Ligonier Banner., Volume 15, Number 2, Ligonier, Noble County, 29 April 1880 — Page 2

The Ligomier Banmer, J. B. STOLL, Editor and Proptm;u'. ‘ LIGONIER, : : : INDIANA.

NEWS SUMMARY. et s s Important Intelligence from All Parts, ——————— j a Congressional. | IN the Senate on the 21st Mr. Hoar’s amendment to the Geneva Award bill, to strike out the provision for the payment of the claims of underwriters, was agreed to—3B t 0 19; Mr. Thurman stated that he could not * support the bill as amended, and did not wish to remain in charge ot it; a motion to indefinitely postpone the measure was adopted—3l to :.Ys—and a motion to xg:consider was tabled—32 to 28. Mr. McPherson, from the Committee on Naval Affairs, reported favorably on the House bill authorizing the equipment of an expedition to the Arctic Sea....The controversy over the %uest‘ion of debate on the Special Deficiency ppropriation bill was continued in the House, the Regublican members withholding their votes and thus indicating the want of a quorum; Mr. McMahon finally withdrew his motions to limit debate. The Naval ApproBria.tion bill was re‘gorced and referred to the ommittee of the Whole. kel THE Army Appropriation bill was taken up in the Senate on the 22d. Mr. Blaine moved to strike out Section 2, which provides *‘that no money appropriated in the actis to be paid for the subsistence, eguip»ment, transforta.tion or compensation of any portion of he army to be used as a poilice force to keep the peace at the polls at any eleetion held within any State; provided - that nothing in this provision shall be cox%strued to prevent the use of t.roogs to protect-against domestic violence in each of the States on application of the Legislature or Executive thereof.”” This motion was rejected—2o to 28—whereupon Mr. Blaine moved to add the following: *‘ Pro‘vided, further, that any person who shall carry 8 deadly weapon of any kind openly or concealed at the polls at any election for Representatives in Congress shall, on conviction thereof, be punished by .a fine of not less than $5OO nor more than $5,000, or by imprisonment not less than six months nor more than five years, or by both, in the discretion of the court.”” The Vice-President ruled the amendment not-in order, because of its being general legislation., Mr. Edmunds ethen offered an amendment to the effect that the section should not be ‘‘held to apply to any case in which the employment of the military power of the United States is authorized by the Con- ; Btitution and laws made in pursaance thereof,” which amendment was also rejected—l 9 to . _ Other amendments were offered and rejected, after which the bill was passed as it came from the House—2BtolB....The Naval Appropriation bill was passed in the House. ‘Mr. McMahon made a proposition, which was aceepted by the Republican side, limiting debate on the Special Deticiency bill to one hour and twenty minutes, one hour to be occupied by the Republicans and twenty minutes bythe Democrats. THE Post-Route bill was passed in ~ the Senate on the 23d. The debate on the resolution declaring Henry M. Spofford entitled to the seat in the Senate held by Mr. Kellogg was opened by Mr. Bailey, of Tennessee, who claimed that, Louisiana having indorsed the Nicholls Legislature, the only question the Senate could decide on was whether Spofford was or was not elected by that Legislature. The House joint resolution authorizing the Secretary of War to lend tents for the use of the sufferers by the recent tornado in Missouri, was passed. - Adjourned to the R26th.... In the House Mr. Cox, Chairman of the Committee on Foreign Affairs, reported back the joint resolution tor the abrogation of the Clayton-Bulwer treaty as a upanimous report of the committee; referred to the Committee of the Whole. Mr. Cox also reported ‘back'a joint resolution for a Commission to ascertain the basis of reciprocity with the British Provinees, which was ordered printed and recommitted. Mr. Waddell alluded to the terrible tornado which had swept over the Town of Marshfield, in his district, and ‘which had left a large number of persons homeless and destitute, and introduced a joint resolu-" tion, which was passed, directing the Secretary of War to furnish the Governor of Missouri with five hundred tents for the benefit of the sufferers. After debate on the Special Deficiency Appropriation bill, all of the Senate amendments except the one making an apBropriation for the new State Department uilding were concurred .in. . The Speaker announced the apfi)ointment of the following members as a select committee to investigate the alleged corruption in regard to the contested election case of Donnelly vs.. Washburn Messrs. Carlisle, Bicknell, Reagan, Lounsberry, O'Neill, Updegraff (Iowa) and Butterworth. > THE Senate was not in session on the 24th....8ut little ‘business was transacted in the House. Bills were reportedfrom the Committee on War Claims for the payment of claims allowead by the Commissioner of Claims and by accounting officers of the Treasury.

% Domestic. » A CHINAMAN named' Ah Lee was hanged for murder at Portland, Oregon, on the 21st. i ADvICEs received from Texas County, Mo., on the 21st state that the town of Licking was entirely destroyed, excepting three houses, by the storm on the night of the 18th. Three hundred persons were homeless. One life was lost and ‘seventeen persons were wounded, five of them seriously. The tornado did immense injury to all kinds of property in the county. By concentrating his forces Gen. Hatch recently surrounded, captured and disarmed the whole band of Mescalero Apaches, in New "Mexico, numbering 460 persons. Just as the troops were preparing to escort their prisoners-to a place of safety about thirty of the savages made a break for liberty, but a well-directed volley brought down fourteen of them, only sixteen making their escape. = s A TERRIBLE accident occurred on the evening of the 2lstat the Madison Square Garden in New York City. The building was occupied for the time by a fair for the benefit of the Hahnemann Hospital, and a large number of people were in attendance. At the portion fronting on Madison avenue a dancing-hall and art-gallery had been arranged, and it was here that the disaster oceurred. The Madison avenue wall fell outward into the street, and that portion of the roof was at once precipitated upon the heads of the dancers and the occupants of the art-gallery, . burying many people beneath the ruins. At a late hour on the night of the accident it was known that four persons were killed cutright, and it was feared that further search in the ruins would disclose other fatalities. Over a dozen persons were injured, some of them seriously. 5 Gaelin N DURING recent swamp fires in North Carolina & man named Owens, employed in collecting shingles from the swamps of the Alligator River, perished in the flames with his wife and three children, although he observed the fire when it was nearly a mile distant and tried to make his escape. - i ~ WHiLE a young man named Graham ‘Ormsby, his mother, sister and a lady ‘friend were driving over the ferry flat at Wickliff’s Landing, on the Kentucky River, on the 21st, the horses became restive and unmanageable and plunged into the river. The ladies were drowned, the young man alone escaping. THREE men were killed on the morning of the 22d by the explosion of a boiler in a mill near Memphis, Mo. : : ] A GovERNMENT life-saving crew ‘at Huron City, Mich., set out on the morning of the 23d to rescue the crew of an unknown vesgel which had gone ashore during the night afew miles south of that place, butsoon after leaving port the surf boat was swamped, and all but the Captain, six in number, were drowned. L i A e

A SINGUL.R disease, resembling St. Vitus' dance, has broken out among the - young ladies attending school at the Brown County, Ohio, convent. It has spread so rapidly. that studies have been dispensed with, and many of the girls have left for their homes. } _ It wasreported on the 23d that a boy in Philadelphia, supposed to have had a welldefined case of hydrophobia, had almost entirely recovered. He suffered excruciatingly for several weeks, barking like a dog, froth‘ing at the mouth, and showing other wellknown symptoms. o o : THIRTEEN children died on board the emigrant vessel Ohio, which arrived at New York on the 23d from Hamburg. ; - THE Memphis Board of Health has given notice that after May 10 no fruits or goods of any character from *lropical ports will be admitted into that city until subjected to a thorough inspection. OVER three hundred families have been rendered destitute in Ocean County, N. J., by the recent .forest fires. They lived principally by the cultivation of berries. Ox the day of the Marshfield tornado a large-sized roof landed in a door-yard near Lawrenceburg, Ind. Careful investigation in the neighborhood failed to disclose a building minus its covering, and thé belief was gaining ground on the 24th that the visitor came from Missouri. : : TaREE runaway Chicago boys have recently been taken up in New York City. They made their way to the metropolis by stealing rides on railroad trains.

DETAILED accounts of the shooting of Charles be-Young, of San Francisco, by the son of Mayor Kalloch, received on the 24th, show! that the tragedy wasenacted in the counting-room of the Chronicle, in.the presence of several gentlemen.. Young Kalloch entered the building hastily, with a revolver in his band, and at once opened fire on his victim. De Young fled behind the desks, and was on the point of raising a pistol himself when the fatal bullet- struck him. He fell insensible to the f{loor, and expired !in ten minutes. The murderer refused to make a statement of any kind, and maintained a remarkable coolness. The publication of a pamphlet giving the testimony taken at the trial of Dr. Kalloch in Boston, which had been in circulation in California for some time, had been attributed. to De Young by the friends of Kalloch, but the Chronicle denies that its:late editor had anything to do with its appearance. Aside from this, no recent provocation for the crime had been hinted at. The funeral of the deceased journalist took place on the 25th, and was one of the largest ever seen on the Pacific coast. . It was stated that detectives had obtained sufficient evidence to warrant the suspicion that the shooting of Charles De Young was the result of a conspiracy between Isaac 8. Kalloch and his son. Mayor- Kalloch feared the vengeance of Michael De Young and kept a strong guard at his house continually. : Personal and Political. Tae Illinois State Greenback Convention met in Springfield on the 21st. The following delezates-at-large to the National Convention were chosen: Alexander Campbell, O. J. Smith, Jesse Harper, A. P. Forsythe. District . delegates were selected by the members of the several districts. Presi dential Electors were also nominated. A..J. Streeter was nominated for Governor; Andrew B. Adair, for Lieutenant-Governor; J. M. Thomson, for Secretary of State; W. T. Ingram, for Auditor; G. W. Evans, for Treasurer, and H. G. Whitlock, for AttorneyGeneral. a s - THE Texas Democratic State Convention met at Galveston on the 20th, and after a two days’ session nominated delegates to the Cincinnati Convention. A resolution was adopted favoring the nomination of General Hancock, but the delegates were not specifically instructed to vote for him. THE Connecticut State Prohibition Convention met in Hartford on the 21st and nominated a full State ticket, headed by George P. Rodgers as the candidate for Goyernor. . PrESIDENT HAYES on the 22d nominated Edgar M. Marble, of Michigan, to be United States Commissioner of Patents, vice General H. E. Paine, resigned, and Joseph K. McCammon, of Pennsylvania, to be Assistant’ Attorney General, vice Marble. _ ;

THaE heirs of Thomas Jefferson tendered to Congress on the 22d the desk oan which the Declaration of Independence was written. It was exhibited in both houses. and attracted considerable attention. After speeches by Senators Dawes and Johnston and Representatives Crapo and Tucker, resolutions accepting the gift and thanking the donors were unanimously adopted. The famous relic will be placed in the State Department beside Washington’s sword and Franklin’s cane. : THE Virginia Republican State Convention met in Richmond on the 20th, and, after a three-days’ session, elected delegates to the National ‘Codvention, and instructed them to vote for Grant. They also passed resolutions expressive of their desire that Senator Blaine should accept the nomination for Vice-President. - THE leaders of the woman suffragists of the United States have issued a call for a “mass-meeting of all the women who want to vote,” to be held at Farwell Hall, Chicago, June 2. They demand an amendment to the National Constitution, giving women -the right to vote, and propese to (bring a pressure upon the political party National Conventions to espouse their cause. On the 25th and 26th of May a National Woman Suffrage Convention will be held at [ndianapolis. THE Vermont Democratic State Convention met at Montpelier on the 22d and elected delegates to the Cincinnati Convension favorable to the nomination of General Hancock for President. They were instructed to sustain the two-thirds rule and to vote as a unit. : ' THE Republican State Convention of Colorado has been called to meet on the 25th of May for the selection of delegates ‘to the Chicago Convention. - - : THE Georgia Republican State Convention adjourned on the 23d, after a session lasting four days. Fourteen colored and eight white delegates to the Ghicago Convention were appointed, about equally divided in preferences for Grant, Blaine 'and Sherman. ik ‘ oy - CrarLEs DE Youne, one of the proprietors of the San Francisco. Chronicle,. was shot and killed in his office on the night of the 23d by a son of Dr. Kalloch, the Mayor, whom Mr. De Young shot and seriously wounded last fall. : - Tae United States Consul in Siam has informed the State Department that the King of Bfam will leave that country for Europe and the United States on the last of April. The Consul suggests that he be royally entertained. , o A WasHINGTON special of the 23d says Mr. Blaine was evidently annoyed at the

recolution passed by the Virginia Republican Convention requesting him to accept the Vice-Presidency on the ticket with General Grant. He characterized the request as ridiculous, and said it could not be entertained for a moment. THE Massachusetts Legislature ad.journed on the 24th, after a session of one hundred and nine days. Two hundred and gixty-two acts were passéd and sixty-eight resolutions were adopted, not one of which was vetoed by the Governor. ' DExNls KEARNEY's habeas corpus case came up before the Superior Court of San Trancideo on the 24th. The Court decided that it had no power to review its own action, and Kearney was remanded to the House of Correction to serve out his sentence. THE Oregon Republican State Convention, held at Portland on the 24th, elected delegates to the National Convention and adopted a resolution declaring Senator Blaine to be the first choice of the Oregon Republicans, and instructing the delegates to use all honorable means to procure his nomination. K B. FrENxCH, Second Auditor of the Treasury at Washington, died in that city on the 24th, aged seventy years. ; Pror. H. R. PALMER conducts the May Musical Festival at Marion, lowa.

| - Foreign. , ABout 850 dwellings were destroyed by fire at Hull, opposite Ottawa, Canada, on ! the 21st. Loss heavy. - THE Lord Mayor of Dublin visited the frigate Constellation on the 2ist and formally welcomed the officers. He expressed in glowing terms the thanks of the Mansion House' Relief Committee to the American people and the United States Government for aiding in the relief of the distress in Ireland. THE expedition to survey a route for a railroad through the desert of Sahara in Africa has returned and reports the plan feasible. : A BERLIN telegram of the 21st says the International Fishery Exhibition was well under way. The display from the United States exceeded that of any .country represented. : AN Athens dispatch of the 22d says Greece had complained to the great powers of Europe that brigandage was rampant in Thessaly. o L AN Ottawa telegram of the 22d says that seven lives were lost in the recent fire af, Hull, and that the losses aggregated $2,000,0090. : : A NUMBER of prominent Americans ‘have formed a corporation for the purpose of ‘enlurging and improving the American Exchange in London. : A CABUL telegram of the 23d reports that the British forces in Afghanistan had recently repulsed and disfiersed three thousand native cavalrymen, killing more than a thousand men. - Geuer® Stewart lost seventeen killed and one hundred and fifieen wounded. : A LonNDpoN dispatch of the 23d says the Queen had at last consented to the appointment of Mr. Gladstone as Premier and Chancellor of the Exchequer. : THE Canadian Government has removed the embargo on American cattie, and shipments may now be made from Dominion ports. : i THE emigration returns published in Liverpool on the 24th show that, during the month of March, eighty-three vessels left the Mersey with 13,363 emigrants on board, of whaom 12,167 were bound for the United States. ‘THE official reception to the officers of the frigate Constellation eoccurred in the City of Cork, Ireland, on the 25th. Addresses were made by representatives of numerous cities. The Captain refused to receive the address of the people of Queenstown until the political passages were expunged. EpMOND DE PRESSENSE, a Protestant divine, and a well-known writer on theological subjects, has been appointed Secretary of the French Legation at Washington. § . THE London World says the Queen’s health and spirits are quite unsatisfactory. Her Mujeaty suffers almost constantly from violent headaches. . .

LATER NEWS, CapTAIN POTTER, of the frigate Constellation, attended a luncheon given by the Cork (Ireland) Yacht Club, on the 26th. The Duke of Edinburgh was present, and, in proposing the health of the Captain, paid a graceful compliment to the American Nation. JOSEPH SELIGMAN, a member of the well-known banking firm of J; & W. Seligman & Co., of New York, died in New Orleans on the 26th. The deceased gentleman was well known as, a member of the Syndicate designated by the Secretary of the Treasury for the negotiation of the four-per-cent bonds. e ! , A CYCLONE in Macon, Miss., on the night of the ,25th destroyed twenty-two buildings, killed eighteen persons, and wounded more than forty. The property loss was about $lOO,OOO. , - ° : MAyor KaLrLocH, of San Francisco, and son deny the charge that thére wasa murderous conspiracy between them. -The father says he was out riding all day, and, retiring early in the evening, fell asleep and. knew nothing of the shooting of De Young until informed of it at ten o’clock at night. A RECENT fire at Poksani, Roumania, destroyed 300 houses. EuGENE FAIRFAX WILLIAMSON, who gave 80 much annoyance recently to Rev. Br. Dix, pleaded guilty, in New York on the 25th, to the charge of defrauding a jewelry firm of thirty-five dollars by means of aforged check, and was remanded to prison until the 209th, his counsel desiring to submit afidavits. ON the 26th, at Harrisburg, Pa., Judge Pearson segtenced William H. Kemble; Emil J. Petroff, Charles B. Salter, Jesse B. Crawford and William F. Rumberger, convicted of having attempted to bribe the members of the Pennsylvania Legislature, each to $l,OOO fine and one year’s imprisonment at hard labor in the Eastern Penitentiary. - QUITE an animated discussion occurred in the United States Senate on the 26th on an amendment offered by Mr. Allison to a pending resolution, the amendment providing that, in addition to the number of cadets at West Point Academy now authorIzed by law, the President shall each year appoint two colored cadets at large. The Kel-logg-Bpofford case was taken up, and a long and animated debate ensued on the resolution declaring Mr. Spofford entitled to the seat occupied by Mr. Kellogg. In the course of the discussion . Mr. Blaine asserted that a bargain was made by which Messrs. Kellogg and Butler had Been seated. This charge was denied by Messrs. Bailey, Bayard and others, and Mr. Kellogg, at the close of the debate, said so far as he was concerned there was no bargain or, trade in regard to his seat. In the House the bill for the relief of certain homestead and dpre-em‘l)tion settlers in Kansas was passed, and several bills were introduced, among which was one providing for a tax of ten cents per pound on oleomargarine.

INDIANA STATE NEWS. THE Northern Indiana Methodist Episcopat Conference was lately in session at Union City. The following are the appointmentsas announced by Bishop Foster on the 12th: Fort Wayne District—Abijah Marine, Presiding Elder. Fort Wayne—Berry Street, C. G. Hudson; -Wa{,ne Street, A. BE. Mahon; Centenary, F. L. Whorton; Third Street, to be supplied; iluntertown, D. P. Hartman; Harlan, J. H. McMahon; Auburn, H. J. Norris; Garrett. to be supplied; Leo, 3 A Lewellen; Fremont, E. S. Preston; Angola, E. Holdstock ; New Haven, P. 8. Cook; Cherubusco and Coesse, R. Tolby; Arcola, to be supplied; Decatur, J. B. Carro; Monroe, L J. Bicknell; Geneva, B. Sawyer; Sheldon, Joseph H. Slack; Monroeville, W. R. Womes; Ossion, Newton Burwell; Bluffton, 8. E. Erwin; Circuit, H. C. Myers; Roanoke, Y. B. Meredith; Markles, James Wolpert; Huntington, M. Mahan; W. G. Yocum, FE’resident of Fort W‘t?;vyne College, Member of Wayne Street (Fort Wayne) Quarterly Conference; Cadis Albro, Professor in Fort Wayne College, Member of Berry Street Quarterly Conference. Goshen District—g. Greenman, Presiding Elder. Goshen, W. Q. Pierce; Mishawaka, A. Cone; Osceola, J. H. Jackson; Middleburg, J. T. Blackmore; Elkhart, M. H. Mendennali; Circuit, W. 8. Stewart; Bristol and Van Buren,’ M. H. Lampert; La Grange, C. E. Disbro; Circuit, J. G. Slussor; Lima, J. K. Waltz; Orland, W. M. Van Slyke; Waterloo H.J.Lacey; But--I¥r, C. H. Wilkinson; Hamilton, J. W, Paschall; Corunna, J. Johnson; Kendallville, J. Green; Wolcottville, C. King; Wawauka, H. C. Klingler; Ligonier, C. W. Church; New Paris, G. B. Work: Milford, W. Lash; Nafianee. 0P Downs; Albion, J. W. Smith; Missionary to Mexico, A. W. Greenman. : Muucie District—E. F. Hasty, Presiding Elder; Muncie, F. T. SimlPson': l\f orth Munoie, T. Sells; Winchester, P. Corland; New Burlington, A. J. Carey; Selma, M. A.Teague; Farmland, A. J. Lewellen; Dunkirk, P. J. Allright; Pennville, J. W. McDaniel; Montpelier, D. F. St»ri(/ght: Hartford City, N. Gillam; Al bany, D. C. Woolglert; Eaton, J. L. Ramsei:; New Corner, R. H. Smith; Jonesboro, C. E. Bacon; Alexandria, H. C. Smith; Anderson, A. W. Lamport; Perkinsville, C. Harvey; Anderson Circuit, to be supplied; Fishersburg, T. H. C. Beale; Pendleton, A. F. Bremington; Efi:_tville, J. 8. McCarthy; McCordsville, T. J. m. Kichmond District—C. Skinner, Presiding Elder. Richmond—Pearl street, W.J. Titus; Gracechurch, H. A. Buchtel; Centerville, J. M. Woolverton; Cambridge City, O. 8. Harrison; Dublin, E. S. KFreeman; Lewisville and Ogden, W. S. Boston; Knightstown, H. H. Phillips; Charlottesville. James Leonard; Greenfield, J. F. Rhoades; Philadelphia, W. Anderson; Williamsburg, G. W. Howe; Hagerstown. J. M. Mann; Newcastle, Thomas Stabler; Spiceland, Newton Wroy ;: Middletown, M. Wayman; Cadiz, J. Thomas; Whitewater, J. S. Carns; Fountain City, W. H. Pierce: Winchester. Circuit, to be supplied; Trenton, W, Peck; Union City, H. 3. Meck: Ridgeville, T. E. Madden; Portland, P. J. Parrett; Circuit to be sup%lied; J. Earp, professor in Indiana Asbury University, member of Grace Church Quarterly Conference; W. P. Walker, J. H. Chemachung Tejni, missionaries to China. Warsaw District—J. W. Welsh, Presiding Elder. Warsaw, R. A. McKaig; Silver Lake, J. J. Smith; Wabash, C. W. Lynch; Wabash Circuit, to be supplied; Marion, W. S. Birch; Lafontaine, N. E. Tinkman: North Manchester, B. A. Kemp: South Whitley, F. A. Robinson; Columbia City, W. H. Danicl: Larwell, M. H. Smith; Pierceton, W. E. McCarty; Leesburg, A. B. Shackelford; Webster, R. S. Reed: Bourbon, J. W. Lewellen; Inwood, H. Wool&(’nt; Lincoln, A. C. Gerard; Perrysburg, J. . Miller; Mexico, J. H. Ford; Palestine, M. Swadner; Akron. J. B. Allenman; Lagro. M. H. Mott; Antioch, E. P. Church; Warner, J.T. Fetro; Mount Atna, to be supplied; Marion Circuit, to be supplied. 4 THE following is the complete official vote on the Constitutional Amendments: :

I First { Second COUNTIES. t Amendment. ]' J ‘Amendment. Yes. | No. J Yes. | No. : £o| i al7 1002 Adamat L 3?18: i,(lg(l)i 2515 Loos Aldlent . v seedeas S Tnal 2 5109 2381 Bartholomew|.... 027 l 11131 1200 “'053 PBenton.... . ... 1’6:8 ’801; ’670 o 5 Blackford .. ... . bootl sand 2341 2,480 Boone bt iR v ":335 1’156 34:1 I’l3o 8r0wi1,... ... . 50 1»791 1,689 17632 Carfoll. cii. 00l %,3“ Slaes 21520 269 Gass ohi 543 2| 2805 “ose Glarke. . . ... 1’"76 2193‘ 1830 2,081 Clay. 00l 1«;)23 5541 2020 488 Clinton:. ......... ’839 ’996' 835 79 Grawtord. ... Ay ]32| 1,881 1049 Dayie55.............| 1% sil Thel 2% Dearbera.. 2.0 2,0:75 1‘563‘ 51063 Tl Decatur .........-.. oo ot 1,506[ %t PDeKalb: . .. .. ho Sae X g% De1aware........... "'4B I’B77'{ 725\ 1, Duboig ..o oiiia y ‘llB Sn 2,055 1113 Blkhatt. 0. 0 0 1:246 ’763! ]’293| 813 Fayette,. ....... v e 874 l 1224 708 Wloyd.. oo ol 1’%52 1915 1783 146 F0untain........... 1057 2527 1168 2449 Eranklin .. . . b 388 1’364‘ i,321 o Fulton.ici i i .. Y2l Lol 1931 1488 Gibson.. . ..lid 2?3_)3 1’853“ 2,496 1,674 Grantc.. oo 7855 1913 1943 1791 Greene.. ..k 2,5091 Tan 2,726‘ 14 Hamilton (.. .5, 0068, Loss| Tise 1840 Hangoek, o o 1,530!,: Toer 1,624‘ 1409 Harrison. .| .. 0o 2‘6523|<’ 1'2528! 2063 1,730 Hendvicks........o% 3‘29"i 1.241[ 3658 75 Henry - .00 .. 2,39{ 1,4141 5570 1001 Howard.. ... ... 1,942’ 2’0893 loz 2026 Huntington........| St 2,2745] 1335 2% Jackson ... .o 1,99; o 115 i Ja5per.............j 140 1801( 1128 1618 JHY iR 256 b 27981 1304 Jefferson. ... i ... ‘l'Blsl 11333 i TBl 1110 Jenninas, .ol I'6')6{- ToBl| 1701 1,888 JOBRNVOM. ...k 1’982 2,435} 2062|2273 Kaox, . & 0 iao 2,142| 2513 2039 K05ciu5k0.......... I‘4'-77[ ‘908! 15181 9% Lagrange.... ... ‘1,5531 51| lois & ke, ... aol 1,-9\_2} 2,194|| 2358 1.966 Laporte .:ii. i .50 1506 1083 1527 1037 Lawrence.......... 2,]57; 3'064 22571 294 Madison ... eee.. iR B 9’592’ 551 MArION .oo I’:3&3# 2:035 1407 1953 Marshalli. ..ol 03 "640{ 13081 '5BO, 1309 Ma1'ti1:1...... bl RN 2,502 10774% 2’454 1,536 MR 1.071{ 1230/ 1416 1349 Monroe = i 2:§6o' anl| 2000 2877 Montgomery....... g 044| 1’6581 2062|1601 MoOrgan. .i .. ... : ’995‘ ,391 i 1084 * 289 Newton..ii.ii... 2093[ 2009‘ . Noble . eu.. ,4~31 5 e o Ohio.L a 0 Taest v ordl one a 0 Drßnpe. ..l o ... 119 16l 139 149 OwWen ... e 56 29145: 1,1853 2145 1138 Parke. . giaais s 1"’08! ’657' 1o o Perpy. -o oo 1748 1 500| I‘2lo] 1418 Pike:.. . seencecaenlns 1.5511 ’277i 1,6]_0 200 Porter.« iy i . ‘784l 1616 878‘ 1789 POSeY., .Loi vn 532 "800 546' 708 Pulaskl. ... ... 26831 940 2.082 2,388 Putnam ... 00 8’558 1066 3.5%0| 1048 Randolph teeeaiia. I‘s6’.’& 1‘836! 1576 1’795 Bipiev. .. 000 | 2‘:165 11910‘ 2211 1887 Rusho oo oy o "625 236 851 826 BoOtt .. . aieu. s 9953 519 2244|5116 Bhelby... ... ... 2 1.'714 1,414’ 801 l Ta Spedesr o i »204 -,528', ’2lB ot Starke. . ...... a 8 o 4 2363 | 3019 908 St.doseph.. ... ..., 1.(&34 - Sl Tras 358 5teuben.......... .k 1858 2959, 1413 2,261 Sulliven. . i 90 o] Yo o Switzerland ....i... 3 '_.533 P aos 1648 Tippecanoe....,... I’:‘36"’ 168 P3O 1602 miptoßia v ,9231 A oo iviuiiag 4,452, 1703|| 4,008 1.9 Vanderburg.. ..... 1‘.‘;%)6 | ’965 1: 797 Vermillion...... .. el 4.%58g 0,808 Nidgo.o e 2.924} i e Wabashi .. ...5 ... ; 1.425 ’629 L 4705 564 warren. ... | Tee L 1,2971 1752 Warrlel oo ot ‘| ]’l69 I'BoB 1194 1737 Wa.shing’ton. soesaaal 4"’6'B 11142!] 4’822 ; 1‘034 Wavne.............i ”675‘ oilag 305 2052 %’giiltse ...»....7.:: 1,46'11 A,887 i ]:%g' lgég Whitzey,..,.........’ 1,126 1,983’ L i 5 T0ta15............ 169,483/ 152,251 '[177,304/138,985

Third Amendment—Yes, 173,921; no, 144,897; total vote, 318.818; majority, 29,024. Fourth Amendment—Yes, 176,145; no, 137, 716; total vote, 312,861; majority, 39,429, Fifth Amendment—Yes, 181,684; no, 136,175; total vote, 815,8569; majority, 44,509. Sixth Amendment—Yes, 175.626; no, 141,318; total vote, §16,944: majority, 34,308. 3 Ninth Amendment—Yes, 176,943: no, 126,958; total vote, 203,806: majority 49,990. el e ' THE oldest living boatman is said to ‘be David Burns, who lives at Burns’ Landing, on the Kentucky River, and is nineg years of age. He has walked from New Orleans to Frankfort six times, a distance of 1,500 miles. ; THE Buffalo Courier says all the perfume in Arabia will not sweeten a man’s character after he has been through one National political campaégn as an aspirant for the highest office in the gift of the Nation. £ : ‘ FRANCE exports to Europe $140,000,000 worth of manufactured articles in excess of what England exports.

e MISCELLANEOUS. . —BBixty telephone wires hang on the poles on Harrison Avenue, in Eeadvflle, almost obscuring the sky at that point. As regards telephone wires, C]Sgago claims the championship, having three hundred and fifty on a single pofea _ —At the recent town election in old Concord, Mass., only twenty votes were cast for the School (/Yom‘mittee and all of these by women. The result was that three men and one woman were elected; the men for a period:of three years, and the woman for only one year. L —Experiments have recently been made in England as to the maximum speed that a skater can attain, Mr. lish Smart, one of the champion skaters of the world, has made twelve miles in 28} minutes. This nearly represents the time made by the best bicyelists. —A fig tree still flourishes, and is an object of worship by Buddhists, was planted by Divinipiatissa, in the year 288 B. C., in Ceylon. Its history is preserved by a mass of documentary evidence and tradition. It was described by the Chinese traveler, Fa Hiam, in the year 414, and by the earliest Europeans who visited it. . —The old family Bible that belonged to ‘‘Mary, the mother of Washington,”’ is still in existence, and is kept in a branch of the Washington family in Virginia. It contains the family register, recording the birth of George Washington, February 22, 1732. The binding has a cover of cloth, woven by the hands of his mother. : o —Mr. McCulloch, of Australia, takes no thought of expense about his cattle. Lately he gave $35,000 for the cow ¢ Duchess og Lancaster,” and $22,500 for Berkely, Duke of Oxford,” buying them to replace two valuable Oxford cattle which the sanitary authorities of Melbourne Kkilled by giving them poisonous water in quarantine. : —Thirty attempts were made against Louis Philippe’s life. Seven of them have become historical, and are set down among the records of his reigns. - In the year 1833, a pistol shot by Bergeron; 1835, infernal machine by Fieschi; 1836, pistol shot by Alibaud; same year, another pistol shot by Meunier; 1840, a gun shot by Darmes; 1846, a rifle shot by Pierre Leconte; and in 1846 a pistol shot by one Joseph Henri, who, while the King is assuring the crowd that he is unhurt, fires again, and again misses him. - —The French Duke of La Tremouille has a shooting preserve in the forest of Ram%)ouillet, and to protect it against poachers has studded it with man traps of his own invention. The other day the gamekeepers heard the electric alarm jingle, and rushing to the designated poacher trap found the Duke, who in roaming about his estate had stepped into one of his own snares and found himself in the twinkle of an eye dumped into a deep narrow pit, out of which he could not clamber. —There are hard times in New Zealand where prosperity has been the rule. The labor market is overstocked and thousands are idle. Relief boards have been established, and to add to the misery there has been a large influx of French Communists, generally conviets from New Caledonia, many of whom are escapes. Altogether the outlook is a gloomy one at the present time. Victoria is also suffering from the effects of an overstocked labor market and a stagnation of business generally. —A telegraph niessenger boy, while passing along Clifford Street, Rochester, N. Y., a few days since, heard a stranie noise in some shrubbery beside the walk. On investi%ation he found a cat which was completely enveloped by a huge striped snake.. The snake was wound round and round the body of the feline, and the latter was completely exhausted in it efforts to free itself. The snake was -killed and the body disengaged from that of the cat, but the latter died almost instantaneously. Its body was covered with bruises, while that of the snake was bitten in many places. : —-Joseph K. Emmet, the former negro minstrel, and now the prosperous actor of German-American charaeters, has accumulated a large fortune within a few years. He has %ought a place on the Hudson, near Albany, and begun the erection of a magnificent | residence. There is a large music room, furnished with an immense orchestrion; the parlor is modelled after that of an English manor, with timbered roof, every room in the main story is an octagon, with a bay window and balcony. A feature of the grounds will be a b{F windmill of the :I§utch sort, which will pump water for a picturesque cascade.

Afflicted France. From a special cable dispateh our readers will learn to-day that the térrible ““13, 15, 14"’ puzzle has made its way across the ocean, andis at present bewildering the wits of Parisians in mueh the manner that was so fatal to New York a short time ago. There can be no doubt as to the country from which the infection was conveyed to France, so aseries of diplomatic notes is within the possibilities of the coming fortnight, ang Mr. Evarts may have his first opportunity to offer an apology from the ngited States to a foreign éovernment. Whether a mers apology will be sufficient, however, is' yet to be learned. Nations have declared war for smaller reason than the ‘introduction by anothor people of causes of distraction and torment, and 'a French. fleet may yet be sent to the Potomae to demand satisfaction. A blockadg of all French ports against vessels coming from the United States is as small a penalty as we have a right to exgect under the cir“ourgstances, and as slight a measure of self-protection as France can honom_lgf take. What course the malady will follow as it spreads-—and spread it must—.is impossible to predict; but Germany can hardly escape, no matter how sternly Bismarck may force xapressim proceedings. ‘Once across Germany and ‘into Russia, however, the puszle will be a blessing in disguise, for even Nihilists must give up all ordinary work when ' subjected to such an influence. But for France alone the American hieart will at present concern itself; our sad national experience with the same trouble makes it impossible to think of coming dispatches without a shudder.—N. ,Y.Jkrald. @ —Egg Corn Bread.—One quart of sour milk, two eggs well beaten, one teaspoonful of soda, one-half teabtrl)onfiil of salt, and corn-meal enough to thickea.

The Recent San Francisco Tragedy. ribune. : : S té’iz«c%ilffi%‘égcb,“fisr]n 2. The feud between the De Youngs and the Kallochs, which so nearly resulted in the death of one of the adversaries on the 23d of last August—of Kalloch, senior, by two bullets fired by Charles. De Young, and of De Young himself at the hands of an infuriated mob of the: adherents of the wounded man—this evening culminated in a real tragedy, Charles De Young being shot and killed in the Chronicle office by 1. M. Kalioch, son of the Mayor of San Francisco. The shooting took place at half-past seven o’clock to-night, De Young being almost instantly killed. : - It was just seven months ago to-day that the bitter campaign in San Francisco'culminated in an attempted murder, a tragedy which was the sensation - of the hour in 'Frisco and. created excitement and intense interest all over the country.™ As the present affair was so intimately connected with the shoot--ing of last summer a brief recapitulation will be of service to refresh the memory and assist in a proper understanding of the merits of the case. The political campaign in the summer of 1879 was conducted with unusual virulence. - The Workingmen's candidate was the Rev. I. S. Kalloch, who had had 'a somewhat mottled and checkered career in Boston and Kansas. __ Heading the opposition was Charles De Young, one of the two brothers who edit and own the San Francisco Chromicle. After Kalloch’s nomination for Mayor by the Workingmen, Charles De Young, in a gpeech at the State Convention of * Honorable Bilks,”” announced that he would compel Kalloch’s withdrawal from the contest. Subsequently he notified Kailoch that unless he withdrew he would rake up his record in the columns of the Chronicle. Kalloch sent back word defying him, and intimating that he could 'tell worse things about the De Youngs than they could about him. | : Accordingly the De Youngs took up the gauntlet, and in ‘the issue of Wednesday, August 20, the Chronicle ‘opened fire with'a long article reviewing Kalloch’s career in Boston and Kansas. This article charged him with having been engaged in numerous scandalous scrapes sinee he was twelve' years old. He was charged with drinking while in the pulpit, and being connected with innumerable swindles and scandals, both ip the East and in Kansas, whither he afterward removed.: The article created great excitement, and was followed the two succeeding days by still more virulent and person- - al attacks. ; ; Friday night, August 22, Kalloch had advertised a mass-meeting at the Metropolitan Temple, ut which it was given out that he would read an article published five years previous in an obscure paper called the Sun, written by one B. F. Napthaly. This article was a. personal attack on the De Youngs and on the reputation of their mother, which had provoked a vain attempt to kill Napthaly by the De Youngs at the time. De Young sent word to Kalloch that, if he read the article, he would be shot on sight. The meeting came off as advertised, except that Kalloch did not read the article,.but contented himself with a merciless attack on the family record of the De Youngs. He said that he had the article in his pocket, and that it would be published and commented on within a few days. Gy De Yourg evidently considered the proceedings of the evening as egual provocation to the reading ot the arti- - cle, and acted accordingly. The following day Charles De Young drove in a coupe to the side entrance of Metropolitan Temple, and sent a messelhger , -to tell Kalloch that some one wished to see him. As Kalloch came toward the coupe De Young fired twice, and Kalloch fell, shot in the breast and in the thigh. A crowd immediately seized - De Young’s carriage and upset it. He was kicked and bruised, and would undoubtedly have been stamped to death on the spot had not a large body of police come suddenly to the rescue and hurried him to jail. . The result was, of course, intense excitement on the part of the workingmen and the calling out of the police and military. The mob was preparing’ to sack the Chw'onicle office: and lyncg the De Youngs, when it was pacified by the announcement that Kalloch was improving- and in no immediate danger. ' . At that time Kalloch’s son was prominent as one of the leaders of the mob. He made a speech at the Sand-Lots, where he was received with tumultuous cheers. -He assailed De Young in - terms no less outspoken than those used by his father, and appealed to the crowd, in case De Young should not be legally executed, to kill De Young and help the speaker avenge his father. The mob was finally appeased by Kear.neg and awed by the Gatling guns and military preparations. : ‘ ~ As Kalloch ‘grew better, the excitement subsided, and when Kalloch was: _ elected and De Young released, the whole affa‘r had almost been forgotten. Charles De Young,, the murdered man, was & notable character on the Pacific Coast. He was - about forty years of age and of Jewish extraction. Less than twenty years ago he was setting type on the Sacramento Union. With but little capital other than that of his hands and brains, he left for San Francisco, where, .in company with his brother Mike, he st‘a’.rte£ a theatrical advertising sheet known as the Dramatic Chronicle. Despite its small size it made itself felt from its stinging personalities and bright, witty articles. Its editors = secured the services of good writers, Mark Twain among the number,, and from the outset it was an ‘assured success. Through its growth from a small sheet to a large and successful newspaper, the scent of the roses has clung to it still, aud Charles De Young has made the Chronicle noted for its personalities and sensations. ‘Many a man has gone - “gunnin% for (}harl'ay‘goYm%;but has always found. him a man who would shoot on the slightest provocation. He has had numerous shooting affrays, but generally he (AU HIS SRI , onitis man and came out unhurt. = LoNGFELLOW'S ' * Evangeline” has bety Secsiiind ol BN KO lawyer and man of letters living-at Lisbon. It isp?éfw&“mh&fi dissertas domom w 0