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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 25 Apr 1883, p. 2

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•LYKE, lOw Ml mlidMr ILLINOIS. > Ifssi^siR Wmm m W imbject--Jfir-and the far tor and F Qu of X \ M'M 1 ?:f; WM'k -- ' THEEA8T. ' Tu steamers Nestorianand Parthea^ atBoato^aafotbe Indiana, at Philadelphia HUHIM! Mnty 1,000 Immigrants from lre- landlast week, the British Government hav­ ing Mid the paivage expenses in a great muir instances. The majority are iu desti­ tute circumstances. having been evicted from their holdings in Ireland-- Fire la Broadwav, New York consumed Bradstreet's Ageacr. aad BtiniBfton A (Son's store, and the Hall Safe •Ml Lock Company's building, involving a totalIOCB of #170, CWO The New York Po- lloo Superintendent says it is intimidation if a next* of workmen, standing outside a shop where a strike to in progress, advises persons ' seeking employment not to week there. FHKBXAN, the Pocasset cliild-mur- rienr, baa after nearly four years'incorcer# lien In the Insane Asylum at Banvers, Mass., .abandoned his claim that he killed his little daughter wider divine inspiration, and says the deed was prompted by the deviL The authorities at the asylum report that he is •o longer a fit subject for that institution, and it Is expected that he will soon be put on trial fat murder James Marshall ft Co., ike iron pipe manufacturers of Pittsburgh, have made «a» assignment Their liabilities are placed at #1,500,000, and the aasete will i reach #1.3*50,000. Speculation injMg. iron, for . an advance caused the failure. JAMES TREGLOWN, who killed Minnie Chlrgwin in a fit of jealousy on. June 30, 1882, was executed at Slorristown, N. J. •CONCORD and Lexington, Mass., cele­ brated on the lW,h of April the 108th anni­ versary of their revolutionary battles. At Newbnigh, N. Y., the centennial anniversary •f the celebration by Washington's army of ifce cessation of hostilities was observed THE WEST. A WIXD-storm did considerable dam- sge to farm buildings in Otoe and Nemaha •ounties, Neb. Several persons were in­ jured by the fall of houses they were occu­ pying.... A heavy gale at Anity and Adair, Iowa, worked havoc with buildings, fences and crops. At the former place people sought shelter in cellars and caves During a storm at East Tawas Mich., haiU •tones fell measuiing three inches in cir- oumfeience. .. .At Wh te Oak. Ark. , a num­ ber of houses were blown down and three persons fatally injured Late reports of the Michigan crop prospects have been received by the State Department of Agriculture from 85'2 correspondents, representing 068 townships. Five hundred and thirty-live of these returns are from 412 townships in the southern four tiers of counties. The report shows that 13 per oent •f the wheat ci op is winter-killed, and the portion not wint-er kiiled to be Sij per cent, as promising as on the 1st of April, 1882. These are the figures for the entire State In the southern four tiers of counties where 85 per cent of the wheat crop is grown, 15 per cent, of the acreage is reported killed, and the remainder is estimated to be 17 percent below the condition one year ago.... .Spring planting in thirty-one counties of Southern Minnesota and numerous points in Southern Dakota has been generally retarded by the weather. Heavy damage to winter -wheat is reported from Vernon, Monroe and La Crosee counties. Wis. There has been a marked improvement in Che appearance of tae winter-wheat lields •f Illinois and Ohio since the 1st of April ... .The Ktiapp, Stout & Co. warehouse at Kenomonee, Wis., valued at #.iO,GOO, was >yed by lire Seven stores and and an elevator were burned at Mar- Ma THERE will be a "National exhibition •f railroad appliances" held in the Inter­ state Exposition Building, at Chicago, from May Si to June 28 next It will be a most interesting display. The original Stephen­ son "Rocket," the first practical locomotive ever built will be one of the most interest­ ing exhibits The Sioux Fails Water <Pow- er Company, of Sioux Falls, D. T., is insol­ vent. The property is known as the Qaaen Bee Mill, and originally cost more than #500,- FIBE destroyed Abernetliy's furniture factory at Leavenworth, Kansas, causing a loss of #40.000. The dames spread with such rapidity that a number of workmen were abliged to leap from a second-story window, and live of them sustained injuries that will probably result in death The jury in the ease of George Scheller, tried at Milwaukee opon the charge Of having willfully caused the burning of the Newhali House in .January last, brought in a verdict •f acquittal Onl-. one juryman was in favor •f a verdict of guilty, and he toon yielded to the opinion of the eleven....The licence upon saloons has heretofore been #114) at Minneapolis. Tlie City Council last week raided it to #1,5G0. REPORTS in regard to the condition ef the wheat crop, received at Toledo, from •ver 1,800 places in every important wheat- Eowing county in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois ichigan, Kansas and Missouri, show that in about one-quarter of the counties the pres­ ent condi ion is very favorable, in one-quar­ ter fair, in one-tbira poor, and in one-sixth very p< or. In one-quarter the present .condition is said to be much better than two weeks ngo. In one-half it is slightly better, in one-tlxth about the same, and In one-twelfih worse.'- One-sixth fay that the crop is better than it was a year ago, •ne-quarter say it is as good, nearlv one- lialf report it wor-e, and one-sixth Vay it Is much worse. The season is backward, and the acreage and reserves about the nune as at a corresponding time last year.... A Winfleid (Mo.) dispatch says the fishermen at Cape Angris Mo., have been in the habit of trammel netting in the bay on the Illinois Mde of the river, which is contrary to the laws of the State. A constable of Calhoun, 111, determined to suppress it Last night with a posse he hailed a fishing party of Jbnee ana demanded their surrender. They •ailed on the constable to rfead his warrant, which he refused to ao. so they started iowa the bay. The constable then ordered Ms party to fire, and the result was the kill- Sof Win. Willoughby and the probable il wounding of Henry Engle, and slight Muadfay of Johnson Binman TXEXE are prospects for a full crop winter wheat in DeWitt and adjacent I in Illinois, and farming operations ftt activity. In California an aver taViaqp bit whfl« playing at-- HEK»T JOHNSON, a young MAN em­ ployed at tile Bead House, w Lookout Mil tolii. aaar 'was ditrinf out with his sweethsatf ln a the horse ran thrown out . lady bad both her legs broken. The horse plunged madly down the mountain, throw­ ing the boggy over a predpioe. AT Annona, Tex., Deputy United Marshal Layman, of the Western Arkansas district, was killed by John & Lennox, a Texas desperado, for whom he had a writ for the murder'of two men. Lennox at­ tacked the M arshaTs camp on the souttiera border of the Choctaw Nation with a band of outlaws, shot and killed Layman, and released the prisoners in their possession Fire at Huntington, W. Va, destroyed #40,- W.0 worth of property and rendered twenty families homeless. BOOTH EDWARDS, a colored murderer awaiting execution in jail at Munfordville, Hart county, Ky., made an attempt to es­ cape, having by some.means obtained a pis­ tol Finding nunwlf thwarted, he retreated to his cell and blew out his brains. Presi­ dent Arthur arrived: at Savannah. Q&, April 10, on board the United States steamer Tallapoosa, dining with the Savannah Rifle Association. A public reception was held at the city ex­ change. The President and his party took the cars in the afternoon of the same day, for Washington. "WASHINGTON. * 3* 'has 1)een .decided by Attorney General Brewster that the law making re­ tirement from the army compulsory on ofll- • cers who have reached years repeals the law whtoh limited the number on the retired list to 400. In accordance with this decision thirteen additional officers have just been retired, and. a permanent Increase of the list vwUlfollow, BEFORE one of the dinners given by the British Minister last week the subject of an international police for the capture of anarchists was broached, when Assistant Searetary of State Davis said it was not probable that the United States would be a ;party to the scheme THE charges preferred against Super­ vising Architect Hill allege corruption, ex­ travagance and incompetence in the man­ agement of his office, specifvingcontractors to whom special favors were shown, and affirming the existence of a ring in the office of the Supervising Architect which exacted fees, commissions and percentage from •contractors. THE Supreme Court of the United States has decided that the reduction of 10 r ;nEUr«ff"2S to at Marseille* [JESSE* that QMI Britain's to : 0 per cent made in 1876 by the Postofflce Department in the rates for railway mail service from the sum agreed upon when the contracts were signed for the four years from 18i5 to 18itt, was nob authorized by law, the contracts being binding upon both parties for the full period covered The hearing of testimony In the second trial •of the star-iroute conspiracy cases, at Wash­ ington, was concluded April 18, having lasted five months, and counsel began their arguments to the jury. During the day the Grand Jury returned two additional indict­ ments, one charging William Pitt Kellogg with corruptly receiving money while United States Senator, and the other alleging a similar offense against Thomas J. Brady while Second As sistant Postmaster General POLITICAL. POSTMASTER GENERAL GKESHAK has given orders that »o more Postmasters la Mississippi be removed at the dictation of Gen. Chalmers, who, since he contested the election in the Second district with Manning last fall, has assumed to oontrol Federal pat­ ronage la the State I>* the coming contest for the Speaker- «Mp of the national House of Representa­ tives the three most prominent candidates will be Carlisle, of Kentucky, Randall, of Pennsylvania, and Cox, of New York.... .The Mississippi Supreme Court has refused Chal­ mers a mandamus compelling the Secretary of State to declare him elected to Congress, on the ground that, the certificate having already been given to Manning, the national House of Representatives alnaw can intlK- age eron is anticipated, the Increased acre­ age In the State offsetting the damage done ky drought Glowing prospects are received from W soonsln, Minnesota, iKebra^ka, Iowa and Dakota, where the passant seeding-time conditions have never been excelled.... A Hennoslllo (Mexico) dlapatch says: A cour­ ier who has arrived from a detachment of troops following the Apaches xeports several funning fights with the Indians from Ures ftp Gaablez, and claims thai they hare killed •early the whole band. Alter losing the trail of the balanoe some of the soldiers vis­ iter Gambles, where one whs was in the campaign last year recognised a white who was with the Indians at that time, the acting chief in one of the fights.. . The wife of Judge J. w. Stephens, of Mis­ soula, Montana, was awakened at night bv a burglar attempting to enter her room, fier husband being ab* ent from home. She warned the man to leave, but he defied her, imen she tried to shoot him with a gun, which missed lira She then procured a re •olver, with which she fired twice, one effect in the burglar's hraast, THK SOUTH. PERHAPS the largest transaction in ••ttle ever made in the country was recent­ ly effected at Fort Worth, Texas, the sale being O' 75,000 head of full-grown cattle. The prioe paid was #25 a head, which would «egr^te#l,t$re,000.... .Fire destroyed prop •rty at (Wslield, Md., of the value of #100- <00, upon which the insurance was 140,000.1 BUFFALO gnats are slaying the live atock by the hundreds in the Lower Misslss- topi country. The assault made by this terrible enemy is of such a character as to preclude any escape for the beast if in the •pen air, as they come as a volume of smoke from the chimney of a steamboat, settling down on the unfortunate animal, com­ pletely covering every exposed part of its body as long as they can draw blood. It is no unusual thing, where Aeycome in such clouds, for them to i ake the life of a hon-e or a mule in an h »ur. The attack is sure death if the animal is exposed, and when ono > covered with them it is next to Impossible to get them off, and when IT would tonttocW attnadlMnMat can mhr be*atialled. The latest m«v« in this dtraoMon is iheaoauliement of New Guinea, which has been effected by the simple proo- •ess of sending a Commissioner from Queens­ land to take possession of that Island The Inciting cause of this notion was a rumor that Qenaany was likely toelaun the territory, which 4s too near Australia for the British to allow any other civilized Govern­ ment to get a foothold upen It--Prince Thomas, of Genoa, cousin and brother-in- law to tusetaidiv King of Italy, was mar­ ried at Mtudcn to the Princea Isabella, of Bavaria, ooualn of King Louia EIGHTEEN Nihilists were convicted ithe other day at St Petersbuig. Russia. Of these six were sentenced to death, two tp life imprisonment, and the remainder to terms varying from fifteen to twenty years The men sentenced to capital punishment are Boganovitch, who was one or the party implicated In constructing the mine in little Sarden street, St Petersbuig; Zlatopolis, an associate of Hartmann; M Gratchefsky and Klimenko, who participated in the assassina­ tion of the late Csar; Telaloff, who tried to blow up the imperial train in 1881; and a re­ tired naval officer named Boutsevitch, whose tpecial crime is not stated. • ADDITIONAL SEWST THK SCOVV Lill, wnich has becotniB a liter of Ohio, prohibits the sale of liquor to be drunk on the premises. It fixes the li­ cense for the sale of alcoholic liquors at #300 per annum, and for tbe sale of malt liquors at #100 per annum. It exempts cities of the first class from the operation of the Sunday iaw The Delaware House (11 to 5) indefi­ nitely postponed the Senate bill providing for the submission of the question of license or prohibition to the people. Ex-Gov. EENDP.ICK8 missed an invi­ tation to a banquet by the Brooklyn Free Trade Cinb by saving, in a recent interview, that he was in favor of free tiade or a tariff for revenue, always provided due regard was had for the manufacturing interests of his own State. THE Saloonkeeper's Association of Cincinnati have formally determined to op­ pose, by every legal method available, the operation of what is known as the Scott law, which imnoses a tax of #^00 a year on all saloons where spirituous liquors are sold and SlOu where on y l>eer and wine aie sold. It is understood that the brewers and whis­ ky dealers will join in the opposition to the law. The plan will probably be to get a test case before the Ohio courts a3 soon as possible, and try the constitutionality of the iaw .... There is an unexpected unanimity in the opinions of the committee of fifteen Repub­ licans appointed to harmonize the differences in the party in New York. The influence of Presid nt Arthur and Secretary Folger has been brought to bear in that direction, with the promise of a redistribution of Federal patronage in the State The Ohio Demo­ cratic State Central Committee has decided to hold the next State Convention at Colum­ bus, June 2L GKNERAXm CAPT. EADS claims to have enlisted the co-operation of a syndicate of American and European capitalists for the prosecu­ tion of his project for a ship railway across the iKthmus of Tehuantepee. Surveys are in progress, and the Captain professes the utmost confidence in the success of his scheme. , THE annual report of the American 'iron and Steel Association shows a lazge de­ crease in the production of iron rails in 1882 over 1881. ana a small decrease in the pro­ duction of open-hearth steel rails and cruci­ ble steel ingots. In all other articles there was an Increase in 1883 on 1881 A fierce hurricane raged for fifteen hours at Victoria, in British Columbia, playing havoc with the shipping in the harbor. Four ships were blown ashore, and now lie high aad dry. PEMBROKE, Out., suffered to the amount of #30,000 by fire; at Preston, Out a foundry was burned% tbe loss being #2§,000, and at Philadelphia an equal damage was sustained by fire in a manufactory of plumbers' supplies. Butofcard's block, at Owen Sound; Ont, was burned, causing a Iocs of #60.000. FIRE destroyed the village of Oak- vine, en the lake there, twenty miles from Toronto. Canada. The loss will amount to #100,000 or more. When the fire reached a drug store two barrels of whisky were rolled out on the street, and the members of tbe village fire brigade all got drunk and help­ less, otherwise the fire might have been cont: oiled in its first stages The United States Supreme Court has af­ firmed a decision disbarring a lawyer who was reported to have participated in a lynch­ ing-. There was nothing but rumor to estab­ lish the attendance of the attorney at tbe lynching, and yet Judge Locke, of the Federal district in Florida, threw him over­ board. PARLIAMENT House, at Quebec, was destroyed by fire, the flames first appearing in an upper story. Many public documents andcjpesof acts of Parliament awaiting executive sanction were burned. The water pressure was delayed fifteen minutes, which allowed the fire to gain great headway. FOREIGN. THK German Emperor has caused to be read in the Reichstag and address setting forth that the condition of the working classes deserves attention, and the budgets for 18S4and 1885 will be submitted Immedi­ ately, so that tae n«xt session may have an opportunity to discuss tbe question •SL IPOO free indulgence in salad by President Arthur at Savannah pro­ duced lesults that for a short time caused his friends on board the Tallapoosa, aad the officers and crew of the ship, serious anxi­ ety. For a time the President was in great agony, but the professional offices of the ship's surgeon brought him relief. Secre­ tary Chandler is reported to have been much alarmed, and was disposed to telegraph to Washington for medical assistance. MB. L. B. BENTON, of the type- founding firm of Benton, Waldo & Co., of Milwaukee, has invented a type which, it is claimed, will levolutionize the type-setting business. Each letter is a multiple of a cer­ tain unit of space, and correct spacing m all classcs of work is thus reduced to a oer- ta nty. The facility with which the type can be used will greatly increase the amount of work performed by each compositor TIMOTHY KELLY was the third of the alleged murderers Lord Cavendish aad Mr. Burke to be put on trial at Dublin. The testimony was in th ; main similar to that in the cases of Brady and Carley, upon which thes • men were sentenced to death. Several witnes es swore that Kelly was not in Phoe- n x Park on the day of the murder. The jury failed to agree THE examination of the dynamite conspirators proceeded at the Bow Street Police Court, in London, April 20. The evi­ dence showed the connection of Wilson and Whitehead with the manufacture and dis­ tribution of nitro-glycerine. Without con­ cluding, the examination was continued until Thursday, the 20th. ROBT. M. DOUGLAS, lately United States Marshal for the Western district of North Carolina, having refused to surrender the records of the office to his successor, the District Attorney has been directed to bring action against him for abstracting official records. The case is somewhat complicated by the fact that the Judge before whom the suit should be brought is Douglas' father-in- law. Flames swept away #".200,000 worth of business property on Common street, New Orleans. AMONG the recently announced deaths are those of Charles P. Kellogg, a leading merchaat of Chicago; Edward Nock, at Youngs town, Ohio, the first man in the United States to puddle iron; Roswell Hart ex-Congressman, at Rochester, N. Y., and Solomon S. Gray, of Natick, Masa, the pio­ neer manufacturer of paper collars. A PACKAGE of dynamite, without dis­ tinguishing marks, weighing twenty-five pounds, arrived at Milwaukee by the Adams Express, consigned to the Milwaukee Ce­ ment Company. It was handled carelessly both there ana at Chicago, and the escape from • a destructive ^explosion la wonderful Kate Kane, Milwaukee's only female lawyer, thre^ E. glass of water in the face of Judge Mallory, of the Crim nal Court of that city, and was fined $ot'. She claimed the Judge insulted her by word and ac .ion Pat McHugh was matched to fight Frank Steele lor the championship of Wisconsin and #1,- 000, but was fatally shot in the back at a saloon at Stevens Point Gen. Crook has enlisted Apaclie scouts, who will at once take the field against the hostiles, co-operating with the Mexican forces At Sacramento, CaL, the wall of a building fell upon a saloon, killing six men and possibly more, and wounding twelve othera THE Pall Mall Gazette, recalling the political intrigues of Mazzinl in England against the Government of Italy, and the refusal of Great Britain to extradite him, has doubts if the United States will give up O'Donovan Itossa should his extradition be requested An English and Spanish steamer collided off Buboa, Spain, resulting in the drowning of seven persons The Madagascans are busy making weapons, and are determined not to surrender an inch of territory to France. JAY GOULD has issued a circular to tbe stockholders of the Wabash, St. Louis and Pacific Railway Company, giving notice of the creation of a collateral trust loan of #10, CO J,000, bearing (> per cent, interest and running thirty years, to meet the obligations of the Car Trust Company and relieve the Wabash Company of its floating debt with­ out drawing upon the net earnings of the companv. The loan will be guaranteed by the St Louis, Iron Mountain and Southern Railway Company, and secured by mortgage bonds, real estate, stocks, etc. AT New York, delegates from twenty- one telegraph, telephone and electric-light companies favored burying their wires; but, as no sat sfactory system lias been devised, deprecated hasty legislative action. ZEE KABKEX NEW YORK. S.60 LIS Llf M M 6.95 S.flO Mi 5.90 5.03 4.T5 1.06 1.07 •M A3 LOT M M JS9 .70 1&00 Hods. PLOUE--Superfine WHEAT--No. i White.- No. 2 Bad CORN--Now 1 OATS--No. i POBK--Mesa LARD CHICAGO. Barm--Good to Fancy Steers., Cows and Heifers Medium to Fair Hoos. PlOUBr--Kancy White Winter Ex. Good to Choice Spr'g Ex. WHXAT--No. 2 Sprmflr. No. a Bed Winter COBH--No. 1 OATS--No. a.. RTK--No a BARLEY--No. A BUTTEE--Choice ~ EOGS--Fresh.... POKE--Moss l ABn Mtti WAU KEEL * WHXAT--Na % COBN--Na a... OATS--Na a Ryx--NO. 1 BABLET--NO. 3..... POBK--Mass LABD ST. LOUItt. WHEAT--Na 2 Bed COBN--Mixed OATS--Na 9 . . Rn. POBK--Mess.. Laid, „-,v, OIMCiNNATL WHEAT--Ha a Bed...; COBS OATS. RYE. POBK--Mess I.Attn „ TOLEDO. WHEAT--Va 3 Bed CORN OATS--No. a DETROIT FIXJUB WHEAT--No. l White COBN--No. 3 OATS--Mixed POBK--Mess INDIANAPOLIS. WHEAT--Na 3 Bed COBN--No. 2 OATS--Mixed „ n EAST LIBERTY. PA. CAXXXJt--Best 4.75 Fair. 6.00 Common. 6.3S 87.60 ! @ 6.90 & 6.35 & 6.20 @ 7.76 & S.25 & 5.10 # 1.07 0 1.08 .51 .43 .59 .75 .26 .16 . 8.25 0 4.06 9 LIS m l.M 0 •« 0 .58 19.36 010.50 .115*® .11)4 & & & .74 m .35 ® .16 & LOO @18.25 .11% 9 1.08 e .63 & .43 igt ,r>9 & .71 @18.25 Ol fc® .11 * 1.06 & 1.09 At & .49 AS 0 .43 .63 .54 18.00 #16.36 MX® .11 1.06 & 1.10 .66 & .56 .46 & .47 ,.68 m .64 1&6Q @16.76 .If* & .11!* 1.11 M 4.36 1.06 M .46 18.35 1.06 M & 1.12 & .66 # AT 0 4.50 m i.o7 & .55 m .46 @18.50 LOS .61 I ib'ndondJwttcl)states that , & 7.00 6.50 9 5.76 7.80 & 8.10 4.W # 1.66 that His Blgftt >«** H I*7Mb -- He Make* 8ml v StartUag Disclosure* Norman, Dal ton, Wilson, Dr. Gallagher, Bernard Gallagher, Kirton, Ansburgh and Whitehead, the eight men arrested charged with being concerned in the dynamite con­ spiracy, were brought up in the Bow Street Police Court, at London, April 19L On the prisoners being arraigned inthe court-room, says the cable report, it was announced Nor­ man had tornea informer. The rest of the prisoners, including Bernard Gallagher and Whitehead, were formally charged with treason-felony. Poland, in opening the case for the crown, said he had a quantity of fresh evidenoe against the prisoners, which would be tarnished In proper time Nor­ man testified that his real name was William Joseph Lynch, and that be was born of Irish parents in the 8tate of New York. He swore that be worked in October last at a coaoh-builder's in Brooklyn; at that time he Joined a secret society In New York, the object of which was to free Ir eland by force The members went by number*. The hall in which he was sworn in was situated at the corner of Second street and the Bowery. There were ether* associated with tbe clubs and managers' clubs, known as "district members;* they were not known to each other by name Lynch, amplifying, said that in October last, while working In a coach-builder^ in Brooklyn, a sbopmate, Daniel O'Connor, in­ duced him to Join a secret society, a branch of the Fenian organisation, the divisions of which were called "Emerald Cluba" O'Con­ nor took him to an Odd-Fellows' hall in New York, and in an ante-room told him the ob­ ject of the society was to free Ireland by force alone. Lynch, on joining the so­ ciety, took an oath to stand by Its watch­ word, obey his superior officers, and observe the laws of the orotherhood. The mem­ bers were known by numbera. The name of the presiding officer was Thomas Burns. Lynch attended called meetings of the club twice each month. He did not know O'Donovan-H' ssapersonally, butheard he had been to the club-room. He was always spoken of there as the "old man." He knew, beside O'Connor, two members of the club, both named Sullivan. The number of the treasurer of the club was 82; of the Secre­ tary lit The password for admission to the meetings was "Providence." There were other associated clubs in NewYork--the Sarstield, on Thirty-second street ; the Owen Koe and Thomas Davis, at Military Hall; the Emmet, on Eighth avenue; and the Davitt and Tom Moore Clubs The district mem­ bers were not known to each other. When a member was wanted to go on a mission the President read out his number, and told him to send him (the President) his address. Lynch was sent to Mr. Thomas Gallegher, who lived on Manhattan avenue, at Green- point, Long Island. Gallagher told hi n he was l!o go to London; would know what for when he got there. Gallagher gave him §50 and tola him to take a steerage pas­ sage by steamer to Spain under the name of Norman. Dr. Gallagher gave him #100 more, and told him to go to London and inquire at the American Exchange for a letter ad­ dressed to him. Lynch aid not want to go, as he had relatives to support, but finally went. Dr. Gallagher gave hiin a small box. He examined this on Che steamer, and, find­ ing it contained a spring which worked by pressure, he became alarmed and threw it into the sea. Lynch said he reached London March 22; met Dr. Gallagher in London the k!lth and fc8th. In London Dr. Gallagher and the wit­ ness passed Scotland Yaid, and Dr. Gallagher said: ""That is the headquarters of the de­ tectives It will come down, too." Dr. Gallagher said he was staying at Charing- Cross Hotel, and gave the witness £7 saying: "It don't run short. The old man will pro­ vide for ua" They walked past the scene of the Westminster explosion. On his asking Dr. Gallagher if "that's what we are going to do," the latter answered "Yes." Galla­ gher viewed the houses of Parliament and said; uThey will make a great crash when they come'dowttj^ At this poMt TJr. Gallagher shcrated Cflt from the dock: "Yrtu infamous liar!" juvuoii Kuid that,, irom tae statements of Dr Gallagher as to what destruction was to be wrought, he inferred from the talk of his co-conspiratois that O'Donovan-Ro^sa was in the scheme. Rossa was referred to as "the old man " Lynch testified that he went to Birmingham to see Whitehead at Dr. Galla­ gher's request for "tome material" Dr. Gal­ lagher gave him money to buy a presentable trunk, in which to put the stuif he was to get from Whitehead. Whitehead put him in the way of getting india-rubber bags Lynch confirmed all the evidence submitted at the hearing last Thursday as to Dr. Gallagher having called for him a-. Fletcher. He said when Whitehead was loading the nitro glycerine into rubber bags he told Lynch that fifty pounds had been taken away that morning. Whitehead also told hiin he would soon know what the lid uid was. Whitehead here shouted, "You lie, you traitor!" Lynch further testified that Dr. Gallagher met him when he returned to London from Birmingham with nitro glycerine. He had not Been any of the persons before except Dr. Gallagher and Whitehead. Lynch identified the boy he saw with Whitehead in the factory of the latter at Birminghom. The witness said that when Whitehead was loading the nitro-glycerine into the rubber bags he told him a man the same morning had taken sixty pounds of the liquid. Both Iir. Gallagher and Whitehead (•poke of sending another man to London, but did not mention any name The witness spoke in a weak and indis­ tinct voice, and at one time appeared about to faint At the conclusion of the testimo­ ny, and while the depositions were being read, he did faint, and was removed from the court-room. O I R M E N A G E R I E . „ A .HEN WITH ADVANCED IDBA& ; IT ^ -X.-I* BMsly has a hen with a teiyjgifei?g gressiveturn of mind. She has scratched around and laid for her master a pair of eggs of entirely new design. One egg contains the yelk, and the other the white. Both are joined together lya ligamentous membrane, something after the style of the Siamese twins--Santa Rota Republican. A SINOINFT MOUSE. Mr. Robert Beverly, a well-known resident aad l6&d on ner of Fauquier county,Va., save he bas in his possession a natural curiosity In the shape of a mouse that sings, chirj s and has the other peculiarities of the bird kind, minus the feathers and conformation. It warbles similar to a mocking, bird, and its noteo are of equal sweetness to either that Of the canary.--St, Loui» Globe-Democrat. A WHITE PABTBIDOE. Polk Miller has on exhibition at his store a Virginia partridge which is nearly white. The Dird was killed in Fluvanna' county during the late show and sent to Clifford Bridges, who ohowed it to Mr. Miller while it was in the flesh. He Bent the bird to Miss Drewxy, of Chesterfield county, a good tax­ idermists and under her directions the bird wsa stuffed, but it was t-o badly shot that it could not be mounted. The head of the bird is just like all hen partridges, but the bal­ ance of the plumage is almost white.-- Richmond Whig. "ODD happemnuh. IK a certain part of Texas, many miles from the coast, lie tbe remains of a ship, high and drv in the prairie grasa She Is of Spanish build, and supposed to have been driven inland by a tidal wave. " A LEXINGTON, (Ky ) doctor hangs out the follow nig sipn: "Ltr. Tooles, scientific car­ ver of toes and limbs; specialist and expert in removing rheumatism; corns and cramps extracted according to nature." ALTHOUGH the Tennessee Penitentiary at Chattanooga has been occupied for more •hunbalf a century, and many prisoners have been sent to It under life sentences, no person is now imprisoned there who was there in 1870. BEVEM inches from the outside of a log in a Pennsylvania saw mil. the saw passed through a walnut which was imbedded in the soJid wood The shell and kernel of the nut were sound. The growth of the tree shows that the nut is at least fifty years old. AT Chicago six good men and true sat upon the body of a man who, while under the in­ fluence of liquor, fell from a railing into a basement. The assembled wisdom, with the able assistance of the Coroner, arrived at the conclusion that the man's death was "eaused by alcoholism aided by dislocation of the seek." fliifiullini lisiit Tmlnlmg Tfcuiu. IProt E li. Hoover.] In the naton) of almoet every boy there are fotur powerful influences at work, which tend, as' they are slowly osed, to strengthen or weaken his moral character, viz: 1. His restlessness, or desire to be doing something, which is the cause of many of his troubles (and his mother's fclso). 2. Hui gjegt craving for companion­ ship, and what he calls "fan," which seems to be a necessity to most healthy boys. 3. His fear of ridicule, which in many boys is so great that they can be induced to sin against conscience and stomach in order to escape it. 4. The desire to appear manly. The boy carries these four influences with him always, and it is a contest be­ tween us and Satan as to who shall con­ trol them, and the boy's fate depends much upon the issue of this contest. He is worth all the bravest efforts that can be made in his behalf. He is worth more than all the gold or honor you can win. If yon love him more than you love these things and even than yon love yourself or your own case and comfort, you can, with the Lord's help, hold him safe against "the world, the flesh, and the devil." Bat you must be "wise as serpents." Too much restraint will chafe and embitter. Too little is sure to end in ruin. You must make your child happy, for it is true "that discontent is the cause of most of the wickedness in the world." You must let him oee that you eagerly desire his happiness, and that he has your wannest sympathies in his efforts to And it. If he sees that you put off his gratification to suit your own con­ venience, he will suspect your lack of sympathy. If he sees you break your promises to him, or grant him an in­ dulgence that you have said was im­ proper for him, he will suspect your sincerity. If he sees you guilty of "make-believes," or false pretensions or shams of any sort whatever, you have lost his confidence and respect, and may expect soon to lose his affection and then to lose your hold on him. Children are very close and shrewd observers of human nature, and not easily deceived. Your only hope is dealing honestly and sincerely with them. But how shall you make them happy? I have asked this question a thousand times in school, and my an­ swer is, by keeping them occupied in pleasurable employments. Boys love to play, and that is your great last resort. But they, also love to work, at things they can do specially well. Then do you see to it, when you give them work or a lesson to learn, that you show them how to do it really well, and then accept it as well done. A school becomes restive and unhappy whenever there is not enough work to keep the pupils busy, or when they do not know how to> do it. Let all your instructions and directions be clearly stated, and do not cut out too much work but insist upon having every task that has been assigned fully and thor­ oughly executed. You must make them your compan­ ions. The boy wh6 is in love with his mother and sister, and looks upon his father as the very king of men, cannot easily be won away from them. But he must be met half way, for if he feels that he is only tolerated as a nuisance, and feels himself charged with all the offenses that have been committed, he will Ym pAWAyfiillg tempted ic SSCOir your expectations and make your bill of indictment a true one. Make him feel, at home, he is more than the prince of the blood, that his wants and wishes are always worth considering, and that even his opinion and good will are of some worth. Knit him to you by ties of a kind that Satan cannot knit. You have possession of the citadel; why should you be driven from it? It can only be by your own fault. Loyalty to you is deep rooted in your boy's nature, and if you are wise and alert he cannot be seduced from his allegiance to you. Strange Characteristics of a Color-Blind Man. "I should think you would meet with funny mistakes?" "I do. I often get on the wrong car late at night, and, after a while, find myself almost beyond walking distance of my destination. Of course I swear; but that don't help matters. The other day my wife said: 'Henry, do get a black suit of clothes this time, and don't come home here wearing that eternal brown cloth.' I said 'all right.' I bought What I was supremely con­ fident was a jet black suit. Upon go­ ing home I gazed proudly at my partner and said: 'See, I have got $his time a black suit.' She laughed, and to this day I am wearing those clothes, which are a deep brown. When I want a little circus all to myself, I close my eyelids and vigorously rub my eyeballs. I never see over seven colors, but I see these seven mighty quick and they dance around in spots and streaks and zigzag shapes like demons. Blood has a dull gray appearance, like stone. My in­ ability to distinguish colors renders me more susceptible to music than most people. The lost power is thus com­ pensated for."--Philadelphia Press. Lightning in the Family. The late Washington Irving was full of humor, of the most playful kind, and was always ready to give or take a joke. He once gave an amusing hit at Lewis Gaylord Clark, an intimate literary friend. , Washington Irving and Lewis Gay- lord Clark, while walking near Sleepy Hollow, were overtaken by a storm. There was great thundering and light­ ning, and Mr. Irving took refuge onder a tree, asking his companion: "Why don't you come in here and be as comfortably housed as I am ?" "I daren't do it, my dear sir," replied Mr. Clark. "I am afraid of lightning; my father was once nearly killed by it while standing under a tree in a thunder­ storm. He always enjoined it upon his twin boys never to do the like." said Mr. Irving, "that alters the case. If lightning runs in your family, I commend your caution." Ensilage. Chemists and most persons who have had no experience in feeding ensilage are opposed to this system, as being costly and wasteful. But hundreds of careful, observing farmers, who have had from one to five years' experience in its use, to a man pronounce it the most economical and profitable method of presenving and feeding green crops to all live farm stock, and especially for dairy products and growing animals. This wide difference of opinion may be, perhaps, reasonably accounted for by the fact that the chemist deals with dead matter entirely in his laboratory, while the farmer deals with life in the food and life in the The.chem- A CMFTOM Presentiment. v On the ooofcrion when the incident to -which I have referred occurred, Senator and Mrs. Linn were to be the guests at a formal dinner by the Presi­ dent at the White Honse. Early in the evening Dr. Linn, feeling somewhat ill, coyeluueu iu remain in his lodg­ ings. Mr. Webster calling at the mo­ ment, he was requested to escort Mrs. Linn and convey to the President his regrets at not being able to be one of his guests. At the proper hour Mrs. Linn, escorted by Mr. Webster, was conveyed in her carriage to the White House. The company had not been long seated at the table when Mrs. Linn remarked to Mr. Webster, by whose side she was seated, that she feared she had not done right in leav­ ing the doctor and that she felt an in­ clination, if she could do so without marring the occasion, to return to her hotel. Mr. Webster made some obser­ vation designed to dissuade her from departing then, saying that if she felt so disposed she could leave at an ear­ lier hour than the rest of the company. So strongly did the impulse to go grow upon her that stoon after- she made it known to Mr. Webster, and so urgent was she that he ^id as Bhe re­ quired, and quietly made, known to. the President her wishes. Mr. Webster accompanied her to the 'carriage, and at her request returned to the table. Her instruction to the driver was to proceed rapidly to her home, and twice on the way she enjoined him to drive faster. Arriving at the spot, without waiting for the groom to open the car­ riage door, she, in the quickest man­ ner, opened it herself and sprang to the room where she had left her hus­ band. As she entered she beheld her husband on the bed, and the clothing in flames! A moment more would have been too late. Dr. Linn was in a stupor, and in some manner, which was never perfectly explained, the bed­ clothes had taken fire. He was ill for a number of days. His life was saved apparently through his wife's presenti­ ment, which I think was as remarkable as any on record. Mrs. Linn related the facts to Mr. Webster, in my pres­ ence, on his calling the next morning. His observations after Mrs. Linn fin­ ished the narration of her first impulse to leave the President's table, her struggle to repress it, the growth of the presentiment till it over-mastered her, the ride homeward, her anxiety for greater haste, her bursting into the room, her husband's danger and rescue --to which Mr. Webster listened with absorbing attention--were character­ istic of the man--solemn and impres­ sive beyond my ability to repeat.-- Washington correspondent. Statues in the Capitol* The statue of Fulton, being in sitting posture, is a departure from the rule displayed in other works of art in Stat­ uary Hall in the Capitol, and is favorably commented upon. Mr. Clark, the archi­ tect of the Capitol, says he has heard nothing unfavorable upon it as a work of art, and he considers it a meritorious production, vigorous in action and in­ dicative of intense thought in the sub­ ject. As to the propriety of according Fulton the honor of having first con­ ceived the theory of steam navigation he says it has been intimated to him that when the statue, is formally pre­ sented to Congress a protest wiii be made in favor of John Fitch and Rum- sey, who claimed priority in the inven­ tion, allowing, however, that Fulton, having in Livingstone a friend with a long purse, was thereby enabled to carry the propositions to a successful issue. It is probable, therefore, that when the statue of Fulton is presented in Congress, some speeches may be made against a concession to him of the honor of being the inventor of the steamboat. Other statues expected for Statuary Hall in the near future are that of Garfield from Ohio and two from New Jersey--those of Gen. Phil Kear­ ney and Richard Stockton, one of the signers of the Declaration of Indepen­ dence. Mr. Clark says he has heard it intimated that the Ohio committee charged with the task of supervising the preparation of the Garfield statue intend it shall beof colossal size. This, Mr. Clark, says would be in bad taste, as it would tend to create a rivalry among the various States in getting up colossal statues and mar the general effect of tlie whole collection in the hall. The general comment upon the Ethan Allen statue, which is nine feet high, ie that it is too large and out of propor­ tion with other figures displayed. Mr. Clark has written to Gov. Foster, re­ questing that before the statue of Gar­ field is constructed the committee come to Washington and study the other statues in the hall, so that all may be as nearly as possible of uniform size.--Washington letter. Arizona as an Independent State. At one time, I think it was about the outbreak of the civil war, the handful of Americans who were then in South­ ern Arizona held a meeting and resolved to declare themselves a free aad in­ dependent State. They determined to hold themselves absolutely neutral be­ tween the North and South. They therefore called a meeting and elected a President, Vice President and a Cabi­ net. They elected all the officers that they could think of. They chose a Secretary of the Navy, while there was just about water enough in the whole Territory to float a duck; and they elected (Generals of the army until there was just one man left as private. Every­ thing was conducted on this scale. Out of 300 or 400 Americans in Southern Arizona probably three-fourths were appointed to some office. --Boston Herald. Wagner and Wagner, it is known, was in the habit of dressing in an eccentric fashion, and put on special garments to compose in. This seemed folly to the French novel­ ist, who permitted himself to be irri­ tated by what he deemed an outrageous piece of affectation. When Wagnefr called, one day, he was kept waiting for half an hour in an ante-room. Then the author of the "Trois Mousquetaires" marched in, superbly attired in a plumed helmet, a cork life-bolt, and a flowered dressing-gown. "Excuse me for appearing in my working dress," he said majestically. "Half my ideas are lodged in this helmet, and the other half in a pair of jack boots which I put on to compose love scenes." A BOT says in his composition that "Onions are the vegetables that make you sick when you don't eat them your­ self." IT is estimated that the druggists of the country have an average of five regular opium customers each. named "Pacific", eighteen feet long, aa feet beam, a depth «f two feet six inch- «s, and a register of two tons. Gilfcrr was the only pssnenger, and he started with the determinatiOB of performing the unparalleled feat of crossing the- Pacific Biugle-Suuaded in a common flail­ ing boat. Gilfoy's principal discomfort, he said, Was the too familiar habits of the sharks which every night came thumping the boat with their ugly snouts. To rid himself of them he- made a harpoon out of a boat hook, and succeeded in rendering them so shy that by propping up his shirt at night in the place where he usually sat by the day he was enabled to ts,ke his real comparitavely undisturbed. On the 14th of December, being Mip to the south of the Friendly Isles, a heavy sea broke over the boat and cap­ sized her. He went backward into the water, and it was only by an hour's hard work, with the aid "of a floating anchor," that he was enabled to right the dory. No sooner was she wghtedi than another heavy sea eapsizedner a second time. Again he righted her and passed the night in bailing and the day in making things as ship-shape as possible. By the 10th «f December he had got things under way again, and was enjoying pleasant weather, when the boat was pierced by a swordfish. On Christmas day he found himself near Hunter Island, a barren rock, with all his instruments gone and nothing left of his provisions except twelve pounds of corn meal, two quarts of ai- cohol and fifteen gallons of water. He then tried to make for New Caledonia, but the wind and current were against him, and on the 14th of January he ate the last of his meat. Two days after he lost his rudder and had to rig up a makeshift, and from that time on he had to subsist on whatever fish he caught or birds he shot. On the 20th of January he ate his last cooked meal, a bird singed over a heap of broken matches, and after that sucked the bar­ nacles which balanced the boat. Then the days came in which he knew noth- . ing and cared nothing, steering aim- , lessly here and there. Just as the last hope had fled he sighted the Alfred Vittery, on Jan. 29th, bound for Maryborough. The Vittery saw him and a Jew minutes after Gilfo^5 was saved. He was then but 160 miles off Sandy Cape, and after being fed told the singular story of an extraordinary feat so nearly accomplished.--«S<m Francisco Chronicle. Sly Reynard. ̂ I had occasion once to spend a month at a farm-house in a region of country where foxes were very numerous. They were no small annoyance to the people, for, frequently, Reynard would dash into a farmyard in broad daylight, and snatch a turkey or a chicken from the flock under the very eye of the owner. This made it necessary to look after the fowls with a good deal of care, and in most cases a boy was set to watch the flocks as they went afield. Mine host had a fine brood of turkey! about two-thirds grown, of which he was very proud. One day they were allowed to stroll some distance from the house to a lot of land from which corn was then being removed by the workmen. The flock would follow the cart as it was being loaded, and while «->« ~ ±_ J-l- - T III. gvuv VVJ llUO ¥r each load, they strolled about in search of food. Once, while the fowls were left unguarded, a fox was seen creeping toward them from a neighboring piece of woodland. Swiftly and silent ly he advanced concealing himself be­ tween the rows of stubble, till he sair he could get no nearer without discov­ ery, when, with a tremendous rush, he sprang upon the flock. Sooner than I can tell it, he had bitten one through the neck and dropped it for another and another, until, before the flock could escape, he had killed five of the young fowls. He then deliberately set to work and buried four of the number between the corn rows, and taking the- fifth one in his mouth, he ran away te> his cover. What shall we say regarding such exploit? Reynard's sense of hunger- would promx>t him to seize a turkey, and experience, supporting instinct*- would teach him the necessity of cau­ tion in getting near enough for it, b^it nothing short of an exercise of reason can account for his trying to provide for the future by laying in a stock of provisions while opportunity offered- If he did not reason about the matter, will some one be kind enough to tell ua what he did do?--Rev. J. A. Cass, in- Good Cheer. The Son and Vegetable Lttk From an acorn weighing only a few grains a tree will grow, for a hundred years or more, not only throwing oft many pounds of leaves every year, but- itself weighing several tons. If an orange twig is put in a large box of earth, and that earth weighed, when the twig becomes a tree bearing luscious fruit, there will be very nearly the same quantity of earth. From careful experiments made by different scien­ tific men, it is an ascertained fact that a very large part of the growth of a tree is derived from the sun, from the air, and from the water, and a very lit­ tle from the earth; and notably all veg­ etation becomes sickly unless it is freely exposed to the sunshine. Wood and coal are but condensed sunshine, which contains three important ele­ ments, all equally essential to both vegetable and animal life--magnesia is important to any of the tissues. Thus it is the more persons are out of doors the more healthy they are, and the longer they live. Every human beiiig 'ought to have an hour or two of sua- shino at noon in the winter, and in the early forenoon in the summer. Happy Reconciliation. ? t Near Eureka, Nev., lives a ma#* ftftd wife in perfect bliss, who got to quar­ reling a couple of years ago, after living pleasantly together for thirty years, and agreed to divide everything, even to a board parti ion in the bed. This lasted some time, until one morning, when the old man was lying about hall asleep, the old lady peered over the board and ejaculated: "Bless his dea? old heart." The husband, starting up, said: "Do you mean that?" The an­ swer was in the affirmative, and the old fellow roared: "Take away the board." Poon little Emma Smith wedded bifc burly John Brown. The latter, on be­ ing asked his business, replied with thg» oil- of a man who was telling the truth. "I'm an Em-bosser." THERE is fellowship among the vif|Uy tues by which one great, generous pa£> •ion Mtimiiliit«w iinntW. .. f .. . .. '•u,;..,. .id.

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