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McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 30 Jul 1890, p. 2

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[aintlealtf $LYK£, Miter and PuWither. > ___ ^ 3 ILLINOIS. WORLD OVER. $ INTELLIGENCE FROM EVERY LAND AND CLIMB. W»tory of a Week Gathered fhm the Wtrem Embtucin* Political Doiu(«, Per- *M»1 Movement*, AocldeBtii Crlulml • AffiUrs, Labor Notes, Etc. EDUCATION OF TH&IKDIAlt. . The Question of Denominational Schools DFC- cussed in the Senate. TBK Senate passed tbe following bills on the 24 th: Bonne .bill for the construction of a bridge across the Savannah River ; Senate bill for the construction of a bridge across the Willamette Kiver at Albinv, Oregon; Senate Mil to provide an American register tot the sunnier Marmion. Consideration of the Indian appropriation bill was then resumed. The amendment appropria -ingiflO.OO,) for the prose­ cution of a suit in North Carolina to enforce cer­ tain rights of tho Cherokee Indians in that State was modified so as to merely appropriate $5,000 to pay tho legal expenses already incurred in tho suit. Agreed tSffiia-The House proceeded to voto upon the committee amendments to the bank­ ruptcy bill. In view of the fact- that the bill , had never been read in the House, Mr. McMil- BPv;-r • lin (Tenn.) .demanded a separate vote on each S* k amendment., and much time was thus con- Sn snrned. The amendments are principally ver- bal and informal in their charactcr. On nx>- tion of Mr. Keilly (Taj. an amendment wa? /.J.. \ adopted enforcing the laws of the States givif.*' ,'t "wages for labor a preference. The Torrey (>ank- ftV luptcy bill was then passed with unimportant Lt N . amendments--yeas, 117; nays, 84. W. ' THE NATIONAL GA tis. " < (" fllaadiac of th: , . Player*, W. Hk£>/Boston........ 44 K¥"? ; .Brooklyn 47 ' -S Now York.. .42 ' Chicago 41 *•% J'hilrtdelp'a. .42 1 ritt^ii'.irg....32 'Cleveland.. .81 ff%y ^Buffalo 18 % J Western. W. s:M-M. '^Minneapolis 46 Milwaukee, .45 P,5, Kansas Clty.39 3?enver * .33 Sioux City. .34 Des Moines. 30 Omaha 98 Bt. Paul.....81 111.-Iowa* W. Ottumwa... 44 Monmouth ..39 Ottawa. 37 Dubuque 35 .Aurora 35 jC'dr Rapids. 33 Joliet 25 I'JgterUng 18 Clubs in the Six LradiBg Or* gan'za'ions. L, 9cJ National. W. I* f c. 23 .G0:t Philadelp'a.52 26 .6GG 34 ,57't Brooklyn . . .50 27 .049 33 .5W» Boston 50 29 .033 35 .53);Cincinnati...45 31 .592 3ti .£87,; Chicago 39 36 .520 38 .4->7 New York.. .34 46 .425 40 .437 Cleveland.. .21 54 .'280 52 .257,Pittsburg. ..17 59 .'iiJ f>c.| American. W. .<538 Louisville. ..46 .633! Rochester.. .42 .555 Athletic 43 ,54'.);St. Louis 43 .492 Columbus...36 .448 Syracuse 33 .400! Toledo 31 ,9QSjBrooklyii • • .21 9 c ! Interstate. W. .647: Terre Haute. ,9 .582 Quiucy 7 ,562|Burlington. ..4 .54C Evausville. ..Jt .522 .530 .373 .272 Peoria. . . .2 tfe. .621 .567 .505 .4(57 .440 .419 ,2b7 .750 .700 .333 .250 • T F, BUREAU OF PENSIONS. Commhnioner Rami's Methods to 3Be Invjs- ^*;V tleriited. ^ THB Bouse Committee on Bales has p), (agreed to report in a modified form, 2|'- "witla a favorable lecommendation, the ^ resolution iatroiuced by representative % , Cooper, of Indiana, providing for anin- riy destination. of charges made against 1?, ' Commissioner Raum, of tbe Pension The resolution provides that the £.*•- - jnve«Hgation Bhall be conducted by a :'j,eelect committee of live. Mr. Cooper's V lv, ̂ resolution is as follows: ' 'N TiiiHEAS, Eejxirts are being widely circulated > "vfchrough the newspapers, reflecting upon the lilv ' .'iiiauagenient. of the bureau of pensions, in QS '?which it is charged : ;pC. * 1. That the present commissioner of pensions J«|v 'Jias been engaged in selling to certain employes vv_ f>f the pension office shares of stock in a corpo- ^5- :' tatioii or company of ^hich ho is president, ifly's Which was organized fof the purpose of intro- Cueing a patent refrigerator which it is claimed 4s in^practicr.Ve and vorthltss, and that in con- aidorauon of such p"Urpg3as said eroployaa are id in QftSce; nijd 1 said Ccui^iadioner of Pensions has by a« unjust and partial ruling, ad- <; eaissed to be taken out of their or- tiif,u8aud6 of the claims of a certain residing in the city of Washington, Urni'..'- «""»- in cousideratfon thereof said attorney " ; • (.-• lias become surety on the note of said Commis- p Bioner in a bank in the city of Washington for |f; " the sum of $25,000; therefore Jit it resolved. That the Committee on Pen- Bioiis, be and they are hereby directed to inquire .concerning said charges and report to the , » • >Kou se. And for the purpose of making said in- -- vestigation thorough and complete the said % committee is hereby authorized to send for vi take tcstixccny. MERRIAM THE NOMINEE. I Minnesota R< publicans Nam? Him 'as Their Candidate f >r Governor. ! THE Minnesota Republican Stale Con­ vention met at St. Paul and placed the following ticket in the ̂ eld: Governor, William R. Merriam; Lieutenant Gover- nor, Gideon S. Ives; Treasurer, Joseph Bobleter; Secretary of State, F. ±*. Brown; Auditor, P. J. McGuire; Attorney ; General, Moses E. Clapp; Clerk of Su­ preme Court, C. B. Holcomb. The plat- lorm favors reciprocity witbr South America, denounces all monopolies and : trustB, approves the Australian ballot system for the whole State, lecpgnizes the services of the soldier, and indorses the disability pension law introduced and championed by Senator Davis. THEIR STANDARD BEARER. * Nebraska Republicans Nominate Their State Tlckpt. THE Nebraska Republican State Con­ vention at Lincoln finally adjourned after flacing the following ticket in nomina­ tion: Governor, L. D. Richards; Secre­ tary of State, J. C. Allen of Red Willow; State Auditor, Thomas H. Benton of Dodge; Treasurer, Capt. J. E. Hill of Gage; Attorney General. H. H. Hastings of Saline; Land Commissioner, George Humphrey of Custer; State Superintend- 'ent, A. K. Goudy of Webster. Wed a Mon*y Chest.' JFCEWIS WATSON , the New En- of passion, has renounced „ fctionixl faith and taken tip atholic in order to become ®n8a#Bd t(^ Francis Washington Higgins, a wealthy "N'irgin'an. They never met , until within a fortnight* hut hare corre­ sponded for over a year, I 4n" Enelishmeu Af:er Luaibir Mill'-. AN English syndicate has offered $7,000,C03 for Knapp, Stout & Co.'s prop­ erties in Iowa and Wisconsin. The property consists of several large mills and valuable tracts of pine land. Capital and Labor. BUILDING operations in New York, Brooklyn, and Jersey City ate nearly at standstill, caused by a boycott that has placed on certain brick-yards the ners of - which are members of the rick Manufacturer!' Association. Blown to Atoms. THE Corning mill of the Laflin & Band powder works at Mountain View, N. J., 1 blow up, instantly killing two workmen who were employed in the building and wrecking the place. EASTERN OCCURRENCE!* ,* ' AT Philadelphia,' Census Supervisor Beatb has closed the census office for good, and shipped his last batch of re­ turns to Washington. Gen. Beath said that the official count will show but a •mall increase over his original estimate 1,040,*Cty--for Philadelphia's popula­ tion. THE iron foundry of C as sidy & Adler, Hew York City, was the scene of a ter- •#« explosion of melted metal a few Apn ago, and seventeen men were more a* MM wounded by £yin; H^^^Hl &f iaet&l and fre-b icks. • '• J. W. WATS OK, literary nan and author Snow, died at New York in of his age. He will be bnrnlPHHHpesa Club plot at Cypress Hilt CONNECTICUT. CAMD^^MRARNED M effigy Rev. Mr. Schonj^^^^Vrotcstant clergyman, because their re­ ligion in a Fotrrih of • ANNI® GOODWIN, « cigarette girl, shown by her picture to have been ot rare beauty, was tortured to death In several dens in Harlem, N. Tfe Her lover paid for her killing, and u medic al practitioner handy at such work was bribei to do the job. When it was done tho doctor, over 70 years old, carried the body of his vie-; tim down four flights of stairs irf the dead of night aud took it away in his car- xta$e--where, nobody knows. WESTERN HAPPENING ; THE climax of the sensational murder of Engineer Vandevander in his cab near Van Wert, Ohio, was reached when Fire­ man Rdodhouse uuhurdened his mind and coafessed to having indicted tne fa­ tal blows upon his companion. His story is that as soon HS the train left Ohio City Vandevandor turned toward him, with mal gnant hatred gleaming in his eye, and said: " >-- you, I will do you up now." His words were accompanied by a crushing blow upon tha skull which blinded Rood- house, and in a trice its counterpart lev­ eled him to the floor. He then says he- picked up the nenrest weapon thnt "came to hand, it chancing to be a heavy cop­ per hammer, aud with all the energy of despair he swung it twice down upon the head of his enemy, felling him to the floor of the cab in an insensib e con- diMon. - THE Indiana Supreme CourS has af­ firmed the decision of th-3 lower court in the Elizabethville White Cao case. Marion Kendall, vlio was paralyzed bv a beating received at the hands * of White Caps four year-i aeo, sued live of his as­ sailants, prominent farmers, for $10,000. The court awar ied him $5,<100, and the decision has just been affirmed. IT is aow definitely kn^wn thtt of eight Apache prisoner)! under "The Kid," who murdered Sheriff Reynolds and deputy rnd escaped, in Arizona, all except three have been killed. "The Kid" and two others are at large. De­ tachments of troop? from all tha forts are out to intercept them. WaiiiE picking huckleberries near Farwell, Mich., E. J. Ferguson was shot and instantly killed by J. Do Lord, who mistook him for a bear. Ferguson leaves a wife -nd three "h'l^rei. AT Wabash, Iud., o.or 200 persons Were receive! in'o full communion by the Xlethodist Church aB a result of a re­ vival during the winter. Two hundred now on probation witl be received into the church next month. ILLINOIS G. A. IJ. po*ts propose to build a memorial hall at Springfield, JI1., in honor of B. F. Stephenson, the found­ er of the order. The structure will con­ tain memorial windows for the G. A. R., W. R. C., and Sons of Ve.erans. A,FOUR-STORY brick bonse known as the John Christie tenement was burned at Cincinnati, and a family of four, father, mother, and two children, were cremated while rescuers labored around them. The dead nnd the injured, so far as learned, are as follows: l>oad--Solo­ mon Mens&i; Mrs. Mensk;, his wife; Eva Men«ki, a 12-year-old daughter; Erran Menski, a 7-year-old son. Injured--Gas*" Hitzwell, Ev* Misses. Mary Kas^eneur. Of the injuied the first two are likely to die, vlvje the last named h s chances of recovery. ^ IN"TELX.I4UNCE has reached Fkrgo of a cyclone near Clifford, in the southwest­ ern part of Traill County. Details are meager. The only thing learned is that the storm struck Bowen, ( lifford and Galesburg. about twelve mil^s northwest of Hunter, in the southern portion of Tta 11 and in the northern pare of Cas^ County. Minnesota. It was a lobula­ tion cyclone, tearing ; nd twisting Rcross the country, leveling buildings and de­ stroying crops. Five persons were kil ed outright, nnd a man and his wife prob­ ably fatally injured near Clifford. CRIMINAL negligence on tho part of ^ flagman on the Rock Island Railway caused a collision on that road near Wil- lard, ftnn., a passenger train running into a freight. A number of passengers und trainmen were injured, but no one was killed. HARBY MAYNABD touched off a fire­ cracker in Horn it Carroll's grocory store at l'e i K«-y, Ind. A spnrk flew into a keg of powder, which exploded, com­ pletely wrecking the building. Out of twenty men in the store at the time seven were seriously injured, two of them fa- tally. THE Illinois General Assembly organ­ ised in special session at Springfield, on on the 2?d, for Columbian Fair legisla­ tion. In the House, where the Repabli- can caucus nominees were chosen for officr-rs, the Democrats raised objections to three membe-s and also to the elec­ tion ol the Speaker by a quorum majori­ ty, l<«t their objections were overruled, snd a pretest was ordered spread upon the uvnutes. A meesa?e from the Gov­ ernor was read, sett.ng forth the necessity of the session, and urging speedy com­ pletion of the work projected. No bills being ready for presentation, both houses adjourned for the day. i THE £ouring mill of Mead Brothers at | North Jackson, Ohio, ww completely | wrecked by the es^lcuion of a boiler, j George Mend, the engineer, and William ! Thomas, an employe, were killed in- j stantly, und William Mtkeseli probably i fatally injured. The boiler had been -in j use ten years. | • NEAR Golden, Col., the bodies of Mrs. R. R. Able and Miss Ethel Drake, who were drowned by a cloudburst, were re­ covered. THE Lake Shore and M ehigan Sooth- era track-laying crews have discovered Juno good-sized veins of iron ore near olishawaka, Ind. One of tbe ve ns is nearly thres feet thick and tbe other two feet. The cr: is said by experts to be reasonably tns. MANDAVIIILE AI'LT, driven INSANE by the death of his child and by sickness, Bhot and killed his wife and then hanged himself at Centerville, Ohio. RECENT losses by fire in Spokane Falls aggregate $200,00). Incendiarism is sus- pected. Steps are being taken to secure a better water supply. MiddleHorc led an Ohio . , . that he hftd . Hamilton Count fee was want a# .Lata im- »rk- the polioe of Cincinnati and Chicago' foL crooked operatic n?. * A PAKTTof pugilbtsmetat th ̂Spokes- man office in Spokani Falls to arrange prize-fight between Patsy Mulligan fan Jim Ctiper, and while talking aatt over quietly Billy Lynn, a friend Casey, started a quarrel with Mulli| The latter knocked him down and h put out of the offic j. Ho went nro1 a back door and coming in behind gan shot him twice, the won JJ considered mortal. Ed Smit pugilist, was struck in the kn lose his leg. Lynn is in jail. ALABAMA Prohibitionists] ed an effective method of the liquor question. At Col)ins^|Rhej blew up au "original-package" house with dynamite, the proprietor liavi: fused to heed their warning and town. NEAR Paris, Texas, Andy To negro, was called to his door by a of white men, who filled him with b from rifles and revolvers, some of missiles cutting his tongue in two. cause of the tragedy was that the 1 had had a quarrel With white ladB. 8A1 WAR. 'OR AND GUATE- IN COMBAT. mi fOUTICAL PORRIDGHI THE Wisconsin Prohibitionists met at Madison and adopted a platform favoriig woman eutfrage. recognizing the Women's Christian Temperance Union, declining to indorse the Bennett educational law, and insisting upon State and nat onal prohibition. The following ticket was then nominated: Governor--Charles Alexander, of Eau CI airs. Lieutenant Governor--W. It. Nethercut, ol Milwaukee. Secretary cf State--Goorgo C. McKerrow, ol Waukesha. Treasurer--Robert Far so, of Lake Mills. L. Attorney General*--T. K. Van Keulen, of Osn- kosh. Bupcrintend'ent of Public Instruction--Henry Bumner, of Outagamie. liailroad Commissioner--J, Q. Black, of Rich­ land. » Insurance Commissioner--Andrew Peterson, of Oreea. FOREIGN GOSSIP. MR. GLADSTONE has declined six invi­ tations to address public meetings dur­ ing the lust two weeks. The grand old man says he has arrived at that period of life when it in nec9ssary for him to take r .uore thnn ord nary enre of his health, and that the duty or pie tsure of address­ ing public gatherings can with safety bo left to younger nrn of the party. 1 *f|e*«Be Victory, Whteh ti Matter's Reprnsentotlvea £'*ngll» of Both--Mexico ooffnli* Oea. Kceta M of Salvudop. I Mexico special: The lonar- nod war has broken out between mala and Salvador, according to a! advices received by tho con- ntia! agent of the provisional gov- tuent of Sau Salvador, Seuor Geronf- o Pou, who arrived hero last night Jrom San Salvador. It began without tho usual formalities of war, and for his country Scuor Pou claimed lirst victory. Senor Pou exhibited the following tele- grain from-Gen. Ezeta: •' "Julv 19.--The enemy, 9.000 strong, terday invaded San Salvador, but forces bravelv repulsed them, caus- thHr complete rout. Many pieces rtillery. large quantities of amuiunl- and hundreds of stacks'of arms captured by us. I have given rs to advauco Into Guatemala." nor Pou says the Salvador army is" d wfth Remington rifles, niachino , and mountain batteries, and is rally well equipped with plenty of »\phey. The Salvador!an forces are in­ ferior fn number to those of Guatemala, bulk Sonor Pou says he has received ad­ vices that disaffection has occurred in the army of Guatemala, and two battal­ ions have refused to proceed to tho frontier, which, ...-.he thinks, will have the effect of equalizing matters. Gen. Ezctu Is commanding the movements of the Salvador forces. Minister Diegucz of Guatemala says that the only dispatches received are from points in San Salvador where it is known that tho press censorship is in force. **Our forces are well armed with Retnlngtolt rifles, Gatllng giHis; and mounted batteries, and - if San Salvador 'has 16,000 men in tho field, we havo nearly double that nuihber. While it is true we havo no big fund in the treasury, everybody in tho country^will come to the front with money in case there is war." It is the general opinion here that in case there is war between Guatemala and S4n Salvador, tlie lirst named country will be victorious bccause of its supe­ rior forges. ,.!• CONFESSES TO THE MURDER OF VANDEVANDER, iuarrel and RAN INTO AN ICEBERG. FRESH AND NEWSY. & A MOVE is on foot to revolutionize the professional base-ball world. The mag­ nates of the National League, Western Association and American Association contemplate a pooling of issues, so that, if the deal goes through, there will be. but two big professional leagues next wear instead of four. There will be an Eastern and a Western league. THE: Centropolis Car and Machine Company, of Centropolis, Mo., and Dal- ton. Pa., has made an assignment, owing $100,000. The nominal assets are figured at $18-5,000. THE mysterious robbery of the Bank of Nova Scotia, in Woodstock, kas caused a, great deal of excitement. The sum of $40,000 wai taken from the vault, nnd the accountant of the bank, Robert G. Stnders, is looked up, charged with the theft. AV a conference in Topaka between general cfficers of the Santa Fe Road and a train men's grievance committee it was flgreect that conductor-; sliflfet recfeivij a uniform salary of pl^nonth and ihat they were to receive payiBf 100 miles for alt- runs of le?s than 100 miles. A DISPATCH from Pembroke, eighty-six miles above Ottawa, on the Upper Ottawa river, says that some miscreant cut the rope holding to the laik a raft of logs on which twenty-two rattsmen ,were stopping orer night. The raft with all asleep on board drifted out into the river and into the rapids a mile b- low, and when those on boird were awakened, they were being tossed about among the rocks. Of the twenty-two only two escaped to shore. No traces of the bodies of the twenty have been found. RECENT deaths: At Cheyenne, Wyo., W. W. Corlett, ex-delegate to Congress f nd attorney for the Union Pacific, aged 48; at Portland, Me., Edward Payson. the author of "Law of Equivalents," a^ed77; at New York, Patrick J. Shar­ key, well known in the sporting frater­ nity c s one of the backers of Kibain in his fight with Sullivan. PETER JACKSON is to sail from San Francisco for Australia July 26, and the chances that he and Sullivan will ever meet is about one in a thousand. Cali- fornians are now talking about matching Corbett against the big fellow. IT is reported that the to al stock of unsold pig iron in tbe country June 30 amounted to 403,459 tons, or less than three weeks' supply at ths present rate of consumption. THE steamship Egypt, of the National Line, from New York for Liverpool, caught fire and was abandoned at eea. The crew, after being two days adrift in the boats, were rescued. 640 head Seat­ tle were burned. The Stmmshtp Hlbern Ian Hi* lla& Adventure. Philadelphia (Pa.) telegram: Tho Allan steamer Hibernian arrived hero yesterday from Glasgow after a trip of ten days, during which she had a nar­ row escape from being dashed to plecos on tho si»3o of a huge iceberg. The vessel ran into a fog and the speed was reduced to five knots an hour. But for this the vessel would surely have been lost. The berg was sighted just before 8 o'clock in the evening, and at a distance of about fifty yards. The engines were reversed, and tho man at the wheel had succeeded In slightly changing tho course of tho ves­ sel so that tho berg was struck at a stand. The iron plates grated along the side of the huge pile, and the vessel ca­ reened until her sails touched the water. There was great excitement among tho lifty passengers on board. One passenger, a woman, was thrown from a bunk and slightly injured. Tho berg appeared to be about lifty feet above water, and was very long. After the collision the j Hiberiflan remained hove to till tho { next day, all the while being enveloped In a thick fog. During this time the passengers suffered intensely from cold. They paid manjk visits to the qnglno room, wliich wflptbo only warm on tho ship. ' BU§Y PENSION AGENTflfe % • • • •#. Titer Are Crowding: the Kails wltf Tfa elr Advertisements. Washington dispatch: The pension legislation at this session of Congress has stimulated the pension attorneys to groat activity, causing an Increase of 33 per cent in the receipts of the Washing­ ton postoflice for the quarter ending June 30, and the officials say there will also bo a great increase for the month of. July. The abnormal increase Is due almost entirely to the pat­ ronage of tho pension agents, who have been buying as high as as 55,000 worth of stamps at a time. Some of thom bought one cent stamps for use to inclose unsealed circulars, but the smart one^ used the sealed envelopes to send their circulars, knowing with tho press of business at. tho office tho first-class matter wound receivo attention first. In addition tojthe circulars, scaled and un- sealed,^nc firiu sent out a million copies of a newspaper in which their business is advertised. HABXET BEFOIPB CHICAGO. CATTLE--Prime 4.50 I; ; SOUTHERN INCIDENTS. JOHN A. STEELE, JR., Mayor Tom Steele, John Goodwin, and W. p. Chal- len engaged in a shooting affray at Tus- cumbia, Ala. The former was killed, John Goodwin was seriously injured, and Tom Steele slightly wounded, and a by­ stander, Tracy Abemathy, bad his arm broken by a stray bullet. THE Hon. John P. Buchanan, a farmer and President of the State Farmers' Al­ liance, was nominated for Governor by acclamation by the Tennessee State Democratic Convention at Nashville. Mr. Buchanan has serve! three terms in the Legislature. B. VAN KATSCHEB, an alleged Austrian Kair to Oocd Common HCKIS--Shipping Grades.......... SMJSKP XVHHAT--No. 2 Red .....! COJIN--No. 2 OATH--No. ii llYt--No. 2 HUTTEK---Choice Croaioery CHKBSK--Full Cream, flats JCo os--I"resh r u T A T O K s O h i o , p e r b u . . INDIANAPOLIS, CATXT.E--fih ipping Hoos-- Choice Light BHKKP--Common to PruBo WHKAT--No. y. Red CORN--No. l White OATS-No. 2 White ST. LOUIS. CATTLE HOOB... WHEAT--No. 2 Bed. .. Conjj--No. a OATS--No. 2 J RYE--No. si. y.'.H CINCINNATL Boos WHEAT--No. 2 Bed. * CORN--NO. 2 , OATS--No. fi Mixed * MILWAUKEE. W HEAT--No. a Spring*. COKN--No. 3... ' OATK--No. 2 White BYK--No. 1 BAELKT--No. 1 DETBOIT. CATTLE Hoos HHRBP WHEAT--No. 2 Bed CORN--No. 2 Yellow OA-ra--No. 2 WUito TOLEDO. W HKAT CORK--Cash ... OATS--No. 2 White 1 B l IF PALO. CATTLK--Good to Prime Hoos--Medium imd Heavy WHKAT--No. 1 Hard COBN--No. 2 EAST LIBERTVT. CATTLE--Common to Primo HOUR--JJght. BHKKP--MecUtuu to Good NEW YOttfi. CATTLE Boos BUEBP. .............. WHEAT--No. 2 Bad. COHN--No. 2. ft 5.00 (9 4.50 & 4.00 <0 4.00 (& 5.50 V4 .ft) 4.00 8.0 J 3.50 8.0J .« .37 ,'I® .32 <& AS '̂,0 .14 O .07 KF> -IS 1.01 & 1.25 • 3856 .33 .49'<4 .08 .15 8.00 8.90 S.0J 4.50 4.03 S.00 •85>4@ .80^ .89)61«, .40!$ .83 & .39 AFTER THE TIMBER THIEVES. Lse he <;om I) ul FIMIQIIII Weakens and Tails the Whole Sturj- of His <|uarr*l with the En­ gineer anil the Struggle In the Knglne Cab--Ho Claims that the Killing Was in Self-Defense. Van Wert (Ohio) special: The mys­ tery surrounding the horrible murder of Engineer Madison "Vandevander has at last been cleared up by a confession from Fireman Samuel Roadhouse at the coroner's inquest. The evidence was so strong against Roadhouse that when bo heard of it lie concluded to make a full confession.* He Was still con Oned to his bed and after a few moments1 delibera­ tion said: ••Sheriff, I want to toll ycti something. I killed Vandevander." While he was speaking his throat clogged and he uttered the three last words in a husky voice. "I did it," ho continued, ••In self- defease. He accused me of Informing the superintendent that he was drunk at Devil's Lake last week, and, al­ though I offered to prove to him tii&t. I had not reported him, ho refused to be­ lieve mo, and had been abusing me moro or less since then. Last Friday, while we were at Franklin getting ready to go out on our run, we had a came near exchanging blow, "When" we reached En tori menced on mo again and sa you, I'll fix you.' Van \y, and desperate, and, to tel the case, I was afraid o leaving Enterprise he threat, and I walked back 1<? box whcn^-lie wasn't lookinjf"an the hammer they found witiTtho hat? sticking out so 1 eaq^d grasp It.. I th< started back tQ my seat iu the cab. .lust before I reached it Van reached out his left arm and dealt me a terrible blow on the left side of tho head," pointing to tho gash on that side of his head. "I was^staggered for a moment, and just as 1 was about recovered he raised his right hand from the throttle and gave mo another terrible blow on the right side of the head. "I jumped back, grabbed the hatft- mer, and catching it with both hands raised it, and, throwing all my weight on it, brought it down on Van's head with all the force I could muster. The lirst blow did not appear to stun him and I showered several more blows--I don't remember how mauy--and did not quit until ho lay still. 1 then picked him up and sat him on the-scat on lii9 side of the engine, where Re was found. I hardly realized what I had done until it was over with. At first I did not know what to do, and I lay down on tho floor of tho engine and in the few min­ utes which elapsed* it came to me to fix up tho story I told Dr. Woods. Just as we had passed Van Wert Van raised his head, and 1 again picked up the ham­ mer and dealt him another blow which opened h?s head. I lelt the blood and brains spatter on my face. That was all. You Know the rest." The fact of Roadhouse's confession was kept quiet until he could be placed in tho county jail, as it was feared that should the news set out there would bo an attempt to lynch him, coming so soo:: after the funeral of the murdered man. After he had boon placed safely be­ hind the bars it became noised about that ho had made a full confession, and the news passed from lip to lip like lightning, and iu a few minutos a largo crowd had gathered about the jail, which is such a weak and poorly-con­ structed building that it would not take more than half a dozen determined men to break into it. Lynching is freely talked of, and as there are a large number of railroad men in town who came to attend Vande- vander's funeral it would not be surpris­ ing if there would^ be trouble.' m SECRETARY BLAINE'S 8ET-1 WITH SALISBURY. England's Policy In the H^hrlng l«» Dis­ pute subservient to the Demands of Her North American Colony--An Interesting Correspondence. [Washington speeULl Following is the official correspond­ ence between Secretary Blaine and Lord Salisbury, touching the seal fisheries of the Bebring Sea, sent to the House of Representatives by the President, in an­ swer to the resolution introduced by Representative Hitt. of 111 nois: The correspondence between Secretary Blatne and the new British minister began .Ian. 22 of this year with a long letter from the Secretary to Hir Julian Pauneofot®. This letter maybe fairly taknn as setilng forth the position of the Lnited States in the controversy. The Secretary "In the opinion ot the President the Canadian vessels arrested and detained in the Behrins bea were engaged in apnrsuit that iras in itself oontra bonos mores, a pursuit which of neces- Bity Involves a serious and permanent in­ jury to the rights of the government and people of the United States. To establish this ground It is not necessary to argue the question of the extent and nature of the sov­ ereignty of this Government oyer tbe waters of the Behrtng sea. It is not necessary to explain, certainly not to define, the powers and priv­ ileges ceded by his Imperial Majesty the Em­ peror of Itussia in the treaty t»v which ihe Alaskan territory -was transferred to the Unitod States. The weighty considerations growing out of the acquisition of that territory, with all the rights on land and sea inseparably connect­ ed therewith, may be safely left out of view, while the (.'rounds are Bet forth upon which this Governmpnt rests its justiftcft'ion for tho action complained of by her Majesty s Govern­ ment." "N.4 LOOK FOR MORE PIQjf4T^(l^. The United States Government Preparing to Put a Stop to Their Operations. St. Paul (Minn.) dispatch: The lum- bet stealing by Cauadlans along . the northern border' of Minnesota has be-r come so extensive that the government* has concluded to put a stop to it. A large expedition headed by four agents will leave Duluth about A tiff, land head in a northwesterly direction, its desti­ nation being the western portion of Rainy lake. It is estimated that In two rivers there are 75,000,000 feet of logs, and perhaps as much more Is beinsr got away with by Canadians at other points. along the boundary line. An effort is to be made to secure this in the namo of. the government, and as soon as the logs have been found by the agents and branded with the government stamps, which the agents take with them, they will be held at all hazards. Told I n a I'"cw Word*. j GKSKRAI. POI.AVIC.TA, tho new-eaptaln general ot Cuba, will leave Spain for his post of duty Ang. 10 next. THE new premier of Cape Colony, Cecil Rhodes, is an Imperialist, but he j geYfUwVth Tun 8.60 8.00 J»7 .SO 8.53 @ 4.75 & 3.75 <0 .88 & .35 & .33 <& .81 @ 4.00 .85&<3 .86)4 .40 i'St .42 <& . 39 .80 & £ I .87 .83)4 .88 .SO .50 8.00 5.09 8.(0 & 4.01 3.00 <S 4.75 .STHiS«S .»8)6 •87&-S .39 Si .33 .88 el J89>A6 M]A(9 .*> .40'A .85)4 3.78 & 4 V3 8.79 & 4.M .43*4 8.S0 8.75 4.00 & 4.75 & 4.25 0 5.2i *JX> <9 5.09 4.03 <» 4.50 -4.S* & 8.75 .W5'4<S .87)4 a & .a gave Parnell $50,0(1') for his home rule fund. IT IS proposed to baye a permanent census department in Great Britain, whose duty ft shall be to take the usual decennial census. A COMPANY having for its object the bridging of the English channel, is seek- ins concessions55 from the French und English governments. IK a fight with Indian* in the Sierra Ancbas Mountains, nesr Wilcox, Arizona, Lieut. Macktiy's po-ee, killed Wah-Lan- •Tnh, one of the most hostile. IK a rjuarrel over a flock of g«£se John Giltert struck John Carney with a sledge-hammer and inflicted' a futal wound. Both lived in Louisville, Ky. JOE SEVMN shot and killed James Price at Collins' lumber camp, neat Brantley, Texas. The trouble grew oul of a misnnderst nding. Price wus noted as a bad man. £evtru surrendered. MAYOR PENDLETON, of Fort Worth, Texas, who has become notorious through marrying a second time, nlthouih his first wife knew nothing of hie having procur. d a aivoree from her, has resigned hi« office. SIMON and Julius Kroganker of Ilrom- berg, two German forgers who had pro< cured over 3<)'>,ooo marks through tholr deceptlvo but illegal penmuusbip, were arrested in New York on arrival of the tteamer Tra*e tbe other day It Will Bo War to the Knife In Central America. City of Mexico special: The news received-te this city to-day by private cipher cable dispatches fully confirms the account of the battle between tho Guatemalan nnd San Salvadoran forces yesterday. Tho Guatemalan forces, un­ der tho command of Gen. Fuentes, were encampcd a little to tho southward and eastward of Rhalohitapo, close, upon the San Salvador frontier. The Guatema­ lans, not expecting to receive much, if any, resistance on the part of tho Sal- vadorans, were taken completely by surprise and retreated precipitately be­ yond the borders to their own territory. No estimate of the loss of life on cither side can bo formed, but from all accounts only thirty or forty were killed on wounded. Tho San Salvador troops did not follow up their advantage, as they had received instructions only to preserve the integrity of their own ter­ ritory. It is sa'd that in view of this defeat 2,000 Guatemalan troops are advancing as reinforcements uuder the command of Qen. Camlio Alvarez, the aspirant for Presidential honors in San Salvador wider tho protection of Guatemala. With Gen. Alvarez at their lioad as commander-in-chief of the Guatemalan forces there no longer remains a doubt that Guatemala intends invading her neighboring territory. , : M'GEE WAS NOT KILLED. -A Supposed Victim of the War Returns to Ills Friends. Opelika (Ala.) special: The return of John McGee to his former home in Chambers county Friday has created a big sensation. McGee as a young man 18 years of age, went to tho war in tho Gth Alabama regiment, of which Gen. John li. Gordon was tho first colonel. In 'the famous charge made by that regi­ ment in tho battle of tho Seven Pines, McGee was among tho missing, and it was supposed that he was killed until Friday, when ho presented hlnj- proofs of his identity. The Secretary then speaks of tho value of the "sheries which were controlled by Russia *• interference or question until the ces- " «ka to tho United States in 1307. urbo l possession continued to the nntil 1886, passing whaling ves- ng from seal capture. He says lform avoidance of all attempts to KAI.in those waters had been a con- 'gnitioji of the right held anil exer­ cised, first by litu^ia nnd subsequently by this Government. It hoen the recognition of a fact now held be Y^S. denial or doubt that the taking of seals in lie open sea rapidly leads to thair extinction. The Secretary, continuing, says thi proved not only by expert testimony " total destruction of all seal fisheries. one in the Dehring sea, which the Q of the United States is now trying not altogether for the use of the Amfl plo, but for the use of tho world at lai recites the successful efforts of the States Government to improve and preserve thS" fisheries, resulting in the payment of more than $12,090,000 to English laborers for the prepara­ tion of the sealskins and the elevation to civili­ zation of natives of Alaskan islands. He says : "So great has beon the injury to the fisheries from the irregular and destructive slaughtar of seals in the open waters of the Behring Sea by Canadian vessels, that, whereas the Govern­ ment had allowed 100,090 to be taken annually for a series of years, it is now compelled to re­ duce ths number to 60.000. If four years of this violation of natural law and neighbors'rights has reduced the annual slaughter of seal by 40 per cent., it iB easy to see how short a period will be requirod to v.-ork the total destruction of the fishorles. "This Government has been ready tc conosde much in order to adjust all differences of view, aud has, in the judgment of the President, al­ ready proposed a solution not only equitable but generous. Thus far h ;r Majesty's Government has declined to accept th9 proposal of Ihe United States. The President now awaits with deep in­ terest, not unmixed with solicitude, any propo­ sition for reasonabla adjustment which her Majesty's Government may submit. The forci­ ble resistance to which this Government is con­ strained in the Hehring Sea is, in the President's judgment, demanded, not only by the necessity of defending the traditional, long-established rightB of tho United States, but also the rights of good government and good morals tho worn over. "Nor is the Government of the United States disposed to exercise in those possessions any less power or authority than it was willing to concede to the imperial government of Kusnia when its sovereignty extended over them. The President is persuaded that all friendly nations will concedo to the United States tho F.ame rights and privileges on tho lands and in the waters of Alaska which the B-tme friendly na­ tions always conceded to the Empire of Uussfa." The Marquis of Salisbury, under date of May 21 last, in a letxer to tho British Minister, re­ plies to Mr. Blaine's arguments: "It requires something more than a mere declaration that tho Government or citizens of the United States, or even other countries in­ terested iu the seal trade, are losers by a cer­ tain course of proceeding to render that course an Immoral one. "Her Maeesty's Government would deeply re­ gret that the pursuit of fur 8»als on the high Bea* by British vessels should involve even tne flighfcest injury to the people of tho United states, if tho case bo proved they will be ready to consider -what measures can be prop­ erly taken for the remedy of such injury, but they would be unable on that ground to depart from a principle on which free commerco on the high seas depends." Says the Marquis in conclusion : "The negotiations now being carried on at Washington prove the readiness of her Majes­ ty's Government to consider whether any spe­ cial international agreement is necessary for tha protection of the fur-seal industry. In its absence they are unable to admit that the case put forward on behalf of the United States af­ fords any sufficient justification for the forcible action already taken by them against peaceable Hub.eits of her Majesty engaged in lawful oper­ ations on the high sf as." The thirtieth and last letter of the mass of correspondence, which would, if printed entire, till over twenty newspai>er columns, was ad­ dressed by Mr. Blaine to Sir Juliau Pauncefcte from Bar Harbor. In it the Secretary says : "I am instructed by the President to say that the United States is'willing to consider all the proceedings of April 16,1888, as cancelled, so far as American rights may bo coneerncd. This Government will ask Great Britain to udhpre only to tho agreement made between Lord Salis­ bury and Mr. Phelps on the2Sthof February, l&H. That was an agreement made directly be­ tween the two Governments and did not include the rights of Russia. Asking Lord Salisbury to adhere to the agreement of February '25 we leave the agreement of April 10 to be maintained, if maintained at all. by ItusBia, for whose cause and for whose advantage it was particularly designed." NO NEWS FROM CENTRAL AMERICA. SENATE AND HOB FORK OF OUR NATIONAL LAVfcl -0*<- MAKERS. - >»IV,; - h i packago nciency apj'ro flB< al vm i It seems that he was taken prisoner and carried to Johnson's Island. Ho escaped from tho prison, bnt found it so dftlicult to pursue his journey south­ ward that he accepted the hospitality of a farmer near Selidado, whose daughter he subsequently married, and there ho has remained ever since, lie found his father nnd mother dead upon his re­ turn. but his 'sisters and brothers aro still living around tl)e old homestead. GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER. la tk» All Telegraphic and Mail Communication with Salvador Cut OIL The Department of State has as yet received no confirmation of the rumored war between Salvador and Guatemala, nnd there is no one on duty who has any information on the subject, writes a Washington correspondent. Since hos­ tilities opened between the republics Guatemala has assumed a most dictator­ ial position, not only toward her unruly sister, but toward the other Central American States. It is alleged at the Department of State that tbe rea­ son for the apparent delinquency on the part of Minister Mizner in keeping the department properly in­ formed is that not only are the telegraph wires cut, but that ihe ordinary postal facilities have 1 een abridged. Whether mil tary espionnge would be extended to diplomatic dispatches sent by an officer of a fiiendly government is not known. At all eveuts the summary methods adopted hitve interfered with the hereto­ fore easy oommunieation between Guate­ mala aud the United States. REFUSED TO HANDLE PACK­ AGES. Terdlet at the Coroner'* Jnrjr Ting* Kiplm|an Cn*e. Chicago dispatch: The ofllccrs ot'tftb Geneseo Oil company at UufTjalo, N. Y., refuse to attend the coroner's inquest being held in this city In the steamer Tioga explosion, by which twenty-six men wero killed. In a letter lecelved, however, tho officers of tho company admit having shipped uaptha as oil, but claimed that the steamboat ofliclals knew the character of tho freight However after a thorough investigation of the case the coroner s jury brought a verdict holding .1. C. Bright, presi­ dent, W. II. Hrlght, vice president, and Alonzo F. Iiedford, Chicago agent of tho Geneseo Oil works, gulltv of manslaugh­ ter, and recommending that thov be placed s>. jail until discharged by course of law. severely burned by blaaing gas, or baron, hat been successful in swindling J alro-siika w^te^!.WW . •- ̂ i1 Kansas Express Companies Throw a Bomb Into the Liquor Men** Midst. {Atchison (Kan.) dispatch.] • All the express companies have noti­ fied their agents at Atchison and other border points to take no more beer or other liquor for Kansas poiutn. Hereto­ fore IOCHI dealers on thiH aud tho otbor Bide of the river have done a heavy Lot­ tie, jug and keg business by express to intetior towns, and the new rules will cause them some bother, although it will not shut off their trade. In order to get j around the order dealers will pack their liquots in boxes, and, thus ooncoaled, ex- I press agents are bound to take them. It ' is understood that the order was issued I in anticipation of the original-package bill becoming a law. : News In Brief. • quantities of aprlcfrts ttre be* ing canned in California. IT is Baid that the city of Richmond, Va . with 100,000 inhabitants, has no city hospital or public dispensary. A SINGLE birthday party at Beading, Pa., did service for three relatives who were born on tbe same day of the month. THE dog population of New York is estimated at from 25, (M)0 to 30,060. More than 7,000 were caught .and asphyxiated last year. «Cthe Senate ftep*»«enistire* -- Important Meaoare* Dise*sx«Hl and Aeted Upon--Gist of tl§- Itasfttess. THE Secretary of War transmitted to tb» Senate, on the 18th, the petitions of a larpk number of officers of the United States army, praying that the number of appointments at large to the United States Military Academv ba increased to twtmy. and that such appoint* men Is be restricted to the sons of oJicers atgfi soldiers and to tho lineal descendants of ofS» eers of vcluutear forces of th? late wafc The consideration of the sundry civil apprfli# priation bill was resumed, tJ o pending ques­ tion being the irrigation^ provision ilk toe like bill of Oct. 3, l&W, and Mfc Iteugan continued his speech against the amenj. ment and in favor of the irrigation scheme initio « ated by that. act. The Houne Committee on In­ valid Pensions authorized a favorable report on the House bill granting a pen HI... a of S2.000 par year to the widow of Geu. Fio.uout. Tho original package bill was taken up and E. B. Taylor. u4«- vocatina it. said that no such blow had be^H* given to State soverslguity and State rights uA by the ascertainment that under the Constitu­ tion the citizen of a foreign State might take' into another State any property that wfl» a subject of commerco and sell it without lia­ bility of taxation. The Elections Committee ot the fiouse decided two of the four remaining contested elections cases on tho docket by party votes in favor of the contestants, both Itepublicans. The cases are those of Goodriett VB. Bullock, from the Second District of Florida, and of McGinnts vs. Alderson, l'rom tho Third District, of West Virginia. There were conUst* in three out of the four Congressional district# in West Virginia, and the Elections Couuxuttap has decided in favor of the Republican contest tant in each case. IK the Senate, on the, 3.1th inst., while the sundry civil appropriation bill was. under consideration, au amendment w*e agrosd to which appoints ' as mansgerfc of the National Soldiers' Home Edmund Ml MoiTill, of Kansas, for the unexpired termor John A. Martin, "deceased; Alfred O. 1,. Pearson, Of Pennsylvania, for the unoxpired term ot John , F. Hartrantt, dccsased; Lewis B. Guncfcel, of Ohio, for the unexpired term of L. A. Harris, deceased; WilliamB. Franklin, of Connecticut! Thomas W. Hyde, of Maine; John C. lii&ck, of Illinois; and Samuel S. Yoier, of Ohio. Anions the amendments reported by the Committee on Appropriations and agreed to by the Senate were the following: Inserting an appropriation for the construction of building* aud enlargement of military posts from $G50,-' to Jj:8j0,003; an amendment, which waa to, to odd to tho appropriation of 9400,000 ' ~;cial limbs, or commutation therefor. And in case of commutation tbe paid directly to the soldier, no feo or compensation, to any agent cr attor- m passed, and ths ta,rlir finished business. The oration of tho original h'alU au evening sea- only. The general de- •tion for the last prior yet^Wh-^ag reported L>y Mr. Henderson, of Iowa. TZ*a BB the last of tli" general appropriation bills to be^ xeported. The total amount carried by tho bill is •>>, 14" 440, based on au estimate of about *li).500.n Among the items in the bill are the following? For the expenses of contestants and conteBteee in election casus of the House, $71,081, and the - following appropriation to widows of decsasel Representatives: Mrs. Samuel J. Randall. *4..>00, the amount due Representative Randall for the unexpired t?rm of his service; Mrfl. R. W. Townsliend. ©10.031; Mrs. K. J. Gay, $9,093; Mrs. 8. S. Cox, 8796; Mrs. William D. Kellt.y, 80.223. . >' INSTEAD of taking up the tariff bill, as it wji| J cxpected tbe Sonata would on tho 21st, Senlia* tor Gray got up tho bill to transfer the revenna marine servioe to the navy. The bill docs not, as many suppose, put the revenue service di­ rectly into tho navy or place itB officers iti tha lino of promotion to be admirals and comrno. dores. It simply makes the service a distinct branch of tho navy in the sense that tho marine corps is a distinct branch. Revenue oflfteari will still do duty on revenue ships ana not iu war vessels, and vice versa. 'Ihe onlv advantage the revenue (ffljers will gel is that it will give them naval rauk aud pay and tho right of retirement under present laws. Mr. Comstock, of Minnesota, introduced a bill into tha House authorizing tho Secretary of Agrictll- ture to establish uniform grades for all kinds (till grain bought, handlod, transferred or shipt<ed from one State or Territory of tne United State! to any other State or 'l'eriitory, or from any­ place in tho United States to any foreign coun­ try, which shall be known as "American graded* the Secretary to publish tho same in his report! aud spacial bulletins. At 12:15, as a mark oj Vospect to the memory of 5(1 r. Walker, of Mil- »juri, decoased, the House ajjourned. AT the conclusion of morning business 't(Mt Senate, on motion of Hr. Dawes, took up Indian appropriation bill on the aid. The Co*»- • mittee on Pensions reported favorably the blUe to pension the widows of Gen. John C. Fremont and Gen. George B. McCioIlan at the rate ol <fcj,000 per aunum eacli. The House begau vot­ ing on the "original package" bill as soon as th« reading of tho journal had been concluded, and ihe substitute for the Senate "original package" bill, as amended, w as passed by a voto of 17t> to 3S. Following is the substitute: "That when­ ever any article of commerce is imported i into any State from any oth-r Statoor Territory I or foreign nation and tbero held or offered for sale, tho same shall then be subject to th» laws of such State; provided that no discrimina­ tion shall be made by any Stato in favor of its citizens against thoso of other States and Terri­ tories in respcct to the sale of any article of commerce, nor in favor of its own products against thoso of like character proiuced in otltei States or Territories ; nor shall the transporta­ tion of commerce through any Ptate be ob­ structed- except ill tho necessary enforcement of tho health laws of such State." A favorable re­ port was ordered on a House bill for the reltet of soldiers of the late war who were mustered out or killed before their names had been placed on the rolls of the army. AFTER unimportant business, the Senate re- sumed consideration of the Indian appropriSK tion bill on the 23d. A paragraph appropria** ing $8,000 to Indians in Minnesota (full and mixed blood) heretofore belonging to the Meda- wakantou band of Sioux Indians, and who have severed tho;r, tribal relations, gave rise to a discussion, in the course ot which Mr. Dawes gave an interesting history of these Indians. He said tney had given notice to the whites of the intended Sioux mas­ sacre in Minnesota in 1802, and had aided is protecting the white women and children on that occasion. 'Ihe President sent to the Senate the following nominations : To be Envoys Ex­ traordinary and Ministers Plenipotentiary ol tho United"iStates pursuant to act of Cong»«et approved July 14, 1830: ThomnB H. Anderson, o» Onio mow Minister Resident and Consul Gener­ al at Li Pas), to Bolivia; Clark K. Carr, of Illi­ nois (now Minister Resident and Consul General at Cophenhagen), to Denmark ; John D. Washburn, of Massachusetts (now Min­ ister Resident and Consul General at ' Berne), to Switzerland; John IJ. Stevens, of Maine (uow Minister Resident ad Honolulu), to the Hawaiian Islands; GeorgB Maney, of Tennessee (now Minister Resident at Montevideo), to Paraguay. Tho House reiunieo consideration of the bankruptcy bill. (Iowai submitted the report of the i~ on Kite tion s in the West Vi '* election case of MctiinniS report, which finds iu was ordered printed ats dent sent to the Heu| answf r to the rosolat tho oiticial eorrespo) ment of the UniteSl of Great Britain the Behring Sea. thirty separate ] from Mr. Kdwat aud Charge d'AJ call, dii.ed Aug.; from Secretary f the British Mini accompanying President, Secretary Blaine, UB$W. «|at#illE-itote Harbor, July 10, resets • be 'iadav Uk tlallBttliS- siou which tlie Fretitient directed' on the 11th, .und saya that the «Mi:ro«|H>udence is still .ia> , progress. LATEST STYLES IN DRY Drv goods dealers are selling: »• Domestic challles in small designs . cream grounds. , € ' Silk veiling like silk mualln tor snitt» mer mourning bonnets. As many as (if teen dozen crochet * tons for one gown. , ^' ̂ Gold and silver mixed galoon, vaa»•*"*:' 3 dykes and ombroiderlos. 7;..";. Immense quantities of cut silver ball*. gles, hair and bonnet pins. Beaver, tan and gray shades in ' and suede kid Rloves. i.S > !!< ¥- Men's dress ties of white lawn, wtfr colored embroidered ends. '*P " French embroidered batiste robes, t# ^ ^ s-bo made up over silk. ... The "Owl" brand of colored mohairs - ' ' i' *'• for traveling suits. Fish or seine net for drapips "realistic seaside cott.u<»$ Pale crcara with a 1av< Swl^ In white,auq| Black aiuiflHHppVVfElis, ha-vinc or open stripesJiKe drawn work. French challles bavlng blue or brov& floral patterns OR an ecru ground. uuu ri!(.uinniBiiun}8 »uu« umi than 7 000 were cauaht and asohviiated ' 4,cul" niuums UUVUIK UIUU <»r wowa . ^ ed jail until discharged by dw» [„t year ' g " P y floral patterns on an ecru ground. o f l a w . ^ ^ * t • • ^ • r ^ . \ / ; / ~ ^ "r ^ 'C* ^ ' r"V- " * ^ •»' ^ ^ lj 1 ' ' * V j 4>' X » <, H >w ' n: ' V- , '.«/>.:4 .'A' * ";M • % '• *'"• | " S : : 1

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