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MoCOKMTGK. S. G, T AY, JUNE 21, 1888 GEORGIA’S REPORT SOUTHERjfiSPR AYS WASHINGTON NEWS Missouri. Ex-Treasurer Harry Carter, of St. Joseph, has been discovered toe about $8,000 short in his books and h turned' over his properly to his bondi m. At the last election garter, who It be:n treasurer for two terms, was ele ed city auditor. The Southern Wire Compan; of St. Lou's, which also h?s a large f tory in Pittsburg^Pa.,have concluded tc lovo th? whole concern, to that city. T »» presi- dent gives as a reason for this a|on that I uuraie or potash (sulphur), 2 ounces ar. senic. Mix the above in 12 gallons of gruel for 100 hogs, or give one pint' doses to each daily. Give to both sick and well, where the latter have been ex* posed. Not only should the sick be sep arated from the well animals, but each each should be moved to new and clean; quarters or pastures. Burn up the old; beds, sprinkle walls and floors of sheds! or styes with a solution of one pint of pure] carbolic acid to ten gallons of soft water. All discharges should be deeply buried, or treated with n solution of one ouiittfS of chloride of sine to two gallons of wa ter. The person who attends the.-risk, should not have anything to do»yln>.«hc well hogs. All food and * water efomld be clean and pure. If these dirfeeijpns are faithfully followed the disease, may be stayed in its progr^-ts and gt* oped out. Every turner sVmld .see P in spect his liog^ as WtsoS^ll otiYr ''kni- r j ma's, everyday, and act promptly on i (he very first abtfearunoe of disease. I AROUND THE GLOBE crop- prospects should be abandoned, then'the producers would be compelled to rely for information on the speculators, and the .latter will be presumed to uso their knowledge for their own advan* tage. a IKSPECTION OF FERTILIZERS. I -respondent remarks that a great deal of dusalis* the,way guano is placed rket. Please explain.” ent does not say in what : of guano is unsatisfac* :r the complaint is against vhioh the inspection law the details of the law it- pt to “explain” without knowl -dge of the ground mUd not be likely to give he^commissioner isawaie OP CROPS, MADE BY THE AGRI< CULTURAL DEPARTMENT. INTERESTING ^CTS for busy^sma: IEFED HOW CONGRESS IS SPENDING ITS TIME AND ENERGY. ITEMS GLEANER FROM TELE PHONE AND TELEGRAPH. SOMETHING ABOUT CORN, OATS, SPANISH PEANUTS, FRUIT, ETC—A REMEDY FOR HOG CHOLERA—TIMELY SUGGESTIONS. MOVEMENTS IN RELrtffouijfEMFERANCK. \ MASONIC AND SOCTAt JRCLES FIRES, —Occidents—induct^ js^L-SBOgress. OFFICIAL ACTS OF TIIE PRESIDENT—AP POINTMENTS AND REMOVALS—WHERE THE NATION’S MONEY GOES—GOSSIP. INTERESTING DOTS ABOUT THE NORTH, EAST AND WEST—THE EUROPEAN SITU* ATION—DOINGS OF KINGS AND QUEENS. The strawberry crop around New Al bany, Indiana, is enormous. Locusts have appeared at Dubuque, Iowa, in v&t numbers in the last two days. ‘i The Alarm, an anarchist paper of the most pronouuced type, has been started in New York City. Mrs. Sheridan, mother of Gen. Phil Sheridan, difA nt Somerset, Ohio, on Tuesday; fcutd egiuaaxg_l^^j govrraman lo allow the Brouge factory tosi^BB Russia with cannon and projectiles. the Montreal S^^V elaga, Canada, W>cr ft and 134 horses We. <? Col. J. M. Henderson, the Commis- eionerof Agriculture for Georgia, has just made his June Report as follows. general Remarks. The reports from correspondents are unusually full in number and in details of crop conditions, and a careful reading of “Notes from Correspondents” from nearly eJery' county in the state, • will give a very dear idea of the goppra 1 AlaSamn. ' * The Sheffield StoDe vdcs have com menced operations. j / Mrs. 8kininierhorn, b* felma, was fa tally burned by the e|:j>Vioh of a coal oil lamp. ., The road from da^j completed, and will t few days. jT'.v r of M_S»nu;ry propose organizing a (ir clation for mutual benefit,. .n The Alabama EdudlWy! Association will meet at BessememrtTune 20th and continue iu session th«e ‘iys. S ewnrt & HarailtorfemAttalla, have leased the O’Connor I off mines near Gf dsden, and will at cpdeommence op erating them. , j Five thousand people } Wednesday witnessed the laying of th corner stone to St. Louisi Louisville is ^ration in a was against ihe treaty. He gave it as his conviction that the desire of Canada to have the American market opened free Jo their fish was at the bottom of all the trouble. * At —f***e>’S condition of f^TTn operations and vrbps. /fc * H, -J. ^TBK WEATHER. 'k/ ^SJSe'tfifrbuth"~wfiich sat in afterTSe heavjfqins of March and the early -part of April,' was brought to a close by co pious rains which fell, varying in the dif ferent sections of the state, from the 12th to the 22d of May* The eeasons contin ued good until June 1, many conrespon- aenta complaining of too much rain, ’whicnTstqrfexed with the proper culli^ vation of craps. The temperatun throughout the grefcfer part of May, wa rather toftpjow forhealthy derelopmcn: plant, and this circum ler with the too abundau that tTTWWTs defective in some impor tant respects, but he can do no more than> execute it as faithfully as possible with the means at his command. This he claims to have done, especially during the season juft passed superintendent oPthvf institute for at Roltigh, died at ^7 Morganton <fii Tua^Y, from/njc dieted by aaothi^ninate. '/ A-jkirty qj^nughs was causing BOLD TRANSACTION. On Friday, American Express Messen ger J. H. Zimmerman ami Baggage Mas ter Joe Ketchum were alone together in the express and baggage car of the Cin cinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis and Chi cago Bailway train, which is due at Cin cinnati, Ohio, at 11 o’clock. Zimmcr- mao, when the train left Delhi, a station twelve miles west ot, there, called Ketch- urn’s attention to some tramps that he saw through the glass of the car door leading to-the front platform next to the locomotive’s tender. Both men arose and went toward the front door. When within ten feet of it the tramps began firing through the glass window. Ketchum full, shot in four places. Two balls entered his abdomen, one in his breast and one in his left shoulder. Zimmerman tried to draw his pistol, but it stuck in bis hip pocket and he retreated to Ihe rear platform of the car, where he mot the conductor. The latter pulled, the bell rope and stopped the train. While this was going on one of the tramps cliftibcd on the tender, where he was met b£ the engineer and fireman and knocked stiff by two blows from a monk ey-wrench. The engineer and fireman then rolled him off the tender, while the train was At full speed. Before he was thrown overboard; however, a second ^ w vuuii j vH iii6 tariix Dll I j l " and Messrs. Bayne, of Pennsylvania, Warner, of Missouri, McMillan, of Tenn- • es8ee, Dalzell, of Pennsylvania, Randall, ‘ of Pennsylvania and Wilson, of West • Va., spoke. In the Senate on Tuesday, Mr. Chand- ! ler offered a resolution referring the credentials of Senator Gibson, of Louis iana, for his new term, to the committee on privileges and elections, instructing that the committee inquire into all the facts of the senatorial election, and tc ascertain and report whether or not, at the recent state election in Louisiana, which included the election of a state legislature, and inquire and report whether the legislature was actually and duly elected by the people of Louisians, or was, in fact, solely the creation of the returning and canvassing officers, and whether the state of Louisiana had, on the 22d of May, 1888, (the day of Senator Gibson’s election), a republican form 6i government, including a legislature, enti tled to choose a United States Senator... The House spent two hours and a half ; discussing the resolution reported frotp the committee on postofficcs aud post roads, calling on the postmaster-genera! for a tabulated statement of disallowed postmaster claims presented from the' state of Kentucky. The contested elec- 1 tion cases of Frank vs. Glover, of Mis- j souri, and Lynch vs." Yandever, of Cali fornia, were disposed of by concurring in the reports of the elections committee 1 awarding seats to the sittinsr memh**™ I mi *»-— ■* N early two . :e personally Jospected and samples taken by the six inspectors, and the tags applied to the -bags under their personal direction, and generally in their immediate presence. The work amounted to nearly twen+y- cight hundred distinct inspections. Every car load of fertilizer entering the state for sale has been entered by an in spector in person, cither at Augutta, Sa vannah or Toceoa, or at its final destina tion. Extraordinary diligence and care have been employed to prevent a single car load or bag of fertilizer from reach ing the hands of a farmer before being personally inspected by nn inspector. The greatly incrcas d number of fer tilizer factories within the limits of the state, and the shipments entering the s ate at points where it wns impractica ble to station an inspector, have required the whole time—almost day and night— of two of tbo six inspectors, during the season. The chemist has been over whelmed with several thousands of sam ple*., The commissioner is confident th t the law ns it i9 has been faithfully cxe outed. The commissioner has bben in form- d that some instances have occurred (towards the close of the season and where f imiers were very urgent for the immediate delivery of the'r fertilizers) where agents have delivered feitilizcrs to farmers without giving the inspector time to reach the point of delivery. Several such cases, by direction of the commissioner, hive been repottcl to the prosecuting officers of the circuits where the offenses occurred, to the end that the penalty of the law may be imposed. Fanners who receive uninspected or un- npged fertilizers have certainly no rii*bt to c m plain. Every farmer—every good c'tizen—should feel in rsuty bound to i "f la" Railway, at Hoc!, burned on Saturda burned to death. A moung the paa on the steamer Wi> in New-York from _ , — Mormon immigrants. The seventeen year locusts appeared at Wheaton, 111., about two weeks ago, and have so rapidly increased in number that now they literally cover all kinds of bushes and trees. The citizens of Aberdeen, Dak., forci bly resisted the efforts of an electric mo tor company to lay rails in the streets, because ihe consent of property owners had not been obtained. The Board of Aldermen of Boston, Mass., on Monday, by a vote of 7 to 4, refused to confirm the Mayor’s nomina tion of Edwin G. Walker, a well-known colored lawyer, as principal assessor. Twenty-one tories voted against the British government in the division on the resolution in regard to the admiralty introduced in the House of Commons by Louis J. Jennings. Locusts are advancing in a compact mass twelve miles long by six in breadth n Algiers. A panie prevails in the prov- nce of Constantine. The valley of ^uelma has been devastated by locusts, a. - *- i ’« 4 • i y Of 7 _ turbancc o' streets in Matthews v4cii Town M/^hnl Hurley came up nndjat- tempte^i° arrest them. He was ,fici- bly r^ated, and one of the touts, nam/a Bowden, drew a revolver md sw/e he would shoot him dead. Htjej tpok a shot gun from one of his depjes of the stance, rains, has had a somewhat retarding el feet on the cron. The seasons and tern perature on the firat day of June wen all that could be desired in every sectioi of the slate. The reports of conditio land prospects of the crops from Noit and Middle Georgia have rather gloomy tinge. In the lower three sci tious—Southwest, East and Middi Georgia—the prospects ore genernll very good, and in many cases even fl i tering. On the whole, the condition < crops has advanced since last report, an- the inductions are favorable for goo yields, provided, the weather conditior continue good in the future. . CORN. Stands of corn are good, except h .low lands, where the bud worm and cu worm have been very destruciive. Th stalk'i? rather small for the season, bu; the color is good and the plants ar- healthy and vigorous and the fields in good state-of cultivation. OATS AND WHEAT. The generous rains of the latter half o May resulted m a wonderful improve ment of the ?at crop. In some countie the yield is reported as the best* since 1882. The crop-js better in Southwesi 'elsewhere, the yield ot th wiUbft 87, compare.! wit) on. Wheat has been seri by rust, tie txtentof in land Middle Georgia. \-oifTON. The condition of th ; s crop on the first 1 A* l l . M A ■»- • • » ! with SlasoDic honors. j dresses were delivered by Governoi" iy and Hon. John F. Harris. , The authorities of the . ibama GreXt Southern Railroad at Bii ngham, Will build a large car shed iu < mection.with their new shops. It will located be tween the Alabama Great mthern yards and the Georgia Pacific tijkB, and will be'00x150 feet in size. The mining town of Wrior has been in a state of wild excitcsnt in antici pation of several bloody orders, if not a general riot. It seeme iat the negro mu.ers have become enragjl at some of the white mine bosses, ar.tjon Wednes day went gunning for thei threatening to exterminate the whole |t. Florida. A syndicate of Englis^njnhave leased the Palmetto House, at bniton, and will easoni hl68 and ’89. The guards of the fe3»crado Dennis Williams were found ii tirfs jail at Ella- on Monday mcning tied kid- Ihe action of the 4-lden that the > live bounty, lightning struck a tree itr which there were thirteen hogs lyinjd ten were killed. Their bodies shd Qo outward effects of the stroke. Gen. Jas. W. Harrison, of Wall, and at one lime a lawyer rl politician of profninence, died on day from paralysis. Before the r Gen. Harrison represented !And^ both in the House of KcpreseM at iv<| in the Senate. Prior to the Var hi \ a man of wealth, but the Aid o struggle left him almost penpiless. was prominently 1 known in^coun^ I with the Blue Ridge Railroa4 Tennessee. Jay Gould, the millionaii^, wa Chattanooga on Tuesday, j Fisk university, at .Nashville, , very near being destroyed by p enlarge it for tbe guip-ds of the d?3jicrado Dennis were found ii tire jail at Ella- ville, on Monday mcnitig tied kid napped, and gagged, a 1 the cell of the prisoner was empty, intruders were s any account whatever of the process, but it is sup posed that his friends reused Deunis. A St. Louis firm is eisblishing a can ning factory at Soutblajd. They have a capital of $50,000, n^d will put on a line of schooners to Ceitral and South America to carry tiy*q to can. They ^ill _so*»p wharf ami building^,' and to the^SToi'- gon Steumsiiip Dine to tend* at their dock. The proprietors of Southland made them a donation of half the land in the place yet unsold. • ^ Georsla. Dummies and an improved service will mark the new management of Atlanta’s Etreet railways. Gcd. Fisk, the prohibition candidate for PreskLut, will deliver a speech in Atlanta in August. A discussion in Atlanta about the cot ton worm, develops the fact that no other remedy than Paris green is of any use in exterminating it. The political movements of the pro hibition parly iu Atlanta, headed by Rev. Sam Small, is attracting consider able attention. Capt. J. Pinkney Thomas, a brave soldier aud a popular gentleman, died suddenly on Tuesday after a few days’ illness, at Augusta. He was on Gen, Young’s staff in Hampton’s Legion. The “Veterans from Georgia,” of the Army of Northern Virgiuia and Army of the Potomac, leave Atlanta on the morn ing of the 80th, headed by Governor Gordon, and escorted by the Gate City Guard, to attend the great reunion at Gettysburg, Pa. The round trip tickets cost only $10.40, and the party will be gone a week. Judge W. Lowndes Cal houn is in charge of the arrangements. Kentucky. Convicts to the number of 18, em ployed on the Versailles, Midway & Georgetown Railroad, escaped from their camp on Monday and are still at large. Francis Murphy, the world-famed temperance lecturer, stopped one day in Louisville en route to his home in Pitts burg, Pa. His 21 year-son, JohD, eloped with Miss Lucy, the daughter of Law- renefe Richardson, one of the wealthiest men of the city, and the couple were married by Rev. C. Ib. Hemphill. ■Silas Richardson, charged with burn ing the residence of Peak Gastincau, re fused to surrender to a sheriff’s posse at his home in Somerset, but fired on the officers and the crowd with them. He finally escaped, hotly pursued, and was brought down by a shot in the bowels. He was jailed in time to save him from lynching. Louisiana. Charles E. Whitney, a member of the New Orleaus press and for several yean past city editor of the Times-Democrat, died on Suuday evening of cancer of the tongue. The Senate on Monday confirmed the of ex-Governor Samuel DEVASTATING STORMS tJOSSIP. Secretary of ti e Navy Whitney will soon retire from President Cleveland’s cabinet. From the evident improvement of Gen. Sheridan, hopes are entertained that i. — Dispatches to Chicago, 111., from the Michigan peninsula, report Saturday’s rain storm to have been in the nature Ol a flood ffom the heavens. Tho Calumet ^^wasnc-irlv drowned out. waternnd every railroadon the penin sula suffered from washouts aud lost bridg<8. The storm also did some good. It extinguished a fire that was destroying the town of Norway, before the town was quite swept out of existence. As it was, forty-seven buildings were de stroyed A waterspout burst out over •the district of Armtiz, Indian Territory, flooding the entire section. All the bridges on Big and Little Cabin Rivers were washed away. The Missouri, Kan sas and Texas Road loses three wooden bridges and one iron bridge, also several miles of track near Blue Jacket station. Red Lake River, Minn., touched eighteen feet above low water mark, and is at the top of the bridge. Some six ty-five families have had to leave their homes, some losing all their effects. At Cloquet the St. Louis River is still ris ing. The bridge between Junction and Thomas&on w-as swept away, aud a big log boom is iu great danger. r < m* c f the inspectors, North [ Rev. E. A. TavloF^PUPm Baptist church at Knoxville, "n . his resignation, to take effect jmber 1st. The members of the cn have not decided on a successor. The board of directors of jPerry Stove works (recently burneqet in Nashville to consider the que<ff re building the burned factory, board decided to partition the fouibuild- ing, so as to make a mountinga pat tern shop. They will imme<V P ro ' cure an engine and a blowid be gin the restoration of the lostirns. Virginia. An incendiary fire on taesday night, destroyed the greajouring mills, six miles from Lynchbt License was issued on Tueiby the County Clerk at Charlottesvifor the marriage of Miss Amelia Riv^jhe au thoress, to John A. Chandletf New Y'ork. A mortgage was recorded pe cor poration court at Lynchburgjnn the Rqanoke machine works to tKorfolk & Western Railroad CompanyMjOOO,- 000. Fire broke out shortly afteiidnight on Monday, in the building liging to the Boston Wharf and Wanpe Com pany, and formerly occup^by the Chesapeake & Ohio Railroad ©any, in Norfolk. The building and ©nts, in cluding 250 bales of cotton, te con sumed. The British bark Veilof Que bec, lying at the wharf, had | masts, navy, nas^Decn—uiucjuu msanp Fla., as commandant of tbe navy yard there, to succeed.Lieutenant Commander Gibson. The new German minister, Count Ar- soually, was presented to President Cleveland on Tuesday by the Secretary cf State. The usual exchange of court esies was observed. Prince Roland Bonaparte, grandson of Lucien Bonaparte, brother of the Empe ror Napoleon, arrived in Washington on Monday. He is there with the special intention of paying a visit to the Presi dent. Indian Commissioner Atkins will tender his resignation, to take effect at the pleas ure of the President, and will leave Wash ington for his home at Paris, Tcnn., to enter upon an active canvass for election to the United States Senate.* Senator Chandler has introduced, by request, a bill appropriating $150,000 for the development and encouragement of silk culture in the United States. It creates a division of silk culture in the erty cmpnjui, uuu uuiay back. The brewery owners promised Qot to demand their withdrawal from the union, and allowed them their wages for of tho month was 61, compared with ai average, which is 7 points lower thm the reported condition, June 1, 188? Tbe stand is fairly good in every section averaging 93, compared with a “perfect’ fctand. In this respect there is very lit tie difference in the several sections The 6tand being so nearly perfect, tht case of the comparatively low coiyli tion is found in the fact that a larg< part of the crop failed .to germinate a tho proper time on accouut of drr weather. Hence, although stands art now good, ihe plants arc small and tb« crop IS backward 6omc ten days on ar average. Comparatively few complaints of lice or other insects have beon rectived Iu view of the favorable weal her sino- June 1, (now June 8,) the condition o: (he cotton crop is not 'discouraging a omr.iis-Io-er and his inspectors in en- o e ng llie law. He invites suggestions from tht m in regard to changes in the law or in the details of execution. BUCKWHEAT. In reply to an inquiry from J. W. Stroud, of Crawford county, the follow ing information is given: Buckwheat (from buck-beech, and wheat), so called from the resemblance io shape of the grain to that of the beechnut, and the uses to'which it is applied, belongs to the Order Polygonacew, and is botani- eally known ns Fagopyrum esculentum. The grain is black or gray, three-angled, and about the size of common wheat. It will grow on even poor soil?, and ha? long been used as a soil improver, but it gives better results on good land. Sandy soils are best, but it will grow on a great variety of soils. Potash is the dominant fertilizing element required, and hence, wood ashes are a valuable fertilizer for buckwheat, but any of the ordinary ferti!- ize's. including stable manure, will do. Buck «\ heat is highly valued as a honey p’ant, although tbe honey from its flow ers is dark colored. When sown foi bees or for improving the soil, it should be sown in April; if for grain, August is - the proper time to sow it in Georgia. It During the hearing before him on Monday at Albany, N. Y., on the bill providing for repairs to the Assembly ehamber ceiling, Gov. Hill took occasion to say that the whole capitol was a blun- ”*• '• A • iL •_ The procession of Knights of Pythias, on the opening of the grand conclave at Cincinnati,, Ohio, on Wednesday, was a very brilliant affair, though it did not contain the promised thirty thousand people. Six thousand would be a very large estimate of the number of persons in procession, nine-tenths of them being uniformed knights, organizations by di visions, brigades and battalions. Bands were numerous, and the music was very fine. Several companies were mounted. At the annual convention of the Kan sas state temperance union, held at To peka, a resolution was adopted, denounc ing the statement that a prohibitory law cannot be enforced, and asking that the National Republican Cgnvention adopt an anti-saloon plank. Mr?. J. Ellen Foster, of Iowa, addressed the conven tion. She said she was en route to Chi cago, and in the name of the Republican women of the country, would demand this time. FRUIT. No change since May 1st, is reported in SENSATIONAL ELOPEMENT the percentage pf yield of pcabhes, pears, and grapes; 'but uj-plos have declinec from Great excitement prevails in Laurens, S. C., caused by the recent elopement of Rev. Joe Jone*, brother of Sam Jones, and Miss Bassie Farrow, of Cross An chor, S. C. Mr. Jones met tho lady last Summer, w r hilo conducting a series of religious meetings at Laurens. The mother of the young lady was very much opposed to the match, but on the other hand it was favored by her father. On one occasion, it is said, tha*; Mr. Jones went to see his affianced, and was met by her mother who “shut the door in his face,” and refused to admit him. It seems Mr. Jones became tired of such obstacles, and with the aid of friends, secured the girl aud ran away and mar ried her. The happy couple were ex pected to leave on tbe night train, but unfortunately, the bride had left home in such haste that she neglected to carry her baggage, and therefore they were de tained. The mother declines to give it up, and threatens to shoot tho “first man who puts his foot inside of the door. ,v Mr. Jones is about thirty years of age, and has for sometime past been preach ing at L&urens, S. C. i8 per cent, of’a full crop), to 59. The repeated failures of the peacl crop are having a discouraging < fleet on growers of this fruit. Is it not true that the proportion of good pe ;ch years has grown much .less in the last th ry yearlt If true, what is the cause! Climatic conditions have undergone no chang< than is discoverable by the observntioi of instruments. Can it be attributed U the more general planting of grafted anc budded trees than formerly? SPANISH PEANUTS. This variety of peanuts is bccomin} very popular with farmers. They m-itur so quickly that two crops may be pro duced on the same land, if desired, ir one season, and some farmers are p’earet with the plan of planting them in stub ble JieldB in June. It is one of th*' piost promising acquisitions for year. A BOY’S WORK. A great million-dollar fire in Buffalo on February 1, which destroyed the dry- goods house of Barnes, Hengerer & Co., and seriously damaged other property, is explained. The firm reopened in a new locality, and among its employes is a cash boy named Andrew Howard, aged fourteen. Howard was arrested for a petty theft, and the detectives making the arrest suspected him of a knowledge of the fire. So they questioned him. How ard says he set fire to some paper in the basement in a fit of anger because he was not excused from work to go to a funeral. Howard also admitted making two attempts to fire the present store of Bai nes, Hengerer & Co- is becoming difficult.^ ThdSmperor feels weaker, and it is consijtii by the Emperor’s physicians that' u disease has possible reached the cesojjgus. The greatest anxiety prevails thigh some changes of the exact naturiof which the doctors are uncertain. i S he carti- lege of the epigottis has bee® permea ble, allowing particles of'ood and liquids to enter the air tubes,ie results being attacks of coughing a: choking. The doctors admit that the mperor is in an almost hopeless conditil When the Emporor had partially orcome the difficulty in swallowing, hcas such a distaste for food, that he ref^s it. His patience is admirable. It Reported if he does not improve, a regeiy will bs fore or hereafter granted' to widows of soldiers of the War of the B^ellion shall commence at the date of ^^■death of their husbands. This legisx^Km fa vorably affects all claims of wi&ws of the late War which have been filed in the pension office on or after July 1, 1880, and which have been allowed to com mence from the date^ of the filing of the claims; but will not favorably affect the cases of such widows as were filed before July 1, 1880, and which have been al lowed, pensions having already been granted in these cases from the date of their husband’s death. The Confederate Veteran Distribu tion Cs. has been conducting daily lot tery drawings in Richmond, Va., under a charter granted by tbe Circuit Court of Richmond. On Saturday the office was closed up and the parties managing it ,arrested for carrying on a lottery in vio lation of the constitution of the state. The charter authorizes distributions, tbe proceeds from which, after deducting 'dividends on the shares, and a fair com pensation to those conducting tbe pro ject, are to be distributed among the Confederate Soldiers’ Home to indigent jex-Confederatcs and their widows. A somewhat similar scheme known as tlw» Southern Association, which was char tered before the present state constitution was adopted, was started there shortly after the close of the War. Under its distribution hundreds of thousands of dollars were distributed to ex-Confeder- ates. cholera. There are several forms of the disense t popularly called hog cholera, find it may be safely said that no remedy >r cure has yet been discovered. Indi vidual animals have been known to re cover from an attrek, or at least, survive, and such recovery is attributed to reme dies employed, or the treatment given. But it is doubtful if in any case the dis- 1 f-U-J x- x x i. /x * * ■» Carrying a Lady’s Muff. A Cincinnati lady tells a story of an experience she had several years ago with a New Orleans cousin who was visiting her, and who, with all his fresh ness as to Northern ways and fashions, was exceedingly polite. The time was winter, when large muffs were tbe proper caper, and muffs in the Crescent City were unknown. The first day out for a walk the young New Orleans gen tleman, noticing his fair cousin sup porting the large muff, mistook it for a burden, and said: “Cousin Lucy, let me tote you’ bah skin fo’ you?” “No, Cousin Thomas,” responded his companion, “all the young ladies in Cincinnati carry them; you see it’s the fashion.” “Well, I never saw but one of them before,” replied the young Chesterfield, “and that was in New Orleans, and a young lady was not totin’ it, either. It was in front of a brass band and on the head of the drum majali,”—Cincinnati Tim*. . „ _. nomination •Douglas McEnery to be associate justice of the supreme court for the term of appointed LOOK OUT and such recovery is attributed to remc- given. I-: rase has yielded to treatment. Careful and long-continued scientific in- ’ vestigations have been made, and 1 the general result is, that it is practical- ! ly useless to attempt to cure an animal that has been infected with the disease. The most economical and expedient course to pursue is to kill every hog in .vbich the disease has manifested itself and will not yield to treatment; burn or >ury deeply the carcasses, and rely on reventingthe spread of the plague by the isc of disinfectants. If a specially val- inble animal, should become affected, t may be well to attempt its cure, but he sick should be at once widely sepa ated from the well. The following pre- icriptiou ha? been used with success: 2 pitinds fl >wers of sulphur, 2 pounds sul phate of iron (cooperas) r 2 pounds mad der, i pound black antimony, J pound. ANOTHER VIC1M twelve years in place of Robert B. Todd, whose term has expired. Peter McCartney, a noted counterfeiter, was sentenced in New Orleans to ten years’ imprisonment at hard labor in the Columbus, O., peuiientiary, and to pay a fine of $3,000, for raising bills and pass ing counterfeits. McCartney finished a filteen-years’ senteuce in Michigan re- centlv. We are to have some weather during the latter part of June. After the 20th several storms are to be expected. Their paths will lie north of or along the for tieth parallel, arid the principal disturb ances will cross the Mississippi valley from the 20th to the 22d and from the 26th to the 28th. A storm will cross the Mis-issippi between the 14th and 16ih and rage with considerable force in the Eastern States about the 17th. in Chicago, 111., has claind another victim. Police officer Timot) Sullivan, who was cue of the detailed hick stood the damage of the anarchi- bomb on that mtmiorablo night, died Vednesday/ lie received bullet in tl: thigh anc blood poisoning whi h supereued grad ually, sapped his strength intil deatl ensued. Texas. Dispatches from Gainesville report that 500 cowboys are assembled in the southern part of the Chickasaw Nation land*, ready to resist the imposition of a tax of $1 a head levied by the Indians for cattle grazing on their lands. Gov. Gay has ordered out his militia—only 100 in number—and the U. S. troops, at Fort Reno, have been ordered to be in readiness. SUNDAY VIOLAfORS GREAT OIL WELL HE IS THROUGH More than 150 warrants \ere served in Cincinnati, Ohio, upon saoon keepers for selling liquors on Sumay. So far the issuing of warrants andthe giving of bonds are the only forms of punishment inflicted for the violations of the law, but the temperance men art going in for more vigorous measures. C. C. Harris drilled into an oil well an the Synder farm, in Henry township, Ohio, which filled an 800 barrel tank in three hour?, at which rate the well will produce 6,400 barrels per day, making it the largest oil well yet discovered in any field. Thomas F. Siseman, probably the targest retail liquor dealer in Holly Springs. Miss., closed his doors and placarded them: “Closed for good.” This is the result of a successful revival which is conducted by Rev. George luge (£ tho Methodist church.