Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 18, 1881, Page 2

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—— e — s —_————————— night, given by the Tresldent to the two Houses of Congress and thelr officers, aud to members of the Supreme Court, The Ad- mdulstrntion hos made a new departure with vomurd 1o these soclal entertainments, nnd is Inviting what constitutes tho diferent clnsses of the political aind soclal worlit in town,, Tho great Ameriean people, represented by tho oiceseeker, hns his tirnh in the morning hows, the memy and navy have had one evening, and to-night the two Houses of ss were fnvited, A eurlons inchdent. 0 in extending the Invitation (o nated Wordreame from the State De- partment to the Viee-Prosudent requesting Liim to invite the Sennte (o the White House, Viee-President Arthur's fivst. Impulse was to unnonnes tho Invitation from the ehair, but this gesmed too wueh ko an announees ment of DEATHS AND MATMUAOGES 1IN COUNTRY CHURES and he finally deelded to send written in- vitatlons to the wembers of the Senete and the oftic This seconnts for the peenline lungungi itatums received by the Senators, ns the Invitatlon fssued by the Viee-President stntes that ho Iy reguested to fnvite the Senate, ‘Fhis Is guite a novel soelnl enstom In Washington, nud has ut- of the teacted attention [n soeln] cireles, dls- posed of to be eritiend, AMERICAN PORIKG THE RUBOPEAN CRUSADE ACGAINST TS, - WasHiNeTos, 3, G, Mareh 17.—The Min isters-of tho Unlted States to the Court of St. James and at the Freneh Capital have been- fnstructed to Iny before the respeetive Gov- ernments to which they are aceredited the senso of thi¢ Government that Injustico Is shown toward the citlzens and food-proil- uels of this cotntry by tho attitude which 15 belng asswmed in Burope on thls question. Posltive Instructions have been sent Lowell ot Londan to meet Crump's statements and pXDpose thelr erroneousness, Noyes, at P'arls, ing been telegraphied in the fotlowini terms, direeting him to lay the facts before the French Governpent : ST N WASHINGTON, Murch l.—Ta Noyee, finister, Paris: ureo respecting tha pork degroo of tho French Government Is approved. The statements of Crimgs, Acting Briush Consul at Philudelphia, oceasioned oxeltement and wide- epread comment hore, lending to correspoud-, cuce with the British Legatfon and Bonrd of ‘Trade. Hog cholera I8 confoumded with trich- Inosis, wnichi {8 un entirely distinot diseunse, Tlut tho representations regumding Loy cholern aro very gren f exmgrernted, Most searching Investization tuils to riow n basls for the bub- lished statchients, The mortulity among very young swine from chotern hus “been less this rear than for several yoars vast, and the comli- ginn of full-grown howe, which alone sre used 1or pucking ana 4sx|i\ur|. 18 this yesr excoptions ally wood, Tho Dritish representutive at Philn- delphin hos nppureutly heen mtsled by designing speculutors to the great {njury of legitimnto trade, Dony In the strongest terms tho report of tho British Consul, shonld tho rench Minls- ters uppenl to it 18 Justifying them Interifeting or restricting the Ameriean K trade. In- structions follow.. Bua eeretury, CITIRIQUI, TROUBLE ANEAD, v Special Dispateh to The Chicago Tribune. WasnuiNaroy, D, G, March' 17.—'T'he ma- terlal faets about the grants by the Govern- ment of New Granada to the Chiriqui Im- provement Company have Been published liere to-day, 'Tho nature of the grants, tho conditions upon which they were made, and the failure to comply with.any of theso con- ditlons, are sot forth In very clear terms. Tho laws under which the granis were made ure also printed, In short, the publication, which 1s drawn entirely from ofticial sources, isofa character to show concluglyely that the Dm- provement Company Wns no rights whatever, and that all which it ever clnimed have lapsed by the terms of ho concesslon itself. 1t is upon the strip of and granted to this Company that the Gov- ernment of the United States now propuses 10 establish conling stationst and there ean bo . |ittle duilbhol the fact that nnattempt on tho + purt of this Government to exerclss jurisale- tlon over any portion of this grant will lead to very serfous complications with the United - Btates ot Colombin, s i UMUNT. 18 REPLY TO THE WORKINGMRN. Bpecial Dispatch to e Chicage Tribune. Wasinaroy, D. €., Mareh :17.~Persons who are compelled to work n very groat denl more than elght hounrs every duy muy be pleased Wwith the following mneat reply nndo by Secretary-of-the-Navy flunt to a delegation of workingmen who called upon * him, lnsisting that he should ehango o ruling of the Department relativeto the Elght-Ilour law. Seeretyry Hunt sald: - The requeat you make fs too sudden. You nsk me, with a stroke of my pen, boforo any exami- ‘nation bas been made, to undo the aets of my predecessorin thismuttor, You wish ine, botweon 1his and Monday, to change tho settled poliey ot fuur yoars. 1ecannat, ot such short notice, cut olf 20 per cent of the nbor provided for by gurrent approprintions. {am i mintster of the Iuw, always obediont 1o 1fs dumands, und bound to excento it (n tho most falthful munner, My sympnthies are with tabor. [ ama lnboring- mnn, though never contining 1t to cleht hourn 1 shall endenvor to do what I8 safe, wise, and necessury. 1 slnlt give tho subject (e conside eration. “As soon ns tho present pressure is over Lsbnll givo tho matter my uattenuon, I cannot order uny chunygo now. NOTES, g THE PRESIDENT AND THI SOUTIL Spectal Dispatch ta The Chicago Tribune, Wasmixgroy, . C., Murch IT.—A gentle- man on inttmate terms with the President stntos that, ns regards the South and the new Adminlstration, thers Isto ho no distinetively Soutliern policy, but that Presldent Garfietd intonds to treat all scetions alike. As to the Federal ofiices tn the Svuth, homeunns to deal wish thew on procisely the same prineiplo ‘whieli howitl adopt to tilting places In North- ern States, 1lo means 1o look for the most énpable, honest, and reputable Republic- ung, and Intrust thess with the sub- ordinnte plgees at his disposal, e does not “mean to appoint Dome- erats, 1fe will not select sham Republicaus, 1o will seek out renl, open-and-aboveboard, netive, or what are enlled the Stalwart South- € Republicans to fill the mauy Important places in the Southern States, 1le whi pro- fer men whose relatlons Lo tho Republican varty hiave boen pronounced, whose convie- tiong on party questions have veen positive, and whose characters, antecedents, und r Intions to the communitics In which thoy live minke them men of influenee,—broper leidors of thelr purty, No Dewoerats or Asslstunt- Demoerats need apply. i’ RAYNOR, Tostmaster Alngor snys that Mr, Kennoth Ruynor, who thinks he'wns insulted by an enploye of the T'ost-Oflice Departinent, ns a wiatter of fuet, had nll histroublo fu the Bank ot Wushimzton. e walked Into the bank uid In o vather loud touo usked whero the Posmaster’s room was, —The roply camo from elerl, 1 don’t know,” wheérenpon Alr. Raynor had some words with o pollees uan wito happened to ho In the bunk, HALIFAN, Seerctary Blalue has alreudy commenced actlvo negutiations with the Hritish Govern- ment relative to the fisherles question, and it 15 sald (nlthu\uih dispatches from the ol ummri/ contradlet 1t) that thero are indlea- tluns thut thut Government is_disposed to leave the wholo subjee tha Fortune Bay outruge wnd other vinees growlng ot of the Washington "Freaty to then wimplyes, of which Secretury 1ipdne and Siv Edward hornton, Britlsh Mihister heve, shall by two, the thivd to b chosen by the mutual agreciment of theso two, % THE INDIANAPOLIS POST-OFFICEN ‘The appolntent”of thy Mon. James A, Wildimut us Postmaster at hutlannpolis wus Bent Lo the Setnto this ufternoon by the President, which will by promptty contirmed s 800N uA the Benate Is organlzed, In tho reeent Senutorinl fi""' g he was ‘one of Gen, Harrlson's wiriwest supporters, aud, by tha u[umlmnwul. the Senator ndleates w dis- l»msll on o takie enro ot bis filonds, Col, W. L Hotlowny, the present Inenmbent of the finlcu, I8 recognized hers ag one of Wy very esb and most eflelent oflicils in the Lost-Otti Departiment. 1o held the omfico twelve years, and but < for this fuct e would hiwe been reappointedd, T As it Is, Gen, Tlarrson had astruggle with Dihmselt betoro he conld suke wp his wiid 1o recommend a chunge, In anjutervlvw thiy eveulng b suld it wus the most diflfentt ivwbh:m b wa called upon to settle, ¢ wus not pleasant, ho sald, (o bo called upoir to diseriminate between friends, and b regarded botn Hollowuy und Col. fi, 8. Foster ns bis friends, The Senutor betrayed ugreat deal of feching us ho waus spesking, ik = co hus showing that, though defeated, these gontle- men had not forfeited elther his regard or rgapeet, NEW MENICO, Col, Lionel A. Sheldon will probably bo nominated dx Governor of Nuw Mexico. ™ 1o wis - Licutenant tn Gen, Gaoefleld's regi- ment, and after the War went to Louislina, atd was o Representative from that State (o the Forty-fiest, Forty-secomd, snd Forty- third Congresses, Of fate years ho has reslded I Oo, 1le was an execllont membor of Congress, and s regarded as well fitted for hisnew flehl of duty, 1L 18 the_expeetntjon of Gov, Lew Walklice, of New Mexico, that he wili be sent ta Soullt Ameriea. , BOCKWELL, The President to-day appointed Col, A, o Rockwell, of the Quartermnstor's llvlmrl- s Commivsioner of Publie Buili \m::; He will M Col, Ruckwell was a eluss- inrfield at Willlams College, my from tho velunteer sekvice, eral yenrs an ollleer on the 4 0 gentieman of nt- s il el standing, and §s eminent- Iy fitted for tho new duties for which he has been asslgned, A GUEAT SUCCTUR, . The Commliteo o Inaugzuration held a final meeting to-night, to lienr the report of tho Finnneo Comudttes, 1t appears thnt all bills lnye bean paid, that the proceeds of tho sale of bull-tickets was aufliciont-to eover nll ilnbllities, and to-more cheeks will be drawn for returning every dollur.of private subseriptions made to meet any deficiencles whieh wight oceur, The whols munuge- mont of this affair, from first to last, hay been of the most ereditable eharactor toall eoncerned. 1t was on n larger sealo than any- thing of the kind ever attenipted here before, fnd every fenture of 14 wns a gramd sucress, To tha Seerctary,, Col, 1, C, Corbin, more than to auy other man s due the remarkably sueeesy of the demonstration. THE VACANT JUDGESITY _ Ex-Chief-Justice Caton, of the Tllinols Supreae Beneh, is here urglne the Senate to rojeet Stanley Mutthews, on the ground that he Is not n vesident of the eirenit, and the peopio of Wisconsln, Ilinols, and Iuliang dow’t want nn ontslder put over them agnin ns United States Jitdge, 1t Matthews' rejee- tion ean he seenred elther Judge Jeweti or Audgs Isham, of Chicago, will bo urged for the nomination, 1LLINOIS APPLICANTS, ‘The Hon, Iid Warner, of Morrison, amem- Dber of the [linols State Board of Equalizy- tion, Iy here waitine to step Into *Long” Jones' shoeg as Collector of Internal Itev- enue for the Freeport distrlet, n ease Jones is mude Marshal, -~ Warner isstrongly backed for the plu Gen, Marting of Snlem, and Col. Isune Clements, of Carboudale, left for Jiome lnst nicht, Clemonts, who wis nnaspl- rant for tha [nternal Revenue Coltectorshipof thie Cafro Distriet, withdrew: from the con- test before hls departure. This virtually leaves tho field the to flon, Dan Jogan, of Motud City, who §s Thomas' cholee for the position Capt, George W. Martin, former ¥ rk of Scott County, 18 an applieant for the PosrOflice nt Winchester, in place of Mrs, Iarlan, the present ineumbent, Mrs. Brennan, a soldler’s widow, 18 also an appll- cant for that office, CASUALTIES. KILLED ON THE TRACK. DeTrorr, Marct 17, 5t evening as two en of the Michigan Car-Works, going, howme, wore erossing the Lake Shore Rall- rond track, In the suburbs of this eity, lhu;’ were striuek by aun outgoing trafn, Ond) named Jolin Fraser, was Instantly kllled tho' other, Nudolph Mahran, had o leg broken, and, 1t s tedred, received fatal in- ternal injurles. The former, nged 25, leaves a wife and two children; the Iutter, nged 37, has o wife and elght ehildren, It s elntmed that the locomotive Inmp was not lighted, nor the bell nor whistie used when the train passed the erossing where the aeelilent ve- curred, NS, relieve Col, Case o) . BURNED 70 DEATII. Rpecial Dispatch to The Chicago- Tribunes OT1TAWA, 11, March 17.—A heart-rending aceldent oceurred to-tlay in‘the burning to gleath of “an Infant son of Mr. and Mrs, Thomnas Pantty, of Houth Ottawa. The mother loft her child nlone In the houss’ while sho stepped® inta o neighbor’s, and, on her return, found the littlo boy, aged 18 months, insensible upon the floor, ifs elothes having been burned nearly off. * In playing he hiad come too close to the stove. ~ Dienth released the little suflerer In a fow hours, TIIROWN FROM A WAGON. Dexisoy, Tex., March 17.—dudge D. G, Venable, Deputy United States Commission- er, and a promincnt eitlzen, was aceldentally killed to-day - by belng thrown from d wagon and run over, IHis wife aud daughtor loft to-night with the remalus for Frankfort, Ky., where the family formerly resided. DENtNON, "Tex,, March 17.—Judge D, (. Venable, who moved here from Kentueky threo yoars ngo, was to-dny thrown under tho wheels of # londed wagon anu instantly &:l{_ltefl. The remains will bo taken to Frank- jort, " : TLOSTON SAN Fraxcisco, March The Eurckn Powder-Works nt Berkley, neross the bay, uxploded this worning. ‘Theexploslon at the Eureka Powder-Works proves to have bean of a fifty pound packago of powder with which the Company wns vx- verimenting, with a view of ascortaining the condftlons most favorable to igniting, * KILLED, . 8pectal Dapateh to The Chicago Tribuns BroosixaroN, 1L, Mareh 17.—Thomas Devine, an englucer on the Indlanapolls, Bloomington & Westorn, was killed here to- duy, 18 homo 1s in Bloombngton, and he formerly ran on tho Chieago & Alton, ————— AN ELOPEMENT. A _Schoolmintress of 35 Years and a Youth of 18 Kly from Omuha to Get Married. Bpectal Duspaleh 1o The Chicago Tribune, OsAnA, Nob., Mareh 17.—A declded sensa- tion has been erented here by the announce- ment of the elopement of Miss Ellen M. Stratton, a teacher In Central Puplic School, with Charles Duke, her favorit pupll. Shp 18 nbout B years old, and ho Is not yet 18, Bhe hus nlwnys been regarded as n fine tencher ana an accomplished Indy. The boy fsnson of K I Duke, n prominent hard- ware merchunt, Young Duke hus for some tlme past boen visitig her at her room vvens Ings to aceure extra tuition In his studies, so 1t Is clnfmed, and the result was that they fell in -love to such am exe fent that an elopement seemed to them to bo necessary, Miss Steatton hos within tho past three or four weeks been preparing for this ovent by borrowlng sey- oral hundred dotlars from lersjator teweliors, In suws ranging from $24 to §100, She also left unpnld soveral large-siged store Dllls, honyd b, ete., and her ereditors to-day en- teavorwd to (Ind something to attach, but nnthing conld b found of uny great value, Jiss Stratton wits well known lere, and no one woulil ever huve suspeeted anything ot tho kind trom her, "The eloplag couplo huve wone to Chilengo, § A STRANGE OCCURRENCE. A Mun Killed by n Stroke of Lighte gy and Mis Gravoe Dug by th Bolt Whidh Canved 10s Deagh, Spectal Disbateh to The Chicags Tribunes Riensoxn, Va, Mureh 17.—1ussengers on the Incoming Southern tealn this ovening re- portmrunprecedented oecurrenco near Mo- renee, 5, G,y this morning, by which & mnn was not only kitled by n lighining stroke, but Wiz grave was, dug neatly ad with dispatet, wd Wmself burled fn It. Mr. Jomes © Dest, about 12 w'elock to-duy was overtaken by o sovere storm upon the pluntation of Dr, Reosoe Grege, sud was hurrying across o fleld toa plnce of shielter, when a torrltic crash enme, killing him fustantly, ‘The strangoest oceur- renes I conneetdon with the aifalr Is that the Bghtulng, after kiliug My, Best, dug his to be dug out with nnu'ulen. ——e—— . WHERE'S THE RESTRICTION? SAN FiraNcisco, Cul., March 17,~The City of Peking brouxht 99 Chinesy passengers from Hong Kong, THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: FRIDAY, MARCII. 18, 1881—TWELVE PAGES, NEW YORK. Oertainty that Gon, Grant Will Ro- sign from tho World's Fair Commission, Tho Subscriptions of $250,000 fo the So-Calied “ Ex-Prosidents’ Fund” Now Complete. Unanimous Desire ‘of, the Bubsoribers to Make Provision for Gen. Grant Alone. 1inteh Declares tho Award to tho Con- tral Construction Company n Tolegraphic Trick. Blaino Promisos the Viotims of the Eu- . ropsan Pork Oonspiracy Unole Bam's Protection. . WORLD'S FAIR, GEN, GRANT WILL WITHDRAW FEOM THE PRESIDENCY, Spectat Dispatch to Tha Chicago Tribune, Niw Youg, March 17.—In all probabliity the -World’'s Far enterprise hns follen {hrongh, nnd it will be abandonced, nt least so far as holding 1t n this elty Is coneerned. Gen. Girant has come to tho concluston that Lo eannot further help to float the affair, and whil withedraw from the Iresidency ns soon a8 the Commlsslon can find nman to takehls, place. *1wlish the foir every suceess, bub I findd T eannot give it my personal nttentlon, nmd thereforo Tintend muking way for some- body who can give it the attentlon whieh it requires In order to make It suceessful,” As to the Lnportant question of site, the Gieneral sald: “My impression is that, inasmuch ns *s0 much opposition ins been manifested by the cltizens of Inwood, TIE QUESTION OF NITE would be left open unill tho - necessary amount of funls s subseribed, and then to have it decided by the voles of subseribers,— the number of tholr votes to bu in proportion to the amount of meney subserlbed hy each. I have no doubt that the falr would be n sue- cess If held in Central Park, but the people are prejudiced ngalnst the use of thelr plens- ure grounds, and thelr prejudices should Lo respeeted.” Mr. Sullivan, one of the chief nromoters of the falr, concedes -that Grant’s withdrawal will dlseournge the public. Rufug lnteh, however, takesa moro hopetul view, and siu'n that, even with Grant ount, the Conunls- sion WILL GO OX WITH THE WO, © “There are other men us eapable as Grant.” he suys, * who ean Jend the enterprige.” Mr, Hateh says further, * Willam 11 Vander- bt ean afford to hold this falr at Inwood, iy all the expenses, sl stil make iL profita. 1¢ to the Now York Ceutrul Roilroad awul himself, Jay Gould pwns and_controls morg ntles of rativoud directly and indireetly than Vanderbilt, and yet his stocks are not sell- Ing g high' as Vanderbilt’s, It 13 nip wd tuck with thom ns to which is the best fel- low nt the present thue,” PRESS GOSSIP, Th the Western Assoctated Press, NEw Yok, Mareh 17,—The World snys: “Gen. Grant, when asked about the report: that he had resigned the Presldency of thy World’s Falr Commisston, snid: *1 hiave not sent In me’ reslgnation ns yet.’ ' Wiy it fruethmt you lntend Lo ?* was nsked, “Gen, Grant sald; * L think thero shouhl ho n Fcnuomm\ at the head of the Commisslon who can glve It ample time, and attention, ! 1 shall soon leave the country to be absont for anindefinit perlod, nnd ghis fact and pug- estion 1shall lny before the Conumissiol be- fore Monday next, so that they may et ne- cordingly, ‘This i3 all 1 can sny at present.h”” The Commerclal says: “IL'ls stated By, iersons very close in the confidence of” ien, Grant that, in consequence of his Mexican nothing mioro _to do with tho World’s Falr of 1853, It 18 uot positively known whether he has sont in hig ru!|§n|\(lml,,hut., as he leaves Mondny next for Mexleo, It |8 more than probuble I will present the for- mal document to the Commlissioners before Jeaving Naw York. It is understood Gen, Grant wislies the entorprise overy duccess, but, for rensons best known to himself, he- does not feel inclined to be connected per sonnlly with It.”” TheMmes makes the rnsmvu /UNounce- mont that Gen, Grant whl formally reston the Presidency of tho World’s Falr Commls sion before loaving for Mexico, - — GEN. GRANT’S FUND, TILE BUNSCRIPTION COMPLITE NEW Yonx, March 1%—In November Inst an appenl was made foran Informal subserip- tlons to provide o perpetual fund, whose an- nunl eome should be enjoyed during 1ife, and whilo not holdmg any Fedornl ofiice, by the ollest ex-T'resldent of tho United States, The desired amount of the fund was stated nt 250,000, and the probable yearly income b 812,600, T'ho task of ralsing the fund was undertaken In person by George Jones, and the record of his completed work Is con- talned In the following reports 1 have tho pleasure funonnco that, of tho ontire wnonnt of §250.600 which has hron sute seribed, 216,000 have beon paid fin, Tho oute standing subseriptions nro mninly those of n fow ‘subkeribiors’ for large AmMounts who iare at pres- entoutof tho ocountry, and have not yot had thuo to unswer my request tor pnyment, The amount alvondy reseived hus boen Invested by tho Commitied of Subseribiers, mmnlullmi of K, . Morgan, Oliver 1oyt, and Georgo Jones, and WhL yield an_annial, in- z, of $13,100, Bhould the remaindor ho Invested tooqual advantage, tho fund wlll‘ylwm ovor 15,000 1t yeur, snbscrivers thio nuines of fund, and nbout 230,00 have beon subseritied on the distinot understunding thut tho namcs ot tho donora shnll. bo kept seceot, 1 may say, huowuovar, thut an nnulysis of tho 1lst in iy pos- sesslon shows the following distributon of amounts 'Twa sithaoribers of 25,000, "Plireu subseribors of 810,000, . Nlghteen subseribers of #6,000 ‘Three subseribiers of 82,800, ,, 'Pwo subicribors of $2,000, Farty-clght subcritiera of O riber of #1000, y=s0ven subseribors ithsoribors of 20, | ‘Fhirieun subseriuors of ¥ O subscribor of ¥50 lous subsorlbers £ Total... Srevsriaesavaen seassrsens ,000 When It becomos necossary to provido for tho ultimato disposition of the fund n meeting of subseribers will be ondled, Urorax Joxes, Ureasurer, THE N TIMERT BAVAD At nn early stngo of his Inbors Mr, Jones Tound it would be'neeessary to abuidon the Tdun of devoting the incomy of the fund withe out reserve to the benedit of the oldest liviy ox-Presldent, “Che unanlimous senthnent o thoso npporiod Lo wits that the fuiid should be regwrded meroly us nn Imperfeet substls tuto for want of & Nutional Yruvlnluu for Gen, Grant, and that the tinul destination of tho principal shoull Lo o matter entirely within the discretion of the subserib- ors tor the umjor portion of the amount, No other argument spve the onv drawn frou the prefninent services of Gen, Grant to the Amorican peoplo would have avalled to raiso the fund to the deslred Hudt. No other numu suve his conld linve preompted men diftering n uvcrl)'lhh respond promptty“and ungrodging! apper] whose results nro now betore the pul- e Whilo professud ltepublicans constitute the great mujorlty of its subscribers, the lst contulns the naties of wen nos {dentitied with either party, ms well us of some proui- nent Demoernts, Oneof the latter cluss ap- pears us o subseriber for §10,000, TIE TELEGRAI'US, PANTIAL EVASION. New You, March 17,—The arbltrators ap- nuinted to valua the plant of the Amerlean Unlon Telegrapt Company awarded the Central Constructlon Company $10,000,000 in stock md £5,000,000 In bonds. About one- hulf of this was pald previous to the con- solldation, Bubsequently the Western Unlon Company issued fts new sfbek for tho baluice, and® yesterduy tho Central - Construction Company divided It up among Its stockholders, who -are lden- {leal with tho wrineival stockholders of the Amerlean Unlon Company—viz.: Gould and party, Nonaof the Injunetion procecdings took nny necountol this indebtedness to the Junstrnetion Company, The telegraph peo- ple sny that it was never contemplated to in- terfero with the payment, but Rtufus Iateh, when spoken to, chareterized the [ssnancs of tho new stock ns o trlek to ovade the in- unetion in part, and sald that, I his opins on, the orders of tho Court hind heen disre- parded, Inrespongo (o an fnquiry as to what e proposed to do about i, ho. would only answor that he was not through with them yet. PORK PRODUCTS. MERCILANTS APDE, TARY DLAINE, NEw Youxk, Mdih 17.~Several prominent merchants uunt«‘!“llhmuch to Secretary Blning to-day, reyjui us follows: Cables from Fieedo thls morning Indiente that thoro s latio tmpadiment in - nle Iowing the qse,® Of pork products shipped beloro © tecont edlols werg Tusuied, rog —ully vequest vou - to enble tho Amorl anlster at Purls 1o Inaist that all sueh &b 28 documents for which wers dated prior t0 1 edlot, shall bo duly re- colved, n othoewisy 0eont hardship {8 Incurred 1o shippors and thelidde, 2 Lato In the atternoon the following veply was recefved WaARIINGTON, March 17.~1 havo Instructed our Minister In Parfs to etfect the dosired arrmnge- tont, 5 JAsES G, BLAINE, THEOPIIILUS YOUNG. CONFLICTING 'TEST A8 TO A MAN'S Npeelal ta Cincinnatt Commercial, NEw Yonk, March 16.—The ‘Theophilns Young case bids falr to ho n eause celebre. There was anothor slngutar confliet of testi- mony In it to-day,. “The first two witnesses, John E, Burt, of Boston, aud Mr, Scanlan, of Baltimore, were produced by Henry Young, and they posltively identified the elalmant ng T'heophilug Yous When they had given their testhnony, Miss Florence Mlller wns catletd to tho stad by Young's lnwyer, Bl testified with evident ¢pgerness that sho was natep-danghter of Theophilus Young, being o daughtor of Mrs, Mary Young by a for- mermarriage, and seanning the cladm- ant from bend to-fout deelnred” that ho wis not hor steptagher. * Counsel then bade elaim- antstiml up and submit to an exmmination af his slmll by witness, The Iatter ran her Hugers through the hairon the back of his engagements, ho will have | Tead, but could not find o lnvee, ege-shaped sear which ‘Theophllis Young was known to Jwye on that_spol, neither could she find sears_on his forchenl 'and under his chin, When ecrosg-oxnmined she ndmitted thera were threo sears or spots fndieated, **but they were very sumll and nothing ke her stepfather’s,” She was asked whether thero wns any pecullarity about HER STEPFATHENWS TRETIL “Yes,” siio reptlod. **Thoy were very shorts down to the guwms, and blnek.” - Claimant openvd-ils mouth ad showed o s‘ct of teeth corresponding with this deserip- tlot, il s “Ah,” exclafined the witness In o half- vexed volee, **but my stepluthar’s teeth were smatler and biacker still, You want to de- ceive me.” X Mr., Cassldy, of - Boston, testified that n Soeptenbe 874, the Younus ook lodgings in his house, whers they remnined a month or two. Whon elilmant met the witness o ahort thiue nizo ‘e not only falled to reeog- nlze him, but absolutely denied ever having ladged on Washington street, The witness ngreed that clpimant bore n great re- semblanco to ’l'hcnl)hllus Young, . but thought 1t could not be him Dbecause he seemed somewhat sinallor, Alice Young, aged 1, daughter of Theophilus Young, wis tho next witness, Clulmant eamo forward and nllowed the wirk to feel his head, She havdly touched it, howaver, but excinlmed very loudly: * Ilg cannot be my father, for Nie has not* the sear, 5 1TEMS, LORENZ0 ILANRIS ARUEY. New Yonx, March 17.—Lorenzo larrls Abbey, one of the most expert anelers of “tho country, nnd’ momber of thé firin’ of Abbey & Imbrie, of this city, died yeaterday, [ In bls 50th yepr, (at Jacksonville, Fla, ~ He . was born at Kindoshuok, near Albuny. ' AN EXPEIT CITANGES HIS MIND; In the Whittaker courl-martinl Expert “donthworth thought he had been infludneéd In his first decislon In rogard to No. 27- by nany eircumstances which now hy places no welgltupon, i TIE WEATHER, ) The wenther to-dny Is cloudy, threataning, but pleasant. ‘Thermometer—6 a: my, 893 9 . m,, 493 noon, 40, . . THE UNISSUED FOUI PER CENTH. Tho Eveniny Postsays: * Respaetlng tho roports floating about to the stfcet that the Trensury I8 mumllmhu.'1 with_the influsntinl Liankers for the sale to 1t of $104,000,000 4 por eent bonds authorlzed but unissted, our n- formatlon to-day 15 that Secretury Windom dectines’ to consldor the aubject of the sulo of theso bondls until it hay been definltly set- tled whetheip or. nof there Is to be an-extri session of Congross.” . “UTICA, $ Rteports hiave been recolved ,in this clty (umuunclufi the failureof 1lopson & Shepard, wholesale denters In crockory at Utlea, Llu- Dbllities $100,000; assots 55,000, E ONE OF THE ROBBENS who entered the house of Miss Roberts in Brooklyn, and robbed her of $3,000 in bonds and juwalry, hus Been arrested and ldentltied by the viethn, . e — NO LOCAL TALENT. Mies E¥mmn Cranch Forcod to Retiro from the Cinctnnatl Collogo of Musie. Cinetnnistd Guxette, March 17, Mlss Emma Cranch, onr talented contralto, who restgned n sbort thue ago ns ong of the vaenl teachers of the Cotloge of Musle, and a statement of whose grievances hns been glven In these columng before, stated to n representutive of the Gazelte yesterday that sho had un additional compluiut to mnke agninst the Collpge Direetors. Whoen she reslgned I was with tho understanding that, In JuBtlce to ler puplls, gvho had puid thelr tultion tn advance !l*be Instructed by her, sho woulid be allowed to remain fn tho cojloge until she had satisfled tho terms of lmr'purlls. the longest of which would ‘bu about five weeks hence. — Sho desmed this uw matter of strlot justles to her puplils, a8 woll nsto the college, 1ut hor ur- rungemonts wers simmardly put aside, il tho College Direetors declled “that it was to thao Interests of the collego to have her resig- nntlon take elluct at onhee, Mlss Cranch stibnitted the following eor- reapondence, which will make natters more clear: AR Mancn 1, 1888,—2Alr, @, W, Nichols, Prestdent of the College of Musto of Cinclunatis 1 herewlth tentler iy ruslygnution wd vocnd teneher fu tho Collewre of Musio, 0 tuko efeot nt the close of tho terin of my presout pupild. Respoctfully, B EMMA CRANCH,L ‘To this lettpr Miss Cranoh recelved the fol- lowing reply: - * CINOINNATI, Mareh 12, 1881 (postmarkod- the Hth, 6 p.an)—3igs Emma Cranch, East Walnut Hills: 1nm insirdeted by tho Board of Directors 1o ucknowlodgo tho rocéipt af your reslguntion, dutod tho st fust., aud to expruss thoir regrot at your severing your connection with tho collego, As to tho thne'whon your reslznution 1a to tuko oftuat, the fntecests of tho colleke pruyunt tho Lonrd frum necepting uny svslguatdon 1o tako offect on tho explrution of tho torms of tho wvuplls inktruoted, ‘Fhey buave,"thorefore, nu- ocepted your reafynation, 1o tako etfeot linmes distely, "Iy order of tho Bonrd, A W, WoRTutNGToN, Scorotary. Miss Cranch heroupon, ou uesdoy lnst, malted the followlng unswer, which shows that her withdruwal from the college 8 now maude finals March 16, 1681,—T0 the_Directors of the College of Muts of Clneinnali—~0eNrirstes: [ bhave this mowment roceived your lettor (postmnrked tho lith, 5 p. m.), lu whivh yon oxpross your regrot ut my resigngtiop us voeal teacher, couplod with yourdesire that 1t bo *lmwmncdiate, and not ut tho closs of my puplls’ teems, a3 | propused, Ay only reason for that BIT0 to uet in good fuith wit Thuy hud vuttred. thonsulves speclally for vooul fustrugtion under wmo, und bad -n{l the college tor It fn udvanee, 1 was desirous to cluse my connection with tho colicge, but npt to deny 1y puplls: tho benetit of tho terms for which you had ulreudy rocolved payiment, Phily, of courso, you, widerstood, | toak 1t for grauted that you would coneur with e in oplne fon aa to Its Justiee und good folth between tho colloge und its poptls, Hut if, w8 you now uuy, the “uturusta” uf the collewe’ do nutallow it, | cannot, of counsy, jus 0f thosu [ntorcats ox- cept to rogrot ju- comuon with mu“)uum thut such 18 the case You bave aceepted my rosig- pution in u form In which 1 did not wuder it, but now I vory puspectfully and choerfully agreo it 8 ought to take elfcot ut once. Respee tull; ENMA CHANGH, ully, Miss Crunch further suid; *‘Lhere has proposition wus s do- Yy puplls, . nt 10 o’clock, beenn porsiatent effort mado by Col, Grorgoe Ward Nichols fo put howme hient In_the backrround. 1f T have been negleeted for n long tinte 1n the apportlonment of publls, At most of thess who appled to the to recefve fnstruction from me, w sunded to take lessons from snlaried I ors, and frotn Madam Maretzek, [ eatnot complain of nny disconrteous treatment ever received from my fellow teachers, nor was 1 onvlous beeauso they were recbiving more pupils than 1, but 1 eould not by Indlgnant that puplls who desired straction weve persinded hi zo to some other tencher, sspeeinlly T knew this was done stpply for business reasons o overstoek the' salurled teacher and give n nlluu{ pittancs to the teacher who enrned his |u|[)' the howr. "Thy few puplls who did remain with me in tho coll tha present eousummntlion have been repeat edly plied with persuasive negnment to leave me, but 1 ihink that most of them will still bu willing o take onyfrom e at the Musiceal Colloge, even though they will therve- by forfelt four ‘or five weeks’ tultlon In the College of Musie,” A DAY IN COURT. How Changes of Yenuo and Bondsmen Aro Procured—A Trial by Jury, with | 1ta Usutnt] Accompnnlments, “ ITenr ye, hear yel'tho llonorablo Court fa naw hi gesston pursuant tadjonrnmont,” mum- bles the Ball(ir In o monotonous tons of, voiee nd hu mechanitally hamniers thovatting with hls mitvel: Inwyers spasmodieally dive Into thoir puckets For briefs, alidavits, und qthor .papers, and whisper wysterlonsly to thole” balf-fright- ened and wholly-confused ollonts; Jurers v move thelr hats, uttompt to nssumo n reapeets ublo npposrunco, und converse fu undertones; wilnesses and speututors, nwed into silence by tho wwinl uye und warnlng finger of tha second Balllie, sliuk Into sents or out the door; and Judge Budltugh, stritting up the steps, pomn- uuslly takes his plnee, Jeopurdlzing the buttons of his waisteont fian endeayor to look dignifled, reuts his crossed legs upon the desk before lilm, aud, with o self=himportant frown, glares patrons Jainggly down on tho cotmshon lord for # momont prior to commencing the bustuess of the duy, YANY MOTIONS, GENTLEMENP? ho domands, knltting bla brows intercogutively, and gluneing over ut tho areay of legal luming- rlus urowding nnd Jostiing ench otuer, *1f tho Court plenke,” shouts Mr. Allcheok, o dlminutivo imb of the Inw, who.ls prineipilly remurkably for his shivt collne and tho strengti of his volee, % my wpartner, tha Hon, Michiel Cheathiun, was lnst oventmr eatled from oty most unoxpeetediy, and [shall o the ense of Steole ngningt Uamblo bo obliged to throw my- self on tho elemenoy of the Court and wgain bes seoch your furthor indulggnea,” If the Conrt plewse fsnurla tho opposing counscl, Mr. Crabbhd, **thls I3 thio Acth timo that, under one preteise or nuothorivn continunned lins heon obtwined. Thus aro the whovls of Jus- tive effectwlly and Intentionally—yes,” your Haonor, Intentionnlliy—ctogrzed. My client livos twenty-s1x mdles out fo the country, and eannot spare hie thno from his business simply to please tricky and Inslicere attorneys, They think by this means to tive him ont, Tho Hun, Mr. Cheatham novor futends to argie this motton, und ho knows it,—yes, and his pargner Knows [ty tool - And ho dare ot deny IL1™ "‘l do deny It Interrupts the lrate All- chook. ** Morcovor," continues Mr. Crabbld, with n glance of witherlng contempt ut Mr, Allchuel,~ Which it mutet b guld sooms to haveno effe *1have it from good authority thut tho flon, Michael Cheathi §8 not out of town, and that ;nlu rathor lnue excuse ls butn mere subter- re—-=" " * Do rnu wmean to insinuato that Iam g—" bernn littlo Alleheek In stentorinn tones, “'This tiust not goon o men!” exclitimed the Jwdge, elreumstanees, tlon une weel Mr. Crabbld drops Inton chafr and glares pt Mr. Allehieok, who,ns ho turns nway, facutiously waves hiis hand and pleasabtly smiles. »Como und have a drink, Skesmar,” gaid Alleheek, tuking tho arm ol n persu who stood near the door, **Oll Chieathim’s (n tho street, and wants to seo you, Wo mtend tuklng n oy of vonue from Wrlght, who ls now in the Crimlual Court, nnd you must huut up & couple of fellows who will aiuke tho neces- sury utlldavits, A. tiver for ench of them, and another for *’uur trunble, Come on,” *Can't do it this moning, 1 um waltine for n party whose case f9 funblo to bo culied at nuf' moment. Thore’s Sharperglown the ball. Tolt him you eame from mo and ha'il do it for you, He's bl right,” The speakor, Bkeoimir, who had. accompunied Alleheck until without tho door, WR8 i youni man of 25 or 30 yeurs, whose rathor ln:c]Ilfiuul.unnmommuu buspoke keon obsorvis tion, l' rewduess, cnution, und a higher order of cuuning. y fArther, gontlo- 1 will, inder the , continue the heariug of this mo- »Ol, by the w:i.y." sald Allchook, retitrning, * “1 WANT A BONDSMAN TO-MONROW It's bdtore the Clerk, aiid nny ono of respectable uppenranes will do, * Loolk - up some propérty and give it to hiin to schedute, 1f necessury, for J don't onre whether ho appears to Justify or not, g all we wunt Is more thno. 'The bond §s only 8200, There's n tonner for him nnd sumoething for you, toe, Will youdoft? Al right, thon." 2 Hurdly had Allcheck tnken hia denarture whon cthage well-known lawyer Mr. Sly ap- proached, As ho passed’ Skoemar, to whom ho noither howad por spuke, that youny uiny quiel- 1y slipped into his bund o swilt eard, Mr, Sly 0 1tered the court-room, renioved Hiahntund cont, und st dnwx\:u tho tuble before thy vulmf Jury box, Then he for tho first thmg cautionsly, glanced nt Skeemar's eurd, Upon it was penolled the numes: Robinson, Krobl, Murply, Wood, and Galdsmith, und benvath thom was written: Robinson nnd Krehl are good tulkers and will carry thalr point, Will ace you st goon,' My, 8ly pincod tho commyicatjon Ingila vest. pocketind reforred to u-voldme of linols stututes. Meanwhilo the matfons hnd all beon ‘.l"""""'“ ol and the calllng of the cajendar had e, . *i'wo thousand and sixty-two—Fourth Mud- Iake Presbyteriun Church Soclety agninst Wil- i Hedstrong,” oulled Judge Lndlsugh. *Aro syou roudy, Mr, Blyr" * It tno Court please, tho defondant 18 ready,” roplicd Mr, 8ly with o doterenthil bow. *T'hig plaintht {8 rondy,” romarked o tall, glim, white-ficed, clderly geatlomnn, whoso numu was Truman. * Very woll: Do you want u Jury?* “If tho Conrt Plnuw. tha caso 18 such n almple one that Ishould have Ilmkm’rl.‘ll to go on with it without one, but my clleut dediros u jury trinl,” rumurked Mr, Bly, rising. “CALL A JURY, Mit. BAILIFIR oedered tho Court, sinking baak luto his chalr ns though his mind wis gonsidernbly rellovi “Henry Bodonsebutz!™ eriod tho Bally # Ferol” shouted o bullot-heudod Httth man, quito us brond a8 ho was fong. Curl Stigmuollor!’* procecded the Bailf, “ Paul loskowitz, John Smith, Potor Uchtuunn, 0Ole Oleson, Froderiek Relmonsehnefdor.” No one resppuded to tho tnst-enlled nume, the Nl paused, gluncod sourchiogly up at tho cellimg, und thon ropeated it in loudor tones, At cull u stupld-looking mun roso up fu one corner of the room auq stured sloopily abput bim, ¥ _vsle your tho Lniiir, 2 *Yah,'* camo tho veply. wWell, why dan't yoi answee and tako your sent 1" werowicd tho Ballilr, A *Gentlemeon will plenso rospond 10 tholr numes, and tuko tholr souts,” idmonlehed tho Juilge, whercuovon Mr, Heimonschnoldor slowly st dowil, tnuch tothe pmusoment of all prosunt, exucept the Baklir, who foully suceeeded In pro- valling upon tho ubstinato juror tu take his propor plice. *Michiel Muleaby the Jalliff wont on. Aloxlh Tudbzhowaiey, Maurico name- Relmenschnoldor? snappod “ Puter Woad, Ehrenberger, Jame Beblugonfuust,” . ho necessary number baving Leon scoured Mr. ‘Cruman bogin HIS OPENING NTATEME ** Moy It plonss tho Court and gontlewen of tho jury,” snid ho, * this cuxo bs i very plain ong, und tho facts enn Lo atatod In fow words, It hny bovn brnutht by my clionts, the ‘Cristeod of tho Fourth Mildlake I'resbyterinn Church Hocluty to rocovor damages forthe irroparable Injurlos Sustnined,—tho totnl ruin und destrio- won, 1 muy say, sustuined by und throuyh tho remoyal of tho editive within whose wails this Boulety was wont to assemble for tho sacrod purposes of worship, oo five years ugo it was deemed ndvisable to remove the aforeanid structuro u distunco of soio two miles, and Mr, Hedstrony, bolng o house-wover, was apulied to for uu esthinato ot tho cost of the propusod un- dortuking, 1n duo senson Mr. Hodutrong, tho detendunt, subnilttod what appesred 1o tho brethiron to be n rensonable ane, It wag uccu}m o, und tho work began, 1t was midwintor, tho colil bnd buon very sovoro, the grouud wis trozen to w,consldernvle depth, and Mr, He #trong saw o dittlenlty fn cureying out his u dortuking vory caslly,” Tho cjurch had beon removed nbout hulf 4 mile, when Mr. flodstrony suddenty discovored that a stralght lino drawn from 1o wite forwerly oceupled 1o thut duslic- nuted us e future one, could it bo purned, wouklcut oft distunco of unearly throo-quar= tersof nmilo, To pitrsue this ounTeo, huwevor, would nocessituty crossing u portion of M Lanke, wid bo imuedlutely “concelvod the navel oud eriginal, not to wiy singulur snd dangerous, den of uoving the Lutldiog uoross on tho e, Did o nek tho consent of or even consilt tho brgthrem prior to attempting tho vxecution of hid strange oxperimont? Ob, nol ile calily und deliborately procewdod fo carey out his project ou his own n-fipululmll!{ and ut his own Flak, Nesd @ sk tho twolve inieiiigont men fuoliyg me tho rusilt of bls rash notion? Benreo-¢ Iy. Suftico it to say thut, under tho Inmensy’ und unusunl stradu, the oo, strome and thick us 1t muy huvo bewn, broko, und ig one womont the stugnnut, muddy witter of g diko Ingulted and swullowed up the house of Waorship: wad, gon- tuen, buried {n that wuek wnd wire o to-day the rulus of thy ouce proud edilica of tho Fourth Mud Luke Presbytorisu Church Boviely, and tho ‘Trustoed, my clivnty, uow sue for dam- uges, That, geatlcwon, 1% our cuse,"" * Now," observed e, Bly, rlslug and compla- contly iroking his smooth chin, “1 desire to stato, i permitiud, thut it {8 not my deslre to wake any prelfntnury remurks whatever," MENAMING TR ey Y urged tho Court, i it tmy W Whit 4 your uuw, yui' 3L, Rittuon up . ?5#'"’ Juror aceunylng tho first seat fn tho first +* VR fsh dna?™ 4 What Is your nomop' Meln namny™ Yos, wint I3 1t » Mefn ninmo vas Rolmoen “What i your full nnme * Yans, it vis Relm iar," ** Dut what 18 your uthor nmne,~your flrat nnme? # Oh, niefn furst nnmol Tt vas Fritz.! * Where do you live, Me. telmenschnelder?* “Yero 1 livor™ » 5 # Yes, wheredo vou livop" #Oh, T Hve by oam,” ‘Yhnyl o you do for o living?* Az’ » Whnt do you do?” “an, I eomo by the yewry vonst." M I tho Court please, this man duesnat under- stand tho Bnglish Inngtinge." * Mr, Helmenschnelider, you understand Ene RUSH?” interrogaton thoe Judie. . “Oh, yans, I apeaks better us mein brodder,” * o on a littlo farthor, Mr. Truman,” wTlow long hitvo yon boen in this codntri?” 1 vna in this enindory mnro}ns fonr yoar' nesu” neldor,” * Well, what I8 yone i O, ynna, it Vil peezonioss, “1f your Honor ploase,” appenalod Mr. True nn. Btand nasilo, Mr. Relmonschnelder,” ob- acrved Judge Hndlaugh, *You aro excused from tho panel,” 1 vas vxcoosed? “ Yo, and can go home," " o helmp® “Yes, rnw;{;ou néedn't edmo back. Call an- other juror,’ W sJohin Itobinson,” shouted the Hnilim, Mr, Robinson wus duly examined and pnssed. “WIAT A8 Youst NAMEM Mr. Traman asked of th = Miotnol Muloany, 2 Whero do you livey, M + In thio puteh, sur. “The puteh?” * Yo8, sur. tho pateh,’” ¢ 4 tho paten?"’ ‘nirteenth street, furninet tho lake sur.'” W hat (3 your busines: **8ure, 1 enrrios the ko “You heand mo state tho facts of the cnse, Nr. .\lulcuh{z © Indndo 1 4l thin, and Idon't belave in theso reshyterinn churehes, inyhow.'” + * Yon are exoused Mr, Mutenl * Call nnother Juror,” exclatned the Court, John Sehultzenger having been ealled told his numo and residency, und - when nsked i ho m )muw‘I auything about the vaso roplied In tho e on know tho dofendant? Mr, Truman 0. Nur his nttornoy?"* 0 w h :: gg\. @ you ntiy religlons projudices?” “ Do’ you know of ang_ronson why fnu could not give in this ense u verdiot necondlng to the luw. 1|“\ml tho. evidence?™. W o No.! * Do you know where Mud Lako 187" o * If witer hearing the ovidenco you shoutd fiy your own mind deoldo that the plaintilf Is not entitled to any dmnages, and tho Court (n bl Instructtons direct f‘ll\l to find for the plaintir with damuges, woultl you disregnrd your own convletions nnd abldo by the - instructions?™ The Juror ovhlently was puzziod. After this question had beon ngkaed inn varlety of wiys, tho Juror inally replied very emphatic- ully, ** Repont thnt query!” erled the Judge, arouseil. 118 rupetition resulted In tho sanie roply, Puliy 1] ** Dischurgo thut mun from the pancl,” or- derad the Judice, with n scowl, When eourt ndjourned for the midday recess njur§ had been deepred,—Mr,, Olesag, - who hul nioved to the city only five onthis provivusly Visoonskin " Mr, Bmith, who was it wnd © Had Lobt Col- lector®; Mr, Budbzhowsky, who le sorved on o Jury withinn yenrs,and Mr. s Iu‘xuunnm.n witltor who lert his residenco so ourly und hur- riodly in the mornlng that he never Inul been able to discover what it8 street munbee wis, having beon exoused and. rupluvod by Messrs, Iyrobl, Goldsmith, Murphy, and Scott, ‘a colorid wmin, # All of your men have heen nocopicd—T aldn't oxpiut such good Juck,” ovserved Mr, Sly to Hm.- mur whon thoy mef in the formor's privata of . S WILL DE A TOUGI CABE TO WIN,” Bald Skeemar,- v . .! Ldon't know, Hedstrong hes bolf a dozcn eesed who will swenr— bitt whito js bluck und black s no color at interrupted Skeegnnr, 1ow do you know (ho{ wille 't 1 Tarnish two of thom mysel{?” “Woll, well. Don’t ppenk too loyd. The truth is, I shoult rathor have o disagroemont thun 1 victory, but Hedstrong snys wo must win at all hazards, How much will it'take? Remem- ber you've hud 20 already.’” *+I'hut wus for tho witneases,” . o it S Can't you tulk lowor, Skeemart” -~ . - ! . *Dou’t be nurvous, no anc can hear me. As ¥ | 8ald, it's o toukh caso to win. ‘The Judgo may ' glvo the Jury tho devil IF they bring In a verdict ‘|]u your fuvir,—Dut thut's no” business, of purs. 3 & ! n 3 Sights dollars down?' 3 8, §80. You know it’s atl humbug abont paying afterwvurds, ‘fhut's played out. Nobody ever got u cent, and 'pu. know St Aud 1 waut 26 altorwards myselt,’ ) At tho salogn at 1o'clock. * Ygu meet Lamb Temember wo st win, **Did you ever know Juo ta fallz- ok GRS o . . “LET ME SEE," sl Truman to himaclf nftor ho hnd scen Lamb. ** Hero 18 875, Joblnson $16, Kreh] 310, Murphy, Wood, and Goklsmith $6 enuly .60 to about four of tha othors. That will luave we §23,—or £10 to spend and $15't0 kaop.”* That avening an obseryant friend of Mr, Trus man culled on that eentiontan und the following conyoyaution took place; H 21 tell you,” semnrked tho visitor, © that, un- Idss you tke #nwmo uctlyo stops Jn tho way of preventlon, _° YOU WIRL L0SH TIIS CASES s What do you mean?” nsked Mr. Trumnn, 4+ Thera [s no possibllity of loslog It, ns Mr, Sy Lus litile orno dofense, und the nnl{ queation which the jury will buve to doeldo §s tho amount of dumpues to bo awurled. 1 have Bly ontho hip thid timo,” And 3fr, Truman rubbed his uunducmmllumll. ‘ "V “thought It iy duty to warn * Very well, ** Indecd. I onn sco no ocenslon (’r a warning. Only o bribed jury coutd Dasilbly uring in i ndverse verdiet, and ) know Mr, 8ly to bea gon- tleman und an honurable one, who would nevor descend to such desplonble 8 us Dyou, Dribem, or othors I coull mentiow. ** Vary well,” auld his friona, with ap Incredu- lous sniile, % when tho triat I3 ovor possibly you will remember my words," ‘That night Robinson umlfiht n 10 cont puir of " Btookings, got shuved, und thon vislysl u furo bank, which e lett v puaror If not n wiser mnn: EKrebl “bought unlimited Lgoe "y the Norto Site,” and looked mystorious; Murpfly hud u ll‘,htwlm Dy bust friond und whipped! his wito Wood got glorlously drunk, and Goldsmith gave his bottor-nulf o & note, The trinl nsted two days, tho jury remalned out ovurnlght without agreelng, bt at 11 o’clook ou the third day thoy filed lnand deliyered A VERDICT IN FAVOR OF TUE DEFENDANT, nescsslng his dumnges at $150, - Bir, Truman und his clients. woro thunder- struok, nid tho_Judgo ‘ooked qulto ajurply nt tho Jury, but hogmude no commont, ben tho 1urors vero polled sgine of them angwered vory jow, but ull ruplied dillomntivety, - +somu -who read *the toregping sketch may be fuclined to doybt tho existence of suob vimls nently respeotabilo attornuys ns Sir, SI{. or that any Juwyergn tho ety would descend to such disreputinbld’ mouns in order to win j cuse. To thosa pooble lut tho writer sny: Buch men do oxfut, und such things huve boon dong und nre abmost dudly dono v our courts, both Jower and uppur. Those corrupt practices are winked at by the Hullirs, and eithor are countonaneed and cpecouraged by members of theviine or ontirely fenored by them, whiol i4 -uru’ulll\'u of that old suying: “Nono aresc bind s thoso who will not 8ée," A4 for thy reporiers who haunt the courts i search of logul ltoms, thoy huve nelthor the desire nor inclination to step vt of the rut of gugulur duty; like very obedient ohildron, thoy do s thoy are told, and nothing moro, . A MAN AROUT TOWN, ——— IMMIGRATION TO THE NORTHWEST, &pectal Dispatch to The Ohleags Tribune, _Wia,. Maveh 17,—-A great many contracts avo belmg. made by the St. Faul Railwny Cotnpany for thostransporta- tlon of fmmigrants to Minnesota and Dukota, ‘ho ralbway ofticials suy that tho tido of -lin- wmigration Wit commence enrlier und con- tinuo longgy In the ensulng senson tilan dur- ng any seuSon heretofore. PROHIBITION. * Bpectal Dlaputch (o The Chicago Tribune, Cavtanvirug, I, March 17,—The M- couplu ‘Femporance Unloi held {ts sesslon In this eity to-duy, with delegates from the va- rlous towns of the county., The HonTI, Cln‘/ Sexton, Chiet of the Flre Du‘rnrlmunt of St. Louls, delivered n logical nud able tem- perapea lecture ut thy Court-House to-night eforo‘n latge und enthusiastlo sudlence, 1118 speech was reeolved with great onthuste nsut by tho audlel § —e—— TYPOGRAPHIGAL JROUBLE, Spectal LXspatch (o ‘The Chica 7 LAvAYETTE, Ind, March Thy pro- prietors of the Dally Jowrnal snnougce that they huve all the printers thoy need {o take the places of tho strikers, none of whom have pturned, or will be permitted todo ko should they desire. No differences arese inany of the other uffices. et GEN. UPTON'S REMAINS. - BAN FrAxncisco, March 17.—Gen, Upton's remuing will be hrought from Pestdio Hutuzs day, eseorted by Lroops from stny llm\m{. and will e met by the lsnllll'a: s Hrigado, N, (1 C., il the eofliy C40urt] L. Onkland, whenee Tt will e sent Ent Sy wi uurd of honor frong ghe Foury, :{r' Toun . St TIRE RECORD, " ["ll{}. ()'N IR, 3 Ky Maveh 17,—"Fen milog y, of thls plaeo, In théelifls of ¢l .Bq “|f“ fire that hag been burning for $y 1.“.]”“: I'he fire b3 fed by o stratune of stong o s burned several Mindred yardy | o, hbil, ) At . AT FACKSON, 'TRENN. Jaexson, Tenn, Mareh 17,<f0 eofloy compress of this city, swith 500 haley ton, burned Just nlghts aneey 815,000, ‘Ige orl known. s, S0000: |t b SH0,000; Jgyp. 11 of'tho firy' 13 Fo—— - CHICAGO, A still atarm at 6:0 lost evening way eiused by same diapery on o altar of g, l° Jesult Churel un West Twelfth stroet g cldentally eatehing five froma lghted cundl Damageteitliog: THE “ EXACT FACTS" An to tho Jolgn of Terror In Vicks. burg In 1835-Rouncing the tan. W' blerm, AL Gireen in PAIadelphin Times, Ttisbeeausu ) was in Vieksburg when the evony which T wn about to deseribe oeeurred 1 [ Lam able toive theexict frets of Wit was tyy * uost exolting epoch In'thoe bistory of thae pjry up to the War, This ofeurrence, T believe, by nover been seribed,—nt feast 1 have yiher gcon It—and It furnishes pernaps better oy [’ anytulng ciso nn fdou of tha state of socielyny [’ it oxisted i that period In1he wild Soathwes, On tho Fourth uf July, 185, thoro was n grang celobration glven In honor of tho National holj. day, Tho town wis gayly decorated, bandy were i oif the streots.and thore were evidences g every hand that tho dny wns onue of gonera| B rojoleing.” A burbooue—u favorit featuro of [§° tha Fourth of July celebrations In the Souty— Wi tho ovant of tha tny, and to this everylaly was fnvited, lfu( the” tinw tho uinst ol fecling roloned, Wivon tho vengeanco swors W' nEainst the gemblers was torgotten, or, {f ot forgotton, at lonst spspetded, Eminent speak, g Pors tind been fuvild” from othor Stutes, an num‘ux-umsu tharo on that duy were Alexaader 5 MeClung, of Kentueky, with Foote, mid Prey. tisg, and othiers cqually well known in that day, . i not an well remembored in this, They werg 0s e, & all Demoern all were noted tor thelr great porsonnl by 0o table hatl been resarve for the invited guesty nnd-the other eminent 3 DErHORR presont, tnd it this wora seated some thirty-tive or forty inen, 1o such n mixed gy Bemblngre us tha barbecuo attravted there WL'L not unnnturnlly a large number of gamblors— vrofegsiongl ginmblers,—of whom t” wag estie wated thove woro not less thn 250 o thecityye [l tho time. Those wumblers haw thelr hendyuurters [l iy n colony of theie own, or vather In thres bouses Enown ad the ** Kiunoirood Nus, 1,2, With them iu these houses were nssoc. must tbindoned wretehe 10 bo foind fn the whole South the notorious among those gamblers u o every Btato nlong the Mississippl. among them belng (George Bluekburn, Frunk Cabler, Il Baken, Aloxander 3 v Jim Hood, and Tom Curr, The nidliztary hud turaed ant at the * hiarbeene, and wers thore under arms s o part e z of tho attractions of tho duy. While thy malkgny wis golug gn thes gambler Iilackburn, who'vis presont fh compiny i, Caler, b nrtner, both bolng seated st it tubtdbipart from ho spedicers, hogan Interraption, Sinckiurn fe murking that ho was *going to have some fun it he eleareld_out tho swholg tabl Satueledy #honted 10 Bluckbirn to I down and not cause s disturbance, 1t Was no vse, He was bound, ho eajd, to start tho fumn, and 8o saying be Jumped on tho table, - * Ashue dld 8o sevoral of the sotdiors Jumped 0 from th tublo where fhey wero sittingand de. uthnded that ho sit down. Blackburs refused il dofied thom, Prosenting tholrzuna tha sol- » diers fammed thom against Ihekburn g g l:llsll'.‘ll hiim off tho tublo, e Btragyléd tiereelf, : ut was flonlly overp e swud eut in b atrugile, Cabler, who_attempted to ussist bim, wiig nléo mustored. Tioth mon, blecding, bot stilldetinnt, wera then bound. R cunot wusvt umd thoy wero placed tn 1t and pustfad off from shore, In unotlier minute thoy ftonting down tho sglamelppl. belnig resnied by tholr feliowy 4omo lnlf n_nllo helow. gimblers were furious, and threatoued rovenye, mukige no .seoret of tho thront that they would burn the -town down during’ tho niglit. The barbecue broke up. It was known—pverybody felt—thit tho grniblers meant:busineds, sad thut tho lives and property of il raspectivie. peopls vergln the most [nnninent dangor when night came. No- Iunl{ thonglit of wnything Lut safoty, und the wildeat exciioment frovallnd. — Citizens everys whoere wero seen nrming fhiomseives (o awalt the fllfllgululhfll il 1&ic was at han midst of - sl “the commation, how wora somo peoplo who did mot fose thelrheads. Ono of these was Dr. Willlum Dodley, of Ken- tucky. Ho quiotly gelosted n munber of men, formed thom into i Viglahee Committe, and phniced Wmsel? at thoir head, ‘Iois done, the Iieilunco Comnittes nesvmod tho oifensive, and sont word to the gminblers thut thoy hud poly ve bours i which o _leave Vicksburg or —=I Muugnf thoudid s0. Bt I tho mcantime five wumblers ,wore not hlle. They wore North, tielmy, Ddten BOL Haines, Jolin A, Murrell, and .anothor mun. whosy. name I have forgotten. These men hatl'gath at North's yuimbilng rooms, near tho rivor, Hero thoy burricade thognselves, aud to the conumund to leave gwvdro’ ‘that = they, woul not nove and gwould kil any™imnn - who interfered with thotm. . Dr. Bodivy, henring 9%or thls, went down ta North's place, s ho sl to mako one nsta effort to conviico .thort of tha folly of resisting tho people, He Lade his Inst elfort—~be buedly got within speaxs Ing dlstuncs when w shot from one of tbe gumblers waa firvd and_ Dr, Dodiey fell dead fo "hig tpaeks, 1le nover brfin(hud ngaln, “Theres galt “muy bo tmuglned. The, Dfll\uu-hwmf itl zens, who but an lour bufoto were simply bent on self-proteetlon, worn trunsformed for tho Wthno {nto n bloodthivsty mob, and, reckless of .danger, lhu)‘clmr‘(ctl un 'tho house und breaking “down tho bitrrigndoa captured tho ive gamblers. 'The ** Kanguarood™ wore sepnrated from ;Iu .elty by u biyou, which'wad crossed by a wonden stracturo known. by the suggestivo name of lhg S iy of Stuhis”" Across thiy tho now frenzi people nterled the captive gamblers, On e ‘othor sfido_ trees were soleted, und i lesy tba un hour ufter the murder of r. 1lodley muuul * gamulars wern swlhiging by tho nucks dead, . b JThls wad not the gnd: 1 wis onjy the beglnind of tho toreibly rotrilution to o exicted. The wob advanced on the three hoysed known “tho Kangurous,” nnd foimd (it thore et still Illllni' af tho gamblura whio lul not tuken Hight whilo thore wis yot time. Thow wo.yln solzed, somg of thom shjvt down, ollmrulrlfb" nto the river, and two of thom, taken by the mol |‘|nl thrown fram the * Uridgo uf Biahs into’tho stugnant waters of tho flayou fur tlow, For ovor in hour this torrible sru(mmn; tlnued betore tho venzouncy of the mub 714" sated ‘and tholr work consldored don “l)us many mon perished that nhght will fi ' Jknown, but d heurd of betweon fiitsand 8 a wha were nt the * Kangurgos ™ on the Feurth ! July, and who werg nover hoard of nlterwarn. ho bodled ofd tho five gumblyrs whi l_vf‘l’:ll hanged wero kept, 8vinging for two clu)lmm witard atanding by with grdersgto stoot duits nny ono who shbuld attompt to rumn)olhu i Nor wery tho poaplu of Vieksburg even t :.’ stielod, They followod tho most llnulrhlll!"m the gamblors futo adjolning Btates, aud mare thun ane fell nviotin to thow vengoanes, - ooy thoy did their work lhwnu‘uhu'.——()w) Feact be! mufrmwu from thodominntlonof the ruuhm'lu who hud ruled it, wd thoroatter Vieksburg wid nover enlled—ua'sho b hogn befare (it e 'l'{“muu Fourth xlnr J ||:y—mo muuhllm ] ufl\;flm § ow tho guinblurs who escaped phiyes 5 fnont purt in“the cunqucn,u‘l’*l‘uxus 14 forno: other clinpter. \ COFIRMATORY. Lats Dispatchies Corroborating (e Itumor, Printed Elsowhers, that (he Apachos Huve Killed Thirsy ¥er wons din Now MoXloo. Special Digpatch to ‘The Chicaga Tribunks | Dexvven, Col, Mareh 18— . m— 1' formation recefved: ‘by telograph from wlu‘\ appears to ba n-fustworthy source stated that the Apacho renegades under Nanw Tiuve ngaln nppenred on tho southern 'h;llf‘ der and klled thirty persons, ¥ '; News COMCHy nppnreutl{ thronk the milltary, =~ A lotter Jifst regelved from the samo placo brings n_rumor of flw. reappenrance Jf this band of Indlans, aid %l‘ 1hough the source of the Infornution Is n! constdored o well-informed, soms to referto the same matter, and both uro probubly to m: oxtent Mtunlly confirmntory. ‘Thls uvcmm“ utates that eloven men, throe wome, nugl boy ware killed, They . weye u('cunnmn)lilu ® Wagon train from New Mexlco luto Mex C::; and hnd passed on uhiead of the train, whe they wore set upon by the Indiuns av Kkilfed.i One boy oy escaped, 1o mtum‘ to Inform the people with (he ":i“; who, coming up, discovered the doad bo fl lylng gealpless and naked on wflkfllllll‘i ‘F'hie telegram snys that thirty were Killed a : that sevural waguns were’ burned, It ac‘cl'lj\“ probablo thore way & subsgquent umnckm the trivin and_the, Indinns killed thoso W hud been loft after the first slaughtory e m———— SHIP NEWS, LmeS\'(.: ilA:‘rciTl‘Er.A—'é’l'hu stonmships Jtaly aud Celtlo Monargh havg arrlved outy 4+ i =5

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