M<HENRY. w laiudcalct Editor and Publish* J. VAN SLYKE. ILLINOIS. W E E K L Y « E * f R E V I t f f THE EAST. r * & £ fMtKHiTKST, a young lawyer of £ '4 H. f./what and killed Fnnnio Howell, the :MkX&/ber'ot a' prorrsinfTrt merchant oT that If... Pr-'-y-r* then wmnjutted suicide. The murderer »nd hm victim were mrtiM ronr J, but IHWI livod together, aa a legal wan h^c| uumcdiatiily after the mar- LIII« MA*KEB, Af Latitsaster, Ijpfc., wiw Walkih^ W4th a young gGnttetnan/when' •ipUA from hU cigar set fire to ht<r dres*. and fatartv fcnraed.. ..On the night of r, 16 thcro vu, a heavy froat in the north- i portion of New York, and at Stamford, ! I*> contity.' thtn ice formed. In i «onnt^ there vw a light snow- The growing corn and _ buckwheat \» WOM 14tv r<"|X>rted wnne*iiat injnred x®w Mfcineeiof one of tlte excursion trains ooUiided with anch fatal effects at Mav'a twifillM, N. J., haa confenaed the cause of the . to the Coroner's jury. He saya that on jheday of the catastrophe he undertook, for {hi; first time, to use the automatic brakes. He , |ad um? ha*! any cjspenenc® witii them. and JM & ragnlc the brakes would not work at the ' " ftfbcw moment. * '* ^ Tk* decapitated remains 6f Mary Oss- j -10 years of age, have been found in the neaJ- BarnRtabte, Mass. A large knife buried in the girl a side. Theiv were iudi- that a d^perate struggle had taken , waoe, but uo clew to the murderer was found. * A PABINO feHt hfes been performed at $ew forte by a jouhg Scotchman named Robert yi>onsld«(m. He safely leaped from High bridge fthto Harlem river, a distance of 116 feet. When he Jamped he was dressed in ItghtB. He wore heavy shoes on both leet, held tightly together, and his lire was erect. His hands and arms were pped. When within about fifteen feet of i water he drew his anHas to his sides and Mr his head forward. He struck the water _L the middle of his back. In less than a min ute he swam to the neareat craft, and was soon II right. . -Y DR. TANHHB has had ail of his teeth . jmlled, During his lo :g fast his gums shrank away and the teeth became loosened to such aa #xtent that he could not masticate food. Hence OositiSdalset. said that the result of the recent electioingq^r* anteed the permanency of the republic; de nounced the calumniators of the present min istry. declared that the religious orders must __ >_ . , > not attempt to rise aumrior to law, and as- RoBKBT WtliKES, wholi «le, Jlwelar of I bearers that the foreign relatioux and Toronto, Canada, his daughter Florence, aged \ domestic affairs of France were highly satiafae- 15, and son Bertie, ag> 11, were drowned the ' tor^- Mexico, have been ravaged by a hurricane. A great amount of property was destroyed and many ptopfe injured. OEXEBAU other dav. Florence and Bertie were bathing and the boy getting out beyond his depth, the father, who was in a boat, jumped out to sa\e him. The daughter also went*U the rescue and all were drowned The Grand Trunk freight aheds at Richmond, Quebec, with sixteen loaded cars, have l»eeu destroyed by fire. GOLD to the value of $1,420,000 was shipped t® New York at London on the 17th iust. It is estimated that the amount of gold that will be imported between now and the close Of the year will be ¥'25,000,000... .Steam ships leaving Liverpool and other Emopeah ports for Now York are crowded with rcturniiig American tourist*. v THB Triennial Conclave ol Kaights Templar ftttraetod aa immense number of strangers to Chicago, and the festivities passed ; off with much eclat. More than a quarter of a t mortals, million people witnessed the grand parade of Knights. The streets through which the prog ression moved were packed, and thousands of faces were visible in the windows and doors and on the roofs of buildings. The day was excessively warm, and many of the Knights were prostrated by th© heat. The column was seven miles in length, and contained a hundred bands of music and alxiut fifteen thousand Sir Knights. Sixty thousand people attended th« great ball at the Exposition building. A NEW Atlantic cable company has been formed. This company proposes to lay a cable line between England and the Azores, and between the Azores and America. All the nec essary concessions have been obtained. BRITISH COLOMBIA Indians insist on catching sea otters at Cress sound out of sea son, and, as the Alaska savages object, trouble is apprehended. An armed vessel has tx'en sent from Sitka to preserve the peace and protect the otters The owner of St. Julien has offered to wager anv sum from #5,000 to $20,000 that his horse will beat any trotting or pacing horse in tli • world in mile heats, best three in five. THE Grand Encampment of Knights Templar, at their meeting in Chicago, elected the following officers to serve for the ensuing three veal's: Sir Benjamin Dean, of Boston, Most Eminent Grand Master; Sir Kobert E. Withers, of Alexandria. Va., Bight Eminent Deputy Grand Master; Sir Charles Roonie. of New York, Verv Eminent Grand Generalissimo : Sir John P.'S. Gobin, of Lebanon, Pa., ] Very Eminent Grand Captain General; Sir'Hugh McCurdy, of Corunna, Mich., Very ; Eminent Grand Senior Warden: Sir William 1 La Rue Thomas, of Danville. Ky., Very Enu- j nent Grand Junior Warden; Sir John \\. j Simons, of New York city, Very Eminent Grand Treasurer: Sir Theodore S. Parvin, of Iowa City. Very Eminent Grand Recorder. The next Triennial Conclave will be held Indian Fran cisco, in 1883. " ' WASHINGTON* A GRAND PAGEANT. t.VfMJ'tlliUi Ilia T«-i»»pl*r Parade fi RAY-'" A mufnifirrnt Spectacle. Tfcor.i a Chicago pnjxyr we glean the following graî hio description of tfco Knights Templar pa rade in that city : . At 7 o'clock it seemed as if every living thing »ithin the city was moving on the line of route, but especially on Michigan and Wabash avenues, from Twenty-first street aortli. Even' house sent forth its oontingofit, and the enormous, dense, surging ranks of the populace stretched along the sidewalks so overwhelmingly that a quick step was impossible to the most activo of Soon, indeed, even the sidewalks -;Wv- PASWN6 SMILE* ifr* , THB bowie knife hns a fine rip-yon-la- tion. IN making \riUs some are left oht auU others are left in. Tins watermelon is like a.bookt It isnt red until it is opened. ^ | ? is but skin deep."! This can not bo applied to a banana. ^ PiitKs work from sun to suri, But tlie mosqiiito's work is never done. F BEBJSCCIA--Yes; you will alwfiTO find a fanny bone in the humor-wrist. A BOY always feels proud and hound- lesjji when his father offers him a cigar. IT is pitiful to see a bald-headed man hunting for the parting on his head while'he sings "There's no pla£e like comb." THE easiest way to find out whether Bob Ingersoll is oorrect car not is to go and take a trip on a New York steam- lK>Ut. wonld not, or conld not hold them. They in vaded the roadways, and not all threatenings and imprecations of the stalwart peeler on foot , dowuri ht scftndaL conld move them half an inch from their i - - ground. Thev held on like bull-dogs. The _ , American monarch, his wife and royal republi- , IT has been discovered that burning oan family were on their dignity, and insisted the bung hole of a kerosene uarrel ivith on *hat •hey conceived to be tliwr full rights. , & j1()t wiU^auae tile baitel to This was all very wt 11 during the earlier part . SOME say the girls go to meeting to look at each other's bonnets. That's They go to show their own. onus WIOT. THOMAS IICGRAW; of Detroit, Presi- t of the Globe Tobacco Company and higan Savings Bank, and a large real-estate iwhet and d-'-k-r in wool, "naa made an assign- . , for the benefit of his creditoru. His as-{'exports of specie for the fiscal year ending in his local commanderv that was to match pu»t * a i a .-.r%w n i\r\r\ a x i.i 1*. u:i: - .. m vn i Ka in IViu v\onnr«K' a# trn *• Kn# -uri^K of tlie proceedings, as the procession was, in- ; evitably, about an hour late in starting. This j enabled every person who desired to be a spftc- ' tator to take "up some kind of a position. Some { adhered obstinately to the sidewalks, fsome | hung half way out of windows. Some climbed i the trees and telegraph polos. Every stoop J was garrisoned to repletion. Housetops were | crowded with boys and girls who defied the ardent sun, as, emancipated from vaporish | thralldom, he made tlie best use of his oppor- i tunity and seemed resolved on converting all j humanity within his reach to roast meat. Small boys distinguished themselves by getting I astride of lamp-posts. They hung like squir- 1 rels from frail branches, and escaped with their ! lives aa none bnt a small boy can escapc. j Compared with this wonderful turnout, all the other demonstrations were dwarfed of their fair proportions. Even the reception of Grant seemed like a drop in the bucket. To anyone i who could see the great vista of the avenues, j for an immense distance filled in almost, every part with people, the sight put in the back- j ground every event that has gone before. It j was the Valley of Jehosophat, without tlie goats or the judgment. -j The hour preceding the grand m ister was i filled with the preparatory notes of ilie display. I Drums rattled on highway and byway. Bugles J rang out clearly, and " the flashing blade," and I " the neighing steed," and " the trumpet-stir- •. ring blast/' inspired one to sing with Tom { Moore: | Oh, the s^ht entrancing, , When morning's beam is glancing | , On ft'es avraye<l In helm and blade, And pinnies in the gajr wind dancing. amount to about $259,000, but the liabili- ies nre a great deal more than that figure "flrafientshaw, who swore that Charles Do ioung tared the first shot when young Kalloch linafced him, has been sentenced to fouiteen 1 In! the California penitentiary for per il motion for a new trial was denied Smiley, of Spring Lake, Minn., while water- , lils horses overturned the wagon which con- talvod himself, wife and three sons. A11 of the Company is going to build an #80.000 nument to * Oakes Ames, at .the ;h*4 point on the Hocky Mountains, FT OWING to the great success of "The 'alse Friend" at Haverly's Chicago Theater, week, it is continued for another week at Thisri ijwerfnl play is presientod by A.'M. Imer's rinion Square Theater Company, with ' origî ial, soeriory, original properties, and :jhe jM»w«rfnl cast of the New York company, >**5l6Eiiig Mr. Chas. R. Thorite, who is un- , i in his character in tyis play.. i Hsmr HJLRTWKIII,, of Bunker Hill, tlL, killed hiswifewitj) a shot-gun, and ended • , , 'liis own wretched career by cutting his throat. t . . - T r e x n a i p e . m E a p t S t . L o u i s s a l o o n - ̂ jkeeper, shot and killed HoraceB. Tail, a drank- Jpn epsiwner, who assaulted him. . Tmcitown ol Eureka, Nev., has for '• jtho second time within a year been almost des- % Jtroyed by fire. The loss is estimated at $1,000,- ~r" 1)00 A man named McGowan, on be ing frxptlled fwm a Kansas City saloon, mt> to sleep, in. an ioe-honse near a ahep. While there he was so iMjr eaten by rats that he will die 7*n>e CfMcaotv llilwaukee and St Paul Railroad ^An^urbu concluded airnnj:emeiits with the fBoax Indians for running its line through their itaiftrvation, and wsotk an ttie Black Hills exton- «w:wUl now be viaorously pushed An ex- r.jMOsipn occurred in the Yaeger mills, St. Louis, ̂ n an instant the entire building was in 'itfaaef.! The fire spread rapidly, destroying ..warehouses, tenements, freight cars, an old skating rink, and mncli other property. The •loss is estimated at f200,000. , :j THE Agent at Poplar liiver, D. T.r has .̂ "abandoned his post in consequence p(, the ;threatcning aspect of the Indians In that < ». vicinity. He reports Sitting Bull within twenty . ' .miles of the agency. Troops have been dis- ':fn.tched to that point from Bismarck... .A ter- .y riUe tornado recently swept across the south rn part of Gass county, Dakota, making a track two miles wide, sweeping away buildings, crops, "•if and farming machinery, and killing and injuring j several persons. ABOUT 30,000 people visited the ' j Chicago Jockey dub Park to witness the prize drill of the Knights Templar commanderies. " The 1 taper Commandery, of Indianapolis, took - the first pnze, the De Molai Commanderv, of , Louisville were given the second prize, and the third prize was awarded to the Reed Com- mand ry No. 6, of Dayton, Ohio. The weather was intolerably hot, and the accommo- jp- dations at the pork were whollv inadequate. m- M ost of tlie spectators were compelled to stand g| >:for hours in tue broiling sun, and, although the - .jdust was stifling, no water was to be had except f : , for mon<)y. ̂ FAMIINO elevator at the fcJandnsky ll(Ohio) wheel works crushed a man and a bey ^Who were pamiiig under it, to death, mangling ...JEtheir • fcodles frightfully. Then were sixteen ' Idporaons on the elevator, only two of whom THE rumor of war in Buenos Ayres was occasioned by a couple of soldiers ' rushing across the street to get a drink. --Cincinnati Saturday Night. , THOUSANDS of persons who vote the j Democratic ticket are unable to speak j tlie last name of their candidate for vice- j President. --Norri»toivn Herald. j A MAN at Augusta, Ga., on receiving a j ] doctor's bill for medicine and visits, j i wrote that he would pay for the metli- • cine and return the visits. ' "Darljng, I am growing cold," re- ! marked a chronic grumbler to his spir- | ited spouse, and then she stroked his | golden locks--with the fire shovel. { SOME predict that the time will come ' | when people can read each other's ! j thoughts like a book. It is sad to think ! I that many fly-leaves will be discovered ! where least expected. ! "OUT in this cold world, out on this j J treat," sang the young man whose j | pocketbook had been materially light- 1 j ened in "setting 'em up" for several I I legions of his friends. I ! _ " NEVER push a man because he's go- I I ing down the hill." No; far better to I j head him off and kick him until lie is glad ' j to streak up that hill again like all crea- t tion afire.--Danbury Xewa. | "I AM going on a trip to your-rope," j the condemned man remarked to the Sheriff when marching to the scaffold; I and after that reckless break the officer j swung him off without regret. i THE gentle answer--"Have you got! the rent ready at last?" "No, sir; j mother's gone out washing, and forgot to ; put it out for you." "Did she tell you j she'd forgotten?" "Yes, sir."--London \ Judy. . A COLORADO man can take his rifle and j , u.eu^.i.L ailu x„UiUI1 put a bullet into an old straw hat 1,000 * ^ against 81 last year. California and Oregon | f Vhere the stands for the Grand Master ! yards away every time, but he doesn't j „ . , , , . , - ., „ i , How important every body looked ! But most THE official statement of imports and . ajj ccmntryman who had acquaintar.c ti June 30, 1880, prepared by the Treasury De partment, shows that the net imports of gold to the United States amounted to §77,153.31, a larger gain than any hitherto reported. The exports of silver exceeded the imports, but eaait figures are not given. RETURNS to the Department of Agri culture since Aug. 1, show an increase in the conation of the cotton crop as compared with were drowned... .Tl^ Union Padfic j jnjy The present average condition for the whole country is 102. The general average of where he stood, in the panoply of war, but with the spirit of peace. It was difficult to decide at any state of the proceedings which were the most interesting-- the Knights, or the people who came to look at them. Both were grand in their way, and, taken together, formed a picture of mammoth magnificence that must long rennin impressed on the mind that contemplated the spectacles with the judgment born of experience in such matters. As a matter of course, there were several ex cellent places from which to obtain a good view the corn crop on Aug. 1 was 98, against 100 I ^ ̂ ' x,„<rtjon bnt tJJO begt waH t July 1- The condition of the spring wheat i» j the crJs i n p o f W»b,sh avenue and Twelfth street, where the stands for the Grand Master country of 86. SECRET ART EVABTS has renewed the offer of the United States to mediate between Chili that it enabled the spectator to see the column at its best, before long marching had produced _ the partial demoralization that generally suc- uli and Peru, IU connection with ^ England, . cpeds the e^irly enthusiasm of the day. in the hope of preventing further bloodshed! The advance of the head of the column was between those two countries. heralded at 9:45 o'clock by the drum corps of ON and after the 1st of October the the Second Regiment Illinois infantry, which was « newapftpers >ddre»*l to j countries or colonies of the Universal Postal, > people, who thronged the thoroughfares to an Union shall !Te the same as on printed matter j almost impassable extent, and caused them to for the same destination, viz.: 1 cent for each two ounces or each fraction of two ounces. POLITICAL. THE New York Greenback State Con vention, in session at Syracuse, nominated Thomas C. Armstrong for Judge of the Court , . . „o „ of Appeals and re-afflrmed the Chicago plat- ' f or ! ' w - t . form; with the following addition: »lUnd | ^eut.8- Ward and Hayes extended clear across and air, Ught and water, are free gifts of na- ! the street, and drove everything before tl.em as 1 on 2 B 2 Ys U C, I 1i sit upon aBZfi; . 4 he will stin^ B 4 U no : A in dr plaoc, and hurt U so j > U'll 1 dr, pour uo 4 2 n6 1 j F 'twas a pin on which U s8. . j --Exchange.. j I THERE is no need of any eulogies over j j the man who discovered gold iu Call- I fornia. He blundered into it, just as I fall back and align themselves on the curbing, j a man sometimes discovers that there i Then, from the elevated platform, far along the j is a bull in fbe «vme pasture with him- i avenue to the northward, the broad front of . 6elf»' ' * * » .. ' ' * ! the mighty column, as it began to extricate it- ! ,ir „ . , ^ i self from the cross streets on which the differ- I WHEN a female contributor to a I ent commanderies were formed, was seen. ; monthly magazine Speaks of "the most j The picked men of the police force on foot, \ delicious, delectable, entrancing and j platoons, under Capt. McGarigle and j distracting of all innocent indulgences," j she means a kiss.--Hart ford Sunday -pedieat. But the great point is to stop, a runaway before he gets into his stride; after he is once away few bits will stop a real runaway--a steady pull is a waste of exertion on the rider's part. Some liorsos may be stopped by sawing the mouth with the snafHt, but nothing will check the old hand. Another expedient is to hold the reins very lightly, and on tho first favorable opportunity,' as a ris ing hill, fyr. instance, to try a succession of jerks. But the cunning, practiced runaway i« not so much to be feared as the mad, frightened horse. The mad horse will dash against a brick wall, or jump at spiked railings of impossible height. I once saw a runaway horse, after getting rid of his rider, charge and burst open his lockpd stable-door. }'" * forty Year; In Bed. m*r i Gyuthia Taggart and Elizabeth (com monly known as Betsy) Taggart are the Barnes of two very extraordinary women, one deceased, the other on the brink of the grave. Their father was Deacon William Taggart., who formerly owned or kept the old ferry at Middletown, in this county, where Betsy still resides?' ' They belong to a most respectable family, and these two women have been visited by thousands of people who were anxious to learn something of the cause which brought them into uotoriety. Cynthia was bedridden for nearly forty years be fore she died, and Betsy has been in the same condition for thirty-nine years. It is stated by those who have known them well that, patient endurance of great suf fering was- a marked feature of their ex istence. Asked by the writer, a day or two since, what their illnes was, a rela tive replied that he could not tell; in fact, no one. knew. It was simply a hick of vitality; the unfortunate women appeared to lose all power after arriving at a cer tain age. Of late years but few visitors have been admitted to the sick chamber of the surviving sister, but in the first years of their extraordinary illness they were called upon -by strangers from far and near, especially during the summer time. Cynthia, after taking her bed, found much comfort with si lyre, it is said, and in her uncultured way would compose poetry. She once wrote an " Ode to Health." Her death appeared to afflict lier sister Betsy to a great de gree, and at times she was inconsolable. Her mind would wander at times, but the name of sister Cynthia was seldom off her tongue. Her nephew, a well-' known business man here, was one of the first to go to tlie war, and by :-onrageot«i conduct rose from the rank of private to that of colonel. This was nearly twenty years ago, and the colonel says that even then his friends used to write him that "Aunt Betsy is failing fast." Yet she is still alive. But perhaps the most extra- ordimuy fact in lier whole case is that now for nearly seven weeks nothing but water has passed her lips; not one parti cle of solid food or nourishment. JJer mind has become completely a blank for a long time now. As may l>e imagined, she is reduced to a mere .skeleton. These two cases are perhaps the most remarka ble of the sort ever heitrd of. There is not a particle of imagination or sensation connected with them. Their family is one of the most respectable on the island, and any statement they make can be im plicitly relied on. It is not possible for poor old Betsy to survive many days, seeing |hat she takes no nourishing food whatever.--Boston Journal. • tuie to all mankind' and every person is enti tled to enough of each of these to enable him to secure the necessary comforts of life ; there fore, we protest against the further granting of large tract ft of public lands by the Government to railroad corporations or individuals. We de mand a tariff which shall protect American in dustry.** THB Democrats of Connecticut nom inated James E. English, of New Haven, for Governor, and Charles M. Pond, of Hartford for Lieutenant Governor The New Jersey- Republicans have nominated Frederick A. Potts for Governor. THE Colorado Democrats have nom inated the following ticket: Governor, John S. Hough; Lieutenant Governor, W. S. Stover; Treasurer, Dr. A. Y. Hull; Auditor, Robeit G. Bray ; Attorney General, Robert G. Stallcup ; Superintendent of Schools, J. J. Crook ; Secre- they advanced briskly, every man looking his best. Then came the mounted escort of forty- five Knights of the Do Molay Commanderv, No. 5, of Grand Rapids, Mich., whose steeds, all clean-limbed, spirited, and richly caparisoned, danced under tliem in a lively manner. Following came the carriage of the Grand ' Master, drawn by thirteen noble horses--seven i white and six black--each with a groom at his head. Behind this imposing turnout came the j carriages containing members of the Grand j Encampment and other high officers, all brill- J I iant with stars, crossed, ribbons and sashes, i | Passing through tlie s duting squadron ^ of tlie ! j escort, the cortege halted. The grand officers | ascenucd their platforms. The one on the | : west was selected by Grand Master Hurlbut and j j his lieutenants. With them appeared Gov. ; Cnlloui. Mayor Harrison, Grand Prelate Lock«v • i a*nd manv other eminent dignitaries. The plat- I | form on the east was occupied by another | | crowd of high Templars, and by several mem- , i bers of the press. | ! Some delay followed the appearance of the ; i Grand Master, and it was 17 minutes past 10 I j o'clock when tlio drums again struck up, and I I the column was fairly under way. The spleii- I I did monotony of the uniforms, all dark and i l white, the Cornier predominating, was relieved | : by the brilliant and ever-varying colors of tlio J I band men. who seemed to vie with each other . in the matter of crtstly costume. The drum j j major, who is the human prototype of the ini- j Cortant turkey gobbler.) strode before each • and. baton in hand, and with bearskin cap. ! ! black, white, or gray, that looked like a tremen- , | dons load for the poor fellow to carry. The banners, the plumes, the thronging co- j : horts, or commanderics, marching mostly twelve i i!breast, made a stirring picture of "modern j 'chivalry. Their swcircs c lit er«d in the strug- > : gling sunbeams, and rhe.r ix'tmons seemed to j cant* in ecst sv. IV ostr.ch teat bers pnl wni e.Mushes seemed like an^rv fon in (resting a i • lack :did swollen stream, or. better perhaps, i (Vere injured. tary of State, C. O. Unfue ; Congressman. R. S. Morrison. P - ' ABOUT 30,000 people visited the • , *OHBiGiv. [ - J Chicago Jockey dub Park to witness the prize Mias APEIMXDE NEIMON, the accom- \ plished actress, who recently announced her ' retirement from the Stage, and sailed for EU- ; rope, died suddenly the other day at the Conti- i nental Hotel, in Paris Twenty-one persons ! j,' -- -- -- ---- I have just been tried by court-martial and con- j . mami ry No. 6, of Dayton, Ohio. The rioted at Ki"f, Russia, for political offenses, i weather was intolerably hot, and the accommo- I Two were sentenced to death, three to twenty j years' imprisonment, and sixteen to bard labor ' for terms varying from ten to fifteen years. • Resolutions denouncing the British House of Lords and the Irish Land laws «ere adopted by an immense Ho i e-Rule meeting , in Glasgow, Scotland Bulgaria and Rou- ; mania are at loggerheads, and Russia is con centrating troops at a strategic point m view of | an impending crisis Burglars stole 860,000 worth of jewelry and pla$e from the residence j of the Earl of Eldon, near Wareham, England, i .... A recent cat le dispatch announces tlie death ; * A PARMKK named Emmons, living near j ^ 2?ar8hal Baz^ue- j Neenah, Wis., had a dispute with hi* father-in- ^ T™ agitation against an exclusive- Haw, Mr. Huxley, about some money matters. * The dispute waxed warm; Emmons drew his is Revolver and fatally shot Huxley, and then |m - sbntliimse f with tyual dendly effect Advices tir ' Fort Keojih ale to the effect that' about ; If * . i,|W0 Sioux Indians are on their way thither it J^he intention of surrendering themselves i PrwonerB of war. It is designed to disarm i » . . c» t , , . . •, , - . ^HEIII E,S BOOK as Uiey arrive. Their arms and ! ous that the work should go on under tho aus- ' d^vere frequent, y rewarded by enthusiastic i," *ff,ponied will then be sold, and the proceeds will j pices of the United States. De Lesseps is ' ° . . ... ,. ,. . f oe employed in the purchase of provisions for | working with his usual energv, and will soon ^ oe pr^s ion closetl with anotlur display of their tein[>orary support. ..Monroe Robertson | place ^0,000,000 francs' worth^ shares iu the | «•- m : ̂ hanged at Greenville, Ohio, ctn the'20th of 'London, New York, Paris and Frankfort mar- ^rft,?d "Un^.at VI? \' JJl P,?I t? ^ the murdtr °r bis father-in-law, kets... .A dispatch from Paris states that the ' thut 1,ut "nlRob«;rtson killed a man in Mary- j neutralization of the Panafma canr.1 under ' the guardianship of the United States has been accepted. De Lesseps will now again trv to sell stock in this country.....Over 3,000 persons left Liverpool forthe United States iuthe mouth of July. There was an increase in the total inv migration froift the port for the month of 5.000 over July, 1879. ' A DISPATCH from London, in refer ence to the evacuation of Cabul, says person AP FBO enow on tho lurch, when . December ap'yjirs. Wliut a winter of pIur.M** Ota that lonul of Hj carn! R was remarked that all the orgnn'zat'ons Journal. NONE of-ftur learned judges ever dis-1 criminate against black people on ac- 1 count of color. 'No American citizen of j African descent was ever denied admis sion to the county jail or State prison.-- j Hartford Sunday Journal. j " I DIDN'T know a man could be so' much made up of •water," said a hot man { on tlie corner yesterday, wringing the | sweat from his brow. "Oh, yes," re marked a hotel-keeper who came along, , "my experience is tliat man is a regular ' sponge." | AN impecunious fortune-hunter having { been accepted by an heiress, at tlie wed- i ding, when that portion of tin* ceremony | was reached where the bridegroon says: " With all my worldly goods I thee en dow," a spiteful relative of the bride ex claimed: " There goes his valise!" " IT is the breath of the people," said Douglas, "that purifies the blood of the nation." May be so; may be so; Douglas j knew more about polities than we do. but j we hope to die if Ave haven't met people ! whose breath would poison a l'eoria | mash-tub.--Burlington Hatohcgc. ' ; Patent Flonr. j Almost everybody knows of patent j Hour, but not everyone understands j what it is. Stripped of technicalities, ! this is about the story of its maiiufact- j ure : The best flour used to be made of j winter wheat. Spring wheat yielded either much less in quantity, or else so j much of the bran got ii^to the flour in j its manufacture that its color was intol- j erably dark. The wheat would be; ground and then bolted. In the refuse- gold currency is daily gaining gj;ound in Ger- ! v,m titc larger cities inch as New York. Cm- ! the bran and middlings--would lie in- manv, and it is expected that tho entire finan- ci in iti, Philadelphia. -» ltim< rc Dilvoir, Louis- j eluded a large, proportion of the spring ; St. Louis, and .^velan • * "'"l" " - - • - - • : cial question will be reopened at the next ses- I sion of the Reichstag. I THE French Government renounces ! La^' W . _ r.or o -orf" ;ties lor coiicentratn>g and dnll- j ail intention of attempting to control the De j in . 'llio D troit Comma ndery execuied some i Lesseps canal project, and is willing and desir- i e^itiiu. u.ovements as they trauipe<l along, uoie precision than the Kn.ghLs from ttu! rntal j ®nfd pafticu-- • " larly for feed for horses. Now the best ! of nour, and the most expensive, is made j of this very refuse of the old-fashioned j process". It all came out of the discov- j ery of a way to draw out tlie bran. Un der the new process the wheat is ground ; about as before. The first result-is an ordinal y flour sold for exportation. Then • ^ Coulter. C If J?nd> and •«>«"* »» KSU«H. Durins? the war ; ®^ne3tei with a band of gueirilas. and :-W :'v 'rc<ltlenU^ lx>aJited that h.' ki led saven colored S; Vi men m oot day. Before going to execution he 4;. ^acensedhw 12-year-old ehild of having sworn I / w8 . .Mr. J. K. Ereher, a farmer of § ;V Philadelphia, Ohio, died of tlie effects of vinflicted by his insane son. : f- THE tOUTO* ' ,jjgr MAH. COKTBACTOB ADAMS, of Little . Bock, has telegraphed the Washington authori ty 'or Profcpction on the mail route between i Davis, Tex., and El Pabo. Tmlitna are •i ' making things hot in that region. ; *i Ex-Gov. HEKSCHEIJ V. 'JOHKSOS, who ^ ran on the Domocratic ticket with Steplien A. Douglas in IStKi, ii B just died at his residence I} ^/"^son county, Ga., aged 68 years.... # K ? v While Ute lwrade of Coup's circus was taking VK place, in WinohetUr. Va., tbe other day, tlie cession was three hours )iassin; \ an hour may honestly l<e deducted fr<.m ' tifiie on account of li dtingn. ! Johnny's Letter. I NARBAOANSETT FI^K, R. I., 1880. ' DEAR PAPA : Please send me 50 cents. ! Now I will tell you why I want it. Yes- j t-irday Dr. Flint's son and Mat Harbe- • Bon, myself, Nettleton Neflf, went crab- '• biug up to Narrow liver. We did not thut point,^l>ut j tilp remainder is taken and put upon j great horizontal sieves, and while agita- j tion is going on there an ingenious sys- , tem of draft is rushing up through, and i [ carries off the bran. What is lelt is the | glutinous portion of the wheat, the most nutritious and most productive, and out j of this, purified now by the drawing off; of the hran, we get our new-process! flour. The result of tlie discovery of the well informed as to the topography of Afghan- bave good luck at all, only caught four ; process has been to make the poor spring istan, and of tbe military situation there, de- ! cr&bs. I psid the expenses which was 50 > wheat of Minnesota and upper Wiseon- clare that England's only alternative now is to j cents. We walked up there (not in our ( sin the most valuable of grain. abandon the country altogether Tho discov- i bathing suits). After paying the bill I : . . ... erv of a plot to blow up the railway tunnel and , thought Iliad better begin compromising. thrown the authorities . \\rjiell we jrC>t Up there we took off our person in the" citv Ts^closel^Tatehed!"* jand stockings and caught some Mr. Gr flin, the British Agent at Cabul, reports j four crabs, three of which I caught. to the Indian Viceroy, the Manpri-t of Itij>on, i About 4 o'clock it began raining, we that the situation in Cabul is gencrJlv satis- [ took shoes and stockings and ran for the Kunawaj Horses. erottsptta. \ \ 'f A scHoowEn has arrived at New Or- teans from Hava'n's, With yellow fever on board. ^ Ji Uies Al Kedden, CtMifederate Secretary of War, has just died in Goocliland county, Vir- agtid 65 yens A young mauinmed Waldrun, who resi 'ed at A'Lima, Ga., elojied With his 13-year-old sister-in-law. He was ar- rasted at Sunny side, Ga. A mob overj>oweied tlM Sheriff, and took away the prisoner, whose , Jtead ttwjr eat off. _ Tex., and Mat amor is, factory and that the dissatisfaction with the k but when we <n>t there we saw new Auiwr is confined to the rabble ol the cit-! » ,. wntn_we h°l tneie we saw we were in our somewhere keeper of the page of hyenas was pounced upon j ies....Oie Bull, the celebiv.t.-d violinist died, ! 8ome ladies, and, as we w< ' ^infuiiated sad taaeif j recently in Norway, whither he bad gone on a i drawers, we had to seek shelter visit from this country. Ilu wus 70 yeur-i old. | else. When we were running for the wreck REOB.NT floods in Germany have been I with my pants in my hands 35 cents j ;3 L ^ u* yOU ?OX£ft ^ very disasUous . to the crops, and famine is (dropped out of my pocket So now I i t0().vij,0;.0u8 •< mav nmke^him Tlie horse that has once acquired tliel i habit of running away will bolt on the ; • fif^t opportunity. If you suspect his in- i tention, the best plan is to elieek it'tlie j j moment lie begins to move, taking hold j I of one rein with both lianas, and giving I j it one or two such violent jerks that tlie | ; rogue must pause or turn around. Then ! stop him, and, if you doubt your being j feared in some of the inundated districts.... Fully 00 per cent, more gr;iin nnd provisions has t een moved tlnou^h tho New York State c;inuis since their opening this year tliau for the corresponding period of last year. This is regarded as a siyu of great business activity and prosperity. PKKMIEB DB FBEYCIHKT, of France, Biade a speech the other day at a banquet. He am almost dead broke, at least not enough for a week. Please do it, papa, because I could not help losing 85 cents out of my pocket. Yours, JOHN. cross his legs and fall--not a pleasant contingency, but anything is better than being run away with in a street. In j open country you may compel the mna- PKOFESSOR--" Wliat important person- I to g»lloP with ? looso re?n "util he age was confined on the Island of St. j18 ,or to m. a eonstantly nar- Helena?" Mr. EL -- "Robinson Cru- rowingcireleunti lie is ghul to liuit. A m." 1 ten-acre field u big enough for this ex- A Swift Runner. * •Talk about your walking matches! Why, a good Indian runner can easily do his one hundred and twenty-five miles in .twenty-four hours, without making* any special' effort, either.' No tedious training in that case ! One of the most, interesting races in the world is that between an Apache Indian and a deer. The deer Btarts at full speed, making long leaps of from ten to thirty feet. At first he gains rapidly on the Indian, but the Indian follows, every now and then uttering frightful yells, but never for a moment leaving or losing tlie trail. The deer, when out of sight, halts and looks back, but soon his pur suer comes in his sight, wheli he bounds on with longer leaps than at first; finally he makes for the water--spring or stream --and when he gets there he halts and drinks all he wants. Now there is no hope for him, for after he drinks he can not run so far or leap so far. Pretty soon the Indian comes in sight again, while the tired deer rests a moment; but the tired hunter never halts to drink, not if his mouth is as dry as ashes, for by doing so he not only loses time, but he cannot run so fast aftarward. Over hill and mountain they go, never rest ing, the Apache ever in hot pursuit. By-and-by the Indian sees a blood stain on a rock, where the deer has stumbled and skinned his knea or struck his nose. He knows now the race will soon be ended, and runs faster than at first, while the deer loses ground every min ute. When the deer sees the Apache close upon him he stops suddenly by a rock or bush and turns. Sometimes as soon as he stops he drops down fainting, or even dead, Irom fatigue. If not dead already when the Indian seizes him by the Ilea i and hind legs, he makes but little resistance, und is dispatched with the knife. The hunter now cuts out a fine piece and eats it, taking not a moment's rest for fear ol getting stiff, but puts the deer on his shoulder, or, if too heavy, a part of it, placing the rest in a secure place, and then trots back to his camp, having traveled perhaps a hundred miles without resting. The next day some one will take his back rail for the balance of the game. /\^ Afghan Etiquette. An Afghan never receives uiicer^nioni ons calls. The visitor must s^fid a few- hours' notice of his intention. He is then received at the door by some confi dential retainer or retainers, and con ducted through an open courtyard to the foot of a rude, winding staircase, which leads first to an uncovered lauding, and thence to the ordinary reception room or balcony of t-lie proprietor. Here he is receive! by the host in person, and con ducted with every mark of courtesy and respect to a small row of chairs, tho use of which article of furnituie seems to be general in good society in Cabul, and to have quite superseded the carpets and felts which satisfied an older gen eration. After a few words of welcome and inquiries in a set 'formula alter health on both sides, a tray ot fruits usti- ally appears, and is placed xipon the carpet at the feet of the visitors. The fruits are followed by fche tea-tray, and a cup of highly-sweetaued green tea, without milk, is placed before the vis itor. The conveisation is then carried on with more or less spirit on the ordi nary topics of the day, and In re, ii the visit is a merely formal one, the inter view comes to an end and the visitor is conducted to the door with the sam® formality aud courtesy with which he was received. If, however, a confiden tial interview is desired, the attendants are requested to withdraw. WHEN a Leadville man merely passes in his checks on account of delirium tremens, they say* he died a natural death. P4*; - HEATH Of + BASCV^n -:" • .. -1 1 file End» a Connie *f Crtaae ami Ex traordinary Villainy fn the Peni tentiary. , (From the Chicago Inter-Ocean. 1 Lewis L. Clermont, alias Ralph L. Holland, alias Louis La Dezina, died last Saturday in the Eastern peniten tiary. The dead man was one of the best educated, most versatile, desperate and successful rascals this continent has ever known. He was the son of Sheriff Clermont, ot Scioto county, Ohio, who afterward removed to Schoolcraft, Mich. He was under 40 years of age when he died, but over three years of peniten tiary life, differing so widely from the pampered career he had followed previously, added to the failure, of re- Seated efforts to escape, had broken him own in health and spirits, and the good looks and indomitable courage which had always rendered him remarkable deserted him at last. Clermont's career of crime was not so remarkable for length as for brilliancy and daring. At the outset of the war he left good mer cantile employment, where, owing to his connections and education, he was se- | cured great advantages, and entered the j army, enlisting in an Illinois regiment, j He obtained a first-class position in the j Quartermaster's department, and at the | end of the war used his place to realize j about $60,000, at the expense of New | York firms who honored his drafts for | cotton alleged to be in transit. Then 1 he disappeared, but turned up a year I later in St. Louis as a banker, with cor- 5 respondents in Chicago and San Fran- ! cisco. He did straight business until he saw a chance to lay down drafts in Chi- i cago for $40,000, which were cashed, | but when presented in St. Louis for pay- | ment the firm of Rolland Ar Co. were j gone. Clermoyt then went to Europe J and the Holy Land, takiug his wife. At j Stuttgart, Wurtemberg, he was the ; gue^t of Maximilian Shinburue, alias ] Baron Shindle, who was living in luxury j on his share of the proceeds of the rob- j berv of the Northampton and Ocean j Bank. Here Pinkerton captured Cler- j mont, but he hired the best legal talent, I and beat the celebrated detective firm ' on a technicality touching the extradi- j tion. j ' The crook then went to South Ameri- , ca, but returned to Chicago, and then showed up on Wall street, New York, as J Louis La Dezina, a wealthy Brazilian, and commenced stock-jobbing, as a cover for his connection with Walter Patterson, and other expert .bank- forgers. One day a lot of reputable Wall street brokers found themselves to : be victimized to the extent of $150,000 | on forged collateral^. At this time a big ! scheme was put up to " raise" certifi- ! cates of Reading stock and swindle | Philadelphia brokers with it, but the job j was discovered and frustrated. On j March 25, 1876, Clermont (then going | by the nar-.e of Col. Rolland) and his ; brotlier-in-law, A. B. Weeks, alias : Wicks, alias-Johnson, by a well-played ! confidence game, got into the vault of ! the Cliambersburg (Pa.) Bank with i Cashier Messersmith. They pretended ' they wanted to make a heavy dejx>sit. | The vault contained $500,000. They ! seized the Cashier, an old man, but did I not disable or injure him, and he broke j from them. Rolland snatched $30,000, ; but failed to get off with it. Both men i were captured, tried, and sentenced. ! Weeks getting ten and Rolland eight i years. This wan was on Nov. 26, 1876. j His tliree years and over of confine- i ment have been studied with numerous i plots and plans to escape, but none suc- ! eeeded. The discovery of one in De- ' eember last showed he v.as endeavoring ' to bribe the keepers. The investiga- ! tion of the hollow haudle of a shaving I brush, sent to Clermont, showed it to contain forty-two diamonds, worth $10,- ; 000, which he offered for assistance to ; escape. Those diamonds were probably i the connecting link with a strange ro- ! mance in the prisoner's career. His | l^rst wife--his devoted wife--was a Chi- i cago woman, but, after his union with I her, he was, with her full knowledge I and consent, united in marriage with a j Philadelphia woman, the object being | to secure diamonds she was possessed of j to the value of $15,000. j Yesterday and To-Day. i "Hole on dar," said a colored man, i hailing an acquaintance. " Does yer cross j de street ebery time yer sees me terkeep : fruin payin' dat bill?" I " No, I doesn't." j " What fur den?" | " Ter keep frum bein' axed fur hit." j "Mr. Napoleon," said the creditor, "I I lent yer ten dollars three weeksago. Yer ! promised an' promised ter pay me. De | udder day you said dat 'pon yer word an' | honeras ageu-'leman yer'd pay meter-day. | Now, wliat's yer got ter say?" ' " I al'ers 'zerves my honer. Yer's get- ! tin yer lack of flosofv and my honer t mixed." "How's dat?" j "l)oan yer know dat de udder day all j de time in town was changed? Da fouu' j dat de time was wroug an' da stmt off an' ! got what da calls a transit apparatus, j Since den all de watches an' clocks lial; i been overhauled. Hit hab lieen fouu' i dat our time is git?one day too fast." i ' 'Dats got nutliin' ter do wid my money." j "Course it hat). I promised ter pay j yer ter-day. De oberhaulin, ob de tame I shows dat dis. ain't ter-day." i "How does yer make dat?" j "Why, dis is ter-morow. Doan' yer • see ? Lemme tell yer, ef yer goes roun' ; dis town showiu' such iguunce of flosofy • de people will laugh at yer." ! " Well,when is yergwine ter pay me?" ! ".Tes ez soon ez we kin get the time i straightened up. Da's workin' on hit j now. Jes take ruy advice, fur ef the peo- | pie oust gits inter dar heads dat a man ' is a fool, ten years ob knowledge won't change hit"--Little Rock (ArA). Ga zette. Some Men's Wives. Three men of wealth meeting, uot long since, iu New York, the conversation turned upon* their wive*. Instead of finding fault with womeil in general, and their wives in particular, each one obeyed the wise mail's advice, and "gave 'honor' unto his wife." " I tell you what it is," said one of the men, " tliev may say what they please about the uselessnets of modern women, but my wife litis done her share in secur ing our success, in life. Everybody knows that her family was aristocratic, and exclusive, and all that, and when I married her she had never done a day's i work in her life ; but yvhen W. Jc Co. j failed, and I had to commence at the foot of the hill again, she discharged the servants, and chose out a neat little cot tage, and did her own housekeeping un til I was better off again." "And my wife," said a second, " was i an only daughter, care.-sed and petted to i death ; and everybody said, 'Well, if he will marry a doll like that, he'll make the greatest mistake of his life ;' but when I came home the first year of our j marriage, sick with a fever, she nursed j me back to health, and I never knew her to murmur because- I thought we • couldn't a'Tord any better style or more i luxuries." I " Well, gentlemen," chimed in a third,1 " I married a smart, healthy, prot^f girl, but she wma a regular blue-stock ing. She adored Tennyson, doted on Byron, read Emerson, and named the first baby Ralph Waldo and the second Maud ; but I tell yon what 'ti>," and tt • speaker's eyes grew suspiciously moist, " when we laid little Maud in her last bed at Auburn, my poor wife had no re membrances of neglect or stinted moth erly care ; and the little dresses that still lie in the locked drawer were all made by her own hands."--Journal of Commerce. And Drink/Too. ' ' > ?' So great are the ravages of the jrtiylt ^ loxeria in France, that unless some means can be soon devised for arresting the progress of the evil, wine-making there, which has long been one of the chief industries, must necessarily come to an end. Whether this country will be able to Bupply the deficiency in the * _ wine supply thus created, remains yet to be proved. If any attempt to do so shall be made we shall not only have to pay even more attention than heretofore . to the improvement of our varieties of grapes, but we shall also have to greatly enlarge the area of our vineyards. In Ordinary times the vintage of France amounted to between 1,500,000,000 and 2,000,000,000 gallons, worth about $350,- 000,000, - / Since the first appearance of the phyl loxera in France, in 1865, it has spread through fourteen departments, entirely ruining the vineyards, and despite the study and experiments of the Ibest scien tists, aud liberal rewards offered by the government, no remedy has yet been J discovered. Already the supply of wine from Madeira, which used annually to export an average of 460,000 gallons, has been cut off by the destruction of tiie vines by the vine mildew--Oidium Tucfc- eri--while the same cause has been equally fatal to the vines in the Canary Islands, which every year used to send S abroad 6,000,000 of Canary wine, very much like Madeira. In Spain too, the region which supplies sherry, and in Portugal, that which supplies port, are, it is reported, both sitf^ring from the phylloxera aud vine diseases, so that a wine famine seems imminent in the near future.--Rural New Yorker. The Peculiarities of a Massachusetts Swan. Visitors to Pine Grove Cemetery, at Milford, Mass., are much surprised to see a swan standing on a grave, near a child's rocking horse. The swan utters a shriek if any one attempts to appi-oach the grave. Some years ago the mate to- tliis swan died, and soon after the rook ing horse was placed on the newly-made grave, when the surviving swan immedi ately stationed himself as protector, over the horse. If the father of the little' * boy that is buried there approaches, the 4 swan makes no outcry, but no one else is allowed to approach the spot. Re* eeritly the horse M as taken away and ; * painted, and while it was absent the swan took no notice of the grave but ] »assed its time on the pond or in its house, but when the horse was replaced the swan • took up his position by its side, thus showing that it was the rocking horse and not the grave that was the object of its vigil. It is rumored that the trustees ordered the horse removed, but the owner of the lot refused to comply with tlie command, because his son had re quested that it should be placed above his grave.--Boston Journal. j f Memory. Memory is uot peculiar to intelligent. people. On the contrary, the inferior I race of mankind, such as negroes, the I Chinese, etc., have more memory thai* ! those of a higher type of civilization, j Primitive races, which were unacquainted ' with the art of writing, had a wonderful | memory, and were for ages in the habit | of handing down, from one generation ; to another, hymns as voluminous as the ; Bible. Prompters and professors of ! declamation, know that women have I more memory than men. French i women will learn a foreign language ; quicker than their husbands. Youtha ' have more memory than adults. It is well developed in children, attains its I maximum about the fourteenth or fif- j teenth year, and then decreases. Feeble | individuals of a lymphatic temperament ; j have more memory than the strong. : Students who obtain the prize for memo- j ry and recitation chietly belong to tiie ; j former class. Most people rememoer j better in the morning, when the mind j is soothed by a night of rest, than in S the evening. I THE whole number of men, from $IN»K | to time, called into the national service 1 during the war of tlie Rebellion was ! 2,088,523. As many of those were i mustered in twice, while hundreds of , thousands deserted who were never under fire, it is probable that not more i than 1,500,000 effectively participated in suppressing the Rel»ellion. CHATTAXOOGA flatters herself that *h? 1 is some pumpkins, and yet her propoiv tion of saloons is only one to every 500 ' inhabitant*. Think of 499 men waiting i for the five-iiundreth to drink and wipe ! off his mouth! 1'HU MARKETS. NKtt YoliK. BKKVES Hons COTTON ,...., FLOVII--Superfine WHEAT--No. 2 OOIIN--Western Mixed OATS--Mixed KYE--Went«ri> POBK--MC88 LAUD CHICAGO. BEEVES--Choice GRADED Steers.... COWH and Heifers Medium lo Fair Hoas FLOUR--Fancy White Winter Ex. . .ST 00 ,4l<> UO .. S oo (4 r> M) .. ii»-<«' la .. 3 60 (rf 4 OU .. 1 03 OK 50 51 38 (£ 41 83 Ni 15 1)0 £rll« 00 1 8>4<«I H«, 4 70 3 40 4 *J0 4 0U Ii 00 (Tood to Choice Spring Ex.. 4 35 5 00 <«, 3 .W 4 4A (a 5 4i~> ^ 0 0O «$ 5 00 (d 8* 7!> -*y 25 . 11,Vet, 12 .16 50 ($16 00 WHEAT--No. i Spring Na 3 Spring COB*--No. 3 OATS--No. 2 KYK --No. 2. BABI.KY--No. 2 BUTTKB--Choice CreMneix. Eoss--Fresh... POBK--Mew LAHD MILWAUKEE. WHRAT--No. L No. 2. CORN--No, 2 OATS--No. 2 RYE--No. 1 BARLEY--No. 2 ST. LOUIS. WHEAT--No. 2 lted. .• COBN--Mixed OATS--No. 2 RYE POKK--Meat I..VBI) ; CINCINNATI. WHEAT COBN OATS RYE POBK--Mews LARD TULEDO. WHEAT--No. 1 White Na 2 Red COBN--Na 2 OATB--Na 2 DETROIT. FLOI-R--Choice WrfEAT--No. 1 White COBN--No. 1 OATS--Mixed BABLEY (per cental) POBK--Moas. 16 00 (A16 SO INDIANAPOLIS. WHEAT--No. 2 Red. 91 92 COBN 30 <$ 40 OATS 28 SO POBK--Clear 16 00 @16 80 EAST LIBERTY, PA. CATTLE--Beet 4 75 <» 5 00 4 25 & 4 50 Common. 3 50 4 00 Hoo# 490 *4 & 50 8 00 » . . .10 m ; 00 15 75 MLG IK) ffl 1 iK) (S 5 25 ta; 1 50 it'- : L