Decatur Democrat, Volume 27, Number 7, Decatur, Adams County, 18 May 1883 — Page 1

VOLUME XXVII.

The Democrat, Official Paper of tho County. A. J. HILL. Editor and Business I Manager. J I ' TERMS : ONE DOLLAR AND FIFTY CENTS IN ADVANCE : TWO DOLLARS PER TEAR IF NOT PAID IN ADVANCE. B B. ALUMw.riwt'. w. n Nr.uca.OuMar ». Smulmi, Vice Free t. THE ADAMS COUNTY BANK, DECATUR, INDIANA, 1 Thia Bank i« now open fur the traaaaelion of a general banking bneinesa. We buy and sell Town, Township and Oennty Orders. 26jy79tf ~~ PETERSON & HUFFMAN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW, DECATCa, IKDUWA. Will practice in Adams and adjoining eeanties. Especial attention given to collections and titles to real estate. Are Notaries Public and draw deeds and mortgages Real estate bought, sold and rented on reasonable terms. Office, rooms 1 and 2, I. 0 0. F. building. 25jy79tf H.'CO VERDALE, Attorney at Lavu NOTARY PUBLIC, PXCATCS, INDIANA. Office over Welfley’s grocery, opposite the Court House. B. R. FREEMAN, M. D. PHYSICIAN 4 SURGEON. DECATUR, INDIANA. Office over Dorwin & Holthouses’ Drug Store. Residence on Third Street, between Jackson and Monroe. Professional calls promptly attended. Nol 26, No. 84. ts. W. H. MYERS, trick A* Slone Jflason Contract DECATUR, INDIANA. Joliclts work of all kinds in bis line. Persons contemplating building might make a point by consulting him. Estimates on application, ▼25n46m3. '’SEYMOUR WORDEN, Auc tiouc er. Decatur - - Ind. Will attend to all calls in this and adjoining counties. A liberal patronage solicited. nSfitf. ~AUCUST KRECHTER CIGAR MANUFACTURER, DZCATUB, - - INDIANA. A full line of Fine cut, Plug, Smoking Tobacco, Cigars, Cigarettes and Pipes of •11 kinds always on hand at my store. G. F. KINTZ, Civil Engineer and Convey ancer. Deeds, Mortgages, Contracts, and all legal instruments drawn with neatness and dis« patch. Special attention to ditch and grave road petitions. Office over Welfley’s Grocery Store, opposite the Court House, Decatur, Indiana. 87-m6 TO BUILDERS. STONE AND BRICK WORk, Cisterns and Chimneys contracted for, or built to order, and workmanship guaranteed. Orders and correspondence solicited. F. W. SCHAFER. AND SHOES. One Door west of Niblick, Crawford and Sons. Henry Winncs, DECATUR. INDIANA. One of the best selected stock of Boots, Shoes, new and Seasonable Goods, etc., including everything in his line, and prices guaranteed as low as can be found in this market. Come and see for yourselves. KUKKLIJ annuai ’y robbed • their victims, lives prolonged, happiness and health restored •y the use of the great GERMAN INVIGORATOR which positively and permanently curst 11*1 potency (caused by excesses of any kind.) Seminal Weakness and all diseases that follow as a sequence of SelfAbuse, as loss of energy, K»m of memory, universal lassitude, pain in the back, dimness of vision, premature old age, and many other diseases that lead to insanity or consumption and a premature grave. Send for circulars with testlmonals free by mail. The In vigrorator it told at fl per box, or six boxes for $5, by all druggists, or, will be sent free by mail, ■ocurely sealed, on receipt of price, by addressing, F. J, C'HESEY; Druggist, 187 Summit St., Toledo, Ohio. Bole Agent for the United States. B. A. Pieroe & do. Sole Agents at Deontar Daughters. Wires and Mothers. I»r. Marvhisi's Uatliolicon Female Remedy. Guaranteed to give satisfaction or money refunded Will cure Female diseases. All ovarian troubles, iaflamation and ulceration, falling and displacements or bearing down feeling, irregularities, barrenness, change of life, luccor»hoea, besides many weaknesses springing from the above, like headache, bloating, spina! weakness, sleeplessness, nervous debility, palpitation of the heart, etc For sale hy Druggists. Price $1 00 and $1.50 per bottle. Send to °r. J. B. Marchisi, Utica, N. Y., for pamphlet, free. For sale by Dorwin and Hclthouwe. — No. 2 m 6 Posit vc Cure lor Piles To the people of this country we wou.d say we have been given the Agency of Dr. Marchisi sltalian Pile Ointment —warrated to cure or money refunded —Internal, External, Blind, Bleeding or Itching Piles. Price 50c a box. Foi sale by Dorwin and Holthouse.—No. 2mo. Roeh Candy Cough Cure. Warranted io cure or money refunded. Coughs. Colds, Hoarseness, Throat and Lung troubles, (also good for children.) ‘Rock Candy Cough Cure contains the healing properties of pure white Rock Candy with extracts of Roots and Herbs Only 26 eta Urge bottles sl-0' cheapest to buy For sale by Per win and Holthouse. *0.'2a8., <

The Decatur Democrat.

THE NEWS CONDENSED. THE EAST. ' The New York H orM lias passed in* to the possession ot Mr. Joseph I'ufitzer, of I the St louis The price paid Was about 84i»,"00. not including the building The paper will continue Democratic in polit.es..,.bixty-one head of Jerstiv rlltle I brought *32 080 at New York. The King of Ashantee sold for t;m highest figures ever obtained at auction., $6,500. Ward McConkey was executed at ' Pittsburgh for the murder of George A. McClure, in Dead Man e fcolltrtk, near , McKeesport, Pa, on the night of Aug. 2, . 1881. MctVmkey retired to bed about 10 ■ o clock the preceding night and slept so I Bouiidly that he had to be awakened in the ; morning. He ate a hearty and I when his spiritual advit-*rt \i S ited him [ was as unconcerned tik he had been all i? 1 !? i , the cap was adjusted he i said, all ye murderera” Death was caused from strangulation Life was extinct in seven minutes. The hearing* of i the condemned was of total iudlftcrtnce not a sing’e tremor benqr i>,*cf ptible and ■ even laugh ng a. h» mkrhed from the fail ! to the BCaflWd... .The Standard oil-works at Communipaw, N. J., were struck by , ; lightning and set on fire. The flames communicating with the oil tanks, one explosion followed another, and ai last the storehouse where the barreled Oil Was kept was attacked, which succumbed! Six tiremen were overtaken bv a flood of Witzin- oil and perished The 'to s is estimated at 81,500,00), the property destroyed including twelve hugv- tttnks, eighteen cars, six barges, a flrtdge, three docks and five brick buildings. Capt. W. W. Bush, of Lockport, N. Y., who was the first man to enlist in response to President Lincoln's call for 75,00) men to serve ninety issued April 15 1861, has been presented with a guld badge a foot in length, in testimony bf the fact cited above... .Hannah R. Grant, mother of ex-President Grant diet) quite suddenly at the resident* of her daughter, Mrs. Mary Corbin at Jcfttev City Heights, aged ‘.H years. The Hod. Israel Washburn, ex-Gov-nor of Maine, died in Philadelphia after a brief illness. He was born in Livermore. Me., in 1813. In 1850 he was for the first time elected to Congress, and served for five term a He was afterward elected Governor of the State, and some time after expiration of his term was appointed Collector of Customs at Portland, Maine. He Was a brother of the Hon. E> B. Washburne, of Chicago .... Because the saloons are closed at Wilkes- ! barre, Pa, Sundays the proprietors want I barber and cigar "shops and livery stables also prohibited, and the sale of milk stopped, but the Mayor will not interfere. William B. Carroll, deceased, a clerk in the office of the Comptroller of the city of New York, is discovered to have stolen $143,6 0 from the city. His thefts began with small sums in 1879, c n.inuing until August. 1882. THK WtfST, j Crop reports from every county in , indiah& have been published, from which the following averages are drawn*. North Division—Wheat, per cent, of condition, 70; corn, per cent, planted and to be planted, 100; clover, per cent of condition, 97; timothy. per cent of condition, 99; peach buds, per cent alive, 30; apple buds, per- cent alive, 88. Central Division—Wheat 70, corn 100, clover 68, timothy 96, peaches 21, apples 77. Southern Division—Wheat 76, corn 97, i clover 89, timothy 95, peaches 70, apples 90. The Indiana Farmer publishes reports from Ohio and Illinois showing the relative conditions : Wheat, Indiaua 72, Illinois 73, Ohio 71; corn, Indiana 99, Illinois 100. Ohio 100; peaches. Indiana 40. Illinois 61, Ohio 20; apples, the same in ail the States. A political fend between two baa dements in Dodge City, Kan , has resulted in anarchy how ruling the town The ' Mayor is in league with the desperadoes, ' who drive persons out freelv, watch trains i closely, ana even prevented for ten days past telegraphic infoi mation being sent to ' the outside world. A request has been made to Gov. Glick to place the city under martial , law. Matters have assumed a serious aspect, and life and property are endangered. The United States District Courts of low’a and Minnesota, at Des Moines, gave an opinion on the celebrated drivewell cases, holding that the patent was void Hobbins A Colvin's circus was blown down by a hurricane at Freeport, DL Wild confusion prevailed among the small audience present, but all escaped without injury. At the St. Louis city hospital, a patient named Dan Kelleher died very suddenly, and two other inmates sank into a semi-unconscious condition, and were only revived after great exertion and applications of an electric battery. It seems a serious blunder was made by the hospital druggist, who gave a mixtun* of chloral instead of the proper prescription... .The bank of Townsend, North & -Co., of Vassar, Mich., was burglariously entered a few ; nights ago. The double doors of the vault and the time lock of the specie drawer were blown open. The thieves secured $3,060 in gold and SI,OOO in silver. They weie interrupted and fled, leaving the currency drawer, containing s7,oooin currency, partly broken open.... During the heaw thunder and rain storm at Avoca, lowa, Cook's livery stable was struck bv lightning and set on fire. The flames spread until SIOO,OOO worth of property had been reduced to ashes. The people of Cleveland were startled the other day by the announcement that Amasa Stone, the well-known rialroad man, capitalist and philanthropist, had killed himself. Since fast November Mr Stone has been afflicted with insomnia, brought al-out by indigestion, and of late his condition has been so much worse that he was unable to obtain more than an hour or two of sleep in a night He .-hot himself through the heart at his residence in Cleveland. Mr. Stone leaves a fortune estimated at from $6,00-‘,6UO to $10,000,000. ... The managers of the Bay View Rolling Mills, at Md\\aukee. are making even preparation to shut down on June 1. when the | present stale of wages runs out, and at which time the men were to gel answer to their demand to be paid every two weeks, as the men are at Pittsburgh. Over 1,200 men will be thrown out of work.... The ta tional war at Dodge City. Kan terminated without the shedding of as ’much blood as the exigencies of the case seemed to require... .At Asherville. Kan., three children of Isaac Wilkeson were burred to death in their fathers bain....At Nanponee Ind., the boiler in Gueyer's shingle mill exi lode I, blow ing two men to atoms, fatally wounding four others, and entirely wreck ing the building. A tornado of formidable dimensions struck Kansas Citv, and within a few minutes it had caused the destruction of $390,000 worth of property. Three lives are known to have been lost and many persons were injured more or less severely. lhe storm was a terrible one while it lasted. Hailstones as large as hens eggs tel in great quantilea The air was filled with flying debris of the buildings which stood in the cyclone’s path. Men and ’ women, horses and buggies were hurled thro igh the air. The escapes in many cases were miraculous. The storm ha> :ett 1 havoc and destruction in its path, ine streets were strewn with mattresses, pieces of lumber, and household articles In many i places plsnlfs and pieces of lumber were driven three or four feet into the ground. Wyandotte, near Kan-as City, suffeied severely and the little manufacturing suburb of Argentine was completely w recked. • The divorce suit of Theresa Fair vs. Jr mes G. Fair came up in the District Court at Virginia City. Nev. No defense was made and in one hour the ease was closed and a decree oi divorce granted MrK Fair. She was awarded »4 5iM),010 in bonds and coni siderable property. She was also awarded the custody of 'the three m nor ehfldren, Vuginia. Theresa Alice and Charles. The oldest boy. James G. fair. Jr was awarded to the defendant.... Reliable reports from the >prnr yheat section of the country, embracing ria Dakota and Minnesota, Northein Xcrthern Xelra ka. and five counties in Xorthern Ulin'is show the outlook to oe ra oi able, more to than tor a numteroi ; reais, with a mater-aJ tocreas? m , i the acreage sown..,.lhe Chicago An- |

derson pree ed-brick works were destroyed by ft ce. The loss fe 1*250,010..... The JaVkson Iron Company's furnace at layette, Mich., wag totally destroyed bv fire, Loss, $ OO.fOO; no insurance... .Hre in the lumber district of Cincinnati destroyed property of the aggregate value of $175,b0a The cyclone which did such serious damage at and around Kansas City extended over a greater area than was indicated by the first reports. Numerous small towns were visited by th»* storm, dwellings and public buildpitfß beifig damaged or destroyed, and in several instances loss of life wa- occasioned. At Macon City live persons were killed and ten or fifteen injured. Several of the wounded at Kansas City cannot recover. The property losses will amount to hundreds of thousand* of ’dollars. Wind and hail did great damage in Southwestern Michigan to farm houses and young cropa The greatest destruction occurred in the vicinity of Sturgis, where several dwellings and barns were wrecked. There was damage done by hail at several points in Illinois, also. The village of Southport, near Indianapolis, was partially wrecked by a tornado, two chu. dies and a school house being among the buildings demolished. A frame school-house at White P’geon. Mich., filled with children, was overturned by a hurricane, one boy be ing killed and several little ohes badly injured. ... .The Iron steamship Mississippi, owned by the. Orisgoli Improvement Company, bnnieil at Seattle. Washington .Territory, with 1,100 bushels of coal The chief engineer was burned to death. The bunker timbers fell, killing one man and injuring an. t ier. The vessel was a total loss, she formerly belonged to the Government. and was used as a blockade mnnt r.... Small fruit growers in Southern Illinois are much alarmed at the ravages of an insect which attacks ripening strawberries, rendoiing them unfit for fitilrket. THE SdUTi The Florida Ship Canal Company as organized at Washington by the election of ex-Gov. Brown, of Tennessee, President, and the Hon. William Windom Vice Pres- | ident It is estimated that the canal will I cost S3O, (00, CO J, and will be completed in three years. An aged gentleman who had long been paralytic, and a colored servant, lost their lives by the burning of the house in which they lived in Baltimore. A third inmate df the house sustained serious injuries by leaping from a window to escape from the flames.... .Five thousand dollars’ worth of gambling apparatus was burned pn the public square of Nashville. Tenn, by order of the Criminal Court Five hundred gamblers left the city on account of the law making gambling a felony. A large number headed for Chicago ... .At Warwick. Texas, two Mexicans killed themselves with the same knife. One stabbed the other in the region of the heart, leaving the knife sticking in the wound. The other then quickly drew the knife from his own breast and stabbed his antagonist At the South Carolina convict campl on the Georgetown and Lanes railroad, nine lavor of the defendants. The royalty sought to be recovered under the Deuchfie d patent for cooling and drying meal amounted to $1 ,OO(i,(MX', while the Downton patent for manufacturing middling flour was estimated to be worth S3,CO'J,CO >... .The Supreme Court denied the petition for a rehearing cf the Louisiana and Virginia bond cases. As D. C. Hutchins, who had killed a man near Shreveport, was being takefi | to jail his guards we. e surrounded by a mob i bent on hanging him. Seeing that escape I was impossible, Hutchins drew a dirk and stabbed himself to the heart..,.The Hancock building at Austin. Tex., was totally destroyed bv fire. Loss, insurance, $16,000. The dwelling of John Martin, of 1 Stanford, Ky., was burned, consuming two of his children, aged 2 and 4 years. An older daughter in attempting to rescue them was | badly burned. POLITICAL. A bill prohibiting the manufacture, sale, and use of any article, device or invention for the purpose of surreptitiously destroying human life and injuring property : by explosion or fire passed the Pennsylvania Senate. During a debate in the Pennsylvania | Senate upon the proposed Prohibitory amendment to the constitution, a member censured President Arthur for co ijitenauc- ' ing the drinking of liquors in the White House, a practice, the Senator said, which had not prevailed during the incumbency of Presidents Haves and Garfield... .The Vermont Senate has refused to enlarge the Governor's powers so that he could remove the Superintendents and physicians of the State institutions. Paul Strobach, who was the Republican candidate for Congress in the Second district of Alabama in 1880, being defeated bv Herber i. Democrat, was recently appointed United States Marshal for the District of Alabama. Preliminary to a trans- ; fer of the office, agents of the Department of Justice have been examining the | accounts of his predecessor, especially as regards the alleged irregularities in the payment of Deputy Marshals, of whom Strobach was one. The result is that the Grand Jurv of the United States District Court at Montgomery has just returned five indictments against Strobach for defrauding the Government while acting as Deputy Marshal Strobach claims that he is being made the victim of a conspiracy by an opposing faction of the Republican party. In an interview the other day, exGov. Seymour, of New York, said that Samuel J. Tilden’s business habits had caused him to be misunderstood by the Democrats of the country, but nevertheless he was an able wan. On the tariff question Mr. Seymour favors one for revenue only, and thinks it will be a subject widely dis- ' cussed in the coming Presidential I campaign. The ex-Govemor also said that Congress should pass a law I preventing plots being hatched in this country against the lives of citizens or of resi- ; dents of foreign countries.... Since the refusal of the Supreme Court to grant a rehearing in the Virginia bond case, leading Virginia Democrats say that the debt question will not be permitted to become a political issue in future campaigns, but that their supporters will accept the validity of the Riddleberger law, and try and defeat the “Liberals” as represented by Mahone and Riddleberger on some new issuer WASHINGTON. Mr. Charles Lyman, Chief Clerk of the Treasury Department, has been appointed Chief Examiner of the Civil Service Commi cion, the nomination of Mr. Keim having been recalled from the President. President Arthub has not yet fully mapped out his programme for the summer months, butitisquite certain that .he will take a trip to California about the Ist of August ...A statement prepared by the Sixth Auditor of the treasury shows the receipts <>t the Postottiee Department from July 1 to Dec. 31, IKB2. being the first two quarters of the current fiscal year,to lie 8221tctl.'.d'.i. Expenditures for the same period, J2oyd.i,++s—leaving a surplus of 81,389,534. Secretary Folc.er has requested the Chief of the Bureau of Navigation to prepare a report on the law relating to the lauding of pauper immigrants This action is Us meet complaints that Great Britain is sending paupers to the United States general. Col. Unda, chief of staff of Geh. Fuero. the Chihuahuan military commander, who is in Albuquerque, New Mexico, state® that Gen. Crook s presence in old Mexico is approved l>v the Government of Mexico, and tl at the combined forces of Gena Fuero and Crook will form a cordon about the Apaches which will be impos-ible to penetrate. Col. Vnda is confident that the campaign will result in the ext rmination'ot the hostile Apaches.... The N iona! Temperance Society and Publication House have re-elected John N. Stearns S -cretarv. an t have chosen B.shop Hopkins, of Mui -aehuse ts, Presi ent. The receipts in the past vear were Sb '.ol*'. the expenditures <• 1,(100... .The rebels at Miragoane Havti. are reported to have blown up a luidge there with dynamite, kil ng 200 people and wounding as many more Tur Pope has released from her vows ' the nun in the Hochelaga convent. Montreal, 1 whose alleged illegal d.-tention caused a sen- , sation a few weeks since, and the young | woman has returned to ber family.... .Td-

DECATUR, ADAMS COUNTY. INDIANA, FRIDAY, MAY 18, 1883.

bacco manufacturers complain that they are subjected to great inconvenience and Jobs by the inadequate supply of Government tax stamps Five murderers fell victims to the hangman on Friday, May 11. Angelo Corretti, the Italian murderer of Daniel Cash, a fellow-convict a Sing Sing, Dec. 31, 1881, wa-s hanged in the prison yard at that Sylvester K. Makinson, for the murder oj Mrs. Maggie Copeland, was hanged in the jail yard at Cambridge, 111 The condemned protested his inn > ence. He ate and drank neartiD at h s 'a t dinner on * arth. J« hn W. Jackson, for the murder of Samuel L Hull, was strung up at Jackson, Ohio. He slept soundly over eiffit hours thh previous night, ate a heflrtv breakfast, atld was cheer* ful. Jerry Blalock, the murderer of Thomas Bradenburg, was hanged at Jacksonport, Ark. The condemned was conver; ed. He said he was j repared for death. Henry Rivels, who murdered Henry Hyams five years ago, was executed at East Providence, La. A large crowd witnessed the execution.... There were 149 failures in the United States reported to liratltftreeCs during the week ending May 11,17 more than the preceding v eek, : 1 more than the corresponding week ol 18S2, and 1,-5 more than the name week of D 81... .The recent flgut between the Mexican troops under Gen. Torres and the renegade Apaches in the Sierra Madre*mountains was a fierce one. tbe Mexicans showing remarkable courage and skill The Indians left e even dead bucks on the field, while the loss to the troops was five killed and eight eeriouslv wounded. The resignation of Lieut. Col. Guido Dges, to take immediate effect, has been received at Gen. Terry’s headquarters. CoL Ilges re ently tendered his resignation td take effect Jan. 1, 1884, but was notified by the Secretary of War that, unless he amended his res gnation as he has now done, he would be court-martialed for duplicating his ac omits... .A new counterfeit $5 gold co n has made its appearance. It purports to be a coin of the United States struck at New Orleans in is 13. It is heavily plated, and 491.7 grains light. An address “to the Irish-American societies and to all friends of Ireland” has been issued by the Executive Council of the Irish National League of America. The council met at Detroit, organized for busine s and adopted the manifesto referred to. The address is similar in tone and supplemen.a v to the declaration made at the Philadelphia Convention. It solicits all Irish American societies of every kind to become ilfflllatevl vrith tlic National and calls for meetings to be held at which tire pr n iples of the league shall be ra ified.... A dispatch from Victoria, B. C., reports that a Chinese riot at Lyton, on the line of the railway, causes considerable excitement The Chinese assaulted the white foreman during the day. and at night a vigilance committee of twenty whites, disguised, burst in.o the Cbiiv secamp and beat the sleeping nu n aLout the heads and bodies with clubs, kil ing one and injuring a largb number. It is feared five or six will die...* The town of Qu’appelle, Manitoba, was almost destroyed by fire. The Dominion Government's immigration building, stored to the roof with settlers effects, was consumed. The loss is placed at $100,000.... Five acres of Leamington, Ont. were burnt over, the only fire apparatus being an old fire-engine, which was in bad condition. FOREIGN. ’ Four thousand Chinese or Annamese troops attacked Honoi, the capital of Tonquin, but were repulsed by the French , France is determined to establish herself at Tonquin, and asks the King of Annam td recognize her protectorate over his dominions. i At Dublin, Joseph Mullett was found guilty of conspiracy to murder Dennis Field, one of the jurors in the Hynes case, and was sentenced to imprisonment for life. Another adjournment was taken in the case of the men arrested in London for the unlawful possession of nitro-glycerine. At the next heai ing their commitment on a charge of treason-felony will be a ked....At Paris, as a wedding party was going to church, a rejected lover shot and killed the expectant bridegroom, and then poisoned himself. Edward O’Brien, Thomas Doyle and Edward McCaffrey, recently indicted for conspiracy to murder, were arraigned at Dublin. O'Brien and Doyle pleaded not guilty McCaffrey was subsequently indicted for the murder of Burke, and arraigned to plead to that charge. He said he was not guilty, and a-ked that counsel be as kned him? The trial was postponed.... In the Bow Street Police Court, London, all the dynamite conspiracy prisoners excel t O'Connor, alias Dalton, whom the authorities are unable to connect with the others, were committed for trial on a charge of treason-felony. Lynch, alias Norman, the informer, was committed on a charge of misdemeanor. O'Connor was discharged.... The Pope informed Archbishop (Yoke of Dublin, at an and ence, that certain grave resolutions regarding the Irish trouble would speedily be promulgated, including a censure of such of the Ir.sh clergy as had promoted the Parnell fund... Mullett, who was sentenced at Dublin to 1 penal servitude for life for participating in the attempt to murder Juror Dennis Field, exclaimed on leaving the dock, after receiving his sentence, that he would get justice elsewhere. The Irish, ne said, would get justice for him.... Announcement was made in the House of Commons that the British Government would consider the question of permitting the planting of tobacco in the United Kingdom Oherlihy and Kennedy, alias Feathj erstone, charged with having been engaged ■ in the dynamite conspiracy, were arraigned i at Liverpool and remanded for another week. Joe Brady, the first ‘lnvincible” convicted of participation in the Phoenix Park butchery, was hanged at Dublin on the morning of the 14th inst. Reporters were denied admission, the Irish executive and British Home Secretary having sternly resolved that none but officials should witness the execution. It is sought to make the culprit's fate mysterious and ignominious, and to ca t allpossib e obloquv upon his memory. The Duke of Connaught, third son of Queen Victo ia, has been appointed to the command of a brigade in India, in older to give him an opportunity to qualify himself for the office of Viceroy of India, ; which tbe Queen desires to see him occupy. ihe international Fish Exposition at Txndon was opened by the Prince of Wa’es, who regretted the unavoidable absence of Queen Victoria, but, in her Majesty’s name, returned th; nks to the nations participating in the display... .Bismarck's illness is now said to have been greatly exI aggerated. his only ailment being his customary neuralgia. Joe Brady, the first of the Irish Invincibles to get his neck into the hangman's noose for the murder of Lord Cavendish and | Under Secretary Burke, was visited by his mother just before the execution. She was heard to exclaim: “Mind, Jde. no ustatement.” Brady smiled, and replied; “Don't be foolish, do you think I am a fool?" It is stated that the mother threatI ened to disown her son if he gave the Government any information. Brady made no I rt itement to the jail chaplain or to the Govi ernor of the prison. One of the i last th’ngs he did was to write ' a letter to his mother. Biady was a stone-cutter, an intelligent, well-in-i formed fellow, and a powerful young man physically. He leaves twenty-tour brothers ; and sisters, all of whom occupy good posi- • tions in society. His father and mother are | both living, arid are under 60 years of age. A cable dispatch from Rome an- , nounces that a letter has been seut from i th3 Vatican to the Irish Catholic Bishops de- ’ daring it to be intolerable that Catholic I priests, much more Bishops, of the church i should pt omote any such object as that of | rai ing a fund for the benefit of Mr. Parnell ,I’ s sa d tha the document goes on to con- | tit mn all collections u which may be em- > ployed as a means of exciting rebellion against existing laws." i A'l Arabic MS., dated 1365, contains th curious information that merchant vessels trading in the Indian ocean at that time carried divers, whose duty it was to discover and stop leaks in the hull of the craft below the water-line Prof Loomis states that the heaviest rainfall is met in the rain-belt that . surrounds nearly the whole globe lying ’ between the northeast and southeast I trade winds.

ikbIANA feTATE NEWS. Thb Indiana State Medical Society held its session at Indianapolis last week. Evansville is to have a new cavalry company. There is now but one such company in the State—that at Portland, Jay county. A telephone line from Corydon to Leavenworth is being constructed, and steps are being taken to continue it from Leavedworth to Cannelton and Tell City. Jebry S. Halt., of Crawford county, succeeds Captain Stanberry as store-keeper at the Insane Asylum, and Dr. Foulds displaces Dr. Browffi as physician In the female department The prospects of the Rose Polytechnic, at Terre Haute, are very flattering. It is expected the number of applications for admission to the freshman class of next year will be greater than the school can accommodate. The Rev. F. A. Friedley, President of the DePauw College, has been tendered the Presidency of thb Purdue University and been urged to accept it. The friends of President Friedley trust he will remain at the head of DePauw College. At Jeffersonville, recently, a scaffolding at Howard’s shipyard, upon which ten men were working, broke loose from its fastenings. and the men were precipitated to the ground, a distance of about fifteen feet. Four of the men escaped unhurt, while the bthers sustained severe bruises. At Williamsport, on St. Mary’s river, ten miles south of Fort Wayne, the dam at Cody's grist-mill was partially destroyed by the explosion of dynamite placed by malicious parties unknown. Eight hundred dollars will repair the damage, and S6OO that to houses in the village. Nobody hurt. The explosion was heard six miles. Patents have been issued to Indiana inventors as follows: Cortland Ball, Indianapolis, polishing iron ; John L. Barnes, Hecla, Bider press; Wilshire M. Davis, bed spririg; Williani H. Drew, assignor td himself and 8. Fields, Laporte, carpet stretcher; Henry A Gore, Goshen, staplepuller; Myron H. Lincoln. Bedford, combined seed-planter and fertilizer distributor; George W. Lutz, Indianapolis, speculum and vaginal irrigator; same, stem pessary; Daniel W. Marmon, Indianapolis, roller mill; Edmund D. Meagher, South Bend, plow; two patents; JohnE. Sanders, Indianapolis, dieplates; John Sedgwick, Richmond, wire and cord stretcher; Andrew Steveley, Frankfort, canopy for fording beds ;N. C. Swindler, Belleville, straw-stacking machine; Johd Winebrener. Cromwell, ice-hook. THE NEW INSANE HOSPITALS. The new asylums ordered by the last Legislature are practically and for all purposes to which they may be put under the law establishing them, under the control of the new Insane Asylum Commission. The body ?.s composed of Governor Porter as ex officio member; Judge J. C. Robinson, of Spencer; Defoe Skinner, Esq., of Valparaiso; General William Grose, of New Castle, and Colonel Joseph Gray, of Noblesville. The use to which these asylums are to be put is not determined by the statute Establishing them. The generally received impression that they are to be permanent homes for the incurably insane has no foundation in any authoritative action yet taken, and is only based on the fact that the present hospital is for cases of acute mania, which may be restored by judicious treatment. The new Asylum Commission has no statutory or prescribed relations with the Board of Trustees for the Indiana Hospital for the Insane; there is not a member common to the two boards. The Trustees of the Indiana Hospital are Dr. T. H. Harrison, of Lebanon, President; Philip M. Gapen, of Indianapolis, and Dr. R. H. Tarleton, of Martinsville, as Trustees. This Board has control, under the law, of the Indiana Hospital. They can elect or discharge the Superietendent, confirm or reject his medical appointees, and have the general charge of the revenue and disbursement. The new Asylum Commissionershave impelial power to locate, build, equip, organize and designate the purpose of the three new asylums. The only restriction ir. that one of these shall be located at Evansville. There are an average of 2,500 cases of insanity in the State of Indiana. Os these, 1,100 are cared for in the present hospital, while over 1,000 are outside of hospitals. As to how they are kept and treated the public is more ignorant even than of their actual existence. Insane hospitals stand as among the best exponents of organized Christian charity. This great charity is turned over to the State, which by proxy accomplishes the requisite good without entailing individual discomfort. There s no charge put by the State constitution upon the Legislature that should be carried out with more conscientiousness, with greater judgement, and more consumate ability than the order given by the people thirty years ugo, through the constitution, that the care of the insane should be obligatory on the part of the Legislature. This has only been partially done 5 the establishment of new hospital is a step to its consumation. It seems unnecessary that a State should have two insane asylum commissions, one with its duties prescribed largely by precedent and another entirely a law unto themselves, and the two entirely disconnected with each other. The word is a unit—the care and restoration of the insane ; it needs but one board and one head. There are between 600 and a 1,000 new ca/-es to be provided for each year. Our insane neighbor has his rights and the sane have theirs. The insane should not be kept in private families. The strain breaks down the well; the sufferers are rarely rightly provided for. This social skeleton cannot be safely kept in the household. Duty is not met when it is immured in the county house, or even when the benevolent intentions of the people become systematized, hardened and crystalized into vast piles of masonry. The Question, “Who is my neighbor!” and the still earlier one, “Am I my brother's keeper'?” are not set aside when our insane are thrust into asylums, or our •riminals imprisoned; they still come within the prescription that thou shalt love thy neighbor as thyself It is hoped that these two boards will act in unison, especially when it comes to the’work of putting the new hospitals into actual use, and determining their future work and sphere. They might hold joint meetings, make use of all past experience, and should, as we have no doubt they will, act wisely in view of the great trust thrust upon them. Except Mr. Tarleton they are all new men to the business. They doubtless have much to learn and unlearn. Among the questions they will have to meet, are the relative merits of the so-called cottage system and the consolidate i system of construction, what class of inmates the new’ asylums are to receive; whether it it is not better to make the present centrally-located buildings the home of the incurables, and the new asylums places for the treatment of acute cases which may recover. The capacity of the present buildings can be easily and cheaply extended to 1,800 beds and patients under tbe present medical staff and management, a number equal to the present list of chronic cases.—lndianapolis Journal.

At Washington, the jury in the State against Janies Gold, for the murder of John Bigham, at Alfordsville, last Match, retarded a verdict of manslaughter, assessing his punishment at four years' imprisonment in the penitentiary. The murderer was satisfied with the verdict, and Judge Malott immediately passed sentence upon him. Mrs. Waldron, the venerable mother of E. H. Waldron, General Manager of the Lakd Erie and Western railway, died very sudden - ly, at Lafayette. She was apparently jri good health during the forenoon. At noon 1 ber son called her to dinner, but receiving I no respone, he w’ent to her room and found her sitting in her chair dead. She was 72 years of age. Heart disease was the cause of death. A dispatch to the Indianapolis Journal from Muncie, says: “During the past two months eight barns have been burned in this county, and every one of them contained a self-binding reaper. The last one was consumed May 8, and belonged to Adam Hhfller, residing rifear De Soto, this county. This destruction of self-binding reapers had attracted the attention of farmers. w r ho now fear to store them in their buildings, and it is believed if the war against them by farm laborers continues that the insurance companies will refuse to continue policies on buildings having in them these labor-saving harvesters. * The Gravel Road company engaged in building a rbad nbrth from Seymour, recently purchased an acre of ground froni which to procure gravel. The ground purchased is three miles from here, near Rockford, but a short distance from White river, and has proved to be an ancient buryingground, it is supposed of the Mound Builders. About a dozen skeletons have been exhumed, most of which are in a good state of preservation. Hon. A. A. Davidson, Superintendent of the road, and Dr. Millard F. Gerrish have made a careful examination of the bon?s. The bodies had been buried with the head to the east, and not in the sitting position characteristic of the Indians. Two earthen jars, or vases, were found, which u i uniipio in Numerou.. 1it.... nu-l bowlders not common to the. locality were unearthed. There is an absence of arrowheads. or Indian relics. Indianapolis Journal: Shortly after the L., N. A. & C. train had passed the station at .Cedar Lake, the other night, the gas stove n the baggage car exploded, setting fire to it. The clothes of the newsboy in the bag. gage car caught fire while he was attempting to suppress the flames The express messenger also received most serious injuries. The bell-rope was burned, so that no communication could be had with the engineer to stay the flying train. The boy jumped from the blazing car, and, finally, when the flames burst from the car, the engineer saw the trouble, and stopped the train. But before this was done the whole interior of the car was ablaze. It was filled with the passengers’ baggage, and express and mail matter, all of which was consumed. There were no means of extinguishing fire bn the train, and it had to be allowed to burn out, thus delaying the train nearly four hours. What Is a Sponge I Scientists have wrestled long and bitterly over the nature and origin of the sponge. Up to not many years ago most of them agreed on classifying it simply as one of the most infinite series of submarine vegetables. Later scientific opinion, however, sets down the sponge as an animal, or rather a bunch of minute animals of low organism, cell-shaped, equipped with a stomach and digestive machinery, throwing off from their bodies masses of fecundated eggs, and developing in combination with each other that fibrous mass which ultimately leaches our markets as the sponge of commerce. Take one of these masses which we call a sponge and examine it more critically. It will be found to be a group of small fibrous cells which, after ramifying more or less, connect with large round apertures penetrating far into the sponge mass. By suet on,* or some more occult process, the sea water is drawn through the smaller cells and their partitions. The living organism then takes up from the passing fluid and devours the minute algte, on which it is supposed to feed. The water, then loaded with excrement, pours outward in a constant current through the larger orifices. Haeckel, the famous German naturalist, contends that the sponge sheds most luminous scientific light on the remoter methods of evolution. So that, contemplating one of these inert masses of fiber hanging in the drug store, evolutionists may regard it with something of the reverential regard due to a protoplasmic ancestor. — Neui York Post. A Bellowing Match. ’ Dumaine, the Paris actor, claimed to have the most powerful voice in France. One of his fellow-actors, Machanette, disputed the honor with him one day, and, after much wrangling. they agreed to settle their claims by actual test at the Porte St. Martin case. “I’ll lay a wager that I can break a pane of glass by simply calling, ‘Come in,’ ” said Machanette. ■ “I’ll wager that you will not be able to do it, and that I will,’’ said Dumaine. “Done.” Dumaine commenced. The winuow rattled, but did not break; but there was a panic among the waiters. Then Machanette tried, and lo! ten panes of glass were shattered. Dumaine owned that he had lost; but it was not long before they both found out that two of their friends, overhearing the wager, had placed themselves outside the case and smashed the window with their canes at the moment of Machanette’s bellowing. Poisonous (jAialities of Metals. As a law, metals are poisonous in proportion to the elevation of their atomic weight, or the low degree of their specific heat. This law is the result of comparatively recent and certainly most interesting investigations. Thus, in comparing cadmium and zinc, it was found that the former was much more active than zinc, the two having the relations indicated; barium, again, was more poisonous than strontium, and the latter than calcium. This law has also been verified by comparison of the groups of tellurites; thus, the latter and selenites are extremely poisonous—much more so than the sulphides, which are scarcely dangerous. Finally, oxygen, which belongs to the group of sulphur, selenium and tellurium, is only poisonous when animals are exposed to the compressed gas, so that their blood is made to contain about double the normal onantitv. Hfnßy Ward Beecher says: “Conscience neither thinks, judges nor decides anything. It is a pure and simple emotion. The old-fashioned way of representing conscience as God’s vi- ertgint in us as that which determh. er reveals rig|jt or wrong to us, was well enough for all practical purposes, but as mental philosophy it was greatly out of the way.”

1 HOME FOR EVERT ONE. — BY BILL ABB. What thh people want and ought to have are homes and a flian'c—homes and a living chance. Give a family t» home of their own and it is the best safeguard for the perpetuity of a government and the happiness of a people. I was always sorry for a family who had no home, but had to dodge about from house to hhtfsO and place to place—no orchard to improve, no flowers to love' and nurse, no sacred spot, no castle, as Blackstone calls it. I don’t know how other people prize it, but my home is the dearest spot on earth to me and to my family. There is no place like home—not a rented home, forever wanting repairs, but a home to live in and die in —which the boys who’ ave found work afar off can look back to with affection and revisit with pure delight, and where the good wife and daughter can plant the vine and rose-bush and sow' the flower seed, and the orchard and the grape-vines bring their fruit in due season. It won’t do to say that the poor are too lazy to work and but land and have a house. They haven’t been tried.' They don't get enough for their labor to lay up anything. They are not encouraged. Vanderbilt and company get all they make over and above a poor living, and Vanderbilt must be protected. Tiie trouble is our people have got hardened th fixing a minimum price upon labor, just enotigh to feed and clothe the family stingily, with HO margin for old age or sickness, much less d house. What does all this mean that these syndicates are buying up all the land of the great West, 700,000 acres i and 300,000 acres in Texas and large i tracts in Arkansas? Why don’t the i United States Government buy it up and save it for homes for our people? The Government gave 100,000,000 of acres in Texas at one time to a wealthy corporation to hire ’em to build a railroad—tnore land than is contained in Any four Siatmo In the "Union cicrpi i Texas, and our statesmen made no protest. The money is all going in the i hands of a few, and so is the land. There is away to stop all this, but when it is agitated the rich and powerful cry out agrarianism and robbery, and hire the press and bribe the big men and ' scare off the little ones, and so it goes. What we need are statesmen, not hirelings. We want fearless men who can’t be tampered with. Let all this surplus | wealth, these bloated fortunes be taxed to support the Government. After a than has accumulated #100,(MX) begin to tax the excess, find the more he accumulates the heavier the rate; and when ' it gets up to a million take all the excess, if necessary, to equalize in somS , measure the burdens and comforts of life and provide homes —humble homes —for the people. A man with ten acres and a house of his own, is a good citizen in peace and a tower of strength to his government in time of w ar. A million of dollars is enough for any one man. He ought not to hunger and thirst for inore, for he can’t need it and it makes a dog of him to hoard It Up. Who has any respect for such men as Vanderbilt, or Gould, or Senator Sharon, or even for the memory of Stephen Girard or A. T. Stewart? Nobody.—JtZanta Con* stitution. kwvxw' of Ex-President Van Buren. An amusing anecdote is told by an old inhabitant of Thomas H. Benton when the guest of Mr. Van Buren at one of those famous dinner parties for which Lindenwald was noted in its palmy days. After the desert had been served finger bowls were brought in, and were viewed with some suspicion on the part of one or two or the guests. Later I Benton said to his friend: “I observed Mr. Van Buren immerse the tips of his fingers in one of these.little glass bow Is and wipe them daintily on his napkin, but I just rolled back my cuffs and took a good plain w ash.” One day the princi al of Kinderhook Academy called at Lindenw ald with an autograph album which contained Baron Humboldt’s signature, and requested Van Buren’s autograph. “Where shall I put my name, Mr. Post?” asked the ex-President. “O, anywhere, Mr. Van Buren,” was the reply; “you will find plenty of blank pages in the book.” The ex-President turning over the leaves carelessly, and seeing Humi boldt’s signature paused, took up a pen ' and wrote his own name directly under the Baron’s. The ex-President in his old age did | not lose his youthful verve and vim, and • was universally respected and loved at j his home. Though he could not boast | of a commanding presence, he had an I elastic figure and carried himself erect. His features were animated when conversing. and wore a constant smile. When relating an anecdote or relishing a good story his eyes twinkled with fun. In fair weather it was bis custom to take a horseback ride every morning until his final illness, sitting erect in his saddle ami wearing a skull cap, under which his snow-white hair could be seen. One morning when riding past Stuyvesant Falls, he was hailed by a bare-footed urchin, who shouted out: “Hey, mister, is you the President of the United States?” “I used to be, my little man,” was the prompt reply; “what can Ido for yon?” “Oh, nothin’, sir, only I thought Jimmy lied to me; I didn’t think such a little man as you could be President of the United States.”—A’etc J'orfc Sun. What the Millennium Will be Like. Rev. J. Hemphill, of San Francisco, could not help but believe that the advent and personal reign of Christ would be after the millennium. During the millennium, he thought, the physical conditions of the w orld w ould be imj proved. Siu being removed, pain and travail would be done away with. The physical conditions of man would be vastly improved, and there would exist no pain, sorrow nor tears, such as are i ours now. When that time comes men ! will live as long as the old pat riarchs before the flood. Healthy bodies will make healthy minds, and for 1.000 years the two w ill be yoke-fellows. The moral and spiritual conditions will be vastly improved and holiness will abound. And during those thousand years he i thought one language would prevail throughout the world, for through the Tower of Babel, or sin, numerous tongues came, and by the casting out of sin they will go. Bnt what language is liable to be adopted ? The signs of the times is that the honest old AngloSaxon of England and America will be the one, for it is now being introduced over not only the civilized, but the uncivilized world. When the glory of the millennium would dawn he would not venture to guess.— San Francisco CaU, "Mb. Clinkers,” solemnly remarked ’ the proprietor of a reptile contemporj ary to his financial and commercial edi-

NUMBER 7.

tor, “Why is it, sir, that since the ht inst. you have constantly quoted the monev market ae 'close and .stringent,' when’ the fact is the monetary movement was never so easy :iw now. How is it, sir?” “Well the fact is that I applied for an increase of salary last month,” said the O. and E. man sadly, “and as it refused on the plea of hard times, so—fl'hy. of course, I—that is, I naturally-'-re—“Ahem ! that will do, Mr. Clinkers, that will do,” said the papercrat, with a scowl, and the next dav another English college graduate, with cracks in lil» Uppers, was called in out of the wet ami given the striker’s place at two ami a half lf*s per week.— San Francisco Post. Webster and the Boy. Daniel Webster was a man of generous impulses, which he freely indulged in, no matter how costlv the indulgence might prove. The following anecdote, which, as a correspondent says, has been heard by few, illustrates tins characteristic of the great statesman. Having a fine carriage that needed repairing, ho sent it to a shop near his house. Wishing to supervise the work, he frequently called at the carriagemaker's to see that the repairs were done as he wished, and sometimes made suggestions to the workmen. At one of these visits a little fellow was giving the carriage its first coat of paint. Mr. Webster spoke to the boy about his work, offering two m three hints. But the bashful lad was so disconcerted by the fact that the great man was addressing him that ho dropped the pot of priming. The leadcolored mass ran over his clothes and ruined them. A 'prenti e lad in those days received no money and but scanty clothing. The boy’s face showed his dismay at the thought of wearing his disfigured garments. Mr. Webster, taking in the situation at once, said to the boy’s employer, “Mr. R., I wish vou would let this lad come wrtii me lor a lew minutes, xuen addressing the boy, said: “Come, my boy, put on your cap and follow me.” The blushing lad followed the great man to the shop of a neighboring tailor. “Mr. Brown,” said Mr. Webster to the man of the shears, ” I wish you to measure this lad for a suit of clothes. Let the material be good, and get them readv as soon as possible, and send the bill to me. While you are about it, put in a cap and a couple of shirts.” “Now, my lad,” said Mr. Webster, turning to the astonished boy, “run back to your work. You will probably meet me often and will know me. Bnt I shall not remember you, as the years will change your appearance. But remember to speak to me when you meet me, I shall always be glad to see you. ” “From that day I was an out-and-out Webster man,” adds the boy—now an old man —whenever he tells the story. The freckled-faced boy outgrew his suit of clothes and became a man of noble physique and handsome features. One day he was in the vicinity of Marshfield, and, being dressed in his best suit, thought he would call on Mr. Webster. Acting upon the impulse, he soon found himself crossing the marshy lands near the statesman’s home. A roughlydressed man was wading in a shallow pool, with a gun on his shoulder. “Hallo!” shouted the young man; “can you tell, sir, where I can find Mr. Webster?” “Wait a minute and I’ll come to you,” was the reply. As the gunner drew near, the youth saw that it was Mr. Webster himself. It was not, however, until he hail told the story of the new clothes that Mr. Webster recognized in the young man the boy to whom he had been so generous. Then, extending his hand, he said: “Well, sir, I am heartily glad to see yon. Where have you been during all these years? Come up to the house and I will get off this rig and have a chat with you.” The invitation was accepted, and when, after a long call, the youth left Marshfield, he was a stronger friend of Daniel Webster than ever.— Youth’s Companion. A Wonderful Spring. Silver spring, in Florida, is a remarkable natural curiosity. It covers about an acre, is from twenty to sixty feet deep, and so transparant that a nickel thrown into the wau-r can be followed in its course till it reaches the bottom at a depth of fifty feet. The water bubbles up from a bed of white sand, and is strongly mineral. When the sun is overhead, all the colors of the rainbow are reflected upon the water. Huge fish are seen swimming around, dressed in all the prismatic colors. The spring is drained by the Silver run into the Ocklawahua river. The longest street in Paris is the Rue des Pyrenees, 11,345 feet; the shortest, Rue Brognart. 75. THE MARKET. NEW YORK. Beeves t 6.50 7.50 Hous 7.50 7.70 Flour —Superfine 3>5 & 4.20 Wheat—No. 1 White 1.16 $1.17 No. 2 lied 1.18 $ 1.25 Corn—No. 2 64 $ .66 Oats—No. 2 4'J $ .52 Pork—Mess 20.25 ©20.50 Lard 12 $ .12% CHICAGO. Beeves— Good to Fancy Steers. 6.15 $ 6.60 Cows and Heifers 3.75 $ 5.50 Medium to Fair 5.75 $6.10 Hogs 5.00 & 7.85 FLOVB—Fancy White Winter Ex. 5.50 ($5.75 Good to Choice Spr'ft Ex. 4.75 $5.90 Wheat—No. 2 Spring 1.12 $ 1.13 No. 2 Red Winter 1.13 $ 1.14 Corn—No. 2 .63 $ .55 Oats—No. 2 41 $ 42 Rte—No 2 66 $ .67 Barley—No. 2 ho $ .83 Butter—Choice Creamery 25 $ .28 Eggs—Fresh 14 $ .15 Pork—Mess 20.00 $20.25 Lard .12 $ .12% FORT WAYNE. Wheat—No. 2 Red. new 1 08 $ 1 11 Oats 37 $ 4<> Corn—ln ear 42 $ 45 Rye 50 Barley f 5 $ 70 Bltteb—Fresh 18 $ -.0 Eggs 13 c is% Potatoes 45 $ 50 Labd 11 $ ii Hay—Per ton® 8 00 sll b 0 CINCINNATI. Wheat—No. 2 Red 1.12 ©1.13 Corn 55 $ .56 Oats. <4 $ .45 Rye 64 $ .66 Pork—Mess 20.00 $20.75 Lard 11 .12 TOLEDO. Wheat—No. 2 Red 1.15 © lik Oats—No. a 44 @ .45 DETROIT. From <.2S ® i.so Wheat—No. I White 1.12 g. 1 u Coax—No. 2 55 a .56 Oats—Mixed 45 g Fobs—Mess . ..20.50 @ll.OO INDIANAPOLIL Wheat—No. sited I.H Stu Cobs—No. a j# 9 ,54 Oats—Mixed 43 @ .44 EAST LIBERTY, PA CATTLE—Best 6.75 ® 7.00 Fair M 0 Common. 6.n0 S«ls Boos ;.u @7.70 6HXW J.W 4x9