RIOTERS SHOT DOWN. ATTACK ON THE JAIL AT BIRMING- HAM, ALABAMA. ————————————— THE LYNCHERS REIMULSED, THREE MEN KILLED AND OTHERS MOIL- TALLY WOUNDED, SEVERAL OF THE WOUNDED SINCE DEAD. BirMINGHAM, Ala., Dec, 9.—Bir- mingham is in mourning. A score or more of her citizens, some of them representative men, were shot down last night by the Sheriff and his posse, in defending 8 human fiend in the county jail. Sheriff Smith, well know- Ing the temper of the people, had plazed » strong guard at the jall to prevent Dick Howes, supposed to have mur- dered his wife and child, from being lynched, and had placed in their charge a Gatling gun, About 12 o'clock a great mob around the county jall clamoring for Howes’s life began slowly to press back the outer guard and advanced down Twenty-first street to the mouth of the alley leading to the jail entrance. This alley is about 100 feet long and 20 wide, and 1s the only approach to the jail. When the crowd reached the mouth of the alley Sheriff Smith, from mside the jail door, warned them to stand back time and time again. He yelled to them to keep back, as they would be fired on if they advanced up the alley. Finally he called out, *‘I will count three. and if a man remains there in the alley we will fire.”” He counted three and the crowd fell back a little, and the authorities did not give the order to fire, This seemed to make the mob bolder, and again they pressed up the alley. Sheriff Smith now yelled to them: *'I will count five, and If you don’t fall back we will fire,’ Ile counted five, while the mob hooted, yelled and eon- tinued to advance up the alley. Then the officers opened fire, which was at once returned by the mob. At least one thousand shots were fired, and then the meb fell back, leaving the ground covered with dead and wounded men. Several dead were hurriedly carried away by their friends before being identified. The scene after the shooting down of the citizens, many of whom had of curlosity, was simply beyond descrip- tion. Many of the best and most sub- stantial residents who had retired to their homes, came out on hearing of the shooting, and at 2,15 o'clock fully 15,000 people had assem- bled on decond avenue, They sald they were in favor of the law, but could not stand idiy by and see the best young men of the town shot down like dogs in defence of a buman demon. Sheriff Smith said this morning: **We begged and pleaded with the crowd to keep back, and then they fired the first shots were fired by the crowd before 1 gave the order to fire, them to halt at the mouth of the alley, and still they kept com- fug on. We begged them to go back and time and again warned them we would shoot, but half way up the alley, close up to the jail door, and were shouting, “*Dyna- mite, blow up the jail with dynamite.” fire, I gave the order to fire. They continued firiog after we ceased. I feel that we could not have done any- thing else under the elrcumstances, and 1 deeply regret the necessity,” It is claimed by the crowd that the officers fired first and continued to shoot after the crowd began to dis- perse. During the entire affair the least excited man in the city, perhaps, was Dick Hawes, the man the people wanted to lynch. his bunk, washed his face and dressed with the greatest deliberation, the firing began he remained quietly seated, and when the trouble was over he lay down again. The following is a full list of the killed and wounded: M. B. Throckmorton, was about 30 years of age. a wife and one child. J. R, McCoy was toward the front of the crowd when the firing commenced. He fell at the first volley. A. B. Tarrant was shot in the back, After the first volley be lay down on the ground with the hope of avoiding the flying bullets. Fate would not have it so, however, and a ball struck him as be lay on his face and ranged up the back. After a few minutes suf fering the young man died, A.D. Bryant was shot through the tas He was standing rather near front, and was doing his best to restrain the crowd from going any , He fell at the first volley and died Instantly. C, C. Tate was shot through the hip, thigh and loins, He 18 dymmg. He is about 45 years old and had a family. Colbert Bmith (colored), shot through the right lung, died this morning. Lawrence Fitzhugh, a civil engineer, badly wounded, was shot through uA shoulder, He is about 830 years old. Charles Ballay was shot through the head it is thought fatally. A.J. Behiede, » mechanic, was shot in the lat side, just under the shoulder, It is thought he will die. Charles Jenkins was shot in the back of the head, the ball coming out in the centre of bis forehead. lingered until 10 o'clock this morning, when he Brarden, at the hospital, wounded in the thigh and abdomen, died about 10 o'clock this morning. J. W, Montgomery received a slight wound in the left jaw. Mr. was shot through both legs, below the rear postmaster, He leaves the knee, while sit on porch of the residence of Mr. W. Stddons, of Twenty-first street and Third avenue, Charles , # brakeman on the Lowwsyille and Nashville Railroad, was shot in the right side just below the . His wound, not neces- oA is at the hospi the calf of both right leg being badly shattered, the left a flesh wound. e is also shot in the left arm, just below the elbow, and the bone is broken. He is about HU years of age and has a wife and seven children, J. W. Owen is at the hospital, shot entirely through the right thigh, He 18 about 50 years of age, J. W. Gllmore, it 1s thought, is fa- tally wounded through the bowels, He is 40 years of age and has a wife and five children living at Green Springs, Frank Childer is dead. Albert Smith (colored) was shot in the back and seriously wounded. Mr. Wiillam Youngblood, Mr, Alex- ander and Ed, 8, Cooper, reported as killed or wounded, are not hurt, W. A. Bird was shot In tne right shoulder, the ball passing entirely through him and coming out near the spinal cord. Mr, Bird is 30 years old and unmarried. BemiNGcuaM, Ala, Dec. 0.- Sheriff Smith has been arrested on a charge of murder. The military were called upon to arrest Smith and others implicated, but this was refused, and, (nally, about five o'clock a citizen went be- fore a justice of the peace and swore out a warrant for the arrest of Smith and his deputies on the charge of murder, ‘This was served by the Cor- oner, who found Smith in jail, and the Coroner himself took charge of the jail, and In his custody that institution is at present. During the day Captain Peyton Bibb, who i8 In charge of the Montgomery Blues, advised that the military take Smith and Hawes out of jail and carry them to Montgomery, away from the scenes of riot and for sate keeping. This was not acceded to by the officers in charge, there being no civil steps to that end advised, During the afternoon the rumor pe- Pratt Mines, about five miles from Bir- dynamite cartridges, and, with the in- | crease of the ranks that was expected, assault the soldiers and with dynamite blow to atoms the jail, That such will military, though a successful finale is not anticipated, and five others will arrive on special trains by mid-might, the Montgomery | Grays, the True Blues, the Montgomery | Mounted Rifles, under command of { Hon. A. A. Wiley; an artillery com- pany in charge of Gatling gun from the Capitol city. Besides these come com- | panies from Tuscaloosa, Opellks, | Greenville, Anniston and other Ala- i bama cities, | = One precaution against undue excite- iment and consequent violence was | taken this mor: 10g by the City Council, | who 1n special -~ssion, ordered that all | saloons and di. stores be closed until | further notice. | trouble in Birmingham, Alabama, on the 10th, except that all the saloons and cannons guarded the approaches to j the Jail. There is still much feeling, but nobody believes that, after the ter rible lesson o! Saturday night, the mob | will again attack the jall. Asa resuit iof the riot 10 men are known to be idead. A large number of persons | were wounded, 11 severely, but it is thought all will recover. | Smith is in jall on the charge of mur- {der, and Chiet of Police Picard, who | was also arrested, was released m §10,. {000 bail on the morning of the { 10th. Governor Seay has been re- | quested by Birmingham, | visit the city and make an investiga | tion, and he will probably do so. ! { around the jall for some time, smi Manual Training in New York. lection of the six Commissioners of Education to be appointed this month, (December) it is to be hoped that the in the Board. innovation among the directors and | workers of the old system should not | be permitted to deprive the children and the community of the benefits of manual training. The good results effected in the small experiments al- ready made are enough to warrant— | nay, to demand-—an extension of the system. Practical instruction in the use of the hand, the eye and the judgment of the pupil should be an integral part of every educational scheme for children. 1t **puts the whole boy and the whole girl to school,” instead of that part of them represented by the purely inlel- lectual faculties, The primary schools should teach something that is prac- tically useful, in addition to facts and formulas, RE ns Professor Boller submitted to the Congress of German Scientists, held at Cologne in September, the following formula for an antiseptic fluid which he clairas 1s free from the dangerously poisonous properties of those now in common use: Corrosial sublimate, 1 grain; common salt, 5 grains; carbolic acid, 40 grains; chloride of zine, 100 grams; sulpho-carbonate of zise, 100 grains; borle acid, 60 grains; salicylic acid, 12 grains; thymol, 2 ns; citric acid, 2 grains; water, 34 pints, This mixture 13 what the author calls the “strong solution.” A second or weak solution is made by leaving out the sublimate and carbolic acid. The solution is limpid and transparent, and does not attack steel instruments placed In it, mtd —— A horse can scarcely lift two-thirds of ita own weight, while one small Sesion of June beetle can lift sixty six times its weight, Forty thousand such June beetles could lift as much as a draught horse. Were cur strength In proportion to this we could with weighis equal to ten times of u horse, The tendency of fashion in feminisn attire is to the plastic, classic style, DYNAMITERS AT WORK. AN ATTEMPT TO DESTROY A DISTIL- LERY AT CHICAGO. ONE BUILDING PARTIALLY SHAT. TERED.~A MEMBER OF THE FIRM SAYS IT 18 THE WORK OF THE WHISKY TRUST. Cnicaco, Dee. 10.—Shortly after 6 o'clock this morning an attempt was made to destroy Shufeldt & Co's. distillery in the northern portion of the city by means of dynamite, At the hour mentioned the neighborhood was shaken by a tremendous explosion, shaking the bulldings in the neighbor- hood, breaking many panes of glass In the surrounding houses and causing the people to rush into the street In great alarm, Investigation showed thet a bomb had been thrown, probably from the street, into a detached warehouse used ior storing high wines in, This building was shattered so the hoops were burst off many of the casks and the heads were driven in. Very soon after- wards s package, wrapped in paper, was discovered lying in the street. It contained several sticks of dynamite and six fulminating caps. A fuse cone nected with the package showed evi- dence of having been lighted but had gone out prematurely. These articles are now in the possession of the police, who are at work on the case, A jagged hole, about three feet square, was torn in the roof, and in various other ways the structure was damaged. Examination revealed the fact that some person, evidently stand- | ing on the high sidewalk on Hawthorn | street, bad thrown upou the low roof | of the bullding a package of dynamite | sticks, tied together and attached to a fuse which had been ignited. These | sticks consist of compressed dynamite, wrapped in pasteboard, and provided with fulminating caps. The combina- | tion bad exploded, and it was only ow- | ing to a peculiar chance that the entire | structure, as well as the surrounding | buildings were not instantly leveled. The alm of the man or men | hit the skylight on the roof, and the mark was missed by but a few feet, tubs or vats of highly inflammable lig- wor. Had the dynamite sticks explo- ded on the skylight the liquor would rific explosion would have resuited-an explosion, Captain Shaack thinks, of sufficient violence to have torn down a | score of buildings, As It was the dam- | age was comparatively small, | barrels of wines underneath the spot | where the explosion occurred had their | hoops torn off, but none of the con- tents were spilled, Fortunately no one was in the build- i ing at the time, and no loss of life or | mb was caused, James D. Lynch, one of the proprie. {to be the work of the whiskey trust, “We are not in the trust.” he said, *“‘and that organization has on numer- | ous occasions threatened to do us up.” | To show you the desperate character of the deed, let me call your attention { to the fact that there were 15,000 bar- irels of whisky stored under the | roof that was torn open, and if these | had been ignited a termble fire would have been added to the horrors of the explosion, One of the reprepentalives | of the trust was here shortly after the | great that he had to skip out for fear | of being violently dealt witn,” **There is no doubt in the world that [itis the work of the trust,” said Mr, Lynch. “They have been threatening look out for damage, | them to ‘damage away.’ I never | thought they would be guilty of such an act as this,” Mr, J, D. Lynch, Manager of the | Shufeldt Company, offers a reward of 1 $25,000 to the person who threw the { dynamite on the distillery building, or : him to do the work, or such Informa~ | tion as will lead to the detection and | arrest of the parties responsible for the | outrage. The members of the Whisky | Trust ridicule the idea that the attempt | to destroy the property was the work, tion, a it ” WHITE CAPSIN PENNSYLVANIA, PirrssuRre, Pa., Dec. 13,—A White Cap organizat.on has been discovered in Lawrence county, It has a written constitotion and by-laws, Its principal object is said to be to deal with offen- ders against morality who would other wise go unpunished. Several persons in Newcastle have been warned, one of them, named Sloan, for taking a strange woman Into his house, Such offenders are threatened with severe punishment unless they thend their ways 1mmediately. The discovery caused considerable excitement through. out the county. ARREST OF COUNTERFEITERS. PirrraToN, Pa, Dee. 18, Three Italmns, members of a dangerous gang of counterfeiters who have been oper- ating in this vicinity, were arrested at Sturmerville, this county, to-day by House on the 11th, the Direct of the Whole. After a without action, thevom pong debate; the House adjourned. «The new tube mill of the Reading Iron Works, in Reading y Pa, shut down on the evening of the for an indefinite DESTRUCTION OF A MILL. EXPLOBION OF MEAL CHICAGO, =~ SEVERAL LIVES LOST. CHicAGo, IL, Dec. 11.—Three men are known to have been killed, one fatally injured, and a number of people badly bruised and shaken up early this morning by an explosion of meal dust, which completely wrecked the three- story brick building on North Halstead street, occupled by David Olliver as an oatmeal mili, Several adjoining build. ings were also badly shattered. The explosion, which occurred shortly after 2 o'clock, was a terrific one, the shock beng felt a mile away. The Gtulldings in the Immediate vicinity were bombarded with fly. ing brikks and timbers, and nearly every pine of window-glass within a radios of six blocks was smashed. Al- most belore the rumble of the explo- sion diet away flames sprang up from the wretked mill and the whole place was abl@e in a few minutes, The fire spread vith incredible rapidity, and when thy first fire companies reached the scen| they found a block of roaring flames tdcontend with, General alarm was at ojce turned fn. Eogises were stationed at every avallable point around the biazing patch. and buildings that did jot take fire at the outset were saved afgr the hardest kind of work, Sparks that were carried through the sir by thi wind ignited buildings two blocks agay, and for half and hour the firemen Bd all they could do to prevent balf a dagen serious conflagrations, Hundnds of men searched anx- fously fo the missiog millers, and after sope Lime one of them, John Holmes, was found lying In an alley across fe street from the mill, ter- ribly buped and lacerated, He was working in the second story of the mill when the explosion occurred, and was A TERRIFIC DUST IN | street, He caonot live, No tre could be found of the other Cocper nd John Smith, and iL i8 be- | the debrh, Perso who were asleep in the ! bullding adjacent to the wrecked mill | were thpwe clear out of their beds by { them wdée more or less Injured during the terre bombardment of bricks and other dria in tls opinion of Chief Swenie, of | the Fird Department, the explosion of { mill dug in Oliver's oatmeal mill this i morning was the most remarkable and | destrucfve one ever known in the | Northwast, It canpletely demolished a large | ing. (€nly four men were in the mill, | James Holmes was blown through a | hospital where he is slowly recovering. | John Christensen, the | men employed iu the cupois, and Ernest | the emineer; beneatithe runs. After long digging the chaired and almost unrecognizable bodies Of the engineer and kiln man were ujovered, NEWS OF THE WEEK, — While a passenger car on the Dad. {ley brach of the Huntingdon and | Broad Top Railroad, Pennsylvania, was sroping at Coallight Station, on the montain side, on the morning of the 106, an engine and lwo loaded | coal cap dashed into the rear, throw- { and om be floor, eons were severely injured, among | them Mrs. Allen Black, John Dough- erty, Jin Bollinger, E. F. Gould, Miss | Lizzie Laster and Mary Laster, of internal | injurigand painful cuts from broken | glass, Probably all in the car would | have ben killed but for the presence of mini of John Shentioe, a passenger. { Foresefing the danger, he loosened the | brake € the passenger car, and the i slight tart it obtained lessened th | force d the collision. A despatch from | Albugerque, New Mexico, says that a | wreck becurred on the Atlantic and ilrosd on the 8th, at a point Crockton, in Johnson's Canon, { Dudieq all of whom received | Pacific i The eggine jumped the track when | near th head of the canon, approach- unnel, and the engine, tender, gage, express, and one emi- r rolled down the steep, rocky mountain, a distance of 150 were piled up in a confused did notyo down the hill. Mai! Agent H. B. Doits, Baggage Man Charles Bodemger, and the engineer and fire. a considerable number of are badly injured, but no White Caps in Waco, Texas, sorge Armstrong on the 9th his wife destitute and sick notice was pinned to a tree fogging took place inform- tizens that the perpetrators were lawabiding, but were determined to mete fut punishment to the gulity when thi statutes failed, Benhmin D. Keck, a note clerk In the Secold National Bank in Allen town, Pha, 1s short $4000 in his ac- counts. The bank is secured by his Keck is sald to be 8 man ~Hugh Harper, a desperado, well known throughout western Kansas, entered the store of Mr, Turner In Harold, on the 9th, and presented a bill, asking for change. When Mr. Turner opened his cash drawer Harper covered him with & revolver and made him hand over what money he had, amounting to $95. Harper then fled, but was pursued by the sheriff and a posses, Harper fired and wounded one of the officers, and was then shot in the leg by the sheriff, ~Miss Millle Ross, an elderly lady living alone in Smithfield, near Unlon- town, Penna,, was visited by three masked robbers on the evening of the 10th. ‘They burned her feet, hands and face with candles and beat and bruised her until she gave up all the money she had in the house-less than five dellars, ~M. M, Knoll, a clothler in Wilkes- barre, 1’a., who failed some days ago, and whose steck was disposed of by the Sheriff, has been arrested at the in- stance of ¥. A, Harris, a member of the firm of Harris Drotbers, cloth job- bers, in Philadelphia, on the charge of fraud in unlawfully disposing of bis goods and giving a judgment note to 8 P. Knoll, a relative, without a return | consideration, and with intent to de- | ceive the above firm and other credit- iors, Knoll walved a hearing and gave | bail for trial, IL. W. Buskey, a book. | keeper in the Norfolk National Bank, in Norfolk, Virginia, was arrested on the 10th on a charge of stealing sums | aggregating $3300 at various times, — The schconer Cig Church, from { Cape Charles for Norfold Light, was | lost in the storm of the 10th. her crew were drowned, The vessel was owned In New London. The | heaviest storm of the season at Hali- | fax, Nova BSeotia, raged there during the night of the 11th. Much damage | wis done to electric light and telegraph moorings in the harbor. left Sambro on the after- | noon of the 10th, with three men and | a woman, is belleved to ba Jost, | their { boat, which 3 —A heavy storm raged at Asbury { Park, New Jersey, on the 11th, and i the crews of the Life Saving Station | patrolled the beach in squads, A large { quantity of cocoanuls came ashore, and iit is thought they came from a wrecked vessel, Tuere was a gale from the northwest at Atlantic City, | New Jersey, on the 11th, and at high tide the waves dashed In with almost las much fury as duricg the recent | storm, They washed far over the ruins, { and it was feared that more | damage would be done. The high tide i on the afternoon of the 11th, tore out a number of cottage bulkheads at Mon- mouth Beach, which were partly de- | stroyed by the severe storm of three weeks ago. A despatch from Cohasset, Massachusells, saye a storm sel In | there on the morning of the llth, and increased in violence until night, when | it promised to exceed in severity Llhat of three weeks ago. The rain came down In torrents, and the wind was | blowing a bnrncane. The sea was very { rough all along the shore, and it is feared that much damage will result, —Maligoant diphtheria is reported to be raging along the line of Derks ! and Lancaster counties, in this State, | where thecounties join. In some fam- i ilies two and three children have died, land even adults are afllicted with the | disease, “It 1s estimated that within {a short time 20 persons have died | within a short distance of each other.” ! At Reamstown the schools have been | closed until the abatement of the dis- | ease, - An attempt was made on the alter- { noon of the 13th to rob the People’s { Savings Bank in Denver, Colorado, | while part of its force were alsent at junch. A stranger entersd and en- | gaged the cashier in conversation, His | “pal” sneaked in the back door, en- | tered the vault, but, before he secured | any money, Mr, Stannard, the teller, | noticed him, and, rushing to the vaglt, lcovered the thief with a revolver, | ordering hin to hold up his hands, | which he did until the patrol arrived | and took him to jail. The frst thief escaped. The one captured wore a | pair of boots mad of felt, He refused { to give his mame, They were stopping | at a leading hotel and elegantly dressed. —Heury Landseldel, a steel worker in | Allegheny City, Pa., committed suicide on the 13th, alter attempting to kill his wife, whom he slightly wounded in the | temple, It is said that Landseidel was prominently identified with the An- archists in that section, and had been married seven times, all of his wives being alive. There isan air of mystery surrounding the case, and the police are not satisfied with the woman's story. Two strangers from Arizona entered the San Bernardino National Bank, in San Bernardino, California, on the 13th, and one of them presented a check and asked that it be cashed. E. II. Morse, the cashier, told him he would have to be identified. A quarrel followed and bLoth drew revolvers and began to shoot. Cashier Morse was fatally wounded ssl dled ina short time. The man who did the shooting gives the name of John Oakes, but re- fuses to talk, He wasshot in the arm, ear and back, but i# not dangerously wounded, It is believed the men en- jorud the bank with the design of rob- «The boiler of the cotton gin on G, 50th CONGRES 8.-Becoud Session, BENATE. In the United Btates Benate on the 10th, a communication was received from the Secretary of the Interior, in reply to a recent resolution requiring information 6s to the alleged outrages and restraints of liberty practised against Indian women in Alaska. The Secretary says that the Department has no information on the subject except “newspaper reports of uncertain value.” Mr. Edmunds, from ths Judiciary Committee, reported a resolution, which was agreed to, asking the Attorney General f r information as to the execution of the act of March 3d, 1887, declaring the forfeiture of the property of the Mormon Church, and the manner in which the proceeds have been disposed of. The consideration | of the Tariff blll was resumed. Vari i ous amendments reducing the rates on manufactures Of iron and steel were offered and rejected. Pending further action the Senate adjourned, In the United States Senate on the 11th, Mr, Frye’s resolution, offered on | the 10th, m=tructing the Committee on { Foreign Relations to inquire into the | state of affairs in the Samoan Islaods, was reported back and agreed to. The Tariff bill was taken up, and, after debate, an amendment offered by Mr. Harris, reducing the duty on steel beams from 1 1-10 cents to 6-10 of a cent per pound, was rejected. The rate was then, on motion of Mr, Vest, | fixed at one cent per pound, this amend- ment being agreed to without a division. { An amendment to reduce the rate on ! trace chains from three to two cents a Mr. Alli- | son's suggestion, the itemn was passed | over without definite action. Pending action on an amendment offered by Mr. Jones, of Arkansas, making cotton ties { free of duty, the Senate went into ex- ecutive session, and, when the doors | were reopened, adjourned, In the U, 8B, Senate on the 12th the consideration of the Tanff bill was resumed, apd the amendment offered by Mr. Jenes, of Arkansas, making cot- { ton ties free of duly, was, after a long debate, rejected-—yeas 18, nays 235, a | party vote. Mr. Coke moved an { amendment reducing the duty on cot- | lon ties to per cent. advalorem. | Pending action the Senate adjourned. i During the proceedings the Union Pa- cific Funding blll came up as the spec- { ial order, and was laid over, retaining { its rights as a special order. Mr. Rid. dieberger gave notice that he would | move, every morning, to take up his | resolution for the consideration of the British extradition treaty in open ses- | sion, In the United States Senate on the 13th, the consideration of the Tariff bill was resumed, and Mr, Riddleberger, of | Virginia, who appeared in his seat for {the second time during the session, made an unseemly exhibition of himself, until he was finally compelled to retire, The Tariff bili was pro- ceeded with, and Mr, Coke's amend- i ment, offered on the 12th, fixing the { duty on cotton ties at 35 per cent. ad valorem, was rejected by a party vole. Several other amendments fo the | metals schedule were rejected, and the | bill was then laid aside, about four pages of it having been disposed of during the weck. Mr. Riddieberger offered a resolution which went over, | providing for the election of new elec- | tion officers of the Senate on the first day of the session after January Ist After an executive session the Senate adjourned, | pound was rejected; but, at “ow wn HOUSE, In the House, on the 10th, various bills and resolutions were introduced, | under the call of States, and referred. Mr. Holman, of Indiana, offered a resolution directing the Judiciary Committee to inquire Into the use of | mcpey in Presidential and Congress ional elections iu recent years, and to report at any time by bill or other- wise, He asked its immediate consid- | eration, but the regular order was de- manded by Messrs Wilkins, of Ohbio, and Weaver, ¢f lowa. The resolution wis referred to the Judiclary Commit- { tee, The District of Columbia and Pension Appropriation bills were passed and the House adjourned. In the House on the 12th, the Iliver ' and Harbor bill was reported and re- | The Senate amendments to the Agn. cultural Department blll were sent to a conferance committea, Mr, O'Neal, of indiana, from the Klections Commit. | tee, presented a report in the Call | fornia contested case of SBallivan vs Felton, finding In favor of Sallivan, The report, with the views of the mi. nority in support of Felton, was placed on the calendar. The Direct Tax bill was taken up and passed-—yeas 178, pays 96. Adjourned. In the House, on the 13th, the bill for the retirement of John C. Fre. mont as a Major General was reported and placed on tie calendar, The bill to amend the National Militia act was considered, The Oklahoma bIII was discussed, pending which the House adjourned. 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Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers