St. Joseph County Independent, Volume 15, Number 50, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 7 June 1890 — Page 2

T /L„ „ ■ — WALKERTON INDEPENDENT. WALKERTON, - - - INDIANA. THE WORLD OVER. A MIRROR OF THE IMPORT ANIT OCCDRRENCES OF A WEEK. Things That Do Happen—A Complete Record of Interesting Events the 'World Over — Shocking Accidents, Startling Crimes. Other Topics. PASSING BILLS. Many Measures Disposed Os by th. 'ver Branch of Congres - . In the Senate, on the 2d inst., a conference was ordered on the naval appropriation bill and Messrs. Allison and Gorman were appointed conferrees on the part of the Senate. Among the bills reported Irom committees and placed on the calendar were the following: Senate bill extending the jurisdiction of the Circuit and District Courts of the United States to the great lakes and their connecting waters; House bill to provide for a term of court at Danville, Ill.; Senate bill for the reappraisal and sale of the unsold portions of the grounds and buildings of the Dearborn arsenal, Michigan. Mr. Plumb introduced a bill (prepared by Mr. St. John of New York, for the purchas > of silver to use as lawful money. It was referred to the Committee on Finance. The conference report, on the military academy appiopri ition bill was presented and agreed to. A lively debate followed the taking up of the conference report on the army appropriation bill, the provision as to canteens being the point under discussion. The conference report was agreed to —yeas, 35 ; nays, 8. The silver bill was taken up and Mr. Harris addressed the Senate. At the close of Mr. Harris’ speech the silver bill went over, and after a brief executive session the Senate adjourned. In the House, among the bills passed were the following: Providing for an addional Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of New Mexico; increasing to #270,000 the limit of cost of the public building at Duluth, Minu.; increasing to $175,090 ths limit of cost of the public building at Fort Worth, Tax. ; the Senate bill tor the relief of the Board of Commissioners of the Sinking Fund of Louisville, Ky.; the Semite bili dividing the Judicial District of Kansas into two divisions. Adjourned, THE NATIONAL GAME. Standing of the Clubs in the Leading Organ'zutions of the • onntrv. ^National. W. L. Vc. Players’. W. L. Pc. Philad’phia2o 13 .045 Boston 21 12 .636 Cincinnati .19 12 .612;8r00k1yn...21 14 .600 Brooklyn.. .18 13 .580 New York. .18 14 .562 Chicago ... .16 14 .53 ti Philad phial.B 15 .545 New York. .17 16 .515] Chicago... .15 15 .500 Boston 16 17 .484 Cleveland. .13 It; .448 Cleveland. .10 19 .341 Pittsburg...l3 19 .341 Pittsburg.. 9 22 ,29J|Buffalo .... 9 19 .321 American. W. L. c.i Western. W. L. c. Athletic 23 9 .718 Denver 17 11 .607 Rochester.. .22 12 .645 Minneapolis.2l 15 .583 Louisville.. .17 15 .531 Sioux City. .16 14 .533 St. Louis... .18 16 .529 Des Moines. 1> 16 .483 Syracuse... .14 18 .439 Milwaukee.. 13 14 .481 Toledo 13 17 .433 Kansas Cityl2 15 ,444 Columbus...l4 2) .411 Omaha 13 17 .433 Brooklyn.... 8 22 . 266’St. Paul 10 17 .370 HI.-lowa. W. L. Vc. Interstate. W. L Vc. Dubuque.... 17 7 .708 Burlington. 22 7 .758 Monmouth.ls 9 .652 Evansville. 17 11 .607 Ottumwa.. 16 10 .625 Terre Hata. 14 13 .518 Ottawa 15 11 .576] Beotia 11 14 .440 C’drßapidsl3 11 .541|Quincy. 10 18 .857 Aurora 12 13 .480 Galesburg.. 7 21 .250 Sterling.... 6 20 .230; Joliet 5 19 .228| PRINCE BISMARCK WARNED. Emperor William Tells Him to Keep Quiet or He Will Ite Punished. The Emperor of Germany has informed Prince Bismarck that if he does not at once ce tse his utterances on political affairs and other matters relating to his retirement, with which the press has been tilled of late, the result will be serious to him. A number of officials at the minor German courts have been dis-mis-ed for intriguing at the instigation of Count Herbert Bismarck to obstruct the Emperor’s policy. TEN BREWERIES SOLD. Acquired by an English Syndicate for a Consideration of $7,500,000 A San Francisco (Cal.) dispatch says the mail brings legal documents consummating the sale of the ten principal breweries of that city to an English syndicate for $",500,000, PresiDntial Appointments Confirmed. The Senate has confirmed the following nominations: George H. Wallace, of Missouri, Consul General at Melbourne. United States Consuls A. J. Daugherty, of Illinois, at Callao; R. Wildman, of Idaho, at Singapore; R. G. Daniels, District of Columbia. Hull, England; A. B. Keevil, of Tennesee, at Martinique, collectors of Internal Revenue—Levi A. Hughes, District of New Mexico; J. H. Mills, District of Montana. Anton Mahrlich, Register of the Land Otlice at Central City, Colo. ; Thomas D. Meads. Receiver of Public Moneys at Marquette. Mich.; George C. Ginty, Marshal for the Western District of Wisconsin. The State Eli c ion in 0-eg n. A Portland (Oregon) dispatch says: Meager returns from the State indicate the re-election of Binger Herman (Rep.) for Congress by from 4,000 to 6,000 majority. The vote on the Governorship will be close, but returns received seem favorable to Pennoyer (Dem.’). The Republicans probably have a majority in the Legislature on joint ballot. The Legislature elects a successor to Senator Mitchell. National Debt Statement. The summary of ti e national debt statement is as follows: Total interestbearing debt, $806,446,64"; total debt on •which interest has ceased since maturity, $1,973,601; debt less cash in treasury June 1. 1890, $1,068,858,839; decrease of debt during month, $6,661 871; total cash in treasury as shown by Treasurer’s general account, $638,362,171. Who Wi l Succe d Mr. Clarkson? Ex-Gov. Foster of Ohio, Attorney General Michener of Indiana, and National Committeeman Fessenden of Connecticut are now talked of in Washington as successors to Mr. Clarkson in the Postoffice Department, Fr< sh Labor Troub’es in Au tria. The labor troubles at Vienna are being renewed. Numerous fresh strikes are reported in various industries throughout Austria. A Prosperous Batik. The Bank of Montreal has declared a dividend of 10 per cent. Indian Appropriation Bill. The Indian appropriation bill for the fiscal year of 1831 has been completed by the House Committea on Indian Affairs. It carries an app’ opriation little less than $6,600,000, which is somewh it below the appropriation for the current fiscal year. Mu'let Claim Dismissal. The Court of Claims has dismissed the claim of A. B. Mullett against the United States for compensation as architect of the building now occupied by the State, War and Navy departments.

CURRENT HAPPENINGS. EASTERN OCCURRENCES. The accounts of C. A. Thompson, cashier of the insolvent Owego (N. Y.) National Bank, are said to be short about $7.5,000. Thompson’s speculations caused the failure of the bank. John Keenan, the New York loodle Aiderman, has surrendered himself to the authorities. He gave bail for $4,000. John Hanlon, a laborer confined in the Tombs for drunkenness and disorderly conduct, hanged himself with his suspenders to a water-pipe in his cell. The Astors have contracted to build a hotel in New York City for George C. Boldt, of Philadelphia, which will cost from $2,000,000 to $3,000,000. It will be cm the European plan, will be the finest hostelry in this country, and will be lo- ’ sated at Thirty-third street and Fifth 1 avenue. 1 A Bangor (Me.) dispatch says: A i rescript has been received from the ' court sitting in Augusta, settling for । all tme the famous case of the ’ State against Michael Burns for sell--5 ing liquor in this city in unbroken l packages. The case has been before the courts for two years. The decision sustains Burns’i ositiOn. The opinion was , drawn by Chief Justice Peters and is concurred in by all the other Judges. A New York dispatch says: The seven persons who were bitten by a mad dog । recently in St. Joseph, 111., have arrived there from that city. They were taken at once to the New York Pasteur Institute, ■ at 178 West Tenth street, where they re- । ceiied prompt attention Horn Dr. Paul Gibier, the specialist in charge. The pat ents were all Loys between the ages of 1 and 12. When Dr. Gibier was ready to proceed with the inoculating process five more boys were added to the 1 st, swelling the number of patients to twelve. Tire course of treatment requires a da ly inoculation for two weeks. This makes thirty-seven patients that have 1 een treated at this im-ti-lion since it was opened, nd all have met with success. Dr. Gibier is certain that be will have satisfactory results from the work begun on these patients. An Ashland, Pa., special s ys: The situation at the Bast mine is unchanged. Men are at work driving two shafts and have re cbed a depth of twenty feet. It is impossible to give a definite statement os to the extent of the tire, as on y part of it can be seen. The troughs which ?airy water to the burn ng banks bntst above the Buck Mountn n engine-house last night while the engineer was down the slope and washed the coal dirt into the house, almost covering the engine. At New York, Benjamin Bauman, aged 7 years, had his kit aim torn from his body. While feeding a pet canary he fell from the top of a step-ladder out of a third story window and was impaled ou an non picket of the fence tn front of the area way. The iron ran through his arm close up to the shoulder, and the weuht of his body tore the mangled member from its place and left it hanging quivering and bleeding from the picket. At Pittsburg (PaJ the sixth International Sunday-School C onvention of the United States and Brit sh North America and provinces will open on June 24 and remain in session nil week in Mechanical Hall of the Exposition b Hiding. Three sessions will be held daily, and at least two thousand delegates are ex. ected to be in attendanc *. The Hon. John Thompson, rged 81, died suddenly at New Hamburg, N. Y., of heart disease. In 1856 he was elected to Congress, being a member during the exciting debate on the admission of Kansas, in which discussion he took an important part. He was well known. WESTERN HAPPENINGS. Official news of the murder of Attorney Henry Hardie by hostile Indians near Tombstone has been received at army headqu irters. and Gen. Miles has issued an order to pursue the Indians and to use the same tactics as in pursuit of I Geronimo. He will place troops at Lowell, Grant and Huachuca, Arizona, and Fort Bayard, N. M., who will close in on ; them. The hostile band consists of Kid and his party, who were sentenced to ten ; years in military prison, but after serving : i p few years were pardoned by the President. A Minneapolis dispatch says: Representatives fiom about sixty of the most prominent lumber firms cf the Mississippi Valley and North nn Wiscons n met , at Minneapolis to form a combination to raise the price of ’umber. Capital tc j । the amount of mpre than $150,000,000 w..s represented. Thu meeting resolved , to call their traveling men off the road for sixty days from the time ; the agreement shall be signe I by threefourths of the lumbermen of the section. A committee was appointed to draw up a price list. This committee is toreport at a moating to be held at the same place the second Wednesday in July. In the meantime an energetic etlort will be made to secure the consent of as many manufacturers as possible to an agreement on a higher price. Frank Kuhn, proprietor of Kuhn’s Garden on Milwaukee avenue, Chicago, and his entire family, consisting of his wife and two sons, besides two servants, were poisoned by eating a pie that was afterward found to contain arsenic. The man servant John, 32 years old, died. The others are all out of danger, as a result of prompt medical attention. A Sr. Cloud, Minn., dispitch sa-s: The Keller binding-twine mack ne has been solei to the McCormicks. Senator Keller came down from Sauk Center prepared to meet Col. Westerman from the McCormick Coinpan , of Chicago, and consummate the sale of his machine. Both tne McCormick and Deering people have made h m an offer of $100,006 in cold cash for the machine, and he lias finally decided to let the former company live it. The instrument is of apparently simple construction and seems to do its work to perfection. A ioll of over one thousand feet in one piece, made from slongu grass, was exhibited, and it is pnt up a a cost of oi e-quarter of a cent a pound. Those who have seen it say it is destined to revolutionize the binding twine business in the Northwest. 11 is announced that the Choctaw Lottery Comp my is about to begin business withaopital of $900,000, The charter was obtained from the last Legislature of the Choctaw Nation on condition that a large share of the profits be turned over to the Choctaw Orphan Asylum. A Minneapolis paper prints the particulars of the formation of a big cracker 1 bust with a capital of $10,000,000, an’d

including nearly every prominent cracker- I maker in the country. The uegotia- | tious have been conducted very qui- ! etly, and the facts have been so well concealed that very few per- { sons outside of those directly inter- I ested know of it. There has been u I i pool in operation for some time, profits ' being divided ou an agreed percentage, ; but this has proved unsatisfactory and ; the trust is the result. It is to conduct ; the entire business of the various concerns interested, stock to the amount of ; $10,000,601) being issued in return for the ’ transferring of the individual properties. ’ A goodiyshare of this $10,000,030 is water. I A Little Rock dispatch says: The white citizens of Cameron have declared war upon the blacks because of au as- j snult made upon a lady by a negro three I weeks ago. Notices have been posted to ' the effect that no colored man will be . permitted to live in that section. Word ! reached this city that Robert Weaver had i been shot down in cold blood at Cameron [ decause his skin was black. His assassin ; is unknown. Thomas Williamson, the triple mur- | derer, was arraigned before a Sedalia (Mo.) justice of the peace, charged with the murder of Jeff Moore. He being without an attorney, the case went over. Williamson wore from his cell to the court-room an old hat which several i parties instantly recognized as having I belonged to Charles Moore and worn by j him just before his disappearance. This * ; hat ha I in its side a dint to correspond i j with a wound found in the skull or the j I murdered man. Edson Gregg, of St. Joseph, Mo., one of the largest grain brokers on the j j Missouri River, has failed for $,50,006, ! ■ His assets have not been estimated, but j | tue known to be sm ill. He operated j fifteen elevators on the St. Joseph and j I Grand Island Railroad nil the < hicago, I Kansas and Nebraska Road in Kansas and Nebraska. Mr. Gregg’s failure is , j due to heavy purchases of corn made for ; July delivery. A Sro< KTOX, Cal., dispatch says: A break in the levee ou Un on Is’and kt i i water into the middle division of 8,600 • i acres of grain. The break is 101 feet 1 i wide and cannot be closed. John Anderson, B. Qukt and E. L. ’ j Ennenberg were killed near Castle Ito k, ■ Col., by a c:>ve-in at Curry A O’ Brien s i rock quany. SOUTHERN INCIDENTS. A telephone message reco ved at ; Austin, Texas, from Liberty Hill, about j twenty miles west of Aus!in in a rugged ; f-ection of country, state; that a desperate encounter on 1 orseback eccuired be- i < tween a gang of horse thieves and officers . pursuing them, resulting in the killiu r of one of the thieves find the capture of several others. A dispatch from Fort Worth, Tex., says: Just after the prand march had been completed and d Hiring had begun at 10:30 o'clock in the Texts Spring L’alacehtre flumes were discovered tn the mammoth s ructure, and m a short time it was in ruins. The main floor was thronged almost to siitloc tiou with the elite of the State's society eir les, and m the panic-stricken rush which ensued as the dreaued cry of lire spread from month to mouth many people were ; injuied, but loss of life was averted almost by a miracle. Men, women, । and children rushed with the frenzy born of fear to the places of exit, mid the weaker went down in the suffocating ciush. Contractor Al Haynes received injuries which will un ioubtedly cause ‘ death. Several children are missing, j Others injured are: Mis. Volney Hall, injured internally; G p Hollingsworth, badly crushed; Judge L. X Coi pt-r, both legs broken; George Lo-tller, seriously injured; M. R. t raice, of New title ms, badlv hurt; James Davis, jumped from the upper sto l adly ci np’ed. Bissell Wilson, railway dek, of St. Louis, feet burned. Many others were slightly bur.. The loss is estimated at SIOO.OOO. ThEODOKE U. WIEDENMULLEB, a wealthy merchant and ranchman, was waylaid near Corpus ( hristi, Texas, t od with a rope, taken ton brush, covered with turpewin^, find bumednli e. The citizens of Duval County offer $2,600 reward for thr capture of the murderers, j Mexican smugglers are suspected, as Wiedenmuller was disliked in their . circles. _ THE NATIONAL CAPITAL. A AVashington di-patch says: At the session of the convention of State R ilroad Commissioners a resolution was ' ado; ted that the public in'ereo‘s w ; ’.i best le subserved by the adoption of a classification which shall be uniform for the j whole < ountry. POLITICAL PORRIDGE. The President has sent to the Senate the foTow.ng nominations: ” George C. Ginty, Marshal for the Western Dis- ; trict ot Wisconsin ; Levi A. Hughes, Collector of Internal Revenue for New Mexico; B. H. Sullivan, Surveyor General of South Dakota; T. I’. Clreney. Pension Agent at Concord. N. H. ; Anton Mehrlich, Register of the Laud Office at Central City, Colo.; William It. Hoyt, of Wisconsin, Commissioner for the District of Alaska; Receivers of Public Moneys—T. D. Meinls, at Marquette, Mich,; C. F. Augustin, at Menasha, Wis. Consuls general—Edmund W . P. Smith, or ilia District oi Columbia, at Bogota; George H. Wallace, of Missouri, at Melbourne, Consuls —Aquilla J. Daugherty, of IKirx . at Callao, Peru ; Rouncevihe Wiidman, of Idaho, at Singapore; Samuel L. Gracey, ot Massachusetts, at Foo Chow, China. 5v ithdravv u—Samuel W. Gracey, Consul at Cardiff. To be Consuls of the United States—Byron G. Daniels, of the District of Columbia, at Hull, England; Laton S. Hunt, of New York, at Guelph, Ont.; Isaac C. Hall, oi Massachusetts, at Cliar lottestown, Prince Edward’s Island; i Joseph O, Kerbev, of Pennsylvania, at Paia, ' Brazil; Alfred B. Keevil, of Tennessee, at MarI tinique, West Indies; James F. McCaskey, of Ohio, at Acapulco, Mexico, The Senate has coutimed the followicg nominations: Ge orge Chirst, Collector of Customs for Ari- ‘ zoim; 1. W. J >yer, United States Attorn *y for . Maine ; D. E. Bryant. District Judge for' tiie i Eastern District of Texas: Samuel L. Graeev, I of Massachusetts, Consul at Foo Chow, China. A Newport (R. I.) disputed says: AsJ ter the usual pre iminary exercises the ' two houses of the State Legislature as- ; sembled in joint session, i nd after organi- ; zation John W. Davis was elected Gov- । ernor; W. C. T. AVardwell, of Bristol, i Lieutenant Governor: Ziba O. Slo mm, , of Providence, Attorney General; E. D. i McGuiness, of Providence, Secretary of j State; and John G. Perry, of Kingstown, । ; General Treasurer. The proclamations were made from the balcony of the State House. A Lincoln special says: The procla- ■ mation of Gov. Thayer revoking his call for an extra session of the Legislature has been made public. The reason as- ' signed for this action is that the legality i of the nets of the Legislature convened ! under his recent call would be ques- ' tioned, and miiht be entirely nullified by the courts. The alleged illegality con- i sists in calling a session w.thout giving !

time to fill vancancies in th3 many legislative districts which will i>e without representatives on account of the lemoval of member by their election to other offices. RAILWAY NOTES. A New York dispatch says: At the annual meetingof the Pacific Mail George and Jay Gould retired from the directory. The change of management brings into control a directory in harmony with the Canadian Pacific find Great Northern Railroads. The new Directors are: C. B. Houston, who was once before President and was re-elected, Calvin S. Brice, Samuel Thomas, C. M. McGhee, Oliver 11. Payne, Henry Hurt, Edward Lauterbach, C. P. Huntington and I. E. Gates. FOREIGN GOSSIP. — The Armenian village of Bepahie has , been destroyed by an earthquake. The Nile at Assouan is lower than for i years. It is hoped that improved irriga- । tion will mitigate the failure of the I crops. The weavers in the large mills in Tresnitz, Sternberg and Zwillau, Moravia, have struck work to enforce a demand made upon their employers for an increase of 100 per cent, in their wages. A Sofia cable says: The northern part j of this.city has been wrecked by a burr - : cane. The loss of life is considerable. Among the soldiers the killed and wound- [ ed number eleven. The loss among the j inhabitants has not yet been i scertained. The damage to the palace amounts to i $300,600. Invi situation in the case of the i Nihilists arrested at Paris shows that Reinchstein, the leader, manufactured the bombs and was the only one who charged the bombs with the explosive. It is ‘•tilted that several of the prisoners cannot be convicte I on the ch rge of > manufacturing explosives, but that they will be expelled fiom the country. FRESH AND NEWSY. Srciir.TAßY Windom has written Immigrant Inspector Fitch, of Chicigo. that | ■ contracts m de w ith Canidian carpenters I coming here in response to an advertise- ; went offer.ng them steady work at eer- ‘ t in wages are violations of the alien । ; contract labo law. Th : Housi Committee on Commerce I In s agreed to fax orably teport the bill j providing that no Stata shall be re- j strained in its power to prohibit or re- j strain the sale or transportation of oleo- j i margarine. A St. Paul dispatch reports the oc- ! currence of a hot wave m the Northwest. ■ The mercury nt Huron, S. D., stood SI i deg ees above zero, and Yankton reported I the same figure. This condition was accompanied by low• barometric pu ssure and high winds or tornadoes are fe .red. Oppo-ite conditions are reported further north, where in Manitoba rain has fallen. Tur. Prus'.dent and his family contemplate spending a portion of the summer season by the seaside, although no definite arrangements have been made. Thi: Norlhiiexlt rit Miller says: “The flour output last week w as 167,3.5(1 biirreD, averaging 17,876 daily, against 129,740 the week before, 10.5,066 for the corresponding time in issq, and 162,006 in 1888. Under the influent e of the present lifeless flour market there is a growing tendency to curtail the output. This is true j of the country as well as of Minneapolis. | Middlemen appear to have no conti- i deuce m present values, and even if ; concessions are made it is doubtful ■ if any considerable increase in sales I i could be ettected. Millers are therefore maiLtiiining ; rices pretty well, asking perhaps .sq/ 10 cents less than a week ago. she direct export shipments for the week were 27,230 barrels against 2'1,940 the preceding week. Saturday 281,666 barrels of flour were reported in store at Duluth, against 127,666 a year ago. Wheat received for the week ending Muy 27, 133,!’4u bushels. Shipments — Wheat, 161,266 bushels; flour, 113,498 ba-rels; millstutf, .”.,629 tons.” A Lin< rLN (Neb.) dispatch says: Piendent John Fitzgerald, of the Irish National League, received the following ■ cablegrHin: “Your i ction postponing j convention has my entire approval, and । j if cal legram had reached me in time I I . should have advised recent meeting of [ council. Farnell.” Bradstreet's says: The opinion gains | ground that we tire to carry over nearly 40,t0 >,066 bushe's of wheat July 1 next in excess of the quantity cairied over one year ago. Believers in higher prices point to reported prospects for a crop of only 412,660,(100 bushels of wheat this y ear, i s compared with 49 >,006,0 >0 bush- । i el; hi 1889 a; an offset, with a tendency . to fe.vor holdir; cf grai l. ” MARKET KEI OKTS. CHICAGO. CatH-E— rrime ....* 475 ® 5.50 . Fair to Good 4OJ (f® 4.75 Common 3.00 4.G0 Hour—Shipping Grades. 3.50 (g 4.25 Sheep". 3.50 0 5.75 Wheat —No. 2 lied 93 o .94 Corm— No. 2 33 .34 Oats— No. 2 28’.)© .29 Bye —No. 2 53 O .55 Bl iter —Choice Creamery 12 vS .14 Cheese— Full Cream, Hat's OS (Oi .08J4 Eggs— Fresh 12 © .13 Potatoes —Choice new, per bu.. .40 © .48 Pork— Mess 13,00 iulb.JO MILWAUKEE. Wheat —No. 2 Spring 89 @ .90 Corn —No. 3 33 coi .33’3 Oats —No. 2 White 29 & .30 Rye— No. 1 31‘t>© .55)4 Barley— No. 2.... 47 ! .ji<4 .48’.] Pork —Mess 12.75 ©13.25 DETRO 11'. Cattle 3.00 © 4.50 Hogs 3.01 us 4.0 I Sheep 3.00 © 5.25 Wheat -No. 2 Red 95’._.© ,9(>’<. Cohn —No. 2 lillow 30 ’© .3(1’) Oats— No. 2 White 31 & .32' TOLEDO. Wheat 94 & .919; Corn— Cath. 35 © .33 OATS—No. 2 Waite 20 © .30 NEW YORK. Cattle 4.00 © 5.25 . Hogs 4.00 © 4.5) Sheep 5.50 © 6.50 Wheat— No. 2 Red 95’/.© .OtiJa Cohn —No. 2 40 © .41 Oats— Mixed Western 32 .35 Polk New Less 13.75 ©14.25 ST. LCUiS. Cattle 4,25 © 5.00 Hogs 3.75 © 4.-5 WhkxT —No. it Red 95'j .93'$ Corn —No. 2 31 © .32 Oats —No. 2 27 © .27^ Rye —No. 2 52 © .52K INDIANAPOLIS. Cattle— Shipping Steers 3.03 © 5.00 Hogs— Choiaa Light 3.00 © 4.00 1 Sheet —Common to Prime 3.00 © 5.00 i Wheat- No. 2 Red Ui © .9; Corn —No. 2 White 33 © .37 Oats— No. 2 While 31 © ,31'S CINCINNATI. Hogs 3.50 & 4.03 | Wheat— No. 2 Red 94 © .96 Corn —No. 2 37 © .38 I Oats— No. 2 Mixed HI © ,3iq Byk— No. 2 53 © .61' BUFFALO. 1 Cattle —Good to Prime 4.50 © 525 । Hogs —Medium and Heavy 4.00 © 4.25 ! Wheat— No. 1 Hard 98 © .93 ! Corn— No 2 33)$© .37%

HONORING HIS MEMORY. DEDICATION OF THE GARFIELD MEMORIAL. Fresident Harrison. Members of the Cabinet, and Many Other Distinjgiiished Statesmen Participate. Cleveland, Ohio, May 31.—The roar of cannon and the cheers of 50,060 people welcomed President Harrison and Vice-President Morton to Cleveland to participate in the unveiling of the monument to the memory of the late President, Garfield. The monster demonstration at the unlo 1 depot, however, 1 crowned tiie triumphal entry into the | city. The first to greet the President ) was ex-President Hayes. The President 1 shook hands with him and several other j gentlemen, and was then escorted to his carriage. As the President stepped into his carriage there was a mighty roar. In advance of the carriage doing escort duty were the cavalrymen of the First Cleveland troop in their olack and yellow uniforms. Behind them in the first car- / 4^ z? ' THE MEMORIAL BUILDING. 1 riage were President Harrison. ex-Presi-dent, Hayes, the Hon. Ainos Townsend, , and Mr. D. P. Eells. In the second । carriage were Vice-President Mor- ; ton. ex-Gov. Foster. Mayor Gardner, and | Gen. Barnett. Secretary Windom, Mr. ’ Lee Mcßride, the Hon. R. C. Par-urns, I and L. E. Holden were seated in Hie | third carriage, and in the fourth were | Postmaster General Wanania l ;er, Marshall Ramsdell and Mr. M. A. Hanna. Attorney General Miller. George 11. Ely and S. Everett occupied thefifiii car- : riage, and Secretary Rusk, the Hon. i William McKinlev. Jr., and the Hon. D. jA. Angler the sixtll z\t Bond street she escort wheeled and led the distinguished visitors up to and 1 along Euclid avenue past decorated ; blocks and residences unt l the home of Mr. Eells was reached. The party then disbanded. President Harrison and Marshall Ramsdell, the guests of Mr. Eells. alighted and tne other carriages rolled away to the various houses where the occupants were to be entertained. Gen. W, T. Sherman arrived later in the day and was the guest of his nephew Henry S. Sherman. Maj-Cen. Schofield of the army 1s being entertained by Mr. WilHirm Chisholm. At noon the procession started toward Lake View cemetery, five miles away. The cemetery was reached at 2:30 o'clock, and there was thunder of cannon as President Harrison's carriage neared the head of the procession and . passed under the triumphal arch spani ning the cemetery gates. President Harrison and Gov. Campbell | occupied the first carriage. Behind , them were ex-l'resident Hayes and I Vice-President Morton, and in the next were Postmasterd>< oral Wanamaker, Maj.-Gen. Schofield, Major McKinley, and Secretary Husk'. In the other carriages were members of President Garfield's cabinet and numerous Senators and Congress-uen. ' The parade surpassed in numbers and appearance anvthing ever seen in Cleveland. Tiie military and the masonic boilies were massed in front, and the veterans and civic societies followed. Over forty bands were interspersed through the procession, which, although the men marched twelve abreast. i stretched out for a distance of three / \ ' i! fe 'lf jfir?' a ■ Wfe ■ ■ 100 THE STATUE, mill's. The special trains had brought 56,006 people to the cemetery gates and the crush about the monument was terrible Ex-President Hays, president of tin Garfield Monument Association, made the opening speech, and the oration was delivered by ex-Governor Jaco! D. Cox, dean of the Cincinnati law college. A chorus of 500 voices sung patriotic airs. After the regular exercises the Knights Templar held brief services and a national salute was fired. 'fhe Garfield memorial stands on the bluff overlooking Lake View cemetery. Its foundation is 100 feet above the level of the lake, three miles distant, and it rises to a height of 180 se n t. It is an imposing structure, conspicuous lor miles in all directions, while internally it is the most magnificent mortuary temple on this continent. Artistically considered, it has few if any superiors in the world. If we are as willing to explore the Bible as our fathers were to sail the Spanish Main, the work will grow upon us with a fascination that shall lure us on to the real El Dorado, and enrich us with a treasure that is better than silver and more precious than tine gold. Theo. Brown observes that there are some men xvho are mean enough to counterfeit a counterfeit itself. Everything that is nice grows on the othei side of a barbed wire fence.

DOINGS OF CONGRESS.! IMPORTANT MFASI RLS < DNSIDFItED^ AND ACTED UPON. At Hie Nation's Capitol—What Is Being fl Done by tiie Senate and Hohm* — Ol<l wa Mat tors Disposed Os ami Nev Ones Cou-B sldereiL S The session of the Senate on the 27th inst, fl| Was oecupicd principally in a discussion < n ator Wilson’s bill subjecting imported liquors to the provisions of the laws of the several fl States. In the House Mr. McKinley of (jhj o 'fl submitted the conference repor uuon the cusl^B toms-admiuiHtrative bill, i'ho conference rel port wus adopted—yens, 127; nays, 13- tkefl) Speaker pro tern, counting a quorum.’ The^B Democrats as a rule retrained from voting. The House then went into committee of the whole. £ (Mr. Allen of Michigan in the chair) 011 the'® river and harbor appropriation bill fl An amendment, calling (or ®s,ouu for nm fl provements at Cedar Islands, lowa, was fl deteuted, as was that of Mr btoue, or Kentucky fl a-king lor au appropriation for Hickman, Ky fl This was followed by the defeat of an amend', fl uient calling for .*2jU,ooo for levees at Natchez H Miss. A long debate followed an amend mem-fl ottered by Mr. I oat tier of Louisiana, as to tho fl im| rovements at tiie mouth of the Rud and the. ■ hiad of the Atchiif.ilaya Rivers, which was de- B feat si. An amendment was offered Ly the fl Cnairiunn of the River u id llurb u Committee,,l providing that $50,033 of tne amount allotted to-fl the Missouri River shall be. expended between 9 Sioux City and toitth Dakota, and #5000) fl above South Dakota. Agn ed to. Mr. McCrearv fl made a point of order against the feature of ■ the bill m inch imposes a tine lor obstruction of £ navigable waters pr dumping into streams such I hi tick s us may b'come an obstruction, holding ■ Hint Ihe committee had no power to inflict fine- ■ and imprisonment. Fendi.ig discussion, the K committee rose ami the House ad.earned. ’ £ In the Senate on the 28th, the Senate bill sub- I jecting imported liquors to the laws of the sev- B eral States occupie 1 the attention of the Sena- ■ tors all day. In the House Mr. Vaux, Mr. Il I'anuuU’s sme -ssor, presented his credentials' a and was qualified as a Representative. Ali lull was passed appropriating .$125,000 for | the estiiblishnunt of tne national military ■ park at the battlefield at Chickama-.ga. A J conference was ordered on the naval appro- I priuiion bill, and then the House went i into committee of the whole iMr. Burrows of Michigan in the chair) on the river and harbor bill. On motion of Mr. Dunnell of Minnesota, sectio i 8, providing that it shall not be lawful, to build bridges over navigable waterways without first securing the approval of theSecretary of War to tne proposed plans, and providing a fine and imprisonment; us lenaltyfor violation of said act, was so amended as to penult the casta to bo brought before toe Unite I Beatas courts instead ot the Secretary of War. On motion ot Mr, Cornstock, of Minnesota, all the paragraph calling for the survey and the estimated cost of cutting, anew channel to the Bay of Superior, opixvsite the opening between liice’a Point and Connors Point, was stricken out. A motion to recoin- 1 mit the bill, with instructions to the committee I to cut out the piaragraph making an appropria- ; tion for beginning work upon the Hennepin j Canal, was defeated—nays, 1J8; yeas. cl. The ! bill then passed, and the House adjourned. In the Senate, ou the 29th, most of the day was spirit in the consideration of thobill sub- 1 jecting imp'orted liquors to the provisions of the laws of the feverul States, and after 11 dis- | cushion 1 articipatod in by nearly all the Sena- ; tors present finally Bucceeded in securing a vote upon the bill, which resulted: Yeas. 34 ; nays, 10. Those voting in the iiftiniiatrve were: Allen, Allison Baiir, Call, Casey, Colquitt, Cullom, Davis, Dawes, Dixon. Lolph, Edmunds, George, Hawley, Hiscock. Hoar, Ingalls, Joues of Nevada, LcMillau, Mitchell, Moody, Morrill, Paddock, Platt, Plumb, Power.' Pugh, fa.vyer, Spooner^ Stewart, Stockbridge, Walt bull. Washburue, Wilson of lowa, 'luose voting iu the negative were Bate, Blodgett, Cockrell, <O.ie, Harris, 1 dories of Arkansas, Turpie, Vance, Vest, and A oorheee. The title of the bill was then amend- ' ed so as to read, "A bill to limit the effect of the regulation of commerce between the several States and foreign countries in certain cases.’’ The House spent the entire day in the considerniion ot bills making appropriations for I’titdic buildings. At five o ciock the committee of the whole rose, having piassed in committee bills providing tor public buildings at thirtyfive places, at a total cost of 5p4,425,u00. Morsels of Gastronomy. American ginger in Chinese jars is a new gastronomic humbug. Lamb has fallen a little in price, but not enough to injure Mary's pet. There are some hotel soup;so thin a blind man can see through them. Fashionable faniilir s’ prejud ice against hash is only shown away from home. It is dinted that Boston yachtsmen use their city's brown bread for ballast. Clams are once more seasonable, and their indigestive qualties just as good as ever There is one peach crop that never is. a failure, and that is the preserved kind. A man who puts sugar on lettuce will eat ice cream and drink coffee simultaneously. The trouble with hotel wafi’es is that 1 they appear to put too much flannel in them. There ought to 1 e some way to compel the boiling of cabbage and turnips outdoors. Those who delight in the g< od things of life are charmed just now to goto mar ket. The edict referring to the Chinese now applies to the sausages—they, too,“must Disraeli used to say the test of gentility was to see women cat oranges and grapes. Shad ro - and limo juice is the approved breakfast of the effeminate clubman. It is believed that the last gun nas fired ['or vea . and it is* meat and right'’ to let it alone. When scrapple disappears from the Philadelphia breakfast table, spring has actually come. In many people the eating of onions means a period of intended isolation from society. All the old literature about the efficacy of lettuce for insomnia has been started on its travels again. A man found a $lO gold piece in custard pie he was eating; no doubt a reward for his courage. A dull knife will make even a fillet seem tough, but a sharp one makes a pounded steak seem a tenderloin. People, wlio have been across the ocean will seldom touch “stewed pruaes with rice” after they have safely landed. The fondness of the tribe of parvenus and upstarts of the fashionable world for “fresh mushrooms” can be appreiated. There are people seen eating lamochops who look disconsolate because they cannot eat the bone as well as the meat. .. Nobody ever hears of codfish bans ■ in these days when old-fashioned food is voted very vulgar,,' even by descendants from the farm. , Odd Names for Papers. . Ripsaw is the only weekly in Wynne. i Ark, 1 The town of Azusa, Cal., has a paper । called Foinpotropic. Tombstone, in Arizona, has a paper called the Epitaph. Tom Joyce's Burlesque Gazette is ■ weekly in Helena, Ark. 1 Women's Exponent is the suggestive name of a paper published in Salt La City, Utah. . | El Verano, Cal., has but one paper. It Is called Vitigraph.