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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 22 Nov 1882, p. 2

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Several ' MMBen f&to were also killed. A Iwrare num- •W. */efW seriously injured. The engineer • V*® crying: to wake up lost time. i i.'4"®® train on the -Ifwr York : J TJitndral mad rain into a locomottve near IfeebML 7T»e engine and drawing-room -carWete hurled from the track. Four per- •8*18 reoeived serious injuries, among them being Warren G. Derby, of Brooklyn. Secre­ tary' Foh^e.v w on "the train, but was not •hurt,. ,..K re ihan $14,000,000 has been ex- r^ended «n the Brooklyn bridge thus far. Eixekt ALBEE,who two years ago took jjryery thing but the safe in the Ashuelot Sav­ ings iBank, at Manchester, N. EL, of which ' f fete was cashier, pleaded puilty to two indiot- )• BRnts formaki' gr false entries, and was led f, . off to State prison for ten years. Richard 1 'Hofftaan, of Somerset townBhip, Pa., who •( ha been a cripple all his life, while fer- ,, vastly praying behind a barn, heard a voice ^py, "Arise and walk!" He obeyed the oom- ' viand, !.nd is now sound in every limb. • THE Ways and Means Committee of " the Vermont Legislature pjopoflBS to raise 1 ' «U money: required for State expenses by taxing the corporations doing1 business with­ in the State. The railroads will be asked for $ percent, on the first $2,(W0 earned per v anile; express and telegraph companies are to disgorge 8 per cent, on their gross re- ' oeipts, nnd savings banks half of 1 per cent .oo deposits, all of which is to be paid to the •Sfcitc Treasurer semi-annually. XUBWUB, , <»• TBe steamer Emma C. Elliott, while < aearinpftt Louis, Ma, came upon an 1m- •ense Hook of .wild ducks. The electric ..Hghf was turned on, when the birds dashed •irainst it with such force that several hun- ? £ed of them were captured; and In the morning thirty-six were found concealed in i< ,S,tte caliilL , EDWARD HO:LROTDE, a Cincinnati * •#»! 'iajger, wasrobbed and almost b^atentodeatti by burglars. He is 80 years of age, and is • • f> Krur Ui over #100,000. Twenty-flve years ago : b® separated from his wilfe and cutoff all 7 communication with the world except to •" V ' receive necessitrv suppliea Four masked vji'Iif !>t ..bfurglacs entered his steeping apartment, i • ; land, after beating him brutally, they were * *v Minded a pocket-book containing $5." They \m I' s J, wrencliefl. a large toe-nail from his foot, when , • . hie pointed out the hiding-place of bonds * 11 ' 5(forth •l.S.tKK) and a roll of currency. After f • (i sMRinly tlngeing kis body they ransacked the house and left A pohce Lieutenant pene­ trated to the bedroom and found the old * Sum in a bed of greasy rags. Iiitwb « w HMo. B. AKMSTROHO, a Chicago jour- aalist, was sent to Horon, Dak., to estab- f a land office. By 3 o'clock on the mora- m log of opening, 500 attorneys had assembled . In front of the building to file applications, and the doors and windows were broken by \ - ^ ' thie qrowd. Kie receipts for the first day Nrere #9,wX), 1he total transaction^ being the Jnanstomeomrd. GaL F. Lam (omer* tl»asri lanreftt on record. I'ostjBiaBter at Daj-ton, Ohio, who stood in his accounts with the de­ partment thrust a tiny knife blade into his f./t .Jugular vein, and died instantly. t> >t»o; XEEBEBiJE collision occurred on the ««(» * <»* <^tiifiago and Alton railway near Oak Grove, twenty miles east of Kansas City, Ha, be- ' ^tWeen a construction train and a hand-car : toWch resulted in the death of six men and ^ Jttie ditching of Hie entire train. The con. •cructHjn tnin was in c arge of Conductor Hamlett, and at the time of the collision was ,, Hhylfjng toward Blue Sprhxgs, when it en­ countered the hand-car going east All the * I ®tea ftta the hand-e ir jumped, tbe loss of Ufe being with the laborers and trainmen. . The caboose, six flat-cars and one box-car " 'Went into the diteb. As the cars went into the ditch s$?ne at the men jumped, but . U b* ' ;-»w. V - i »>T MV AUWH V* *MV WVIU VUV Were caught iindtr the carp.and crushed out 1|f all shape. Beside tiietdx killed a large •umber were wounded. . THE night watchman in the Union >*^epot at fit. Joseph, Mo., hearing pistol #K>te, started out to discover their origin. f He noon found in the street the warm * «orpses of Joseph Hughes, a notorious char­ 's acter. and Marker Davis, ibis cousin, it ap­ pears that they had been playing cards in a s 'Saloon near by and had considerable money, although none wnsfound on their bo.ties.... The fail of a derrick at Cleveland caused .the death of three men almost instantly and *|he Bevere wounding of another. . . . - ' * T w o FREIGHT trains collided near Hnd- *"* " ion, Minn., causing a general wreck and the turning of a caboose One man perished in W I the flames, another was instantly Killed, and three per ons were mortally injured. A *'hum her of cattle were shockingly mangled. !....Brave Bear was privately executed at Ifankton, D. T., for the murder /oentray Work has begun on the i P .oof Pension OfHce at Washinarton, located ' A the square bounded by F and G and Fourth and Fifth streets, and two years wMl bcrequirfli to erect the s: rue tore. A SAMPLE of the counterfeit Bland eilv«r dollar which is being extensively cir- TT^rtiri. fspeciallyln the Weft, has been rft. ii| Wastihigton. The coin is veiy plated, resists acid tests nnlen cut before applied, has a ring simi* lar to tile geanine, and te of the exaot w. iglit The officers Of the Secret Service Department consider the counterfeit one of tbe most dangerous that has yet appeared. COMMISSIONER MCFAULAND, of the General Lind Office, in a recent decisfcxi declares that where a person has failed to mate entry to a tract of land through being misinformed of his rights by local officers, yh«" otherwise entitled to make entry, hft will be protected by the department and lose nothing, unless required to do so by the actual demands of the law In a decision tendered the other day the Acting Secretary of the Interior holds that a contest for a land title instituted by a parent cannot be transferred or inherited by a ohii>l, even though it shall appear that the contest was instituted for the child's benefit > THE Bar Association of Washington recently recommended that Charles & Bnn- dy be not appointed a Jadge of a police court, for which action Bandy hw broaght buit for #50,00(1. , : OENKBAL. -C - > ' i J * • ' THS successful scheme of Chicago Anns in exporting dremed beef to the sea­ board cities has excited the ire of the rail­ roads and live stock interests, who have formed a company with a capital of #1,000,- 000, of which W. Arnold, of Chicago, and W, H. Yanderliilt are members, for the purpose Of opening depots and underselling tne orig­ inal projectors in their fields of operat ion.... Yanaerbilt has recently sold to savings banks in New York, in a quiet way, no less than fl0,000/XMot his 4 per cent bonds, two points below the current market price. It seems to be pretty well settled that Vanderbilt has got possession of the Nickel-Plate road. THE accidental kilUngof an Alaska chief Incited the natives to capture a launch and two sailors of the United States revenue cutter Corwin, and upon refusal to return the pris­ oners Capt Merriam destroyed their village and killed several of the'natives. Other hostile villagers who had taken possession of an American fur-trading company's station and held the employes prisoners were treated in the same manner and tae prisoners re­ leased. THE United States Marshal in Indian Territory seized a quantity of liquor belong­ ing to army officers, as the Federal statutes penhit the entry of spirits onjy for medici­ nal purposes. A protest has been entered by the commander of the department, in which Gena Sherman and Suerida'i jotn. Secretary Teller will be forced to decide the point.. . .Mrs. Scoville is delivering lectures in Canada. She avers that her husband is the worst crank in the Guiteau family. J. C. TIFF ANT, who was indicted in Arizona for embezzling $15,000 while Indian Agent, gave bail in New York to appear at Tu«on for trial in February... .The New York and Texas Mexican--taifway has pur­ chased 4,0u0,000 acres ot landror colonies GEN. GRAFT has contributed to the North American Review a lengthy artMe on the case of Pits John Porter, recommend­ ing that lie should be declare 1 by Congress to have been convicted on mistaken testi­ mony, which would make him * Major General of volunteers. A YOUNG Colombian named Porteg, accompanied by some friends who had set­ tled in a dense forest tract on thePutuiriayo rfver, a tributary of the Amazon, were re­ cently killed by Indians, who tapped their atrocious work by cooking and eating the bodies of the victims....Thirty-two States are represented at Indianapolis in the Na­ tional Urange, which holds secret sessions. Gov. Kobie, of Maine, and Congressman Aiken, of South Carolina, are among the delegates. rOUTICAX. THE names of Morrison and SDI Of Illinois; Randall, of Pennsylvania; lisle, of Kentucky, and Eaton, of Conm cut, are all prominently mentioned in nection with the Speakership of the n£jxt House of Representatives.... .Lee, colored Republican, who was defeated, for Congress by M ckey in the black district of South Carolina, will oontest the election. SAMUEL J. RANDALL presse ess the opinion that the Democratic successes a^ the polls are a declaration by the people tor- a reduction in public expensea He fuvors the absolute repeal of all internal-revenue taxation, and thinks the question of free I'lji'T *• i ^ •III <)*>< _.. . Yankton, D. T., for the murder of w«m« »i'*®oeeph Jo1 n-om, aaad left to hs rela- dftlliliwJ tives a request not to avenge bis death.... Astr. winers at Keokuk claim that the tele- m ' Scope revealed the figures 24 on the faoe of turnip «*tte*un....Mrs. E. K. Hart,slater of Oliver * £'• *ort®n' dled at Keokuk. 1» •M > Republican sajs that •Id crop now being gathered is estt- # mated at 7,000,000 bales, the largest ever » 'raised. That of last year was 5,486,000 ba'.es, »l <wiand that of the year before was fi.589,000 ••<«»#•»**« being the largest in the history of the - country down to that time The Hodge » * i J u .*wjbrotherr» (colored) were executed for muroer mi Knoxville, Tenu., by being placed under the g;dlows in a wngon, which was tan that he Is the new Prophet of .islam IMWPMl HEWS. A DtSASTEK by which aeren persons lost their lives cocnrred on the East river opposite fmMuaaburg. The barge Signal, lbad«4 with 7B0 barrels of sugar, was run tittto by the steam* City of Worcester, and «larg»MbMmtehersld& The steamer received riifka tnlhriee and prooeededjan her way, leaviavthe Datge to sink, whlon It quickly did. l%ere were eight persons on board--Capt William Taylor, nis wife, brother and three cliild -en, and two deck bands--«dl of whom, with the exception of Capt Taylor, found a watery grave RICH silver mines have been disoor- <*ed a short distance east of the Pigeon river, on the Canadian end of the Him. Inch blocks of the precious metal have been picked tram the surface of the vein...-- Prof. Soule, of the University of California has discovered three new spots on the sun, which oan be seen through a smoked glass with the naked eye. KOSSUTH, in a letter to a leader of the Radical party in Hungary, declares the very existence of the anti-Jewish agitation to be a national shame and disgrace, and it is in­ conceivable to him how any one professing democratic principles could be possessed of such a craze. It's not the Jews but a bad economic poller that has reduced the poorer olaesc* of Hungary to s uin.... .The Russian Journals have orders to make no allusion to the construction of military railroads or the movement o( troops near the Turkish frontier. ... .Midnight raiders attacked the house of Magistrate Roach, at Magnoss, Comity Ker­ ry, Ireland, fired several shots, gained ad­ mission and carried off two guns... .Eight­ een printing establishments at Yienna closed, owing to a compositors' strike. The men demanded an advance of 30 per cent PETER BON AN, agent for the Flat- hea&e in Montana, advises Commissioner Prioe of the approach to the reservation of a force of 7,400 men at work on the North­ ern Pacific road, with an army of gamblers, prostitutes, liquor sellers and legitimate traders. The Agent asks instructions as to Fermitting trade in an Indian country. The dianBireau has requested th»; Secretary of War to send troops from Fort Missoula to keep back oamp followers and traders. MARTHA ROBINSON, a Louisville ne* gress, stripped her 2^-year-old child naked and placed it on the top of a red-hot stove. Later she took it out on the street, and left it in a hallway. She says she adopte 1 this means to get rid of it....Died at Parkers- burg, W. Va, Richard Shumeyer, aged 110 years....Three colored men were killed by the explosion of a ginning mill boiler near Montgomery, Ala A POLITICIAN at Washington, claim­ ing to hold intimate relations with Senator Logan, says that gentleman will not be a candidate for President, preferring a Beat in the Senate; that the fight over the Illinois Senatorship will be a bitter one; that nei­ ther Cullom nor Raum can be e'ected; that Robert Lincoln stands no chance whatever, and that as a Democratic candidate David Davis could secure enough Republican votes to elect him.... The latest returns to the National House of Representatives show 195 Democrats, 123 Republicans, 5 Rfadjusters, and 2 Independ­ ents, or aDemocratio majority of 65 over alh which the Democrats expect will be ia- oreased to 07. LATEH ELECTION RETURNS. Official vote for Governor ot Connecticut: Waller, Dem , 59,020; Rulkley, Rep, 54,872; Roger, Prohib., &U Vote of New York city: Cleveland, Dem.. 125,345; Folger, Rep., 47,714 Cleveland's majority, 77,631. HanoocKs majority ovwr Garfield was 41,&ft Election returns and estimates in Illino;R indicate the adoption of the Canal act, and the defeat of the State House appropriation. Folger carried only seven counties in the State of New York. Cleveland's majority is now placed at 194,78ft--' Butler's plurality /In Massachusetts is In­ completed returns from New Hamnahira ifin xtmc, itepudncan, n eietfteflr ojf 559 majority over all contestants. Haynes, Republican, has 3,7% plurality in the'First Congressional district, and Ray, Republican. 2,214 plurality in the Second. Tbe plurality for Pa^tison, Democratic candidate for Governor of Pennsylvania, is 38,723. Stewart, Independent Republican candidate, received about 40,000 votes. The official canvass of the votes in the Ninth Congressional district of Missouri gives Dr. J. H. McLean, Republican, a small majority over Jumes O Broadhead, I>£»u>- «rat Broadhead proposes to oontcss McX Lean's^ection. completed ittes, towns i ACCIDENT. Th) eouhi returns from all the and cities in Illinois show trade will not practically arise for a genera-/ election of Smith. Republican, as State tionyet / Treasurer, by a plurality or 4,210, and Raab, BEN BUTLER assumes that the Dem- Democrat, as Superintendent of Public In- /' ocratic Congress will substantially sweep away internal-revenue taxation, and thinks that, if this be not done, a single short/ crop would bring* unprecedented financial disaster THE Legislature of Alabama organ- lied by electing George P. Harrison Presi­ dent cf the Senate, and W. F. Foster Speak­ er of the House. The bonded «lebt of the State is $9,497,800, upon which there is an annual interest of 9344,000. The cash in the treasury Oct 1 was #421,000. The Governor recommends a reduction of taxation Senator Sherman called at the White House to ask the appointment of Warner Bateman as the Judge for the Southern district of Ohia As Bateman prepared the legal portion of Bherman's report removing Ar­ thur from the New York Custom House, the President is understood to have been highly Indignant over the demand....Pope Bar­ row, one of the leading lawyers of Georgia, has been elected to fill the unex­ pired Senatorial term of Ben H Hill, a son of the latter receiving 99 votes. Ex-Gov. Col­ quitt secured the long term, after a bitter contest... .The Rhode Island suffrage amendment to the constitution of that State, submitted to the people at the recent elec- rejected by a vote ot to GEN. WOLSELEY is not popular in Ireland, as he had, prior to his departure to the seat of war in Egypt, expressed himself as sorry to forego the opportunity to crush out any uprising in Irelnna that might occur during his absenoe, and other sentiments equally obnoxious to the Home Ruler* Ac- stiuotion, by a plurality of 4,108. The official vote of Philadelphia for Governor was: Beaver, Republican, 70,875; Pattison, Democrat, 67,411; Stewart, Inde­ pendent, 7.992; Armstrong, Labor, 672; Pettitt, Prohibition, 99. r Full returns from all tho connties in North. Carolina elect Bennett, Democrat, Oongress- man-at-Largs, by 400 majority. A dispatch from Unpoln, Neb., says the returns as far as made up show that in the next Nebraska House of Representatives will sit 45 straight Republicans, 28 Anti-Mo­ nopolists, 18 Democrats, and 9 doubtful In the Senate are 17 straight Republicans,.? Democrats, 6 Anti-Monopolists and 3 douljcr Complete returns from all the counties in Illinois give Smith (Rep.), foi State Treas­ ure , a majority of 4,210, and Raab (Dem.), forjEhyerintendent of Public Instruction, § A t . -- r- ~ -- a wagon, which was then , . , . -- ft"**'! stowlv away, leaving the culprits to cordingly, when theproposition came up in ,,,< strangle to death. This method of aiminis- ! I>oblin corporation to tender Wolseiey ' the freedom of the city, it wax voted down-- ?eas 21, nays 27 Gladstone anuounced in 'arliament that British troops would not be sent to suppress the rising of the False Prophet in the Soudan. ON account of recent disorders the financial situation of France »T*>* ll' . - * , terin^ the law was the choice of the cun- .m*' * demned men. „ •*•*-8 * A Negro at Frankfort, Hy., under- W-'took to pitch hay with a lighted pipe In mouth. The result was the destruction of s the aj; r Opera House, the postoflise, Buhr's _ Hote1, (ind other buildings the loss agurd- • * gating 3S ',0;i0. The Opera House was owned t the city, and some of the public records wesebunwd. BY the burninc of the Court House X Ol »J(> *94 Crockett, Texas, two male prls- fl i m 0^_eAs^®ri8hedi. Ail the records were de-. I^EAR Texarkana, Charles Hemey, ' 1".' Jr., a merchant at Lost Prairie, Ark., after a quarrel with two brothers named Butier, .o went heme and was pursued, the Butlers ir'*'*«••• • ^lf!Pow*ngr 111111 to a neP"° cabin, where he • ' "W taken refuge, and kicking the door ** '*»*• <dSwn. Hemey had a double-barreled shot- " ill*, ,(.»y -.f^^dkiUed both brothers as they crossed ' the threshold He was wounded in the am •»* # * •<- ..i. hy a ball fired by a man who esate with the " mt *#L«wUanta The Butlers were picked up j. , t ^ dead and buried in one grave. - ' THE Governor of Virginia has oom- - -lis * * muted to imprisonment for life the sentence I Vt-"asi' If A Booth> a negro girl of 14 years, who I M WM to have been hanged at Surrey Court •;'yr, ft. H^se for poisoning Mrs. R. C. Gray and / .®M|'«*tt***»vis Jones....Joseph Cole gave an elft- „ ,phant a chew of tobacco at a drous in *• • BtlMIWHle, ttar, when the animal Idled the i «tienderwith his trunk - - WAHlOMGXOIf. mi 43m./ SHERMAN, in a report fe> the ' «44«. Secretary of War, criticises the systen^of S erecting forts here and there throughout , , , *m- \ /> ^ w* ±, •?* the West, and advocates the erection of per­ manent fortilio tions, which would serve as SnartsntOr the whoM army for the next is regarded as bad and the situation of the Mintstry is very precarious Since the bombardment of AJexandria, Russia has ordered seven war- vest-eis for the Baltic and two for the Black sea Queen Christina, of Spain, gav<; birth to a daughter The coffee crop of H ;vti is less than two-thirds yieid, and tne quality is poor. Sc> QRHAT is the distress in the Egyp­ tian delta from the failure of therioe crop that many deaths from starvation are prob­ able unless aid is extended by the Govern­ ment. ...A prairie fire on the Mongolian frontier of Rtts«ia has covered a space of seventy square miles, ooMura ng many Cos­ sack villages Wheat-sowing in England is retarded by floods and storms of .-hail »n^i snow / IN his statement to the House of Commons recently, Premier Glraktone Bald it was necessary that 12,000 -Britl«ti troops- remain in Egypt for the present, knd in a Short tme a treaty would be made with Egypt, one clause of which would provide thau the cost of the maintenance of this army would be defrayed by England.... There te an exoelleut prospect that the per­ petrators of the atrocious murder Of which the Joyce fam lv in Ireland were the vic­ tims will pay with their Uvea the penalty ot that awful crime. Two men who aci-ompa- nled the party of assassins have turned State's evidence;, and it is expected that the testimony will be complete and conclus va ....At Constantinople has just been cele­ brated the 1300th year of the Mohammedan calendar, and buk ness was forgotten for participation in processions ana ojion of a Boiler ill a land Iron Mill. 1 ! Several Persona KiU«d and Badly Wounae& Many (Tel«grumfrom Cleveland, Ohw.1 A tenifio explosion occurred at a little after 4 o'clock this evening in the Forest City iron-works, operated by At<ins k Clark, the union crossing, Newburg. The main" boiler of the mill suddenly exploded while the day men were gping from their work, killing three or four men, and fatally wound­ ing a number of others. The mill was almost entirely wrecked. One-half Qf the boiler went through the roof and landed several hundred yards to the north, while the other half wen!> a similar distance in an oppo­ site direction. Walls were blown down, a tall smoke-stack left leaning over ready for a fall, while the dead and injured were scattered in all directions. A fire al­ most Instquly broke out, but it was soon got underSontrol, and did little or no dam­ age. Beljf from Newburg and the city was Instantly summoned, and as soon as possi­ ble the injured and dead were c arried into the offioe of the works and cared for. Sev­ eral men are now missing, and it is not known Whether they are dead under the ruins, hidden in the water-course near or gone to their homes without reporting themselves. The dealt and injured accounted for op t* 0 o'clook to-night are as follows: John Williams, the master mechania He was fouoA lying so deep in the mud and so fSboIored by the earth about him that JM' would not have been noticed had not John Gallagher, an old man who lay beside Mm, called out: "There are two of us hera* Williams' head was horribly crushed in and his body broken all to pleoea John Gaflagher lived until 9 o'clock, when he died aim. He was a piler on the guide- milt His face was terribly bruised, his nose torn off and his head full of holes, from which the brains oozed. As he lay on the floor in agony his wife hurried in, and, kneeling by his Bide, asked: "Do you know me, John? He said that he did, when she placed her hand on his face and said quietly: "Put your trust in tiod, call on Him and trust Him. He said that he would, and then begged and begg d to be laid on his sida He lingered in great agony until 9 o'clock, when death put an end to his pain. Ano her man instantly kil ed was Sydney D.Wright of Wyandotte, Mich., who stood beside a friend who had accompanied him in search of work. The whole top of his head was blown off. William Wilson, of Chicago, Wright's Mend, was struck on the hip and foot by some of tbe debris, thrown down and seri­ ously but ttet dangerously injured. Wiiliani Atkins, a roller, stood some 200 yards av+f from the boiler. He was struck by somewLng and cut instantly in two, the body goinp in one direction and the limbs in another. His head was mashed to a jelly and ground into the dirt Fraturis P. Bradley, a carpenter, had an arm and a leg broken and was cut in the groin and back His case is hopeless. John Mollaney, fireman, had a leg broken, and waSvery severely bruised. G. H. Hanna sat on a bench beside Atkins and was lifted by the concussion of the air, carried over the shears, and thrown on the ground. A roll weighing two tons struck within rfew feet of him. A brick struck him on |de back of the head as he was flying through ifce air, and rendered him insen- •IhU » to mill in dollars will be sev- CORN REP Progress of Railway Biuldlng. ') The last number of the Railway Age con­ tains the following regarding railroad con­ struction tor October: The work of addi-ig to the railway ml casre of the IT- ited States st.it 1 goes on with r-o- mar< abte rapidity. Our returns tor ilie wionth of October snow an aggregui not much less than that of the two preceding uagnths and indicate that the total for tbe year will probab y be larger than the nvist liberal estimate heretofore. Stimniarizm. the detai ed statement which is given below, we have a record of 1,068 mi es o new track --main lines only--added on seventy one diffei ent lines in" thirty of tbe States, and Territories, as follows: No. No. States. Lines. M. States Lines. M. ArlxonaTer'y..3 39 Minnesota 7 173 Arkan-as 1 63 Mississfppi I U California J 22 Missouri 2 2<i lorado 3 47 MontanaT r'y...3 C2 Dakota Tcr'y..<! 131 ebraska 2 S Florida ..3 ,21 /New Hampshire.. 1 4 Geor/ia 1 yOr New York 1 25 IdahoTer'y..3 22 North Carolina 1 19 Illinois.........'4 • 49 Ohio 4 55 Indiana 1 H6 Oregon 2 11 Iowa ...6 as Pennsylvania....* 29 Kentucky .1 1C Texas 6 (W Maine ....1 • 1% Virginia ..1 1* Maryland 1 3 Virginia...1 Michigan 8 "^3 / IWlftOonsin 2 38 "^otal lines and imics in thirty States . and Territ -TlM.\ .71 l.f^S Reported to Oct. l.\ s,(>75 Total Jan. 1 to Nov. 1.^ 9,Hi Adding the figures for October to those previously given, we find that at leapt 9.1 tS miles of new track have been added in the ten months of 1862 just closed, smd that the work was prosecuted on no less than 21*3dif­ ferent lines in forty-three States and Terri­ tories, le iving only three States and one Territory1--New Hampshire, Rhode Island, Delaware and Wa-hington Territory--in which no traci laying ior the year hasthuB far been repo tea sibla The eral Aalde» of What Was The November cerjj_r^p<Srt of the National Department of Agriculture shows that plantti i^gyas later and replanting was more genemMman for several years past The prospeet^p to July was discouraging, caus­ ing a shSfb>riBe in valnes. but since that the made the gwwrng period of fully the aver­ age length. The condition on July 1 averaged 85; in August, 83-in September the same, and in October 81. Last year the con­ dition fell from 90 ifi July to 66 in October, pressaging a loss of over 450,000,000 bushels, which was fully realized. In October, the highest indication of the aggregate was 1,608,000,(00 bushels, and it was stated that later returns of the product may slightly re­ duce, but can not materially increase, this result The present returns make the gen­ eral average close to twenty bushels per acre, which is under the medium, confirm­ ing the prediction of Sept. 1 that the heavy production of 1878 and 1880 can not be ap­ proached this year even under tbe most fa­ vorable circumstances. The yield in the census year was28 1-10 bushels per acre. The average yieldof ten years up to 1880 was nearly twenty-eleven bushels. November returns of the yield per acre on an acreage of between 6">,000,000 and 60,000,0u0 make an aggregat* of nearly 1,650,000,OOo bushels. Its dtstributbn in round numbers is as follows: I States. Arkansas. Tennessee.... W. Virginia.. 41,0tK),000 Kentucky 4,000,000 Ohio 17,000,lKK>!Miehi:Jan » uK>ui»..... 3S,Oi)O,0OOjIn(iian». N. Carolaa.. 38,ooo, oo|lllinoi8. . i. . . . S. Carditis... 16,000,000 Wisconsin.... 32,ooo.ooo Georgia 32,000,000) Minnesota 21,000,000 Florida. 4,0oo,ooojlowa .1«6,000,01.>0 Alabama.... 29,000, oo,Missouri. 184,'>00,0; Mississj^>L.. 25,0 0,000 Kansas 151,000,000 Louisiaa.... 12,ooo,ooo Nebraska. 81,0 0,"00 Texas... 74,000, ooo I \ The qialitv of the crop throughout the South isswperior, but the crop falls below -the Ktaiurird of 100 in only eighteen States %nd Temtbrie.s. It is only one point below the stantu|d in Michigan," two in Ohio, three in Nevaitil five in Indiana, Vermont and Utah, si; i i New Jersey, eight in Colorado, nine in le1 York, ten in Rhode Island and New 5Ie^i< >, fifteen in New Hampshire and Iowa, sij;t< :n in Dakota, eighteen in Minae sota, and wenty-two in Wisconsin. .Some corresponc nts deem it too eiirly tor an accu­ rate estiin e, and think the outcome will be better det mined by December, which ha- always bei i lowest. * It is not prob ibl j that the crop v 11 exceed the :.bove fi ru States. Bushels New En >00.000 New lor 31,000,000 New Jer 10,000, 00 Pennslv Delawar Maryland Bushels. *5,000,080 G9,000,000 :t, ooo, 000 S.OOOJWV 8.',000, 30,000, 99,000,000 200,000,00) DUCKS infest Coos bay, Oregon, by miliums, and are being continually killed and captured in every conceiva­ ble manner by men, women and child­ ren. One man has a home-made Gat- ling-gun on the bow of a skiff. He mows them down in swaths, and supplies the market at a bit apieofe THERE is a near-sighted horse in Berlin that wears spectacles. When he loses them, which is frequently the case, he mi exhibits the peevishness natural to r&k- re Jgioui I sonable beings whenjplaoed at a Mini ieetivala lite astrologers assured the Snl> • disadvantage. ^ ) ' -• - : fe-k A "inccessftal Experiment. "I hav been told," said Mr. Dubious, watching the great steam-hammer in the rollii j-mill, "that a good hammer­ man can reak the crystal of a watch with tha thirty-ton hammer." "Yes, sir," said lie hammerman, "it can be done." [ should like to see it," said Mr. Du ou8,; eagerly, feeling in his watcli-pcket. "I can do it, sir-" re­ plied th^man. "And will you?" re­ plied . ]Si Dubious, drawing out his watch. Come--I am anxious to see it tried." le laid his watch on the great anvil-plffi. The hammer rose up to its full lxht, and the next instant all its pondjous weight, witih a crushing force t.hq shook the ground for an acre around, lame down on the watch. "There fir," said the hammerman quietly, i you don't believe that crys­ tal is brjen, just stoop down and you can see feticking to the hammer." Mr. Dubiousivallowed a whole procession of lumpiand gasps before he could speak, tut I forgot to say," he ex­ claimed, (hat it was to break the crys­ tal withtt injuring the watch." "O yes," sa; the hammerman; "yes, I know; I ive heard that rubbish my­ self ; but lis all gammon; I don't be­ lieve it tin be done. But you can break th^ystal everytime. --Burdetle. t-- himala and Odors. A writ®n odors and their recogni­ tion in th! Journal of Science, sayB: "Take alox, a sheep or a goat to a country wfre the flora is strange, and he will bwse upon plants analogous in odor w i those which have formed his food iiis native land. Bu when­ ever he rceives a strange effluvium given off avoids the plant as doabt- - jr.. -i,, A superfluous bear at the Paris Zoo had a bun with prussic acid on it given him. But bruin was not to be caught that way. He pushed it into the water, and not until the odor was, entirely gone did he.eat it. The poi­ son had then lost its force. Animals have pronounced tastes in odors. The literal^iii "fine frenzy rolling" of the cat in catnip is notorious, while the pard and panther grow amiable beneath the influence of lavender water. A LOGAN BOOM. Reasons Which Make the nil. nois Senator One of Available Candidates . of His Party* A Tcnifin in Certain Quarters to Favor the Nomination of Gen. M ^ Sherttaa. '*-• nVashln#ton Telegram t* Chicago Times.] The Critic made the day of Senator Lo­ gan's return to Washington the occasion of nominating him for the Presidency, and giy_ ing the reasons for regarding him as decid­ edly the most available candidate for 18SL To day this is followed up by a communica­ tion in The Republican signed "Old Soldier," which nominates him again, thus: "Many cases have been assigned for the tidal wave which swept over the Republican party last Tuesday. One of the greatest causes was exhibited in the election of Gen. Butler by the soldier vote. His election as Governor of Massachusetts will make him the Democratic candidate for President in 18S4. The election of Illinois has proved that under the leadership of the gallant sol­ dier, Gen. John A. Logan, the soldier vote was cast for the Republican ticket Although Republican States like Iowa, Michigan and others have lost Republican Congressmen Illinois has lost none and may have gained one member, beside sending a good Republic in to the United States Senate to succeed David Davis. If the Republicans hope to elect a President over Gen. Butier they must run a purer man and better sol­ dier, and that man is Gen. John A. Logan of Illinois." ' But many leading Repub'icans feel that the only thing that can save tbe party two years hence is some bold novelty that will create enthusiasm and catch votes in some direction to replace those that are daily be­ ing lost to the party. Senator Logan did not sulk two years ago, as Conk ling and Cameron did, and therefore will be much m re acceptable to the anti-stalwarts than they. At the same time every man who has long been in political life has made enemies, and Senator Logan has been prominently concerned in the internecine Republican war. He may have lost as mudh strength wilh the Conkling wing as be has gained by his discre­ tion on the other side. For these reasons soma Srominent Republicans axe much in favor of le nomination of Gen. Sheridan. He has the friendsh p of Grant with cut having in­ curred the hostility of Grant's enemies, and it is calculated that he can get the Catholic vote, the Irish vote and the soldier vote! Sheridan's military career might not affor j? much of a clew to his Presidential policy#; but it would enable the campaign orators to evoke much enthusiasm and to become very eloquent without committing themselves hopelessly on the issues of the day. One of the growing issues is the tariff, a dry matter of statistics which it takes a good deal of patience and Industry to understand, and a campaign orator would be glad enough to pet away from ad valorem and the incidence of taxation and the relation of cost to profit, and send Early whirling up the Shenandoah or fight over again the battle of Winchester, subsequent to Sh ridan's arrival on the field. There is, by the way, a strong prospect that Congress this winter will perpetuate the gr ides of General and Lieutenant General. Such ac­ tion would be gratifying to Sheridan and Hancock, the two most popular officers in ilie service, UMU the liuSEe liaAily to GRATI­ fied because each is closely identified with ~ great poUtkalpaitiaa...^, SHIPWRECK. The Steamer Westphalia Sinks ao Unknown Steamship Off Portsmouth. Nothing Soon of the Unknown Steamer, and Not a Soul Saved. . (London Cablegram.] ~ The steamer Westphalia, of the Hamburg- American line, from New York Nov. 2 for Hamburg via Plymouth, has put into Ports­ mouth with a hole in her port bow received by collision with an unknown steamer off Beachy Head early this morning. A boat lowered from the Westphalia to Bearoh for the other steamer is missing. \Jt is believed that the missing steamer has goifo-to-fche bottom with all on board, and also the missing b at of the Westphalia, which contained an officer and six men. The officers of the Westphalia report that it was intensely dark at the time of the collision, with a heavy sea. The collision oocurred at 2 o'clock in the morning. The missing steamer was bark-rigged and not seen after the collision. Capt Ludwlg, of the Westphalia, immediately dispatched a boat to try to find her. He then made ready all the other boats, in the event of water gaining on the Westphalia All the pumps were kept, going without intermission. The mails and ninety passengers landed at Portsmouth this afternoon and will be forwarded to their destinations at the earliest possible moment Th - Westphalia is now moored alongside the dockyard and kept clear of water by her pumps. The cargo is n t greatly damaged. Great praise is ac­ corded Capt Ludwig, officers and crew, for coolness and courage from the moment of the collision. There was a very heavy sea on, and it was too dark to see the ship's length. FORTT FEB80KS OBOWXSD. The steamship Angelica, plying between Qifla and Hull, has foundered in the JUaith Sea, and forty persons drowned. i i •Todflsh-Balls or Death. The question to be decided bj the Justice was whether a restaurant-keep­ er is justified in shooting a man for re­ fusing to eat his codfish-balls. The judge of the law and justice decided yes. The case was as follows: The proprietor of the Sawtooth restaurant placed a plate of codfish-balls on the ta­ ble of a young man, and a regular boarder, who had seated himself for grub. The boarder was camly and peacefully stowing away the victuals, but didn't take in any of the codfish- balls. The restaurant-keeper approached him, and said in a commanding tone of voice: "You eat them codfish-balls*' "I don't like codfish-balls," replied the boarder. "You eat them oodfish-balls, I tell you!" "I tell you I won't;I don't like 'em." "I tell you once more to eat them codfish-balls. If you don't I'll shoot you;" and the restaurant-keeper started for his pistol. The boarder saw he had to do one of the three things--eat the oodfish-balls, refuse again and bo filled with leaden bullets, or skip. Ho skip­ ped. Just as his coat-tail was vanish­ ing out at the door the irate restaurant- keeper blazed away, but missed him, The boarder had him arrested. The Justice, in his dignity, decided that the proprietor of a hash-house was perfect­ ly justifiable in shooting a boarder with intent to kurfbr refusing to eat his cod­ fish-balls.--Idaho World, FITZ-JOHN POSTER. 8en. <hwt Make* » Fre«bJk»iii 5 Hfaiohslf, _ And Afk* that Ha' Be Restored to His Rank in the Army. Gen. Gnat has a long article ln the last number of the North American Review, en­ titled "An Undeserved Stigma," in which he reviews the evidence in tbe Pits John Porter ease, and reaches the conclusion that great injustice has been done that officer, which ought to be undone as soon as possible. Tbe article is simply an amplification of the points coxmtfned in Gen. Grant's letter to the President on the same subject. In con­ clusion be says: "Gen. Porter has*now for twenty years been laboring under the disabilities and penalties inflicted upon him by the court- martial of 1868, all that time contending for a restoration to his position in the army and in society, and always, as stated in the be­ ginning of this article, on the ground of his entire innocence. The investigation of the Rchofleld board has, in my judgment, estab­ lished his lnnocenoe of all tbe offenses for which he was tried and convicted. The suf- erings of twenty years under such findings for himself and family and friends <s something it is now impossible to set right. Twenty years of the best part of his lise are con­ sumed in trying to nave his name and his rep­ utation restored before his countrymen. In his application now before Congress he is asking only that he may be restored to the rolls of the army w th the rank that he would have if the court-martial had never been held. This, in my judgment, is a very small part of what it is possible to do in this case and what ought to be done. Gen. Porter should, in the way of a par­ tial restitution, be declared by Congress to have been convicted on mistaken testi­ mony, and therefore to have never been out of the army. This wpuid. make Mm a Ma­ jor General of volunteers until the date might be fixed for his muster out of that rank, after which he should be continued as a Colonel of infantry and Brevet Brigadier General of the United States army from the date of the act, when he could be placed upon the retired list with that rank. * » » If a solemn ami sincere expression of my thorough understanding ot and belief in the entire innocence of Gen. Porter will tend to draw the public mind to the same conviction I shall feel abflhdantly rewarded for my efforts. It will always be a pleasure to me as well as a duty to be the instrument even in the smallest degree of setting right any man who has been grossly wronged, eppechilly if he has risked life and reputation in defense of his country. I feel, as stated on a previous occasion, a double interest in this. As General of the Army, when I might have been Instrumental in hav­ ing justice done to Gen. Porter, and later as President of the United States, when I certainly could have done so, I labored un­ der the impression that he was guilty. Having become better informed, I at once voluntarily gave, as I have continued to give, my earnest efforts to impress the minds of my coun rymen with the justice of this case, and secure from the Government, as far as it could grant it, the restitution due to Gen. Fitz John Porter. * • Suspension Bridges. Of all engineering stiuctures, suspen­ sion bridges are the most easily acted upon by wind. Their primitive methods of construction were defective through .excessive flexibility. The accident which happened to the Roche-Bernard bridge on the Vilaine, on the 26th of October, 1882, and the successive injuries to the Menai bridge in 1826, 1836 and 1839, may be cited as examples. The chains of the latter bridge, though clashing to­ gether violently, bore the strain; but a number of transverse pieces and sus­ pension rods broke, and 160 feet of flooring hung in the air in 1839. Ac­ cording to the bridge-keeper, the undu­ lations of the roadway attained an am­ plitude of thirteen or sixteen feet, and greatest ileiXleCtlOna were observed at the distance of a quarter of the span from the piers. It is evident that ^eryi- thing gives way in these irregular/indu- lations, which' are different for the chains and the roadway. : The Mehai bridge was strengthened by various means. The Roche-Bernard bridge was provided with a counter-cable, curving upward and placed under the roadway, and notable progress has been achieved in the design of more recent works. The Americans, in developing the prin­ ciple of the stiffening girder, having also added a series of straight and slop­ ing cables coming from the top of the piers and supporting various parts of the roadway. They have, moreover, in some large bridges anchored the road­ way to the rocks by stays underneath, a method which is not free from objec­ tions any more than the parabolic coun­ ter-cable of the Roche-Bernard bridge, for the variations in temperature may at one time loosen and at another time stretch these understays. In the Ordish system, as applied to the Albert bridge, Chelsea, the upper stays, starting from the.tops of the piers and ending at var­ ious parts of the roadway, are connected with the vertical suspension rods at divers points of crossing, which increase the total rigidity. Sometimes, as at the Lambeth bridge, rigidity is obtained by the introduction of cross-bracing or di­ agonal bars between the suspension rods; or, as at Pittsburgh, the chain it­ self is made rigid, assuming the appear­ ance of two sloping lattice girders of variable height, and attached to their narrow extremities, at one end to each other in the center of the span, and at the other end to the tops of the piers. The great transversal inclination in cer­ tain bridges to the two funicular planes, by which the cables, spreading out at the tops of the piers, come together in the center of the span, affords a power­ ful resistance to oscillations. With these improvements the suspension system, without losing its inherent lightness, is protected from irregular undulations when exposed to wind; so that the wind pressure merely acts on it, like on any other structure, in producing an in­ creased molecular strain which has to be provided for by strengthening the parts liable to be affected.--Engineer­ ing Magazine. "Why Those Weeps!" "Ty do you veep so much in dot Syn­ agogue, laslit Saturday?" asked Mose Schaumburg, the Austin Avenue mer­ chant prince, of Simon Wolff, another Austin Avenue prince. Simon explained that when the rabbi preached so touch- inglyonthe text, "Dust thou art and unto dust thou shall return," that he could not control liis emotions. "You vas a tam fool, Sitpon," retorted Mose, impatiently. "There was nod- dings to veep apout. If you vas ipade of gold and had to return to dust, den you might veep, for den you lose hun­ dred per shent, but vhen you vhas mad© of dust and returns to dot dust, den yon makes noddings and you loses noddidgs, so der vasno occasion to veep so much?1* --Texas Sijtings. What They Feed Horses on la Europe. It has been a perpetual mystery to me what they feed horses on in Europe. No corn is raised, practically speaking, and very little oats. During one of our diligence rides, we stopped while the drivers gave their animals a small lunch. They fed them on chopped bits of bread crusts. That would be a good way of using up the scraps. But we were told that bread was baked on purpose for the horses, and chopped into bits. It was common rye bread. After the repast a mysterious liquid was brongll in flat tubs to the beasts to drink. An. usual, the tubs were made in a shape to' be as clumsy and heavy as possible- to* carry. The fluid was a mysterious, sloppy-looking compound. We asked: what it was. The drivers said it was mehl-wasser (flour-water). And thus, after putting into them a few crusts of rye bread and a refreshing sip of water with flour stirred into it, our steeds bent their necks to the task, once more, and toiled onward with their load of" Cook's tourists toward Alpenach. Snob a diet might tend to develop the mild Christian virtues in an intelligent hoase, but it would scarcely be apt to make . him kiok up and run away.---Foreign fettek- i The Cats of Cairo. " Among the curiosities of Cairo is an. amateur branch of the Humane Society for the especial benefit of poor Puss. A curious legacy was some years ago left by a wealthy burgher" to enlarge the permanent income of the Cadi, on condition of his nourishing and cher- ishing all the unclaimed cats in Cairo. Like most Mahometans he must have shared the feeling which made the- Prophet cut off the wide sleeve of his robe soon^: than disturb a favorite cat who had fallen asleep thereon. Conse­ quently a large courtyard has been de­ voted to their especiil benefit; and here the "nice, soft, furry creatures'* lie and bask in the sun, and are fed at. stated intervals, and altogether have a. very good time of it. It is a curious fact, hpwever, that, although daily ad­ ditions are made to this large feline home, the inmates rarely amount to . more than'fiftv. This (in the absence of sausage machines) is a very remark­ able problem. I suppose that a candi­ date for the office of Cadi has to pro­ duce a medical certificate to prove that he is hot troubled with that unconquer­ able aversion to dear old Ptt'ss with which so many of the masculine genus are afflicted. * . The said aversion was one day turned to excellent account by one of our mu­ tual friends, whose next neighbor in chambers made himself odious by prac­ ticing on a cornet, or big fiddle, or some such instrument of torture, in. spite of the civil entreaties of our friend, who was nearly wild with head­ ache. At last, exasperated beyond en­ durance he sallied forth and invested in a large packet of valerian, which he sprinkled on the low roots below the windows. Of course, in half an hour all the cats in the neighborhood had as­ sembled and crazy with delight, issued cards of invitation to all their acquaint­ ances, and very soon the army of cats,, each more mad than its neighbor, were dancing and scrambling, fighting and miauling, until the barbarian with the; musical ear rack was tearing his hair- in a frenzy nearly as wild as the cats.. His neighbor was so delighted at the success of his little joke that his head­ ache^ was cured. Meanwhile a shower of rain washed the valerian into the courtyard below. Then every one who walked across the court brought in par­ ticles thereof on the soles of his feet; and the cats found their way up stairs by scores, even into the chamber of the cat-hater, who, on the whole, was very fairly punished^ They seemed to have the same affeo- tios for TOTY vouss nnmunhik. and «/ J O *. - , - - -- -- TV come and lie down and roll on it in the most aggravating way. Speaking of cats it is not startling to hear that the cats of London--the real household pets--are said to number 300,000, with­ out any sort of calculation for house­ less wanderers, whose1 nasal yells dis­ turb nocturnal peace ? The ' amount annually , spent on purchasing horse flesh from the cat's-meat men "in Lon­ don is said to be £100,000! This, ac­ cording to vulgar notions, should be a proof of the folly of elderly spinsters, who are generally supposed to have a monopoly of feline affections. The great cat show in London a few years ago, however, betrayed a very different state of domestic matters, the male ex­ hibitors being so numerous and so suc­ cessful that they carried off thirty-two prizes; fifteen more were secured by cat- loving matrons, while to the much maligned old maids they were only awarded four prizes! -- Gentleman's Magazine. SOKE one has contrived a clock-work motor for which a tremendous weight is- wound up into a tower by horse or ox power, thus storing enough energy ^ in. ten minutes to run the churn, dish washer, sewing machine, corn popper,, grindstone, egg beater, etc., at any time dying the day. THEY tell a story of a certain New York Judge who wondered "why In thunder they wanted to give Humboldt a statue in Central Park? He nevjer did / anything but invent--buchu."-- Bunalo Advertiser. THE MARKETS. NEW YORK. HOGS. COTTON. FLOUB--Superfine. WHEAT--No. L White.., No. 2 Red CORN--No. 2 OATS--No. 3 PORK--Mess..... LABS CHICAGO. BCEVBS--Good to Fancy Steers.« Cows and Heifers Medium to Fair HOGS FLOUB--Fancy White Winter Ex. Good to Choice Sp'g Ex. WHEAT--No.2 Spring. No. 2 Red Winter. COBS--Na 2 OATS--No. 2 RYE--No. 2 IUKLEY--No. 2 BUTTER--Choloe Creamery. EGGS--Fresh PORK--Meas... LARD MILWAUKEE." WHEAT--No. 2 CORN--No. 2 OATS--No. 2 RYE--No. 2 BABLKY--No. 2 POBK--Mesa LABD : ST. LOUIS. WHEAT--No. 2 Red CORN--Mixed OATS--NO. 2 RYE PORK--Mesa . LABD „T „ CINCINNATI. WHKAT--NO. t Red CORN OATS RYE PORE--Mess LARD TOLEDO.'" " WHEAT--No. 2 R*D COBN OATS--No. 2 DETROIT. FLOTO WHEAT--NO. 1 White. CORN--No. 2: OATS--Mixed j.. PORK--Mess. ,XT INDIANAPQLIS. WHEAT--No. 2 Red 7 COBN--No. 2 OATS--Mixed EAST LIBERTY, PA. CATTLE--Best «.uo Fair. 5.50 Common. 4.00 HOOT & 40 ..I AOS #12.50 .. 6.80 & 7.15 .. .103£@ .10 % .. 8.25 @ 3.90 .. L08 @ L«9 ,. 1.07 & 1.08 .. .88 & M .. .42 & .43 .. 21.75 @22.09 .. .12V4® .UK 5.25 & 6.40 2.T5 & 3.90 4.60 @ 5.1* 5.00 @ 7.!* 5.50 @ 5.7$ & 6.99 * * ' .6® .84 M .80 & .38 .28 @ .2* 1T.75 018.00 .iiJ6@ .list 5.00 .94 & II .98 .94 @ .67 @ .68 .34 @ .3* .64 & .5SI. .14 & .7* 17.75 @18.08 .115*® -Hilt .92 @ .98 .62 @ .68- JM ® .3* M @ .5f 20.75 <$'21.0® JIM® .11*'- .98 ® .9* 5 I & .61 @ .68 30.25 @20.50 .11 >3® .UK: 9 6.08

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