.'j ' -vV Jf . - r-%t £G(£RMR FJAINIWLCT I. VAN $LYKE, EtfHatm* JlcHENRY, ILLINOIS. P»xnrTM*»«iutiTHt»*As, at Sooom^ HWf' ICuciooy «H ooa(Mfte<l to disarm a ttonMonuw gambler, aiuaed Oorfon, In the (•renin# U»e tatter assassinated the Mar shal at # poker table, firtag nine shots into hte body, and walked away un- molMlrt Throe «mrdcrcw *nd a borae- tbief aioaped from ttw* La* Y«eu (Col.) jail. A pOMO purmed and Overtook them. Tho Jail-Mfdt# show**- tight. tuMI two of the *hui#i|vr8, Allen asul Davidson, wore killed, inow of the party waa wounded, but uian- Ipd to HiUke ofr' iKcta*., .vJMrole*j|n was struck at JPonca, Nob., at a depth ot #M feet by workmen digging for co&l. •rwr. soim Lotiixm conntv, hto bwa lw a tragedy of nmumal horror. A W E E K L Y M E W S R E V I E W . 4*: tlic Eim .. PlTTSBnROH reports great activity in iron baanom The Parnell Loague, of Wow York, has adopted iwohitions severely ar- raignin" the English Gowmment for iU atti tude toward and threatened prosecution of , Q* Parnell, and stronglv condemning the niobil- . ization of trooo* on Irish territory for the pur- farmer named Nott. becoming enraged at hie poae of terrorizing the people and perpetnating ; wife's gi*ter, seized a large knife nsed for cut- the prenent system. Speaking as American j ting corn and aacaulted her with it. stabbing citizens, the members here extend most oor- ; the unfortunate woman until he thought she sympathy to Parnell. and promise all ; was dead. He then went into the house, and, moral." material, and financial support ; ta king his gun. returned to the spot where his The steamer Rhode Island, of the Providence I nster-in-lnw lay. Putting the muzzle of the line, went ashore at Beaver point, Narragnnsett < weapon under his chin, he fired, the whole bay early yesterday morning. The steamer was ; load passuig through hie mouth, tearing out wTbadlv'damaged "it is believed it will l>e a total ' the tongue and lodging in his head. He fell to loss. None of the passengers were lost. The j tlie ground, but while in the throes of death gtetmer was valued at $500,000. ! he saw some sign of returning life THE testimony in the case o' j to wliun) STS* charged with forging the Garfleld-Morey letter, j warcj? j,e seized a big stone and dealt her a blow closed at New York on the 9th. when Gen. j in the face. As he was raising himself to re- Prvor asked the discharge of the prisoner. ' tlu' t'\ow wife the yard, and Judge Davis said he would render a doeiaion 011 ; taking m the situation at n glance, she herself Saturday the 13th. George Bliss then caused ; seized another large stone, and, standing over theStof S. S. Morev and Robert Lindsey ; the prostrate formof her Husband, put an end for SeSmr, And they were commit,tod for ex- j to his struggles. Her .ister died in a.few:nnn- aminationl Lmdsev testified that for ten years i utes after. . .A passenger taun o* the Texas - • ! Pacific railway was wrecked near Lake Fork, Tex., and Fred Kirk, a stock agent, was killed, three men were seriously injured, and fifteen slightly. The wreck was caused by a broken „ . give Garfield a plurality of 6,540. Potter, in October, received 6,952. OKAS D. CONGER announces himself a candidate for the Michigan Beriatorahip, and mentions H. P. Baldwin, James F. Joy and John J. JSagley as in the field The Atchison <7hmnpion has official returns from all the counties in Kansas except twelve on the re mote frontier. The vote foots up : Garfield, I florae; Hancock, 56.917; Weaver, 18.330; Garfield's plurality, 58,6(19. This will be in creased to aliont 62,000. The total vote of the State will be about 200,000--an increase of 62,000 since 1878....Garfield's majority over Hancock in Michigan is 53,504. AT a meeting of tho Domocratio iSa- timril Coaisjiittas in Now York, last Week, an address was issued denying that they ever took [ Volg» ritHP. . out Southaru AKram, In Croatla, ahOfl^ was uo violent > that own torn* in 8«nnl persons were killed aud HUrty Ilijuml. Many | buildings will haw to lm palkd ilown. A large ! nuuilxu- of mh*l.>itaut<t tl«d to ti»e fields. j M. DK BAUDOT n'Aasosr, Legitimist | and Ultramontane Deputy from I* Vendee, who was reprimanded by M. Oatnbotta, Proai- I dent of tho French Chanibfffc, and tempora- 1 rily expelled, has sent his censor a challenge to mortal combat. j A REMARKABLY disor^Irir «nd dis graceful scene mi enacted in the French Chamber of Deputies tho oilier day. It grow 6ut of M. Baudrv D'Aason's refusal to leave THE ST AUK. Sl'lSPf! Htfwto turn people's hearfs--ohtneio a ooncert late in a pair of gqeaking boots. CARLOTTA PATTI and M. De Mtinok (her husband) are feted everywhere in Australia. Miss FLORENCE MARBYATT is giving public readings in England, and talks of coqjiiig hitlier for the same purpose. A voijUME of reminiscences of the late Ole Bull is to be Jiiade of materials which tho violinist left with his family. PROP. NORTON, of Harvard College, on account of ill health, has been obliged to give up his lectures on fine arts this year. FREDERICK SWAB has received $1,500 from Sarony for the exclusive privilege he had not slept twice in the same place, ROBERT GREEN, a laundryman, is the first negro to serve as a juryman in the crim inal courts of New York Col. E. L. Drake, who driller! the first oil-well at Titusville, and who thus became the founder of the petroleum interest of Pennsylvania, has just died, at New Bethlehem, Pa. SAMUEL S. MOKET, who was arrested the Chambers when ordered by Gamlxtta. Ho any action in reference to the Morey letter, or 1 had been excluded from the Chambers, but even saw it until its publication. _A resolution j sneaked back in defiance of that Uxly. A file was passed, recommending that in the States j of soldiers was brought in. Ai. D Asson sat where election frauds have been perpetrnted I at his seut with folded arms, surrounded by the Democratic committees investigate with a ; a body-guard of lloyaliHts ^nnd clericals. A. w . . .. w view to exposure and punishment, but doclar- : hand-to-hand fight ensued. The Deputies ro- | of photographing Bernhardt in Amer- ing that the National Committee cannot l»e j sifted the troops, and refused to allow M. i ica. charged with responsibility as to the duties of ; d'Asson's expulsion. At last Col. lUu. th^coni- \ x ,T xr , T-> • courts or Congress. ) mander of the soldiers, o;iught tlie bellicose ! Lror H. HOOPER writes from Pans OFFICIAL returns from the ninety-nine < PeP?ty ro«»J the U>dy. a soldier took hold of i that virtue on the 1' rencli stage means .. . T . ..n I J .'vd» two more caught him by the lu els. ; ttlmMMi gowns, a cab to drive in, and counties in Iowa show the following result. For j ft„d he wa8 c;irriw] ki k,ug and struggling out 1 onitm soup in a garret. nf tho hniKn in a tl... nn.- i 10 FOR his comedy of Black-eyed Susan, which still holds the stage, Douglass of 187(5... .The officio! vote of Pennsylvania ! Trjal, T 7~"*7"v "" i Jemild received just what Milton did for j Lo*t---twenty-life dollars. ' NEW HAVEN, Ct., is proud of its opera- houses. It has only about 60,000 iuhab- i itivnts, yet it has three opera-houses. Un- ; fortuak.lv, only one of them is a "grand " | opera-liouse. , MR. ABBEY is a Napoleon among the i theatrical managers. He is bold and en terprising. He has arranged to bring •New York Com• Garfield, 193,954; for Hancock, 105,928; for ! of the houi-e to a Wk-up in tho jitiFace, Weaver, S.'?.5!K); scattering, 470. The total vote J incident caused interne excitement. cast 323,832, an increase of 30,953 ov<;r the vote j THE Pojie exitreases symmthv for the of 187(5 The oflici-'l vote of Pennsvlvania T « « I T , „ , . f . * , , gives Garfield a plurality of 37,276 and a ma- |InsL Land *** '•> stix^^ly opimsed to jority of 14,625. Tne "total vote is 874,783, ! a°y revolutionary jmn-tHHUniis Krlly, tlu' acaiiist 758,993 in 187(5. Followinj? is the. vote \ against for Pr«»sid«nt: Garfield, 444,704; Hancock, 407,- 4 2 8 ; W e a v e r , 2 0 , ( > G 8 ; D o w , 1 , 9 3 9 ; P h e l p s , 4 4 . . . . The official vote of Alabama, with four comi ties to hear from, is: Hancock, 88.3t)9; Gar field, 55,794; Weaver, 4,551. The counties to hear from will add about 2,000 to Hancock's majority Official vote of Maryland for Presidential electors : Hancock, 93,706; Gar field, 78,515, notorious Australian highwayman, has' been > hanged. AN audacious robbery has been per petrated in Rue St Vmne, Paris, iWnk notes of the value of «>0<XlKK) frauos having 1;M>II stolen from a postman,,..All the Nihilists tried for attempts RTSJAUVSL the life of the C.*nr have IKHUI found guilly bv ihe Mihtary Court at »t. ! Petersbuiig. Fsve «f the convicted wei* sen- i out the I'awion Play.- Gov. FOSTER says that he is a candi- i teneed to de*th„ ami eleven to hard lulsir in 1 mcrcial Advertiser. date for the Ohio Senatorship, and that he will i t ^hAUA ^ISE. is in Europe, fight hard to get it. He says he has no under- j tude. .. .Mr. Wh;ekr. an IriVh land agent, was 1 5P" one °f the toughest problems in the Bail. i EDWARD KENNEDY, who shot Sheriff I McCorkle, at Shelbvvillo, Ind., on the eve of ! tho State election, has been seen near Shreve- port, ^....Fa^tteMcMiille^^^mw,^wh& j wlwtever^ithSearetujr8hwiiiftn,'Mid | «ht»t dea^ near a ^ix«~ca«<>iFooia,"in the | European mifld to fathom is why she sjerved in the Federal and Confe ill New York for perjury in the Philp trial, has j greases, and in the United States Senate before made a full statement of the manner in which i the war, has been killed by the care at Wytha- he was induced to testify, declaring that he i spent two nights before election in uie rooms Ex-JUDOE GLEESON has been ais- of the National Democratic Committee, from ! barred by the Supreme Bench of Baltimore for whornhe received ^ Lmdsay hasconfessed ; utt falsehoods in court... .A train from that he was coached bv \V llliam M. Price, a b Democratic elector in Maryland, and that his testimony throughout was false. Miss MARY SIGERSON, residing in New York, repulsed offers of marriage from Andrew Gillen, a dissipated young lawyer. The latter called at her residence, threw his arm about her neck, and, in the presence of her mother, shot her dead. SOLOMON S. MORET and Frank Lind sey, alias O'Brien, were brought before the Grand Jury of the New York Court of Sessions on the 11th inst., and made confession that they had perjured themselves in the hearing of the Philp case. Morey was held as a State wit ness, and O'Brien was indicted for perjury. A SHOCKING accident is reported from Bordell City, a small town near Bradford, Pa. One Joseph Heeps and eleven others were playing cards in a boarding-house. The fire" was running low, and Heeps under took to replenish it by pouring on kerosene oil from a peach-can. The can caught fire, and Heeps threw it from him. It fell into a can of petroleum fire to the house". Elliot Haley, and Henry Hyde perished in the flames. Joseph Barthley received fatal injuries in at tempting to eKcnpe, and has since died. Mike "Welsh, Henry Monroe and Wiilard Fresby. who were badly b'nrned, will probably die. Heeps, the fellow who caused the disaster, escaped without serious injury Mr. Henry Wharton, a well-known Philadelphia lawyer, and at one time associate editor of the American Law Reg- Madison Court House, Fla., having on board five persons in charge of a United States Dep uty Marshal, who arrested them for having violated the election laws, was boarded bv a party of masked men, who released the prison ers, drove off the witnesses against them, and threatened violence to the Marshal. v Two NEGRO laborers were killed and five injured by the caving in of a railway cut near Orange Court House, Va A dispatch from Charleston, 8. C.. says that thirty-nine warrants of arrest for offenses under the elec tion laws have already been issued by the United States Officials in that city. A number of arrests have also been made iu Richland and other counties Libbv prison, the famous military hostile of the Southern Confederacy, in Richmond, Va., has been sold at auction to James F. Gray, for $6,725. THE National Cotton Exchange re ports that 1,507,945 bales of cotton of this year's crop has been shipped from Southern ports, or by rail to Northern manufactnriug points. This is an increase over the shipments .. , ; nt this time last year of 167,781 bales Dr. on, wnicu set > j0jul y. Porter, Assistant Surgeon iu the Uni- Brown, Barney ted ButtM army; telegraphs from Key West that there have been ten cases of yellow fever at that point, of which two were fatal. WASHINGTON. SECRETARY SHERMAN, it is said, will strongly urge upon Congress legislation of some sort to relieve tho treasury vaults of the iuuc »»auciuie euiiiu ui uie .iniri i'-nu jauc rvij- f n<w,nm„lotinL' silver dollars ifiter. is dead... .Lucretia Mott died, the other , PrebbU-e of accumulating silver aonars. day, at Philadelphia, in her 88th year. The deceased lady early identified herself with the anti-slavery cause, and championed it to the end. SECRETARY SHERMAN'S recommenda tions to Congress, it is said, will probably in clude a law for the issue of thirty-three-year _ . . bonds, bearing 3% to 4 per cent interest, with THE proposition of a New Workpaper : which to refund *772,000,000 in 5 and 6 per to raise a Presidential pension fund is being ' cents, maturing before July. He also favors lwiKkiv MmnBU 4» in ti-.t j the issue of Silo certificates, stripping the green-hnsUy responded to in that City. Hon. back of ita •,gaI.lt,Ilder quill!tv, and leaving the .Edwin D. Morgan heads the list coinage of silver dollars to the discretion of the with 55,000, conditional that 1250.000 Secretary of the Treasury. '8, BEF°RE Jan. l. John H. Starin THE issue of stamps and foostal-cards places his name down for $2,500. Other subscriptions are George Jones, *1,000 ; An- ; for October was the largest in the history of son G. McCook, $250; Thomas L. Jameay : the GovermAent, amounting to $4,312,694. ®250, and A- J. Dittenhoefer. $ 100 The cost of the postal service to the general treasury for the fiscal year was $2,786,341. RECEIPTS from internal Two butglar* entered the house of Thomas O'Brien, a Syracuse merchant, and with a car penter's hammer brained Mr. and Mrs. O'Bnen while they were sleeping in bed. O'Brien's condition is very precarious, and J litre is no hope of Mrs. O'Brien's recovery. e MASSACHUSETTS, according fo the official census report, has a population of 1,783,085. The females exceed the males by 66,044. The number of persons of foreign birth is 443.116. and there are 19,004 colored persons... .William V. Grover, a 50-vear-old husband of Red Bank, N. J., has shot and killed hu 13-year-old wife. revenue since the commencement of the current fiscal year up to the 12th inst. were $48,240,768, against ! $43,780,935 the corresponding period last year. During the Ji-cal yeur ending June 30 the receipts ot the Treasury Department from cus toms duties amounted to $188,378,611. This sum was collected at a cost of $6,023,253. . iti • ' ITM1S WEST* ^ jk FBKXOHT train and a gravel train ran tnio each other between St. Paul and Minne apolis on the Milwaukee and St. Paul road. •A' v * > v * 4- POLITICAL* THE following are the revised footings { of the Republican majorities for President and ! Congress in Minnesota : Gartield, 36,848 ; Dun ! nell (First district), 8,531; Strait (Second dis- I trict ), 5,505 ; Washburn (Third district), 9,635. Returns from all but three precintcs in New Hampshire show a total Presidential vote of The collision resulted m the death of three as follows: Gartield, 44,787 ; Hancock, men and the Druising and scalding of | ; 8cattf"n6- G83- two others. The accident is said to i Kobert MCKENNA, elected by the Ra- be the result of malice on the part of | publicans as a member of the Tennessee Legrs- &raTel train i Ittture, is ineligible through a conviction of in- Mayor Kfulocii. of 8&n FTEIICIHCO H&S B(^N j , . , reaUxl on an indictment fotrnd against bim by ' in marrying the grand-daughter of his the Grand Jury charging him with a violation \ The complexion of the United States of the law in hiring men to do work on the new ; maJ, affec'j<Jd by this discovery City Hall bv the dav instead of by contract as i S®£retary Sherman definitely announces him- the statutes provide The Milwaukee ^ a candidate for the Ohio Senatorahip.... and St Paul Railroad Company have ! ?OV" Fostfr' of ohl0' Ba-Ts no Southerner will purchased from the Spotted Tad ind tiiat Gen. Gartield will not interfere in the con test. OENERAL. • ItAKBs Erie, Ontario and Huron wer« visited by a furious gale on the night of tho 6th inst., causing many shipwrecks. A JAPANESE steamer which returned from the Arctic seas reports a whaler recently arrived at Petropaulovski, a Russian port, which announces that the Jeannerte aud several whalers, with all hands, are lost, having been crushed to pieces by the floating ice. THE Schooner Belie Sheridan, of To ronto, while on her return trip from Charlotte, wrecked. All on board but one man were lost. THE General Missionary Committee of the Methodist Episcopal Church, in session at New York, have appropriated the following sums : Blue Ridge Conference, f3,500 ; Cen, tral Tennessee, $3,400 ; East Tennessee. §2,000; Florida, f3.700; Georgia, #4.300; Holston- $8,500 ; Kentucky. $5,000; Lexington, £3,000 ; Little Rock, $2,500; Louisiana, §7,000; Cen tral Alabama, $2,800; Delaware, $1,200 ; Detroit, £3,500; Michigan, $3.200; Nevada, $3,000 ; Mississippi, $6,500 : North Carolina. $3,500; Savannah, $3,500; South Carolina, $7/(00 : Tennessee, $3,000 ; Texas, $4,000 ; Virginia, $5,500 ; West Virginia, $3,000 ; Wash ington, $2,500 ; Oregon, $2,500 ; South Cali fornia, $3.5(10 ; Vermont, $900 ; East Maine, 41,000; West Wisconsin, $2,500 ; Wisconsin, $2,000. The appropriation for Minnesota was increased from ¥800 to $900. CAPT. EADS, of jetty fame, has gone to Merfoo to make a survey of the isthmus of Tehuantepec to determine its adaptability for an interoceanic ship railroad Washington advices indicate the following changes in the military service: Gen. W. B. Hazen to succeed Gen. Myer as Chief Signal Officer; Col. Nelson A. Miles to be promoted to the rank of Briga dier General, and to succeed Gen. Ord, who will be placed on the retired list; THE propeller Zealand, of Toronto, was wrecked on Lake Ontario iu the gale of the 8th inst., and all on boards sixteen persons, found a watery grave. BRADSTREET'S revised estimates of the wheat crop of 1^80 show a total df 455,649,000 bushels, the surplus for export being placed at 190,724,000 bushels A terrible explosion oc curred on the 12th inst. in the Ford coal-pit, at Stellarlon, N. S. The men on the north side calmly continued their labors, and were greatly surprised at dinner time to learn what had happened. Those on the south side, numbering nearly sixty, were in stantly covered and maimed by huge blocks of coal dislodged by the concussion. county of Limerick. will persist in ordering forty barrels of -- JLL. a..[ j Americau onions every month. . The House of Representatives. j RINGS are not to be worn on the first The following table indicates the number of jfiuger of either hand, says the latest au- mambersof Congrem elected, by States, com- pjiority, but you can not convince the pared with the membership of ,the Forty-sixth i young woman who takes off her gloves Congress: ! the theater that two of her fingers were given to her for nothing. IT is said that Anna Dickinson will try by litigation to prevent Fanny Daven port from acting her play, An American Oirl, in any other form than that in which it was_ written. Bfirtley Campbell threatens similar proceedings against Frank Mayo with reference to Van, the Virginian. THE stone which covers the grave of Miss Neilson in Brompton Cemetery, says the Echo, has already been sur rounded by flowering plants and covered with wreaths and immortelles, placed there by the hands of loving and affec tionate admirers. At the head, pending the completion of a suitable monument, stands a simple white cross, bearing only the word "Neilson." MODJESKA has been sued in London for $30,000, on account of her refusal to come to America this season. She was under contract to a manager for five years. After performing in this country three years he failed to provide her with engagements for the fourth, and she made a London venture on her account, meeting with great success there. She claims that the contract was broken by the manager, and he seeks to hold her to it. THE German Crown Prince has been the most popular of all the visitors at The Passion Play in Oberammergau. He stayed out the entire play, and afterward told the Burgomaster that he should never forget the performance, for the impression made upon him was greater than he could express. It is al ready a tradition among the Oberam mergau peasantry that tears stood in the eyes of "Unser Fritz" when he said those words and grasped the Burgo master's hand. { THERE is now only one theater in the ; country, the Boston Museum, where the | old system of weekly changes of bill by ! a stock company is maintained. All the t^rty-Mxlh Fvrif-«ev«nth Comjrfsv. Ounrfi e#s. JL V. O. B. 2>. a. Altbami »•»»%•** • •• 8 .. .. 8 Arkansas. » • « 4 .. 4 California «»•••••• 3 1 2 a Colorado. • • • . 1 1 .. Connecticut..... 8 1 „ 3 1 .. Delaware. 1 .. 1 „ Florida. ..... 2 .. a .. Georgia . .. 9 .. • .. Illinois u 6 1 13 6 .. Indiana....-,... . 6 • 1 8 5 Iowa. JT..'. • •••. • • 7 2 9 .. Kansas.... ..... . 8 ., ., 3 .. Kentucky .. 10 .. 1 9 .. Louisiana....... • • Mi,lt .. e .. 1 5 Maine •••«•••a . 3 2 3 a Mary'and 1 "5 .. 1 *5 Massachuaette,.. 10 1 .. 10 1 Michigan .•••••• • . 9 .. .. 9 Minuesota ........ 2 1 .. 3 Mississippi •••«•• • « .. ' # Missouri ........ 12 1 'i 9 "3 Nebraska ... ., • i .. ... 1 Nevada . 1 .. 'i New Hampshire. ... ..... 3 .. *3 .. iNew Jersey . 4 8 4- *8 New York ...•*... 24 0 20 12 i North Carolina.. ...••••• 1 6 "i 1 7 Ohio ........ . 9 11 .. 15 5 Orenon 1 .. 1 Pennsylvania.... ii 9 1 19 8 Rhode Island.... . a .. .. 2 South Carolina.. ....... . 5 .. .. *5 Tennessee i 9 .. 3 7 Texas 5 1 .. 6 ; Vermont .' 3 .. .. 3 : Virginia . 1 8 .. 2 '7 , W«r-t Virginia... 3 .. 3 : Wisconsin '. '5 3 • • « 2 Totals. .182 151 10 148 139 « be appointed to a position in Garfield's Cabinet. WITH one county estimated, Garfield's plurality in Indiana is 6,520 Returns from all the counties in New York, official and re ported, give Garfield 21.636 malority Re- ; turns from all the counties of Oregon except two, : show that Gartield has a majority of 547. The I#V i mi* ^ - •860UJ that Frank M. Biedenbaugh, a wealthy young German, who three years ago married the daughter of a neighboring farmer, came THERE are an even dozen candidates Uni- Bed Cloud Indians the right-of-way through their territories a distance of 180 miles The way will be 200 feet wide, and the company pays $110 per mile, and $4 per acre for station ground, and $5 per acre for a town site on the west side of the Missouri river. THE town of Bitesville, Ohio, has . . -- been the scene of a most horrible tragedv It ! TI11 rfctlu!"H ^l!' 'nS,n;a,t,e tl?e niajority to 600 -- - - - ««wuy. | i he result of the California election i» BO close that it is now probable that some of the Gar field and some of the Hancock electors will be „ , elected. David 8. Terry, one of the Demo- home late at night intoxicated, and, entering j cratic electors, has been so badlv cut that he is the room where his wife and child certainly beaten. Terrv is the "man who shot slept, assaulted them with an ax. His ^nator Broderick, of California, in a duel, and wife's skull was crushed by a single I bene* runs behind his ticket blow, and then his son's throat cut by the edge of the ax. He then went to a room where Mrs. , „ .. , „ , Stephens, a visitor, and her child and servant- I United Suites Senator in Indiana, namely: girl were sleeping, and killed Mrs. Stephens : B- Claypool, of Connersville; Congressman awakened sprang | Browne ; President Burgess, of Butler toward the door, but was knocked senseless and left fcr dead. Upon recovering consciousness ahe gave the aiarrn, and the neighbors came. It was not until morning that the murderer was found hidden in a tobacco-house, with his throat cut, not fatoUy. Jealousy, insanity and drunkenness are the theories advanced to ac count for the hon ible crime. J. C. ADEN, a German farmer living near Woodford, Woodford county, 111., his wife and his niece, were killed by a train of the Illinois Central while crossing the track in a wagon. IS. F. BERTRAM), a leading citizen of ROCK ford. 111., has become grandfather to his children by marrying his mother-in-law, Mrs. Crandall.. .Five lives were lost by a fire in the uoodshaw hoisting-works, at Bodie, Cal. IN the period between the 1st of May and the 31st of October there were brewed in the city of Chicago 311,047 barrels of beer. This would make about 155,523,500 glasses, or the city8"68 num' wo«»an and child in THE railroad war continues. The Wabudi system of roads last week reduced rates from St. Louis and Chi -ago to all Eastern points. The schedule adopted for limited tick ets is : Boston and New York, $4.25; Philadel- & ,®3 : Ha rriubiirg and Buffalo, $3.25 ; Pittsburgh, $2.25. 'Ihe rate between St. Lou s and Chicago continued at $1 for tickets limited to twenty-four hours. A FIVE-STORY building on Randolph atreet, Chicago, occupied by D wight Bros. & Co.. paper m umfacturers, and Sammons. Clark A Co., furniture and picture-frame manufactur er", has been destroyed by fire. LOBS, abont #100,000. , ' BURGLARS visited the postoffice at Ap- pleton* Wis., MM! out open 300 letters Gov. Bmith, of Wisconsin, has appointed the Hon. Orsamus Cole Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of that State in plane of Chief JMtioe Bymn, dwMwi Missouri.. Nebraska Novuda '. New Hampshire.... New Jereey New York North Carolina Ohio Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island Sontli Carolina Tennessee Texas Vermont Virginia West Virginia Wisconsin Total Massachusetts Threemen* 1 MichiRan ••• who volunteered, found it impossible to ex- ! MisSS.'.'.'.V plore the south side for any distance, on ac- -- count of afterdamp. Six sufferers were taken out in a dying condition, and the names of thirty-two were recorded as missing. FOREIGN. Gov. JOHN POPE HENNESST is MALTING determined efforts to suppress domestic slavery in Hong Kong, China.. .'.A general uprising of the South African natives is threatened, an British reinforcements are being sent to all im portant points.... Edwin Booth made his first appearance in London before a large, fashiona ble and severely critical audience in th'* Princess Theater as Hamlet, and was enthusiastically re ceived. He received several calls before the curtain, and was loudly appiauded James Russell Lowell, the Americau Minister, deliv ered the evening address of the winter session of the Edinburgh Philosophical Institute. His subject was " Shakspeare." A typhoon at Tokio demolished 1,000 houses and sent hundreds of fishermen to watery graves The religious decrees have been exe cuted in all portions of French territory except Algeria and Corsica Lord Colin Campbell is soon to wed Miss Blood, a beautiful Irish girl of distinguished family Laycock, tho Australian oarsman, defeated Riley, the American, in a contest on the Thames Rowell won the Astley belt at London, making 566 miles in six days, beat ing by one mile the record of Hart, the Boston colored boy. Little wood made 470 miles, and Dobler, the American contestant, 460. THE excitement in Ireland growing out of the Land League prosecutions is becom ing intense. A Land League meeting at Ath- lone on Sunday, the 7th inst., was attended by 20.000 of the Irish peasantry, some of whom walked fifty miles to be present. Parnell Ut terly condemned the billeting of police upon The United States Senate. The Senate, after the 4th of March next, classing DaviB, of Illinois, and Mahone, of Vir ginia, as Democrats, will be composed of thir ty-seven Republicans and thirty-nine Demo crats, as follows: Dtm. 1 Alabama ! Arkansas ' Caiifornia ^ ' Colorado ' Connecticut.....; ' D e ' . a w a r « . i . . . . . . . . . - . i F orida ! Georgia. I Iiiuois.............^ I Indiana. I Iowa • Kansas j Kentucky. j Louisiana. Maine : Mary laud Rep. 0 0 1 2 3 0 0 0 1 1 2 a The Electoral Vote. The vote of the States in the Electoral Col lege will be as follows : versity; John M. Butler, of Indianapolis; I districs where semi-starvation prevails, and .Uinn M ^ e it. . * [ i i • , , ... * . John M. Coburn. of the same pl«ce • Will Cumback, Judge Gresham, Gen. Ben Harrison, ,, C. New, Congressman Ortli, James M. Shackleford and Gen. A. D. Streight. Besides, there are any number of dark horses All the returns ot the election in Maine, with the exception of six small precincts, which will not materially change the result, foot up as fol- iows: Gartield. 74,005; Hancock- Weaver electors, 64.h32 : Weaver straight Greenback electors, 4,070; Dow, 66 ; scattering, 12 To tal, 147,991; majority for Gartield, 5,019 A San Francisco dispatch savs that the official returns are not yet all in, but ei ou -h received to determine that the Hancock e ecto s except Judge Terry, have carried California bv a ma jority of 200 to 800, while the Republic,, ns havo elected forty-one Assemblymen, giving a ma jority of two in the Assembly, and twelve ®n joint ballot. RETURNS from all of the 102 counties in Illinois show the following result for Presi dent : Garfield and Arthur, 318,205; Hancock and English, 277,454 ; Weaver and ChanU-ers 25,821 ; Dow and others (abont), 500; total vote, 621,980. Garfield over Hancock. 40.7.31 • Gartield over all, 14,430 Secretary Sherman d bclaims any understanding with Gen. Gartield about the future, and declares that he would not l>e unwilling to retire to private life for the next four years. GEN. GARFIELD has sent his resigna tion as a member of Congress to Gov. Fot- The latter has called an election •o nil the vacancy created bv his acceptance of the resignation for the 3uth'inst. THE private secretary of Gov. Foster, of Ohio, is authority for the statement that that gentleman does not desire, and will not accept, a position in Garfield's Cabinet THE official vote of the November election in Ohio has been canvassed, and shows the following result: Garfield, 375,048; Han- 340,871; Weaver, 5.456; Dow, 2,6Ifi d 8 34,187 , Garfield over all, *o,105....The official returns of the TnriUn. OARFTELD. Colorado ... 3 New Hampshire.. 5 Connecticut. ... ... 6 New York &5 Illinois .. 21 Ohio 22 Indiana .. 15 Oregon .... 3 Iowa .. 11 Pennsylvania .... 29 Kansas .. 5 Rhode Island .... . . . . 4 Maine .. 7 Vermont 5 Massnchusetta.. .. 13 Wisconsin". ..r. 10 M chigttn .. 11 Minnesota .... .. 5 Total ....213 Nebraska ... 3 FOR HANCOCK. Alabama . ..101 Nevada 3 Arkansas .. 6 New Jersey 9 California ... 6 North Carolina. 10 De'.awarc ... 3 South Carolina... .... 7 F'orida. . . . 4 Tennessee. .... 12 Georgia ...11 Texas .... 8 Kentucky . .. ... IV Virginia .... 11 Louisiana ... 8 Wett Virginia .... 5 Maryland ... .. 8 Wett Virginia Miantiwijii-i .... .. 8 Total ... 150 Missouri ...It Nunilierof electors 369 For Garlic'.d.... 21 ;l l'Vr Hamxick... 150 Majority .... 57 parties. Actors never before earned their • pay so easily. With only hidf a dozen, j or fewer, parts to study for an entire I season, and no rehearsals after each new i play is fairly started, the labor is almost ; confined to the time actually spent in j the public performances. I IT is authoritatively announced that j the flickle Patti has resolved upon selling her Brecon seat, Craig-y-nos Castle, upon j which she has latterly spent a great for- i tune. The reason for the proposed sale is that Mme. Patti has been surprised at the high assessment placed upon the castle, and that she has been displeased by depredations made on her estate. The water works which she erected at considerable expense have been de stroyed, the river and land are poached upon for fish and game, aud the poachers have had the oudacity to come to the door of the castle to offer their spoil for sale, and the keepers employed have been frequently molested. ur^ed his countrymen to agitate unceat-innlv un til they become the owners of the soiL Timothy O'Sullivan hurled among the people a copy of his lndictmeut, and it was torn into fragments. A meeting in the County Cork was interrupted by an ex-leaguer, who, with an organize-1 party, stormed tho platform nnd denounced the agi tation as a humbug. The dispatching of the channel fleet to the Irish coast cause 1 indescrib able excitement in Dublin. THE expelled Freieh monks are flock ing to Spaiu. Nobles are offering them their l>alaces. Town Councils are giving them old convents and vacant buildings, the King is j Minu^ta granting them interviews, and the Ministry is Nebraska."'" authorizing Jesuits and othor orders to estab lish themselves in Madrid and all over the kingdom... .The priests belonging to one of the obnoxious orders occupying a monastery at j p^misylvania * Marseilles have barricaded their relreat, pro- I Rhode Island"" visioned themselves, and, in fact, have turned " the monastery into a fortres . It is surrounded by a body of troops who expect the siege to last a month. The Popular Vote. An estimate of the popular vote, based upon the majorities repor.ed by telegraph up to this writing, gives the following result: MAJOltrr's FOB OABFlELD.jMAjoitIT*8 FOB HAXCOCK. 40,IICK> 40,000 200 1,000 2,000 40, OUC M.iKK) >5,000 15, TXK) :r>,000|Mi*sis-ii>pJ 45,000 Colorado... Connecticut Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Maine. Miux-achusetto.. 2,8X1; Alabama.... 2,500 Arkansas 40,000 Ca.ifornia fi.OOO Delaware * 77,000 Florida (SO,000 Georgia 5,000; Kentucky 52,000; Louisiana 44,(MH»i Maryluiul.. New itumpshlre... New York... Ohio { Oregon.. 20,0001 Missouri 4,000 Nevada 23.000 33,000 300 36,0->0 7,000 New Jeraey North Carolina.. IN France, the Jules Ferry Ministry, after an existence of but a few weeks, has come to an end. It* fall is due to the vote of the Chambers, which, by a majority of 200 against 183, contrary to the proposal of the President of the Council, decided that the law on the reform of the Ma_istrature should be placed at the bead of tr»e order of the day. The Ministers thereupon tendered theii resignations in a body... .The Nihilist trials resulted in sen tences oi exile lor three of the accused, and imprisonment for the other four Tho siege of the Premontre Abbey at Marseilles was a brief one, as the fathers neglected to gutrd the door at whv h friends were adrftijted.... A London dispatch says the excitement in Ire land centers in Ballmrobe, whore troops are being concentrated to protect the laborers en gaged in harvci-ting crops for an agint of Lord Erne, and where the excited peasan try are also Hocking in large bodies.... The early approach of winter in Russia has stopped the sowing of wheat, aud numerous grain-laden vessels nave been frozen up in the 55,000 (UK) 2,000 15,0(10 Smth Carolina un,u00 | Teunessesr. 35,000 \ Texas... 75,000 ! 2t),U00. Virginia 40,0!X) 23,00i)| West Virginia 13,(XX) 563.800 Vermont. Wisconsin.... Total 499.600| Total... Orthographical. " Ml. Thompson presents his compli ments to Mr. Simpson, and begs to re quest that he will keep his piggs from trespassing on his grounds." " Mr. Simpson presents his compli ments to Mr. Thompson, and begs to suggest that in future he will not spell pigs with two gees." " Mr. Thompson's respects to Mr. Simpson, and will feel obliged if he will add the letter E to the last word in the note just received, so as to represent Mr. Simpson and lady." " Mr. Simpson returns Mr. Thomp son's letter unopened, the impertinence it contains being only equaled by its vulgarity." I THE bride and bridegroom at a Nash ville wedding had only one leg apieoe. Bears and Hornets. Hornets build their nests high up in the branches of trees, or fasten them to rocks out of reach of harm. But, cun ning as these insects are, they are no match for the bear. A bear discovers a hornet's nest far out on a limb too small to bear his weight or high up on the breast of a rock. If the former, he ciimbs the tree, breaks off the longest branch he can get, and, holding it in his fore paws, thrashes the nest until it drops to the ground. Sometimes he dances or stamps on the limb until the nest is shaken off. If the nest is on a rock, the bear goes up to the top of the ledge above it. Then he gathers large stones and pieces of wood and rolls them down the side of the rock until one strikes the nest and sends it tum bling to the ground below. The hor nets seem to know what has caused their ruin, and not one of them deserts the fallen nest, bnt all seem to await the appearance of the bear, when they at tack him at once. "A hornet sting," says the old hunter, " is equal to a blow from a sledge hammer every time, and one hornet'll knock a bull down. But their bite won't raise a lump as big as a buckshot on a b'ar, and the shaggy creature seems to think it's a heap o' fun. He'll stand up on his hind legs and square off with his fore paws at the hornets, jest as if he was boxin' with somebody, only he's dura careful to keep his eyes shet. Then he'll lay down and roll all over the nest, as if he wanted to show the hornets how he didn't care no more for 'em than as if the^was gnats. Once I see a big die b'ar, which had knocked a hornet's nest as big as a peck measure ofiTn a tree, take it under her arm and walk off with it as coolly as if it was one of her cubs." A Faithful Servant. A young German from Mecklenburg was lucky enough to win $60",000 in one day at Monaco, and at once went to his hotel and locked up the amount in a cash box, intending to leave for home the next morning without further tempt ing fortune. On awakening the next day, however, the box was gone, and with it his old valet, who on number less occasions had given proofs of fidel ity and affection to his master. As it was, ttj,e young man had to telegraph home for money to leave the place, and learned that the servant was in Meck lenburg with the cash intact, having de camped with it for fear that his master would risk it at the gaming table again, as he had seen so many other lucky ones do. ^*7- Soteething About 61aM. Some boy writes to "The Doctor," asking how window-glass is made so flat j and smooth, "especially those in the | large windows of store-fronts." There I are two kinds of window-glass, one called , J " cylinder " and the other " plate" glass, j j All the large panes are plate-pclass, as | j the size of cylinder-glass cannot be in- I J creased beyond a certain point. In thia i i kind of glass a cylinder is blown, i Those who have been in a glass-hous&-- ! and I advise you, whenever you bave an opportunity, to visit one and see how this wonderful material is worked-- know that to make a cylinder a glass is first blown. This then is worked into a cylinder by rolling it upon an iron table. | After a cylinder is made its ends are cut j off, and it is divided lengthwise and flat- j tened out to form a flat, smooth sheet. I All plate-glass is cast. A polished iron j table has ledges at the side as high as i the thickness of the plate of- glass, j The metal glass is poured upon this and spread and flattened by a copper roller. I The plate is then annealed; that is, put ! into a very hot furnace, which is so ar- i ranged that the glass will cool very j slowly, in order that it shall be tough j when, at the end of a week or so, it is i cool. But the glass is now dull and | rough, like that which you Bee in roofs 1 and skylights. To become the beauti ful plate-glass it must be ground and polished. The plates are sa arranged that they may be rubbed together, one upon the other, by machinery. First sand and water are! placed between them, then emery of different sizes, and after being ground with the finest emery they are polished bjr rubbing them with some kind of polishing powder.--Amer ican Agriculturist. Smoking. The evils of juvenile smoking were considered at a conference of Sunday- school and day-school teachers in Man chester, England. Dr. Emrys-Jones, of the Royal Eye Hospital, who presid ed, laid special stress upon the injurious influences of tobacco upon the sight, and said he was convinced that the use of tobacco, say of half an ounce a day for ten or fifteen years, resulted in seri ous injury to the eyes, and sometimes in absolute blindness. Resolutions were adopted setting forth that, as physicians of the highest eminence declare tobacco to be injurious to health and longevity ; as smokers smoke to satisfy the same artificial craving which induces drinkers to drink ; as careful statistical investiga tion shows that the smoking teetotaler is five times as liable to break his vow as the non-smoking teetotaler; as smok ing is an unmanly leaning on a solace to care and labor, neither sought nor need ed by women, enabling the smoker to be idle without growing weary of idle ness, tending to take the ambition out of him, and to make 'him happy when lie should be miserable, and content when his divinest duty is discontent; as it is almost impossible to smoke in an in habited country without causing discom fort or uausea to others; and as, finally, the passion for tobacco has been the cause for many serious fires and disas trous explosions, parents, teachers, and all ®thers who have influence with British boys should warn them against this barbarous habit both by precept and example. What "Wife" Means. Says Ruskin: " What do yon think the beautiful word 'wife' comes from? It is the great word in which the En glish and Latin languages conquered the French and Greek. I hope the French will some day get a word for it instead of that fcmmc. But what do you think it comes from ? The great value of the Saxon words is that they mean something. Wife means 'weaver!' You must either be housewives or house- moths, remember that. In the deep sense, you must either weave men's fortunes and embroider them, or feed upon and bring them to decay. Wher ever a Irue wife comes, home is always around her. The stars may be over her head, the glow-worm in the night's cold grass may be the fire at her feet, but home is where she is, and for a noble woman it stretches far around her, bet ter than houses £&iled with cedar or painted with vermillion--shedding its quiet light for those who else are home less. Tiiis, I believe, is the woman's true place and power." An Eye Fountain. The eyesight of the Czar is said to have greatly improved by a simple rem edy, consisting of a glazuoi douche, or eye fountain, throwing a tiny jet of deli cate spray a yard and a half into the air. The temperature of the water is fixed at 80 degrees Fahrenheit, and the spray is allowed to beat against the eyelids for ninety seconds, night and morning. The remedy seems at first sight ridiculously simple, but it has for several years been successfully employed in Russia. For the literary man or jaded beauty, goiug with weak and weary eyes to rest, there is said to be nothing more refresning than to bend for a minute or two over a glaznoi douche. The eyes recover strength in an amazing manner from the fine but powerful impact of the in vigorating spray, aud there is none of that depressive reaction succeeding the use oftonics. FOB THE CURIOUS^ AT/THOUGH idleness is frequently fatal?' to persons oi gt&ut, mental or physical- energy, s<&me workmen still find theur tex m of e£istenee very short on account of the deadly nature of tttfir employments The overage life ofaSheffirld fork-grinder-; is only 29 years, but that of the dry-grind er of sickles is 88 years. For every 70,451 tons of coal (lug up in Prussia^ the life of a miner is sacrificed ; and to. England there is one life lost for evaiy, 89,410 ions raised to the surface. IK thw Bible about 100 pltuiets are al- - luded io ; Hippocrates mentioned 233 ~ Tlieophrastus 500 and Pliny 800. From this time there wae little addition until the Renaissance. In the beginning of the fifteenth century Gesner coidd only enumerate 800, but its close at Bauhin de scribed 6,000. Tournefort, in 1694, re cognized 10,156 species; but Limueos, in the next century working more cau tiously, defined only 7,294. In tlje be ginning of this century, in 1805, Persoon described 25,000 species, comprising, however, numerous minute fungi. In 1819 De Candolle estimated the known: species at 30,000. Loudon, in 1839, gave 31,731 species; in 1846 Prof. Lind- ley gave 80,887, but in 1853 these had in- creased to 92,920. At present the knowife< species are estimated at 125,000. CHARLES D. MCGTIFFEY, of Chatta nooga, has been endeavoring " to get- some idea " of the magnitude of the na tional debt at the close of the war. He has made the calculation that if four- men were to sit down to pay the inter- est, and count a silver dollar a second, and work every second of the year, they could not keep down the interest on the- original debt; and if another should sit • down at 2 years of age to count th&= principal at the same rate, he Would be-- over 107 years old by the time lie count ed the last dollar, interest on the prin cipal having ceased from the first mo ment. The pile of silver dollars, more over, which he would make in counting " that principal would be four feet square--- and fifteen times as high as Lookout mountain (1,600feet above Chattanooga);. Mid if the silver were conveyed in a con tinuous wagon train, each wagon carry ing a ton, and each wagon and team oc cupying thirty-five feet, the train would stretch from Chattanooga to Columbus. WHAT a noisy creature would a mail be were his voice, in proportion to his- weight, as loud as that of a locust! A locust can be heard at the distance of one-sixteenth of a mile. The golden wren is said to weigh but half an ounce;, - so that a middling-sized man would* weigh down not short of 4,000 of them, and it must be strange.if a golden Wren would-not out-weigh four of our locusts. Supposing, therefore, that a common, man weighs as much as 16,000 of our lo custs, and that the note of a locust can. be heard one-sixteenth of a mile, a man. of common dimensions, pretty sound in, wind and limb, ought to be able to make himself heard at the distance of 1,600* miles, and when he sneezed "his house ought to fall about his ears." Suppos ing a flea to weigh one grain, which is more than its actual weight, aud to* jump one and a half yards, a common. man of 150 pounds, with jumping powers- in proportion, could jump 12,800 miles, or about the distance from New York to* Cochin China. Tiresome Sundays. S In order to appreciate fully the beauty of our Sundays one should live abroad, two or three years. My dislike to for- eign Sundays has reached a perfect- ! pitch of bitterness, a foreign correspond- j ent writes: Owing to an accident, I. I have not been able to go to church the- last two or three weeks, and so I have- had the full benefit cf a Sunday in a for- , eign land. Let me give my experience- for the benefit of such as think that our- Sunday may be improved. As I lie here- I hear the piano in a room close by' played vigorously. The same runs, the - same shakes, the same crashing chords,. are being repeated over and over again that I have had to listen to every day during the past week. I can also hear* the piano across the road being prac ticed on in the same way that I have heard, it practiced on every day during the past. week. In the long passage outside my door I can hear the servant scouring, away as hard at drudging work as she was yesterday. I can hear the house wife with her jingling keys opening; store-cupboards, and giving out stores in the same dreary round of duties that have occupied her all the week, and when I am earned into the salon this af ternoon no doubt I shall find her, as I did last Sunday, with her kind, tired face bent over the work-basket, putting strings and buttons and tuckers to little garments, just as she had put them on any other day of the week. Sweet, un selfish, tender-hearted German lady,, what a boon our blessed Sabbath day' would be to her.--Exchange. I " WiLii vou and your son occupy one ! room ?" asked a hotel clerk of a woman ' of 35, who arrived at Omaha with a boy | of 16. " This is not my eon," she said j with emphasis, "but my husband. We> I are on our bridal tour." THE MARKETS. , Tasteless Cod Liver Oil. Dr. Peuteves, in La France Medicate, recommends, in order to render cod liver oil tasteless, to mix a table-spoon ful of it intimately with the yelk of an egg, add a few drops of essence of pep permint and half a tumbler of sugared water, so as to obtain a fait du poule. By this means the taste and characteris tic odor of the oil are entirely covered, and the patients take it without the slightest repugnance. Beside, the oil, being thus rendered miscible as the wa ter in all its proportion?, is in as com plete state of emulsion as the tuts at the moment they penetrate the chyle ves sels, consequently absorption is better assured. A PHILADELPHIA servant girl was left in charge oi a little child while its parents left the city for a journey. Upon their return the house was closed, and tho nurse and child gone. After a long search and several days of agonizing suspense, the heart-broken mother found this note pinned to a table-cover: "Mamie is in the child's ward of the almshouse and I have gone away. Kate." - A. BURGLAR who had stolon a large sum of money from a house on the Bou levard Voltaire, Paris, was watched by the police after the expiration of a two year imprisonment, and 14,000 francs in coin, which he had buried under the root of a treo in a public park, were re covered. Ho was arrested with the treasure in liis hands just after he had dug it ont from its place of conceal ment. X ..16 75 <aio m 4 85 & 6 50 n @ n*; 3 85 @ 4 35 1 18 @ 1 21' 59 (S> «1 89 <$ 48 1 03 (4 1 05 14 75 (oils 00 8 • (A 5 50- @ 3 50 <a 4 » ® 4 95- (fi, 1 05 <S 92 A 42 © 31 83 88 28 19 « 50 <» 8j& @ 1 09 1 04 0 42 (4 29 84 72 74 NEW YORK. BKEVES Hons COTTON FLOUK--Superfine WHKAT - No. 2 Spring CORN --Ungraded. ». OATS--Mixed Western RYE--W extern I'oitK--Mess I LAUD .....4. CHICAGO, BBXVKS--Choice Graded Steers. 4 85 Cows and Hellers 2 40 Medium to Fair 8 90 Hoae 3 75 FLOUB--Fancy White Winter Ex 5 50 @ 6 00 | Good to Choice Spring Ex.. 4 50 (<>; 5 25 WHEAT --No. 1 Spring 1 03 | No. 3 Spring 91 I CORN--No. 2. 41 OATS--No. 2 80 I BIB-No. 2. 82 BARLEY--NO. 2 85 ( BUTTEII--Choioe Creamery 27 EOOH--Fre»H 18 I POBK--Mess. 13 60 I LARJD A | MILWAUKEE. WHEAT--No. 1. 07 No. 2 1 03 CORN--No 2. 41 OATS--No. 2 33 j RYE--No. 1 £3 BARLEY--No. 2... ST. LOUIS. WHKAT--JJo. 2 B®D. CORN--Mixed OATS--No. 2. RYE PORK--Meas. LARD CINCIMNATL 1 WHEAT • CORN OATS ! RYE ......'. ! PORK--Meas j LARD TOLEDO. 1 WHKAT--No. 1 White ! No. 2 Red I CORN--No. 2 OATS--No. 2 ! DETROIT. Ftoci--Choioe WHEAT--No. 1 White '^1.. CORN--No. 1 OATS--Mixed BARLEY (per cental) *, PORK--Meas 14 50 INDIANAPOLIS. WHEAT--No. 2 Red 1 OI CORN 43 OATS 30 ton*--Clear is 75 EAST LIBERTY, PA. CATTLE--Best 6 00 Fair 4 40 Common 3 50 Hoos 4 50 SHEEP 8 00 .13 50 (414 00 @ 1 07 18 50 *14 00 @ 1 05 ® «*• (4 1 0* 1 30 (4 1 90- @15 (W @ 1 0& @16 00 « 4 » @4 2*- d» 4 m <4 4 7*>