GAVE UP THEIR NAMES.Ir«l Ill* Young llaralnr.illicx Four *i»looi Mrm *»»).Thin morning Fix'd Kmwell, the youngfellow who robl*d bin grandmother of her plt;M*k4*t change, and who, being sub wijnniitlv arrested, coufemed that he wuh the guilty chap, wan brought up before Judge Mack and soundly lectuml He admitted in response to the judge’* inquiries that he had been leading a reckless and disreputable life of late, that be had been frequently intoxicated, hadvisited houses of ill-repute. and had in* dtilged in nil the vices known to the depraved sang with which he trained. He said, however and his statement was confirmed that ho had not been a loafer, tlmt he had worked all the time iu a blacksmith shop, earning a small salary, half of which he gave each week to his grandmother, with whom lie had lived for n long time. The Judge requested to know who had sold whisky to Kussell, and the latter replied that \ oik era, of South First stm t; Tierce, of Siuth Second; Gilmore, of near Michael’s bagnio on the West Side; and the well-known Joe Greggs.This information is the very kind that the authorities of the law should be bent upon obtaining, and the arrest of young Kussell, it appears, is destined to not only make a better boy of -him, hut to tench somebody else a lesson as well.Judgo Mack, having administered astjt, severe reprimand to young Russell and having promised to send him to the l'en-jon t itontiarv for three years if he was ever ,, caught drinking or indulging in otherunbecoming conduct, allowed the chap^ ! to depart in peace. To say that the look i on Kusaell’a face indicated a genuine • of w 1* thankfulness for hi* escape, is telling thedwi ' truth in a mild way. He left the court \ srtp room in company with his grandmother, i „tl(j the old lady whose money be appro- tjmlt; priated. __ lawcomthetcouiha vts.