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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 28 Oct 1885, p. 2

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J. VAN SLYKE, EMtarar* ILLINOIS; McHENRY, S CONDENSED; - £ ; • • • , *&: : « ' ' EAST. Aw express train on the Pennsylvania " fioad tan into a detached emigrant-car X thirteen miles outside of Jersey City, kill­ ing nine persons therein and mutilating (three others. Soon afterward a Lehigh V ' "Valley train dashed into the wreck, killing Its engineer and fatally injuring its fire- „ . Snan Lucius Graves, engineer; Har- brakeman; and John Emerson, en-. Jjneer, were killed in a collision on the li^^worthern Railway, at Andover Plains, N. ^^ 35 At a meeting of the Eastern flint- Class manufacturers it was agreed to close their establishments at once rather than •ubmit to the demand from their employes for an increase of wages. Tb^iron- " - mills at Beading, Fa., are to resume at -• Once. , THE number killed by the railway colli-S Ion near Jersey City is twelve. It fa be­ lieved that five of the wounded will die. * 4"homas P. Pratt, the telegraph operator • *rho it is claimed caused the disaster, has ??t>een arrested, and is held to await the ac-. 'iion of the Coroner's jury. A TERRIBLE boiler explosion occurred at I Greenville, Pa. Andrew Hillig was drilling ' i •* a natural-gas well, and bad reached a depth eight hundred feet, when the boiler ex- Woded with terrific force, killing Henry , ffaust, aged 65 years, and seriously injuring several others. Fragments of boiler-iron - brushed through a bayn near by, almost •recking the structure. Windows in the ... vicinity were shattered by the concussion, and pieces of the iron were picked up five Hundred feet from the scen'e of the explo- fion. • A SCOTCH woman in the last,, stages of « consumption, giving the name of Effie Lit- fiefield, hanged herself to a chandelier in a Boston hotel. She crossed fhe Atlantic Sb6t week, and was in search of a brother In Chicago... .The Hon. Malcom Hay. of Pittsburgh, Pa., who was appointed First Assistant Postmaster General soon after Uie inauguration of President Cleveland, tad subsequently resigned on account of fU-health, died last week. A MINES who carried a naked lamp into ; dangerous section of the Delaware and Sludson mine at i^vmouth, Pa., caused #wo explosions of gasand fire-damp, send­ ing a sheet of fire through the mine, shat­ tering the houses at the opening of the : fjh&ft. and driving the debris hundreds of feet skyward. All the persons in the mine Were dashed to the ground bv the force of ; :«he shock, four being killed and twelve iroiinded. Many of the injured, who are Shockingly burned and also inhaled the Ifemes, can not recover. The man who Caused the disaster had all his clothing, iave his boots, torn off, and ulso lost his &air, but was otherwise uninjured Morton C. Warren, importer of laces at Ko. 49 Green street, New York, assigned, . trith preferences of $106,116.* THE WEST. f, I W' I*- fe;. battle-Aeld of Culo's kill, and meywe ao« collecting fund* for pnHtan of erecting a monu­ ment on the spot. ROBERT J. DOXEY, a wife-murderer, and a nephew of the late General Thomas C. Hindman, was taken from jail at Holly Springs, Miss., by a mob and hanged A dispatch from Washington, Ark., says: "Since a moo burned the Polk boys in MurireeBboro jail a few weeks ago the prisoners have been kept in an old wooden trailding: A murderer named Churchill was captured and confined there. Last night a mob collected, saturated the lower part of the building with ooal-oil, |ind tired it. Churchill appeared at the grated win­ dow, and piteously begged the mob to shoot hinv but the flames soon reduced the building and victim to ashes." EJO.HT members of the New Orleans City Council were each fined $">0 and sentenced to imprisonment for ten days for contempt of court regarding tne payment of certain claims. The Chief Justioe, later, ordered the release ot the men until Nov. 2,, ASH1K6TON. MnrcsTKR ROMERO says there Is no foundation for the report that a scheme for free trade between the United States and Mexico is under discussion. There is the best authority for the statement that the administration at Washington does not look with favor upon the pending reciprocity treaty. THE fre ̂ delivery service of the last fiscal year shows Chicago still in the lead of all other cities in the country except New York, though* in 1880 Chicago was outranked in population by three cities. The full figures for Chicago are as follows: Carriers, 321; mail letters delivered, 52,- 374,005imail postal-cards delivered, 11,- 00!',086; focal letters delivered, 13,048,190; local postal-cards delivered, 9.303,486; registered letters delivered, 435,655; papers delivered, 14,931,764; letters collected, 56,570,508; postal-cards collected, 21,147,- 071; papers collected, 19,484,559; pieces handled, 202,804,326; pieces per carrier, 631,789; aggregate cost, $297,959.62; cost per piece, in mills, if; cost per carrier, $928.22; local postage, $452,103.26. In the number of earners Chicago is exceded by Philadelphia 417 and New York 628. A NEW YOIIK journal prints an interview with Assistant Secretary of the Treasury Coon, in which he says that neither the President nor Secretary Manning has considered the Warner silver bill, and that he believes it is seriously considered by no one save Mr. Warner himself. Mr. Coon further stated that both the President and Secretary Manning are opposed to any further coinage of the silver dollar. Winan* reward o%£500 for the capture wurrapllts. A dispatch from Copenhagen, the capital of Denmark, says that "a des­ perate attempt was made at five o'clock this afternoon to assassinate Premier Estrupp by a youth named Rasmussen, a compositor. HasWiussen fired two shots from a revolver at the Premier. When in the act of firing the third th& would- be assassin was seized by a couple of detectives, a number of whom have constantly been in attendanoe on the Premier for some time past, owing to the extreme hatred of the populace toward him and the other members of the Cabinet Rasm ussen was hurriedly taken to prison, the officials fearing that an attempt at a res­ cue would be made. The first shot struck on a button of Herr Estrupp'ycoat. and glanced off. The second shot went wide of the mark. Rasmussen declares that his motives were political, as Herr Estrupp's conduct in the present controversy in Den­ mark is inimical to the state." THEEBAW, King of Burmah, is actively preparing to resist the advance of the Brit­ ish troops.... Prince Waldemar, third son of King Christian of Denmark, was mar­ ried to Princess Marie, daughter of the Due de Chartres, at the residence of the Comte de Paris.... The English Privy Council refused to grant the appeal in be­ half of Louis Riel,' the Canadian rebel un­ der sentence of death, and ho will hong. POLITICAL. fe­ lt j A FARMER near Wabash, Ind., took into ^ A corn-field a worthless dog and a half |K>und of dynamite, tied them together, § < \ ftnd fired the fuse. The remains of the cur 't iffere scattered all over the man, who nearly ' fainted from fright.... The stockholders of » '|hc C'.* •"?.£" and r.c-J iLo- •Chicago and Lake Superior Road have been .j'^jialled to vote otfa contract ccnsslidui- |ng the property and franchises and issuing mortgage bonds to the amount of $7,000,- 4)00 AH attempt will be made to sell the SI Louis. Hannibal and eokuk Railroad under foreclosure, ecember 8, for at least $370,000.... e Illinois Grand Lodge, Knights of held its annual session at eld, with a large attendance. The of officers showed the order to be in a healthy and flourishing condition.... An Indianapolis telegram says: "A tre- ; tnendons sensation was caused in the sCourt House this morning by the shooting <>f Harrison Tasker, colored, charged with ;?£• a criminal assault upon the person of a young woman named Helen Huendling, py the victim'* brother, Meindert Huend­ ling. On Saturday Tasker enticed the girl " ^(nto his room, and, pointing a revolver at tier, compelled her to yield. When released, ebe jumped from the window and received eerious injuries. Tasker was arraigned r this crime in the Criminal Court this morning. A young German boy, greatly, - excited, entered the room as Tasker was # being led out handcuffed, and, rushing up Within a yard, fired a heavy ball into the Colored man, causing a fatal wound. 'My mother's dead, and this nigger ruined my Sister,' was the boy's comment as he was feeized by a bailiff. Wild confusion en- Sued. Many negro women in the court­ room screamed, and there was a surging of #nen into the room. Tasker was taken to flhe hospital in a dying condition, and Jluendling was arrested. Tasker claims that the girl voluntarily visited his room, imt few believe bim." " A GHASTLY and mysterious double mur- ; Her was committed in one of the populous 10 • Jjortiona of Kansas City, Mo., the victims • being Mrs. Catharine Conway and her ten- , fear-old daughter Kitty. The horrible discovery was made by a neighbor, who ! called at the house and was startled on seeing the bleeding and lifeless ti - bodies of the mother and daughter in the s^|! j back room, Mrs. Conway being found ; .lying on her back on the bed botihd and Ragged and her skull crushed in, while the \ little girl was on her knees with-her head , ly on tne bed and her bra;ns oozing out of f to ugly gash in her head A policeman ;/- in St Louis found on the car-track at the i : corner of Compton avenue and Morgan street an infernal machine composed of ' ," * gas-pipe and gunpowder, with a can at i®ach end In a game or tluee-ball bil- j; liards at Yankton, D. T., Mr. Lannie Mc- gpp jJAfee made > a run of 6,004 points--a most iremarkableVperformance. t A DISPATCH from Winchester, 111., says _ that "Fred Homer, who was shot bya mob, has died of his wounds. When he was i '} dressed for burial four shot wounds were fe ! found in his back. These wounds were ft,,I ^not discovered by the physicians who at- |pv " 'tended bim. He died protesting his inno? cence of the crime for which the mob kiHed him." ^ CHICAGO journalists have purchased the j Davenport Gazette, which will be managed pikit-by Geoi^e B. Armstrong and Thomas O. Thompson Officials of the Union Pa- &' cific ^av« learned that a mob of white Ef men attacked a; section-house at Rock K,, Springs, occupied by thirty Chinamen. Ijfc*- Kevolvers were fired and stoneB thrown un- »/ til the Celestials fled to the hills for the 4 night, Mttuning to their work in the mom- i*-\ ins. . ' • | *7; •" -- . p THE SOUTH. AT Setersburg, Virginia, Senator Ma- ? hone's son, Butler Mahone, was fined $50 ! ' >, and put under bonds of $200 to keep the lsi&^ ' peace. He had attempted to shoot a police officer, who had arrested him for using profane and indecent language on the street, firing a shot which missed its mark ... .Heavy rains have fallen in Tennessee and Northern Georgia, causing serious in­ jury to the cotton crop, and partially sus­ pending railway traffic Three hundred miners at Chattanooga, Tenn., struck for higher wages, and it is thought the trouble will become general in that section. THE veterans of the 2d Maryland con­ federate regiment have received permission ?*pft tyj tfafTn on the PRESIDENT CLEVELAND has appointed £. V. Long, of Indiana, to be Chief Jus­ tice of the Supreme Court of the Terri- ritory of New Mexico, to sdcceed Judge Vmopnt; removed. The following Federal appointments are also announced from Washington: Robert P. Waring, to be Asaayer and'Melter at Charlotte. N. C.; George S. Savage, to be Col­ lector of Customs tor the district ot Cherry­ stone, Ya : L. Q. Wa±>hint£ton. of the District of Columbia, to be a commissioner to examine a section of railroad constructed by the North­ ern Pacific Kailroad Company; S. I. Anderson, to be Collector of Customs at Portland, Me.; Louis K. Church, of New York, to be Asso­ ciate Jnstice of' the Supreme Court of the Territory of Dakota; Win. \V. Porter, of Cali­ fornia, to be Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the Territory of .Ar.zona: VVm. H. Barnes, of Illinois, to be Associate Justice of the Territory of Arizona; John (>. Shields, of Michi­ gan, to be Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of T^iriv.rv ,,r Ariy.ni^; Israel (ireen, of Mitchell, If. T.. to be agent for the inUuiiis <>i the Sisseton Agency in Dakota; Win. H. Bickford, P.cccivsr t5f Public Msr.cys at f-haeta. Cat.; Sylvester Hall, Register of the Land Office at Shasta, Cal.; Edward Kessinger, of New York, Consul at Beirut; Daniel W. Hei ring, of Ten­ nessee, Consul at Tegucigalpa; C. H. Vaughn, Collector of Customs at Sag Harbor** N. Y.; Tllton, Collector cf Ciiftonis at Great Egg Harbor, N. J.; T. F. Donovan, Surveyor of Customs for the Port of Patchogue, N. Y. A CINCINNATI dispatch of Oct. 23 says: "The official count of the vote of Hamilton County has been completed, but is liable to change at the hands of the courts. The complexion of the Ohio Legislature hinges upon a decision ia two cases. If given the fire precincts in dispute, the Democratic legislative candidates will receive the cer­ tificates; if the Republicans win in the courts, they will all the Representatives but The unofficial footings complete Hoadly's plurality G86. Kennedy publican), for Lieutenant Governor, has a plurality of 734. M. F. Wilson has the highest vote for Senator on the Demo­ cratic ticket, 34,872, and Richardson the highest on the Republican ticket, 34,401. Hardacre is the lowest on the Republican ticket, having 34,118, and Brashe.irs, on the Democratic ticket, 34,584. For Repre­ sentatives the variance is not so great, but the Democratic figures are all higher than the highest Republican vote." GENEKAL. GEN. SHERMAN has, it is said, written to a friend that he regrets having removed from Washington to St Louis, and often wishes himself back at the national capital, comfortably settled for the remainder of his days. One reason assigned is that there is less brilliant and pleasant social life than Wll8 iriea ip Washington, and a greater scarcity of habitation ADDITIONAL NEWS. THE Second Comptroller of the Treas­ ury is making a thorough investigation of the accouuts of Indian agents, which afe reported to be in a very bad condition, amd has already referred about a dozen cas<$s to the Solicitor of the Treasury for suit to recover balance found due the Govern­ ment.... Tha Hydrographic, Office has is­ sued a new map of the arctic region, which embodies the results of the latest explora­ tions. The arrangement is such that the names and relative positions of all places around the polar b isin c vn be seen without turning the map around, as is usually nec­ essary, and the eye is not bewildered by a multitude of meridian lines concentrating at the poL1. A very simple method of de­ termining the latitude and longitude of any point is afforded by two lines intersecting at right angle's at the pole, along which the degrees are marked. SIXTY-FIVE cows belonging to R. Sat- tenstine, who sells milk in New York City, were killed, being found suffering from pleUro-pneuinonia. The animals bad been ailing for some time... .John Howell, of Wayne County, Pennsylvania, shot four of his childien, ranging in age from 3 to 11 years, and then shot himself. His wife and eldest daughter were absent at the time of the tragedy. - THERE were 146 failures in the United States reported to Bradstreet's during the week, against 1(14 in the preceding week, and 234, 209, and 137 in the corresponding weeks of 1884, 1883, and 1882 respectively. About 85 per cent, were those of small traders whose capital was less than $5,000. In the principal trades they were as fol­ lows: Grocers, 20; liquors, 19; general stores, 16; hotels and restaurants, 14; man­ ufacturers, 7; clothing, G; dry goods, 6; fancy goods, 6; produce and provisions, 5; carriages and wagons, 5; shoes, 4; to­ bacco and cigars, 4bakers and confec­ tioners. 3; carpenters, 3; drugs, 3; furni­ ture, 3; books and stationery, etc., 3. Bradxtreet's Journal, ia its commercial review for the week, says: "Special tele­ grams to Bradstreet'n report no spe­ cial chang%in the general trade situation. The dry goods market at present is dull. Retailers are believed to be carrying the large volume of goods lately shipped from first hands, awaiting the demand for con­ sumption. There is a better demand for funds for use in regular trade channels. There is a fair movement of wool at sea­ board markets for consumption. The large factories are welt stocked, and the smaller ones are buying freely for near-by wants. Manufacturing 'is relatively active, and prices, are firm. Holders regard the situation confidently, and are not anxious to sell. In grocery staples tho::;- has been an increased movement in sugar and coffee, but prices are weak. Tea is depressed. Dairy products are in steady demand for home consumption, but behind last year for exports." 1 HE Southern Pacific Company, keeping j in view the necessity of warding , off low- rate competition, gave the Atlantic and Pacific Road an entrance into Los Angeles and surrendered the San Diego business, in return for the use of track from Col- ton to Riverside and a pledge to maintain rates Jacob Kauffman, a well-known musician of Denver, having evidently lost (ReT I bis reison, undressed himself on the prai­ rie near the Orphans' Home, and crawled back and forth through a barbed-wire fence until death came to his release. His Hesh was found hinging in shreds... While B. J. Shay, a prominent individual, was dining with Mrs. James C. Brown, of Healdsburg, in San Francisco, the woman's husband entered the restaurant and fired two Khots at Shay, indicting fatal wounds. ... .Aaman named Brandt, at Waco, Neb., becoming irritated beyond endurance, flung a lad of 13 years into a thrashing-machine, where his head was ins antlv tornl from the trunk .. .The Attorney Geiiepil <|f Kansas has gone to Emporia to takei proceedings to set aside the sale by the regents of thir­ teen thousand acres of nohntil school lands to a banker named>^Cross.... Blackfoot (Idaho) special: "The United States trial jury, after being out all night arguing Bishop Porter's case, agreed on a verdict of guilty. William C. Garrison was tried and have one. make '1 TRIPLE 00LLISI0Nt: Immigrant and Passenger Trains Come Together Not Far frgm Jewey Citf. ^ " reck Is Dashed Into by Train and Six Persons Are Killed. <nTTtY rtBTj ther PRONJ GII JB. Another it* iimi he finds there fewer army companions and congenial friends having sufficient leisure to chat with him about the past and kill time pleasantly Dr. Norvin Green was re­ elected President of the Western Union Telegraph Company, with Gen. Eckert as General Manager. Col. R. C. Clowry, of Chicago, was elected a Vice President am' member of the Executive Committee. TBEMONT TEMPLE, Boston, was crowd­ ed to hear the Rev. Henry Ward Beecher deliver his eulogy of General Grant The services were on«ned with music, organ and orchestra performing Chopin's funeral rison, a member of the Mormon Church, asked the consent of his Bishop to take a second wife, which was refused. Garri­ son took the second wife, and^-was disfel- lowshipped. He was hated by4he Mor­ mons, and regarded as a Gentile." (Jersey City (N. J.) dispatch^ When the fast express on the Pennsyl­ vania Railroad, leaving Jersey City at 6:15 to-night, rounded the -curve near the Meadow coal bridge, about five miles out, the engineer saw through the thick tog the outlines of a car on the track only a few hundred feet ahead. The express was run­ ning at the rate of forty-five miles an hour. The engineer applied the air-brakes as quickly as he could and whistled the dan­ ger signal, but his attempt was in vain. The engine struck the car with terrific force, telescoping it\pd throwing the fragments in every direction. j . | The panting engine had scarcely f topped when the train bound east, leavMHtNewaftk on the Lehigh Valley Road at wt&s dashed into the forward end of thef immigrant. Engineer Owen Hall, peeping through the fog, saw the wreck. He did everything in his power to stop his train on its death- bearing course, but it was too late. With an awful crash the Newark train rushed upon the overturned car and was thrown down4 the embankment. Over and over rolled the caw of human freight, ana upon the night air rose the horrible shrieks of the dying. Dark outlines of the train lying wrecked in the valley, and the cars rolling one on top of the ou$$r, presented a ghast­ ly picture. When the shock had passed the dazed passengers left the trains as best they could and huddled together, too startled to speak. The Qrst to recover was the engineer of the Jersey City train. He gathered the fright­ ened people together and ordered them to render all possible assistance to the in­ jured. • All this time the cries of those wholly or partially covered by the wreck made the uninjured turn pale with terror. The engicoer and his willing assistants were powerless to aid some of the poor creatures, while their united efforts were sufficient to drag some of the bruised from under the wreck. When the first wounded man was tiken from the debris everybody cried for a physician, but in the whole crowd of willing woruers not one physician could be found. At 9:30 o'clock a relief train was sent to the wreck from Jersey City, loaded with doctors, reporters, beds, food, etc. As the relief train neared the scene of the disaster crowds of men and women could be seen through the heavy m st re­ turning on foot to the city. When the medical staff reached the wreck the scene was indeed heartrending. Mixed in a huge mass lay the two trains, while for hundreds of feet around was piled timber of all shapes. Beside the track lay the Jersey City train. The engine was tipped over the right embankment, and in a long, gro­ tesque line behind it lay the derailed cars. To the left of this train, reduced to a mass of splinters, were the remains of what ap­ peared to be an immigrant caboose. The car was shivered to atoms and underneath lay some of the mangled bodies of the dead and dying. On the left and stringing down the em­ bankment was the Lehigh Valley train, and at the bo torn lay. the engine, hissing and smoking, the legs and bodies of the wound­ ed protruding from the wreck. The {mssengers who had escaped injury were ending valuable assistance. Strfttchers were immediately furnished by the relief train, and the injured and dead were carried into the baggage car. It was a horrible sight. The first body to be removed was the headless trnnk of a wom­ an.' The feet and limbs, with the clothing torn completely from them, protruded from the splinters of the caboose. Strong hands soon elc.ired the xlebrss from above the mangled form, and it was taken to the car. The next was .the form of a man with^his head torn completely from his body. Then ollowed two or three men who were buried completely out of sight under the dead bod­ ies of their companions. They were bruised and broken, and completely saturated with blood. They were moaning pitifully, but subsequently recovered sufficiently to give their history. During all this time the passengers who had escaped kept up their , search for the bodies of their friends. It soon appeared that the only ones injur­ ed were from the emigrant caboose, which lay splintered between the engine of the Jersey City train and the last cars of the Lehigh Valley. All attention, therefore, was being bestowed on the emigrants, when low moans were heard coming from under the engine of the Lehigh train. The eager rescuers rushed quickly down the embankment, and there lay the insensible form of Owen Hal], the engineer of the wrecked train. His legs were held down by the heavy framework of the massive en-j? gine. Wdling hands soon relieved the poor fellow, and his injuries were attended to. In a few moments groans were heard from the Lehigh wreck again, and the bleeding face of Fireman Stewart Bowers could be seen through the long meadow grass in which lay the engine truck. His skull was fractured, and the blood trickled down his upturned face. With difficulty he was dragged to the relief car, and it was found that he had sustained internal injuries. The pOor feUow exhib- ited wonderful energy and^luck. He; sat ; The Date of His Execution Fixed-- Ansrry Public Feelini Canada. __ convicted of unlawful co- , , ^ His was a peculiar case. Gar- '"P during the examination, groanfhg terri- THE MARKETS. NEW YORK. OGB J WHEAT--NO. L White No. 2 Red CORN--No. 2. OATS--White POKK--Mess .'. ., CHICAGO. march, which was followed by prayer, after j ®KEVE^Clml<» to PrUne Steers, which ap ode composed by Mrs. Julia $5.00 4.00 .97 , .97 .M ap Ward Howe wa^s rendered by the choir. A poem by Louis# lmogene Guiny was then read, when the female portion of the choir sung an elegy written by the Rev. M. J. Sav­ age. Mr. Beecher then delivered his eulogy on the Union soldier, praising in no stinted terms his genius, statesmanship, and mar­ tial qualities. The benediction concluded the exercises.... Ferdinand Ward was ar­ raigned in the Court of Oyer and Terminer at New York, Oct. 22, on the charge of lar­ ceny auu obtaining goods under false pre­ tenses. He pleaded not guilty, and the work of securing a jury was begun. Good Hhlppinjr.... Common | Hons i FLOUB--Extra Spring -- V.". Choice Winter j WHEAT--No. 2 Spring i CORN--No. 2 : OAT.S--No. 2 .' ' RYE--No. 2 JURLEY--No. 2 I 'BUTTER--Choice Creamery i Fine Dairy J - CHEESE--Full Cream, new Skimmed Flats ... j EOUH-- Fresh i POTATOES--Car-lots, per bu..-... t If .... ; roua--jico3 MILWAUKEE, i WHEAT--No. 2 i CORN--No. 2... ] OATH-No. 3 RYK--NO. 1 & 6.60 C4 5.60 <9 .99 .98 »!» .51 9Vfo (Siajj 5.75 & 6.25 *.75. «I 5.SO 8.50/ ({H 1.50 > H.5<1 & U)TF 6.0oN"r*T5O 4.76 <<$ 5.25 t<f> .81 & C9 .87 .41 .21 .61 .66 .24 .17 .09" .06 .17 .45 .42 .26 .63 .68 .26 .20 .10^ .07 .18 .50 L& O.O'J 8</ & M & POBK--Mess. WHEAT--NO. 9. CORN--No. 2..., OATS--No 2.... TOLEDO. .25 .62 8.00 A SYNDICATE in Liverpool has offered to start a fleet of packets to carry cattle from Cork to England for the Nationalists, i WHEAT--No. 2 Red. Lords Bandon find Castleton and other CORN--Mixed prominent gentlemen of London have PORK--Mess . ST. LOUIS. .94 & -44 ® .27"*® .87 .42 It .26 m .64 & 8.50 formed a committee to assist people of CINCINNATI. every class in Ireland who have been boy- j WHEAT--No 2 Red cotted The iiang of Denmark has or- o^ts--M?xed */ .24 8.75 @ .95 (4 .40 & .25 <31 9.25 .96 @ dered large reinforcements for the garrison at Copenhagen,' on account of popular manifestations of dissatisfaction through­ out the country. Excitement has been caused by a number of political arrests, and a state of siege is likely to be proclaimed.... The military craze has infected all Greece, and the people are clamoring for war. Thirty thousand of the reserves have been enrolled during the last five days.... Mrs. Laugtry has been brought before an En­ glish court for neglecting to pay her debts. The action of Mr. Boss Winans, the | Baltimore millionaire, who owns an exten­ sive deer-park in Northern Scotland, in RYE-No. 2 PORK--Mesa DETROIT. BEEF CATTLE. HOGS SHEEP .....; WHEAT--No. l White CORN--No. 2.., OATS--No. 2. INDIANAPOLIS. WHEAT--No. 2 Red Coi»N«^Mlxod f-OATS--NoVi... EAST LIBERTY. CATTLE--B««t Fair X/.. Common Hoos.. closing a roadway on his property so an^ 8hebp '"miwiiVi" gered the people in th.it vicinity'tbat they WHEAT--No. 1 Hard... mobb$d and stoned him Sunday hmL Mr. .45!i<$ .27 .64 8.7S 4.50 3.75 3.00 .92 .44 .29 .91 .40 .24 5.00 3.75 3.00 3.75 8.00 1.02 .48 4.50. .98 .46Ja & .28 & .66 & 9.25 @ 6.25 & 4.0Q, (<*3.50 & .93 & .45 @ .31 .49 .25 0 5.75 & 4.25 & 8.76 » 4.95 & 8.M 1.05 % bly, but thoroughly conscious of his sur­ roundings. The people known to be dqad are de­ scribed as follows: An unknown man about forty years of age. His heart was completely torn from his body, and both his arms ware broken. Unknown woman about twenty-five years of nee. Her heail was severed from her neck, and her bttdy was covered with bruises. UnKBgwn bov about twelve yearn of age. Both hiflctts were broken and his skull waa fractured. Unknown girl about eighteen years old. Her skull was fractured. . Ulena Arcneas, 35 yenrs of ace; on her way to her father at Madison, Wis. Both ner legs were broken and tier skull was fractured. She was brought to the depot alive, bnt died five min­ utes alter reaching St. Francis Hospital. The wounded are: Marinus Klinirer. head and body bruised. ChiiKtian Wyaurbretsen. of Holdstadt. K. V. Urberoth. conductor of the emigrant train, arm broken. Stewart A. Powers, fireman of the Lehigh Valley train, f-'outh - aston. Pa., scalp wound. Owen Hall, engineer of the Lehigh Valley train. Kaston, Pa., 35 years, fracture of the toot and bruises. Three men were taken to St. Francis Hos­ pital unconscious. Ralph Curry. 29, internal injuries. Christian <4. Hoisted, bound for Minneapolis, Minn. Laura Redesen, intending to join her husband at Norwood, Iowa; will die. It is impossible now to obtain a full list of the wounded. 6.00 QUITE ROMANTIC. A Discharged Convict Marries tlio Daughte^ of a Prison Official. [Boston special.] Francis J. Meade, who was pardoned from the State prison, Oct. 1, after serving eight years of a ten years' sentence, waa married last week to a young woman whorfa father was a prison officer, and between whom and the recent prisoner an attach­ ment sprung up while the latter was serving his sentence. Meade is'a yOung man of prepossessing appearance and evi­ dent good points. When, nearly ten years ago, he received his sentence in the court at Salem, he said: "May God have mercy on my soul." His health was very feeble, and it was believed he would not live to Anish half his sentence, but a special prov- ideirce seemed to guard him, and he comes back to the world under the happiest aus- C?s for becoming an honest citizen. He obtained a situation as a taster in one of the Lynn factories. THE town of Brooklyn, Conn., has voted $500 toward a monument to Gen. Pntaam. ndon dispatch.} The Privy Council has dismissed the appeal of Louis Blel, the lender of the fcalf-breed insurrection in Canada, agaiwt the sentence of death passed upon him by the Canadian courts. I > an interview to-day, Mr. Fitzpatrick, Biel s Canadian counsel, said: "It is im- possiblejto pretend that Riel was unfairly tried. No doubt, at the time of the out­ break in the Northwest, grievances existed which have since been remedied. Riel com­ menced the agitation from purely political motives. Many people still consider that, he rendered valuable services to the coun­ try. Doubtless the e.xc tement again in­ duced in Riel mental aberration, rendering him incapable of - keeping the rebellion within legal limits. On thescaffold Riel will become a martyr; in prison or in an asylum hte would be forgotten." In face of the conflicting medical evidence in Rrol's case, Mr. Fitzpatrick advocated the ap­ pointment by the Canadian Government of a commission to, again examine the pris­ oner./ Tpe Daily Telegraph, commenting on the^ case, says: "On the whole yester­ day's judgment is so upheld by reason" and comes from a lawyer of such un­ doubted authority that it may be assumed to cover the justice of the case. The end of tfce chapter now rests with Canada. Riel cannot complain if Canada, now mas­ ter of the situation, exacts the last pen- alties." - TMontreal dispatch.] ' , L. O. David, President of the Riel De­ fense Association, says that he has re­ ceived trustworthy information that it is the Government's intention to carry the law into effect against Riel. The feeling* he says, among the French Canadians is in­ tense, and with the small-pox, and other causes of race feeling, the slightest provo­ cation might cause serious trouble. Per­ sonally he will take no further steps in the matter, and believes the committee will follow this course, holding the Govern-,, nient responsible. The Government offi­ cers here say that Riel will be hanged on the 10th of November. [Winnipeg dispatch. I " ^ Althorgh the verdict of the Privy Coun­ cil in the Riel case has not been a surprise it has occasioned a deep feeling among.the half-breeds and French in Winnipeg, who now expect the rebel will be hanged. A dispatch from Regina says Riel displayed great agitation on receiving the news. He fears the last hope is gone, and expressed the private opinion that he would have to meet the fate the recent sentence imposed. 6RANT ANir ANDY J0HI History of the Differences Between the President and the Gene; ' ^ Armies. " ' t •' Jil- : ;q: wander to Sire Them Johnson's Wratfcr ILLINOIS STATE NEWS. •- • y 1 --George Sipferiiras.killed,-^aiifaU.oll oOal in a mine nearl&ntralia. ^ J. H. Durran, a jeweler at Auro:a, committed suicide by taking strychnia. ^ . . --The real estate trade of Chicago for- Confederate Leaders Ask tlie Old COM- the week ^ the heavieBt of the yeav< from ; the amount involved being $1,523,815. --In consequence of war among the bakers in Urbana, fifty loaves of bread may||i> now be bought at that place for on» dollar, --David Rea, of Chicago, who murdered . his wife some months ago, has been found guilty and sentenced to fifteen years im­ prisonment. --Farmers in the vicinity of Tolono, in . Central Illinois, report husking ninety j;. bushels of corn^from the acre, some stalk? ' being twenty feet high. --The authorities of Decatur, have made a contract for lighting the city by elec­ tricity. Eight towers and numerous hang- ing lamps wilTbe used. &:;f --For a criminal assault upon an eleven- Jf year-ol<jrgirI, Frank Wray, a married man, j l wife sentenced at Bockn Inland to twenty ^ years in the penitentiary. / ̂ --The St. Louis street-car strike is end- v ing with the#employers on top, They do >ijf those things--like most things--better In: | Chicago.--Buffalo Express. v --Frederick Goodall, of Dixon, fell from , | [New York tele)rraia.J The Hon. Chauncey M. Depew has fur- ! nished to the press the following open let- j ter to Col. F. D. Grant: * NEW YORK, Oct. 12, issi. : MY DEAR COLONEL: In answer to your re- queRt for the 1 articulars of the conversation I had with your lather, and to vihicn I alluded in a speech before the Chamber of Commerce, the following is my best recollection: j About four, years as:o I t at beside Gen. Grant ""-at dinner. There were many courses, slowly served, and Jhe entertainment lasted several hours. e drscupsed many matters sntrfrested by his trip around the world, and among other things he said to n e that when in China I rinoe Kung. who'Was Urgent and real ruler during \ the minority of the Kmperor, told him of 1 their controversy with Japan. War waa about to be declared, : nd the Prince thought it would be a long and blooJv one, and asked General Grant if he would act as arbt- ! tr«tor. The General declined for want of time, i but principally because he was a pri\a e person ! and had no power to enforce his decision. He i Bugttested, however, the terms of compromise, j When in .Japan shortly after. 1 he Mikado's Min­ isters told him their side of tile trouble, and re- I vealed the iact that several of the European ; Governments were actively stirring np the strife [. on both sides', hoping to benefit bvthe war. The ' Bame request was n.;uic to bim on the part of ! the Japanese Government--to act as arbitratoj-- j and in again declining he stated tne substance : of the compromise he had advised tor China, i The two nations adopted substantially the ; terms proposed by General Grant, and a disas- j trous Conflict was averted. - | The conversation drifted into a consideration ; a load of wood atrik<nn i>ic nnA of his relations with President Andrew John- ; ®loaao1 wooa> Striking his head and rup-; I son. The narrative of this period was one of j-turing a blood-vessel, fram which he died the most graphic to which I ever listened, and ! iu about >ten hours. HTW sixty years> old. HEIR TO A MILLION. A St. LOUIIHO Entitled t the Great Townley Estate. rst Louis telegram.] ' The s Liverpool Weekly Post of recent date announces that by an act of Parlia­ ment, passed August 4, the British Gov­ ernment has decided to pay over to all the legal heirs o£ the Lawrence Townley es­ tate their proper portion of the money. This estate amounts to the enormous sum of $800,000,000 in money and 400,000 acres of land. The estate would have been divided thirty-four years ago, but, through the false claim of one Talmy, it was thrown into chancery, where it re­ mained twenty-six years. The estate was inherited by * four brothers of the Chase family, three of whom-- William, Aquila, and Thomas--came to this ccnmtry before the Revolutionary war. The direct heirs of these three brothers in America number about 800. Many of them are supposed to reside in Missouri. One of those who} Lave put in claims is L. T. Austin, of No. '224 East Stein street, South St. Louis. He will be entitled to several million dollars when the • estate is settled. Mr. Austfn says that a number of the other heirs who have not put in their claims are supposed to be residents of St. Louis. Mr. Stein's grandmother prosecuted the claim in 1840, but died at the advanced age of 100 years while it was still in litigation. Mr. Austin is now working on the Transfer Railway in South St. Louis. TOOMBS AND THE UNION PRISONER. He Secure settle Release from I.ibby of the Son of a Former Sweetheart. [Centralia (111.) special. I The approaching death of Rob Toombs inspires people to tell incidents of his pub­ lic life and service. A story was told to your correspondent to-day which is worthy of the public print One day, while Toombs was in the rebel Cabinet, he drove up to Gen. Winder's office at Libby, and asked to see a prisoner whom he named, and who turned out to be a mere boy, who had en­ listed in a New England regiment and was captured and taken to Libby. Toombs was taken to the boy, and the two were left alone together. No one knew what trans­ pired, but in a day or two the prisoner's release was ordered, and he was sent home. In former days Bob had formed a fancy for the girl who was now the soldier boy's mother. The tender memories of the past were not eliminated from the mind of the arch rebel by the clash of war, and a moth­ er's appeal was not allowed to go unheard. It is unfortunate tor history and posterity that it cannot be pi eserved as it was told, ft had the local coloring of conversations with, and statements made by, the chief actors, and of the situations of parties and persons as the event* occurred, invaluable as a portraiture and esti­ mate of the times. I said in mv address that Gen. Grant performed services to his country which were unwritten (juite as important as any that were recorded, and I think this narra­ tive will bear me out. This is the substance of the story: Johnson began, the day after the assassination of Mr. Lincoln, to loudly proclafm at all times and places, with constant reiteration, the shibbo­ leth, "Treason is odious and must be punished, and the chief rebels shall be hangied. To give eiTect to this sentiment, as soon as he was in- augured he insisted upon the United States Courts in Virginia finding indictments against all the leading members of the Confederacy. He also wanted the officers in the rebel army who had left the regular army to join the rebel-' lion to be summarily dealt with by court- martial.' These movements of the 1 resident produced the greatest consternation through­ out the South. The Confederate leaders ap­ pealed to Grant to protect them on the parole he had given. He saw Johnson on the subject, only,, to be in­ formed that the President was "by* the Consti­ tution commander-in-chief of the army, and that anything done by the commandinsfGeneral on the field was done subject to his approval or rejec ion, and he rejected the terms. General Grant urged that the rebels hqd surrendered on these conditions, disbanded their organizations. Portion ofd) ^submitted universally to the situation, and were K carrying out In good faith their part of the agreement, and every consideration Of both honor and expediency demanded equally good faith oh the part of the Government. The other course would have led to an endless guerrilla warfare, conducted in a country admirably adapted for it by desperate and hopeless men. Johnson obstinately adhered to his view, and assumed the authority of commander, when Grant flatly told him that if there were to be any courts-martial one must be called to try General Grant first; that he would by every means in his power protect his parole and ap- p al to Congress and the country. In the halt called by this attitude of General Grant a very remarkable change occurred in the views and policv of President Johnson. General Grant discovered that the most fre iueut and "favored visitors to the W hite House were the men whom the President had proscribed. In the General's opinion Johnson's loyalty was subordinate to, if not entirely dependent upon, his entire enmity to the slaveliolding oligarchy. He was a i oor white, had been a journeyman tailor, and, notwithstanding the distinguished public positions he had held, he could not break through the class barrier, and was treat­ ed socially with contempt by this proud aris­ tocracy. When they plunged into rel>ellion he saw his opportunity. He believed in the power of t>he Government, and thought that the time had come when he could defeat his enemies, confiscatc tReir property, humiliate their pride, and possibly destroy them. The absorbing ambition and passion of his life had been to be received and treated as one of them by the oligarchy. Having tailed iu that and- suffered insult and indignity in the effort, he became one of the most vindictive of men. He saw them foiled in their rebellion, defeated and impoverished, and now he wanted to kill them. While he was devising means to overcome General Grant's resistance to this last purpose, the leaders of the old feudalism called upon him. They admittrfl their former treat­ ment and'justified it. They said that in all ages and»countries where caste distinctions ex­ isted, conditions were always possible which promoted men who had achieved success from the lower into the noble order. As President of the United States, he became, regardless of birth and ancestry, not only a member of their order, but its leader. Johnson was wild with delight; ambition and pride were both satis- fled. He became as anxious to sustain and perpetuate in some form a system which had given the hignest social and political distinc­ tion to a tew great families as he had been 5 CHINESE STAMPEDED. A House Containing: Mongol Laborers At­ tacked by a Mob Near Kock Springs. ^ [Omaha special. J A dispatch ieceiy«d at Union Pacific headquarters state# that a mob of white men attacked the siection house at the old town of Rock Springs, Wyoming, three miles from the coal-mining town of the same name. The house was occupied by thirty Chinamen employed as railroad sec­ tion men. The mob yelled and shouted, fired a volley of revolver shots into the air, and bombarded the house with clubs and 6tont s, and smashed every window. The Chinamen were frightened nearly to death, supposing that another massacre was about to be perpetrated. They ran out of the housi and fled to the neighboring hills, where they remained all night, suffering intensely from cold, as they were out half clad. _ • SPLINTERS. THE letter of Chauncey M. Depew re­ garding the relations between President Johnson and Gen.' Grant has drawn from Charles A. Dana the statement that John­ son was an opium-eattr. wfHK Mayor of Hnrr slmrg, Pa., has issu­ ed a peremptory order to his pdl||e force to arrest all persons heard swearing on the streets. cheap edition'^ "The' Life" of George Eliot," will Bim tain a number of letters never before published. CANON FARRAR pro host, Mr. George W. American srentleman." jounces his recent lilds, "the ideal WHITE whiles are reported to be numer­ ous in the Gulf of St.| Lawrence this season. 1 A WOMAN 73 years ohfwas an applicant for a divorce in Hnrtford,C!onn., the other ' THE original name of Massachusetts was "Land of Codfish." GRENOBLE, France, is the greatest glove- making city in the world. < MR. BURN AND. the editor of Punch, is writing a sew romance. wait for the formulation of his plan. The Presl dent sent for him, and said that the radical measuers of Congress were revolutionary and would destroy the country. The war was over, and the Republic wanted peace, and that was possible only by a union of all sections. Tho irovisional governments provided for the se­ ceded States were temporary expedients without constitutional authority, and the States had all the rights and should possess all the powers they had before the war. He had perfected a scheme to accomplish this result, and with Gen. Grant's assistance its success was assured. He would by proclamation direct the rebel States to send to Washington their full quota of Senators and Representatives. He had assur­ ances from enough members from the North who, united with them, would make a quorum of one house at lea-t, if not both. The Congress thus formed he would recognize and install at the Capitol. If the other North­ ern members did not choose to Join, they would be a powerless rump meeting in some hall. To the General's suggestion that this would start the Civil War afresh, the President replied: "They who do it will be the rebels, but If you sustain me, resistance will be impos­ sible." He appealed to Grant to stand by him in the crisis and thev would be the saviors of the Re­ public. After endeavoring for a long time in vain to convince the President of the folly of such a course and its certain failure, 110 matter who sustained it. Grant finally told him that he would drive the Conuress so constituted out of the Capitol at the point of the baynot, give pos­ session of the building to the Senators and Representatives from the loyal States, and pro­ tect them. If necessary, he would appeal to the country and to the army he had so recently mustered out of service. Mr. Johnson asked if he did not recognize the powers vested in the President by the 1 onstitution, ani if he would refuse to obev the Commander-in-Chief. Gen­ eral ('rant srfid that under such circumstances he most certainly would. Shortly afterward the President sent for Gen. Grant, and said to him that the. relations of our Government with Mexico were very delicate, and he wished him to go to the ftty of Mexico at once on a very important mission. The Gen­ eral knew that this was to get him out of the country, nnd put it in the power of the Presi­ dent to 1 all, as his successor to Washington, some otticer upon whom he could rely. He re­ plied that if tho appointment was a diplomatic one he declined it; if it WHS a military one he refused to obev, because the General of the1 army <o:ild not be ordered to aHireign country with whkh we are at peace. The interview was a stormy <>np, but the subject was droDiteJ. One day the General was sent \N est on a tour of insj ection. He knew that (ten. Sherman was to be his successor, and in him lie had ab­ solute confidence. The outspoken loyalty of that great soldier prevented the project ever being renewed It is at this date needless to speculate upon what might have happened had Gen. Grunt actively assisted or passively obeyed the Presi­ dent. No one douuts the courage or obstinacy i t Andrew Johnson, and only a man < f tqual firmness and determination could have pre­ vented a most calamitous and unfortunate strike at the most critical period of the recon­ struction of the republic. \ ours very trulv. CHAUNCEY M. DEPEW. To Col. Frederick D. Grant. NEW YORK. Oct. 29. ITEAR MR. DEPEW: I am in receipt of your letter, and thank you for yoi.r response to my request. I have read your account, with great interest. It is substantially correct, and I have been able to verily the facts irom documents, letters, and personal recollections. Yours very trulv, F. D. GRANT. To the Hon. Chauncey M. Depew. --Arthur Nettleton, who was .sentenced to twelve years in the Joliet' Penitentiary for killing Clarence White at Paw Paw, Lee County, has been received at the prison. --Charles W. Angell has grown so much in the esteem of his employers and of the prominent people of Joliet that they have banqueted him. The banquet was a sur­ prise to him. --While soime boys were shooting at a. mark in Maple Park, Kane County, a ball entered the house of John Hoyt through a window and lodged in Mrs. Hoyt's lungs. She died nest day, -- . , --A jury in Judge Anthony's Court at Chicago gave Patrick Reidy a verdict of $6,000 against Marcus C. Stearns. Patrick had both eyes put out while working in Stearns' quarry. *1 / --Miss Eugenia Vandevauterf the music- teacher who was injured by a Wabash ave­ nue car, obtained judgment from Judge1 Blodgett for $5,000 against the Chicago City • Railway Company. --The Chicago Herald declares that a preacher in that city used the words: "I will meet the home nine in the lecture-room Sunday afternoon at 2 p. m. Ihe gime Will be called at 3 sharp/* --A German farmer na^ed Fitzler was drowned at Henry, by fallingsS' the bridge into the river while diu ik. Frank Meeker, a farm-laborer near Galena, fell into a pool of waterand was suffocated. --Charles H. Philbrick. Pri ate Secre­ tary of President Lincoln whena was assassinated, was found dead iu his b$d at his home in Griggsvi lie. It is supposed that he died of paralysis £f the heart. --The Corporation Counsel of Chicago has given an opinion that the streets of the,, city can not be mo :opolized by the Electric Sectional "Underground Company, notwith­ standing the liberal provisions of its fran­ chise. -- "Thip world is becoming year by year more and more fit to live in," says th$ editor of the Chicago News. This is pleasant. By tl*e time a m m becomes old ;J enough to die he will probably just be reconciled t > living.--New York Graphic. --ifelle Boyd, professionally known as "the Confederate spy." has sued the Chi­ cago Tribune for $5,000 damages for libel, lion to a lew great; lamuies as ne nan Deen . , . . ,. _ to destroy it. Grant did not have long to A telegram was printed in that paper stat- wait for the formulation of his lilan. The Presi- .i t. _i__ 1 i - JTFLSS A tw of the Married a Poet's Daughter. [Boston dispatch.] Annie Longfellow, youngest daugh- the late poet, was married this after­ noon to Mr. James Gilbert Thorpe, of Eau Claire, Wis. The ceremony took place at the Longfellow mansion, on Brattle street, Old Cambridge, and was performed by the Bev. Samuel .Longfellow, uncle of the bride. The wedding was private. ing that she had gone away from a St. Louis hotel without paying her board bilL --The editor of the Bloomington Through Mail Magazine, lately suspended, is a philosopher, and announces in sub­ stance that he will not lie down to die upon the grave of his hopes. "I candidly told my creditors," he says, "that theie was money in the Through Mail, and that if they would permit it to survive there would be~0u<ieff^1iKit for them and me, too. I did not lie /to them. 1 here is more in it than all oLwb will be able to get out. I put $3,(M)Qi<fScaBh and $6,000,000 in hard work fnyself, and as they have $1,000 in ft, and my former partner put in about $3,800,1 can lick the white-livered Ananias that says there was never anything in it." He adds cheerfully also: "Unlike Mr. Wakeman, ofjthe Current, I shall neitber cry, suicide, nor go mad." It is evident the editor of the Through Mail is not yet world-weary. Fine Stock. The seventh annual American Fat-Stock Show will be held in the Exposition Build- i' g, Chicago, commencing Tuesday, Nov. 10, and closing Thursday, 8 p. m.\ Nov. 19, 1885. It will be seen from the follow- . ing list of meetings tint all the national live-sto k associations hold their annuil meetings at Chicago dnmig the continu­ ance of the show: \ Tuesday, Nov. 10. American Southdown Breeders' Association, Sherman House, at 7:30 p. m. Wednesday, Nov. 11, American Gallo­ way Breeders' Association, Grand Pacific Hotel, at 7:.' 10 p. m. Wednesday, Nov. 11, American Berk* Duiiv Asavu.nuvu, Suciau^tu HuudA ut 7,30 p. m. •Wednesday, Nov. 11, National Norman Horse-Breeders' Association, Sherman House, at 7:30 p. m. ' Wednesday, Nov. 11, Percheron Horse- Breeders' Association of America, Grand Pacific Hotel, at 7:30 p. m. Thursday, Nov. 12, American Hereford Breeders'As-ociation, Sherman House, at 7 p. m. Thursday, Nov. 12, American Clytfetedale Association, Grand Pacific Hotel", at 7:30 p. m. Friday, Nov. 13, American Aberdeen- Angus Association, Grand Pacific Hotel, at 7 p.m. • Friday, Nov. 13, Illinois Shorthorn Breeders' Association, Grand Pacific Hotel. at 7:3o p. m. Tuesday, Nov. 17, American Cotswold Association, Sherman House, at 7:30 p. m. Tuesday, Nov. 17. American Shropshire Association, Grand Pacific Hotel, at 10 a. m. Tuesday. Nov. 17, National Swin'e-Breed- " ers' Association, Sherman Housk at 10 a. m. \ Tuesday and Wednesday, Nov. 17 \nd 18, second annual meeting of the NationakCat- tie-Growers Association of America. Wednesday, Nov. 18, American Short­ horn Breeders' Association. Grand Pacifio Hotel, af 7:30 p. m.

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