as mam * *ON, muuml I l i f t WIE*. Gov. Lose, of Massachusetts, ha* or- J^eeaaart, the Fooaesot fanatic, to the .The seeond trial of Mrs, 0km B nnett, for the murder of the of Mm Smith, policeman of Jersey .Mttlted ki » verdict of not iniilty. The M molted in tbeir conviction ud m- _ to death,., .Ttoee «en in Philadelphia ft* been eeeleooed to fine and imprisonment for making Me eleahoa returns. A vuvsafpstock exchange tor the ex- eluftivsuseof ladies has been opened in New York. United States 4-pewent loadi Were quoted at 1.05}4 in New York, Ust week, the highest price ever reached by them.., .Geo. John Briabin. ex-mfmber of Coogiw, flitt Pennsylvania, is dead Destructive <torBK are reported atorg the East Atlantic coast, several top sals were wrecked, and some livesjoet.... OeucHlm: Charles Decker, a prominent MO of Newaik, N. J., blew Itead off With ft aannon loaded to the mny.z'e with powder ids aloe*. Israel BooJhby, a bank cashier at Augusta, Me., committed eiiicid© by blcwiaf his brain* out with a pistol. The Captain W the brig Aueus*ine, which went asbore at At- lanticvilk, K. J., shot himeelf when he Mir (he Ysaml most be wreaked. A bill has been introduced i» the Sew Yark Legislature making!! a mfs&eeaanor for any female to eugage publicly in any pe des triti> match, asid for any manager or lee- tee of any boiling cr grorada who allows tise exhibition to take place....The New I«k Jfrraltf ba* giv^n fl«.0,000 to the Irlab rtmi fund. 3 hi« munificent-gifi is legarded a* am effort to counteract (m disastrous results which have followed the paper's policy of op posing tte purposes of Messrs, * Parnell and Dillon. The large chair factory of Smith & Crane, New York city, taw been horned. Loss, •100,000... .Mr. Kenneth Albro, a wealthy cat tle raiser from Texas, went to New York on a bu-ineea trip requiring the nee of a large amount of r<*ady money. He went into Wall street about 10 o'clock in the morning, carry ing with him a email atebel contain ing 1125,000 in registered bonds. As he reached the sub-treasury steps he noticed a man coming down directly in front of him. At the same instant a man stepped alongside Mr. Albro and, seizing his hand.shook Hheart ily, saving: "How are you? How do job do, Mr. Thompson ?" The man in front of him pointed to a pocket-book lying at Mr. Albro'* feet, and eaid: "dee there, sir, you've dropped something." He stooped to pick it up, when the man who had just, ealnVd him put his 1--id on the back of the old gentleman's seek 1 pitched him forward on the steps, at tits is time twisting the sachel from his hand and walking quickly away. As the bonds are registered, Mr. Albro will not lose hfs money, though he will probably engage a guard the next time he walks the streets of New York with f 155,000 on his person....Hon. A. E. ---j Borie- who was Secretary ©f War for a time un- , der President Grant, and who accompanied tbe ; lat'er on his tour around the world, died in Philadelphia last week, at the age of 71 years. The contributions for Ireland's re- •|S! JUsf in Mew York are increasing every day. 1'he wealthy men of that city, being convinced of the genuineness of the reports from Ire- WPfluid, are now giving all the way from 2100 to .#1,000 e--h. It is staled that David Do*s # fj©., / jilt New York; have forty-three agents baying Acorn in Iowa, and that they have now over .'A000.000 bushels in crib... .The St Louis aad f»n Trancisoo and the Atchison, Topeka and '<• >,flpBta Fe Railroad Companies have signed an 'K^agireemant jointly to baud a Hue from Albn- on the lt:o Grande, to San Francisco. wi!l cost #25,000,000. • na|t occurred recently, near Fort _ vt, over wNhsMthof pg spHt Vtocnoe Committee, 'aby 8«1»m>h issued * d\ «ut)wMiH(.l intlta| proposals for the sale to Am OovsnuMBtof 5 and G-per-eent. boada to the «pwwt>* of fll 000,000. The State Department is Mid to bare received information that fee statistics nsed by tbe Bjittsh Government to sustain Am Oa- aadtan claim befose tlkis^'jPhkl^UL QNMtt^Htaa were fUMtekat; ths* (h* attsntfcm of ths Brilith GcmnMM hs« Men called to thsfss frandmlsnt falaiteattaaB, and ths tMMss at ohacos indioatedr but ti British Owwamt has (jtwdined to takaaoy attto of thte ktforua- tloo. Delfosse. formerly Belgian Mi|Mr at Washington, who was President of tbsBlhfex Ooinmiwiim. hasbesniBfDtmedoftl^ifttaadn. lent Ohaxcs a ths sais, vrhMh ins 1ft* MMIs of Has awara Id whiofa he mM «I mttir. ^Panjl^Mt DUloo,Mr. called <m the PreaMentiSs oOmt tor.. They were cordially reoeivedLmnd lurf a start asd oteaMDt talk with the tWdetrt. Mr. Parnell spoke of Irelaod,e diaitresf, and INfrsfceoicte tutawrtol its catuMS and of Ids object in •isllinc United States. Ths hsritet fmA tbat he mapathised with ths Irish psople. and hoped that speedy means would be found for th#f yltf# faiotc Ihe report sabmitted to Con- g^eashy the Osonterr of War, it appe&ra that thsMfa^isedstareagtkof the milithi forest ths tfffurant Btatss eondsts of 14B geoenC ef- 3e»«, IfiOi regimental, fltUaatttM «B«r, 9,196 oosnpaay offimra, a»d 990HBem- missicaed officers, mnnciaua and. privates Tbe tsaorganised tecs or nni&ber xt men avails&te for milHtxy duty Is p«t down at6 - »1«lT68....1he action of ReeMtuy lehttrzia removing Mr. Hayt fiwsa the oMem of Oocnmie- rtonw of Indian Attain has be* approved by tbe Board of Indian CommissiaBers. Advices having been reewived from the Government officials that preparations for invading the Indian Territory ire assuming formidable propoitions, this question was the stbleetof a somewhat protractsd discussion at m Oab&Mt meeting last week, aad it is under stood a proclamation similar to that tf last spring oa the same subject will eoon be issued by the President....The Cabinet has conflriasd the finding of the lUlitary Court of Inquiry in ths last ctse sgtktt Reno, wWeiu t»s asn- tence waa'AuttlMal from the army. Ths New York Sejrabliean State Convention, to cho3 e delegate to the National Convention, will meet at Tftiea, JPeb. 26... .The National Democratic Committee has beeacs&sd to meet at Washington, Feb. 2S. , The Madison (Wis.) Democrat pub lishes the first and second abates for President of the Stole effioen Mjd.slashs, and msmbers of the Senate and Assembly. The whole num ber of perrons interviewed was 133. The first choice was Blaine, 4%i Qcaa^ 89; aeytnour.ld; Johatiherman, 10; 15. B. Washbarnr fc Oar- field, 5: TQden, 4; BJrimrd^ 9^ Hancock, 1; Edmunds, 1; Hayef, 1; TBea. Atmrm»n, 1; re- fused to express an opi^on, 9; fbr nominee of the Bepubiicau Convention, £ The Judiciary Committee f>f the lower boose of the Maine Legislator# has' heeo. instructed te inquire into the advisability of so amending the constitution of the State as to limit the right of suffrage to those who are jible to read and write the English l&ngnage. Gen. Giasi*!* friends at Washington am so confident of his nomination at Chicago that they are diseasing ths advisability of sooadiag Mr. Btelas en the suUeetof aesspt- ing the sesoafl plaoson the tick€i Sossys a Washington osrwsponaenf... Indianapolis telegram: "The trie dt of Gov. Hen dricks profess to he much gratified with the shsne affairs are sssuming ia New Yirit sad elsewhere with regard to the Democratie Presidential nomlnatioa, and cbn- ia their favorite^ cbsacs begins ts - ztmuet i, putting tbeir all of their ra t Tbe County Hospital near Milwatl- hse, Wis., was destroyed by fire last week. Two inmates--one an old woman of 90, and the other an insane man--were burned to death. A Denveb dispatch says great excite ment prevails over a new discovery of gold twenty miles west of that city. A vein of min eral'WM struck ia the Doily Yarden mine at «ha depth of twenty feet, and a specimen .taken to Denver and sn assay obtained, the assay giving the value of ths ore at #21,1W per ton, #a),177 of it being gold. P&tbick Dukn died in Chioago, a few days ago, of hydrophobia. The case will attract attention among medical men by reason of the remarkably short tuns intervening be tween the first! premonition of the disease and the death of the vi-jfim. The bite occurred about six months ago. and no suspicion of in oculation had been entertained. The person bitten was a young man of robust health and good habits, and, in twenty hours from the tigw ths &*si feeling of wnniiinon manifested itself, he was a corpse. A San Francisco dispatch reports that" a fire occurred in a Chinese wash-house on Pine street It is not known how many oc cupants there were, but ten bodies of Chinamen have been recovered from the ruine.- Papt. Jack, of the Utes, left Los Pi- aos last week for Orand river, at which point the White river Indians are said to be encamped, for the purpose of making another attempt to seoore the surrender of the twelve guilty sav ages. Jack would make no promises, and re fused to set a time for his return. Gen. Auams awaits him at the agency from which he etuted BO BOOTH ; roon and Wright Bainer, bioth- tn,ot Goldaboro, N. 0., quarreled about a horse and buggy which they owned in partner ship, and Haywood brained his brother with a bar of iron. The murderer fled. By the purchase of the lines of Tunning from Selma, Ala., to PennaooU, the great Louisville and Nashville railway com bination has secured an extension to tbe Gulf of Mexico, combing an unbroken line from Chicago to the deep water of Peosacola JoaM Qwdi, sn illicit distiller of Rutherford county, Tena, was sitting by a still-house when a stranger came up and bor rows^ his knife The man stonceopsned it and fepraog upon Q iade, and, getting him un- oa tttfcvofand, cm hie throat, after which he threw .His knife ts the ground and escaped A shocking calamity occurred near Cofnmbia 8. C., a few nights ago. A cabin in which nine negroes--two men, a woman and six children #»*»< Advices from A'asfca report that a Moofey war is raging between the native In dian tribes of that far-off land... .A Panama dispatch says that De Lssseps has eight work ing parties--over 130 men--surveying the isth mus for the lnteroossaic oanaL A band of regulators murdered an en tire family named Donnelly, consisting of five T*sons, at Lucan, Oat., a few nights ago. The neighborhood had suffered severely from mieves and incendiaries, and, as the Donnellys were suppled to be the guilty parties, the 22™ "t V»e mob feil on them. " Their bodies u'lly ni,1tilated, and afisrwards paritaay eonsumed in their dwelling, to which ^^nchers wt tire 0Q comp etiogtiKir Moody Before the eotnmittee of the Board Indian Commtseianers investigating Ac a'fiin8t ^r. Hiyt, at New York city, Fa son of the ex-yommwsioner appeared as a '•». His tes^naony was of the most <Jam- th^n* rn?rmi,:K tbe r®Ports rsla-«» Ban Carlos silver mine, heretofore »«d, in every particular. WASHIMOTOie, mpshimt, Vermont and haviog raised i4><,000 for a mono- ™****antioa pt /ohQ «ark'- vis- _ l aud appoint to the National CqbtwbUuu js asilsd for May K, VOBEKM. Yellow w iver has appeared in sev eral places in Brazil, and fears are entertained that it will spread to Rio Janeiro... .The steamer Be: gore, coal-laden, from Peaatth for Gibraltar, foundered when two miles from port 'J hirteen of her crew were drowned.... Tbe Irish Relief Committee in New York is daily in receipt of information from Ireland of dreadful suffering there Iiuesia ms de cided to inciease tbe number of her peace and war forces, the lat ter by 11)0,000 men....A rich laud-owner, his wife, three daughters, son and two women servants were recently found murdered in their * Barcelona, Spain. The horrible was committed by robbers....The Empress of Austri t is fox-hunting in Ireland. ....The Moors at Fez, Morocco, have at tacked the J em, wounding several. They oovered an old man, over 70 years of age, with petroleum asd burned him alive amidst shouts of joy.....A sensational report comes from Berlin, to the effect that the proposed increase of the German army is only the initial move in a deep-laid plot against France; that the object of filling the army to a war standard is to give France notice that the Socialists, Nihilists, and o'her orders wboae members are opposed to Misting governments have reached such a strength in point of numbers that combined action on the part of European nations is neces sary. Should Francs refuse to co-operate with Germany and Russia, war ia to be declared against her by the iaet-named power. A dispatch from Candahar, in Af ghanistan, to the London Times, s^ys: * Ter rible accounts reach here from without the British lines. It is reported that nearly 2,000 families bave been exterminated bv Ghi'zais, and that seven of the villus of"the latter were afterward captured by Hasaros and every soul in them slain." The programme of the Executive Committee of the Nihilists has been discovered at 81 Petersburg. It states that the only way to obtain the reforms they seek is to overthrow the Government by forcible revolution or con spiracy. The Socialists "would the.i transfer the Government to an Assembly elected by all the Rusaians, irrespective of class. At Woolwich, tbe other day, the mate to the gun which exploded on the British ironclad Thunderer was blown to atoms with & double load, consisting of 190 pounds of pow der, one 600-pouud shell, and one 700-pound projectile. A railway collision in the suburbs of Paris killed nine passmgers and wounded many more. The English Parliament convened on the 5th iast. Tae Qasan's speeeb, which was quite brief, was read by the Lord High Chan cellor. South Africa, Afghanistan, and Ire- Und formed the chief topics. Referring to the distress in the Green Isle, the Queen says • The serious deficiency in the u-nal crops in some parts of Ireland has re-idered necessary special precautious oa the part of my Government to guard against the calamines with which those diHtrietH were threatened. With this view thev rmve ca'M upon the authorises chaived with the duty of administering relief to make am ple preparations for the distribution of food and fuel, should euch a step become necessary. Gen. Roberts, the commander of the British forces in Afghanistan, reports that eighty-two of the natives who participated in the "revolt" at Cdbul last fall have been exe- cuted, and fifteen others are under sentence of death A dispatch from Gal way, Ireland, states that a large body of tenantrv in the town of Atheur" headed by Faiher McWhillim, beat off a number of' process-server?, who were un der the protection of a email detachment of oonstabnlary. Great excitement prevailed among the populace. THE NATIONAL CON6RE8& cmed ia behalf of petiiisaav, and k*pt ibem la jail nntil ths fitbla which Ik* evidence had to bo takwi I _ feOMgftss to lavas* SaoMtar* IMMm'totiSrBUMS alt'aS srLr s.ssjr itSTpSS of ttj u mSaSSi. of Iowa. AWK apeeohee bv imn. nSs, J?aPP< ^ThomaoB. Cw- Matar,Ooffroth,Msaalac, llssl,BaassgandH*a- Saraoa, ths Boass, as a mack of raspsrt to ths maaaory «t ths daeaaaaJ. aajnerws*. <i In ti»© Senate, Feb. 2, Francis ft Griffith was nominated for Supervisor of the Oeusu# of ths Sirtfc district of Indiana, vice William P. Seymoar, Whoa* nonlaation was withdrawn. Mf. Thnrmaa, Atom Comwittos on Jndiciarjr, paported a MB tow reviving and continuing the Court of Com- .mlaaionem of Alabama Claims, and for the distil- bation tf the nnappropi iated money of the Geneva SWMrd... .In the House, among the bill* Introduced asd referred were the following: By Mr. Phelps, appropriate #100,000 for the relief of Mifftrers in Ireland; by Mr. King, tor the appointment of acorn- f--litffl ui engineers to examine routes of toter- nrsanlr communication; requesting the PissldfeBt to tender to Peru, Bolivia aad Chili the K<>od ol&ees of this Oi>vernment for the restoration of peace;, by Mr. Bland, for the free coinage o£ the Btlwrlw- Bar; by Mr. Rack barn, providing for the registry or enrollment of auy Teasel built in foreign oountxtoe: by Mr. ( offroth, granting pensions to soUMlera sod sailors of the late war who were disabled while in the mi it ry service; increasing the pensions for the loss of leg or arm; by Mr. Shelley, for the de livery of letters having iiwn«cient poatage; pro viditifr for the tie tioa of a Cohgceaaionsl Vnnter; by Mr. Yoaug, to lucwtae the dlcitocy It the Na tional Board ot Health; by Messrs. CowcUl sad Ooler. ck. bills to facilitate transportation between Lslse Ene and the navigable waters of *t>* Wibash; by Mr. Brown, ptopostaga coiistltsjtional assand- Hur.t providing that the House of KepreaentattVBS sfialS be compoaed of 800 members, to be sppor- tlosed an*ona* the several -tato« as provided in section S ef article 14 of tin smendme ta t« the constitation; by Mr. Wand, f r the frae coiw ge of t'ae Rtmdard silver dollar; by Mr. Thompson, prt»vidmr tuat no claim o£ a eitiaen ef a Stats whicu old not: fro into rebellion shall be disallowed on acrouat of disloyalty Uutaes H he proven; by Mr. Newberry. amendinflbt&S Patent laws; giving tbe Colirt of Claim* janedtction Of Indian depredations; by Mr. Fort, to pat certain articles imported and nsed in the manufacture of paper, glass and woolen fabrics on the free list, and te reduce the duty on j rintinfc paper nsed for books, pamphlet*, niagnsiinea and newspapers. The bill making appropriation for the improve ment of tbe Susquehanna. Ohio and Tennessee rivers was passed, as was also the bill authorirtfjg tbe Secretartts of tbe Interior and War to employ additional decks for the remainder of the fiscal year, to expedite tbe settlement of the pension applica tions. tlie Speaker announced the appointment of Mefir*. Felfon, Phillips and McKinley as visit ors to Wret Point; ®lso the appointment ot Mr. Phillips as a member of the Committee on Ed ucation and Labor and of Expenditures i:i the l)e- ptltMDt of AuMiee. The House thon we lit Into committee of . tore Whole upon twi-ion of the rules, to defeat a vote upon Mr. Weaver a gre< n- bftek resolutions. On rising, a recess was taken •till evening lor the purpose of listeiing to Mr. ParoelJ. Mr. Bayard, from the Senate flrinanceOom- mittee, icported tbe Wamsr Silver Mil adversely, Mt (ke opening o( the session of Feb. S. Mr. Bw* statsdthsttbamport was not unanimous, and tbe Btfnority hoped to be heard in regard to the Mil at some fotnre time, Tbe Wll was placed on the cal- A resolution ofTered by Mr. Teil« wss adopted, asking information in regard to tbe location and lands of tbe Kortham Pacific railroad. Memorials for a reduction in the duty on at* el rails wen presented by Mr. Kirkwood. k resolution from ths Military Com mi'tee to inquire into the expediency ot retiring non-commissioned officers on pay after thirty yeans1 service was adopted. R.-sumtiona of «&• apt ct to the memory o: the lata Congressman Rn*ti (Hark, Of Iowa, wo e passed, Messrs. Allison, H- re'ord aad Klrkwood delivering eulogies. Presi dential noaainations: James Q. HOwar.l. to be />ppraiaag of the Port of New York; Oeorge Walker, of New xork, to oe Cocsul Oeoeral at Paris; WiJher A. OoMtepeed of Ohio, ia.be United States Marshal for I he Northern Dxtric* of Oiiio; Robert M.Wallace, ot SoathCaro lina, Unite 5 States Marshal for the Dlstriet of South Carolina . .Is the Bouse, on motion of Mr. Frost, the prSriiegsee of the Sne* were srsnted to Parnell and Dillon, tbe Irish agitators. Mr. Davis offered a resolution, which was adopted, di recting ths OomnUtfee on Agriculture to Inquire nto tbe most feasible method of extending the beneflts of the Agricultural Bureau over that portion of the Uni ted fetstss west of the 100th meridian. A resolu tion was adopted calling upon the Treasury De partment for infdrmatioa in regard t-> new public ralldings. Tbe bill - - -- PW shall serve as a petit iutoi court mom turn three vldlnec that no person in any United Btates weeks during any of SENATE EXODUS INTESTKHTION. Synopsis etjf *»»« Testimony Ellcl t««l by the twMm Cinamlttea. Shertff L#nm%e< OtseocastK lad., la his maaa-iuaiMfilM^ ClMM that he met and Jisd liikiilAiMliliiiiflMed man named from Wsahlai||| hi lsttarato Jadgefar- was that their A warm discusshm occurred in ths Onus, oo ®*t nit., upon the printing of a petition of Mr. ®®*ulsoe, a colored man, who contested a seat in tbe House from Alabama. Haralson seta forth that after the election he endeavored to obtain de positions, but tbe Mayor ot Mima and other per sons sntborized to take depositions refused to pir- saat thsir duty. He also siieges that his j the counterfeit 'money jit a cattle ~aale, tmapsfitnr procured isdictmeots ssltost! M be had intended. itteal debate ensued upon the rule defbting the [t-es sf the Appropriations Committee. The vote upon rejecting the amendment of Mr. Brown, Re publican, upon which the debate oecurred stood IOT to 03. A resolution, offered by Mr. Kern an, was adopted in the Senate on the 4th itist., asking the reason of the suppression of statistics of imports by Collectors of Customs. Mr. Klrkwood intro duced a bill to provide for the payment of addi tional tounty to the soldiers of the army of the United States coring ths war of ths Re bellion. Twelve thoussnd copies of the eulogies to the late Senator Chandler were ordered printed. A bill introduced by Mr. Hereford confers jurisdiction in war supply-claim cases upon United States District Courts, which shall certify their judgment to Congress, and Con- kt ss may appropriate the money to. pay sueh judgments, it favorable. The bill authoris ing the conversion of national gold banks into national banka was passed. The President nominated Oharles L. HoUtein. of Indiana, to be Uuited States Attorney for the Dis trict Of Indian >; Ales. G. Wells, Surveyor of Cus- lom* District of L'suittiana; Edgar W. Mann, Regis ter of the Land Office of Cheyenne, Wy. T.; James L. Haworth.oi Kaasas, Indian Inspector. ...In the H ut e, consideration was resumed of the bill determining the jurisdiction ot United Ktates Circuit Courts, and -emulating the removal of causes from 8'ate to Federal courts. The House then passed the joint resolution appro priating fJSC.OOO to enable the Fish Commissioner to repr^ent the United States St the Exhibitloh in Berlin in April. The remainder of the day was passed in committee of the whole upon the revis ion of the roles. Mr. Anthony's resolution was adop'ed ia the Senate on the 5th, that the Senate shall each day proceed to the consideration of general orders, de bate to be limited to five minutes on an objection to carry any bill over. The first bill on the calec ®ar was the bill to prohibit military interference at elections. Mr. Allison--" I object to that." Mr. Blsfne--'Why object to thatl" Mr. Cockrill-- " There can be no objection to that" The bill was laid aside. A number of other Mite were objected to or referred to committees. )he bill to amend the Census act was pissed. It requires the enumeration in cities having over 10,- OGtl Inhabitants to be made in two weeks from Jane 1.1KS0, instead of four weeks, as provided bv the original act, Mr. Allison introduci d a bill for the relief of certain employe? on work tor the improve ment of the Dea Moines rapids. Mr. McOonaud Ia- troauced a bill to establish a port of delivery at In- dianapoliH. After an executive session. In which the nomination of John M. Morton to be Collector at San Francisco was rejected by 10 to 42, the Sena e adjourned till Monday -- In the Bouse, the 8enate bill for the conversion of national gold banks was passed, "ihe following bills wer<; introduced; By air. O'Connor, making siiver certificates receivable at the United States treasury in tbe redemption ot circulating Botes of the issue ot national b itifcs; requiring the Secretary of th® Treasury to pay current interest on all registered United Statea bond* without respect to dht of assign ment or transfer. Mr. Wood presented a resolu tion. which was adopts i, asking the 8scretary of the Treaeary-ln regard to taxes assessed and col* lectrd in eae » State, ihe morning hour having expired, tfie House went into committee on the re vision of the rules. 1 he House only was In reseion on the 6th Inst., aod it waa engaged upon the private calen dar. Among ths bills introduced were: By Mr. Dickey, appropriating $85,000 for the purchase of Praye's equestrian picture of Gen. Winfteld Scott; by Mr. Washburn ' for the relief of aettlera on public lands. Mr. WMttborne offered a resolution, wheh was adopted, calling on the President tor information as 10 the proceedings of the Iuternatimial Pelar Congress he'd at Hati. burg. Germany. Oct 1, lW'.t. After very little business the douse adjourned to _____ ami I • Served Him Sight. ^ 5 : A Herkimer county (N. Y.) farmer asserts that he has been outrageously swindled by dealers in counterfeit mon- ey. He scut $100 to one of them, and received by express the customary box of sawdust. Then he went to New York, determined to attend per&enally to the business. He bargained for $1*000 in bad bills, and was allowed to examine the package, for which he paid $100; but when he got on the cais to return home with his purchase he looked into the bundle and found that it contained only worthless paper. An exchange had been effected before his very eyes. Not only had lie lost $200, but also the opportunity of paying out , so as to Carolina and taemsi thousand intoadsl Jt> TLe^^s^ had _ -asatpcaamot the • wn •wy tfcat usgiuss ovsrsS.,..... tha labor martwt tf Qmooaii^ and. time- JS ess grsnta. Ha tfaoagm no objsotion would b@ made to imadfcwits who could support them B. IK. XttfHs, a real-estate agent of Indian apolis, testified that, to his belief, there is abundant room and ample opportunity for in dustrial employment in that State for a large number of colored immigrants, and that he had no knowledge ot ths present immigration being a pohltasl movement. Thomas Mills (Bepufclioan). of Iodiaqapolis, testified that ho remained to * the boys." when the North Caro- liua ooior«&I£pple first began to arrive at lo- diaoapoBa; fya want buoa*. and not women and children." Mr. Voorheea--Yon wantel them to vote? Witness --Yes, we wanted them to vote* Mr. Toor- beee--Wc?l, tbat'e a square answer. You thought if yon had them you coold "politi- csllr* slay as* WitnWL-Ye-<, we thought if w® had them we could'get away with yon ever- Mr. Voorheee--But 1hcy brought a The following to the statement of United States ourroncv outstanding oa the 110x last.- Otdd^Bsandasiae.... a #|.S4i Vm«5bs ^ss Two-jesreoupofti'ttfesof Componud-iotetestnutea.. Fractional currency, all israe^.1S^HS,?S4 X "*A^ , " 1 1 Xetal....,,.... increase of naUaaal-haek aotos wlifoh is deposit- The amotmt of national-beak notes retired by **a is 8Sf, tbedepoait-of lea^sifle.TCfl, f^jnwof mi deposit o, andshow- mod many women and children wi<h them? Imaess-Ysa^ttiey ovardoqe the thing on women ana dhtydren; but no thought it would he b good thing to sootier them around on cheaplaada. Mr. Yoorhee'--In close counties? Witness--Well, yea; in close ccrantios, Mr. Voorhees--State whether tbcee views, which you have given So ftastly, arc shared by your party ia Indiana. Ifilneas replied that be thought they wera tab great extent, concurred in by inovidttal meispdis of the party, hut he did not know of, any party organisation or party effort to draw. negroes to It.diana. He believed the colored people had not a fair chance to vote, or at least weio likely to ha "counted out" in North Carolina, and it was only right to give them a chance in Indiana hg an loeresss daring Jaaaary of such de ^oaitsor »s,8tn:<i& - , * Following is a statement of the pub lic debt on Feh. 1,1880: six-paMWriti b«nds...... v:: -.% Five-psr-csnt, bonds 60«,4M5,800 . * f gour-salS'balf-pCT-ctat. " ' " bonds SSO.0qo,(KK|> - - f Four-per-ccnt bonds..... 7W,178,15(1 ^ Reundlag certificates.... l,r Navy pension fond....i. Total coin bo&da.... Matured debt Legal tenSert Certificates of deposit... fractional currency ... Oold mm) s iver certlB- cates.... Total without interest Total debt............ Total interest Cash in treasury.... K. ft SosdeK, Ooidsboro, N. C., tes«fle<i that, ^ile the people Of the htato of North Carolina .da not fed-alarmed about the exodus, the wave of tha .movement, such as it was, is al ready subsiding, and that the great mass of the colored people in North Carolina wese as well contented as they are in any other seo- tioaof the oountry. T. O. Groomes. a lawyer, of Greencastle, Ind,, placed on the witness stand, and, at the request of Senator Voorhees, produced and read extracts from ednorials published in the GrAncaatle Banner in No vember and Dsosmber, 1878, in which H was stated that thf colored men of the Poatb aro prs^oally disfrancldsed while IhOT five In that seotton i Urging it as the jtafjnS the colored BOfn Bouth to oome North of the Ohio river, and help make a solid Nortb, and arguing thai If they remain in the South to be enumerated in 1880 they would increasethe numbers of their enemies there, but if they oame North they wqsdd increase Sua nnmhw ot their friends in IBs North. , ;T James Buchanaa, of Indianapolis, a promi nent Qreen backer, testified that the demand for labor in Indiana is*far short of the supply; thai m»ve», since 1873, bad a winter passed hat Supervisors of the Poor in the vicinity of Indianapolis wese not called on to supply food to able-bodied men, who would be glad to earh a^IViog if « hey could only get work. He was opposed to the exodus because bo believed tbe negroes were not improving tbeir condition by coming to a State al ready ov< r*u»pUed wttli labor. He was not moved to hold this vi«r becauso of any preju- dtaa against the.Maofaianw.as be bad been an Republican untuKF1-? mtli reference to Indi ana Republicans nvoiiajl this exodus move ment, lie believed nine out of ten Republican voters » e e opposed to it, but that half a doz en leaders wtiom he knew in Indiana, while they did not openly favor it, failed to condemn bringing these negroes to Indiana, when ihey knew perfectly well that there was no work for them there. • 12,008,445 •48.74S.WS »,<i%.000 15,308,74# 12,188.1 atl.SOt 16.327.1 !8 S03,712,2«3 CUBIOUS BESTISG. Debtless cash In tha It sawuy <8 Decresse during January Decrease ainc June SC1879 Cl'BBKNT I.IABIUTUS. Interest due an i unpaid 9 Debt on which interest has ceased... Interest thereon. Oold and silver certificates.........4 United Mates notes held for redemp. tion of certificates of deposit Cash balance available Jan. 1, I860.. available assrxs. Cash in treasury. .......9 ,000,^4,240 11,011,363 SM*3,0i5 SSi'Z »34,W3 19,404,010 1«A35,000 *8,142,»«8 •0S.74#,9fl8 Bonds issued to Pacific railway Com panies, interest payable in lawful mottey, priacipal outstanding . . 9 S4,fli8JSlS nterest scorned and not yet paid.,.. 888,117 Interest paid by United States 45,661,155 Ji»terast sSpaid b,v transportafcloa of mails, etc 11.586,094 Belsncsof interest paid United States. 81,066,061 ts : ; ' '.T® "WTkRYl&Q IBKLim P«asylTanla Repuhllesn OnTMliMu The Pennsylvania Republican State Conven tion mot at Harriaburg on Wednesday, Feb. i Russell Krrett, a pronounced Grant man, waa elected temporary Chairman over Qeoxge Y. Lawrence, by a vote of 158 to 93L John Cessna offered a resolution that a oom- mitteo of nine be appointed to report, subject to the approval of the convention, a list of del egates, with their alternate*, to the Chicago Convention, and a list of electors, after can- suiting with the delegations from the wums districts. Mr. 8'ewart, of Franklin, offered sn amend ment as follows: Resolved. That s committee of one from each Congressional district be appointed, whose duty it will be to report to the oonven- tion the names of four deiegates-at-Iaigd ta. tbe National Convention and two electors-at - large; that it will be the duty of the committee' to report also a list of distriot delegates to the National Convention, who are to be chosen by the delegates from their respective districts, including in their report the names of those persons who have already been chosen as del egates lrom their respective districts by the action of tbe people thereof. Tbe amendment was lost--100 to 150--and then the resolution, as originally offered, was adopted. The following waa then introduced by, Mr. Kerr: ' Resolved, That the delegates elected to Ihe Bepuulioan National Convention from this Stato are hereby instructed to support for the Presi dential nomination Gen. U. 8. Grant, and to vote as a unit on all questions that may come before the convention. * Mr. Stone, of Crawford, offered the folio wing amendment: Resolved, That while we pledge ourselves to support the Republican party, we see no good reason for abandoning tbo position taken by the parly in our own a .id other States in 1876. of opposition to a third Pfesidential term, ana we hereby indorse and reaffirm the resolution passed by our State Convention, held w this city in 1876. upon this question. (Senator Kerr argued in favor of his resolu tion, and traccd the course of the Democratic party as it appeared to the Republicans. Hi thought Gen. Grant was the proper and only man who should get the nomination, aad con cluded his remarks with m appeal to all to support him. Gen. Albright replied to Senator Kerr's re marks. He believed that Gen. Giant was sin cere in his undertakings, had done great serv ice, both civil and military, but he dia not think he was the only man whoooald lead the Repub lican party to victory. He did not believe there was any auger to the oountry in a third term, but he believed that Washburae. Sherman or Blaine coold carry the suffrages of the people. He did not believe ia instructing delegates to Chicago for any man. The resolution was further opposed by Geo. Koontz; Darlington, of Chester; Harvey, of Clinton; aad Wolfe, of Union: while Messrs. Moreland, of Allegheny; ana Bingham, of Philadelphia; favored it Tbe speeches of the antt-Graat people were all from the Blaine point of view, and no other names besides Chant and Blaine were mentioned at all, exoept in the remarks of Gen. Albright Mr. Stone, after arguing strongly in favor of his amendment to the reeo ution of instruction, finally withdrew it, and Mr. Btrapg. of Tioga, offered another oae, to wit: to strike out the name of II & Grant and insert that of James G. Blaine. O i a vote by yeas and nays 8'raag's amend- meat was lost--95 to 154--several of the Blaine I e jple voting against it on the ground that it wan not proper to instruct the delegation for any one. Tbe question then recurred on ths original resolution, or ratter that part of it which instructed the CStkmgc delegates to vote for Grant. Again tbe yeas and nays were ordered, sad showed a vote of 188In mvoref sntllSsfitest of the Extent of Hie the Afflicted Isle. fDebtia (Feb. 4) Telegram to New York Herald.] The daily, hourly cry of distress in Ireland becomes more and more argent and wide spread. Kvsry day reveals new horrors in the catalogue of suffering. The outlook for the coming months is gloomier than any prediction has yet painted. No language can describe the appalling privations, the utter destitution, which prevail; but a vivid pioture can be found in the statement and figures below. They are uoexaggerated and well authenticated. It is impossible to overdraw the situation, so rapidly do matters becomo worse. What might have been an exaggeration jesterday will to-morrow be an underesiiiaate^ Three hundred t* ousand people are SlowTv starving, and can only be kept alive by super human efforts on the part of their fellow- creatures. b .me of them are living on one meal a d y of turnips or of meal. Thousands more ar<j consuming tbeir last potatoes. Local efforts are becoming feeble. I'enple are look ing to the worl i for succor. The land agita tion has hidden its head for the moment, the Und agitators lending a hand in the common cause, Parnel.'s attack upon the Mansion House and tbeDaohess of Marlborough funds 1 m.pa&ti- The confumon thus caused only blinds tpe eyes of America to the present awful necessi ties of the Irirh peasantry If Parnell be a true Irish patriot he will sink animosities, which every one deprecates, even his friends and sympathizers, and milt become the cham pion in America of that cause in which all the werld is one--tlie c&uce of ciiarily. The following figures are compiled from the official returns of the local committees to the ce..tral l.otiies organized for the distribution of relief in Dubliu as well as from private in quiries made by your correspondent. They a e vouched for by Protestant and Catholic clergy, gentry, and public officials. Further returns are aniving daily in overwhelming uuubera. The returns by counties where the chief distress exists show the numbers of those suffering to bo as follows: thai portion of the Tbe second portion of the msolatfoa, fa. b5 rooting the delegation to vow as a unit* was then adopted by a viva-roes vols. State officers were Hum nominated, a pint- form adopted, a Stale Committee appointed, sad de!egale*jMM0>1fr theOhlcSfO VoSmto- tiau chosen. Mayo S4.e0!> Gal way «!,*«) Slii?o...... ti !«0 Kerry Jfi.UKi Donegal |S 0U0 Itoscommon WS.f50 Cork Clare limerick 7,600 Tipperary.. Lcitrim........... Wicklow...-..^... Monaghan ^Mtmeath IVnngford KiUunny 9,800 5,800 8,600 8.800 1.000 1,875 1,790 Total 512,370 Accompanying this report is printed a tabu lated statement covering a page, and containing an analysis of the actual condition of 258,000 of tbe persons represented in the summary. r T h e D e s t r u c t i o n o f P t n p e i l . In 1748 the spade of a Spanish engi neer first struck upon the buried rains of the city. The city was buried at a depth ol from twenty-three to twenty- six feet in ashes and volcanic mud. Tbe lower half of the deposit con sisted of dry ashes end small stones or scorife. Then comes about ten feet ol voloanio mud. This was caused by the heavy vapor of steam in the atmosphere, which con verted tho showers ef ashes as they fell into a plastic mass. Above this mnd are the scoriro and ashes of later eruptions, and the Boil which has ac cumulated upon the surface. Nothing, or very little, waa burned in Pompeii. The heat was not sufficient to change the colors of the frescoes on the walls, and the woodwork was car bonised by its long intombmeut in such a soil. Discoveries dofend the city against the charge so commonly made that it was an immoral and vicious city. It was a city of art and culture, ond was inhabited by men of wealth and rare taste. If our modern cities were to be blotted out as Pom peii was blotted out, the future discov erer would find beneath their ruins evidences of vice and licentiousness to which Pompeii can give but little com parison. • : . Hating Herse Fleshii A gentleman gives this little incident: As I was riding along in an out of-the- way path I observed a ludicrous scene. I had approached a log cabin that had several acres cleared arqund it. In one corner of the lot a negro woman waa plowing, but she had two girls tagging away trying to break up the hard greand, instead of a mule. They had made little headway, as the ground was too hard. About fifty yards off a negro man was feeding a rather plump mule. On asking why he did not plow with the mule he remarked: "Boss, dis mule is mine; do oie 'oman is mine and de mis is mine; nobody is gwine to fetoh diem away, but if de morgum on dis mule ain't raited nex* fall de white man will send de Sheriff and take de mule and alt I'se got. So, boss, I thought I'd keep de mule fat and let the gals and old 'oman work, and save dis hoes flesh as much as 1 can, fur if de wuat comes I can ride off on de male an' go some whar else to work. Dat's it, boss; de work won't hurt de (Q .̂y Republican. marks on her face giving evidence she ha* patsed throogh small-pox^aba is considered as lacking one of tbe chief qualifications of a marxtagadble maiden. The vaeeination soar is still ha?dly deemed a sufficient promise of future immunity from the disstie by the Benedicts of the Flpwegy I isW GoflsS CkMTFEE --In ptopenrtkm to the quantity consumed, so lutle $we is imported into this country froflt CNiate- mala, Cotfta Rica, Java, Rto Janeiro and Mocha that it is safe to My one- third of our coffee drinkers ever saw a cap of genuine coffee. Old- Govern ment Java and Mocha mixed in the pro portion of one-third of the Amebian beity to two parts of Java is the "ton" among connoisseurs. This should be roasted and ground at hotr e, and not a single berry be allowed to bora; then the coflee should be jprod aced by strain ing, or better, filtering. Death is a mild form of punishment for a cook who boils a refreshment which is at once bread, meat, whisky, and honey. Milk, if used, should be rich cream, and th& sugar assimilates more readily if cut in to pure, snowy, exact squares. The Sun's Distancje.--'Tne sun Is supposed t<* be 03,1100,000 miles from the earth. A ray of light is estimated to travel from that botly to the earth in eight nnd one-third minutes. This does not appear to be a very long time, but then we must recollect that light trav els at the rate of 192,500 miles a second. A body traveling with the velocity of sound, which is only 1,125 feet per sec ond, would require over fourteen years toleaoh the sun; and even a cannon ball which is sent from a gnn with a ve locity of 1,600 feet per second, if it should continue at the same uniform speed, would be ten years in perform ing the journey. The planet Neptune, the most distant one in the solar sys tem, is, however, thirty times as *far from the sun as the earth is, and there fore the light of the sun occupies over four hoars in traveling to that body, and a cannon-ball from thence would take 300 yearn to reach tho sun. What the Microscopic Reveals.-- Lewinbeck tells of an insect seen with a microscope of which only 27,000,000 would equal a mite. Insects of various kinds may be seen in the cavities of a grain of sand. Mold is a forest of beautifnl trees, with branches, leaves and fruit. Butterflies are fully feath ered. Hairs are hollow tubes. The surfaoe of our bodies is covered with scales like a fish; a single grain of sand would cover 150 of those scales, and yet each scale would cover 500 pores. Through the narrow opening the per spiration forces itself like water through a sieve. The mites take 500 steps a second. Eac'i drop of stagnant water contains a world of animated beings, swimming with as much liberty as whales in the sea. Each leaf has a col ony of inseets grating on it like eows in a meadow. The Average Ages or A rivals.-- The average of cats is 15 years; of squirrels and hares, 7 or 8 years; rab bits, 7; a bear rarelv exceeds 20 years ; a dog lives 20 yearsm \ to 16; lions are ionj b.v the name of Pomme, age of 70. E!ephant| h to live to the age of 400 years. When Alexander the Great had conquered Porns, King of India, he took a great elephant whioh had fought valiantly for the King, and named him Ajax, dedi cated him to the sun, and let him go with this inscription: "Alexander, the son of Jupiter, dedicated Ajax te the sun." The elephant was found with this inscription 350 years alter. Pigs have been known to live to the age of 20, and the rhinoceros to 29; a horse has been known to live to the age of 62, bnt average 25 or 30; camels some times live to the age of 100; stags are very long lived; sheep seldom exceed the age of 10; cows live about 15 years. Guvier considers it probable that whales sometimes live 1,(XK) years. The dol phin and porpoise attain the age of 30; an eagle died at Vienna at the age of 104; ravens have frequently leached the age of 100; swans have been known to live to the ag© of 800, Mr. Mater- ton has the skeleton of a swan that at tained the age of 200. Pelicans are long lived. A tortoise has been known to live to the age of 107 years. Bible Facts.--The learned Prince of Grenada, heir to the Spanish throne, was imprisoned in the Plaoe of Skulls, Madrid. After thirty-three years in this living tomb he wrote in his Bible the following *. In the Bible the word Lord is found 1,853 times, the word Jehovah 5,855 times, and the word reverend but onoe, and that in the 9th verse of the CXIth Psalm. The 8th verse of the CXVilth Psalm is the middle verse of the Bible. The 9th verse of the Vlllth chapter of Esther is the longest verse j 55tu verse, Xlth chapter of $t. John is the shortest. In the CVIIth Psalm four verses are alike, the 8th, 15th, 21st, and 31st. Each verse of the CXXXVIth Psalm ends alike. No names or woids with more than six syllables are found in the Bible. The XXXVllth chapter of Isaiah and XlXth chapter of 2d Kings are alike. The word girl occurs but once in the Bible, and that in the 3d verse and Hid chapter of Joel. There are found in both books of the Bible 3,586,483 letters, 773,693 words, 31,- 373 verses, 1,189 chapters, and 66 books. The XXVIth chapter of the Acts of the Apostles is the finest chapter to read. Tne most beautiful chapter in the Bible is the XXUId Psalm. The four most inspiring promises are John XlVth chapter and 2d verse, John Vlth chap ter and 37th verse, St. Matthew Xlth chapter and 28th verse, and XXXYIIt-h Psalm, 4th verse. The 1st verse of the LXth chapter of Isaiah is the one lot the new convert. All who flatter them selves with vain boastings of their per- fectness should learn the YIth fhpptw of Matthew. dca'h upon his coeval will;. , of illnnis fciTwao * q«iKd J& ati ost serenity, aod. wxy dejBOMtration of that equanimity ft»whi<* kifrwbola life has b*en si d singularly jk.mwms**. ••j#*' k S8S •<V: % : wolf 20, a fox 14 lived, the «»• iy living to tffift have been known *«» Wmmtn Wh<y CI i la Mi ., Out the qwalS^ *«afvi»> T .. '%• fProai Ibeibfctun Journal.] */ We have reeenthr heard an inte^tiag1 anecdote, by which oae can deduce a. moral aml adorn it into a tale, of hour second thought so own prevents vast complications. There ls a Yankee skip per from Maine, well known as a local trader, Gap*. Pitcher. He is, iikeaieat Maine men, large-proportioned and tmw- erful. Some y«a*4 ago he ran the Kran* from Washington to Boston, but has been abiroad since, trading between this, country and the Continent As the story goes, a British troop-ship, commanded. by an irritable, impetuous old dttifer 6f the Queen's "navee," was at anchor te IT foreign port. Gapfc. Pitcher's bar* <vaa being piloted in, and, through some mismanagement, fouled the jibboom of; the troop-ship, do ng, however, little cr no damage. The old officer, in a fdiy of rage, bowled: " Come on board, sir." ' The Yankee skipper, not exactly know*' ing what to do under the oircumatanoBeyi pulled in his gig to the ladder of th» troop-ship, and mounted to the deck. He was somewhat startled when, as •, stood upon it, tbe old officer called? "• • » " Sentry, arrest that man." f The skipper wa» astonished, «§kv quickly answered: "I am an American, i iffr citizen. I am unarmed, bat no wftana shall arrest me." . t, "Arrest him, sentry. Dont yoo heap"; , ©K me?" roared the Captain. >- Tbe sentry advanced to seize th ̂ skipper, but was met with a left-hander that would discount a pile-driver- Quickly the Yankee made for the gang*-' ' way, striking down every man who in terfered, leaped into his gig, and milled off to his bark. Straight to the Ameri can Consul be went and put his case be fore him. The latter told him he would attend to the matter, and the next day the skipper called. The Consul sat jut the center of the table; to his right WaS- the English officer, no other than Yice< Admiral Sir James Hope, K. C. B., in all the splendor of full uniform. , r I " A d m i r a l H o p e , O a p t , P i t c h e r , " . . duced the Consul. "Captain, I am delighted to meet you," responded ihe Admiral. "And! now let tne war go on." He spoke in the suavest manner and with the sweetest of smiles. The skip-- per bluntly said that he thought tho t English officer should apologise. . tt Not at all, not at all; no, dear friend. You came on board my ship,, whipped the entire Queen's navy, and escaped without a scratch. Is that not sufficient satisfaction? Don't let us have any Alabama claim business j. please don't ask an apology; you are too good a fellow, I know, to enfocce- it." " Well, Admiral," began the Captain,, greatly mollified. a Well, Admiral, I ,swt^OTj ̂that^rhays it's all right* and I "have some splendid brandy in my cabin. There are exoellent cigars; we< * > will adjourn to our brandy and cigars,, and our two nations will postpone tbe * war. If all your sailors are like you I 1p|| should prefer that the w#jt ly postponed." ' " -- r Geld-lntlng. ' ̂ Gold-hunting mid gold-digging |*s~ js|;: cinate thousands of i:e sons, becaite ̂' the element of chance, that which makes gambling attractive, enters into their1 sig:; result?. An exchange publishes sundry ^» facts about this mania wbteh ipe e%i i % mend to the young. Despite the immense yield of gokt ia California, it is now shown that bier tillable soil produces more actual wealth than her-richest mines ̂ Her grain and he? fruits exeee4[ i* value the best of her placers. , Meet persons tbink of OJifcwrnia Wl only a gold-bearing State, and it is » pleasant to know that lie? agricultural resources are beyond those of her i mines. Agricnlture is apt to pay better than - .gold of _silver-seeking in any fertile, ̂ •well-cultivated region; but there is a t sort of fascination about the preeiooa ; metals whioh allures men the world j over, and blinds them to the more ra- I iiuuni. ,. legitimate branobor fit dustty. : «.• ™ *v./ pTflEMARKETS. WasMsgtea^ Last Honrs. The certificate of Drs. Craik and Diek, the physicians who attenued George Washington at the time of his death, has just been unearthed from a Gorgetown newspaper of 1799. It does not appear in any of the biographies of Washington, The certificate concludes thus: "He was fully impressed at the beginning of his complaint, as well as through every succeeding stage of it, that its conclusion would be mortal; submitting to the several exertions made for his recovery rather as a duty than from any expectations of their effi cacy. He considered tbe operations of NEW YORK. * e-W Hoes Corros FioeE--Superfine ».... | 00 WHEAT-- KO. 2 . . i . . . . . . . . . 1 41 Co en--Western Mixed.... si OATS- Mfxed 47 RYE-- W e s t e r n . . . . . . . M POBK--Heci...... (jo LABS.......... ija _ CHIC \ GO. Bkevm--Choice Graded Steers 4 7S Oowa and Hoifcra S ® Medium to Fair. 4 10 Hoes 4 so rum*--Fancy White Winter Ex... r> &.) Good to Choice HprinirE*. 5 75 WHXAT--NO. 3 Spring. . 11» No. 88prinK.. 1 Cl Co**--No. 2 M OATS- NO. 3 88 RTB--No.» BiBUt-Ko.2.,.„,. n Buttkb--Choice OniiMif.. . . . . . . i t s Boos--Fresh 18 foax--tfess. lttt) 19 M Wi MILWAUKEE. Wheat--*o.l. N<. 8 . . . . Cohw--No. a........... Oats--No. 9 Rre--H*.l Baklsy-Ko. 8 SI. LOOlk. Wheat-- No. > Bed Fall Corn--Mixed Oats--No. S Kyi w„„. Coiur.. " "* Oats.. 1^® ::::::::: loucDo. Wheat--Amber Michigan No. S Red Coiut --No. 3 - Oats--No.2 . _ _ Mrrira*.""' ttmm--Choice Weiat-No. 1 Welts „ *0.1 Amber Cobs--No. 1.... 44 O'at#--Mixed * 40 FAttET (per cental) 1 » Pokk--Meaa is SB u. _ . naxuuvaus. Whkat--Eo. I Bad If COBH n Oats ***" gg Voaa^etmr. V,« •*•* **" * * 60 KUI ubkbtt, SA. Caa»*-«est... '... 4 80 S 86 Oniww a ae gWM* e e S 85 « 68 IB #18 CO 794® 7K 015 • S "t : > I' ; y •" * # . '«:kl' , - - Ff C ^ v ^ ^ V * „ j ^4$ ^ " y ^ ^ **v ^ J