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t. W. HOtJSJHTOlf, rnfik , . WELLINGTON. I I T OHIO. SEWS OF THE )YEE?,, Gathered from All . Quarters. i j ,U ,'. WASHINCTOW. A proclamation, we issued by th Presi dent on the 13th earning the Oklahoma 'boomer not to enter : or remain upon the' . Oklahoma lanU in the Indian Territory. If this warning U not reapeeted "the mili tary pown' of the United States wlH be invoked to abate all inch anaathortied possession, td prevent inch threatened en try and occupation and to remove sueh tn- - trader from the Indian lands." 1 ' '" The Secretary of the Navy baf ordered ' Lieutenant John Bf . Hawley, in charge of the Branch Hydrographic office at Balti , mere, to report to the Secretary of the Treasury for duty on the coast survey. Lieutenant Hawley hai been selected to take charge of the resnrvey of the How York harbor, for which work Congreee re cently appropriated $80,000. Mr. Wright, Commissioner of the Bureau of Labor Statistic, has submitted a plan of work for the Bureau to Secrotary Lamar, which has met with the (Secretary's ap proval. This plan contemplates a line of investigation which will bring out the causes of labor difficulties, and the method of work will be by special agents who will be appointed to gather statistics in this country and Europe. Charles F. Peck, the Labor Commissioner of New York, will be sent to Europe as one of the representatives of the bureau. Ills commission, however, has not yet been made out, and the ap pointment of the other agents has not been aetormined upon. Mr. Wright expects to be able to submit a report of the result of the investigation of the bureau to the next Congress. An order has been issued by Secretary Lamar, directing that all the horses, car riages and equipments which are the prop erty of the Interior Department, excepting those nsed for trucking purposes, be dis posed of at public sale and the proceeds of (he sal be converted into the Treasury. The result of this order will be a retnrn to their regular duties of seven employe who have been nsed as driver. Attorney Cen tral Garland has Issued a similar order re specting the horses, carriage and equip age of the Department of Justice. taring the last week of hi administra tion President Arthur Issued an order re storing to the public domain the Crow Creek Indian reservation. It Is now discovered that this particular reservation was secured to the Crow Creek Indian by treaties which, It i alleged, would be violated should President Arthur order be carried Into effect. President Cleveland Is there tor considering the advisability of sus pending the orriftr, pending a thorough In vestigation of the subject. The Becrotary of the Treasury has dis missed Ave Inspectors of the Custom Hoase at New York, owing to the funds running short. In the enrollment of the Naval Appro priation bill the section providing for the abolition of the Naval Advisory Board at the discretion of the Secretary of the Navy was omitted. The clause appropriating 600,000 for the armament of new cruisers Ira also omitted In the enrollment, al though it was agreed to by both Houses of Congress. In the Sundry Civil Appropria tion bill the item appropriating ?i,fiO0 for telegraph polos and material for the Life Baring Service was also dropped out in the Kirollment. THE EAST. At the annual commencemeatof the Wo Kan's If edlcal College of Philadelphia on lit 10th the degree of doctor of medicine ra conferred on twenty-two female grad- Untenant Austin, Treasurer of the Sal tation Army at North Adam, If ass., de camped a few days ago with all the money. the Army telegraphed General Moore, at Brooklyn, for relief. In the Massachusetts Senate on the 12th, th bill prohibiting the sale of Intoxicating Uqnors between eleven in th evening and lix In the morning, excei by inn-hoidora, iras passed to the third reading by a vote f 2ft to ft. The Hoase ordered to the third reading the reaolutioo providing for a eon titutional amendment abolishing th poll tax as a pre-requisit to voting for Gov ernor, Lieutenant Governor, Senator and Representatives. The House also ordered to the third reading the bill providing for the retirement of the Justice of the Su preme Judicial Const on full pay. J. D. Gill's art store building, at Spring Bold, Mass., was damaged by Are on the llth to the amount of $M,000. GUI' en tire stork of pictures, books, rich paint ings, statuary, etc., wet badly injured by smoke. , Hugh McDevItt, aged fifteen, an em ploye of the Brooklyn & Coney Island Rail road Company, was knocked off th front platform of car two years ago through the driver' carelessness, crushing bis right leg and rendering amputation necessary. When his mother heard of the accident, the fell Insensible, and died two days after ward. The boy sued th company for fiV 000 damages, and on th llth the Circuit Court Jury gave him a verdictfor$l5,000. Tea . buildings near th Erie depot at Oletn, N. Y., were destroyed by Are on the 12th. Los V,000. While driving from Brookflold to Fort Hamilton, N. Y., a few days ago Francis Herman, a farm hand, was seised with a lit and fell from th wagon dead. He Is th same person who ten year ago shot and killed Moiher and Douglass, the sup- posed abductors of Charley Ross, while they war attempting to rob bi employer's bons. General J. 8. Negley, President of the National Union League, ha baaed a call for a meeting of th National Council at Pittsburgh on the 2Nth Inst. At a meeting of th Ohio Valley Stock Breeders' Association held at Pittsburgh oa th 12th, It was decided to bold an ex hibition of domestio meat producing ani mals, breeding horse and Bo ponitry in Pittsburgh next -November. A stock com pany was alio formed with a capital of $10,000. , A disastrous Are broke out In ton broom factory of Fable at Ringer at Stroudsbnrg, Pa., on the 12th. Th building was en tirely destroyed and the Barnett Mouse adjoining greatly damaged. Edward Ca 'an, fireman, wa killed by th falling of B part of the Burnett Hon. A oiler' xploion In th blacksmith hop of the American Tuba and Iron Com pany' mills at Middletown, Pa., on the night of the 12th demolished the building and injured a number of employes. M. E. Thome, engineer, I supposed to be fatally Injured. President Costello, of the Pennsylvania Miners' Association, who ha been visiting the scene of the great strike, on the 13th submitted an official report showing tbat th J strike embraces 132 mines employing over 10,000 colliers. ..According to this report there are 111 mines Idle; five are in opera tion at the old price of two and a half cent per bushel; five have made no official re- turn; Ave have a few men working at the former rates, tad six are not accounted for. Mr. Costello say it I the greatest strike which ever occurred among the miner of this country; that there is not one full pit on the Monongahela River at work, and that the miner were never mor j determined. '' ' ' The business failures for the weok ended March 17 number for the United States 2.18, Canada 44, total 28i, as compared with 277 the previous week. The failures seem to be on the Increase in Canada, but in New York City and the Eastern State they are below the average. The Southern and Western State furnish two-thirds of the lot In the United States, Alfred Smiley, of Foxburg, Pa., a well- known oil country man, has contracted with the English Government to lay the pipe-line in the Soudan country for that Government. Mr. Smiley starts very soon and will take with him five practical pipe line men from Bradford, Pa. He will be absent about three years. The Henderson steel syndicate at Read lag, Pa., has collapsed. This was a pool formed by leading iron manufacturers of New York and Pennsylavnia to experiment with the' Henderson process of making steel. It was claimed that it was cheaper than tho Bessemer method, and equally as good steel could be manufactured. The pool had raised $100,000 to experiment with and control the new process. Mary S.Conkling, sister of Roscoo Conk ling, died at Rochester, N. Y., on the 12th. She was over sixty years of age and had long been in poor health. Statement of the New York associated banks for the week ended March 14: Loans Increase, $1,4.17,000; specie decrease, $74, 000; legal tender Increase, $207,000; de posits increase, $1,043,000; circulation de crease, $lltt,0O0; reserve decrease, $202,000. The banks held $47,082,000 In excess of legal requirements. Charles W. McCune, proprietor of th Buffalo Courier, died on the 14th, after three weeks' illness of typhoid fever. He was born la Brattleboro, Vt., la 1832. Audubon Davis, of the editorial staff of the Philadelphia Daily Newt, and one of the most brilliant journaKsta of this country, died on the Kith of Bright' dis ease of the kidney. The funeral of Sergeant Thomas Plunk ett, the armless veteran, color-bearer of the Twenty-first Massachusetts Regiment and for many year an employ at the Massachusetts State House at Boston, wa attended in Mechanics' HaH, Worcester, on the 14th by a large number of distinguished mourners, including Governor Robinson and staff, th Legislative Committee, fifty past and present members of the Legisla ture, President Pillsbury, of th Senate, and Department officers of the O. A. R. Five thousand persons viewed the remains. John Kelley, a railroad nglnoer, re cently convicted of firing a hotel at Maha- noy Plane, Pa., was sentenced to eight years' solitary confinement at labor. The motive for the crime was the belief tbat the hotel furnished liquor to his inebriated wife. Arthur Coyle, a young married man, was shot dead at Lost Creek, Pa., on the 15th by John Harris, a Reading Railroad coal and iron policeman, with whom be had a dispute. William Fox died at the hospital In Will iamsburg,, N. Y., on the lfith. Two weeks ago Fox, while drunk, threw a pan of hot water at bi wife, and the content burned their ten-year-old shild so that It died. The wife seized an ax and fractured her hus band's skull. While working on a railroad five mile west of Huntingdon, Pa., on the 14th two unknown Italian were (truck by the day express and Instantly killed. Their bodies were horribly mangled. WEST AND SOUTH. A fir at Youngstown, O., on th 13th destroyed a barn and six tenement be longing to Richard Hughes. In the barn three horse were burned to death and a large quantity of hay, feed and carriages destroyed. The tenements were all occu pied and th familiea barely escaped with their lives, running into the street in their night clothes. The fire was incendiary. Cooks County, Tex., wa visited by a ter rible tornado on the 12th. It swe4 a track a mile wide, uprooting trees and filling th public road with all kind of timber. Th largest hail fell that wa ever seen there. Much damage was done to property, and it is rumored that some lives were lost. Th Woman Suffrage bill has passed both branches of the Dakota Legislature. Minnie Hamilton, an attractive young lady of Clartngton, O., recently formed th acquaintance of Arthur (Simpson at a ska' ting link, and he induced her to elope with him. On the night of the 12th the girl, In attempting to descend from a second-story window of friend' boos to meet her lover, fell and received injuries from th effect of which sb died th next day. A Portland (Ore.) dispatch of th 13th says th British bark Allahbad, Captain McCuUnm, from Kong Kong, November 17, is now sixty days overdue and It Is gen erally believed that she has gone to th bottom a (he has not been spoken. Her cargo oonslsta of rloe and Chines mer chandise. Bb 1 fully Insured and has no passengers. Lightning struck a barn on th farm of Captain Hope, near Bbalbyville, Tenn., on th 12th, killing At Dean (colored) and se verely burning Clay Steele, Warner Rut ledg and Willi Hop. Th building wa burned and two bone consumed. TbsClsvslaad (O.) Herald, established In U19 and the oldest daily in Northern Ohio, ceased to exist a dlstlnotiv paper on th 19th, having been purchased by and consolidated with th Plain Dealt of tbat city. Th subscription list was purchased by th Cleveland Leadrr, which will here after b known as th Cleveland Lead and Morning Herald. Th Plain Dealer will Issue a morning and evening edition from th old office of th Herald. ' A fir at Pulaski, Tenn., on th night of th 14th destroyed four business bouse, caudag a loss of about 4,000; partially Insured. A man named Monro Belatea, a resident of Nashville, and two unknown traveling men, perished in th flames, Joseph Mueller, a malster living In a sub-l urb of Detroit, Mich., and who has been in destitute circumstances for some weeks, having been out of work, reoeived notice on the 14th that his' father, a rich brewer In Munich, Bavaria, had died and left hltn a fortune of $120,000. At New Holland, Neb., on the 1.1th fire destroyed fifteen business houses, including the postolBce. . The loss will reach $30,000. The heaviest losers are H. Burchord, James Ryan and McKinnon's drug store. Revenue raiders bad prisoners in a hotel at Higlande, near the North Carolina and Georgia line, on the 14th, when a rescuing party of miner attacked the hotel, and William Ramsey was shot and killed. The raiders were not hurt. . : Edward G. Bowser, a real estate broker of Chicago, has commenced suit against the Western Union Telegraph Company, claim ing $00,000 damage for delivering a mes sag addressed to him to another man of the same name. Three months afterward the telegraph company discovered the mis take and tent th message to the plaintiff, but too lot to avert the loss. . Rice Lake, Wis., was visited by an In-, cendiory Are on the 14th which destroyed nine buildings in the business part of the town. Less $30,000; Insured for $10,000. The body of a Mrs. Mclnveil was found near a fire at Taylor, Crawford County, Ga., on the l lth, with her head and body much disfigured by burning. The skull was crushed, and a billet of wood with blood and hair on it was found near. The woman had been separated from her third husband, Mclnveil. Captain Schmidt, of tho Texas State Rangers, on the 13th arrested twenty-five men in the vicinity of Vernon, that State, charged with murder, many of whom stood high in the community. It Is claimed that the men constituted a secret vigilance organization. Four recent murders are attributed to them. The wholesale arrests created much excitement throughout the Pan Handle. FOREIGN INTELLIGENCE. Hong Kong advices of the llth state tbat the French, after five days' fighting, car ried th Chines positions around Ke Lung. Forty Frenchmen were killed and two hundred wounded. AtHayesville, Out., on the llth Are de stroyed the residence of William Ellen baulen, who, together with hi wife, per ished la the flame. A mass meeting of English workingmen has been called for April 3 at London to protest against the Government spending any more money for war operation in the Soudan. Charles Bradalugh will preside, and Laboucbere will address the meeting. Official statistics show that the number of emigrant from Ireland during 18W was 7U43, a decrease of 40,000 as compared with the previous year. It Is stated that James Stephen and Eu gene Davis, the ex-Feaians, who have been residing at Paris, have been placed under arrest and ordered ts leave France. For committing an Indecent assault on a female pupil a few days ago, Pat HcGeary, janitor of th Washington school, at 81m- coe, Ont., wa sentenced to eighteen m oaths' imprisonment and to receive thirty lathe within six weeks. A London dispatch of the 10th says a battery of heavy artillery, a battery of meuataia pans, Snider rifles and 1,2M,000 cartridges are to be shipped to th Ameer of Afghanistan at once. These applies are ostensibly a gift to the Ameer. Calcutta advices report a damaging drontb in the tea and indigo districts. The Federal Council of Berne ha ap proved the Uaited State treaty for the protection of trade marks. It hi reported that the Indians In North western Manitoba are dying In large num bers from a singular disease, the first symptoms of which are stiffening of the knee and joint frera which death soon follows. Chicken-pox and diphtheria have taken off many more, and they are in a general starving condition. LA-TEIt NEWS. The great railroad strike cam to an end at Sedalia, Mo., on tho 10th, the company restoring the wages of the employes. Th town was wild with enthusiasm, citlsens of all classes expressing themselves proud of th peaceful victory of the men. Portland, Me., on the Kith made a second attempt to elect a Mayor of th city, which resulted In the choice of Hon. John M. Deering, Democrat, by a majority of 200 over Johd II. Fogg, Republicau, and A. T. Cox, Prohibition. Aoariah Paui.i, chief of the notorious Morgautown gang, was arraigned at Youngstown, O., on the Kith, on four counts. To two of these, stilxirnlng wit nesses and arson, he pleaded guilty. His trial will begin shortly. The lienulty for the offense Is State's prison not mure than twenty years nor less than one. Tnc Senate on the 10th confirmed th nominations of John C. Black, of Illinois, to be Commissioner of Pensions, and Lien tenant D. L. Wilson and Knnign Henry T. Mayo to be Lieutenants In the Navy. PrksIPCNT Cmvkland on the loth sent to the Senate the nomination of Joseph H. Miller, of West Virginia, to be Commis sioner of Internal Revenue. Mr. Miller It a young man, and has during the past eight years served his Slate as Auditor. He is a prominent Democrat and Is held In very high esteem by those who know him. Gcxiral SnxRitiAN on the 10th received a dispatch announcing tbat the boomer who had assembled on tho borders of th Indian Territory with the intention of in vading 6klahuma,virtually disbanded upon hearing or tne rresiuenv s proclamation. The War Department apprehends no fur ther trouble with the boomers. An accident to a freight train on the Pennsylvania Railroad at Carpenter' Station, near Pittsburgh, on th lfith wrecked twelve csrs. In on of the empty car were three tramps who were stealing their way to ths West. Two, James Dellie and Amos Gibson, were killed outright, snd the other, George S. Merrill, son of a Philadelphia clergyman, faiairy injured. Edmund Yard, charged with the em bexxlement of $300,000 worth of bonds be longing to Charles O. Shaw, and who Aed to Europe and was extradited by the United States Government, arrived at New York on th Kith. Bail wa set at f 13.MM and wa furnished by John W. Jacobus and George I). Kuper. Tax large barn on the Leaf form, be tween Douglsssvllls and Amltsvllle, Berk County, Pa., wa destroyed by Are on the li'ith. There wore twenty-eight bead of cattle and six horses in the building, all of which were consumed, as was also farming Implement and a lot of grain. Ths loss on uiiiimng ana contents ib jri".""", insur ance $4,000. It is not known how th fir originated. Attorney General George A. Gray be hoen nominated as the successor of United States Senator jsayara. ' The Chicago Prohibitionist have nomi nated a city ticket headed by W. H. Bush, for Mayor. Secretary Bayard Issuss' a Proclamation Showing the Polioy of tho Now Administration, The Weekly Cabinet Meetings Changed From Friday to Thursday Demo cratic Caucus Fix the Minority J Representation. i ( ANOTHER CABINET MKETIXG. Washington, March 13. Tho day for holding the second of tlio-twrt "Msokly Cabi net meetings ling bwn changed from Friday to Thursday, and tho Cabinet, met at noon yesterday pursuant to the now arrangement. All the members were present and the ses sion lasted three hours. Appointments and various oilier subjects, prominent among I which was the Oklahoma matter, were, dis-1' cussed. After the Cublnet meeting the : White riouso was thrown open to the public i and the President held a popular reception In the East Room. Mr. Falrehlld, the newly appointed As sistant Secretary of the Treasury, spent sev eral hours closeted with his predecessor, Judge French. Mr. Hlgglns, the new Ap pointment Clerk, was engaged In the per formance of his new duties. Among the first nomtimtlons sent to the Senate will be that caused by the death of Inspector Gen eral Socket At the Capitol yesterday, it was said that Secretary Bayard lias announced in a very positive manner his Intention to adhere, to the strictest letter of the civil service law. He sent his messenger Into each room of the ! State Department with tho proclamation to the clerks that tliey noM have no fears of losing their positions through the mere change of administration, that lie did not j purpose dismissing any one except lor neg lect of duty. It Is asserted that Mr. K. II. Butler, edi tor of tlioUulTalo Evening Nam, has been offered the position of Government Printer. Mr. Butler left the elty a few days ago and will return In ten lluys or a week when, it Is stated, lie will Inform the President as to his decision In the mailer. The Secretary of Slate is Informed of Hie oflferof an antimony mine to public tender by the Moorish Government, to be worked and the mineral exported. The mine Is sit uated near (ho Mediterranean, not far from Tangier. Conictition is ok-ii until Juno 5 next to all foreign powers, and the conces sion Is to be given to tfie highest bidder the Moorish Government reserving the right to reject any bid, and explore the mine on Its own account. The Democratic Senators held a caucus Immediately after tlio adjournment of tho Senate yesterday ami completed llienrrongo nientof the minority representation of Sen ate committees for the Korty-nlnlh Congress. After adjournment of the caucus, Senator Coekrell bunded the list of the minority to Senator Don Cameron, of Pennsylvania, who will submit the matter to the Senate. - - SOUTH AMERICA. Rtrennons Efforts Being Made to Resist Ilarrlos Hraxlllan Parliament Opened. Saw Juax Dm. Sun, Nicaragua, March in. Active war preparations are being made throughout the. country. The Government has now 70,000 men ready to send to the frontier. Strenuous efforts to resist Bar rios are being made in Costa Klca, A large number of soldiers are ready to move. Great enthusiasm Is manifested and confi dence In the final rctftilt Is displayed. It la thought probable that some quarters of Guat nmala will consider the matter before at tempting coercive incasiws, and that a friendly solution of the dlflliilt problem of uniting the live States may he arrived at. New Yoiik, March la. The latest ad vices from Han Salvador say that active preparations are liehig made by the authori ties of San Salvador, Nicaragua and Costa lilea In Central America to prevent Presi dent Barrios, of Guatemala, from assuming the command of the military forces of the various States of that country and forming all the State Into one republic under his head, to which lie claims lie Is entitled to (to tinder an act passed by the' Guatemala As sembly, notwithstanding the protest of the other States. President Ilarrlos in tho face of this opposition has decided to delay his war on the oilier htates with a view to a 'friendly solution of the troubles. Km i)K Jan Kino, March 13. Parliament 0K-ned on the l'tli Inst The Emperor In giving thanks for the reception accorded iiim in the principal provinces announced that Brazil s foreign relation were of a friendly nature; stated that the sanitary con dition of the country was quite satisfactory; asked that the extinction of slavery will be dealt with gradually In order that the sacri fice might be as small as posslblo without Interfering with the productive Interest of the country, and recommended an equi librium of exjienditures and revenues. GENERAL GRANT. He Passed Another Juod Night A Caneet HpeelulUt Refused Admittance. NkwToiik, Mureh 13. General Grant passed another good night lie slept well snd expressed himself as being much re-frcshi-d yesterday morning, lie awoke about nine o'clock and nte a comparatively hearty breakfast of eggsand toast lie then turned to Ills desk without stopping to read the morning papers, merely asking for the latest news from w aslilngtoii or from Loudon re garding the Impending Itusxhm war with hngland and licgan work on his book. During the morning ho arose and walked the floor unaided. Throughout the morning visitors called to leave their cards and their compliments, few being admitted to the General's prcmnce. Mr. W. K. Brown, the raneer specialist, or North Adams, Mass., called at tho resi dence yesterday afternoon, but was not at lowed to see the patient because ho declined to tell his mode of treatment Mr. Brown was seen at the hotel s'uter in the evening, lie said: "1 came to New lork through a letter of Introduction from Colonel Kred Grant, and also at the request of Mr. 8. B, K I kins, whose father I cured of cancer on the lips, and I went to General Grant' by ap- tHilntment made wlthj)r. Fordyce Barker. After some conversation in the parlor, I was Informed by Fred Grant that. It would be necessary for me to toll my mode of treat ment before I could operate. This I declined to do and left the house. I have cured two hundred cases of cancer during (lie past two yearn and think I have been unfairly treated. 1 shall return to North Adam. Death of an Old Settler. ViWfMrvvvi Tit1 'Matviri 111 leVi n one of the old settlers of till section, died yesterday aged ninety-one. Mr. Van Kirk has lived In this county almost a cen tury. Ho was on guard during the summer of 1813, a short time before the battle of Tippecanoe, at General Harrison's residence when the treaty between Harrison and Tocumseh was niude, and heard the row be tween Tecnmseh and the Terrlloral Gov. eninr, In which the former used harsh lan guage toward the latter and which resulted In Harrison summarily ordering Tecnmseh and hi mob to leave the premise. Mr, Van Kirk leave behind hlin some valuable reminiscences. He was very wealthy and leaves an aged wile and several children, r - ( A Number of Important Measures Pass th House Thf Iturnett Free Bohoolboofc Bill Defeated General Legislation. Columbus, March 10. Both branches of the Legislature convened at four p. m. to day after a ten-day vacation. But few members of either body were present and no business of importancewas, transacted. Henate, March 11. Only a thirty min utes' session was held by th JSenate to day, end but little business was dono. Jfr. Oreh Introduced in MU amending the mechanics' lien law so as to extend the time from four to six months. Mr. Ely in troduced a bill authorizing Bedford town ship, Cnyahogit County, to Issue' bonds to erect a soldiery' monument. Mr. Oron In troduced a resolution, which was adoptud, congratulating General Grant on1 bis restoration to his rank In' the-army ,ond wishing him long life. .A bill was intro duced to relieve the bondsmen of Morton O. Van Fleet, ex-Treasurer of Huron County, who defaulted to the extent of $ta,u00 about fourteen months ago. The bondsmen have already paid $11,000 of this, and the passage of tho bill is peti tioned for by a majoi fly of the voters of the county. Minnie. There was barely a : quorum present in the House to-day and all bills of a general nature on the calendar had to be passed, and only local bills considered. Mucn time was oonsumed in the discussion of Mr. Roche's bill, authorizing the County Commissioners, Treasurer and Auditor of Cuyahoga County to employ an agont to get property on the tax duplicate, not listed for taxation, and receive thoro for twenty-five per cont. of the tax so realized by tho efforts of such a.cnt. It wns finally rcciminiueu m tne Judiciary Committee. The bill amending Section 2.'tT.", Revised Statutes, so thut proporty shall be listed for location in the ward where found, was passed. Mr. Bar gar olTorcd a Joint resolution, which wa looted, appropriating IJU00 to pay the fees and mileage of witnesses be fore the Committee to investigate the cause of the Hocking Valley strlko. Among tho bills Introduced was one by Allon O. Myors compelling newspaper pub lishers to swoar to their circulation for the protection of advertisers, and one by Mr. Stevenson providing for tho pnymontof local bounties heretofore promised but not paid. A-largo number of local bills were introduced and several weropassed. Senate, March 12.-M. Btryker's bill providing for the appointment of at least one female patient In each insane asylum to attend female patients, was passed and Is now a law. The following bills were passed: Providing that petitions for dower may be filed In any court whore property is located; making it constitute burglary to enter a grannry or other farm building, placing telephone and Insurance companies aniler the same restriction for the non-payment of taxes as are now applied to tele graph and express companies. Several un important local bills ware passed, and a number introduced. JIuute, March 12. Mr. Burnett' Free Bchoolbook bill came up for passage to-day, and after an animated debate was defeat edyens 21, nays 42. Mr. Ogden's bill es tablishing a State Board of Forestry wa passed. By the provisions of the bill there is established at th State University at Columbus a central office for the promotion of forestry. The Board of Directors con sists of the Professor of Agriculture In the Collece: the Hocrelarv of the State Board of Agriculture, and a third person to le ap pointed by (ho Governor. These odlciuls are to be commissioned and qualified as officers of the State The Professor of Ag riculture will lie President of the Board, and may, with the consent of the Direc tors, establish volunteer forestry stations In the several counties ot tue Mate, lue duty of the bureau will be to inquire Into the character and extent of tbeiorcsts of the State, investigate the causes of their decnv, and to suggest legislation calculated to expedite the growth, preservations, ami increase of valuable forest trees. The bill Introduced by Mr. Kocbe for the protection of life and property incident to the use of team boilers passed tne House to-aay. it empowers municipal corporations to regu- lute ny oriniisnce tne operation ui steam boilers, and to provide for a proper and reimlar annual liisnection and testing of them; also to condemn and prevent use of nnsate Doners, qnaiiiying ana licensing engineers or persons now in charge of boilers, and to punish the violation of such ordinance by fines and penalties on con viction in anv oollce court or before any ust Ice or tno peace. A large nunioer oi ncal bills were also passed. Among the bills introduced were the followlngr Amending the exemption law so that women shall have bomcstnail, or in lieu thereof 41.000 exemption: prohibiting cir culation of immoral literature; giving lalior liens on railroads. henate, March 13. Mr. hlv Introduced bill to reconstruct th Cleveland city gov ernments It provide tbat there (hall be locted a Board of nine Aldermen to serve for a tnnn of two vears. and one Council man from each ward. Mr. Brown's bill amending ths Jury law so that when a per son dies or roiuoves irotn tne county uiter his name has been put in the box other names shall be drawn to fill their places, wns passod, as was also a number of local bills. Mr. Matthews' bill authorizing the appointment or a nonrn or remnin visitors in, h Knlillers' and Sailors' Orphans' HomeatXenla, which passed the House some time ago, was reported back by the Kennte Committee on Military Affairs without recommendation, i ne nenate ami Tlnuse to-dav named the Deficiency bill. The amount appropriated by It to cover deficiencies Is I.Vt,lt;!:i.i:l, the largest single item lieingii,477.n lor tne renitcnnary, and 1flaUJtt for th public works. Many fetitious are pouring iiho tne nenato snu t.i,iaaskinn for the passage of an act to require the teaching in public schools of . . ' . S I 1 I . I ..l,.,.in A I .fful on the human lynxem oi narcuuet, winu lanti and alcohol. o rr,.f I Mr. l.ittW'i hill AbollthtntT flptv rat school. lor Willi aim cuiurru uiumrnn .. tin fur najiuir). and after being slightly amended was passed by a of UO ayes to in nays. Aimms passed the following only are of general f. Am.ndinir Beet Ion 2100 of the Revised Statutes so as to authorise th taking of prisoners outside the walls of workhouses so won ui .i .lln HaMinn 4li.il Of th HS' lujiliitniMiii as to ronuire that land shall be paid for, where a publio highway 1 opened before in roaa is upouru. wam.rVahle miratroi are amone tno atmosphere ffw Dakota- The 1 1. -ii nt T Newi aav that ft few morning alnce, In that town, the Washington Jllll. over aixty niu ui ,l, nlainlv be seen In all their inuv, j ... . magnilioent splondor In the horizon oi the norm, xno mirage iiij seen are phenomooai wonaers. iurs town, Kimball and other town we nl.hl. l. II,U flnatlnir as It were, 1st the clouds. The hills on the west side, of the Missouri Klvor are also yWblo, anJ . ermA ika l.it-vnr a lundacanfl picture ttve beauty of which can not be described ojr pen. ijflSIIW hrja ST6MACH &rrrEf$ ' Tfca rilteat sjnhleeta 1 For fever snd ague, and rrmlttants, r the di'lnlltuled, bilious snd nervous. To such person, Hosteller's Stomach Bitters oOurds ailuquute proiecilon by luoreasing vital stamlnit and the resistant power of the constitution, and by checking frregu Inrltli'S of the liver, stomach and bowels. Moreover, it eradicates malurlal com pliunta of an obstiimie type and stands nlnne ancquulcd among our national teiiieilies. i ut sale by all Drumrlsts and Dealer gonerslly. PALMER'S FLAVORING EXTRACTS, Lemon, Vanilla, Etc. fars, tJslform Quality, Very Strong, snilFtnt TlSTor. Palmer's COCOA CREAM Tho Best Itntr Dresaliu: to the Market. Palmer's Laundry Blue, jj Bald to bs the Best la use. Abovs articles Eold bjr the Trade 'Generally. E. A. PALMER & BRO,r Cleveland, Ohio. ON THE ENGINE Running a Locomotive while Deathly Sick. Something the Faeeengen via, not Know. A Phyaioian tare an Engineer TlTntTOnT. If AH. Dr. PTtd KennMy, Ronflrmt, H. Y.t 1 IfttAB Bin: I" an rnninwr un .nu swiunj- r Bullnmil, itid run Ih Fall Iflvcr bott train betwor V.ll Uivnf mnd Ii well. rciMtnff In TallMun. Fo tf n Kr 1 uffprtdevrTihli ir Injt drfh fnim liyipcp 1ft. Oltrn I nan llicn uhuhihk iu k n uawnrw mai I roald (rrtlT wp. I think ttila waa due partlT to nrtfular babliaor latlny, ftnd partly to iltf Jurofttia engine. Bomftlma my neaii would map iiKf neural- nq RlPlin 1 1" Itmn wuuiu wmo III my cjw h vntiM fvl aa blv aa anun'i Aaia. Mr Drniti waa vrry o(Tenlv and my UmI aurrd aa aooe aa It entfiird myaiouiarh In fact my fUimach f"lt aa ttHHiRh It ware a Krtt raw and ore aurfacv and what airouy lifave me p ritana tuu can im-ininc. In the lumrcvr and fall of )n; when wo M the frio.v ini-iiniul invfl. the con tun t tar brought on milt attactta nearly erery werk and I thought I annul a nav to ifvb me row it" - wur until tha ni'it acinic, when I frew an much wnnw til. 1 ouuld virtually eat nothing-, and coucluded tbat Diy labor, and my llf"1 too, were alxiut or r, HemetnlMT tat 1 had tried very medicine I bean of, and bad Men tn-at d by aouia of the bent phyal ;iani In Tannu and Lowell. At ihla crUlcal time Dr. David Kenneny a raviinie itrmooy waa reooin mended to me. It waa new to me, nnnd with my fiptrtenre of im-dlcfnet, yon ran etJr f'-nrlra ni fur My 'its that I had not a particle o' faith In It. I had Ukm it but a few day when 1 hrg n to ffet better. The raw and are feel uj left my alomat-h, ami the tniDtiltur tialna left mr head, end aoon I waa all rljrht, and hvn ben ever alnce. It la the only till itK tbat ever did tne the lrat ynod, and It drove very at he, t. n anl dlncotnfMrt rjiinpletely out f my bod Now I lu-ep KKNSkDVK KAVOKITK KKM- i Willi tue vU uiy engine, ana i sura wurir fchtF. Theltere Farnritr Remedy will cure arm hint One nlcht a wliHe aro John l.ayion. an engineer wl tsr onsrlnsi alfk ail ilnalh. He WMM WOfU OUt With work, bad a hitch fever, and ao nerroua ; almost broke down cryiud. --inrnae, juun. i mih, "t U erup. I've got aomvtb ni on my eiifjrne that will aet you npln a jiffy." I ta" out my nottle of Favorite Hemt dy, lifted h1 head and gc him a good doe He wni toed. Two dive aflrr I aaw blm lookirt neaitny a a ouicnrr. --n, ne aaia, wnw was that Huff you pave nm the otli'T night V" It waa r. uavia r.run mt i raiortip m-oii or, ivnmuut, TV "ald 1. "well. I don't rant whoe remedy It la, U'l the U.Ing for a m n on the railroad ' o aaf Wrtll. luura, ric., iMninuriiic. Thla preparation trora to "he. root of dlaeae by pur Ifyl gUie blood end rou-lns ecry organ Into h'aithr attlon. H la uwfnl at home, hun. In office everywhere. lr. David Kennedy. I'll) ale la ud burgeon, lltoadout, M. IT. MALARIA. As aa aaU'SMlsrlal sudiein PR. DAVID KENNEDY'S FAVORITE REMEDY baa won (nlrtn opinion!. Xo traveler thoritd cotu flder hlf outfit eontpltte unlcu It Includea a bottle of' Uill rotdleloe. If yon are ex poet d to frequent cbftDgdi ot climate, food and water, Favorite Remedy Bhoiild alweye be within your rearh. It etprlft ma larlai puleoi.si, aud la the bet preventative if eta il le an d malarial fnvtv In Uto wotlil. li U especially of feredaaft U uetuitny peritV for Ibeeureof K Saury and 11 vrr coioHJinifc,rontiiailofianaall disorder rrltlrtvfrom an Impure Mat of Ibe blood. To women) wlio .iTr from any of the l peculiar to DielraeC Favorite Remedy I constantly proving Itaelfanub ffcllliig frlrnd-a rriUl,iin. Addr the ptejiria lor,ur. l. Hiriiiy, twjuqyuf, n. I. a vaiue, e ivr b',Ly aU dmcirlsie. R. R. LANDS In Uinnetottt, North. Dakota, Montana, Idaho, Washington end Ongon. Fresa Lake KiiiMrler to Pnart "'. At prices rsnglns ehleflf trom 12 s $6 sr set. . n t Is 10 ysarV timet, this Is ths Bsst Country lor sseurlnf Uoos Komts now spin lor sslllsisont. mm mm mm a o nnrt of Government I l.lU ,J firul.r( illtnrf lw. OTH -10.ai.3 Act- B HOHB'Tliaji IIAI.r of sit ih Ful.llc Unas SispostJ or I" l", w.r. In Ins NnrtWrn rsclllr rountrr. Hanks sna Maps s.nt t-MKK. lscrilnr ths yiorlhen S-olfli. S'osmUr.ll. Railroad l.srid. lor "j lh. PRKRIIoTsriiniMt ln.ls. Addrsss.f -ILA. . UMouaM, Ua Coa'r, . f.B. St., II. rsulTMlaa. rT FREE! Lai A fk'orlt prrscriptlon of ess of thy oil noUs sn4 aaocsMrol snrclallsls In tl'rO aL (now rctlr.iinor ih.nir.ot Atto nubulty, tail Mnnhoai.Wtmknett mnd JKmaif .Stini Inplala seal.d n?tlopiV. Dnirsuu on All lb Aditran D. WARD 4 CO. tii'''ns. Mo: TO KAYI KCAITH TMI IIVH MtttT II ItfJ It Otm. im mm l.anr.rmUwCMslM.Iiii1l1lfaiwHkrsrwrMMr , m i.Mnnir.,HMl.rh.(M.Url,lll.-n.ll.m,.l l rli.i 111. S.W.I.. p.Hfl.t 111. Mnn4. mr4 ii.inilhMM th. .rw.m. l.lil.akl.riSILI ISOICISS. ThomnrfT in. fmt lUBMtH.lsrSrHsMvUII.Umlu rsuius 4