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If you wraal nice job of engraving done. on W. T. Guile. He is certainly an expert in that line. l ine job work done at TMft TlMBI office, at low rates. Married, at the residence of Mr. Angsbery, in Venice township, April 18, by Rev. C. Simpson, of Venice, Mr. John II. West, of Bluclid, New York, and Miss Sarah C. Gurnee, of Omar, New York. At the same time and place, by the same, Mr. Ralph J. Angsbery, of Venice township, and Miss Flora (I. Eastan, of Vernon township. The Michigan Farmer this week contains a fine illustration of the stock ram, Monarch, No. 103, owned by Messrs. Barnes Hro3., of Byron, t his county. He was shorn at I .m sing and gave a fleece weighing 31 lbs., and 2 oz. Remember the social at the resi dence of C. K. Shattuck this, Friday, evening. It is to be entirely under , the charge of the gentlemen, who are to furnish the supper do the cook ing. A fine bill of fare has been pre pared and a good time is anticipated. Mr. Ed. Grow wishes to express his thanks to all the -"boys" who have so liberally donated money, etc. ; 10 help himr out of his loss occa , sioned by the fire. Last week we were so busy that j we could not pare time to write an j extended notice of the charming j opera, Chimes of Normandy, and now we c an only notice it in a general way. Each evening the hall was packed ; and the audience each time was more than pleased. The leading parts were all played in a most ex cellent manner and brought forth rounds of applause. T. J. Hoisman, M. B. Gates, M. Osburn, K. R. Hutchins and N. McBain each ac quitted themselves finely. The parts taken lv Miss ( ,'rippen and Mrs. Horsman could not have been car ried out in a more perfect and pleas ing manner. The choruses were all brought owl in clear, rich tones and delighted the audience. All in all, this was one of the most successful and charming operas ever brought out in Owosso, and we doubt if it could be improved by any of the traveling combinations who! produce it on the stage. Certainly I it shows that there is plenty of home i talent in the city and that first class j entertainments can be produced. ! All express a wish that it may be re-1 produced. Wesener's orchestra furnished as ; they always do, music that is hard to excel. Machine oil is down ask Cyrus Mathews. The practice of throwing glass : jars, etc., in the road can only result i in accidents in the end and should J be stopped.' From one carelessly 1 placed it) the road, Mr. John Carr is j likely to lose a valuable two ve ar old colt, which stepped on a glass jar and nearly severed its leg. The roll will never be as good again and Mr. Carr is thus the loser. Rev. J. Miller and family have been guests of their brother in-law. Mr. L. Struter, in Owosso, for a few lays, while on their way from Capac to Maple Hill. Mr. M. recently finished a MiCCesaful pastorate at Capac During his stay there many were added to the church and the society was built up largely C. Umln passed through Owosso last Friday on his way to Capac as his successor. S. Hcne was his prede cessor. Both former pastors of the church in WOfSO. Fast Friday all of his sisters, ex-j ccpting Mrs. fCoch, now in Ann Ar bor, spent a happy day nt the pleas tat home of I.. Strnber. Mrs. Milt -lock nte Julia Aberlc, filled the place of the so long mourned Mrs. Aberle. making live sisters fnOwowo. As early as '57 all these were pio neers in the village of Owosso. THE ORIGINAL AMERICAN TEA CO. I New York, wish agent to sell their Tei end Coffee This company haa beta Mtatriitbed 48 years tad its bnatin is connm-d exclusivity to the importation and sale .,f their 'good. They arc ' widtdy known over the country, both us I wholesale and retail dealer, and have ' many Ten- hrge buyers amongst their I i ustorners. Agents now Working lor I Miom by soiling to Itotelt, Btnrekeepeta, and families are, and have keen doing well. Druggist who ,..- leu ;n have them' packed securely In tin canister, to that their flavor will not ho effected by Oder emitted from other articles in the store. I Address IhmKitT Wku,, I'rest n Veew St.. New Vort On Friday afternoon about half past two o'clock, a fire broke out in the house owned by Geo. hauth, on Kxchang street east, occupied iy Ed. (Irow, D. Wheeler and W. H. Greet). When first discovered the fire was in the woodshed or summer kitchen on the south-west corner of the house. It spread rapidly, and soon enveloped the wing and upper part of the upright above the cham bers. Owing to the scarcity of wa ter in the neighborhood, the engine had to be taken to the race before any water could be thrown upon the fire. However after a delay of a few moments the engine was at work and the flames promptly subdued, and the property saved in a damaged condition. The house was insured in the Detroit Fire and Marine for $1,000. On Monday the General Agent, Mr. Geo. 1arby, of Detroit, was here and adjusted the loss at $800 which was paid on the spot, by draft on Detroit. The principal loser by the fire was Mr. ICd. Grow, who lost most of his household goods and wearing ap parcl say 100 to $125 in value. Ed is a young man of excellent habits, works for the Kstey manufacturing I Company on a light salary and the loss is a hard one for him to bear. We trust something may done for his relief by our citizens who for years have been so exceedingly for tunate in looses by fire. Mr. Henry Holmes, Ludingtcn. Mich., mji "When run down by overwork. Brown's Iron Hitters did me grent good." The Bay Gity ('all of a recent dale says of Prof. Franklin : The street scene in "Julius Caesar' ami the dialogue between Cassius and BruttM were well lendered as was also the opening scene in Rich ard III, ln the dark character of Gloster he brought out the passions and desires of the bloody prince in a vivid and effective manner, demon strating that he has given the charac ter great thought ami study. IJy re (iiest the evening's entertainment terminated with readings from the closing scene in Henry VIII, The deep anil heartfelt pathos of the Pro fessor in the character of Cardinal Wolsey was indeed the best charac terization of the evening and was re ceived with well merited applause. The evening's entertainment was en livened by several selections on the piano by Miss Jennie Maxwell. Will appear at Opera Hall Friday, May 4. Mix. Lydin E. l'inkham s Vegetable Compound it) a most valuable medicmc for ladies of all figen who may be afflicted with any form of disease peculiar to the sex. Her remedies are not only put up in liquid forms but in pills and lorenges in which form they are securely pent through the mails. tSTMillions of pnekujes of the Din mond Dyes have been sold without a single complaint. Everywhere they are the favorite Dyes. The components of Dr. Hull's Cough Syrup are doily prescribed by the ablest physicians, whose success is due to the specific influence of these components. Dr. Hull's Cough Syrup skilfully pre pared for immediate use, is for sale by nil druggists. Prof, franklin is meeting with ex cellent success here in his Conversa tional German and Flocution classes. His method is practical and thorough and all his pupils speak in the high est terms of his energy and earnest ness as a teacher. A new class is or ganizing. His terms are very reason ble. At Ira Merell's. w 1 - m - OkoLOMA, Miss., April 17, 1883. The hist issue of Tin; Times lays open before me. I have been ob serving the weather notes and the contrast which this place presents to the snow and barren landscapes of Michigan is indeed striking. Here everything is fresh and beautiful and the out-ofdoor flowers have been blooming in profusion for weeks p.ist, yet the people on all hands are ending forth a unanimous cry of com print concerning the lateness of the season, and the old men, who note such things more attentively than others, pronounce the present the most backward spring that this coun try has known for years. While the weather has been for the most part delightfully pleasant, and at times really oppressive, wc have been visit ed by many of the sudden changes : which are peculiar to this climate, and they have imposed unusually long on the struggling vegetation of the country. If remember to have noticed during one of the weeks of the present month, the changes necessary to produce ; first, several days of oppressive weather, then a cold day and heavy frost, and lastly a heavy hail storm, all in the short iptce of six days, and the week closed as mildly pleasant as it began- Hut 1 must not allow my discourse on the weather to cause me to forget the -promise made you last week. I b lieye I told you in my last letter thai in my next communication 1 in tended to speak of some of the pecu li irities, I suppose I might say (in comparison with yourselves), of the Southerners. As nw first theme naturally suggests the second, I'll attempt now to tell you of some of the culiiuiry peculiarities of the south. When northern housewives grow complaining and become worn out with domestic duties, a most excellent remedy would be, I think, a tempor ary intimacy with a southern cook room. They would doubtless throw up their hands in holy horror at the thought of preparing three meals each day, every dish to be served smoking from the fire ; and I guess they'd return north with jut the con viction that Southern people have after a visit to their sister section, how those people live on such fare is more than 1 can understand. I heard a young lady, who had spent several mouths in Ohio, conversing with a second on this very subject, a short time since. "Wh," said she earn estly, "I almost starved a land of plenty." Feeling confident of what her reply would be, 1 turned and asked for an explanation of this singular announcement. "My gra cious!" she replied, more earnestly than ever, "they eat everything stone cold, and I didn't relish a meal while there." The crowd, most of whom had never been north, was intensely amused at such a peculiar thing, and they all agreed in the conclusion that if such was the way the Northerners ate, for their part they'd confine their protracted absences to their own southland. I have never seen much Indian meal used north, out here it constitutes one of the greatest essen tials to the table. It is generally used exclusive of all other breads for the midday meal, and no matter what other substitutes are placed be fore one, its absence is marked with very bad taste. The love of good edibles is a southern man's weakness, and if the family purse fails to sup ply plentifully all the requirements of the household it is usually some other con er, and not this one, that comes up lacking. In close connection with this are their accomplishments as entertainers, for people visit mui h more socially and remain for meals mote habitually in the south than they do in the north. This is espec ially true of the country where the large tracts of land included in a sin gle plantation causes the homes to be removed at a considerable distance from each other. The approach of visitors is generally observed and an nounced before their arrival, in which case the most friendly greeting con sists in meeting them at the gate, and as soon as they are in doors, cor dially inviting them to lay aside their things and spend the day. Ofcoursc these things are confined to rural homes, and there is much more stiff ness and forn.ality in towns; but while this is true, there is much more social feeling in the south than in the north. The people in most of the towns are exceedingly attentive to visiting strangers and they spread a whole-soul atmosphere around, which makes one forget the distance which divides him from his home. Your correspondent expects to visit a prairie home and farm in Monioc county before writing again, in which case, you may expect in her next a description of her sojourn there. Toumst. If diseastt has entered the system, the only way to drivo it out is to purify and enrich the blood. To this end, as is ae knowlegcd by all medical men, nothing is better adapted than iron. The fault hitherto has been that iron could ma be so prepared as to bo absolutely harmless to the teeth. This difllculty has been overcome by the Brown Iron Bitters Chemical C'ompanv of Baltimore, Md., who offer their Brown's Iron Bitters as a faultless iron preparation, a positive cure for dyspepsia, indifestion, kidney troubles etc Soldiers, Attention ! ! Milo B. Stevens & Co., the well known War Claim Attorneys, will be represented at Corunna, Monday and Tuesday, May 14 and 15, 1883, by their special Agent. Soldiers and others inter ested in Claims for Pensions, Increase of Tension, Arrears of Fay and Boun ty, of those charged with desertion, or other claims, it is hoped will give him a call. His whereabouts may be ascertained at the office of the Coun ty Clerk. VEIO LATEST The e I in 11 is in the Hocking Val- li y hiiv s ru h Rinit a reduction. A vin nyof live young people u m in Meadow poml, near P r. M asaehneetta, Saturday. lira. Ada l ell General Hancock s moih r-ui-.; . died Tuesday, on (iov ei nor'a I l;t; , n pneumonia. Tue Iowa I) DB KSratiC State Convon t 011 is called la nnet ut l)es Moines on June 6. The American public has paid 922B, C68.AH to 1 i Mrs. l.angtry the past twenty-four weeks, John A. M C ill. the insurance expert, h. 1 1 1 11 Hem iiated Superintendent of luanranoe loi tue State of New Vork. . than Blood, Read W, residing, near Walker. Iowa, went to his wife's grave line shot himse.f dead. The shoemakers 0 New York are ag itating for eight hours a day. and a half holiday Saturday. An overflow of the Manistique river, on the M:clii"nn peninsula, lias occa ionetl considerable damage to mill property BtManiatique and Jamestown. The stockholders of the Western Union Te.egrnnh Company voted to ratify the lease of the Mutual Union and other telegraph companies' hues. Mr. Charles P, Kellogg,WltO has been engaged in the wholesale c.otbing trade in Chicago since 1866, died Friday, in the forty -Sixth year of his aire. A heavy frost occurred Monday night in the Illinois fruit belt, but horticul turists believe no serious damage was lioiic. The title of the new corporation that Is to operate tits Vermont central and Camilla Railroads will be the Consoli dated Hi iroad Company of Vermont. Henry 1). MeDanicl has been elected Governor 01 (JeonriH for the unexpired term 01 the late Alexander II. Stephens. There was no opposition. The Ifay Or of Indianapolis lias vetoed an ordinance adopted by the City Coun cil increasing the saloon license to 11,600. The erection of a status to the late I'eter Cooper, in front of the Cooper union, is being discussed by the New York board of aldermen. A R elimond dispatch chronicles the death of Col. Andrew Taylor, the senior graduateof West Point, at. the age of 87 years. A site for the Garfield memorial hos pital has been purchased in the suburbs o Washington, the price paid being 87.000. .Mrs. Stover, the sister of President Johnson, and who was frequently at the white house during Mr. Johnson's in cumbency, is dead. At Sacramento, California, Friday, the wall of sbuilding tell upon a saloon, killing six men and possibly more, and wounding twelve men. The prohibition bill received a erush ingdeieat in the Pennsylvania House of Representatives Friday, the vote up on iis psasags being 28 to IBS. General Crook has enlisted two hun dred Apache scouts, w ho will at CHOC take the field against the hostlles, co operating with the Mexican forces. In order to test the constitutionality of the Scott liquor law, a case Will be immediately made up for trial before the Supreme Court oi Ohio. The Stamp account of the Lafayette. Ind.. Postoffloe is 1,200 short, alleged to arise from the loaning of stamps to neighboring pflices. Jonathan Whitney, aged 80, of Mont Ville, Ohio, attempted to kill bis see. ml wife because she was too attentive to his son-in-law. The mill owners at Muskegon, Mich igan, have agreed to restrict the manu facture of lumber, in view of the fact that there is danger of breaking down the prices by overproduction. The railroad coal operators met ut Pittsburg. Thursday, and decided to reduce the price of mining from l!i to ;; cents perbushsL It IS believed a strike will result. About three thousand emigrants sail ed from Liverpool Friday, most of them Intending to settle In Manitoba. They represent an aggregate capital r IS,- 600.000. Two women, each claiming to be the widow of the same man, have gone to law at Omaha to determine which is the mother of two girls aged 13 and 17 years. James Park, proprietor of tits Black Diamond steel-works at Pittsburg, Pa, sod the largest manufacturer of mer chant steel in the world, died Saturday, aged 0;i years. In consequence of expenditures inim provingthe roadbed of the New Vork and New England Railway, the com pany has become crippled financially, audits stock sold down t IMH Tuesday. The Connecticut legislature has pass ed a bill creating a board of pardons, consisting 0 the governor, one judge of the supreme court, and lour members of tlie legislature. Litehell, the English pugilist, and Slade, the New Zealandor. have made an scrreemsnt to fight on September 11, within two hundred miles of Kansas City, the stakes being siWtn a side. James (;. Anderson, a grain dealer of St. Jacob. Madison county, Illinois, is alleged to have forged indorsements to notes to the amount of 912,000. His present whereabouts are unknown. A pile-driver car went through a bridge on the Iron Mountain railroad near Helena, Arkansas, Sunday, carry ing down with It fourteen men. four of whom WSte badly injured. A cyclone struck the town of Danbu ry, Woodbury county, Iowa, Sunday evening. The Catholic church, which cost $1,400, was destroyed, and a num ber of other buildings were more or less damaged. No lives were lost. (ieorgeO. Howard, a dentist, has leen awarded $12,000 damages against the Chicago West Division Ilailway com pany for the Ions of afoot through the carelessness of employes of the com pany. Tho San Carlos Indian reservation is threatened with an attack by a company of Ari.ona rangers. The interior de partment is taking such steps as it can to avert trouble, and the army will be called upon to protect tho Indians. There is a probability that, in conse quence of a cutting of rates by the Grand Trunk ltailroad, the charge for carrying grain from Chicago to New Y'ork will be reduced by the trunk-line pool to 20 cents. A magazine containing about fifteen hundred pounds of powder, near Lam ed, Kansas, exploded Monday, killing one man and doing considerable dam age to property by the breaking of win dows. There can be little hopo of the recov ery of Senator Anthony, of Hhode Island. Ho is suffering with Hright's disease, complicated with an affection of tho hrnrt. Ho was elected to tho 1 niteit Mates bSSUttS last year tor a fifth term. Glanders js prevalent among the horses in portions of Whiteside and Perrj COUIIUSS, Illinois. In the county iirst named a number of animals af fected with the disease were killed last week. TWO men who contracted the disease from their horses died. A majority of the stockholders of the Hannibal and st. Joseph ltailroad Com pany have refused to sanction the trans fer of the road to the hicago, Burling ton ami Quinoj ltailroad Company upon the terms agreed to by the otllcers oi the companies last week. The IhiO Democratic convention w ill meet al Columbus. June 21, for the nomination ol candidates for governor, lieutenant governor, fudge of the su preme court, treat Uier, attorney gene ral, and member Of the board 01 public works. The election occurs Oct. 0. Fire Sunday destroyed twenty-three business buildings in the town of Au ralis,Cherokee county, Iowa, fens aggre gate loss being S7AJD00. The factory of the Grand Hapids (Michigan) Furniture Company was burned, involving a loss of $00,080, A party of nemoes who had removed from South Carolina to Liberia about two years ago have returned to their old homes in a sorry condition, having lost what little property they had, be sides contracting a diseaso that has caused several 01 them to lose toes. TheeiSjar manufacturers of Milwau kee employing union workmen have concluded to coneedo the advance in wages demanded; but as the principal shops are non-union there is as yet no assurance that there will be 110 strikeof cigar-makers there tho 1st of May. Edward Jump, a caricaturist, who had earned a wide reputation, committed suicide in Chicago Friday. lie had long been addicted to the excessive use of stimulants, w -hich, together with domes tic troubles, is supposed to have led him to kit) himself. Thirteen young children, pupils Of Si. Stephen's home school, New York, are under treatment in hospital for typhus fever; and. as confirmatory of the theory that the disease was con tracted in the school, it is stated that fifteen other pupils are ill with scarlet fever. Two young men well known In Chi csko, Fred and Charles Ward, sons of Dr. E. P. Ward and nephews of Mrs. C. 1$. Far Well, were killed at Devil's Lake. Dakota, on Monday. Particulars are lacking, but it Is supposed the trag edy grew out of o dispute about town site. A New Vork lawyer named Kuydam Is accused t couspiring it U ol hers in cluding J. Madison b'lagg. of Chicago,) to perpel rate a sw indie 01 gigautis pro portions upon a syndicate (it foreign capitalists, whom was Intended to lead Into Investing In Virginia lands to which the accused bad no title. The oity authorities of Philadelphia have been enjoined from Interfering with tin' polea or wires of the Mutual Union Telegraph Company, which it was intended toBeiss in consequence of the company's violation uf its agree ment bi consolidating with theWestern Union Telegraph Company. A snow-stoi ni of great severity oc curred Hunda) In Wyoming and West ern Nebraska. Telegraph lines were prostrated, and trains on the DnlOU Pa cific llailway were blockaded. The snow i: passing away rapidly, and it is hoped slock will not suffer greatly in consequence of the snow. General James M. Comly, of Colum bus, Ohio. ex-United States Minister to Hawaii, has. in conjunction with his former partner in the publication of the Okin .., Jwriudi A. W. Francisco ami Captain A. K. Lee, purchased the Toledo 5Ioiniuy TeUtfmni "' CwwMt'm pa) log $10,000. Henry T. Wright, assistant post master Of Itacine, Wisconsin, is short in his account $5,000. He was arrested Tuesday by an agent of the ncstoffloc department and taken to Milwaukee, where he confessed his delinquencies and explained the methods he pursued in embezzling the money. it is thoueld that President Mooney, of the Irish Land League of the United Mates, will, by a literal construction ol the rules of the association. Bltppress all discussion in the convention which meets in Philadelphia on W ednesday ol the question of the use of dynamite against Knglish Interests. The Peoria, Decatur and Kvansviili Railroad lias been blacklisted bv the executive committee of the trunkdim pool for cutting rates oul ; Peoria, and connecting roads carry in a its east bound business are forbidden t pro rate with it or accept its through bill ing. Patrick Kgan. ex-treasurer of the Irish Land league, i quoted as sayiirg that, while the convention at Philadel phia next week would collect ively ad vocate constitutional agitation for the redress of the wrongs of Ireland, the members individually would favor and perhaps aid more violent measures. Wilson. Republican, was given a cer tificate ol election as Representative in Conurre. for the Fifth district of Iowa upon an ostensible majority of 24 votes at the November election. Frederick, his Democratic opponent, claims to have discovered errors in the count of volt s that w ill reverse the result ami give him a margin of 100 votes or more. The body of Maggie Ilennecke, the Milwaukee girl whoso unexplained dis appearance last Octoliergave rise to all sorts d' theories, was ion ml -Friday in the Milwaukee river. The girl was about 18 years of age, and, as there is no reason known why Rhe should have committed suicide, it is supposed she accidentally fell into the river. Etumora are afloat in New Vork that the New York and New- England ltail road company is in a bad way linanci ally, and that foreclosure is among the probabilities. Tho stock of the com pany, which has sold w ithin a year for 8K,was quoted Saturday 41. I nprolita ble competition is assigned as the cause of the decline in tho company's for tune. Some astonishing facts were demon jjtratcd Monday evening in a lecture before the Btevens Institute of Tech nology in New Vork relative to the ap plication of electricity as a motivo power. The energy stored in a box one cubic foot in size, the lecturer claimed, could be made to propel a car loaded with passongors from one end of New York to the other. Eight hundred Irish immigrants, whoso passage had been paid try the liritish government, readied Boston Monday. The Cunard line has looked as many steerage passengers from Irish ports as it can carry for three months to come, and the Allan line has ar ranged to bring large numbers of Irish immigrants across the ocean at the ex pense of the English treasury. There are prospects for a full crop of winter wheat in Ds Witt and ad I seen! counties in Illinois, ana 1 arming opera tions show great activity. In Califor nia an average crop is auticipatod, the increased acreage inthe Htate Offsetting 1 be damage done by drought. Glowing proapeets are received from Wisconsin, Minnesota, Nebraska, Iowa and Dako ta when; the present seeding time con ditions have never been excelled. l he cigar manufacturers! of Louis ville, Kentucky, have acceded to the demand of 1 no workmenjor an advance! of wages, and a strikftjHiore has been averted. At New York eiimt hundred ngai -makers and two hundred packers and strippers have inaugurated a strike for higher wanes. About eight hundred coal-miners in Ohio have quit work rather than submit to a reduction of cents a day in tho rate of pay. The miners in tho Alleghany coal region have accepted the lower wages offered by the employers. The Iirst and second mates of the trainer Tropic, running between Phil adelphia and the West Indies, iu the fruit-carrying trade, were arrested by the l rnited States marshal upon the ar rival of the vessel at Philadelphia. Monday, upon the ohargu of violating the neutrality laws in transporting arms and ammunition to Miragoane for tho Ilavtian rebels. The vessel, it is also alleged, conveyed tho company ol rebels who captured Miragoane. tho lat ter part Of March, ftom tnagua to the port named. The decision of the Iowa Supreme Court in the prohibition constitutional amendment casawhlch was liled Satur day at Dubuque, affirms the decision on the iirst hearinir, and, as was the case then. Judge Beck la the only memberot the court w ho dissents. The only new issue raised was the question of juris diction, which is disposed of at bite out seL the court declaring that it is en tlrelv competent lo pass upon the validity of the amendment. As to the first hearing, the amendment is held to 1 null and void because it Interferes with N vested right of the subject. A number of patrons of )'i i iens cir cuit at Dover, Delaware, Saturda night, took an emphatic manner of ex pressing their poor opinion of the per forinanr . Asa portion of the wagons were being driven to the depot to take the cars fr Hie next town on the Cir euitacrowdof men opened fire upon them with repeating rifles and revol vers. Ten r twelve oi the rirens men were wounded, one of the proprietor Charles Henderson, being shot In the eve. Under the protection tlie sher iff's posse the remainder of the vans were loaded ami tliiven to the depot without molestation. A number oi houses in the locality win ro the attack was made were riddled with bullets. No ai r. sis were made. At a conference of electricians held in New Vork City Friday it was re solved that the placing of telegraph and telephone wires underground was a di rect, uinl pressing necessity. At the same time the increased cost of curry ing out this much-needed reform led the assembled telegraphers to deprecate hasty measures. Mr. Thomas A. Edi son declared that overhead electric w ires constituted an ever-present dan ger to life and property, and that uau moment tin men or others touching the Wires might bo killed bj the. elect ri. current. The danger from thissourci has been vehemently denied by parties Interested in maintaining the present system, but they will now have to con cede the fact. The animosit ies out of which irCS the killing of a. W. Slav back by John Cockerill, of 77- fW-ZJ.-yxfci, at St. Louis, a few months ago. have not alto gether abated, since the tragedy al luded to. a feeling of bitter hostility has existed between Mr. Gloves, ii friend of Cockerill. and whose publica tion ol a card was the immediate cause of the collision between Slay back and Cockerill, and Frank .1. Low man. ami several times the t wo men have appa rently been 011 the verge of h fight. At last llowman sent a challenge to Glover, who replied Monday, declining to iirht. and saying thai liowm in's character was not such as to entitle him to the satisfaction he asks. (Hover, however, applies sundry epithets to llowman, which the latter ma consider as calling for crore. GENERAL MARKET". t HK ACC. UiiKAT. Higher; April. l.lu,S'1.U5: May, Sl.tl'iiriU'.", : .lllll.-. -l.rr-.KH.lt;'.. t.oX.- llitdier; April, ;'.:::s '."itr; May. .vr-.in. -.:,", ; .nine, iNflcgirtWJir. O.vis.- Hinlicr: piil. in- .( I!-. May, 1(41V : .lime. 4,VJr. I'UOVIMoN.- Mes pork hiirlwr; April. Sr.'.l.v.f :;i r. , : Miiv Sl'.i.rJO. m.ar . ; June. tM-: :, )'.::,; ,. r.ard Steady: Vpr Ml.fiO(il.;;" Mav, JII.Cm'., l l.'.D. Cattxk. -Jklnrkol lirm. We jiintr: Fancy heavy expert Mcers '..:. 0 6 Choice lilt Mcers ti..) .0; Good do Medium grade Mcers 5.0530,0! Fair to medium steers r.(KKft.5 Heirs. Market lirm. Salos ranired from S7.ir(ti7.(s"i mr light packing ami shipping: S. r.(.f T.Mi, for heavy packing, and from &7.4.X7r f.r lair to choice- smooth hem shipping lei-. llUTTKn. -Steady ami linn. We (mote: Choice to Fancy Creamery at 27a28? V tt; ordinary to troixl do. '. i i'i.-ie; n I m fancv Dairj at Ja:ic: common 10 lair do. I.'kiVOc: l.adle-packetl. UahV; packing rtoek at ice: Urease, 7'..av c. N EW VORK. Wiikat. Higher: No. 3 April, SI .31 1.21 1-.. ; .May, M.21 m.'il ; June, S1.U4 ("J.!4. Chun. C'liiel; 31 i n1 WeMCri !!"pot. .' ( '.l;. e. CINCINNATI. Purit. Market quiet; Famllv, 4.7.Vr MO Wheat Firm: No. 2 I ted Wintci Sl.i:u1.14. Cokn. Lower; No. a Mixed, IRfc'e. Oats. Higher; No. ! Mixed, 4Gc. 1 E. Quiet ; No. 3 Fall, 65! c. FitovtHtoNe Pork dull at $10.00. Lard quiet at 811.10 liulk Men's firm; Hear sides s? .M)r to : : jaipon mui; i lear mie ail.no. M-1LM A l KJUL Wheat. Higher: April. P1.10W; May, 91.11? : June, J.14'h : No. . MV. Coiin. Higher at MIJ c lor No. P. mats. -Firm: No. White 12c. UK. High":-; W c he No.;. ItAULEV. Higher .t No.':. sr. lovm. Wht.m. Higher: No.d e.i AnitUM.IS . dM.12: . May. si. i2i (. Von. fllaherT April, .".a ' : May, tAiajjmc. Mat--Quiet; April. Wnai'Jc. ltvi Qnlel at MHfc. UAKl.EV. Sternly at .''' ,.c PnovIMONS. Pork higher; tie.90. Hi' Salt Meat- (poet at Mn.io. m.aft, I0.7o.- Bacoo rtoady it ft 1.20, n.ys, u.i;. Lard higher: 911.Ce. Iloes Higher; Packing, 87.:(j$7..V) ; butcliers' to be.st heavy, $7.41$ 7.00. KALTIMOHF. From. Quiet; Weatern Huperflne, n.V fl 1.00 ; do. extra, ?4.aVa l.7:: Family, S5.t (SO.00. WllKAT- Western higher: No. !1 Winter Kod Sot and April, xt.201 ( l.'9i; May, 51.21 Wl.M 1 .. Corn. West crn higher; Mixed Sjm.i ami April. Ml aflame. OAT. Western White. :i.V: Ixwt do. .Mr.",c. ItVE-Higher at Ti t'tT.ic. BOSTON. Wool.. Quiet; Ohio and Pennsylvania extrrts, 40amtc; Michigan and Wisconsin 5W40c: California choice spring, ul c.