Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 2 Jan 1895, p. 2

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sUfe [T FOR THE CASl : ~ t -- WAS l»AY DAY FOR COLONEL ̂ $RECKINMD& .̂ 'Wf , -- -- * 4 rti •Arrow Kucape for Twelve People-- Christian Kndeavorers Expect 7 5,OOG 'People at Their Boston Convention --Carter Confesses to Embezzlement. yk " Breckinridge on the Rostrum. feV,1'- The box office at Pike's Opera House, jj£*> /^Cincinnati, Ohio, where Col. Breckinridge *it. lectnrofl on Thursday night, was the •cene of an exciting fight. "Attorney Gus «> • Meyer, who represented Madeline Pol- |f,. lard, had a bill of $45 against Co!. I" Breckinridge. There had been rumors ^ of an attempted attachment and the box- Li * office was barricaded. Constable Kin- Bey went up to the window as if to pur- *> dmste a ticket. At that, instant Constable .Volker gave him a lift, a_ shove, and Kin- ( Hey was propelled clear through, knock- It' tog down the ticket-seller, overturning i., the cash register, and breaking a picture on the wall. Then began an exciting to eight %l|$ilwjfcpsie bridge Is the base of the rail to the sixty list deep. illian C. Schmittberger, captain and now in command of the tj . district in New York, made, fession before the Lexow Commit1 day to the effect that the entire pel tem of New York City, with the tlon of Superintendent Byrnes and a others, was rotten to the core; that black­ mail and bribrry, extortion and corrup­ tion were common crimes in the depart­ ment, and that mercenary methods alone uno i car cal ie Seriously, s. The twig-' it fire and were aster was e passenger did not leave the track, igers were badly shaken up, e were hurt. ven negroes dead and armed hite and blacks near to each othel^, ||jfc outlook for a race war in Brook* County, Georgia, is startling in its osrtgtaty. The excitement is the re­ sult or«e murder of Joseph Isom. one of the wealthiest farmers In the county. actuated his fellow officers. His charges j Seven negroes were killed Saturday implicated Inspector Steers, Police Com missioners .Tames B. Martin ^nd John C. Sheehan, Capts. Price, Gastlin, and Mar­ tens, ex-Capt. John Gunnor, and Ward-* man Dunlap, Robert Vail and Jame* Gannon. Capt. Schmittberger is undel indictment for bribery. He had previous! ly refused to testify before the Senati Committee. Friday, however, he was r< j arrested and his bail increased. Then hi took advantage of an offer of immuni from punishment held out to him by Cou •el ,(^|Bd,^de a clean bijpwst of it . 'i f % 'M WESTERN.x ' In the funeral services over the remaits of Bank Clerk Huntington, at Counau- Bluffs, the minister, the Rev. Stephen Phelps, arraigned the young man's em­ ployers for having driven him to suicide by a merciless system of questioning. A young man claiming to be a Russiin ,rsldent f,?*™ en£ml M Which had rolled from the smashed reg- j >V\ Kinney managed to pick up about ! °JJho National^ Band of Io!e 1°, m- .r - ^ lute 900. Col. Breckinridge and his son Desha Pushed in. "You robbing " shouted the Colonel, while Desha yelled: "You j come down to the Grand Hotel to-morrow And give me satisfaction." Kinney de- J dined the invitation to a duel, and, after "Counting the money he had seized, re- "turned $13 to Manager Ballenberg. Col. Breckinridge immediately after the fight <('\ ^delivered his lecture on the "Era of f • American History." There was nothing Striking in the discourse, and it met with 5 chilly reception. There were exactly 3600 in the audience, twenty-four of whom, i were women. Paper Stock Burns. The warehouse of the Pioneer Paper Stock Company at Chicago was burned Thursday evening, entailing a loss of $55,000--$40,000 on building and $15,000 On contents. The building was a five- ftfory brick structure. The roof and loors fell in and only the wall on the west side is standing. When the south wall fell out it wrecked two one-story oousgss "-iiiivi two fiSilivs v. ere rendered homeless. From the cottages twelve people had been taken by police Kfficers just before the wall fell. ' w,-., • - " * ? " ~ BREVITIES Democrats have Lexow investigation. A drunken brawl at Wrightsville, Ark., resulted in the killing of two negroes. A man named Myer got the wrong bot­ tle in Holland (Ark.) drug store and is dead. A shortage of $90,000 has been dis­ covered in the Kings County, New York, treasury. * Virgil Prnther was fatally stabbed by Crisper Hagan, both farmers, near Ever- •onville, Mo. " Brazilian, troops burned a hospital at San Gabriel and cremated 120. wounded and sick rebels. Five white boys were terribly burned in a suburb of Richmond, Va., by the ex­ plosion of gunpowder. Joseph Thornton, of Montgomery, Ala., while driving was killed by the accidental discharge of his shotgun. Ethel Fowler, aged 5, died of hydro- . probin in Little Rock, Ark. She was bit­ ten last October by a pet pug. A Leadville justice has decided there is no law in Colorado to prohibit a man from burning his own house. Three thousand five hundred jack rab­ bits, the result of the annual hunt, were • distributed to the poor of Denver. Eleven more fire insurance companies |fcave given notice of their intention to pf^ithdraw from the E Hon. Edward R. C*»t^. Wtfonal confei :-over a period of twenty ock, Indian Director of and Louise La Chap- :irl, were married at lock is a graduate of H. Gear, of Iowa, rebral hemorrhage the symptoms indi- for a time fatal re­ ins Talcott, of West celebrated her 104th as 9 years old when ington died. She has ing. psie Harry Menier, the -jumper, leaped from the Poughkeepsie bridge with striking the water, 212 feet t seconds. [s of the Farmers' Loan and ny of New York, as trustees, separate receivers appointed for n Short Line and Utah North- ay Company were filed in the tates uircuit Court at Boise, lat it hasybeen finally decided tie next international convention ^Christian Endeavor Society in owing to the fact that the rail- lave persisted in refusing to grant 1 San Francisco,the place named by convention, the committees ap- to make the preKminary arrange- have gone actively to work. The legation will assemble in July, and en- ic members of the committee of en already put it that 75,000 Chris- i Endeavors will be in attendance. The steamer Guerley, from Port Mor- Jamaica, loaded with bananas foi PUMelphia, narrowly escaped being ||jg»gpped by a waterspout off Cape Hat- A wedding ceremony at Boston 1 day, the groom* Ghas. Hughes, Ky., died at the altar from Geir is rapidly recover- his recent attack of cerebral rbage. Maggie W. Fergo-on, a milliner r'JIftdkson.. Mich., has been robbed of hinotfth $1,600. New York Board of Estimate and ionment have recommended that l̂lty spend $30,000 for anti-toxine, to u the prevailing diptheretic epi- 'bomb" be an night to pay the penalty, and this seems to be only the beginning. A posse of 300 cover a territory of about five miles. The largest crowd, 100 men, congregated a mile and a half from Isom's house, well armed. .About half a mile further on there is a mob of negroes, about the same number, armed with rifles, pistols, axes, clubs, waiting for the white mob to come on. They fear the whites will take sum­ mary vengeance on their families, first found, first shot. No white has been killed. The authorities were powerless and made practically no effort to bring about peace. Revl^ ol the Y|« TJ«U Is '. Past." AND AMOAD Epitome of the General News " ,*v* of the World. V WASHINGTON. Shearman murder at Jamestown, , has developed a fine plot for a Officers investigating tho affair A. picture of the murderer in the Iffjlpttftn's eyes. *" , --J>er, tfce English bridgejump- ĵ liUMd from the top rail of the Pough- ' * * Y . ) b r i d g e w i t h h i s p a r a c h u t e ^ Irate worked successfully,, ana Ohio, demanded money, which was fused him, and threat&neiji to blow the institution. The l " ' - played was found to wrapped in paper. Just after sunrise Tuesday morni; beautiful mirage, showing the St. River and both its banks for a distan thirteen miles, was seen in .the sk; Port Huron. Sarnia, across the i was very clearly pictured in the sky, the ferryboats plying between the cities. The islands in the river below city, the town of St. Clair, and the Oak.; land Hotel, twelve miles away, also were clearly seen. The phenomenon lasted nearly an hour. / John McCarthy, a traveling main of New York, early Saturday morning took a drink in a Chicago saloon on Wabash avenue, near Eld ridge court, which cost him $100.25. He did not "settle" volun­ tarily. The bartender poked a gun under his nose when he displayed his wealth and a loafer in the saloon helped in the robbery. Then he was kicked into the Street, and before he got a blocjr .nwny the saloon was dark. Mr. McCarthy walked to the Central Station and told the policeman there all about it. Near S^n Francisco, Cal., the Cliff House burned Tuesday night. Adolph Sutro's big bath-house, recently com­ pleted at a cost of $500,000, was threat­ ened. The Cliff House had a world-wide reputation, as it overlooked the seal rocks and was part of the possessions of Adolph Sutro, San F/aricisco's Mayor-elect. The buildings of the Cliff House were frame structures and were used as restaurants, saloons, and curio shops. In addition there were wide balconies from which the seals could be viewed. The Cliff House buildings were built thirty years ago, and no visitor ever went away from San Francisco without first going to the Cliff House and looking at the seals. Saturday night Miss Olie Hopewell, of St. Louis, was wedded to Albert P. Hulse, of Chicago. Sunday night the bride of a day sat by the side of the man to whom she had given her heart and watched the light and life pass from his face forever. There was nothing that medical skill could do to save him. The two had known days ago that death stood between them and happiness and must sooner or later strike down the man. Yet they married-- married even though the physician had said "There is no hope," because their love was strong in life and was intensi­ fied when eternity stepped between them and that happiness they had longed to realize. The St. Paul and Kansas City limited had hardly left the Sioux City Union station Friday morning when four men entered tlu- first day coach. They called out, "Every one keep still, we are just separating side of the Theyeom- ly Iverson to him, getting 'iriiS other property. He made a fight and this brought in Sheriff Davenport, who was in another car. He drew his revolver and started after the men, when they jumped off in the dark­ ness and escaped in the yards. A Mil­ waukee train was next entered and the men started through the coaches in the same way. They got clear through one coach before the train got into the heart of the city and took small amounts from every one of the twenty-four passengers on the train. They then jumped off and escaped. They wore no masks and still the passengers are unable to give good de­ scriptions of them and the officers have little to work on. Speaking of the "Black Crook," which is 6oon to Degin a brief engagement at McVicker's Chicago Theater, the St. Louis Globe-Democrat says: (No attrac­ tion of the sort.ever received a more en­ thusiastic reception than did the "Black Crook." The audience was a large one, and the members of it applauded the sing- In*?; dancing, and oth^r ^pocift! features of the production with hands, feet, and voice, and insisted on several repetitions of most numbers. Sam Collins and Allie Gilbert probably received the lion's share of the applause. Each is exceedingly clever, and it was hard to tell whether the winsome smiles, high kicking and melodious singing of la belle Gilbert, or the comical gyrations of Mr. Collins, came in for the bulk of the audience's ap­ probation. They are not the only clever members of the cast, however, and a num­ ber of novel features were introduced. Taken ati a whole, the Tompkins produc­ tion of the "Black Crook" is superb. Shore Acres," one of theenost interest­ ing and truthful pictures of life ever seen on the American stage will follow "Black Crook." ... ^outhernT - As a result %t conferences political friends J udge Nathan Goff is likely to be­ come a candidate for Senator from West Virginia. Joseph Hughes, of Greenwood, Mia*., was burned to death in the home of ex- President Webb of the Mississippi Col­ lege at Clinton, Miss. Late advices from Brooks County, G*., are to the effect that only two negroes were killed in the rioting there, instead of seven as at first reported. Two hundred people left Elberton, Ga., for Texas, where they go, they claim, to better their condition. Men, women, and children compose the party. Capt. Bufurd A. Tracy, one of Winches­ ter's (Ky.) most prominent citizens, Was accidentally killed in an elevator shaft, his neck being broken. Capt. Tracy served on the staff of Coi. Breckinridge during the w*r. Train No. 1, Louisville and Nashville through passenger train to New Orleans! was wrecked Tuesday night near Brent- Wood, nine miles south of Nashville, Tenn. The train ran into some coal cars which had run down the grade from Brentwood because of an open switch The engine was demolished and D. G and his fireman, both At Washington, D. C., Coniifriliiiili John H. G^ar, of Iowa, was stricken sud­ denly at ai\ early hour Tuesday morning with symptoms of apoplexy at his apart­ ments in the Portland, and for several hours it wa4 feared it might Result fatal­ ly. He is nfife? rrc.ovrring. President Cleveland has returned to the White House, apparently much benefited by his shooting trip. " Congressman Springer will probably be appointed to tlie, Court of Claims bench when Judge Welflon is retired. President and "Mrs. Cleveland, it is an­ nounced, will this winter take part in no social function not demanded by prece­ dent. j Ex-Senator Isgalls says he has no ex­ pectancy of being voted for for Senator in the Legislature this winter. He said his Senatorial ambitions were not for 1895; but, if he had any, for 1897. FOREIGN. The porte has agreed to permit foreign delegates to examine witnesses before the Armenian commission. The pope has addressed a confidential message to the cabinets of the several Eu­ ropean powers, caling attention to the troubles in Italy and inviting the sup­ port of the powers ih the event of compli­ cations. The telegraph lines in the northern part of Great Britain are still down and the full amount of damage by the storm is not known. It is estimated, however, that from 50 to 100 persons lost their lives in various manners during the pro­ gress of the gale. ' . The first meeting of the creditors of J. T. M. Pierce & Co. was held at London, and proofs were furnished of the sale of bogus Yankton, S. D., school bonds. In Belfast, it appears, £30,000 of these bonds were placed, and £25,000 were disposed of in Manchester. In Huddersfield, Glas­ gow and Bedford, respectively, £20,000 of the alleged securities were sold, and in London the bonds were placed to the amount of £50,000. The creditors proved debts against the firm amounting to £120,000. At Constantinople the Sultan Monday evening made a final reply to the applica­ tion of United States Minister Terrell for permission to have Consul Jewett make an independent inquiry into Armenian troubles. The Sultan positively declined to allow the Consul to accompany the commission. The refusal was not unex­ pected at Washington. The reluctance of the Turkish Government is accounted for by the formidable proportions to which the agitation in the United States in favor of intercession on behalf of the Armeni­ ans in Turkey has attained. The Frankfurter Zeitung, Berlin, pub­ lishes a letter dated March 29, 1890, from Baroness Charles de Rothschild to Em­ peror William, begging for protection for the Jews in Germany. The secretary of the Emperor in reply wrote: "His majes­ ty is unable to perceive what circum­ stances at the present moment ciyi give cause for the expression of such fear and anxiety regarding the treatment of his Jewish subjects. He regards all his sub­ jects without reference to class or re­ ligious profession, with the same paternal benevolence. His Jewish subjects may rely all the more upon his mftjesty's pro­ tection, inasmuch as, in accordance with the assurance made by the writer's letter, their endeavor wall be to yield to no other class of the population in the exercise of true patriotism and civic virtue." Chronological Recital of All the Im­ portant Events in Legislative, Judi­ cial and Commercial Circles--Start­ ling Deeds of Crime--Stirring Inci­ dents in Military Matters--Record of IHsasters on I«and and Sea--Devasta­ tion by Fire and Pestilence--The Year of '94 Made History Rapidly. Below will be found a concise recital of all the events at home and abroad which go to make up the history of 1894. In America, as in Europe, there has been ex­ perienced a period of severe financial de­ pression. The year was marked by the most Rtnpe'ndc'.vs disturbance of labo? eii- cles in the history of the country, neces­ sitating the employment of government forces for its suppression. Political con­ tests have been nearly as stirring as a national election. The world has been thrilled by tales of horror from devastat­ ing forest fires, and death has claimed many illustrious men. The year will be long remembered as one of the most nota­ ble of the century. Abroad, the theater of news has been principally in the Orient. There is at present raging the war be­ tween Japan and China, and to the aston­ ishment of all civilized nations the island kingdom has worsted its mighty foe in every contest of note. Fort after fort has fallen before Japan's forces, and three separate armies are marching upon the capital of the Flowery Kingdom. The Chinese empire, if not fallen, is humbled, and has already taken initiatory steps to sue for peace. Continental Europe has been at peace, and Russia mourns the death of her Czar. „ ^ JANUARY. y?.p?n,n? of Manchester, Eng.,ship canal. • Theater. 1! ,ston. burns; $1,000',000. 2--Six killed in Rock Island wreck at Lln- wood, Kan....Riot at Dayton, la.; one killed, troops t 3--$1,300,000 fire at Toledo; $250,000 at De- Ktrolt ...Franklin Grove, 111., Bank robbed or $«50|000« 8---$1,200,000 Are at World's Fair grounds. Gov. McKlnley Inaugurated at Colum­ bus, Ohio. 9--Two Senates claim existence In New Jersey John L. Sullivan's wife slugs him with an Indian club. 11--Jackson inaugurated Governor at Des Moines, la... .Sherman Wagoner, wife mur­ derer, lynched near Mitchell, Ind. 12--Nine killed by collapsed bridge at Brooklyn... .Six drowned In Baltimore har­ bor. 13--Three men lynched at Russell, Kan., for murder Schaefer beats Ives at bil­ liards by one point. 14--Sis sailors from Dutch steamer Am­ sterdam perish In vain attempt to rescue crew of wrecked fishing schooner Maggie E. Wells, In the Atlantic Ocean. 15--Nine killed on the Lackawanna near Hoboken, rear end collision... .Gear nomi­ nated for Senator In Iowa Hornblower's nomination for Supreme bench rejected by the Senate. 17--John Buchner, colored, lynched at Val­ ley Park, Mo., for assault. 18--K. C., St. J. & C. B. train held up at Roy's Branch, Mo.; big booty secured.... Secretary Carlisle calls for bids at 177.22 for §50,000,000 5 per cent, bonds. 19-- Ernest Locore hanged at Joliet, III.; Baumberger hanged at Cando, N. D. 23--Severe cold and storms In northwest ....Banker Koetting convicted at Milwau­ kee... .Boone County, la., insane asylum burns, eight perish. 24--Severest cold of the season general. 25--Corbett defeats Mitchell In the prize ring at Jacksonville, Fla., In three rounds. 2ft--George H. Painter hanged at Chicago for murder of Alice Martin; rope broke, double hanging necessary... .Public recon­ ciliation of Kaiser and Bismarck; Germans wild with joy. 27--San Francisco Mid-winter Fair opened. 29--Rosina Vokes, actress, dies in Ens- land. 30--Admiral Benham cows the rebels at Rio. 31--Rioting Pittsburg miners forced to eat dogs. FEBRUARY. 3--Geo. W. Chllds dies at Philadelphia.^.„ Big Are at Omaha. ' V-Valllant, the Anarchist, Is guillotined at Paris. ts in coke d. explosion at "~er ,ex- freworita espios Petersburg, Ta....Four killed by boil plosion near Bourbon, Ind. 0--Nine firemen Killed at Davidson Theater fire, Milwaukee... .Six sailors lost off Massachusetts eosst Seven men killed a logging 11--fhirt; on logging train at New Era, Mich. " "rtr W.- ful blizzard throughout the east; many lives laches snow at Buffalo: fear- Ind. IN GENERAL Childs & McMahon, dry goods, failed for $21,000 at Sioux Falls, S. D. While drunk, George F. Ashford, of Vancouver, B. C., killed his wife and one child and fatally wounded another. Dun'B Review of Trade says gold ex­ ports and uncertainty about financial leg­ islation are depressing trade everywhere. Mme. Leon Grandin, who has set dowu her impressions of America in a book, says New York is a pygmy compared to Chicago. Secretary Gresham has selected a de­ sign for a monument to mark the birth­ place of George Washington at Wake­ field, Va. It will be a monolith of Ver­ mont granite. The first carload of oranges for the sea­ son was shipped East from Riverside, Cal. The crop has been slow ripening, but is now rapidly getting into condition for the market. The crop is estimated at 2,700 carloads. 5--Attempted lynching at Lebanon, 7--Senate repeals Federal elections law. 8--Wreck of old corvette Keursarge on Roncador reef; crew rescued. ' 9-- Blizzard over whole northwest. 11--Terrible blizzard In southwest: many die I11 Oklahoma. 12--I storm hour _ _ day... .Another bomb thrown in a Paris cafe. 13--Von Bulow, the pianist, dies at Cairo. 14--Death of Mrs. Myra Bradwell at Chi­ cago. 16--Murderer Stone, slayer of Wrattan family at Washington, Ind., hanged at Jef- fersonvllle. .. .Bandits wreck and rob a Southern Pacific train at Roscoe, Cal.; two men killed, and large booty secured from the Wells-Fargo Express Co. ...Senate rejects Peekham's nomination to Supreme bench ... .Explosion on German warship Branden- berg at Kiel; kills 39. 19--Senator White, of Louisiana, appointed and confirmed Associate Justice... .Norton Bros', can factory, Chicago, burns; loss $250,000 .... Death of Jos. Keppler, Puck caricaturist... .Boss McKane sentenced to six years In Sing Sing... .Gov. Rich, of Mich­ igan, removes salary grabbers... .Bandits lost and vessels wrecked on the coast. 12--fl.000,000 Are in Buffalo; 13 perish. 13--l)avld Dudley Field dies at New York. 14--Gen. II. W. Slocmn dies at Brooklyn ....Senator Vance, of North Carolina, dies at Washington... .Miss Pollard wins her suit against Congressman Breckinridge of Kentucky. 17--Ilenry S. Ives. "Napoleon of Finance," dies at Asheville, N. C. 20-- Riots at Omaha over Kelley's army. 21--Big coal miners' strike Inaugurated.... Earthquakes in Greece kill 160. 23--1 Ive negroes lynched for murder In Mississippi... .Death of Jesse Seligman, New York banker. 25--Contingents of Coxey's "Common­ weal Army" are marching all over the coun­ try, especially in the West; trains captured and cities closely guarded... .Federal troops recapture a train from Hogan's army in Montana; one man killed... .Great loss of life on Ireland's coast. 26--Striking miners march on Toluca, 111. 27--Celebration at Chicago and Galena of Grant's birthday. 28--St. Charfes Hotel, New Orleans, burns; four lives lost... .Missouri Valley, la., mar­ shal killed by burglars. 29--Coxey's army reaches Washington; no demonstration. 30--Death of Senator Stockbridge, of Mich* lgan, at Chicago, and Editor Frank Hatton at Washington... .Murderer of Missouri Val­ ley's marshal lynched near Council Bluffs. MAY. 1--Riot at Cleveland, O....Coxey and Browne arrested while attempting to speak ' from the capltol steps at Washington. .Great Northern strike enda In favor ot euioioyCs. 4--Fatal riots ou Mesaim Range aau in Pennsylvania coke regions. 8--Coxey, Browne and Jones are found guilty at Washington of disorderly con­ duct. .. .Coal strike raises price of soft coal 100 per cent, j 9--Cloudburst at Stillwater, Minn... Health officials declare Chicago sweatshops full of small-pox. 11--Meeks family four peoplo, murdered at Milan, Mo. 13--Tainiage's Tabernacle at Brooklyn burns for the third time: loss $2,000,000.... Thirty people burned badly at Bradford, Pa., by exploding tank car. 15--Half million loss. 180 dwellings burned and 3,000 people homeless by Are In Boston ....G. A. R. encampment at Rockford, III. ....Tremendous storms and cloudbursts in Northwest. 16-- Hottest day in May, In Chicago, since 1874. 17--Five killed by cyclone at Kunkle, O. ... .Temperature drops from 85 to 35 degrees within five hours at Chicago. 18--Snow in Chicago... .Schooner Cum- mings and crew of nine lost at Milwaukee; nine schooners and eleven lives lost at Chicago; schooner Shupe and six lives lost at Port Huron... .Storm most furious known in years. .. .Heavy snow in Northern Michi­ gan. 19--Seven killed In a tunnel collision near Princeton, Ky....Frost damages drops in several States. 20--Great floods on Susquehanna River.... Half million fire loss at Philadelphia... .Six inches of snow at Carlisle, Ky. 24r'•Riots end bloodshed -at Pennsylvania and Illinois coal mines. 25--Militia sent to several Illinois mining points. 30--Six killed In a wreck at Manville,' Wis. ....General observance of Decoration Day exercises. 31--Tremendous floods in Pueblofand Canadian Northwest. f i JUNE. • 3--$225,000 fire at Ottumwa, la. 4--Four rioting miners killed by Indiana troops; troubles continue in Indiana, Iowa and Illinois... .Pullman strikers sorely in need of aid One million dollar failure in St. Joseph, Mo. 5--Anarchy and riot at McKeesport, Pa. 6--Fatal riots and arson near Peoria, 111. Rosebery's colt Ladas wins the English Derby and £5,000. 7--Twenty Coxeyltes drowned near Brigh­ ton, Col... .Death of Prof. Whitney of Yale. ....Activity of troops of Illinois, Colorado and Ohio... .Battle at Cripple Creek, Col. 8--Apparently authentic report of the death of Outlaw Bill Dalton. 9-- Illinois troops called to Pana... .$475,- 000 fire loss at Dubuque, la. 10--Four strikers shot by deputies at Le- mont, Pa. 11--Columbus conference ends the coal strike.. .'.News of death of Muley Hassan, Sultan of Morocco, and succession of his son. ,c 14--Death of Lord Chief Justice Coleridge at London. 15--200 miners killed in Austrian Silesia. ... .Erastus Wlman found guilty of forgery at New York and recommended to the mercy of the court. 10--Death of William Walter Phelps, di­ plomat, at Englewood, N. J. 18--Troops quell riots at Mount Olive, 111.: 100 arrests made... .Hottest June day ever known in New York; many people prostrated and nine suicides because of the heat; mer­ cury 91 degrees. 19--Great damage by wind at Chadron, Neb... .Destructive floods in Penn Valley. Pa., Prussia and Austria... .Forty-flve ex­ cursionists drowned in Samara... .Erastus "VVlman sentenced to 5% years imprisonment. 20--Gold reserve touches $64,703,047, low­ est point In Its history... .Severe windstorms in Northwest. 23--Rey el Sbnta Anita wins American Derby at Chicago. 24--President Carnot, of France, assassi­ nated by an Italian... .Thirty-one men drown on a capsized tug off New York harbor. 25--Tremendous excitement and anger at Italians In France; cafes and shops looted. 26--A. R. U. boycott on Pullman cars ties up Illinois Central. 27-- Minnesota and South Dakota storm- swept. .. .Railroad strike spreads rapidly. JULY. _ ' " JDL called to quell strikers in Illinois and Colo­ rado. 2--Tremendous activity shown by strikers;^ no bloodshed yet. 3--Tariff bill passes the Senate... .Every road In Chicago helpless from the strike... . Prendergast, assassin, declared sane.... Bloody riot at Irouwood, Mich. ' |1,000,000 fire ioss a seven buildings at World's Fair grounds 4--$1,000,000 fire ioss at Hudson, Mass. 5--Seven buildings at World's Fair grou: burn Riots in railroad yards at Chicago ....Mayor Hopkins issues a pi .Gov. Altgeld protests against Federal flvans and Worrel captured In California. ~ ~ hi - • suspends payment 22--Washington's birthday... .Guatemala MARKET REPORTS, Chicago--Cattle, common to prime, $3.75@6.10; hogs shipping grades, $3.50 @4.37; sheep, fair to choice, $2@3.60; wheat. No. 2 red, 53@53%c; corn, No. 2, 45#45^c; oats, No. 2, 20@29%c; rye, No. 2, 48@4&^2c; butter, choice creamery, 234$ 23fac; eggs, fresh, 18® 19c; potatoes, car lots, per bushel, 45@48c. Indianapolis -- Cattle, shipping, $3@ 5.75; hsgs, choice light, sheep, common to prime, $2@3.50; wheat, No. 2 red, 52@53c; corn. No. 1 white, 43@ 43V£c; oats, No. 2 white. 33@34e. 8t- Louis--Cattle, h#gs, $3@4.40; wheat, Ne. 2 red, 51@5î c; cern, No. 2, 44®44%e; oats, No. 2, 29l&@B0c; rye, No. 2, 08®G5c. Cincinnati--Cattle, |3.50@5.50; hogs, &4®54%c; corn, No. 2 mixed, 44<@44%c; oats, Ne. 2 mixed, 32%@33%c; rye, No. 2, MQMc. Detroit--Cattle, $2.50@5.50; hogs, $4® 4.70; sheep, $2<$3.Q0; wheat. No. 1. white, fi6@55^c; corn, No. 2 yellow, 44@44%c; oats, No. 2 white, 33@34c; rye, No. 2, 51@51%c- Toledo--Wheat, No. 2 red, 54@55c; corn, No. 2 mixed, 4G@47c; oats, No. 2 white, 33@34c; rye, No. 2, 50@52c. Buffalo--Cattle. $2.50@5.50; hogs, $4<0 5: sheep, $2@3.50; wheat. No. 2 red, 67 @58e; corn, No. 2 yellow, 46@47c; oats, No. 2 white, 35@36c. Milwaukee--Wheat, No. 2 spring, 55@ 66c; corn, No. 3, 44@45c; oats. No. 9. white, 31@32c; barley, No. 2, 53@55c; rye, No. 1, 49<g51c; pork, mess, $11.50@ 12. New York--Cattle, $3@5.50; hogs, $3.60 @5; sheep, $2@3.50; wheat, No. 2 red, 61 ®61%c; corn, No. 2, 51@52c; oats, whit Western, 38@41c; butter, creamer: 24c; eggs. Western, 19Q21. - Font Michigan State officials Indicted by grand jury for fraudulent salary grab­ bing. 25--Steel Mackaye. dramatist, dies on a Santa Fe train... .Terrific snow storm in the South. 2ft--Interstate commerce law decided void ... .Fierce storms in the East. 27--Double lynching at Mountain Home, Ark....Boy lynched for murder of a sher­ iff upon his mother's orders at Sherman, Ala. 28--News of drowning of 18 Cape Ann, Mass., fishermen, Jan. 12....Murder and burglary In Exeter Township, Monroe Coun­ ty, Mich... .Miners' riot at Bagle, W. Va.: troops summoned MARCH. 1--Bland's bill to coin the seigniorage passed. 3--Gladstone recommends Roseberry for Premier General Jubal •. Early dies at Lynchburg. ft--Gladstone formally retiree from the British Premiership. 4--Death of Ed Williamson, the famous base-ball player. g--Sugar fluctuates 18 points on New York Exchange; Senators charged with specula­ tion In the stocks. f--SerkMue illness of Gladstone announced. >anlel Ooughjln acquitted at Chicago of Iroaln's murder. •DtGamsn Brazilian rebel commander, a » on a Portuguese vessel. nutUiat^ Insurgents surrender .... House of Commons votes to abolish Lords. 15--Denver !a .-if tr«©»a becanse of quarrel between Gov. Waits and police board. 18--Mulct and local option bills defeated In Iowa Exceeding mild weather. it-Death of Louis Kossuth, Hungarian patriot. 2g-^Judge Chetlaln, of Chicago, stays exe­ cution of Prendergast pending trial for In­ sanity; Ms act excites widest criticism and ouBtoruatlon... ."Buff" Hlgglns hanged at Central Northern States drops to near zero. 26---Extreme cold kills fruit in Northern States; inerenry marked zero... .Coxey's "anny marches from Masslllon, O., toward 70 strong... .Death of Senator consternation... ."Buff" Chicago. 24--Temperature In JolQiiitt, of Georgia. 2T--Death of Major Nevans, famous band­ master, at Chicago... .Furious snow storm la Northwest. 2ft--Gov. Nortben appoints Speaker Crisp to succeed Senator Colquitt of Georgia.... Cleveland vetoes Bland seigniorage coinage bill. 30--Four Sii'liel, many hurt, In liquor law riot at Darlington, S. C Speaker Crisp declines a Scnawrshlp Peoria, 111., water tower bursts; one killed, many hurt. ...Big fires at Barry, I lit, aed Traer, la. 31--Four killed,hnany hurt, by natural gas explosion at kMMtis* Ina... .Borden, Ind., swept 2--Connell* and IF reclamation geld protests aga' troops in Illinois Yacht Valkyrie sunk in collision in a race. 6--'Three rioters and two deputy sheriffs killed at Chicago; over 1,000 freight cars burned; five regiments of State troops re- enforce the regulars... .Strikers completely rule the Pacific coast. 7--Bloody riots at Chicago Miners'mobs loot stores at Spring Valley and Ladd, 111. 8--Riots continue at Chicago; three killed, 25 hurt by troops and deputies. 9-- Two women and oue man killed by wild firing of militia at Grape Creek, III... .Strike extends to Toledo. 10--Debs Indicted for conspiracy. 11--Thousands join the sympathetic strike ....Four soldiers killed In a wreck in Cali­ fornia. 12--Reports of over a hundred killed In earthquake in Turkey... .President Cleve­ land decides to appoint arbitrators for strikes* 13-- Big strike declared off; A. R. U. de­ feated .... Prendergast hanged at Chicago .... Murderous riots at Sacramento, Cal. 16--Four soldiers killed, many people hurt, by exploding caisson at Chicago.... Race war in Alabama results in killing 7 negroes. 17--Eight miners killed by dynamitd at Stockton, Pa... .Debs and his associates sent to tail for contempt. 19-- Fires $500,000 at Minneapolis; res . $250,- Paso, Hi... .Tariff conference com­ mittees disagree. 23--Three killed on the Big Four and 7 on the Texas Pacific by wrecks. 25--Car bams at Washington burn; $600,000 loss, three firemen killed. 26-War declared between China and Jap­ an.... Day ®£ tremendous heat all over the West: immense damage to crops. 27--Many towas in Northern Wisconsin de­ stroyed by forest fires... .Continuance of tremendous heat in Northwest. 2o--PhSUips, Wis., burned; $1,350,000 loss, 13 people perish... .$500,000 fire at Belle Plalne, ana $160,000 at Brooklyn, la.... Drouth in Illinois and Iowa broken. 30--Half million fire less in Minneapolis 3 1 -- s i n k C h i n a ' s f i n e s t w m r a h l p , capture two cruisers, and kills 2,000 men.... Continuation of fearful heat and drouth In in Northwest. AUGUST. ^ ^ 1--$2,500,000 fire in Chicago lumber dis­ trict; three lives lost Death of Judge Holt, famous Jurist and Buchanan s Secre­ tary of War, at Washington. 2--Two fires in Chicago do $357. 0«daffge. to 8--Japs defeat Chinese with 2,000 tered... .Carnot's assassin sentenced death at Paris, _ .. 6--Ex-Gov. Blair, of Michigan, dies... .Rail­ road strike declared off In Chicago. 7--Panic on Chicago Board of Trade caused by drought; corn reaches 60 cents, overselling wheat... .Centennial of Wayne's victory celebrated at Defiance, O. 9-- Fourteen lives lost in wreck on Rock Island near Lincoln, Neb... .Vaccination riot at Milwaukee... .Corn crop outlook growing darker. 13--House adopts Senate's tariff schedule Corn still shows remarkable firmness in market; crop prospects growing worse. 15-- Santo executed at Lyons, France. 18--News of battle from the Orient; Chinese defeated, 2,000 slain... .Crop prospects im­ proved by rain. 21--$400,000 fire In Cincinnati... .Slxtr-slx houses burned In Beevtlle, Tex... .Eight men drowned In a yacht race at St. Johns, N. B... .Gov. Altgeld asks public aid for starving Pullmnnltes. 24--Thirty-seven miners killed near Frank­ lin, Wash.; two at Ashland, Pa.; four at Crisis, ~ - ~ f In cycifl . ™^j|.';iwweHt tlon gr<RHi gan forest dent Iblevaland' vessels strand Michigan forest Are*. 28--Congress adjourns; ... .Enormous customs 1 _, the country, because of low 31--A thousand Chinamen at Hong Kong....Many ish if* a fire _ people killed at Uvalde, Texas, by cloudburst and earth* quake. . > • % SEPTEMBER. 1--Over TOtt people perish, si* towns de­ stroyed, in Northern Minnesota, by forest lires; property loss several millions... .Six negroes lynched in Tennessee for barn- burning. 3--Rains check forest fires... .Tremen­ dous ruin fall in Chicago... .Labor day gen­ erally observed. 4--Fire's renewed in northern pine woods St. Paul raises $10,000, Dulutli $9,500 and other cities various smaller amounts for forest fire sufferers; Actor Irving, of Eng­ land, cables $500 for same purpose. \ 6--Robert J. paces a mile at Indianapolis in 2:02%; three heats average 2:03 2-3; both rec­ ord-breakers. 10--Maine gives 37,000 Republican majori­ ty. 11--G. A. R. encampment at Pittsburg. 15--Owens defeats Breckinridge in Ash­ land, Ky.,district* 17--News of Japan's success In decisive battle at Ping Yang, Corea.'.. .Destructive cyclone In Oklahoma. 18--Abortive attempt to rob Santa Fe train at Gorin, Mo.: one robber fatally hurt, one captured... .New York Republicans t nomi­ nate Morton... .Chinese and Japs sink three ships each. 16--Allx trots In 2:03% at Galesburg. 21--Over 80 lives lost In a cyclone in Iowa and Minnesota. .'. .Madame Fursch-Mahdl, renowned singer, dies at Warrenvllle, N. t(. 2."!--$1,500,000 lire In Portland, O'C. 26--Steamer Ohio and schooner Ironton collide off Presque Isle, Mich., and Mnk: five lives lost. ...Five sailors drown by sinking of schooner Wm. Home off Manistlque.... New York Democrats nominate David-B. Hill. OCTOBER. 2--Little Rock wrecked by a cyclone.... Special meeting of British Cabinet called. 3--Death of Prof. David Swing of Chicago ... .Flurry of snow in Chicago. 5--Six men killed in a fire at Detroit. 7--Death of Oliver Wendell Holmes, of Massachusetts, and Ex-Gov. A. G. Curtin, of Pennsylvania. 10--Terrific storm on the Atlantic coast; over 250 lives lost Nine killed by falling building in New York. 12--Train robbers In California and Vir­ ginia get $100,000. 17--Two killed, ten wounded bymllltia re­ pelling attempt at lynching at Washington Courthouse, Ohio. 20--Death of Historian James Anthony Froude at Loudon. 24--Four Nebraska counties swept by fire; many lives lost and thousands of cattle per­ ish. AD CHRON • 27--Sixteen perish in a bOardlng-house fire at Seattle, Wash. 28--$500,000 loss in freight-house fire at East St. Louis... .Three killed by dynamite in a boarding-house at Laurel Run, Pa.... Three killed at Lima, O., and three at Cory- don, I'a., In wrecks... .Steamer Walraps and 112 lives lost off N&w Zealand.- 30--Seven perish by fire at New York. NOVEMBER. :'o , 1--Czar of Russia dies. 2--Earthquake destroys New towns. larvard, Hebrides 6--^Something dropped In political circles. . 7--Six killed in a B. & O. wreck. 8--Death of Mike Kelly, famous ball player. 10--Tremendous storms on lakes and in Eastern States. 11--Death of Rufus Ramsey, Treasurer ol Illnols. 12--$500,000 fire at New Orleans...; Lynching of the son of Bob Younger, the outlaw, and another alleged murderer, at Floyd, La. lit--Issue of $50,000,000 U. S. bonds order* ed Gen. Cassius M. Clay, aged 84, mar­ ries his ward, Dora Richardson, aged 15, at Lexington, Ky....Death of Charles E. Strong, general manager Chicago Newspaper Union. 14--News of slaughter of 10,000 Armenians by Turks. 10--Death of Dr. Jas. McCosh, ex-President Of Princeton College... .Robt. C. Wlnthrop dies in Boston. 17--Ives defeats Schaefer at billiards.... Turks slaughter 2,000 more Armenians In their religious war... .Earthquake in Italy kills scores. 20--Seven killed by explosion In a West Virginia mine... .Death of Rubensteln, tho composer, at London... .$1,000,000 bank fail­ ure at Portland, Ore. 22--China makes overtures of peace to Japan; Port Arthur falls... .Gen. Booth,of Salvation Army, received by 4,000 people at Chicago... .New York banks take all of the $50,000,000 bond issue. 24--Discovery of robbery of Shoe and Leather Bank, New York; amount, $350,000 .... Yale wins at football from Ha Ann Arbor from Cornell. 27--Czar Nicholas and Princess Allx mar­ ried at St. Petersburg... .Syndicate pays 117.077 for entire issue of bonds. 28--$500,000 fire at Toledo, O $100,000 loss by burning of coal shaft at Spring Val­ ley, 111.... .Tremendous sensation in China, caused by petition to Impeach LI Hung Chang. 29--Ann Arbor wins at football from Chi­ cago University. DECEMBER. - 8--Congress re-assembles... .Kolb has him­ self sworn In as Governor of Alabama; no disturbance. 4--$275,000 fire In New York, $175,000 in Omaha. 0-- Bandits secure $100,000 in a Texas Pa­ cific liold-up. 7--Horrible murder of Alfred D. Barnes In Chicago... .Death of De Lesseps at Paris .... Elopement of Rev. Haney and Mrs. Brandt, of Chicago. 8--Death of Robt. Louts Stevenson In Samoa. 10--Capture In Chicago of Seeley, the New York bank embezzler... .Two killed, 20 hurt In a Chicago street railway tun­ nel wreck Henry Spragg, a far­ mer near Hamilton, Mo., kills his wife, tluee children and himself while insane. 12--Death of Sir John Thompson, Canadian Prime Minister Death of John Worthy, Chicago capitalist. 13--Civil war in Peru... .Meadowcroft Bros., Chicago bankers, convicted of embez­ zlement, sentenced to oae year in prison. 14--E. V. Debs, A. It. O. strike leader, con­ victed of contempt of court at Chicago; six mouths' imprisonment... .Van Leuven, pen­ sion swindler, convicted at Dubuque... .Al­ leged lynchers acquitted at Memphis. 10--Council Bluffs bank clerk wounds two detectives and kills himself. 18--Bell Telephone Co. defeated by Gov­ ernment... .Five killed In boiler explosion at Bay City, Mich. 20--Jones County, la., calf case settled after 16 years of litigation. 21--Capt. Scmittberger, of the New York police makes full confession before** Lexow committee, implicating many high in author- ity. • Oldest Scythe in the World. Quietly reposing on one of the many well-filled shelves in Flinders Petrie's private museum in London is an an­ cient agricultural Implement which throws much light on the art of hus­ bandry as practiced by the prehistoric Egyptians. This antique farming tool Is a wooden scythe blade, which was found securely imbedded in the mortar of one of the oldest tombs of the valley of the lower Nile. The shaft of the in­ strument, as already stated, is of wood of some unknown species, the edge being carefully set with a row of flints so as to present their jagged edges in a manner not unlike that exhibited by the teeth of a saw. These flints are of uniform size, the base of each being fastened so as to fit the curve of the wooden blade. The teeth are not set into a groove along the edge of the blade, as one would naturally suppose, but each are firmly cemented In place, the material being of such excellent composition and the workmanship of such superior quality that after a lapse of time closely approximating 6,000 years they appear as sound and per­ fect as when first taken afield by their original owner. ^ To manage a furnace flre: The fire should be shaken down and raked per­ fectly clear every morning. A few shovelfuls of coal should be put on and all the draughts opened. The ashes should then be taken up. As soon as the coal begins to burn well and the flro looks clear at the bottom put in coal enough to come almost to the top of the Milwaukee is a variation of Minne- waukee, meaning "rich and beautiful country." One of the easiest ways to take a cold Is to drop asleep without an extra wrap 8UB8TITUTE PLAN INI ISLE'# 80 Many Objection* to the Old On# that Mr. Springer audi 8fccretwr||i v Carlisle Decide to Submit a lie# Measure--Mews, Notes. •m$r Some Important Change*. After conferences between the cratic members of the House Comiuittet on Banking and Currency and with thii approval of the Secretary of the Tread*, ; ury Mr. Springer introduced a substitute** for the Carlisle currency bill. It is sub* stantially a new measure, although somi| , • of the sections of the original measutii" are retained in the new bill. Two very important features make appearance for the first time in the sub­ stitute. The main one will have the effe<|t of allowing the national banking systei|| « to run along, without an arbitrary provi»« ' ion that banks must organize under th* new system. The original Carlisle bit| contemplated that all national banks mus| reorganize. under the new plan. Thijr would have required thera to surrender the government bonds which now const$>; tute the basis of their circulation. Bid ihe substitute does away with this inW perative change. If national banks wistf to continue to hold their United State# bcnd« and issue circulation thereon ihegj may do so. It is feit that they wiii soojf < discover the advantages of the new tem, and will, therefore, adopt it volniiff; / tarily. The other important feature of the •tdK; / stitute is that it does away with the ui|*| v known liability of banks to guarantee th4 notes of all other banks. This feature of the original bill has been much criticised* It -contemplated that if a national bante failed its liotes would be paid out of itg assets and the general "safety fund** made up by all the banks. But if-the a4* sets and safety fund were insufficient t^ pay the notes of the failed bank, then th# comptroller of the currency was to mal a pro rata assessment on all the banks ' the country. The banks said this pro#, pective assessment shouidered them wit|| an unknown risk. In effcct it made then| supply insurance on all the notes of banki In which they had no concern.- In view of these criticisms the si tute will do\ away with the assessme plan. The "safety fund" will be the limi of the joint liability of all the banks fc the failure pi individual banks. Thejl will, however, be compelled to keep m» this safety fund by more rigid provisions than appeared in the original bill. - The new bill is arranged so as to sho^H the new features in parentheses. Tb#' first section is as folows: „ "(a). That (so much of) all acts anil? parts of acts as required or authorized thft deposit of United States bonds to securft circulating notes issued by national bank* Ing associations (or as required such a#» sociations to deposit or keep on deposif United States bonds for any purpose e:& cept as security for public money) be, an(K the same hereby are repealed (as to asso­ ciations taking out circulation under thift act); and such notes shall not contain itatement that they are so secured." ^ Section 2 is changed so that banks cai| not only deposit legal tenders to secnr# circulation, but also "currency certiflc cates issued under section 5193 of the r^l# vised statues of the United States." 1 Section 3 is retained entire, except thai! tts provisions are restricted to apply to tional banking associations "taking on circulation under this act." ||| Section 4 inserts "the comptroller of tfatf currency" as the officer to designate tht place where notes are to be redeemed. ^, In Relation to the Safety Fund* ||v In section 5 provu||n is made for kee] Ing up the safet^MflB^uidJin addition the terms of the oiibvau1 billi^is provided that "the collection of said qf one- , fourth of 1 per cent, for each hali-rUS^F shall be resumed and continued until the said fund is restored to an amount equal to 5 per cent, upon the total circulation outstanding. All circulation notes cp failed national banks not redeemed € presentation to the treasurer of tho Unif ed States or an assistant treasurer of United States shall bear interest at rate of 6 per cent, per annutn from date of the suspension of the bank unl thirty days after public notice has b<?ei| given that funds are on hand for thein demption, and such notes shall consti^ndt , >• a first lien upon all moneys thereafter r#» ceived into the safety fund." , I Section 6, allowing the Secretary of th^t*^. Treasury to invest money in the safetjf fund in bonds, is the same as the, origin^ \ bill. • .C; • Section 7 is entirely new and takes tibp:, place of a section which has been elinii inated. The new section is as follows: $:"V J. "Section 7. That every national banM; '• Ing association heretofore organized an|| having bonds on deposit to secure circuity tion may withdraw such bonds upon thf 1 deposit of lawful money of the Unite4 States, now provided by law, and ther|< . .. after such association may take eut circuit la tion under this act and be entitled to aJl the rights and privileges and immunitidi . herein conferred." Section 8 specifies that the portion <i| the national banking act to be repealed til limited to so much of section 12 "as d|*v-. ' rects the Secretary of the Treasury to r<jj§V ceive deposits of gold and to issue certi^ elites thereon." "".i'f j' v' Section 9 is substantially the same as i|| the original bill. Section 10, providing for State bsnki^ Is also the same as in the original bill, em": ' , cept that in the restrictions on Stal|| V banks a new provision is made that tlii guaranty fund maintained by fhem mal include "currency certificates Issued ufi,.,?; der section 5,193 of the revisei statutes?!: » "Section 11. (That any backing ass^ ciation organized under the laws of ank. State may deposit with the Treasurer ihe United States legal tender notes, andTe* ceiv© certificates therefor in tho mannef pwsYldei in section 5.1&3 ef the revise^ statute Of the United States and) thl Secretary of the Treasury stay, undd| proper roles and regulation^ te be estaBji;. ; lishei by him, permit such baste to pra» cure and use in the prepasa*»» of ttteQ notes the distinctive paper used in pcinfc ing United States secuiitieat kit no Staty bank shall print or engrave its notes i& similitude of a United States nets or tificate. or national note.1 NEW BASE-BALL ST Successor to the Famous Captain the New Tork Team. The successor of John M. Ward, the Tier fired captain and manager «f the New York Base-Ball Club, is G«®r©e S. D&vi& He hag bee® a meOh ber of the Ktew York team siaee 1608, &pa has bee® flaying oik ly about six years. He is 26 ye«Jtf of age aad a Ne# Englander by Mrtlk He is an waasssnnw ing and popuiqi',' player, weighs a bo lid 165 pounds and is A ' feet 8 inches in height. He vraji signed by the Cle?e» JS8 ana remained with that organization he was engaged by the New Yorks. BSt is a fine athlete and plays base-ball witk' • r - ^V,- fffM c A A mailto:3.75@6.10 mailto:2@3.60 mailto:2@3.50 mailto:3@4.40 mailto:3.50@5.50 mailto:2.50@5.50 mailto:2.50@5.50 mailto:2@3.50 mailto:3@5.50 mailto:2@3.50

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