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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 1 Sep 1880, p. 2

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wrnrnim HJcff tn*E! flainilfalt* I. VAN SLTKt, MK»r and Pufcllstw. llcHENRT, %- - ILLINOIS, fej:- I * , : woman The largo tobacco factory of L, J. Cottrell, and several adjacent buildings at Owensboro, Ky., have been buiaed. Loss «*ti- matod at $350,000. WA9HI NOTOIft >CR. J. O. MILLER, one of the propri­ etors of tbo Washington Daily Critic, was fa- tally injured by a fall from a third-story win­ dow. He was adjusting the sash. when he lost his balance. The fall was forty feet. TUB Coroner's inquiry into the May's tending (N. J.> railway collision And that the people killed came to their death from a col­ lision which might have been prevented if the engineer and conductor hod more carefully ob­ served the rules and regulations of tho company governing its running of trains. GEN. SHERMAN has issued a general flonr mill of W. B. Thomas A' Co., the hollow- onjer regarding the death of Brig. Gen. Myer. t^wno foundry of Stuart A- Peterson, and the order says his perseverance, energy and manufactory of Gumpert & Bro. The j resulting in the establishing of a uniform ia nlaccd at $2f>0,000; fully insured.... | international system of simultaneous meteoro- Lueb * €o., exporters and imjxtrt rs <tf clocks, j j0gicai observations, affords to the world the lnrdwarc and silver-plated ^7^ j only full and satisfactory data extant for the • l E I L V I E W S f t E V l C W . AM.iaiB, accused of hypothecating , worth of Btolrn securities at Now York. lodged in the Tombs in default of §J6,W» bail. A FIRK at Philadelphia destroyed the sr. failed with liabilities of $400,000... - It is «p«>ort«l that Mrs. Kate Chase Sprague will riiortly rotuni to her husbartd 8 roof at Canon- diet. Nwragansett Pier. j study of meteorology. Struck down at the meridian of his usefulness, the country has lost a most distinguished and promising ofiicer, and 1 the Signal Service an able, efficient and zealous ON the Hartford racing course, last j ckief. week, St Julien boat his own record by half a i JUDGE KEY retired from the office of ar«m«f making a mile in 2:11^. He made the | Postmaster General Aug. 25, and the Hon. fc-,4 smarter at a 2:11 gait, the half mile at a Horace Maynard. late Minister to Turkey, was £t0 gaiLand reached the end of the third i installed m his plac*. miartcr in 1:3S,V Gabrail. Kelly A Humph- PRESIDENT HAYES and family left rf^ ̂ ^-^n^^^lsatMo^^Moms nearl^hei^ Wadlington on the 26th of August, for their feS:° t vwt to u>« r«uc c«*. ! eENESAL. total lv destroyed. *00,000. WAFF4* | DURING the year ending 30th os June A HORRIBLE tragedy has been enacted Iggj 4579243 immigrants arrived in this country. SBar Madison, Wis. Flames were seen to issue j jn the month of July this year 49,922 came night from the residence of John Winnck, a I ipjje Qf the greatest immigration in the ifermcr living on the line of Dane and Columbia j history of the country was 1873, when 459,803 counties The neighbors rushed to the spot, 1 arrived. From present appearances the immi- «nd were not a little puzzled to observe that I gration for is fairly good, though considerable rust and mildew is reported. But in Saxony, Pomerania, Brandenburg, and Holstein the rye crop is only about half the average. In Bavaria, Franconia, and Suabia it is magnificent. Accounts from Hungary, Austria, Spain, and Italy uniformly rejwit the wheat harvest good The cable brings to us the official declaration to the House of Commons of the Chief Secretary of Ireland as to the state of affairs in that isle. The sub­ stance of it is that it is not thought there is oc­ casion at this juncture for asking extraordinary powers to be used in holding down the Home Rulers. But the apprehension excited by their threats is indicated by his statement that un­ certainty was felt as to the future, and should occasion arise Parliament would bo convened to determine what policy should be pursued. A GOVERNMENT proclamation just is­ sued in Cuba declares that henceforth all Chi­ nese shall enjoy the same rights as other indi­ viduals belonging to a friendly nation... .There has been severe fighting at Candaliar, in which the British claim to have gained a decided ad­ vantage, although suffering a severe loss. Avoob Khan occasionally drops a sheU into the city, and his sharpshooters make things lively on'the ramparts. ALARMING news has reached London from the seat of war in Afghanistan. It is to the effect that Ayoob Khan has assembled not less than 100,000 well-armed warriors, and is ly­ ing in wait to gobble up the reinforcements going to the relief of Candahar A terrific hurricane swept over the island of Jamaica, re­ cently. Crops of all kinds were disastrously injured, trees were uprooted, houses leveled with the ground, and thousands of people ren­ dered homeless Iron huts are being con­ structed in some estates in the West of Ire­ land, where policemen may be stationed so as to be on hand to assist the'landlords in evicting tenants. ALL the great European powers have HANCOCK--SHERMAN OonrMpendeac* at the Tiara H tfac Electoral Controversy. MEW YORK, Aug. M. The two letters of Gen. Sherman so frequent­ ly spoken of IK having brought forth the re» oontly-pnbligMI letter of Gen. Hancock, dated Curuudelet I*. O,, lit Louis, Mo., Dec. 28, 1878, are as follows 1 HKADOUAKTKKS ARVRTT THE UKITED STATES,) WASHINGT*>*, JX C., Dec. *, 1874. f Gen. W. S. Hancock, New York Oity : DKAB GENERAL--1 HAVE MNt received jrour lette* of the 3d, and have tolegrapMt you my consent to your proposed trip. I cannot fnTWM any objection*, and hcjxt BOOM that event* will adttltof a return to their poata of the companies detach*# at the South. But every tiro# I make • move in Ml direction I •m met by insurmountable objection*. Three of the oompauies of tho First Artiilory frmltoit Sill reported at Columbus, Ohio, yesterday, anaMll be hero this evening. Everything is ready for vhfem. Tho last company, I 8 appose, was detained at fttrt SIU to await relief on the way. Tell Gen. Ytf (Adjutant General) that in cnee of any order* I will have thorn sant you at Now York, and he can execute them. The political orders to Kuger at Columbia I preferred •IKTOV! go from th# President to him, through the Secretary of War. They were not military. I dislike much to have our soldiers used ia connection with a legislative body, but ordeni oominj? from the President have to be obeyed. The* form a bad pre­ cedent, but thus far have prevented a collision of arms between inflamed partisan*. I trust you will find Mrs. Hancock a&4 your St Louis friends welL Truly yonn^ W. T. SHERMAN, General. UKADQUABTFRS ABWT or THE UNITED STATES,) WASHINOTO*, D. C., Dec. 17, 18?0. J To Gen. W. 8. Hancock, Jefferson Barracks, Mo.: MTDEAB GTEHERAI, Lest yourpeace of mind may be disturbed by the foollsii report bandiod in the newspaper# about your being ordered from New York, 1 will tell yon there is not a word of truth in it. Neither the President nor Secretary of War baa ever intimated to me Rush a purpose, and I know I have never said a word nor written a syllable to that effect, I see in tho Republican (of St. Louis) that not only wnn of the occupants were around the turning dwelling. Entering the house, fhe reason for this was made clear. Mrs. Winrick's dead body was found on fee floor riddled with shots, and her husband's body was found in the bed bleeding from ghastly wounds about the throat and head, jfoim all that can be learned about tho affair, it appears tliat Winrick, in a moment of rage, aimt his wife, then set tire to his house, that both of them might be consumed in the flames, bnt. finding the work too slow, he shot Mmself. The Wnmcks lived unhappily From present appearances tho lmini- >r this year will largely exceed that number. Germany and Ireland contributed the largest quota on both occasions. GEN. ALBERT J. MYER, Chief of the Signal Service of the United States, is dead Gen. Myer, who, through his connection with the weather reports, was known as "Old Probs," was the founder of the system of Government meteorological observations, which under his supervision havo come to fill an important place in the daily news, and are consulted by thou­ sands of people, who arrange many business concerns accordingly. Gen. Myer also intro- ordered the men-of-war detailed for the d»-, the order made, but that I destroyed it, and tore r out the leaves of the record-book coutaip^ng a cop-y. The whole thing wua and is an invention by some­ body who wanted to create a sensation. . The same is WCU« , JJ r -• | LullltTUD JKXUrUUljjlJ• \ItU< ill'Ci MOV uuiv Paul has had a disastrous tire. The names j <juced the study of military signals at West atarted in tho wholesale paper house of Avenll, poiu^ monstration in Turkish watccs to concentrate in the Adriatic. Advices from Constantinople show that the Porte is still obdurate, and that nothing further in the way of enforcing the treaty of Berlin can be expected in that quarter without tne employment of force. Tho Hares and Rabbits bill, which is intended for tke pratoetfbri of fanners from the 11- roads of these destructive little animals, has passed the House of Commons by a vote of 148 to 70. It now goes to the Lords, where it will probably be rejected... .Ronmania is torn up by internal factions as the result of Austrian and Russian intrigues. One faction favors al­ liance with Russia, another with Austria, while a third party, more patriotic than either, favors neutrality and independence. Bnssell A* Carpenter, on Third street, and de- alroyed that and the adjoining wholesale gro­ cery of P. H. Kelly A Co. The total loss is #850,TOO, and the insurance $500,000 Stoion Zimmerman, of Chicago, shot and Wiled his wife. Ho then reclined by side, placed the dead woman's arm wound his neck, and fired a bullet into his own head, dying instantly. Two children, one 3 THE National Convention of Repre­ sentatives of the State Grand Councils of the Masonic Order has just been held at Detroit. Twenty-one States were represented. It was resolved to organize a General Grand Council, and a constitution was adapted for submission to the State Grand Councils. Upon ratification and the other 1 year "of age, were in the room ' by nine of these bodies, tho General Grand " ' ' ' ' ' Council will become fully organized. 1 THE first meeting of the colored ed- j itore of newspapers in tho United States, for ] the purpose of organizing a permanent Press j Association, has just been hold at Louisville, and witnessed the tragedy, the dreadful import of which they could not comprehend Gen. Grant, has returned to his Galena home from Colorado, having visited all points of Interest in that State Washington dis­ patches announce that both the North- tnatcrn and the Milwaukee and St. Paul _ _ „ . , ... . ... „ ,, .. tailwavs have successfully closed negotiations i °£ Louwvtlle tn, with the Sioux for right of wav across the ! Ya8 ^^^d President.....The deaf mutes of nttervation between Fort Pierre and the Black i £menea ^ave J™1 held their hrst convention at Hills. The concession has been ratified bv the Cincinnntu There was a fair attendance of Interior Department, and some rapid work at £a,*lnS deaf mutes from all paiW the Urnted tmck-laying is predicted in the contest as to j ^tates al1^ ft-0"1 Canada. The prowsedings were •Which line shall tot reach the hills. j ^ 011 by signs Robert McGregor, of ' Cincinnati, was elected President, THE appearance of McVicker 8 Cluca- j The Grand Chapter RoVal Arch Ma- «° TheilUir T*118 °PtfnS f,°r new beaSOn I sons, recently in session in Detroit, elected the *. caUmg forth deserved words of praise from , foU 0fficerH : G. G. H. P., Robert F. all the local papers, and IT reallv AS ; N , T ^ n ** T> O I though that popular manager would distance ; P°^e„ I ' . V- V V competition in elegance of auditorium as well , J? T Chapman,_ Boston; G. G. K., Noble as 111 richness of stage appointments. The 5* , -î r?ar', .a l̂n8^°Il • ^T- Henry mat three weeks have been devoted to , ( ovm^ton, Ky.; G. G. Treasurer, Erton's "All the Rage," under the manage- : J^ben C. Iiemmon, loledo, Ohio; G. G. aacnt of J. M. Hill, which remains^in ^cr®ta^" ^ristophei^G. Fox BufTa^o N. \ ; aD four weeks. After the present run of S'u t u ^ Cuffalo, N. Y.; G. . - All the Rage," Dennis 11 Thompson in his great p; '* ' JoBePhl.P- Jfomer, New Oneans. In the assumption of Joshua Whitcomb will rlay a afternoon the Chapter took an excursion four weeks' engagement. His engagement of ^ f. and down the river, liftt season at the same house was tiie largest ln ^be evening they bad a gran,d banquet, jnonetury success ever known in the history of | THE Knights of Pythias, to the iiuin- McTicket s Theater. ^ j ^j. ()f several thousand, from all parts of PTVE buildings occupied as saloons, the continent, assembled at St. Louis last ~4tffcicert halls, shooting galleries, restaurants, • week, and indulged in a grand parade «tc.. near the Bay District race-track, San 1 and had a good time generally. Francisco, have been burned. Loss, $80,- Supreme Lodge elocted the following 1 -- partly insured A jW car- ; 9^™ fo/..the ^nmg term of three years : some repairs on a Terre Haute hotel, Maryland: Supreme Tice Chancellor, John I drupi>ed his rule into a vault thirty feet deep, Liwton, Peunsjlvama; Supreme Pre- j mnd descended to pick it up. When near the l*te< the uKcv- M. Bnrce Thompson, of bottom he suddenly fell over. His father, who , Tennensw ; Supreme Master of the Exche.j.ier, j •as at work on the same building, went to his ! John P. Htumpf, of Indiana ; bupieme Keeper 1 »scue, but when he got as far as his son had ' "fu.the Jec«^s and Seal Joseph Dowda e of • - - - - - O h i o ; S u p r e m o M n s t e r - a t - A r m s . J . R u f u s Smith, of West Virginia ; Supreme Inner Guard, G. B. Shaw, of Wisconsin; Supreme Outer Guard, John W. Thompson, of the District of Columbia. fiaiKM mow he too fell over. Both died from inhal- .*»g foul gas. t Six MILLION feet of lumber, the prop­ erty of J. C. Cameron A Co., John G. Meyer, Xnapp, and Stout A Co., was destroyed by fire at St. Louis. Mo. The blaze was a formidable one. and taxed the energies of the fire depart- nient to the utmost Richard O. Adams, the defaulting Postmaster of Deadwood, D. T„ who Sd been convicted and was awaiting sentence, B escaped from the custody of the Marshal. THE 1,000 Northern Sioux lately sur­ rendered at Fort Keough are to be sent to Oicycnne River Agency, on the Missouri, it is aaid that about 1,000 more will come into that poet from Sitting Bull's camp. Sitting Bull has now with him but 100 lodges, estimated at 150 THERE seems but little prospect of the troops overtaking Victoria and his Apaches, although they have punished the Indians se­ verely. The latest news is to the effect that the hostiles have again retreated into Mexico, and that the Mexican troops have again failed to do their part in protecting the Rio Grande and intercepting Victoria... .Eighteen of the gang of Mexican Greasers who killed the American miners Conollv, Youmans and Ar­ nold, at Michauclian, in March, have been ar­ rested. YOUNG Jesse Grant, son of the Gen- Jightingmeu. The buffalo have all gone south er^ wiU ghortiy lead to the altar Miss Lizzie o f t h e M i s s o u r i r i v e r , h e n c e t h e b r e a k i n g u p o f , ' n v * ihoetilee. A COMMITTKB of citizens of Norton county. Kansas, were in St. Louis last week, so­ liciting contributions for the starving people in tbeir vicinity. They claim that 2,000 families arc absolutely destitute, owing to the failure of crops.,. .A furious storm recently visited Fort Mojave, Arizona. The military quarters were badly damaged, the officers" quarters and hos­ pital and storehouse being almost wrecked, and three of the soldiers killed Ouray, the Ute Chief, lien dangerously ill of Bright's disease at flie Hoath Ute Agency, and is not expected to lire. Chapman, daughter of land-owner. How Joseph Cook Reads and Studies. Lyman AUbott writes to the Christian Union: Joseph Cook carries a railroad "Shakespeare," and prepares his quota­ tions for his unique lecture on the "Shakespeare Conscience," on the cars. He picks up everywhere; gathers every­ thing. But in private he bewails liis treacherous memory. I never knew a student yet who did not seem to grow in­ dignant with himself over the undue pro­ portion of all that he ever learned that he habitually forgot. Mr. Cook is no ex­ ception to the rule. Yet he marvelously preserves and utilizes the results of his readings. His methods are peculiar. I violate no confidence, and I may give aid to students, lay and clerical, if I report here these methods, as he told them to me. This preserving machinery consists of three pieces: 1. He always carries with him a cheap memorandum book. In this he jots down, wherever he happens to be, a thought, a sentence, a figure that strikes him. The book fills up quickly. Then a new one takes its place. He trusts his memory to serve as an index to suggest to him the date of the reading, the inci­ dent, or the thought there noted. 2. He also carries a package of com­ mercial note paper. Any extract in a l)ook not in his own library, any fact or figure wox*thy of more careful preserva­ tion, he notes on a half-sheet of paper. These are assorted according to a few large titles. The homogeneous ones are pinned together. As the pile increases tljey are sewed. " I am going to lecture to-night," said he to me, "on 'Ultimate AimmoBti:' "I oreS<Serpts on AmenBr--a lmhdredw more--and look over them this afternoon as a last preparation^ before I go t n the platform." This method gives him the full use of his resources on each subject in each lecture. 3. He has not the contempt of some would-be scholars for the newspapers; he reads and uses them. With a red crayon he marks whatever strikes him as suggestive; throws the paper into a cor­ ner. Mrs. Cook, who is a sort of private secretary to him, as many another wife of many another busy literary man, cuts out the marked articles and lays them close in an index scrap-book. When a large store has accumulated Mr. Cook truo about John Sherman mtrlguitig to be President of the Senate, that he might be Presldout ad interim. He has told me that he has never heaad the subject broached; that he would not accept tiio placo, aa ho prefer* to be what he is now--Chairman of the Sen­ ate Committee on Financo. I hope you will find tho family In good health and eiv-rita, and I hope you will spend with >ue a peaceful and happy week of the holidays, Thi« letter may be superfluous, but the emphatic repetitions of a wild rumor iu the St. LouiM Jiepub- lican Bitggoi>t»d to me the propriety of my correcting an impression, if made on you. No serious changes in command are being con­ templated, and when they are you maybe sure that I : will give you the earliest notice. ThelV ate men, on mischief Intent, who would gladly sow the eecdfe of dimension among us ln the army. Truly your frlcrfd, W. T. SHKBMAN. The answer of Qen. Hancock to these letters was published in the Western Associated Tress newspapers of Sunday, Aug. 1. Gen. Hherman replied1: HEADQUARTERS ARMY OF THE UNIT*® SXATKS,) WASHINGTON, D. C., JalL~2, 1877. J To Gen. W. 8.*Hancock, New York: DEAR GF.NEUAL : I did not receive your most-in- terentitig letter of Dec. 28. from Caroudelet, Mo., till yesterday. I am very glad to have your views in extciU>o upon mbjecta of such vital importance. Our standard opinions are mostly formed on the prac­ tice ot our predocoKsoru; but a great change was made after the clone of the civil war by tho amend­ ments of the constitution giving to the freed slaves certain civil and political rights, and empowering Congress to make the laws nece.ssary to oninrro these rights. This power is new and uLaaJute, and Con­ gress has enacted laws with which wo aro not yet familiar and accustomed. [See pages 348, 349, aud 350, Revised Statutes, 1,989,* edition 1873-4.J As a matter 01 fact, I dis­ like to have our army used in them civil conflicts, but the President has the lawfnl fight to use tho ni-my and nary, andhss exercisod tho right, as he believes, lawfully and rightfully, aud our duty has lieen, and is, to sustain him with steal and sincerity. As to tho Presidential election, we aro in no manner required to take the least action, but to recognize him as President whom the lawfully-appointed of­ ficers declare to be Huch person. I hope ami pray that Congress will agree 011 soma metiUMl before the day and hour arrives; but, in CA3o of failure to elect by or before the 4th of March, there will be a vacancy in both the offices of President and Vico President, in which event the President of the Senate becomes President pro tempore, and a new election will have to be held under the law of 1792. [•tee'1 itlo III., Chap. I., pages 21, '22 and 23, Devised Statutes.] It is well we should compare notes and agree before thiH crisis is 011 us; but I surely hope we shall pass this ordeal safely and peacefully. I will be pleased to hear from you at any time. W. T. SHEUMAN. A BLANK. Fifteen The danger ln the compromise question, or joint- committee plan, Is that the defeated oaiuliilnte might appeal to the Supremo Court on grounds of Illegal (unconstitutional) decisions. I ant very truly yours, WINFIBLU S. HANCOCK. The correspondence olosed by Gen. Sherman writing Gon. Hancock that " The passage of the bill for counting the electoral vote, ap­ proved by tho President, ends, in my judg­ ment, all possible danger of confusion or dis­ order in connection with the Presidential im­ broglio." Fly and Spider--the Tables Turned. An old Subscriber in Australia sends to the Gentleman's Magazine the fol­ lowing: "Australia is the land of con­ trariety in regard to animal and vegeta­ ble life--such as black swans, the duck- mole, fish which climb trees, cherries with the stone outside, and veritable wooden pears!--but one fact regarding spiders and flies is equally strange, for here there is a fly which catches spiders. He is a wiry, energetic, hard-looking cus­ tomer; body, longisli and narrow; color, literally half mourning, and about three- quarters of an inch long; he builds a clay nest for his larvsB, generally inside looks, under veranda heaves, or even in cracks of wood-work, and sometimes in tho folds of curtains or clothes. In one case, while staying at a friend's house about twenty miles from Sidney, I left my water-proof coat hanging untouched for about four days, and on taking it down there was a nest neatly built in one of the folds, of abont the size of one's little finger and three or four inches in length. On replacing the coat and leav­ ing it for another few days, and then ex­ amining it, the nest was finished; it had three compartments, with one little white grub in each, and for its food several small green spiders, not then absolutely i power of speech returned, and with it dead, but apparently in a state of coma, j her memory. The period of her mental of Life TkM Wera CM t Naught. , [From the Syracuse (N. Y.) Dispatch.} lii a plain but neat little story-and-a- half white house, 149 Town send street, lives a girl named Amelia Hosch, who passed her 26th birthday on the 15th of January last. The greater part of her life--fully fifteen years--has been a blank. Ia her childhood Amelia was considered an unusually bright girl. She early learned to read and writ* both English and German, and could play the piano with considerable skill. When between 10 and 11 years of age she was attacked with fever and ague. This soon developed into hysterical fits, and in a few weeks the girl lost her reason. Her power of speech left her, and her limbs refused to support her. She be­ came a helpless imbecile, and did not leave her bed except when lifted from it. From four to eight times a night and from two to six times a day she was seized with the most violent paroxysms. Many times it was thought she was drawing her last breath. Medicines of every kind were tried, but without ef­ fect. In March, 1879, Dr. A. H. Tankle visited the girl aud made a diagnosis of her case. He combined a preparation of his own with one obtained from a pro­ fessor in Columbia College, New York. The second night after Amelia began taking the preparation she slept all night, something she had not done be­ fore in fifteen years. She began to in­ crease in flesh, and in June uttered the first words that she had spoken since •he was first attacked. Gradually her I HEADQ'BS MILITARY DIVISION or TNE ATLANTIC,1 j • NEW 1877, ( Gin. W. T. Sherman, United States Artny, Washing­ ton, D. C. j GENERAL: An anonymous communication to tho I Secretary of War, dated Louisville, Ivy., One. 1(1, j 187<>, reached my liea;l<juartern on the 27th of that month from the offiee ol' the Adjs^&ufcUeneral of tho I army. It represents that, in tbpc «H§jjip!atp<l up­ rising of the vegui«Mn4Bforc«< jy2_*»tion "of j to be eei/.ed and ie tipected to ami iiiui ViotSv,l))R Indiana army of Democrats. Tho indorf ement'ofl j this communication made at vour lieadouurter;<, dated Dec. 26, 1870, Is as followr: I (Official copy".) I " Respectfully referred to MuJ. Vjen. W. 8. Han­ cock, commanding Division of the Atlantic, who may draw a company from Gen. Kuger, command­ ing the Department of the SoutbfSmd post it at the Jetfersonvllle depot, with orders to protect it against any danger." The terms of tho indorsement Imply the eierciso of discretion on my part which leads me to wriht you before taking action. In my .judgment there is no danger of the kind the auonynious communica­ tion sets forth, or other kind, at the^effersonville de­ pot. to justify the movement of troops to that place. Such movement, it seems to mo, would involvo un­ necessary expense, and would create or increase aj>- prehension fi r which there is no real foundation. There are no arms or ammunition at Ute Jefferson- ville depot, and if such force as is referred to could be raised for rebellious purposes it is not lilcely These spiders were evidently taken out of the orange orchard, as^here were plenty of the same kind alive about the trees; but last week, while up in the mountains, I watched one of the flies carrying off a black house-spider quite as big as itself; and during the course of the day saw him three separate times, and 011 each occasion w ith a large spider. I could not find the nest; but tlie farmer tells me that he has occasionally done so, and found as many as twenty good-sized spiders of various kinds, all apparently dead, but not decayed, and generally five or six larvsa of the fly. "There is also a large spider which actually oatches small birds occasionally, and kills and devours them! Hois like a wasp in color; body, sliape and size of a small hazel-hut; legs, long and wiry; and he also looks like a hard-skinned customer. The web is always double, one about half as large again as the other, and made of such a strong yel­ lowish fiber that, if accidentally walking into it, yon feel a sensible stoppage of your way for tH§ moment. One bird-- the wreck of which I myself saw left in the web--was, rather smaller than the English wren, and the web was strong enough to stand all its struggles, although a little broken here and there. "As regards size of some spiders, we have a flat-bodied, gi'av-colored one here which builds no web, but lives under bark of dead trees, behind boards, etc., the body of which is about the size of a shilling and not much thicker, but the legs of which are quite as long as the lingers of an ordinary-sized hand, and the whole spread of the brute is about a hand's breadth. This is for the fullest- sized ones; but the common run of tliein aro five to six iuches across, aud the style in which they pounce upon and double up the smaller cockroaches is what our Yankee cousins would call 'a caution.'" v_. A Noble Habit. There are persons whom you can al­ ways believe, because you know they have tli<} habit of filing tlie truth. They do not " color " a story or enlarge a bit of newto iri'AMfflr"'*' * remarkable. There are others Whom voii hardly know whether to believe or not, because they " stretch " tilings sa A trifliug in­ cident grows in size, but not in quality, by passing through their mouth. They take a small fact or slender bit of news and pad it with added words, and paint it with high-colored adjectives, until it is largely unreal aud gives a false iinpres- i did not observe, sion. And one does not like to listen to I mix up together slumber is a blank, and she is more of a child than a woman, except in years. She tells of what, she saw in her child­ hood, and sings the songs that she used to sing in heir Sunday-school. Although she has received no instruction since her recovery, she can read, write, figure and do everything that she did bSore she lost her reason. When asked about her illness she looks at the questioner in a wandering way--she knows nothing about it. She now weighs about 140 pounds--nearly twice as much as she did before she began taking the prepara­ tion. She is a strong, healthy-looking young woman. She articulates rather slowly, but her replies are prompt and correct. While talking with the corre­ spondent she said: "I know every­ thing I used to know." She likes to talk, and embraces every opportunity to converse that is offered. The case ex­ cites the wonder of the physicians, and a great many have called to see the girl. Observation. No line can be drawn between common knowledge of things and scientific knowl­ edge, not between common reasoning aud scientific reasoning. In strictness all ac­ curate knowledge is soience, and all exact reasoning is scientific reasoning. The method of observation and experiment in which such great results are obtained in science is identically the same as that which is employed by every one every day of his life, but refined and rendered preciBe. If a child acquires a new toy, lie observes its characters and experi­ ments upon its properties, and we are all constantly making observations and experiments upon one thing or another. But those who have never tried to ob­ serve accurately, will be surprised to find how difficult a business it is. There is not one person in a hundred who can de­ scribe the commonest occurrence with even an approach to accuracy. That is to say, either he will omit something which did occnr and which is of import­ ance, or I10 will imply or suggest the oc­ currence of something which he did not evidence of the existence of man, eveijt though no part of the deposit could b#, more than 300 years old, as the lake wafi formed by an inundation ttrward end: of the sixteenth century. Development of Forest Trees. There exists a great diversity among: trees in regard to their periods of devel­ opment; somo have a brief rotation. Tho- coppice growths in Europeon forestry aro often utilized in periods of ten of- fifteen years; in our own country, too, We have many trees of short rotation, and some of the most useful and profi­ table trees are of this character. Dr. Wardner, of Ohio, in a paper on " For­ estry," sajs: The black locust may be harvested, after it has grown from twenty to thirty years. The eatalpa speciosa in the same- period will make good cross-ties and fence posts. The ailantus very soon attains a useful size, and for certain purposes has been highly commended both in this country and in Europe. Professor C. S. Sar­ gent is advising its extensive plantation, and some years ago it was spoken of as the most promising tree for the arid plains of the Southwest. The forest of Scotch pine in Germany are allowed sixty years to reach their useful size for fuel and for timbers. Tlie birch there reaches its maturity in about half a century. The willow used for charcoal needed in the manufacture of gunpowder may be cut after growing twenty years or even less. Chestnut, in its second growth, is most profitably cut every twenty or twenty- five yenrs. The beautiful wood of the wild cherry soon reaches a profitable size for many piuposes, though for saw logs and lum­ ber the tree should be larger. actually observe, but which he micon- * sciously - infers must have happened, f tO it M'l'kl ^ When two truthful witnesses contradict 1 1 ™ J* " j ^w^another iu a court of justice, itusually " --' - 1 • turns olit that one *>r the other, or some­ times both, are coAfoundihg thoi«^nfer- ences from what they saw with tlikp which they actually saw. A swears that B picked his pocket. It turus out that all that A knows is that he felt a hand in his pocket when B was close to him, and that B was not the thief, but C, whom he Untrained observers their inferences from a wealthy California j THK recent storm on the lower Texas and Mexican oout was much more destructive ttan appeared from the first accounts. The Mexican city, Matamoras, looks as if it had bttu bombarded. Over 300 houses were de- aolifchod and the streets are strewn with de­ bris. At Brazos, Point Isabel and Brownsville toe results were equally disastrous. The losses at tho various points are estimated : Browns­ ville, $250,000; Matamoras, $500,000; Point leabel, $200,000; Garrison, $50,000. Several Mexicans are reported to have been drowned. MEMPHIS dispatches furnish the par- tecnlarsof a row and a shooting bee between CI ret® backers and Democrats in Mississippi: ' Court, A. It. "The Democrats and Qreenbackers have tickets ling Electoral In the field. Both parties held ratification v1 ThH' t Ha!TV meetings at Coffeevil£. Each raised a pole, Tholna" V^01.1^ dlHtnot- Tlie Democrats had a brass band from ' Thml district rt. C. llogers (in-iiuda, which, after the pole-raising ! Colorado lletmbhcans held their conven- anarched through the street*. WlSe passCS ! faon at ^ville Aug. 2G. Gov. P.tk.n was re­ ft comer a difficulty occurred between a n JrS j nou,lnat<id f°r. (/ov^n,,,,r • G<frF W" Uo,Jl"*°n named Spearman, who was in the Democratic ! Wa* for Ll^"ant Governor; Nor- procesKion. and K. V. Pearson, Greenbank can- ' "?an ^ eldrum, for Secretary of State ; Sidate for Sheriff, which resulted in Pearson • •Jan"£A- I>a\i», for Auditor; W. C. Saunders, •hooting Spearman, killing him instantlv. Tliis i \ ,rT'uW 'T , Iv'T Supenntend- wa« the signal for a general melee, and a volley j cnt of 1 ubllc Illl,tructlon* "R * 1 *" • THE Republicans of Colorado have re­ nominated Congressman Belford The call for a Tammany State Convention in New York has been withdrawn and a convention of the POLITICAL. TUB Democratic State Convention of Delaware nominated CoL E. L. Martin for Con­ gress bv acclamation, and the following elect­ oral ticket: Charles J. Love, Dr. Whitely and George Russell. THE Republican State Convention of Iowa assembled at Des Moines Ang. 25, and nominated the following State ticket: State Auditor, W. V. Lucas ; Register of the Land Office, J. K. Powers ; Attorney General, Smith Mcpherson ; State Treasurer, E. H. Conger ; Secretary of State, J. A. T. Hall Tlie Republican State Committee of Texas, at a meeting held in Hearne, nominated E. J. Davis, for Governor, A. Siemering for Lieutenant Governor, and put a full State ticket in the field. THE Democrats of Kansas met in convention at Topeka, Aug. 26, and nominated the following ticket: Governor, E. G. Ross ; Lieutenant Governor, Thomas George ; Secre­ tary of State, John M. Griffin ; Auditor, H. J. G. Neumueber ; Treasurer, Theo. Michcttbaum; Attorney General, A. L. Hackford ; Superin­ tendent of Public Instruction, Miss Sarah A. Brown; Associate Justice of the Supreme Wagstaff. The follow- ticket was chosen : goes over, culls out those of "permanent ! that 14 w°ul<l begin l>y wizing a depot of anuy uniforms; and, therefore, if there are grounds for the action of the Go"Veruineut, I eee no danger in delay which will romiit from this presentation of the subject to you. If, however, iu your txjtter judg­ ment a company should be sent there, it ntiall Ix. promptly done as goon as you notify me to that ef­ fect. As I have already said, I do not act ut oner because in your ingtructious you say I "niny si iul company there, which I construe as leaving i; turned the - . I am ver,\ truly yours, WINKIKLDS . JIANCOCK, Major General Commanding. trf shots was opened upon Pearson, who was #bot three times, from the effect of which he died last night Two white men, Kelley and lUxldbk, friends of Pearson, were wounded. For a time a perfect pandemonium reigned." AT Leesville, Texas, William and ; regular Democracy will meet on the 28th of John Ijttlefield, prominent and wealthy stock- i VOBEI6N* A ST. PETERSBURG dispatch says that Asiatic cholera of a severe type has broken out n the Russian camx> and town of Saratoff The mortality has been great, and #is increas­ ing Advices from Eurojx- say that the pow­ ers will make a naval demonstration in Eahtorn waters, with a view toward the rectification of the Greek frontier, and that Turkey will, tinal- W, be glad to settle the matter amicably A . London dispatch announces the death of Mrs iug tlie victim at the first-named place, and Chorion Kean, formerly Ellen Tree, and at one Lynclifield Burks at the latter. Roland ltucker I tenie a ver>" famonw actress. ACCORDING to the Mark Lane Ex- prenit' last weekly review of the state of the European crops, the English wheat yield falls below the average. What in some degree com­ pensates for this deficiency is, that the yield of barley, oats and beans is alx>vo tho average. The wheat is-d^'.u&ged by blight and mildew but the crop is not lejjorted quite HO bad as la«t year. The French harvest is set down as alx>ve the average. In Holland and Belgium the vield is excellent. Throughout Germany the wheat vield wen, were killed in . a fight, resulting from an *»id feud, With families named Finney and ..Martin, | HKNBT M. SPOJTOBD, of Louisiana ' k8* '°r '0nr ê®n prominently before , public as a contestant for the seat of Sena- . ,(K *5̂ tor Kellogg, died the other day, at Bed Sulphur I Va., aged 58 years. DAIIUS and Waco, in Texas, had banging bees on the 27th ult., Allen Wright be- WES to have been executed at Palestine the same d&y, bnt he cheated the hangman by committing suicide in bin cell the night pre­ vious Four young white ruffians called at the house of a colored man near Cochran, Ga., . . broke open the door, and fired into the bouse. Hie occupant took down bin uliot-gun and blew f out tlie brains of two of them. The * others then made good their escape. ,;Co«ooer'8 verdict--justifiable homicide •• Green Ellis, a negro, has been lynched at Guth- Ut MMIIWii and robbing • white I %•' volue, and pastes or otherwise preserves them; the rest are destroyed. The Young Man that Wins. A certain brutality of manners, adopted from the English, is affected by _ „ some of OUl* young men. They answer somewhat diecretionary with me. I re harshly, affect not to see a lady to whom i em,Jer' they owe civilities, and try to become boors, even if they are not. This style is seen much in men of mixed blood, per­ haps the half Germans, half French, half j English. It is a very poor style and be­ trays the snob. It is not a common American fault, still it exists. It should lie frowned down; it is the fault of medi­ ocre men. But, as Houssaye says: "Young men are moderate nowadays, even in their follies. They are afruid of excess; they cut grooves for their voices to run in. They are bourgeois, who carefully avoid fatiguing, much more ex­ posing themselves." Haussaye does not believe, evidently, that there are Sir Philip Sidneys, "admirable Criclitons," in these days, but he is wrong. A ship­ wreck, a battle-field, a field day in Wall street, brings them to the front. Men are as noble as ever; there are as many heroes. Tlie occasion finds them, and in every office, every merchant's count­ ing-room, in all the walks of the profes­ sions are the silent heroes. What a hero is the young doctor who works day and night succoring the wounded, helping the sick, tending the dying! What a hero the young soldier who has first thor­ oughly conquered himself! What a hero is the young bunk clerk, preserving his honesty while there is temptation all around him! What a hero the young man doing honest work auywhere! He shames the pouncet-box hero; he is the Hotspur of the field of honor. Women love these heroes. They are the men to marry. The other kind" do very well for the leadership of the German, but the true women do not care for tliem. One real man entering a drawing-room with his record of work behind him will scare away the fops as ghosts retire at cock­ crow.--American Queen. She Heard the Roman Empire Fall. The Demopolis (Ala.) News tells the following story: "Our census enumer­ ator reports a colored woman on Maitin Bice's place 114 years old. Seeing that the old woman was proud of her age and her recollections of antiquity, lie asked her some questions touching Gen. Washington's horse and the Revo­ lutionary war, all of which being satis­ factorily answered, he said : ' Old lady, you must have heard the Roman em­ pire when it fell?' 'I don't sackly 'member de circumstance you spoke of now, but I heard a mighty rumblin' noise de year de stars fell, and I spec it must a ljecn dat. Things was constant fallin' dat year, and if it fell in old North Carolina you bet your bottom rag, honey, I was dar.' " folks when so much must be " allowed for shrinkage." Cultivate this habit of telling the truth in little things as well as iu great ones. Pick your words wisely, and uso only such as rightly mean what you wish to say. Never stretch a story or fact to make it seem bigger or funnier. Do this, and people will learn to trust you and respect you. This will be better than having a name for telling wonderful stories or making foolishly or falsely "tunny" remarks. There are enough true funny things happening iu the what they see with that which they act­ ually see' in the most wonderful way, and even experienced and careful observers are in constant danger of falling into the same error. Scientific observation is such as is at once full, precise and free from unconscious inference.--Professor Huxley. NEW YORK, Jan. 9, 1877. Gen. W. T. Hherman, commanding United States army, Washington, 1). O.: MY DEAR GF.NEKAL: I hare been intending to write you in acknowledgment of your two recent notes, but I have been HO much engaged iu hunting a place for winter and "gathering" up my affairs of business, an well as }«rsonal matters, owing to my recent al>sence, that I have deferred doing wo. Now I write to inclose yon a copy of a letter I addrrased yesterday to the editor of the IVorld in reference to an article (xpecial diwpatch) which appeared in that paper Sunday, the 7th. The H'urld correcta the matter in its i«Hiic of this morning. I would have preferred the publication of my letter, but. aH I gave the editor latitude an to the manner of correction, I cannot complain, I suppose. I have written to 110 one on the nubject of my order to go to the Pacific, reported \>y the newspaper*, save youreelf. I ha\o said nothing to any oue,differing in letter or spirit from what I wrote to yon, aud I have not Keen llu- ford for years or heard of him, nor do I kttow of any person who has 111 that time met or communi­ cated with him. I incloFe you a copy of the. HWiV'* publication. I am very truly yours, WINFIELI) 8. HANCOCK, Xajor OcncraL (Inclofiire.) NEW VORK, Jan. 8, 1877. MY DKAR SIR: I inclose nlip cut trom the HW«/ of yesterday (Hpecial dispatch from Washington), headed " A Iiescinded'Order. Did Gen. Hancock Kef use to Be Transferred to the Pacific Coust?" AH an authority given for the communication it seems that I Hhouid publicly notice the same, aud it would gratify me if yon would, in the manner you may deem lxist, make auch correction as would lie most likely to remove auy miHappreheutiioii on the subject. I have not received any orders transferring me from this otatlon, nor any inti­ mation of the existence or contemp'ation of such orders. Hence I did not refuse to IK: trausfcired to the Pacific coast. I have not tendered my resignation. All my information in the mutter ha* Insen derived from newspapers of the day. I had 110 onin.'iiunicatimi whatever relating to tlie sub­ ject with the authorities until after the rumor of my removal was publish'd from Wa-thiugton as ground­ less. Then (jen. Sherman wrote me a note to the same effect. I am in no wise responsible for any statement con­ tained in the dispatch in question, or for any mis­ conception which lias arisen concerning this subject from tirrt to last I am very truly yours, WINKIKLI) S. HANCOCK. To William II. Hurlbut, editor New York World. NKW YORK, Jan. 19, 1877. Gen. W. T. Sheriuan, United States Army, Washing­ ton, D. C.: MY DEAR GF.NF.SAT. : I have be"n qn te busy since my arrival, aud have not felt like writing much, «o that I have n<it written to you as I intended, in reply to your favor ackn. w'edgln,^ the receipt ot my letter from Carondeftt. I wished to n' tice simply your reference t/> the Revised Statutes and one or two other points in a brief way. I will do so yet, but not to-day, as I am house-hunting, or apartment or hotel-hunting, rather. It is too late iu the season to accomplish much here iu that way, save to pay out money and get but little satisfaction tn retur:i. The proposition for a joint committee insure* a peaceful solution of the Presidential question, if«it liec ines a law, aud, in my opinion, gives to Gen. Hayes chance* he did not have before. I have considered that Mr. Tilden's chances were impregnable. Not so Mr. Hendricks. Now it Keeins to me that Gov. Hayes has something more than an equal c!>«nce, but definite results cannot be foreshadowed. Fortunately, trouble need not be provide d against by the use of the army, should the bill become a law. If the bill passes^ and Gen. Grant vetoes it, Mr. Tilden's chance," wi!i Ix? stronger than lwfore; certainly if he and his friends Biipjjorted the measure, public opinion will strengthen his po­ sition. Deceived by Appearances. A Hartford jeweler directed the atten­ tion of a friend to a rough appearing old farmer sauntering down the street, and u remarked, "I've been worse sold on that world, and they are most entertaining j man than on any other in my whole busi- when told just exactly as they come to j nesslife." The man, fully three score pass. One has well said: " Never de­ ceive for the sake of a foolish jest, or to excite the laughter of a few companions at the expense of a friend." Dear young friends, be true. Do tho truth. Tell the truth. There are many false tongues. Let yours speak tho things that are pure, lovely, true. A Tame Eagle that Worries Dogs. Some tliree months ago, while hunting in the mountains east of the Twelve-mile House, Mr. Buffington captured a young American eagle. At the time the bird was quite small and from appearances but a few weeks old. Mr. Buffington has his pet confined in the yard back of his shop, and the many and curious monkeyshines indulged in by tlie moun­ tain bird are really amusing. Measuring some eight feet from tip to tip and weighing forty pounds, with talons three inches in length, there is but small chance for any dogs residing in the neighborhood. For as sure as a canine makes his appearance, the eagle spreads his heavy wings, and with a loud scream he lights upon the back of his terror- stricken dog. The scene that follows is one of great interest. The dog, without further notice, darts through the side gate and out into the street, with the eagle attached to his back, and that too iu a manner to stay. Down the street he goes 1 years and ten, wore shabby pantaloons, 1 rough cow hide boots innocent of the I slightest trace of blacking, a vest soiled in | front and with the back partly in tatters; , was in his shirt sleeves, without collar, ! and his head covered by a tile fashionable j many years ago. "That was about his j style," continued the merchant, "when * he dropped in at my store one day during ' the war, and said he wanted to buy a [ watch. Judging from his appearance • that he meant sometime in the future, j after the scarecrow season was over, and | that he had drawn his money, I didn't bustle around very lively to make a trade. I thought a $10 silver watch would about close out liis pile, and shoved one across the to counter him. He merely glanced at it, and quitly asked, 'Don't you keep anything better ?" This nettled me. and for a bluff I hauled out an American watch, one of the costliest we liatl in the store* worth $175 in gold, and gold was worth about 200 then. He examined it carefully, asked its price, and then to my amazement said, 4 That'll do." He dived down iuto his pantaloons pocket and af­ ter fishing out of the way a roll of green­ backs as big as your hat he hauled up a purse of gold, counted out the $175, shoved the watch into his vest poeket and walked out. You may imagine that this excited my curiosity, and after a while I ascertained who my strange customer was. He lived a few miles down the What to Say. Say "I would rather walk," and not "I had rather walk." Say "I doubt not that I shall," and not '*but I shall." Say "for you and me," and not "for you and I." Say "whether I be present or not,"" and not "present or no." j Say "not that I know," and not "that- j I know of." Say "return it to me," and not "re- ! turn it back to me." j Say "I seldom see him," and not "sel- | dom or ever see him." . j Say "fewer friends," and not "less I friends." 1 Say "if I mistake not," and not "if 1 ; am not mistaken." j Say "game is plentiful," and not "is plenty." ! Say "I am weak in comparison with i you," and not "to you." j Say "it rains very fast," and not "very j hard." | Say "in its primitive sense," and not j "primary sense." : Say "he was noted for his violence," 1 and not "he was a man notorious for I violence." j Say "thus much is true," and not "this I much is true." I Say "I lifted it," and not "I lifted it | up."' And last, but not the least, say "I take my paper, and pay for it in ad- ! vanee." j Effects of Perfume on Health. I We leam that an Itidian professor has ; recently made some very agreeable med- i icinal researches resulting in the discov- , ery that vegetable perfume exercises a j positively lieatliful influence on the at- | mospliere, converting its oxygen into j ozone, and tliurf increasing its oxidizing I influence. The essences found to develop J the largest quantity of ozone are those of, I cherry, laurel, clover, lavender, mint, I juniper, lemon, fennel and' bergamotj j those that give it in smaller quantity are I anise, nutmeg and thyme. The flowers J of the narcissus, hyacinth, mignonette, | hcliotuop^and liHy of the valley develop | ozone in closed vessels. Flowers^flestj*- j tnte of perfume do not develop it, and those which have but slight perfume de­ velop it in small quantities. Reasoning from these facts, the professor recom­ mends tlie cultivation of flowers in marshy districts and in all places infected with animal emanations 011 account of the powerful oxidizing influence of ozone. Land in London. The value of land in London is illus­ trated by two recent sales. At the auc­ tion mart, Tokenliouse yard, Messrs. Edwin, Fox & Bousfield sold, by direc­ tion of the First Commissioner of her Majesty's works, premises in Seething lane, Tower street, at £4 17s. 4d. per square foot, or at the rate of £211,992 per acre. They also sold, by direction of the Court of Chancery, ten freehold houses in Ely place, Holborn, occupying together about 13,412 feet, all with va­ cant possession, the leases granted ninety-nine years ago having expired. The total amount of sale was £34,570, being at the rate of £2 lis. 6d. per square foot, equal to £112,167 per acre. --New York Sun. ;afc- THE MARKETS. at break-neck speed. At a distance of j river and was worth enough to have about two blocks the eagle bids the dog an affectionate adieu and quietly returns, as though nothing had happened. The same experiment is gone through with whenever the dog can be procured. It does not seem necessary to remark that dogs of auy description are seldom seen in that part of the town, and the same dog never more than once. It would lx> a blessing to our city if we had one such bird on each block. It would save our pound-muster much unnecessary trouble. --Situ Jose Mercuri/. MRS. Gov. LEW. WALLACE, in describ­ ing a ride in New Mexico, says that the Mexican driver occasion ally leaped from his seat for a pocketful of stones, ami throwing them at the heads of the mules, "at the same time muttering, 011 the ledger lines below, sacred words mixed with names of saints." The Mexican insists a mule cannot l>e made to under­ stand without such Urging, and they have a proverb, "An ass's ears are made long in order to catch oaths. bought out the whole establishment. Since tlveh I haven't tried any more bluffs on plainly dressed men. You can't al­ ways tell by a man's clothes what he's got down in his pockets." Destructihility of Human Bones. An instance of the readiness with which human bones disappear is shown in the fact that the Dutch Government in 1853 drained off the great Haarlem lake, 011 which there had been many shipwrecks and naval fights, aud where thousands had found a watery grave. The canals and trenches dug to a con­ siderable depth through the rescued land are estimated to have an aggregate length of thousands of miles, and yet not a single human bone was exhumed from first to last. Some weapons and a few coins, and one or two wrecked ves­ sels alone rewarded the efforts and re­ searches of the curiosity-hunters. Here, as in cavern deposits and • river gravels generally, works of art alone furnished NEW YOKK. ' BKKVKS $6 I HOOK 5 1 COTTON i FLOCK--Superfine 3 ; WHKAT No. 2 Spring 1 ; CORN--llncraded | OATS--Mixed Western ) RYK--Western ' I'or.K--Mess 15 | LAUD CHICUJO. BKEVKS--Choice Graded Steers. 4 I Cows and Heifers 2 I Medium to Fair 4 I Hons 4 1 F 1.0cit--Fancy White Winter Ex 5 Good to Choice Spring Ex.. 4 ! WHKAT --No. 2 Spring I No. 3 Spring 1 COUN--No. 2 i OATS--No. 2 | ItvF.--No. 2 I llARi.m --No. 2 I BUTT EH--Choice Creamery | Kous--Fresh I POKK--Mess. lfl ' LAUU I MILWAUKEE. I WHEAT--No. 1 i No. 2. I CORN--NO. 2. OATS--No 2 RYE--No. 1 I BAKI.ky--No. 2 ST. LOCKS. : WHEAT--No. 2 Red COUN--Mixed 1 OATS--No. 2 I RYE S POKK--Mess. 15 I LAUD -. 50 -la lO 25 2.5 in 5 5(1 12 «>• m, 30 <rf 4 00 1 05 52 04 50 <rt, 35 «.' 87 «r S <« 75 (t 5 40 tn 3 25 «. 4 00 m 5 50 (<i f* 25 ia 5 87 (a. 77 <<( 38 «i 2ft in Ot)] 50 50 10 11 (.1 24 (a 11',. in 50 1.. 7 V* 94 in 91 ^ 38 20 (<>: 1 02 92 39 27 78 77 '.)7 9H inl 3K •jfi in 27 75 «i 80 in 15 75 «• 8 50 CINCINN \TI. WHEAT 01 <» CORN ...- 4;) OATK... :TI RYE 75 (,. POKK--Mens 15 LARK TOLEDO. WHEAT--No. 1 White . No, 2 Red CORN --No. 2 OATS--No. 2 DETROIT. FLOCB--Choice 5 WHEAT--No. 1 White Cobn--Nn. 1 OATS--Mixed lUni.EY (per cental) 1 PORK--MESS 16 INDIANAPOLIS." WHEAT--No. 2 Red CORN OATS POKK--Clear 15 EAST LIBERTY, PA.' CATTLE--Bset 4 Fair 4 Common 3 Hoos 4 SHUT 3 75 ia 16 00 7 n ; (It 8 A5 <„\ 06 93 (.. 94 i-2 <«, 48 30 M 31 00 <» 5 25 97 (S 98 42 <n, 43 35 <,i. 36 00 (a 1 50 00 (a IB 50 91 (a !>•> 40 ,u 41 29 <4 81 75 @16 00 75 - fi 5 00 25 (<i 4 50 50 in 4 00 90 ««>. 5 50 00 (i 4 25

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