Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 21, Number 33, Jasper, Dubois County, 15 August 1879 — Page 6

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LT COURIER

9 JHMLli JC( PsMtcfetc JASPER, INDIAKA.

CURRENT NEWS. Iieretary Seburx U preparing for a trip through the India eeuBtiy tic latter pert iti! Anfmct. Ho wW tnenTor to oomplste a treaty wKa tbe Oew Indiana white absent, Ml wilt retura by way of the Yellowstone Park, taking m the Red Cm and Spotted The publk debt statement dwm tbe inwmk af the debt for July to be Ji.Wg.M-i OMk m Trceawr?, tt,K,3?S; eold and silver ertHketetflg,M,Mft; eertiieates of depes ottteteadM, fM.SM.M; refunding eartiaeMes, $g,l66,K0; legal tenders eut-

ttaBdNur, 4S,Ta,4Sl; fractional currency etetaadfag. $5,814,91. The Increase ef MM debt is doc to the ptjat ea account f hms of pmuioBs from, tbe United Mm notes held for tbe redeaspttea ef f raettoaal earreaor, m provided by the act of Jane 31,1071. During Jaly tbe Halted States Tnry redeemed .of M-J0 beads, f7,iis,488; of ISMTS.aO; all,fl,e,WO,of tbe pro seeds of which tt7.t,S10 wu paid out by cheek, aad 188,5,600 was eredKed to tbe boais oa tbeir boad account. There are aow eatotaadiag about $79,909,909 of called bead of alt descriptions. JofeaQDOfaef Iowa bee beea appointed Iadtaa Agent at Ualea Agency, Indian Territory. WBI AXD KHJTMWaST. , Seat? aad Alexander Covert, brothers, lefLtteas Covert, a well-to-do fanner wettHagM mile west of Cotambus, lad., bad a aaarrel oa tbe 8sth regardlag Henry's wife, wbo bed beea for seme time separated freea ber husband aad bad Just come baek to Mre wMh Mat at hie father' house. Alexander BMde some remarks at tbe break feet table refeetiae quite severely ea hie brother wife. The husband reeeated it ae aa insult, a igbt emmcd, duria which both drew tbeir revolvers aad fredateaeh other. AJexaader was shot ia tbe abdomea aad probably atortaliy wounded; Heary was shot through the heart, eaneiag iaetaat Two young teas of Dr. A. H. S. Boyd of Lrriafstoa Ouity,KT., were fatally poisesed by their father, who gave then what he apposed to be eaatoaiae, but whieh proved tobeadeadlypoieoa. Both died withia aa hear. The Iowa Brewers, aad Liquor Dealers held a State Coarentfea at Dee Moines oa the Mta, aad perfected aa organization for the parpeee of securing the repeal of the Llqwsr law aad the rfeetfoa of a Legislature JavaraWe to Heeaee. Tbe subject of politics . Iter. D. S. Duaev of Hardia County is tbe kteet ProbibKiea eaadidate for Gereeaorof lew. Me Je a Ciaif baHHe,aHaieGeaeral Terry, eoaiaiaadiatr the niKUry ia the Df perteaeac of Dakota, oa tbe 81st reeofred a diepaleh froat General Mile?, dated at a eaatp oa Book Creek', 18 adlea aoath of tbe beaadary, eaylae; that SiMiac-Balfr bead of Sioux Jled orthward to If ood XouaUia, eaviag their property eeattered aloag the liae of their Mr as aiiioa. Tae Sioux are eeuItoauaiber with 2,99 Sghtiag eaeral Miles mt be belteTee that he has foree eaoogh to deal with all the Ia dfcuMlttU tag-Bull eaa aitieter. Joba M owe, a wealthy youag drygeeds aa detoc baeiaeee ia Ciaeiaaati but reaMlBg at Xewport, Ky., oa tbe aigbtof the lot weat tote a watere!eet ia tbe rear of Ms neideaee, aad was eoea after eiaed by Ids wife. As abe stepped la the Seer gave war ad both were precipitated iato the vault. Their eereaaae attraet ed a eeiered tervaat to the plaee, who iaber terror alee Jaaiped beadleac lata tbe vault. Xelcbbon aealir rrived, the ire depart aMt was aaanaoacd, mr. aowe was taKea out alfve but un Xn. Hewe aad the eelored i were dead. JCr. aad Mrs. Hewe bad a-rled ealr about a vear. aad abe was a aeet boautlfal aad aeeoatpHehed lady. The fatal opidmie ptmHise ia Lin Cawety, Iowa, is said to be aa uautually Tiraieat type of typhoid dyeoatory. Childroa are the priaoipal vietiavs. , The pleaeure.atooater Lew Clarir, oa Oesgaae Lake, aear Battle Creek, Mieh., together with tbe dwelHag of Jaawe Oevelaad aad three beat-boasee, burned oa the Met. Mrs. Clevelaad aad her iafaat perkhed ia the fsaee, aad two other ebHdrea wore so badly iajared that they are aot exThe fret bale of the aew oomob orop of the Minlaalppi Talley was reeelved at New Orieaas oa Ae let. It wan otaeeed ae lew ddaHag aad told at M7-t eeats. Georgia's int bale was reeelved atAtlaata oa eaaw The DeaMerat of the Fifth lews DiHrlet hare aoaitaated H. E. J. Berdtaaa of MaralfcaawtMPsH s?f OAffMW ChgvaWer JaaaoaviWe, for aiore tbaa JW yean Cashier ef the Canal Banker Xew Orf atMaatter totaeaaiouat of M9,Menl Milee's sswataai has aaae )ato ,aaip oa Little Boeky Creek, aear the hewBdery liae, aeron whieh SHtiag-Bull has retreated wHh hie eatire foree. It is saM tht Sfttiag-Bull rae hlmeelf ia the fbt ea the 17th of July, ae.l was one ef the Sntteruaaway. The beetitee adaiR a lots f eight warriors, killed aad fcwa, la that adhlr. They are mid to be ia a desperate eadftloaas regards feed eupptiee. Their lweviiHM eaa aot hold out mueh loager.aad k Is believed they atwit either Icht for tbe baCtle.Mirreader orttarre.before very loar. AttbeKeattteky State eleetloa, held oa the 4th, Lake P. Bieekhura was eleeted r.toeethorwiai the entire DesejHef State oafeere. The Bepubha.Mk(H4ffMmh the Legislature,

reait

aaWljkW aawUI -Bhaa abitraaaaJrlV sWMt wIWe-MSBrVTSJv a fBMaWVMMI I aTwSWWIi Daieratis. A Tory Meat vote was east throughout tbe State. The eell for a CeatHutioaal Coaveatioa telle for want of a eoaetttuUoaal BMority la He favor. A WlMfltf SsHUvlIyi WaWil'fcap Ke Ie suere, wits aad two ealldrea, were struek by ligbUiag at Koeheter, MIbb., ob the Bight of the Sd. The wife aad children are dead, aad Leewere will probably die. Henry Hooetea was iaetaatly killed aad Jeeeph Grahan eriouely ialuved by the expletua of a tbreehiBg-aMehiae eagiae oa Graham' farw, Blue ailea aortheaftt of Greeaeburg, lad., oa the 4th. Joba ThoBMs, Mary Haaeoa aad Frank De Luoea were drowaed la the MIslwlppi above La Croeee, Wis., o the Bight of tbe Sd, while roturaiag from a pleaie party. The Chieago Tribune gives eurresey to a ruator that aegoUatioas have been peadiag for several weeks between the Chicago, Burliagtoa and Qulney, or persona represeating It, aad the bondholders of the Missouri, Kaaaa aad Texas Kaiiroad, for a

leaee to the former of the property of the latter. No delsite ooaoluhlon has beea reaehed yet, aad it is eaid to be doubtful K the efforts will meet with sueoees. FeuruBknowa men, supposed to belong to a gang of desperadoe la the Indian Territory, rode iato Coffeyvllk, Kan., oa tbe 3d, robbed tbe Feet-odioe and committed other depredations. The citizens resisted, one of when, named Fltzpatriek, was kilted; aaotber, named Roberta, was wounded. The robbers then left,aad shortly after a detachment of United States troops started is pursuit, but at last accounts had made bo arrete. At Chieago, ob the Mli, Solemon Sena, partner ia the arm of Senilis, CroesaiaB & Seaa, iron founders, 87 Folk Street, shot the foreman of the nrm, Conrad Sagelaian, through the head, and then, after ineffectu ally saappiag the revolver at his own head, cut his throat from ear to ear with a knife. The two raea had some words regarding a pieee of work ia band, which resulted in the foreman giving Sena the lie. Is a moment of pawion Seaa resented the iaeult by a deed of blood, the enormity of which seems to have Sashed upon him a moment later aad caused him to take his own life. Both men leave families Seaa a wife aad five children and Engelman a wife aad one child. An attempt was made oa the 4th, in the New Orleans Custom-boute, to assassinate Colleotor Badger. A one-legged ex-Federal soldier, named Wa. A. Brown, placed a pistol ia eloee proximity to Badger's head aad Bred. The ball missed its aim, notwithstanding Badger was so close as to be scorched by tbe burning powder. Brown gives as a reason for tbe shooting that Badger had failed to give him a position in the Custom-hou&e, as promised. He says, however, that he only meant to scare him. He was sent to jail. Kentucky' wheat crop is Immense, but her eora erop is considerably below the average. Tobaeee has been unfavorably afreet ed by drouth and will fall 36 per ceat. short of aa average erop. Feaehee are a total failure and apples seare, but the pear erop is splendid. Goldsmith, Comptroller-General of the State of Georgia, has been impeaehed for alleged malfeasance ia office. His friends etaim that K ie a ease of persecution. KA8T AND SOUTHEAST. Freseott G. Filkbury, Cashier of the Lawrence (Mass.) National Bank, is a defaulter to the amount ef Jetaelost through unfortunate speculations fa mining stocks. The deficit has been partially made good, butFlllsbury is under arrest. An excursion -party from Blnghamten, N. Y., visiting the Thousand Inlands ia the St. Lawrence, oa the 31st chartered two steam yachts for a pleasure trip on the river. The yachte were lashed together, but they became unmanageable, and ia trying to remedy the difficulty one of them swung around and capsized, going dowa iaetaatly with all ob beard. Mrs. Plersell, Mrs. Bostwiok aad Mrs. aad Mies Burkelew, all from BlBgbamten and vicinity, aad Mrs. Pollock of New York, were drowsed. The others were rescued by tbe remaining vessel. A rew-boat containing a pleasure party of Ive persons was run iato aad capsized by a schooner ob tbe Raritaa Klver, near New Brunswick, N. J., oa tbe 31st. Two ladies, Mrs. Joba Danigaaa aad Mies Kate Hons, were drowaed. Rev. Jobs Graham, D. D., of Brighten, Bnaited, was drowned while bathing at Cape May, N. J., en the 1st. id ward P. Paige, formerly ohlef olerk of the Termoat Central Railroad Freight Office at Burliagtoa, Yt., is under arrest charged with the embezzlement ef $17,000. Pierre Gondreau, accompanied by two ladies, Rose Martin aad Celina Morin, all French, of Lewletoa, Me., were returning from a weddiag ea the Bight of the 4th, when their carriage was struck by a train at the Libo crossing and all three were instaaUy killed. The town of Yoleeno, in the oil district of WeetYirgiale, was totally destroyed by fire ob the morning of the 4th. The flames spread rapidly, aad, reaching some ell tanks, they caught Are aad bunted, the burning oil running through the streets setting fire to every thing as it peed,1rABforralng the streets into a lake ef ire. Incendiarism is charged. Charles Feebler,' 'the actor, died at his farm at Richland Center, Pa., on the 4th, aged St. Bev. W. H. H. Murray, the sporting parson, Is a bankrupt, and his creditors have seized his yacht, all ef his trotting boms aad such other property ae they could get laMl 0fe FORKION. The Kmperors ef Austria aad Germany are expected to meet at Gusteia the present month. Five men were killed and 96 wounded by tbe explosion e the German gunboat Bebowb at WIlbelnMhaveH, en the 30th. Lernierd's Geraldlne won the Levant stakes at the Geedweed masting ia Bag-

i.uJ Tka -- IA tA 1 iifilgit bar nawnate aww awwessai vnsil ib a eaaaeawawww aaFa previous to the race, aad her backers are supposed to have aaade a aloe thing out of M. The final deehdoa of the German GeveroBMBteathereiigleueoieetleac at Issue with the Yatleaa has boom communicated to the Utter. It is as follows; All of tbe exiled clergy who ask perm 1st loa will be allowed to return to Germany. The May laws will be tacitly suspcBded, provided the clergy obey the common law, aad all fresh nominations are to be submitted to tbe Government. The Fope is setiefled with these terms. The cholera is said to be prevailing at Monterey, Mexico, overKX) deaths from the disease having occurred. The Consolidated Bank ef Montreal, Canada, was forced to suspend oa the 31st, owing to a heavy run. Many poor people will suffer. The Porte has finally given la to the demands of the Great Fewers, that Tewfik Pasha, tbe new Egyptiaa ruler, shall have the important prerogative accorded to his predecessor of negotiating treaties with foraiaw aatlens. Bishop O'Brien, of the Catholic dieeese of KlnaatoB, Quebec, died' suddenly oa the 1st. The U. S. steamer Enterprise took a prominent part in the grand naval review at Cronetadt, Russia, ob the 30th ult. A destructive ire occurred at Hamilton Oat., on the night of the 1st. The Molanes Block and several banking homes were completely burned out. Loss about $740,000. Two boys were seriously Injured by falling walls. Half a score of what are designated as "obnoxious publications" have recently beea suppressed in Berlin. Fourteen persons were killed by tbe explosion of a powder magazine atDuralgo, Spain. Gross mismanagement is charged upon the

officers of tbe suspended Consolidated Bank of Montreal, and large stockholders announce their intention of prosecuting tbe Directors for issuing false statements regarding the bank's condition. The New York Graphic ef a recent date says: M We have received from a correspondent la the City of Mexico a letter giving an inside view of the present condition of afiairs la that country. Our correspondent has exceptionally eood means for knowing what is going ob. He holds a position which brings under bis eyes information at onee the most extensive and the most accurate. He informs us that the condition of the country, from a political point of view, is most deplorable. He gives many reasons for the belief that President Diaz contemplates a cok 4'ckU and the proclamation of himself as Dictator. He adds that Diaz who, our correspondent Insists, is a real patriot and an honest man is being led towards the act which he contemplates by the advice of those ia his confidence. Our correspondent also believes that the eovp d'etat will be successful." A family named Monette, consisting ef seven persons, ef Port Neuf, Quebec, were poisoned from eating bread which bad been standing in the same place withPari green. Three are dead. King Cetewayo's army is broken up, his nation dispersed, and he himself a fugitive with a price put upon his head. Zululand will probably be divided into three or four separate principalities, each under the rule of aa independent noble. Cetewayo's brother, Oham, will receive his owa territory under this arrangement. Five persons were killed aad 11 seriously aad 40 slightly injured by a railway accident between Nancy and Yezelise, France, on the 4th. The steamship Louts Davis, from Antwerp fer Naples, was wrecked during a fog off Ushant, France. Twenty-one persons were drowned. A severe rain and hail storm occurred in England on the night of thj2d, doing great damage to crops in Bedfordshire, Newmarket, Buckinghamshire and adjaeect localities. Live stock was badly inured in seme places. In London a great quantity of glass was broken. GKXKKAL. The gross earnings of all the railroads of the eouBtry for tbe Iat year were $490,103,3til, agatest $472,809,272 for the preceding year. The gross earning of the railroads of the Western States were$S0,86l,27S,alnst $19,984,1 for 1877; net earnings, $77,S,230, against $66,086,348 for 1877. The dividends paid amounted to $49,341 ,3z2, against $14,SM,4i for 1377. Tbe earnings from freight, mails, etc., were $1(1068,79$, and from passengers, $40,906,480. These figures are from Poor's jtamat. The coaveatioa of the National Cotton Bxehange will be held in New York on tbe 13th of August, instead of ia St. Louis. Apprehension of quarantine obstruetioB is the reasoB for the change. Fanny Davenport, the popular aetrees, has Just been married to Edward F. Price, a finelooking young actor who supported Iter during herreeenttourthroughtheoouBtry. Mr. Price bad just been freed from a former matrimoalM yoke, his first wife, known oa tbe stage as Mies Kittle Baker, having secured a divorce from him, as alleged, without any opposition on bis part. Capt. James It. Bads hai recently beea ia New York consulting; with capitalists on the subject of constructing a ship railway aeross the Isthmus of Panama. It Is understood that he can secure means to test the practicability of his scheme, it he can secure proper authorization to begin the work.' A bill will be introduced ia Congress at the Bextseseien to remove the preliminary difficulties in the way of putting the enterprise on foot. Capt. Hade's scheme is to get ships into a portable basin, mounted upon trucks, and by steam power to convey, the ship and basin upon rails across the isthmus. The NIearaguan Government lias informed this Government that It is opposed to the De LeepspMH, and in compliance with the request ef the Nlearaguan authorities, Civil Kaglneer Meaooal, of the United States Navy, has leen given leave by the Secretary ef the Navy to complete hie surrey of tbe

Xtoaraguea route. The work wa begun by

Meaaealseme time ftf The CoagrcMlenal Labor Committee closed their Investigations la Chicago oa the 3d and have bow gone to San Franoieee. THK YKEXOW KKVUK. Twelve new eases of yellow fever wore re ported from Memph!? oa the 80th aad but one death, that of Samuel A. itateaer, who, strange to say, had previously aad tbe yet low fever twlee last year aad ia 1S73, both times Mverely. The handsome doaatloa of $,W0 was received from W. W. Corcoran, the Washington banker, to assist IB remov lag the people out of the city. Two more eases of yellow fever, both very mild, were reported at New Orleans ob the 30th. There were 117 deaths from yellow fever at Havana for the week ending July Sd. There were nine aew eaes aad four deaths from yellow fever at Memphis on the 81st. A meeting ef colored people was held, to protest against being removed from the city iato camps. Two deaths from yellow fever, contracted oa Havana steamers, occurred at the New York Quarantine on the 31st. The ship Templar, 161 days from Rio Janeiro, arrived at San Francisco ob the 31st, with several oases of yellow fever on board. While at Rio Janeiro nine of the seamen died from the disease, aad after leaving that port Captain Armstrong's wife and two more seamen died. The San Francisco Quarantine officers disinfected the vessel and destroyed all the bedding, carpete, etc. There were 13 new oases ef yellow fever reportedatMemphls ob the 1st, and 4 deaths. There were 14 new oases of yellow fever at Memphis on the 3d, with six deaths; on the 3d there were 12 aew eases aad two deaths. Total deaths for tbe week from yellow fever, 36, out of a total of 44 from all causes. Fifteen new cases and two deaths from yellow fever was the official record at Memphis on tbe 4th. One of the dead was Father Edward Doyle, an esteemed Catholic priest, who had been actively engaged in establishing his parishioners at Camp Father Mathew. Chicago and St. Louis each developed a yellow fever case on the 4th, both of Memphis refugees. In Chicago a man named Frank Victory died at 234 Jefferson Street. In St. Louis, Mrs. Charles Phtlmott, who left Memphis on July 21, and was stopping at tbe corner of Fourth aad Kim Streets, was removed to Quarantine while in the last stages of the disease. Previous to leaving Memphis she had had a slight attack, from which it was supposed she had fully recovered. New Orleans reported two new cases of fever on the 4th, both slight attacks, and both convalescent. Havana had 137 deaths from yellow fever for the week ending Aug. 2 an increase ef 30 over the previous week. There were 18 new eases ef yellow fever at Memphis, oa the 5th, with Ave deaths. Governor Miller of Arkansas, ob the 6th, ordered the organization of a State Board' of Health, for the purpose of perfecting a thorough system of State quarantine. Develepmeat ef Aats. A scientific writer says: We find ia the different species of ants different conditions of life, curiously answering to tbe earlier stages of human progress. For instance, some species, such as Formica funcn, live principally oa the produce of the chase; for though they feed pertly oa the honey-dew of Aphides, they have aot domeetioated tbeir insects. These ants probably retain the habits once common to all ants. They resemble the lower races of men, who subsist mainly by hunting;. Like them, they frequent woods and wilds, live in comparatively small communities, and the instincts of collective action are but little developed among them. Thev hunt singly, aad their baU tlee are single oombats, like those of Homeric heroes. Such species as Latins flavus represent a distinctly higher type of social life; they show more skill in architecture, may literally be said to have domesticated certain species of Aphides, and be compared to the pastoral stage of human progress to the races which live on the produce of their nooks and herds. Tbeir communities are more numerous, they aot much more ia concert, their battles are aot mere single combats, but they know how to act ia combination. I am disposed to hazard the conjecture that utey will gradually exterminate the mere hunting speoies, just as savages disappear before more advanced races. Lastly, agricultural nations may be compared with harvesting ants. The Nihilist. A striking proof of tbe thoroughness of the Nihilistic organization in Ktissia is furnished by a recent inoideat. A few weeks ago a daring ami successful bankrobbery was commitUHl in Kherson, a town in Southern Russia, tbe amount stolen being very large. The Russian police, being uuable to discover the robbers, started the story that they were Nihilists. This drew from the Executive Committee of the Nihilists an indlgnant denial, which waa accompanied by a pledge to discover the true criminals, in proof that they were not Nihilist. They kept their word, and ia less than two weeka did what the Russian police with all their facilities had beon unable fee accomplish captured the bank-robbers aad surrendered them to justice. i " 1'RS," said the horny-flat ed granger, gloomily, last year we hadn't any thing to put in our barns, and this year there's so much stuff thai we can't take oare of it aad a heap is bound to be spoiled. There ain't any laokfortw farmers anyhow."

AlvekttI RHd The toxioaats have variation of action ia their early stages. Alooholt excite the mind and quicken the pulses before tiMy depress. Opium exettes before it depresses. Tobaeeo does not in the strict sense exoite, but depresses and soothes from the find, so that there are stages, which some persons always feel, when alcohol is antidotal to tobacco, Among those persona who are total al. stainers from alcohol few are found wbo ea& bear tobacco in the most moderate use of it. Under tobacco the heart seems rapidly to mn down in power, and alcohol. is oalled for to whip it up again, also as it seems. The fact is, that the heart is not tbe organ primarily concerned at all, but tbe minute vessels at the termination of the arterial circuit. These minute vessels are under a nervous influence by which the passage of blood through them is regulated, and which Influence is readily modified by very reined causes acting through the organic or emotional nervous centers. " The efiect of tobacco on these minute vessels, through the nervous system, is to cause contraction of them as a primary fact, so that the face of the person affected becomes pale and the surface of the body cold, while the heart labors to force on tbe supply of blood until its own vascular system come under the influence ; then tbe stomach involuntarily contracts, and, after a time,tho voluntary mufcler, deprived of blood, convulse tremulously, or pass into active convtil sions, aa in tetanus. Alcohol, on the other hand, through its influence on nervous functions, relaxes the vessels of the minute cireulat ion, sete free the heart, reduces the muscular power, and in every particular counteracts the tobacco. When a person receives a stun, or is shocked by some intelligence, or sight, or sound, that thereby stuns him, so that, like Hamlet, he is bechilled Almost to clly by the act of fear, Stands duiub and speaks not, he is for tbe moment in the same state as the man who first tries to smoke tobacco, and who, with pallied faoe, cold surfaoe and reeling brain, is to his sense and feeling stricken with all but mortal suffering and prostration. In each of these cases alcohol, for a moment, acts as an antidote not necessarily as the best antidote, but as a fair one When, therefore, we see a man smoking and drinking, quaffing off the cup of wine or spirit to quiet the qualm which would otherwise be inflicted by the fumes of the cigar or the pipe, we really observe the facta of a most excellently though innocently devised physiological expert, meat on a living animal. The man, unconsciously to his knowledge, if not to his sensation unless he be a physiologist is inducing a balance in the tension of his arterial circuit. Ia process of time the nervous system, becoming accustomed to these influences, one or both, in a certain de gree tolerates them, for a period. The tolerance while it lasts is an advantage to the habit, and, if the habit were a necessity, it would he a blessing. But tbe advantage is not permanent. In tbe end the nutrition of the organic parts which are under the influence of the same nervous regulation is sure to suffer, and in many organizations to suffer rapidly and fatally. Dr. Biehardson, in Uontemjyorary Review . " m iii ' Louise, Victoria aad Maud, the young daughters of the Prince of Wales, rarely appear in public in any but the simplest of dresses. They are sometimes seen with their mother at the theater in plain white linen or cotton sailor dresses, with a little trimming, and they are often met riding and driving ia neat sailor dresses of dark blue woolen. They went with their father and mother to the French Fair in gowns of plain pink cambric, with sashes of crimson harmonising with the pink. We are now going to have silks which will aot be silks, and the French have already baptised tbe newcomer as aimili-aoie. It is a process for coating fiber of flax or cotton with liquified silk, giving it all the appearance of actual silk at a nominal cost. THE MAJtKETK. NKW YORK, August 6. WW. BREVBe NaMve Steers $7.W flO.00 SHKKI Common to Oaotee. 3.M HOGS Live 4.30 4.40 11 650 1.01 48 37 S W 10.V 4.7 4.40 2.S9 3.10 3. W 3.96 2.70 5.00 4. M 91V St 32 21V MH 1.75 3.2S fl.09 lfi.08 15 COTTON Middling FiOtiK uooa so unotee.... WHKAT No. 3 Spring CORN Ungraded OATS "Western Mixed L60 4 aw PORK -New Mess ST. LOUIS. OOTTOW Middling IKEVJEB Choice to Fancy.. 4.S0 uoou K) mine.... 4.10 NaMve Cows...... 1.75 Texan Steers tM IIOOS Common to Select.. 3.46 SUKKP-N'atlve 2..W Texan 2.W lXOtnt-Choleo X XX.. .............. WH KAT Ked No . 2, Winter. No. s, Winter. OORX-No. 3 Mixed OATS No. 3 HVENo. 3 a ee a TIMOTIIV SEKD-Prlme.... TOBAGCO-Dark Lags, New t.HS ..) siv SI 48 1.70 a 2.70 Medium uara Leai B.9S HAY Choice Tlmotfey ls.eo H UTTER Choice Dalrv 14 BOGS Freeh Candled 10 PORK Standard Moss 8.7S Si WOOL Tub-Washed. Ottotee 38K Uawaeaed Mixed... 34 CHICAGO. REEYKS Comm'n to Choice 3.00 HOGS Common to Chotce.. 3.40 SHKKI' Common toOboiee. 2.70 FLOUR Winters 4.75 Springs 2.M WHEAT SprinjtNo. 2 K Spring No. 3 CORN-rrfh.... 3SS' OATS K Seesseeeeee eeeeee RYlfc NO 2.eeeeeeaeeeee W 9 POKK-New Mess 8.30 NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR Ohoiee Family 5.U CORX-Mlxed u 4 0 9.i 30 95 M 3.M 5. tO 6. t0 4.50 7 s , wv 8.35 5.75 40 37 30.00 S.M m

Fhyalelegleal ElVet ef Tehacee.

OAT8 St. Louis 3S HAY-Ohoiee....... 19.7 PORK-Kew Mees see, a H AOON 94X uonox-MiadJiHK..,.,.