2M39. otJ» far oak m tuM. i * - ' ' ^ Q f refused and they have den take the metier into their il£tleas-co«iiifcing i* doe* -* IRrW • i " frff': of tram along the road- ilis a grand good scheme. > the total length of public ia 18,750 BuSee, of wilich fcflfii, bordered with trees, while •re flt present being sbt will shortly be planted. •On tforcmainwig 7,000 miles the nature ' <rf tW soil does not permit of plants* *ions. The number of trees already planted amounts to 2,678,608, consist ing principally of elm, poplar, acade* opiate, ash, sycamore and lime trees. jiueer of a train ranting be- ttweeh Tfcorristown and Philadelphia a few nights ago,was horrified to see jnst :in fronts* the engine the body of a nnan tying en the enda of the ties out side of «nd parallel with the rails. The train apparently passod over him "before it could bd stopped. But on igoing back to find his mangled body, •the engineer found him entirely un harmed and sound asleep. On being .awakened and told of his narrow escape from death he exhibited no emotion, bat grumbled at being disturbed. The •engine must have passed within one or 4wo inches of his body. UNA. FBANK LESLIE, having an- motmoed her intention never to marry again because she is making $160,000 per year oat of her deceased partner's publications, and it is more money than .she knows what to do with, impecuni- vow editors, without incnmberances, rshrewdly take it as an advertisement that the old girl is lonely, and are get ting ready their bids with the requisite plans and specifications. No woman can be happy who is making more money than she knows what to do with, •unless ehe gets some male person to Jhelp use it op. j: of. tks isofc TTSS dircctcd particularly against him of *11 the w m <0» the defence, and <m <m he was attacked in the street """"" the Court Home and .. life. Ttfr «ngg^ tifage fith his friends in a housethnt was stoned by the mob and had every window facing the street demolished. Kossuth's letter congratulating him his conduct of the defense made itt impression that was all the deeper for these circumstances. THE PoatofBoe Department at Wash ington has lately received the twenty- ninth annual report of the Postmaster General of Great Britain and Ireland far the fiscal year ending March 81, 1883. From that report has been ob tained the following interesting facts and statistics with regard to the pree- ent working of the British postal sys tem: Number of letters delivered in the United Kingdom during the year, I,280,686,200; increase 4.2 per cent. Number of postal cards, 144,016,200; increase, 6.4 per cent Books, pack ages and circulars,, 288,206,400; in crease, 6.8 per cent., and newspapers, 140,682,600, a slight decrease, attribu ted to the increased facilities for send ing newspapers on railways as parcels. One London firm posted 182,000 letters for asingle mail,andanother firm 167,000 postal cards, while the number of circu lars posted at one time by single firms ranged from 44,000 to 66,000. It is es timated that the average number of letters carried per capita of the popula tion was 40 in England and Wales, 30 in Scotland, 15 in Ireland and 86 in the United Kingdom. Taking the reports of other countries for the year 1881 as a basis, Mr. Fawcett estimated that the average number of letters per capita in the United States was 21, France 15, Germany 13, Italy 6 and Spain 5. The number of registered letters sent was II,264,926, an increase of 3.3 per cent, over the preceding year. There were 15,406 postoffioes in the United King dom, employing 44,600 permanent offi cers who might become entitled to pensions. This number included 25,611 women, of whom 455 were clerks and 2,106 telegraphists or counter women. The retired officers numbered 835, with pensions aggregating £176,- THE orange crop in California this .year is said to be the largest ever known in that State, notwithstanding :the faot that may trees were damaged by the February frosts. The lime crop, •on the oentraxy is much smaller than usuaL Heretofore not many oranges Jhave been exported from California. They are liked well enough for their •sweetness and flavor to have been con sumed almost wholly within the State up to the present time. They are pre ferred, as a rule, to any except Floridas, .and very few Floridas have reached the Golden State. In time, however, -with the orange crops increasing as -they have been doing, California will have to seek a market in the Eastern .States for her surplus. THE sagacity of Juno, a pure English mastiff, standing three feet high and weighing 120 pounds, owned by ex* Mayor Bookstaver, is recorded by the Syracuse Evening Herald. She sleeps in Dandelion's stall, curling up against his head, and the two are insep arable. One day Juno went up stairs with her master to his office in the Wasting block, and Dandelion was left in the street at one end of a weighted halter. Erelong there was a commo tion in the street, and the ex-Mayor, looking out, found Dandelion in the vestibule trying to drag the carriage up stairs. Juno likes children, and a child may safely poll the dog's tail or put its hand into her month; bat a little boy who likes green apples cannot pick tbeiMgih her presence, for she takes the Utile boy by the wrist and holds Him until he no longer holds the apple. It is estimated that in 7,600 of the 9,000 bar-rooms, in Philadelphia free luncheon is provided. The qualify, of the food varies aocording to the loca tion of the bar-room, from the soup made of a half-pioked beef bone, a few scraps of fat and lean meat, a small measure of potatoes, turnips and toma toes and two gallons of Schuylkill water, to the spread consisting of Bos ton hiked. beans, boiled and baked macaroni, brofled reed birds in nnaflrm. choice breakfast bacon, "and a variety of o'.her dainties that would probably cost from 40 to 60 cents were the patron to get the same thing in a regular res taurant." The daily cost of providing the luncheon first described is only a few cents, while the barkeepers, who go to the other extreme expend. about $10 a day for food, which is free to their customers. The betels generally refrain from inf$$q|||g upon the do main of the dinrngnroom by offering their customers ixr t̂fce bar-room any food move tempting {ban stale crackers ,, jmd dried-up eheesf. prisoners in tbe murder feialwere lawyfrs»three of •hoktf ̂ prisoners, Jews. Bit eel for • Chrtttfan nobleman hu < Jssglfyt who Is distinguished Debt and Death. Gen. Jackson once said, that any man who traded on a borrowed capital ought to break; be that as it may, I oonsider htm a rad ieally-dishonest man who embarks in business wholly on a borrowed capital, became he is willing to endanger his friend for the ettKtice of his own profit; he cannot lose, but his friehd may. James Harper, one of the beet and purest men I ever knew, a Virginia gentleman of the old school, whose heart was welling up unceasingly with human kindness to all around him, once said to a gentleman who counted his fortune by hundreds of thousands, and who voluntarily offered to be drawn upon for any amount, re plied : "I can't consent to make a fort une at the risk of mv friend." A mer cantile gentleman* who was honor per sonified, Joseph Stephen, once said to me: "I leave my bed of a morning bathed in perspiration, in the agony of device for meeting the engagement of the day." We all know that the fear of not being able to meet pecuniary engagements is a frequent cause of in sanity and suicide to men of refinement and of a high sense of honor, while thousands are wasting away around us under harassing pressure of debt. The temper is uneven; at one time sad, at another almoat unendurably irritable; the appetite is variable, if any at all; the nights are restless, the sleep unre- freshing; gladness hies from home, and silent gloom pervades the fireside circle, thus verifying the Scripture as sertion that "they Irho hasten to be rich shall fierce themselves through with many sorrows." In view, then, of its health-destroy ing influences, I may very properly give the admonition, avoid debt; shun it as you would "the pestilence that walketh in darkness, or the plague that wasteth at noondayoonsider it your mortal enemy--the enemy of your body, your health, your happiness, your soul--the enemy of your wife, your children, and every kindred tie. Take almost any business man, and he will tell you in more than three cases out of four, that he has lost more by bad debts than he is now worth. It is a monstrous fallacy that "if a man expects to become rich he mutt go in debt." The sentiment originated in the heart of a rogue. Debt is not the policy of the most sucoessfal men. The Dentist. The Cincinnati Saturday Night says: "A prominent dentist of Cin cinnati states that he was induced to adopt his profession because nature hwd providsa him with teeth at a pre mature age, and furthermore, declares tfryfc he knows of many other dentists who, like himself, had the hand of prov idence indicate to them the profession they should follow. It is singular that lija parents didn't make a dentist of Richard HI-, since he wws born with teeth. Were they disappointed be cause ho did not come into the world with a whole esse of dental instruments as Perhaps they wanted a dental chair mid a lot of vulcanised rubber thrown in. There arc lots of dentists who didn't have a tooth to i pl likeBfchat# % five the liiM liii tails rscoafe the they by the but the m the old jfrfl the " " 'hifr' their pEtSm •hey were the for the pey- States bonds, and - Jd be the same bondholders and the followed the old sod Jackson of banks and up- Wt'lKNipmiStic idea that end not corporations," " the pepole were' money. •; partially ignored Convention of 1876, i Democracy clung to Vhtil 1880. In the Forty-fifth Congress, when Democrats were passing a hilt to stop the destruc tion of Grcenbacks, Mr. Bayard moved to amend thetrill b ̂taking away the legal-tender feature of Greenbacks, while leavin|r the partial legal-tender feature of national bank notes standing, and tins gfamgthc mponal banks a monopoly of the paper money of the country. Mr. Lamar voted for Bayards amendment, and«when this failed, did not vote at allon the passage of the bill, and yet, in I8&J, Jfo? Lamar carried one-half of the Mississippi dele- gition to Cincinnati to vote for Mr. ayard for President, thus stepping over to the Republican platform on national banks. In 1876 the Democratic party was in favor of thereComage of silver at its old. standard value, and in the Fortv- fourth Congress Mr. Lamar, as a mem ber of the House, voted for the Blair Silver bill. In the Forty-fifth Congrese Mr. Lamar, as a Senator, changed his mind, and in violation of instructions from his State Legialature voted against the old silver dollar. In the Forty-sixth Con gress Mr. Bayard not only opposed the Silver bill papijld by a Democratic House, but by his arbitrary action as Chairman of the Finance Committer in the Senate defeated the consideration of the measure in that body. And yet Mr. Lamar, as just stated, in 1*80 carried one-half of the Mississippi dele gation to Cincinnati to indorse Mr. Bayard, and in 1882 Mr. Lamar was himself indorsed by re-election to the Senate by the Democrats of Mississippi, who thus passed over to the Republican platform on that subject. In 1876 the Democrats were for "a tarift only for revenue." In 1880 they were for "a tariff for revenue only. Now, in 1883, the Democrats of Ohio have adopted the original Republican platform of 1856 in almost its exact language, and have nominated on it as their candidate for Governor a distin guished Liberal Republican who left that party but a few years ago. And every Democratic paper in Mississippi liM Wuoni' to the old-time Republican platform. As now construed, this platform of 1880 meant "a tariff for revenue--enly for office." But as the offices did not come on that platform, they now say a tariff for revenue must be supplemented by such discrimination as will afford protection to American industry. One is relegated to its appropriate sphere, and that is to keep the conflicting elements, called Democrats, together uniii they can elect a President. "Only this and nothing more." In 1881 tho Mississippi Democrats were very bitter in denouncing the In dependent party of Mississippi as the half-way house to Republicanism. And last year an article from the Vicksburg Commercial charging this was repro duced and an attempt was made to foster it on me because I had an inter est in the paper, as being an admission of the ultimate purpose of the Inde pendents. Now the De*nocracv of Mississippi, in many counties of the State, are openly advocating a fusion with the Republicans simply to divide the spoils of office. They have passed the half-way house and are making the best possible time for the home base. This time they hsve surpassed their achievements, as described by Gen. Weaver, and instead of resting on last year's encampment of the Republicans, they propose to occupy the same camp ground together. Wnen the North Carolina mover started West with his two-wheeled cart covered with white cotton and the old yellow dog tied behind, he almost Soiled the old dog's head off the first ay to get him along. (Vide Demo crats pulling back and scowling over the reconstruction measures, constitu tional amendments, etc.) In a few days tho dog began to trot quietly along'and sleep behind the wagon. (Vide Demo crats sleeping on the Republican's old camp-ground.) At last the old dog jumped in and slept comfortably in the wagon. (Vido Lynch sad Lamar sleep ing quietly together after their arduous labor in dividing oat the offices in the negro counties m Mississippi.) J. R. CHALMERS. Democratic Presidential Candidates. The deficiency of the Democratic party in Presidential timber is attested by the number of logs which are floated down the current of public opinion; they are numerous enough to choke up the stream, but no man has been able to pick out one sufficiently imposing to set up for publie admiration. The names are discarded almost as rapidly as they are suggested. Not'long since, Mr. Justice Field, of the Supreme Court, came out with a bid for Urn nomination in a letter in tended to oomiliate the Southern Bour bons. He declared in favor of a system of levees along the Mississippi river, and "a tariff for revenue, with inciden tal protection." He was also emphatic in sdveoating a return at the 70,- 000,000 collected from the cotton tax " the only contribution the. South ever msde toward defraying the expenses of the war it forced upon the country, gome of the Soum^r caught greedily at tho out Among others was the and ContHtutumaliit, of which, aflerepitoininbiir J .pfopoaHjogSg said that a medftl Desaocrsitio candidate ftnd spoke of him as "the coming man." Um$i Wn it IkwiD not ice. lowls damagfd See that the and good. IJUI FCRNIT-GT;»WGR JofammoniatQ [ moth. He nevetlNkxm*. BtftNe* Toirk with two other < CWrt«£and--and sum; up smilingly --Hewitt and 'ftthlfec ao> aban- doned its Oetot*r olcetton alii the Democrats in Ohio .ttM" quarrelling among thamselvea, tbt West has .-no claims whatever upeb tlMr nomination, because it has no pivotal . Btate. That is all very we 1, but faow is it going to help Hew York with a couple of rival candidates, neither one of whom can command a iimteddelegitinn from his own State nor the emn&iasm of the party afr all. Mr. Hewitt is the natural heir to nil the antagonism entertained for Tdden among that class of Demo crats, particularly «t the South, who think Tilden should have resorted to Mexican methods in the spring of 1877 and should have attempted to seize the Presidency in spite of the decision reached by Congress. In addition to this antagonism within his own party, Mr. Hewitt has been too outspoken on the tariff question to hope for united support from the ruling politicians who think it to be necessary for the Demo crats to straddle that issue in the ap proaching Democratic oampaign. Gov. Cleveland is not as strong to-day as he was when he was running i For his present place. The Democratic politicians of his State are disgruntled over his dis position of the State patronage, and the country has heard very little of him since he was elected. Meanwhile McDonald and Hendricks, of Indiana, are engaged in a war of ex termination. They are proceeding in their own behalf upon different lines-- McDonald making free-trade speeches and Hendricks making protection speeches--but each determined that the other shall not carry off the prize. Actuated by the common purpose of mutual rivalry, it is probable that each will be successful to the extent of kill ing off the other. Ohio Democrats have destroyed their chance* by their family quarrels at home. Bayarii is set aside because he represents a "rotten- borougli" State. HanoocU is scarcely mentioned, because the recolleotion of his imbecility as a candidate in 1880 is too fresh in the minds < ii tlmii ftmf. answered the quemon.if S ported, that he predicted reoently that Ben Butler will certainly be nominated if he shall be re-elected Governor of Massachusetts. We may be permitted to doubt/ however, that Blaine predict ed Butler's election in that case, though it is easy to understand why he, as a Republican, should say and do every thing possible to encourage Butler's ad vancement in the Democratic party. If Butler could secure the Democratic nomination for President, there would be a sort of retributive justice in the event which would be peculiarly grat ifying to Republicans. It would be a bitter dose to the Democrats, but they may as well prepare, perhaps, to take their medicine.--Chicago Tribune. Political Notes. ' THE New Haven News saya that the first ticket was Adam and Eve, and "the rascals were turned out, too." THE New York Herald is of the opin ion that Senator Logan is rapidly gain ing ground as a Presidential candidate. THE Rochester Post-Express labors under the impression that John Kelly's olive branch lias been cut from a black thorn tree. MK. HENDRICKS has long been con sidered the most expert straddler in American politics, but his recent effort in Iowa distanoed any of his former achievements in this line.--Chicago Times. HON. LAWRENCE WELDOM, of Bloom ington, 111., says David Davis is out of politics, having declared to him, before he went South, that he intended to pass his remaining days in quiet and in at tending exclusively to his private affairs. THE most melancholy figure in politics is poor old Mr. Hendricks, of Indiana. His pleas for the old ticket after his scorn of it in 1880, beat in the drollery of sorrow all the sad organs ever played by crippled paupers on the side walks.--Cincinnati Commercial Ga zette. WHEN the record of the Democracy on the negro question is forgotten, and Mr. Calhoun can ride over his broad Arkansas acres and gather "figs from thistles" and "grapes from thorns," the negro mav be induced to vote tho Dem ocratic ticket, but not until then.---- Terre Haute Express. SENATOR CUIXOM, of Illinois, gives it as his impression that the tariff will be an issne in the Presidential campaign next year. He believes the Republi cans are willing to make it so, and that a majority of the Democrats in Con gress will further the project by trying to tinker with the tariff next winter. THE Democracy ar«J great imitators. Because the Republicans are wresting some of their strongholds in the South from them, a faint retaliation is at tempted, and the Democracy are play ing the part of the small dog in tall oats in some of the strong Republican States in the Norlh.--fndianapoli* Journal. THE Boston Traveller says that wherever you find a man who was a Greeley bolter in 1872, or a Gaston bolter in 1874, or a Tilden bolter in 1676, or a friend of bolters in New iTork, Pennsylvania, New Hampshire or elsewhere, there you will surely find a taan who has the perpetual mbgtim for Hip somebody or other is going to tarn traitor to the ReouWicannaite. pOajKrl 'ttedMtb eiift ' is eaeet t. .end Hi ĵ piliMHit phjstaiaas light an horn aaaybe altered half of the length -- wet lAH »»r hours,Hrllen, water during tnree or p to some degree, it will have been mently softened. Thereafter strong wooden splints may be applied, grootep to fit the son; but the imlints should be strong enough not to^end. They ehould he secured by atrOngistrings tied tightly, and remain on until the next day# when the hot-water Application may be related, and other aplints ap plied. Thus, by degree^ toe horns may he aullleianny straightened to pre vent their growing into the head. Care [should be exercised not to scald the head, nor should the soaking reaoh the lower half of the horn--that next to the heed, as theVe woold then be dan ger of loosening it from its attachment and thus cause serious mischief. SHOULDEB LAMENESS.--When a horse is lame in the shoulder, says the Prairie Farmer, he drags the limb from inability of the muscles of the Shoulder to properly lift the limb from the ground. The motion of the limb is more or less swinging outwardly. If he lifts his foot high from the ground the shoulder cannot be muoh affected. Jn rapidly walking down hill, he catches up the leg with considerable quickness; he will frequently stumble when going up-hill, ana will make a shorter step with the lame leg than with the other. He goes equally lame on hard or soft ground, which IS not the ease when the lameness is in the foot. In shoulder lameness there is no difference in the temperature of the two feet. Applica tion ofhartsborn liniment, or blaster, j|**V ex- in front and toward the aide, together with abeolute rest, or liberty on pastur age, removing the shoes, generally ef fects a cure. HINTS ON FABM ECONOMY.--Bv far too many farmers keep no hooks or accounts, and lience never really know whether they are making money or losing it. Many more make a pretense of keeping an account of the year's receipts and expenses, winch is much better than keeping none, but still is not as thorough and satisfactory in its results as the careful, prudent farmer should desire. Look at the merchant, for example; his hooks are so accurate ly kept, that at the end of the year he knows precisely how he stands. He knows just what class of goods has p#id him a profit, and just what have not, as well as those that will pay him best to handle for another season. His expense account, including clerk hire, light, fuel, rents, insurance, etc., every item has been carefully kept; his "bills payable" and "bills receivable," and his "stock invoices," are all embodied in a system of book-keeping so admir ably correct, that at a glance he can ascertain the exact condition of his busineiBs. Fancy a merchant- doing a successful business and keeping no books. The commercial agencies of the country would soon repojrt bin ss a swindler, or else in such a deplorable mental condition, that his own interests would require the appointment of a to look after his affairs. -While this policy on the part of the merchant would be so considered, yet the majority, we fear, of the farmers of this ouuntrj are guilty of the same sort of lunacy, in their neglect to keep strict account of the trans actions on the farm. Too many farmers go right on season after season, raising certain crops, that may or not pay them. A general lumping of the receipts, and a haphasard guess at the expenditures for the year, may show that they have made some money, or rather, more properly putting it, that they have gone through a year's hard work and have "sometning left to show for it." Had a separate account been kept with the different crops raised, the fact would have doubtless been disclosed, that the losaea on some one of them ha l materially reduced the profits which the labor and cajntal in vested should demand. An item of ex pense on the farm, and one nearly always overlooked, is the cost of hand and team labor. Suppose a crop re quires besides the cost of manuring, nearly all the time of hands and teams to attend to it, this is an item of ex pense, an important one/too, that must, be charged against this Cfop in order to determine whether or not it is a pay ing one. There are so many avenues of loss, that the most careful and systematic reckoning should be kept, in order to avoid mistakes in manage ment and errors in calculations, in time to prevent the serious oonsequenreB which so often result from their being overlooked. Of course, in keeping strict account of all tike transactions of the farm, much difficulty will often be experienced in determining to just what account certain items should be credited or charged; but after a time practice and experience will enable one to reaoh an approximate oorreotnass at detaila which wfll prowe %nite aalir ̂ . ^any preparation, is hhrd and indigestible. Pounding and trimming carefully, and then aimmer- ing in the nicely-ae leoned gravy, make it tender aud'delieions. Take one slice of veal from the leg, wipe it well and remove the bone, skin and tough mem- branea. Pound and out into shspns for serving. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Roll in fine cracker crumbs, dip in beaten egg, then roll again in tine cracker crumbs. Brown the pieces in hot salt-pork fat, and put mto a stewpan. Make a brown gravy with the pOrk fat, if not soorched, by adding to it and working thoroughly into one helping teaspoouful of flour; when this is smooth and well cooked add one and one-half cups of hot water, or stock if you have it. Season with 'Worcester shire sauce, or of onion or tomato, as suits your own taste. Pour the gravy over the cutlets and simmer until tender, which will be in about three- quarters of an hour. Take out the cut lets and put them on a hot platter, re move the fat from the gravy, add more seasoning,if needed,and strain over the meat. Garnish with sliced lemon. . la seasoning any dish remember always that a successful flavor is one which ean not be defined. If any taste is marked the delicacy and refinement of the dish is lost. Too many cooks insist on em phatic flavors, ana by so doing lose all claim to the title of artists. Iilhestf. as* Law. steadily growing in the cmlSelf a disposition to assert the individual will above the restraints of authority. The strongest Governments of Europe have a sense of weakness and insecurity which they have never felt before. The expenditure in our time of police and military force to preserve the existing institutions of authority from overthrow by violence is unparalleled. In this country the signs of the prevailing tendency, in which Europe finds sndh dire forebodings, are only too apparent. We began our national career with the declaration that Governmenta derive their just power from the consent of the governed, and the War of Secession threatened us with anarehy, beoause 8,000,000 of people of the South, ap pealing to this utterance, refused their consent to the Government of the Union. It cost us an untold expend iture of blood and treasure to deny our original declaration, and to declare in stead that Governments derive their just powers from justice, whieh deter mines that to which the people ought to consent quite as truly as that to which they have consented. We have not been wanting since the war in the disposition to cast off authority andte, make the individual self-will dominant in every issue. Two of our Presidents have been shot by sssaasins. ,•. Men! of high position insist upon their-right, whmi the time comes, to take the law, as they term it, into their own hands. A member of the present Congress has just now been on trial for murder, be oause he sought by blood his own re dress for a fancied wrong. The war upon property and family--the two in stitutions upon which the very exist ence of society depends--is as evident in America ss in Europe. I am not apt to take a despondent view of the World's condition or of the promise of our American life, aa yon well know I look upon our national proepeot with large hope. Never be fore, it seems to me, has so bright a future shone to the eyes of any people. But there is never a privilege without its peril, and we have dangers whieh, if wise, we Bhall not fail to see. Our chief peril--and there are signs enough to show that it is grave--consists, I think, in the undue exaltation of our liberty. We have set the Goddess of Liberty upon the dome of our Capitol at Washington, as though liberty was the presiding genius of all our law. We are preparing to erect at the en trance to New York harbor a colossal statue of Liberty, whose uplifted torch shall proclaim to the incoming fleets of the nations that it is liberty which is to enlighten the world. We boast that we are a free people, but who speaks with pride of the supremacy of our law? We make our law dependent on our liberty; in other words, we are de termined to have such laws as we will, rather than to will such laws as we ought to have. But when liberty is put first, and only the law is permitted which we ohooae'to permit, the liberty soon to a lioense, and the license descends into anarchy, and the anarehy only issues in a despotism.--JFYesfdent Seelye. THB crusade of a New Hampshire re former is sgsinst ohewing gum. Hit fervid oratory sets forththfttgnal ' •k tnlaffti tonunana alnolttt* wm PJUM TT*. ^ reapaeHvelĵ , 5J; DasM, «§|! 47; jr« 14 The above - ehildten all satdewnl en by dea*l̂ the same a« foa«?« . .... : rlp •|f**e Court te thepetMontmnmmBp|i».̂ ta the mttttaiy JUSMBS tfce saMHwinnsmfru*; --i fcHsO| opinion on the dmnus in The Peeplsmt tel SfcfeMlairv* The Anditer sort Ikessmer ta^e*ied'hnt;";'~ ' tbeoouitlKiMitlw mfiHwy feUdsw lapse till fee 1st day < the meantime it wflt ot all just detins spatietlt effioet»tbife< Jane £0, ISSS, aocoaqpasied wi|fc vouchers. The decerns General will exaafs* end' counts, and upon approved the Audita* A to angular W" Judge Aathonr et nhtmgii. befog & M. Cengs* «M| the SODDEN. BOM jciirs*o tbe pnrtnsm together in the One Sunday Oooger miderteoktoi a little bnsineai In betuoau ̂ tatO" and dropped into his mall while eemtiijg While there be was abrupt entrance otoslot who said he had beea directs* to arrest any man feuad day. In vain of the firm, and shriirltffilt heada She defeottve taOsd vtaoed, and, aCtas * which dhelpa ted all the lug's session, Coiner S started out for LuddenV-leMk their way they mtftLadd**, to be much surprisa&at tak< •yisiwiifarl did not tatend hit partner shoaUkhO that he arrested A yn--m sisvstss Lehman 4 Wtwsmsn* store on State street, in being an old mt Exactly how the known. Kay, wfc* days ago from employ of TnhinSiia A morning; being amtgMd *> on the fifth floor. He ' about 7:30 o'clock, the at the secHpd flooc tego ating the elevator ered a few moment the elevator floor. Ibe . wi the iandhig, while were flooring of the elfflralstffpt; tween being only ShSjtt antasil the man's body'was/ ' he was ing extrloated wlta It is supposed that elevates at the vMbc Jista* la&sestlsOi the flooring of the esr top or the dragged to remevedto thematgu*' vesrs old. He is and family In PtHHiifrhli 8ionmnrftM*ati*«, CfJE OhiosgCk hasrtngtohisi Ghaalss .JWMfcs. >ttaM«Mtotovete«tavtf» wheseeidss tn<Leasddmt JMBSSPO snd stamps* at1 the evening heeeBed o Mated tveehesks, One Us tin ilarsrt thai good aawlnal̂ smi'eMiihl̂ assed he eooMI not tlMft gs#§kjr mcaip«fe: them. The sua of Him* htm tobatoMsioaaef taSMMaiiH financial oondttfcm , In tjjM left, and when .tbe shishs iyssî there was no money to < was arrested eoen aftse;; At burglarise hedheeat about theas. Be fM*«eed4 Ghiosgo he oonid tasift th%| catch the thieves. lngly brought him-,>«%,, i Jacobs found thathe waa from Michigan ji open his mouth, and that there wasne t Sheriff GalHgan in hi*' Sheriff H&nehett, and. oner In the tatter's ottos* dropped in In WfTlb f|| gan wee efttacks&tori obligingly left the into an edJotahNi " ss bout Jacob* IntlMM not idle, and Oi open, he quMty l When Kx. Mr. Jacob had pefc > tween htjsi8(n5l hire a pMMp