Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 14 May 1891 — Page 1

derwear,

great.

/sicirw.

Rountree's Bazaar, 110 Main Street.

Ladies, Something Special!

BEST LINE OF

Spring' and Summer I1 'eights in

Underwear and Hosiery!

Ever shown in this city.

We can show you an elegant and carefully selected stock of Un­

including everything from a to-cent vest to the finest quality of silk ones. vVe oiler the very latest styles in Fancy and Plain Hosiery—\splendid bargains in these.

Also, a large assortment of Parasols. Come and ask to see them. They are all the fashion and fully deserve their popularity.

Don't delay, for the selling power of oiu extremely low prices is

D.W.ROUNTREE

A

ramn

GHEBTIXO# *=$=r

(Diajnose and ®irnrlfirrats ofRrfrartum.

Mr. Kline can Always be founded will be glad to sec all who have errors of vision at the Old Ucllabl? Jewelry Store of

KLINE & GRAHAM, Main St., Opp. Court House.

WOOD ENCRAVING!

It is with great pleasure we announce that a new department has been added to THE JOURNAL, establishment, that of Engraving.

Our talented home artist, Silas II ray, will be in charge.

We guarantee to do all work to the complete satisfaction of all.

Write or inquire for estimates.

CASTORIA

for Infants

and

jbmurfm

Children.

I OMtarU cum Oolie, Ooe*lp*tiw. Sour Stomach, Wlittoi, tins (IMP. K8"*

ttat

ittcaHpHiartoaoypreaaiptio* wonM. (in* B. A. Amn, H. D., I ration, IHa*0tfM«aL,BmUrB,l.Y. I Wttbou* tajurtoM

TUB CB«TAD* OoariKT, 77 MIURMY 8 Mi, *. T.

We have them in the finest in the land.

Mock Turtle, Ox Tail, Green Turtle, Chicken, Zuliene, Mullagatawney,

Huckin's Soups, they are the Best.

SHARP!

That Cutlery you^buy from

3D. •H

VanCleave &!Houlehan.

AWFUL WORK.

Many Michigan Villages Wallod In by Flames.

NUMBER OF THEM DESTROYED.

Th« Lumber WhtrlcU Devastated and Million* of I'IM'L IIHV« I!«n Consumed —Tho Will K&ccftU '4,000,000.

MK'JIfr AX'S MISKOUTL* NR.

Rro HAI'IDS, Mich., May N._Fire lights fin*, in Miehigun. At least that has been the ease for nearly a week, and grim battle it has been. Small settlements have been swept off the map and {rood sized towns have only been saved by t^jo walls of brush burnod around them. The. immense forests of pine and hemlock that cover the lower peninsula are ablaze and there is now a barrier of flames and smoke from Manistee to Huron. The fire is the biggest that has attacked the forests since the one of 18*1, which destroyed millions of dollars* worth of property anil many lives. It is the lirst great spring* visitation of lire that the state has ever known. Hitherto the tires have come in the fall, when the loaves were dry and there was much brush burning, and they have varied in intensity with the conditions of the weather. Spring tires have been of ran? occurrence and have done little damage. The destructiveness of the present attack caused by the peculiar dryness of the season. There has not been a good rainfall since early in

March and the forests are as dry as Hint. hast Saturday the fire reached its yreutHst. fury in this section, when it was reckoned a mile of standing timber an hour was the least measure r~i

1

..

"^Tv^'o's CEO A•CS/..5L.,... i.

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N E W A

The places mentioned above are the only settlements wholly destroyed in this old lumbering section, but many others were in peril at one time. Baldwin, in Lake county, was liadly scared after a hard light, and houses were burned in Nirvana, near by. The people of White Cloud, an important junction town of Newaygo county, had a hand to hand fight with tho fire no longer ago than Tuesday night. The town is surrounded with hemlock and pine forests and here and there a cedar swamp. Saturday or Sunday these were swept into the train of the onrushing flames and for hours White Cloud lay in the center of circle of flames. The smoke was so dense over the town that men in the streets were unable to see half a block ahead of them at noon and lamps were lighted in the houses. Every man, woman and boy in the place was called into service. Bucket brigades were organized and they kept the roofs wet, while other eitizer.s were building the little bontlres that the old lumbermen's years of forest fire-fighting have demonstrated as the best possible weapons. The town was protected by these back fires, as they are called, till Tuesday night, when the wind made a shift and drove the flamos north and west- The fire in the vicinity of this town, including the eountien of Newaygo. Mecosta, Osceola and

Lake, has about burned itself out It is still burning all through these counties and the smoke lies like a blanket over the trees, but it has little more to feed on. and the dying out of the wind has largely destroyed its power of mischief.

A trip through the burned region brought to view a scene of dreary desolation. Big woods that were a few days a"o green ami thick now look like a" tract of gray sand sparingly planted with telegraph poles. In some places one travels a inile or two without seeing a sign of spring life except the parching grass on the steep roadsides. The trees that stand have been swept clean of their foliage, and in nearlv every instance a cloud of aciid smoke arising from their trunks shows that the rear guard of the fire is still at work. The remains of the smaller trees lie in ashes, or sometimes a blackened stump is the only surviving part. Everywhere monster trunks st.r across the roads, making travel with team next to an impossibility.

etch a

The Chicago & West Michigan the Grand Rapids .fc Indiana railways, which operate through the burning region, have been badly crippled by the fire, and it was only Wednesday morning that the former road could fed any certainty of reaching this point at'near the time scheduled on its running cards.

and

1

tfortli of here of

THE DAILY JOURNAL

VOL. VI—NO. 205. 0RAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA THURSDAY, MAY 14, 1891. PRICE 2 CENTS.

course the situation is worio. It is re- 1 ported that the fire, extends clear to Petoskey. I

There is no authentic report of loss I of life in the seotiSn thus far. though there are many rumors. One of these lias it that the crisped body of a tnan supposed to be a tramp was found in a strip of hemlock in Lake county. The body was said to have been pinned by a falling troe, but the man's name or the neighborhood of his death plaoe could not be learned from the railroad man who had the story. The people from the burned villages named had plenty of time to escape. They lost what little personal property they owned, but that is not much in a lumberman's family. None of them are •"iffering from war^J. The timber coinpanics and the people in the saved towns have done everything necessary for them.

While the fire is burning estimates of tliolosH in detail will be hard to get. A lumber dealer of this town put tho damago through the state to standing timber and dressed wood at more than 92,000.000 thus far, and the assertion was ventured that it would double that sum if unchecked. In the places visited the loss is figured in detail as follows: Newaygo county, $100,000 Mecosta county, $50,000 Lake county, $75,000 Osceola county. 850,000 Oceana county, S30.000 total for five countie*, 8305,000. This is the estimate of a man who has spent a great many years in this section, and it is conservative. If it is nearly accurate and the counties in which most of the good pine has been taken out are damaged over a quarter of a million, tho loss of the upper tiers where there are vast acres of unbroken forest waiting the ax will far exceed S2,000,000.

BALDWIN, Mich., May 14.—All the towns along the line of the Frankfort & Southeastern railroad are still in danger from the fires. West of Manistee junction the fires are out, but many farm-houses and logging camps have been destroyed. Hundreds of people are homeless and without any clothes save those on their backs.

LOSSES IN WISCONSIN.

W|T

0 A -..V.V-'-

"L:—f--7

A /T if.. Of.

A lMIH 1 ins 111.. I Mi iii.A. of its dcstriictivcnc.«. rtruck the litt town of l-'iclni-. or Fields' siding. on the (hica & West Michigan railway. ami burned the station, t'.i- store and the shanties of the luinb ••men's families. It burned Kinney's. another lumbermen's settlement. and also destroyed the Kinney sawmill near Woodville. Dingliain post oiliee. or (ilia, as it was formerly called, in Newaygo county, was a third victim, and a number of little plr.oes unnamed on the map, caught from the sparks and were quickly S^vept away. Wednesday it was reported that Alton, a little town in the lower end of Mecosta county, had been burned and stories are thick of the unpleasant position of a number of northern settlements which are hemmed in by the fire lines.

SriT.niOH, Wis.. May 14 —Fires

have mowed a pathway from the St. Louis river to the south shore of Lake Superior and extending over a territory from 2 to 20 miles in width. The damage to property cannot be estimated at this time, ns the bulk of this los-- will rest in standing pine destroyed and log- already cut. and ready for the saw At present the greatest damage is reported from along the line of tii Omaha railroad, on both sides of which and extending to Lake Si per or on the north the Are is still 'in fiercely. Late Tuesday uight i\ rt reached the city that S. M. Sto: Gulf's crimps near the

Urule river and (00,000 feet of logs had been burned. Mr. Stocking says that from all he can learn the damage in the timbered districts east of Superior has been very heavy. Over 100 square miles of virgin forest have been utterly destroyed, and the head of one logging firm puts the losses at 81,500,000 in standing timber.

EAU CI.AIHF., Wis., May 14.—Brisk fires are running through the timbor northwest and east of here, filling the city and country side with smoke and keeping farmers and people generally^ on the lookout. Large tracts of choice timber are being destroyed and many farmers' houses threatened.

WIPKI) OL'T A PENNSYLVANIA TOWN. Wn.I.IAMSPOUT. Pa.. May 14.—Forest fires have completely wiped out the town of Middlebury and a number of buildings in the town of Gaines have been burned. The North mountain, in Columbia county, has been burning for some time.

ONE HlTNPKKn VICTIMS.

AUSTIN. Pa., May 14.—It is now believed that the number of lives lost and persons seriously injured by the late forest fires in this district will be over 100. It will be at least a week before a full list of those killed in the train accident can be made out. None of tho bodies have been recovered save that of Superintendent Badger.

THE ITATA'S FATE.

A11 L*ncontlrme1 Itiitnor That She IIAM Been Sunk by tho Chariest on—Little Crodenre Given the Report.

CITY OF MEXICO. May 14.—The An-glo-American publishes rumors of tho sinking of the Itata by the United States cruiser Charleston, but gives neither time nor place. The authorities here say they have no information whatever concerning the matter, and but little belief is placed in the story.

The government has given strict orders to tho port authorities on the Pacific coast to report the appearance of any Chilian or other warships. It will be difficult to get news, as tho government wires have to be relied on altogether. The general opinion here is that the Itata and her convovs will double up on the Charleston. The government lias ordered the gunboat Democrata to keep a sharp lookout for tho vessels.

To Arbitrate (-hill's Affair#. PAULS, May H.—The Siecle says that in 'spite of the rupture of negotiations between President ltalmaceda and the congressional party of Chili, France.tlie United States and Ilrazil intend to fulfill the tusk of arbitrating the matters in dispute between the two contending factions. The Siecle adds that thi task will be undertaken with every prospect of success.

Conilurtor. .loin tlic Fedoratlon. ST. Lons, May 14.—Wednesday's session of the convention of the Order of Railway Condu. :ors was probably productive of more important results than any action taki-n by the organization since its inception. By an almost unanimous vote the convention decided to join the ped-iatioii of Railway Em1 plovcs.

Defaulter.

GKKA I r.KXD. Kan., May 14.—Three weeks ago (». H. Wilson, real estate ab-stract.-r.

ex-mayor

of this city and a

man of high standing in masonic and Knights of Pythias circles, disappeared. It has just been discovered that Wilson is an embezzler and a defaulter in the «uiouul of at lcobt S4U,0Utt.

THE PRESIDENT.

How tho Distinguished Tourist Was Received Si Nebraska.

AN EARLY GREETING AT HASTINGS.

A FleiiHRnt Hour Spent In Uiiroln —OmntiM Honored with the Tarty'ri I'rrsonce for thr llitlHttco of the 1)h\ •.

RT:SIIIN KAsnvAnn.

LINCOLN, Neb., .May 14.—The president's first welcome to the state of Nebraska was given at Hastings, where the presidential train arrived at ii:H0 o'clock a.

111.

Notwithstanding the

early hour several thousand people were

011

hand. .1. N. Clark introduced

the president, who spoke briefly. At Fairmount a large crowd of eitizens and school children cheered the 1 ............ president, who expressed his thanks 1 unilltKhl) briefly. Governor Thayer met the president at Crete. There were 110 formalities as the two executives met. Accompanying the governor were Lieut. Gov. Majors, Secretary of State Allen, Attorney-General Hastings, Adjutant General Cole, State Auditor Benton. Land Commissioner Humphrey and Col. Paler, of the governor's staff. After the members of tho delegation had been presented, the president spoke briefly t§ several hundred people at the station, miking particular reference to the school children. Later in the day Senator Manderson, ex-Senator Launder and Mayor Cusliing, of Omaha, boarded the presidential train.

The travelers reached Lincoln promptly at 9 o'clock and were received by an enthusiastic crowd at tho depot. The party was escorted to the •tate capitol building by a large delegation of citizens, a small army of the Grand Army of the Republic veterans and the full corps of university cadets. The latter bore at the head of their column a cream-colored banner that was during the campaign of William Henry Harrison. This interesting relic is in a good state of preservation and excited considerable interest. At the state house the president made a brief address of thanks. At the conclusion of the speech making the line of inarch was resumed and at 10 o'clock the party boarded a special train, which immediately departed for Omaha.

During the president's stop in this city he was presented by the traveling men of Nebraska with an address embossed 011 satin. He also received an illuminated address of welcome on satin from the children of the parochial school. The city was handsomely decorated for the occasion and business was entirely suspended during tho ceremonies, which lasted just an hour. The mail carriers of the city were mounted and acted 11s a special escort to the postmaster general during the parade.

OMAHA, Neb., May 14.—Nowhere has the president received a heartier or more enthusiastic welcome than was accorded him by the citizens of Oinalia. The people turned out en masse in honor of the occasion and they cheered the president nearly the entire time of his appearance in tho city in public. The decorations were very elaborate and artistic, the ornamentation of the grand stand in front of the courthouse being especially fine. It was a mass of flags, flowers and evergreens, surmounted with a light canopy of bunting of the national colors. The visitors were met at the station by a large committee of ciTizcns, headed by Mayor Cushing and the city council and taken to the courthouso stand. Mayor Cushing welcomed the president, and the latter in response made an address which was frequently interrupted by chcering. Addresses wero also made by Postmaster General Wanamaker and Secretary Rusk. Crossing over from the stand to the Boo building, directly opposite, tho president hold a public reception for an hour. At tho conclusion of the reception the presidential .party and its escort reentered the carriages for a drive about the city.

BLANCIIARD, la., May 14.—The presidential train left Omaha at 0 o'clock, making a stop in Council Bluffs, where the president made a short speech to a large crowd gathered at the depot. A rriving at Shenandoah at 8 o'clock tho party war greetod with a salute from a rifle corps, and in the light of a large bonfire the president made a few remarks to the thror.g assembled.

BASEBALL.

Scores Made In the I'rofeMnloutil tuni«M on Wednesday. National league'games on Wednesday resulted as follows: At Chicago—Boston, 4 Chicago, 2. At Cincinnati— —Brooklyn, 2 Cincinnati, 1. At Pittaburgh—Pittsburgh, ft New York, 3. At Cleveland—Philadelphia. Cleveland, 5 (fourteen innings).

Western association: At Minneapolis —Denver, 11 Minneapolis, At Sioux City—Omaha, 6 Sioux City, 5.

American association: At Philadelphia—Athletic, 18 Louisville, 1. At Baltimore—Baltimore, St. Louis, 0. At Washington—Cincinnati, 17 Washington, 2. At Boston—Hoston. 10 Columbus, 0.

Illinois-Iowa league: At C'edar Kapids—Cedar Kapids, Aurora, 1. At Ottumwa—Rockford, 11 Ottuniwa, 4. At Davenport—Davenport., 8 .loliet, 4 (ten innings). At Quincy—tjuincy, :i Ottawa, 2.

Northwestern league: At DaytonDayton, 10 Bay City, tt. At PeoriaPeoria, 10 Detroit, 8. At Terre Haute —Fort Wayne, 7: Terre Haute, 0. At lJvansville—livansville, 3 tirand Rapids, 2.

Another lltmvy 1'ullur*-.

NEW YOIIK, May 14.—The firm of A. Levy & Bros., of J12 Broadway, closed their doors Wednesday afternoon. The immediate cause of the suspension of business was the filing of three judgments. The firm's liabilities are about •800,000 and the assets are not known.

Highest of all in Leavening Power.— U. S. Gov't Report, Aug. 17, 1889.

.©ass©if

TO All) THE NEEDY.

Charities and Corrections Conference at Indianapolis.

IN HUMANITY'S SAM.

The Itelirf of lliiutiin MUery to He Main Topic ol' !M»cuHHion Proce«MtlnK« ut tho Opening Session.

NOIU.K. MKN AND WOMK.V.

INDI \NAPOJ.IH. 1 ml., Mav M.—The hotels aie overcrowded with delegates to the eighteenth national conference of charities and corrections, comprising members of hoards of state charities, superintendents and trustees of benevolent associations, directors and oflioers of charitable institutions and wardens ami directors of prisons and reformatories. The sessions, which beg^in Wednesday night, of the conference will ocenpv tine week, and arc held in Plymouth church. Among the prominent speakers will he l»ov. Hovey, of this state: ("Sow Campbell. of Ohio, and .lames Whiteomb ttiley. The conference from small becrinnintf has grown in in-

Ihience and the number of its delegates until it is now one of the large most important liatiouitl conferences of carried eountry and exert-, a great influence in the promotion of social reforms. Its object is to collect, compare anH diffuse informal ion respecting every description of eharitahic. penal and reformatory enterprises, both public and private. while the delegates are earnest and practical men and women, some actively engaged in such work and others who. while occupying no oHieial station, are interested as philanthropists and good citizens. The conference

Is presided over by Oscar F. MeCull null, of Indianapolis, ami the secretaries are Lucius l\ Storrs. Lansing, Mich.: H. H. Mart, St. 1'aul Mr. Welch, Denver: Mrs. M. i\ «ioodlett, Nashville Miss Kllen 11. Ilailey, itoston. atid Alexander Johnson, Indianapolis

At the opening session Wednesday night the delegates were welcomed to the state and city by (Juv. Hovcy, Mayor .Sullivan and lion. William 1'. Kishback. »ov. Campbell, of Ohio, was expected to make the principal response for the delegates, hut at a late hour telegraphed his inability to be present, and in his absence responses were made by Miss Clara Harton, of Washington: F. S. Sanborn, of Hoston. and Col. .lulin iilonn. of Baltimore. Following the address of welcome and the responses of the president of the conference Rev. Oscar MeCulloch. of this city, made his annual address on the "Registration of the Dependent, Defective and Delinquent Classes." Tin* exercises concluded with a character study by the Moosier poet, 1 times Whiteomb Kiley—"An Incident of the Insane Asylum."

Sunday ministers from among the delegates.will occupy all the city pulpits, and in the evening public meetings will be held in the theaters and public halls. At the conclusion of the conference those of the delegates so desiring will be taken on a tour of inspection of the natural-gas belt and the various penal and eleemosynary institutions of the state.

THE KENTUCKY DERBY.

It la Won liy Klnicnmn In thn .Hlow Tim# or2l534. LOI.ISVII.I.K, Ky., May 14.—Tho seventeenth k'onlucky derby was ran I Wednesday afternoon at Churchill Downs in the presence of 25,000 pcopie. There were four starters. I as follows: Kingman, Hart Wallace, Balgowan and High Tarill'. Kingman's great race at Lexington entitled lii to first call in the betting, and it was a liberal bookmaker that laid odds of S'-00 to 8."00 on the winner. Halgowan was second choice at Ui 2, with 8 and 10 to 1 obtainable against Hart Wallace and High Tariff. Isaac Murphy rode Ringman, and sent the horse in a winner by uii open length. Halgowan was second, High Tariff third and Hart Wallace last. Tho time was The distance was the. regular derby route—1K miles—and every horse carried 122 pounds. Spokane's time with Proctor Knott in tho 188!) derby was 2:H4£. There was hut little enthusiasm at the result, for the others seemed outclassed by Kingman. The pecuniary value of this year's derby is aboitt ?4,700.

Strikers' VIrt orimn,.

ST. LOUIS, May 14.—The journeymen carpenters held a meeting at Central Turner hall Wednesday, and it was reported that several more bosses had given in. The master builders held a meeting Tuesday, and after an exciting debate a resolution to lock the men out was defeated by a large majority, and another resolution was adopted indorsing the action of a previous meeting to pay 37J con* an hour, with an amendment that all builders now paying 40 cents could continue to do so. This action virtually ends the light in favor of the strikers. The situation among other striking organizations remains practically unchanged.

I'our Year# for an Ktniif»r.7.|r.

CIIIIM'F.WA FALLS. Wis., .May 14.-— Judge Marshall lias sentenced Sever Serely, Chippewa county's defaulting treasurer, to four years at Wanpau. Seruly pleaded guilty to embezzling over 820,000.

rowder

ABSOLUTELY PURE

FACTS BRIEFLY STATKU.

(Jeorge Tobias was killed by the earn at t'rhana. 111.. Wednesday niirht. Over a hundred of the I ndians in lie Okanogan country, ashingtou,- have died of the grip.

The corner-stone of a fine masonic Maeabce temple was laid Wednesday at Sapinaw, Mich.

The Michigan Woman's I'ress association will hold its annual meeting'--June 9, H'uml II at ltaltle Creek.

Advices from Honduras arc to the etVect that tlie rebellion in that, conn-• try has been crushed and the rebels'-.'j dispersed.

Druggist Stevenson, of Nolsou, Neb., who caused the death of Mi-s Curne Knsley by a mistake in tilling a prescript ion, has been found gmlt\ of manslaughter.

Mrs. Margery Lord died at KIgin, 111., Wednesday, aged tw years. Her husband, Capt Ralph Lord, was a soldier In the war of 1M ».

William Rockabrand, a rag peddler, has received a verdict of fcO.ouil damages against the city of Aurora. 111., for injuries sustained by reason of street obstruction.

A freight was wrecked near Viroqua, Wis., by running into a steer on Unv.-x track. Five cars loaded with eatthv-!' were ditched. Kngiucer Morrison and Fireman Steele were badly scalded.

Six hundred colored laborers from St, .. Louis passed through -st. l*aul Tuevdav night, and Wednesday

4,u

state of Washington for the purpose of breaking a strike now on there among-• white laborers.

J. It. Iledspeth and Mrs. Kldredge Ferry, of Austin, Tex., died from the effects of a dose of poison put in their soup at dinner. Hedspeth's wife has been arrested for the crime. The woman is believed to be insane.

The great council of Red Men of Illinois at Fdoomington Wednesday elected T. L. Mctiirr, of (Jalesburg. great sachem. The Michigan great council at Lansing elected A. 1*. shatVer, of -tirand Rapids, great sachem.

The American Rihlc society cele* brated itR seventy-filth anniversary at New York Wednesday. Rev. Dr. Thomas K. Vermllye, one of the lorty delegates present at the organization of the society, pronounced the benediction.

The eighth annual convention of tluV' Women's General Missionary society of the United Presbvlerian church of North America was called to order Wednesday morning at Pittsburgh. Fa., by President- Mrs. J. P. Cowan, of Indianapolis.

A COAL FAMINE.

im

1

route to the

of tho

I own Ueatei'H I'mibli*, ItocHiise Strike, to l*IH Onlrrn, MASON CITY, la.. May 14.—The strike among the coal miners of the state is beginning to assume a very serious aspect. The northwest will be the first to suiVer, and already telegrams are coming in from western towns asking to h«»ve their orders filled with any kind of coal, but the wholesale dealer? are unable to do so. Rut, one in in'* is in operation in the state, that at o.skaloosu, and altogether 10,bfiG men have gone out on strike. Coal can re on in in I nois. The supply of coal for manufacturing purposes cannot last over a week longer and then factories, electric light plants, mills, etc., will have toresort, to the use of other feci. The latest ad vi of in is ha there is no probability of an immediate settlement.

Fire nl (iruftou, .V I),

A O N a 1 4 Jr a on was visited Wednesday morning at 3 o'clock by fire which swept out dtfU,0UU worth of property.

THE MARKETS.

flrnlnn, ProvlhloiiH, ICtu. CHICAGO,

WHEAT—Ruled native iuul HIGHER. No. 2 oash and Muy, tl.O3^&1.07. July, •J.03^'3 I.WV-

CORN—Fairly active ami higher early, now woHkflr. No. 2 and No.

:i.

No. 3 Yellow, fiflQ,67c, May, July, ooatii^c. OATS—Unsettled and firmer. No. 2, 62c May, July, Sain pies firmur. No. 487&V)r: No. 3 White, (2:54c No. '4, M&Mo No. 'J While. KtKftMi'.p.

RYE—Scarce and firm. No. 2 cash, 87£tH8e July doll very, flftc and August, Wc No. by sample, MV H«C and No. 3, KtuNic.

MESS poiiK- Tradlng moderately active and prlcofl ruled higher. Prices runted at 3ll.ftXt$ II.40 for twit 111.40^.11.45 for Muy 51 l.SOail.HO for July, and fll.'i7 /sQ12.0Mor September.

X^AUi»— Market moderately active and prices Bteady. Quotation!! ranged at for cabh for May foi July, and $6.Kii!i2,0.87tt for September.

UUTTKH—Creamery, SO&'Jlc: Dairy• 10©*We Packing Stock. tVftlflc. Pom/iKY—Live Chickens, 9VS©10o per lb. Live Turkeys. 7 por lb. Live Ducks, (K& #4c per lb. Liv^ ern«, 83.UO£M.OO per dor..

OILS—Wisconsin

Prime White, he: Water

White, 84c: Michigan Prime White, ti^cs Water White, Indiana Prime White, Water White, 10c headlight, 175 test, 9Hc Gasoline, 87 dog's, 11c 74 dog's, ye Nupta* tba, 63 dog's, 7^c.

LlQUOits— Distilled Spirits rulud Urm at {1.17 per gal. for tlnlshcd goods. NEW YOIIK, May 13.

WnEAT—Klrm,

K&lHo up. Mny. Sl.l3^Q£

l.UV. June. fUlf: July, ?l.on^].io\ August, tl.Q5!4? September, Yl.0'li%l.04K December, II.O&HULOSTt May (IKl#), £1.0&!-K£& 1.09*.

OoUN—Strong and 1(&1HC up, fair demand. NO. 2, 78®79 4 c.

OATS—Quiet, llrmer. Wostora. MiQ,?0c. PUOVISIONH—Heef—Firm aud quiet extra mess, Id.GO&lO.OO family, lli.50Jtiy.7ft. PorkDull, and steady new mess, $18.50&M.7& old mew, IU.7&&19.26 extra prime, S11.75&1&U3. Lfcrd-Qalet ftfld OMy gtoam-rendered, fc}.7u.

I'll

It'lJ

r*

May )M.

FLOUH—Stoutly. Sprin Whrui patent*. (£0.00 bakers', H.7&Tr?i.OO Winter Whmit Flour, for patents and J4.7ftia5.00 for btrnigtitH.

No.

ii

ami

1

pi

'i$i i.T