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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 May 1882, p. 2

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1 '̂Wf »..« f * ** V. - H > -•S %w MURDBR MOST POUU infsantfe* a * ' * region oI PoMwfiK II^ "#m iMM fey a severe snow-storm, on On Mktf May. Three Inches of the beautiful oonnd tbe weather «m Terr ootd, and • •vemnlng bora the appearauoe of midwinter. W, IL YMadasHitJMM asanas*. to* •i; former ocok of the Baroness de Botliscluld at a salsjy of #7,(00 per annum The Court Hnh At Pittsburgh «u destroyed bv 'Hi*, nothing being left «r tbe large stooe MftHtqi* eioepl the walk* A* Uie building , was deserted for the day, tbe fire, !h« origin of which hi unknown, bad gained gra&t Headway ji ftototo it wan disoovored, and tee most that could be done wain to save the county records .'and most of die valuable books ot the law fc While • engaged in this mrk a young w, s ,.|aan w^kiiledby tt» fall of heavy plate-glass : r̂> MRS. Soor^biuB">ini>/'adT(ar&M. to , ,,%Vlecture m New York. She appeared on the > ' -- *|frge, holding % littJte girl by the band, and said V'̂ ^fetheforiy-one persoass pweat: "Ladies and ' ,. . 'Ge«itien>0a---Fa,mily troubles have made it - "' 1 necessary for me to retire immediately. I i ' liave (riven yon tbe pleasure, if it te a pleasure, seeing the sister of Gaitean. Good even- • ' log." Tbe money was refunded to the pur- • jhamra of tiokete By a collision on the Boe- ; _ Oonoord and Montreal rond, William H. f-^^jAal, inventor of the knitting-raachine, and j- •. ^altwsu •jenea, a Vermont drover, were lulled. £ ,s-;i |fc>til engines w»r<? smsahed. v» . Ton Internal Revenue Colleoto* at ;: trie, Pa. nnearthed an illicit Mill at CnioaCity.. :'<t. ,4b tbe farm of Ezra and Richard Stenrod* " ' the hqoorhad been teal Into tbe oil regMNU. V'- $• '• A dksucr from Tombstone* Arizona, "a*s the.peepW of that Temtar are highly inr jignant at tbe President's proclamation against tfce wtojm. Q ia claimed that the country >•••» *aa newer wn orderly, aad the proclamation * y enayebsre fcaomced aa an outrage. Out Paths has gone to Huunewell, . , Is*, whence be will had Into Indian Territory , a train of thirty loaded wagons,. He states '•i, V>at fifty teams left Parsons with lumber, pro- 'Vfakwtaod a printii*-offica Maj. De Lnne ; Iwiglit in Wiohib baibed win to fence 400,000 ggreaof land which be baa leased from tbe f - In a tenement block on Warren- ;.vii«oB atrMt, lb BkMtaa, Hn. Martha jKomg mam1 a knife' and assaulted her four children, Aagnat, agod 10, was killed |>y a cat across the tbroat; tbe left arms of two ather boys were nearly severed, the girl eecao- .i fngftamtfae room after. Jmt Uiteat had been * bed. The vpxnao then cot her own tombs I wrtetsla a ftightfiil manner. It seems that hostiand had left bar, tat eontrlbnted $lo - |*r week to tbe support <rf the family, and she wraa rendered almost insane by her situation. « y " ^ otciiONe struck a school-house near s!;:,:a*kefteld, Mima., lifted it up and scattered it <l\ <n*)rer tbe praiiia It was ooenpie<! by the tMch- eleven ^popite, who veA att more or leas iri, ̂ jaalaiA, three of tbem sortaining terrible m}a* ' riea. The storey oame ia afoonel-abaped cloud, . * ; t"wtaeb bonded along the prairie and passed M Jl*,tubo Htwa labs, sndbng ap witar to a height f * f IflOfeet. ...Th ̂people of Nprthfield, Minn., ^ A are gutted over an attempt-to blownphnild- • • t Sa«i b^naaoa af itfemsl maebinee. ' 7n retBUtmof the Society of thfl Ar- •' »(«ay<«f tfis VntMalw at M, LevismAaoalled to • ; ,fo««tebKaea. Sbmamh after mkkk a floral unoewratl, .Bi^op ' 'h&Mra dMivoring an address, .and exrOoV. SwwSy Wtod M.060 OB band. iMt«a wore read fronf^tae- ^metkaA tollm Mwrli.«t.' . , ^ ShaVs Oardea. £»; -Vi. m 0W4»«» Bo**i 9s hJ » ; «Nj«#of foar oat of 1,114 votes, defatted a- the delivery of winter an spring-wheat contracts Mas. Baormtm, m aa mtetriem with fjkw*)orh ̂ynwrnnad Imt iatsuteonof leetumg >|fll^p hadseeoredlOO.OW rignatttwato a pe= tttwn for tta oommatatioD of Gattaan's aes^ fwsa haaging to imprisoamens she mate* tbat Mot# and 8ankey> l^evlml made Mbm iaaaaa....JHaxt yew's tetiBkm of "*• is the aaaiversary or the bat- fffl be the orator.. for a rnnmhsiciji# a fffcona# tbeasn ̂ taaoe of tbe coort-martial being axeonted, President Arthur baa issaed tbs following order: 1, Chester A. Arthur, President of «he United States of America, to whom these premnts may °°ffj[usu|1^i the 10th day of Jaaoary, 1863, Fitx John Porter. Major General of Vol- ttatflaca la the mihtan awaioa ̂the United Statea, and also Ookmel of the Fifteenth regi­ ment of infantry and Brevet Brigadier General in tbe United States army, was, by general oonrt-martial, for eertain oaenaee of wnich ha had been thereby oonvkAed, sentuwed "to be cashiered aad to ba forever disqualified tram holding any oOoe of trust or profit under tbe Government of tbe United Stateaaad fnnu, On On Slit of January, 1863, tbat sentence was duly oonfirmed by the President of the United States, aad by ate order of the same date carried into exannkm ; and Wsiuuub, So mnoh of tbat sentence as for- ever d squalified said Fita John Porter from holding office, whnosad upon him aa a continu­ ing penalty, is stal being executed ; and Whf.rrab, DoaMr having sinoe arteen oos~ oermug tbe gnilt Of aid Ftte John Forter of the offense whereof he «k convicted by said conrt-martial, founded upon the result of tbe investigation ordered on toe 13th of April, 1878, by the President of tho United States, which are deemed by ma to be Of suflMent gravity to warrant & remission of that pm of the sentenoe which has not been oompletely executed; -Jtew, therefore, lenote ya That I, Chester A. Arthur, President of tbe United Statea, by vir­ tue of tbe power vested m me by the oontttitn- tion of tbe United States, and in ooosidesation of tbe premises, do hereby grant to said Fits- John Porter a full remission of the hereinbe­ fore-mentioned continuing penalty. ©HKSTRm'JL Aanttm. The United States Supreme Conrt denied the petition for a writ of habeas oorpus ia SergL Malm's case. The ooort decided the ooort-martial bad tall jurisdiction to try Mason for the offense charged ; that its proceedings were all within Its proper Jurisdiction, and the sentence pronounced was not. in excess of its power It is proposed to provide for the re­ tirement of non-commissioned officers in the army at three-quarters pay. Goqgress will, it is believed, favor tbe measure....The President hs« signed tbe Chinese Emigration bill, and it is now a law of the land. Chakles H. Rkkd closed his argu­ ment in the Guiteau case on tbe 10th inst, by objecting to the eridence of Or. Fordyce Barker and Mr*. Dcnmore. He appealed to the conrt to save the jadiciary from the disgrace of send­ ing an insane man to the gallows The pro-. .. .... . . ,rule Board of Agrioaltare reports an in tbe condiUunof winter wheat sections of tbe State. No da^ge has fasaltod fipn ebtneb bugs. The yMd promises tebaStoSperMat better than tbe average. Wisoonsin was visited with qatte an the 10th of Miy. . 'T~" m reported from eennty, fla Imtm Emory, nearly 100 ^feanef age, killed Us wWe fey beati^ her to It is said that atvanens pcMal for a new Arctic expedition finds favor in Washington, chief among its opponents being Secretary Chandler. Skcbktaby Tklueb propoaes to dia- ann tbe Indians on all the reservaUona, aad thai use tbe troopc to take the weapons from roving bands. He insists that the Ward* of the nation etialt be treated pretty nearly the same as the whites, and be punished in the civil courts for misdeeds Maj. G. J. Lydecker, who has charge of improvements in the harbor of Chicago, haa been appointed by President Arthur one of the Commissioners of the District of Columbia, to succeed Maj. Twining; deoeased. Mrs. " Betty" Mason made a strong appeal to the President on behalf of her husband. He promised to toy tbe matter at the pardon bef<m the Cabinet, WBWBRAI. A ooyprmnuBLE quantity of Am^ari- esn' bacon (ay at Havre for aoaie months, 'awaffiiig inspecfion with a microscopa The owner revehged himself by ordering it re­ turned, and sold it in New York at an advanoe •( mtit* per pound. , , , A dispatch fiop Victoria* & CL, sajs: "Within the last forty-eight hours ooe steamer ud t^ro.sailing vessels have arrived from Hong long With 2,1W Chinese." l*b stated from Washington that Che Stele Department aad tike Government of Mexi ko aiis ia dorrespondence looldag tb an arraroe- ! meat to preveat sueoeasfal Iadian outbreaks I on the border. The Government of Mexico j. seems aaposed to grant the privilege af erosa,- ; Ing into Mexktan territory m pursuit of the | bo^ilM practically aa was done under tbe S famous "Ord order," but they want tbe light ! asked for through diplomatic utitmufr ' glutted in due form if stall, aad not taken by Tbs? twenty-seeond annual oaoTention at the United States Brewera' Associatioa met ia WasMngtoo. There were 100 delegates present The President's address showed by analytical tables tbat there was a, remarkable increase ia the growth of the beer traffic and of the revenue derived therefrom.... .The Watch­ makers' and Betail Jewelers' Guild of tbe United States held their annual meeting at Dubuque, Iowa. I* obedience to public sentiment, Mr. James Gordo^ Bennett will abandon bis pro­ posed .Arctic expedition, which was to have man on a much grander seal0 than tbat of the ill-fated Jeannette. > As taking s walk in Stunnix Park, DubUa, afbw dinner, Lord Frederick Oaven- OMnr Chief Secretary for Inlaod, and Burite, Uta Under Seorstary, were waylaid and murdiirlijby "four assaerins, wtto bad evidently thoroughly prepared them­ selves for tbe bloody deed. Two Of tbe miscreants retained their (teats in the oar in wbioh the quartette bad driven to tbe park. The other two, armed with kuivnt, 4made a simultuneon* attack on th<* two d»> fensslsss and unsuspwstmg gentlemen. With the feroeity of banditti tiiey cut aud sloshed at tliein,victims, who mnde a desperate but una­ vailing struggle for their lives. ItatHH-xr* that the two murdered officiate left the Under Sec­ retary's house at>out 7 o'clock in the evening to walk over to tbe Chief Secretary'*) | agement of tbe residence. While passing Oirough the paik I toriou- prisoner they were attacked by four men wearing slouched hats. It is supposed'that Mr. Burke waa first assaulted and stabbed througn the heart. Lord Frederick Cavendish attempted to defend him, but he, too, was stabbed by the assassins. They repeatedly plunged their knives into the breasts of their victims, and. having cut their throats, they got on a car and drove rapidly from the park. A boy named Jacob states thnt white birds- nesting in the park he saw, about 200 yards from where he was and close to the road, a group of men aa if wrestling. He thought they were roughs, and did not pay attention to them. Ho then saw two inen fan to the ground, and four others jump on a car and drive off toward Chapeligod, which lies in a direc­ tion epposite to the city. They drove at a rapid pace, and he eonld not give any description of the appeanfttee of ihe m< n, A gentlen.'sn named Maguire and a friend, who were on tricycles, shortly before had passed Mr. Burke and Lord Frederick Gavendinh when on their way along the main road through the park, and on their return journey they found the Chief Secretary lying ia the center of the oftmageway and Mr. Burke prostrate upon the pathway. Bot h gentlemen were lying in large pools of blood. .They informed tbe police at Park Gate Station of nhat they bad seen. The police at onee proceeded to the soene of tile murder and conveyed the bodies to the hospital. On ex­ amination it was found Mr. Burke had received several stabs near the region of the heart and throat bad been cut almost completely •>W'% _ bat married and killed afl oi tbem in tbe most brutal and cold- id manner. Upo» the eoMa of eaehrvic- it is eaid he places marks showing tbe num- bebas killed up to date. Tbe coffin that teiaed the body of bis late note waa found be masked seven. A mom: appalling storm disaster oe- at tbe ooal sainea, three ndBhM from ter statioa, on the Missouri, Kansas and Texas railway, ia the Indian Territory. Two i*ftotms esma from tbaaoatbwast aad tbe sooth- -- -- w e c o m p t e t e l y d e m o b a b e d / a n d Wtod^^iWgkaandabeBttorty SK&jad j ̂aas aad b^Uan XmiUxr. - •! ̂ -A iuliM and falsi termination |f# tt»e bm*0u*Mu as ploits «f three desperadoes • >^)Wtfd from WUte ©ounly, N. a Tbe Emuikiib MELTXLiii sends a cable­ gram from the Lena delta, in Bussia, announo- i»r that tho corpses of De Long and party haw? been fonnd, with all their papers and books, and that search for Chipp would be continued. Intelligence has reached St Petersburg to the eOeot that thirty-aemi persona on board tbe IMgers were lost Amain Yovaa, ifho waa reeently ar­ rested in Londcm for Uirwtfflim the life of Queen Victoria, has been committed for trial. .Davitt was released from Portland prison on tbe 6th inst, and immediately left for London, accompanied by Parnell, Dillon and O'Ketly.... ^«orrae*ed dispatch from Secretary Hoffman it St " ttoea .mm b*& .pmnlm lioaao of a ^me^nnmte toe wa other twe, in attempting to saclpe, knocked out the lever, whicn caused the epemnit thev had msd« to across. His clothes were completely saturate _ with blood, and the hemorrhage must have been tremendous Hw clothes were alio torn. His gloves had been torn in many places, and his hands bore markH suggestive of a fierce en­ counter with hie assailants. Lord Frederick did not wear gloves. He had been stabbed in several place* about the chest. One wound was through the right lung and penetrated deeply. At th ̂time of the dreadlnl occurrence the park, as might be expected on a lovely evening, was crowded in many placet with people. The.news rapidly spread, aad created tbe wildest excitement and consternation in the city. Lord Cavendish was 16 years old. He waa tii® second surviving son of the seventh Duke of Devonshire, ana was educated! at Trinity College, Cambridge, He entered upon hm po­ litical career :n 1859, when he became the Pri­ vate Secretary of Earl Granville, then President of the Council. This position he held until 1864. Since 1865 he had represented the Nortb- west Biding of Yorkshire in Parliament Mr. Burke, the other victim of the has been Under Secretary since 1870. Phcsnix Park, where the awful atrocity was perpetrated, ia to Dublin what Hyde Park is to - London and Central Park is to New York. It is essentially the a People's park," where the citizens of Dublin, without any regard tb class distinctions, meet upon an equal footing, the splendid equipages of tbe urutocraey mingling with the general throng of the popuuoe. It ii generally regarded as one ot the finest parks in Europe, and oovers an area of 1,750 acres. The leaders of the Land League have issued & manifesto, denouncing the murderers. It is signed by Earned, Dillon and Davitt The Land Leaguers in America express abhorrence at, the enme, and urge their brethren in Ire­ land to use every effort to bring the awaadns to justice. The remains of Lord Cavendish were oon- veyedon a gun-carriage from the Vioe-Rega Lodge ia Dublin to the wharf and placed-on board the steamer. A detachmoot of drtgqons serred as an eecort ' Earl Spenoerwas recMved with enthusiasm in the streets of Dublin. Sir Chariot* Dilke declined tbe Chief Seontaryship of Ireland because he was not promised a seat in the Cabinet A gensw4'"Vetea»e ot stiapects will not take place at present. Charles Moore, recently returned to Ireland from the United States, was arrested at Maynooth, on suspicion of being concerned in tbe assassination at Dub­ lin. When captured he almost fainted. In moving the adjournment of the HcAise of Com­ mons, Mr. Gladstone raid the Government would recast all arrangements. He stated tbat he would ask leave to introduce a measure for tbe repression of crime in Ireland, and also a biL\ dealing with tbe question of arrears of rent Sir Stafford Northcote promised the support of the opposition. Mr. Par­ nell aaid he believed the murder was com­ mitted to frustrate his cause, and waa the work of those to whom he had always been op­ posed. Tbe Manchester Guardian, a leading Radical, organ, says the crime is traceable to the Fenian party, recruited mainly from America, who again interfered when they saw conciliation probable. It says it is a desperate and malig­ nant conspiracy limited to a small number of persons. Gladstone himself is of tbe same opinion. The Marquis of Lansdowne gave notice in the House of Lords, on the 9th test, that he would drop the motion against the Irish policy of the Government, but askgd that there be no yield­ ing to popular demands without the adoption of compensating measures for strengthening the- law. George Otto Trevelyan was appointed Chief Secretary for Ireland, and a new election was ordered for Hawick. * Hamilton, permanent Secretary to the Admiralty, has gone to Ireland to take Bnrke's plaoe fer six months. An important development in connection with the murder of Lord Cavendish and Mr. Burke was obtained by tbe Dublin authorities on the 9th inst It appears that two young men em­ ployed in a railroad shop were witnesses of the tragedy. They were riding through Phoenix Pare on bicycles when tbe four assassins at­ tacked their victims, and the natural impulse m vsttfl of the facte. In Mr. Gtikias , *100,000 for Lnoten Young trodteed an aet lor _ Porter. On the ttil tal Department bf AftfoDtorek KpeMtie* Were made by Messrs, fiarasatsr, Geddes, Jhflh and Mold row. Tim Speaker«%Ued to*the chair for two days Mr. Borrows, or Michigan. The House IMC Oooualmioti bill wss passefc y the Senate, on tbeMh inst., by a vote of 89 4> 19. The Committee on tbe District of Oe- iambi* was instructed to inquire into the asa- iSiLit Mag aheged tint a no- holds d^lyWeee.-The bill to | establish a Court of Appeals was discussed, ! without action. Tbe Superintendent of the ! Cen«na petitioned for afurther appropriation i of $80. WW to. defray expenses. A batch of House billK were passed, donating condemned cannon for monumental purposes. Mr. McDill introduced a hill for a wagon bridge between Council Bluffs and Omaha, Tbe President nominated H. C. Miller, cf Minnesota, Consul at Guayaquil; F. W. Oakley, Marshal for the Western dwtrict of Wisoonsin, and P. R. Cor- l^tt, ila'uhiil for Kelada. In the House of Rupreaeiitativeg, on the bill to en­ large the power® Of the Department of Agr culture, after half a dozen speeches-, Mr. Tawmhmd offered an amend­ ment, which was adopted, that tbe Secretary of Agriculture shall be an experienced agricultur­ ist. Mr. JOunnell offend an amendment pro­ viding tor a division of forestry, which was adopted, A substitute for the original bUl, of­ fered by) Mr. McKenna, was rejected. The previous question was ordered, and an adjourn­ ment was taken. The bUl for intermediate Appellate Courts was taken up in the Senate oh the 10th inst Mr. Jones, of Florida, opposed the section limiting the appellate jurisdictioa of Circuit Courts. Mr. Davis raffed its retention' as nec- •wary. A Joint resolution wss passed appro­ priating •40,000 to supply the deficiency for fuel and lights ia buildings under the ccfhtroi of the Treasury Department A bill was passed to establish an assay office at Dead wood, Dakota. Tbe House, by a voe ot 172 to 7, passed the bill creating an Executive Department of Agriculture. The conference report on the Indian Appropriation bill was agreed to. By a vote of IN to 18, the District of Columbia Appropriation bill was passed. Some debate on the Geneva Award Mil followed The United states Senate passed a hill on the 11th inst for the leliefof L. H. Day, of New Orleans, who purchased mortgaged land under the Confiscation aet, when the Government ofii- eers represe|»ted that it was free from incum­ brance. When the bill for intermediate Appel­ late Courts oame up, Mr. Morgan said it had been hinted that the President would appoint a number of Democrats to the new Judgeships, and he spurned the overture. Messrs. Dawes and IngMla expressed ^ie opinion that such negotiators deserved to be impeached. Mr. Davis proposed an amendment which was adopted, that the juridiction of Circuit Courts shall re­ main unchanged. The Indian Appropriation Mil, as reduced by the conference committee to #455,200, wsa passed. In the House, Mr. Hberwin reported a bill for the annual appro­ priation of $10,000,000 fbr the next five years, to aid in the fctipporrof free schools, the amount to b® apportioned on the basis of illiteracy. Mr. Bioe made an adverse report on the bill to shorten to two years tbe period required ia homsateading. Mr. Steele, reported favorably a bill for a retired list for non-commissioned ofllcer* who have served for thirty yeurs. The Speaker presented a commu­ nication from the Seoretary of War, stating the expenditures of tbe Signal Servioe Bureau for the past seven years, The Intermediate Appellate Court bin was passed in the Senate, on the 13th Inst., by a vote of 82 to 18. It creates nine intei mediate courts, or one in each existing circuit, and eighteen n£w Circuit Jridges, wbo ars to be ap­ pointed by tbe i PrMfteoti first term will begin in November of thMMsr. A hill was also passed to authorise, thsMHbmis and San Fran- ciaeo Railroad ,Qqm>MiaMB|to». tti* AAsiwiis over at Vm Barm. -B|pet|s of eopfsreuce committees on tbe agricultural and for­ tification appropriations were adopted. The House passed a bill to provide for the re­ moval of the remains of Mimater Kilpatrick from Chili to the United States. The Geneva Award bill was passed by 132 to 66. Conference reports on the Agricultural and Fortification bills were agreed to. Mr. Crapo endeavored to ceil np tbe sot to extend the charters of nation­ al banks, but the Democrats refused to vote. * r"r ;5 .'•V Vfr'i w L 111 ADKTtdlf AL HEWS. „ ' ' t nrapoMfi wMHto ft mmm i ttif MaM - acu tester SVto 27. K in an aASami>t t making flH(|ings eayhwfrs^t to wf Bsrwssentstives, Mr. Bragg in- rsKef of Fits John the scops of the atatPe^^jaw.̂ no lives were tost by | of two men to rush to the sssistsnee of U^ted States stumer Bod|- j Cavendish and Burke was checked bjrthe threat LmkiUM bay... .Quaes Vietons f<l- , that if thev annratehaliiMrM Mia f . . , bay--Qusea mally dedicated Epptng forest to the free uss Of-the public, in preeetioe of nearly half a mill­ ion of peopi«L A St. Prbb8bc8« dwpaioh kji the Senate ass Court of Appeal has decided the decree banishing tbe Jewish apothecaries ille­ gal...The false prophet wbo appeared in Soudan has been lined and his followers dia- •, whicn caused ! P®rsed. ttoy bad msde to dose Just { Tbb Irish Bepablioan Brotherhood asttny were about hsif way out, crashing L. < "T ̂ both to death iuabouthalf snhour... .The con- * proclamation in Dublin justify "J** tte MethodW Cburcfa Skmtb, la Bae- i°g the Cavendish-Burke murder oa the ground l..!7l r, rTrted th&t darinK the past that " the moiwter Burke had preyed npou the popd^ m^^^pr^ntt ̂! aV°* *** '°r W* countrymen for many v ,ft. MUDUIa <rf Congress frpm Mnhie ' ̂ex-Secietary Blaine sopinM to bs re- '• to ̂Senate. He will probably eater 1' ss a candidate tor Senator to r'y •; i JxM aaserted by » Waektogtm Mend ' thafOfn. Chalmers, late the BefMsentetive of , ihs "Shoestring* distrietaf Mjasissippi, will head the Independent movement in tw SfftSfefift***proi#*^ b*okiag^ Gs9r,>A*msA»BaATKB was nominated by annlewstton fer Governor of Peaneyivama by the OtaAu Befmhliean Convention at Harris- WflMam Heary Bawls, of Phiia. <g4^e,j |̂sjy1^f> th£ ^."Hoytaud mmmm <ks miMm^rde^b Of Oen. Garfield. § •' «#»*'«speMicW«tate Tea Proddea* has pardosu^l FUx- Mm Porter. all be eould do^vndar Ihs flawMrin of Attoney Gsosnl Brews- " th^: 4JmhWtt^djMPossd years," and that Lord Cavendish was one ot a family who, sa landlords, had been guiltv of! wholesale evictions.. Parnell is accused oi in­ juring tbe cause of Irish freedom... .The «itu-i ation in Egypt is again of a threaten­ ing character, and the active intervention of Kngland and France, very likely backed by an army, will be at onee necessary. The that if they approached nearer the bfoody knives would be tnrned on them. They therefore •ought safety ia flight A Dublin dispatch of the ltth inst Says that "Sir William T. Harooort has been sp-: prised tbat m Iruhmsn now m Liverpool claims to have refuse# m offer of £100 in Duhlm to assist i«i the murder of Oavendish and Burke, and says he esa put his hand on the asBiwMtis." The New York Herald?a eorrespoiident cables from London on the 11th: " It is understood the Irish Mil is now eomplete, aad that it pro­ vides, sit complicated ways, for reform* in arrears, dividing soncesaions between landlord* and tenants with tolerable evennees, snd is, in this respect nes^r idsntlaal with the bill drawn by Parnell." DOiKM OP 90901 _ an army, win be at onee neoessary, antecoBism long existing between tbe Khedive on the one side and tbe Ministry and the Chamber of Notables on the other, de- vetoped into mi open rupture of ratettons and a deflanoe of the Khedive's authority by the Min­ istry At the funeral of the {ate Lord Cavendish, at Chatewortfa, 5,000 tenants of the Duke of Devonshire, father of the 3S* ^ »"ead*no« j was estimated at S0.066 Among the tohitf movnem were tbe Duk« of Devonshire, tbe Marquis of Hartington, Lord Edward Caven­ dish, Mr. Gladstone and Lord Granville The Emperor William of Germany is the great­ grandfather, and Queen Victoria the great- grandmother, of a hew Prince reoently bora to the sen of the Grown Prince Frederiek William. ... .Michael Davitt in New York, st formatioa ***** T& xne IHM0110 uoverament is discussing the pro- ITJS P?bUe l«»edure ' ^^^?™!*1"t®PI*^iBins»ytothe tnstitu ! andentoed Par n^ haa ippitod for and reeeived protection, owfagto. ruaiors enrreut and to tfueateniiMr lettem be has received to the effect that be is a marked man.. A terrible soal-minsex^o. ^oa is reported from Bochum, in WetCpbi^ •tnsstei with great lose of lite: » . • . • After having engaged the attention of the House of Representatives more or leas for six weeks, the biU authorizing a Tariff Commission passed tbat body on the 6th inst, by a vote of 161 to 85, The following Democrat* voted in favor of tbe bill: Morse ot Boston. BHsi of Brooklyn, Sooville of Buffalo, Harm and Hons of New Jersey. Ennentrout, Curtiri. Klotz, Mosgrove, Mntchler, Randall and Mori:«u 11. Wi«e of l^eiinaylvania, Chapman and T»IIm»U of Maryland. Barbour and George D. Wl»e of -- Ifoge, Kenna _ and- Wiis<>M (the •uownnuue sreoenek WiUiam. !e^f3^bl?«r,un to bating thist 'be has private ln- ist he u to be sacrificed to sat- S.1 / I doo9t rekoleet doing enny thing thai A just a little sshamed ot tat what •nmbody xesaembered it, and voe sore, «te» ia a while. to pat am in Baindor it whole delegation) of West Virginia, Speer of Georgia, Goldsmith W. Hewiti and Shelley of Alabama, Upson of Texas, Eiiis and Gibson of Louisiana (representing the sugar- planters), Cleardy of the Cnroudelet district in Missonri. snd Atherton of the Tn«asr&wss dis­ trict in Ohio--total 27. The Republicans who voted against the bill, were : Beiiord vf Col­ orado, Cutis, Harwell, McCoid mad Updegraff of lowa, Dunnell and W&ehborn of Minnesota, and Orth of Indiana--total, 8. No GreSnbaeker voted against the bill except Jonas of Texas. A resolution was adopted F"!* ̂ to withdraw his pspsrs 11s the Alabama contested-election case. Mr. Habbell introduced a bill to create a depart­ ment and a®wt»nr of Agriculture. There was no seen on of the Senate. A bltt was introduced fea tha Ssnstei on Ms 8th inst, anthcrisiag ths Presidec^ to appoint Fits John Potter a Colonel, or {ftaee trim en Che retired list with that rank. A Mil was repotted appropriating *900,000 to extend the Kxeeative Mansion. Tne chair named IRELAND. Bladstoa^s •agrssalan Act« In the British House of Commons, Haroourt, Home Secretary, in introducing the MA for the repression of crime in Ireland, characterised the prevalence of crime there as a national dis­ grace. He said: "Tbe time has arrived for the entire House to unite ia taking stops to repress It. The ease we deplore to-day is no! solitary. Crime is a plague-spot oa Mand, andl believe the Irish people desire this removed. It springs from secret societies, and must be extirpated. Tbe mainspring of crime ia the expectation of impunity, which is only too well founded. The Government has, therefore, oomluded it is nec­ essary, in those places where the ordinary iaw is not observed, to create special tribunals, con- sisting of throe Judges to be appointed by tbe Lord Lieutenant, to try cases without jury. The judgment of the court must be unanimous. Appeal can be made to the Supreme Court, Judgment of the latter to be given by a. major­ ity of Judges. The Supreme Court may di­ minish but cannot increase the severity of the sentences. Parliament will be asked to provide special remuneration for the apeciai Judges. The bill also contains the following provisiona : It gives power to search for secret apparatus of murder, such aa arms, threatening letters, etc.; power to eater- houses - hp.... .4ay or nifdit, tinder - wermnt of the Lord lieutenant ; power to arrant persons prowling about at night and unable to give an account of them­ selves, who are to be dealt with summsrily ; power to arrest strangers, as the . crimes are fenerallv committed by foreign emissaries, tbe ospitality of England not being for such per- son* as the agents of O'Donovan-Bosaa; and power to remove foreigners considered danger- otu to peace. The Government, therefore, in­ tends to revive the Alien act Secret societies will be dealt with summarily, and membership thereof will constitute an offense under this act Cases of aggravated assault will be treated in a summary manner. Power is given to repress intimidation and unlawful meeting*, tb© latter to be dealt with suinmanly. Newspapers containing seditious and in­ flammatory matter will be suppressed and the proprietors required to enter into recognizances not to repeat the offense. Justices can compel tbe attendance of wit­ nesses about to abttcond, and the Lord Lieu­ tenant can appoint additional police where ne­ cessary at the cost of the districts concerned. Compensation for murder and outrage will be required of the districts where ihey occur. Outrages will be dealt with summarily by the courts, which are to conaist of two stipendiary magistrates. The Government reserves for consideration ai^y further alteration of the jury system-" The Homfe Becietarv admitted tbat the bill was extraordinary, but necessary to meet ex-' inordinary circmin<Wuoe*. The operation or t <o bjty -will be l mited to three years.' The* <tovarnibest would do all in their power to prevent innoceut persons suf­ fering from the action of the bill. He added that toe bill placed almsot unlimited authority in the hands of the Lord Lieuteusnt and son- eluded by atating that the measure would shortly be followed by one dealing with arrears of rent Haroourt stated that the Government bad considered the question of instituting a military tribunal, but had oome to the conclusion that a resort to such a measure was undeairahte. After a brief debate the bill was passed to its first reading by a vote of 827 to 22. Tbe minority was oemposed entirely of Home Bulers. Parnell said it was the most stringent measure vrer proposed, and that it would re­ sult in a bundled fold greater failure than Dillon aaid the act hands of as- | HawtoyT Harrison, CockmU snd Pugh ss the eeauaiEttee to invertigete the shargsoteomn- toon ia eonaeetion wNh the HO relativs te &. what had gone before. would bring disaster, destroy all faith in ulti­ mate justios, and p^yinto the It m said th&t Bitting Ball haa become a thoroughbred loafer, being too lazy to do any hard work except eating. It breaks the baek of tbe aoble red man 4? keep him in oat of the weather. 7n hsM a sesslott at te hold Gbe eonTentkm in onsMHcSetoirSioh above idsist fiorGarftaidsnd Iw a mm pine t.--,'----_- east of %ttta, Wis., wild ptge<*fc have «at»b- lished a roost, half a utile wide and ten nMW long, every tree containing twenty or more nests--The excursion train carrying several hundred membeis of ths Missonri Pram Asso­ ciation with their wives from St Louis to Gal­ veston, Texas, was run into by a freight en­ gine near Oswego, Kan. The editors escaped with a severe shaking up..... Pateey Devine, who three years ago muraered Aaron Goodfsllow, in Bloomington, IlL. hanged ia the jail at Clinton, dying like a "game " man, anddsnying his guilt in a speech from the scaffold. He atated that bis rs2 name wasThomas Coyne :tbat he was born in Cincinnati, and had served a term of sixty days in the bridewell at Chicago. After tbe tnuredv he was captured at Port Jervis, N. ̂ *nd was twice oonvicted and sentenced to deato, the Supreme Court setting aside tho first trial. Mator Graob prmided over a meet­ ing of Irishmen in New York, held to denounce the murder of Cavendish and Burke. One hundred policemen were stationed about the doon, ana O'Donovan Rowa, who occupied a central seat, wa< closely watched by officers. Mrs. Parnell was loudly greeted. Richar,! O'- Gorman wae interruptea by a call for three cheers for the assassins At the sale of the Oxford Park herd of Jersey entile, in New York, cowd sold for $3,700 and $8,550 each. Business failures reported to New York from various parts of the country for the week, 117, distributed as follows: Eastern States, 17; Western, 40: Southern, 86; Middle 10; Pacific coast and Territories, 9, and New York city and Brooklyn, 5 Tho Faure sys­ tem of electnc light and force seems to be a successful application of the new light for bouse illumination. On hervovage from France the steamship Labra­ dor, wnich used six electric lights continuously only used one-fiftieth of the electricity stored in the accumulators«„. .The New,York Spirit of the Times, speaking of the entries for tne July races at Chicago, says it ia " the largest number of entries ever made for any trotting meeting in the world." According to the report for May by the Statistician of the Department of Agri­ culture, at Washington, the average condition of winter wheat for April was higher than for many years past, and the average throughout the country is 100. A cable dispatch from London says that " disappointment is generally expressed at the failure of the polios to discover anything important concerning ths identity of the assas­ sins, and the feeling is growing that they have escaped. Many arrests have been made, but do clew haa been found. Parnell, O'Kelly and Davitt have gone to Paris to see Eg an, Treas­ urer of the league. This gives color to the statement that a break is in pro­ gress between the Parnell and Bossa factions of the Irish sympathizers. Fears are enter­ tained among the league members lest Parnell's and Davitt's conciliatory course should alienate the sympathy and cash of the Irish in AmwH^. They have gone to Paris to look over the situa­ tion with Efcan. The rumor that Parnell sought the protection of the police is wholly unfound­ ed." Mr. Barret, a farmer in Bellmullett, County Mayo, was mortally shot by some un­ known person. He had his land, under a T-""* League warning. THE TUBERCULAR PARASITE, 'Use Remarkable Discovery of a Oee> man PliyikftciaiB* (From tho Chicago Tribune.] That monster, consumption, which the poets have described as horsed on the east winds and shooting his fatal arrows broadcast, it would nofr aeem baa at last been brought to bay by science. The great discovery of the splenetic fever-producing bacilli by the eminent ferooch physician, Pasteur, and his cure by inoculation, which produces a mild disease instead of a severe one, has bean followed by a discovery that promises to be mom important in ite re­ sults By Dr. Koch, of Bertie. 'Dr. Jhuteur is saving tbe lives of sheep and cattle by inocula­ tion with the bacillus after it has been modified in its character by cultivation in the bodies of bo vines. Dr. Koch may yet save the lives of human beings from tbe results ,of diseases hitherto considered incurable by a very similar process. v Prof. Tyndall, who has carefully studied Dr. Koch's experiments, and who, it will be remem­ bered. was the original discoverer of the bacteria and their insidious danger to man, haa written to the London Timet his impressions of Kooh's discovery. In the oourra of his examinations he found in every rase that ths tubercles con­ tained a parasite, the bacillus, and' that it wss this minute organism that produced the tu­ bercle, and, truisferring by inoculation tbe tuberculous matter from diseased to healthy animals, he never failed to produce the disease. He developed severn generations of the bacilli without the intervention of disease, and these puriflod parasites in every cue also generated the disease. These experiments were so many times re­ peated with different animals and in different forms that there can remain no doubt that Dr. Koch has discovered what has never been known before--the origin of consumption and of other diseases like pneumonia and phthisis. This is a great ste|> gained. The cause discov­ ered, it now remains for science to find tbe remedy that will destroy theae parasites and prevent their recurrence by inoculation or some other form of cure. Paateur'a remedy, in cases of splenic fever, as we have already said, is in­ oculation with the bacillus after it hat; been modified in character by cultivation. Dr. Koch has attempted a similar modification with tbe tubercle parasite, but after repeated cultiva­ tion tbe virulence remains. Prof, tyndall and those competent to pronoun*« an opinion, bow- ever, believe that the intensity of virulence will be greatly diminished by future experiments in cultivation.' Meanwhile it ia not a secret in the medical world, or at least among some of the more emi­ nent physicians, that Dr. Pasteur himself haa Tans. I'uwrwwntu of a inghiy interesting char­ acter in the destruction or tntwe parasites. If ia well known to all surgeons tbat carbolic acid is very efficacious in destroying bacteria in gun- shot wounds, sword-cuts or other injuries of this kind, and that the proper use of its agency has been hindered by its impurity. Dr. Pasteur found it upon analysis to contain traces of poison and foreign substances that were harm­ ful enough to prevent its perfect operation, and suoc^eded in removing them and produc­ ing a perfectly pure acid, with which he has been experimenting by hypodermic iujeotions with lemarkable success in cases of consump­ tion aad ite kindred diseases, ss well as cancer. '•Where the diseases were long-seated and the patient too weak and too far gone to resist tbe dMftatsBj he has prolonged life, and in the in­ cipient stages he has cured m almost every case. Consumption is the ghastliest snd most deadly foe that confronts the human race. It is almost universal. It is no respecter of par­ sons or of nations. Dr. Koch himself says tbat "If tbe seriousness of a malady be meas­ ured by tbe number of victims, thnrt the most dreaded pests which have hitherto ravaged the world--plague and cholera included--must stand far behind the one (consumption) now under coaaideration;" and tbat one-seventh of the deaths of the unman race are due to tu­ bercular disease, while fully one-third of those wbo die in active middle age are carried off by the same cause. Important as Dr. Koch's dis- 00very is, the greater one remains--namely: tha jwmedy. Having gained one vantage in tile eombat with the destroyer, it ia to Be honed ecienw will press on until tbe victory is eten- pteta, . The Bridal Package. Nearly every bridal couple that cornea to Washington--and Washington is tbe national bridal Mecca--visits the treas­ ury vaults. The young and invariably interesting couple want to closely in­ spect Uncle Sam's plentiful shekel*. When they enter the vault the man ia charge of it, after a few preliminary words of explanation, bauds down a package of notes from a shelf and tells the bride to take it in her hands. He then explains that this package eon- tains $20,000, (KM) in Unitea States treas­ ury notes. The young lady is delighted to be able to go away and say that she has had so much money in her own hands. She is just too utterly pleased. The groom also wants to handle the package. They are further told that the notes are ail of the denomination of 910,000. This constitutes what is known as the ,41*Sad'paapwfc"-»A lied tourists, havioff heard of . in, OTvBsi --y w jhkiquk) , ** JUii m mm as they enter tiM vkalta. Thfe ia aj] *ery pretty. Bit ii Is a ISraad dn the yom&| people. The treasury here does not hud tbat amoa&t of mboey. Tha bulk of the money is in tha sub-treas­ ury at New York. That " bridal pack­ age is a gay deceiver. It does coiltai'i, however, notes of the denomination of 810,000, which would, in tha aggregate, represent $20,000,000 if they were only signed. But they are worth no more in reality than the paper on which they afire printed, being minus the necessary signatures.-- Washington letter. , ' r, FRIGHTFUL TORNADO.^ A Tows Swept A way-TweBtr-Osc People are 'Killed aaa* Over Forty Wounded. „ A dispatch from Denison, Texas, says: "A terrific cyclone struck the town of McAllister, in the Indian Territory. From the meager in­ formation thus far received it seems to have destroyed the entire place, killing and bounding many people." A later dispatch from Dallas, Texas, gives additional particulars of the cyclone t " News from the McAllister cyclone says the deaths added to those killed outright increase the fatabties to twenty-one hp to to -niglit. Forty-two more are wounded, but it is not thought fatally. Half the killed and wounded are women and ohildren. All possible aid from physicians, nurses, etc., is being rendered tha aoiferen. Fifcv-nine houses were totally demolished and twenty- neve n. partially. Settlements Noa. A and 7 of tbe Osage Mining Company were tho ooes visited. They had contained about 400 people. No. 6 wag entirsly-wiped, out No 7 received only the partial force of the storm. The mines were only slightly damaged, and will Ik* worked again next week. Relief subscriptions are be­ ing taken up at various points. A mass-meet­ ing to-night at Denison realised several hun­ dred dollars. "At Paris, Texas, great damage was done to property. Joseph Hill, a farmer, was killed by lightning. Your correspondent was given tbe following description to-night by a survivor of the McAllister storm ; Two horribly Mack-look­ ing clouds, one from the southeast and one from the southwest, came with a rush and met at camp No. 5. An appalling elemental carni­ val ensued there. "The two clouds appeared to rend and to tear each other like wild beasts. A continuous flash of blinding sheet lightning mad® the soene brighter than day for over an hour. Above the wild roar of the wind could occa- ionally be heard the shrieks of dying men, women and ohildren, and when the storm sub­ sided no aid wae at hand, and none nearer »»"» three miles away from the railroad station. All was in a state of chaos, and no help oould be got until next morning. " The fall of rain wm terrific, and it was ac­ companied by a great quantify of bail-stones, which fell as far norttx as Fort Gibson. A washout occurred on the Missouri, Kansas and Texas, near Armstrong, in tbe Territory. A locomotive went down the embankment and tbe engineer was killed. Travel is generally sus­ pended oa most of the Texas r^ads, sawed by the fury of the storm." MA TARIFF COMMISSION. YHxt of ihe Aet Passed by Congress. Be it enacted, vefc., That a commission ia hereby created to be called the "Tariff Oom- misson," to consist of nine members. Sxc. 2. That the President of the United States shall, by and with the advice and con­ sent of the Senate, appoint nine Commission­ ers from civil life, one of whom, the first named, shall be President of the commission. The Commissioners shall receive as compensation for their services each at the rate of §10 a dav when engaged in active duty, ana actual traveling and other necessary ex­ penses. The commission shall have rawer to employ a stenographer and a messenger, and the foregoing compensation and expenses shall be audited and paid by the Secretary of the Treasury out of any moneys ia the treasury not otherwise appropriated. Sec. 2. Tbat it shall be the duty of said com­ mission to take into consideration and to thor­ oughly investigate all the various question re­ lating to tbe agricultural, commercial, mercan­ tile, manufacturing, mimng and industrial in- . ' I V AMI _ at. large, tii' claims, as ixetinetivtely aad right to be left nloaa wi wEerevar ha pteaaa. ife ip *> ab En­ glishman m the atreet mid bhmtfar mfc him the way to such and such a ntfA- v. £ ' ing, and he will reward the unprovoked % onslaught upon his rrivacy Vith tbe%V. very eooL-st of astonished stares. But ' * if you preface your question with an ,fl : '3 1 , beg your pardon," (acknowledging ' thereby that you are asking a gratuitons :i\- favor), he will answer you very/civilly , { ; indeed, and even go out of his way to ^ show you yours. A conversation ' t ' i abruptly launched into in an English A/<j 5 ailway carriage will- probably be ©at short at the outset by what strikes us ( T H Americans as very gratuitously rude . v curtnesn. But if the coaveraatiou is in-^1?"^ troduced by that unfailing open sesame, "I beg your pardon," it will flow on very < .' i pleasantly, and likely as not end in ^ an invitation to pass a week or so at a " country house. Americans are often ".'i shocked at the apparently insolent bear- j ing of German shopkeepers, especially of German bankers. It rarefy occurs to them that they themselves have opened hostilities, as it were, by breaking the very flrst rule of German good breeding in Keeping their hats on. In German* a m&n just as scrupulously takes his feat off, and keeps it off in a shop or counting room as in » I acly'g parlor. An American of our aoquaintaiiice " onoe happened to be one of a party of,/1' "A six who went to the top of a certain ,J \ j tower in Germany, the view from which ^^ is famous. The party was shown the "*-"* * '• way by the daughter of the guardian of the tower, a comely young girl of seven- *4 teen or thereabouts; our friend treated her with common politeness, but a Frenchman who was of the party, was so demonstratively and overwhelmingly attentive and gallant, that the American began to feel that He had been somewhat ruae in comparison with such a pyro­ technic display of courtesy. Well, when they got to the top of the tower they only found one chair there, upon which the Frenchman immediately seat­ ed himself. This authentic anecclote is quite characteristic. If we Americans ̂ stand pre-eminent for good, solid, <effici- '. ̂ ent politeness, we certainly are deplora- .' ^ /> bly deficient in manner. We have ¥0" neither the dignified repose of the En- > * glish, nor the grace of continental , Europeans. Possibly we are shy and try to bide our shyness under, an as- >•- V; ̂ sumed gruffness of bea.rinp'. Certainly *. "1 it seems, nine times out of ten, as if an American, even while performing a very polite act, thought himself degraded by any outward show of courtesy. He % ^ may willingly and cheerfully offer his •' " seat to a lady, and be perfectly content­ ed to stand himself, but his manner «if making the offer is almost insulting. He will growl out, "Take my seat," or else he will make the offer with a jovial familiarity of manner which would be quite in keeping between two old pot companions in a tap room. We may be rich in gold, but we are poor indeed in a the small change of politeness, "Fine , V; ' words butter no parsnips," say we; "this -•*» '• is a mistake; fine words and manners ,̂'4." butter all kinds of parsnips; indeed, as £ j* / Thackeray says, there are many peoge s whose parsnips are buttered ia V Kti way, "-v-j * - * T««eiP •The IndianafK'sJis"' Journal ha» ; 1 nnn I~8 fkn f1 s*wr!ftli ".•I •vV ̂ Jareste of tbe United States, ao far aa the same I tlvn folinm'in-. may be necessary to the eataUiahment of a P*16® tTle> showing «• >„/ - • - population in 1880, the vote cast tor , '.' f •* President, and the per cent such vote is of the population: ••••. judicious tariff or a revision of the existing tariff upon a wale of justice to all interests; and, for the purpose of fully examining ths matters which may come before it said oomg mission, in the prosecution of its inquiries, is empowered to visit such different portions and sections of tbe country as it may deem advis­ able. Sec. 4. That the commission shall make Con# gress a final report of the results of ite investi* ' gations and the testimony taken in tbe course< of the same not later than tine first Monday of December, 1882, and it shall cause the testi­ mony taken to be printed Irom time to time and distributed to members of Congress by the Public Printer, and shall also cause to be printed for tbe use of Congress 2,000 copies of its 0nal report, together with the testimony. THE PERU I5YE8TIGATI0N. r---- • .4. The examination of Senator Blair by the Foreign Affairs Committee on the 6th inst. con­ sisted largely of the reading of statistics frop tbe "Statesman's Ymr Book" and " Spofford'e Almanac " as to the condition and population of Peru and Chili, and catechising Mr. Blair with regard to them. Witness thought there could be no doubt but that English in­ fluence predominated commercially m Sonth America, and that Chili holds commercial rela­ tion® almost exclusively with European na­ tions, particularly with England, from wbom she has received substantial financial aid. Witness stated that Shipherd placed the amount of their claim at 1185,000,000 and that of Cochet at §1,000,000.0001 It was always clear to him (witness) that they would get a great amount of it, Bhipherd indicated a readiness to take in settlement from Peru whatever might seem Mr, In the Peruvian Company investigation at Washington, on the 8th inst., Senator Blair ackn&wl6f3«e£l L# of Slnpherd's stock, but had .not .been in­ fluenced by mere money considerations. He saw Pont "the under dog," and his aympathies were enlisted in her behalf. Thia closed the investigation, except so far aa the sub-com­ mittee 14 concerned. The sub-committee of tbe Peruvian investiga­ tion began its sittings in New York on tbe 10th inst., and opened business by taking the evi­ dence of Robert Randall, who lay sick in a hotel. His testimony threw no new light upon the affair under inquiry. Strategy of a White Cat Canning is not altogether confined to the blacks of the feline tribe, as believers in witch lore assert. A south-end oat, as plump and fluffy as a full-burst cot­ ton-ball and as white as the snow-bank beside which she crouched, showed re­ markable shrewdness at Springfield, Mass., in earning her dinner. Apparent­ ly reasoning, if cats reason, that & flock of sparrows, taking a picked up meal in the road near by, would not distin­ guished her from the surrounding white- nesp, she patiently waited, now lifting one paw and then the other to keep the blood circulating, till a luckless ' bird strayed within reach, when she pounced on her t wittering prey and scampered off with H down a neighboring alley. The rest of the Bpr rrows seemed astonish ­ ed for a moment at such audaoitv, and then they winked at each other as much as to say, "Tbat leaves more grub for the rest of us," and want on with their gleaning. A Camel's Kick* Tha camel's kick Is a study. w it stand* demurely chewing the oud, and gasing abstractedly at sonde totally different far away object, tijrgosa a mnd leg, drawn close into the body, with the foot pointing out; a short pause, and out it flies with an action like the piston and connecting-rod of a steam-engine, show­ ing a judgment of and direction that would lead yon to suppose the leg gifted with perceptions of its own, inde- rnident of the animal's proper senses, have seen a heavy man fired aevaral yards into a dense crowd by the kick of. a camel, aad picked ap 4<':' ' '•'H; Alabama Arkansas.... ......... California... Colorado Connecticut............ Delaware Florida Georgia. Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland..... . Massachusetts..... Michigan Minnesota. Misnitwippi Missouri Nebraska. Nevada New Hampshire. New Jerwey New York.............. North CuroUfia Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island.... South Carolina Tennessee. Texas Vermont Virginia Weit Virginia Wisconsin... Awwa» rtfibeP. 8.. 1,203,791 802,504 864,6861 1M,S«9 SiMtfc liMfi* 367,361 1, Ml),048 #,078,76!) I,a8,a6i 1,624,6*. y!»r>,m 1,64s, 70? 94U, 0b 648,040 9J4,(>3i 1,7«3,«U 780,8O0 1,131,952 2,168,08* 452,483 6^,265 :i4f.,'.<N4 i,i3U,y83 .-.,083,810 1,40.1,047 3,11)8,239 174,707 4,282,786 270,528 '•WM22 1,542,463 1,692,574 332,286 1,512,800 618,443 1,316,480 17tl,«56| 17.17 241,827]15.6? 11.38 fc.s «„• 22.17 iasi 15.84 21.54 49.31 10.35 18.31 19.74 29.46 24.89 21.66 21.78 17.23 22.06 23.35 20.42 10.57 241,478 64,993 212,136 112,713 •267,172 16.1# 19.44 14.112 ia22 2J.31 «9,a69,595(l>>att4t<a»fia«M . i"; THE MARKETS. NEW YORK. Boas Co I TON Fiout-- Superfine.'. v.v?b....;.. Wheat--No. 9 Bprlag. No. 2Bed... Oow-l'Dgradtd Oats--Mixed Western.... Pou- Mess CHTCAOa JBmtzs--ClMioe Graded 8beers.... Oows aud Heifers Medium to fair Flock--nincy White'winter Ex.. Good to Choice Spring Ex, Whkat--No. 2 Spring No. 3 Spring Cokn--No. 2. Oats-- No. Ifta-rNo. 1 Bablby--No. 2....... BUTTEB-chotae-OraeaMer^ Eogs--Freah Pobx -M«ss.< UlD (1«« 1$ »..< lay®, it* ... B 85 (£-»» ... a «2 & i 4» ... 1 46 <a l 47 77 @ S3 ... 69 m SS ...ID 00 <t*l* 00 ... lixe 6 90 n so a 40 e oo 6 75 6 60 1 24 .... 1 14 .... , 72 .... 82 .... O .... 1 06 96 .... 16 ....18 SO « T TS 5 a l W ^•12 a 7 m <£ 1 * (ft 1 IS @ n 53 m i w & M » IT (%18 It v . - f • Wbkat--Na. 1. Ooiu»--No. I...... OAXS--Now 2,...... Rxx--No. 1 Bm*r-S«il-- Pqrk--Mess....... 3Ua»> n*e ux & i n ts a & » it-' 8$. LOOIb. Wwsiat- Jto.r**ed..... | si OofeM--Mixed . T4 Oats--No. 2. M a«........-..i 19 --If » T 11 CINCINNATI. • WHEAT....... ; 1 33 Com* 7« Oats......;... S3 Bvk...« .............. ss Fob*-Mees ..» 60 ... n r. 80 ... 82 94 ...18 25 @18 Ifci .. „ miss % 9T i 2 18 80 f 1 88 n TOLKDOl , Wnsa*-»ebS»ea....... OOBK.... Oats. _ _ DETBOIT. Itora-Choiee Wheat--No. 1 WbWs... Cokic--Mixed .v. OATH--Mixed Babut (per eenbO) Poms--Msaa. Whkat--Na 2 Bed. .7^7. 1 u Oobk--No. 2 71 Oats. " u _ E i8# LISKBTT, |»A. Cattlx--Beat 0 to "* Fair I 4 go __ Oammoa..,.........^... $ as ...... ...... f V 8na«n......... 4 88 «1M <4 *T t S 01*91 ux <a 1 ar : s ,8 88 at« 1 84 ^ 1 as 76 Q 88 S3 % 84 • 88 #188 » eo eia w

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