Crawfordsville Daily Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 13 April 1893 — Page 1

VOL. VII-NO. 174.

r*//,,/,

at

The Warner

roo, West.

ASONkH

pwjwo vmm

C1IEETIWO.

OTtnhTgcmg.KTcTTg,

®inguusr and.Qtrmttfmrarf'Xrrnitttt.

Mr. Kline can always be found and will be glad tn see all who have errors of vision at the Old Reliable Jewolry Store of

Mat Kline, opposite Court House,Main St IT. M. O. JL. BeurToer Stip-pf Weather Report.

Fair, cooler.

Wo Invite all gontlemun and ladles—who have occasion to visit a barber shop-to call and see if we have not the nicest and best regulated place In Crawl'ordsvllle.

MCCALIP & ARMSTRONG.

Bankrupt Sale of Clothing.

Formerly owned by Jas. S.Molony,will commence on Saturday, March

2ii

East Main Street.

Everything will be sold at 30 per cent- of original cost. SIGN OF THE RED FLAG.

Chicago Clothing and Hat Store.

Father of

The Warner Elevator

SAPOLIO

126 West Main Street.

WE TAKE ORDERS

Calling Cards, Business Cards, Autograph Cards, Wedding Invitations, Announcements, ReceptionjCards, At Home Cards,

resli Goods,

Cranberries, celery, New Figs,

Fresli cooking and Eating Apples,

Dales, Raisins. Prunes, Apricots, Nectarines.

FOB.

Copper Plate Engraving

We charge Indianapolis and Chicago prices, thus saving yen

trouble, postage and express charges.

18.

Hydraulic Elevators.

Sen tholr 189*2 Jlachlue

M'f'g

Co.

8th street jCincinnati,Ohio

E A W O S E A S I W O S SUCCESSFULLY." CLEAN HOUSE WITH

CASH FRY, the Grocer.

The Crawfordsville Transfer Line,

WAJJKUP & McVAKLAND, Proprietor!.

Passengers and Baggage transferred to hotels, depots or

any part of the city,

OMNIBUSES, CABS AND HACKS.

Leave orders at the stables on Market street,Telephone No. 4V

Executed in $ Correct Style.

THE JOURNAL

Co.

WORST OF THE YEAR.

The Recant Windstorms the Cause of Great Destruction.

NINE STATES WERE THE SUFFERERS.

The Death MM. In Missouri Numbers Twen* ly-l'ive—Losses iu Kansas, Nebraska, Indiana, Michigan. Iowa and

Other States.

VICTIMS OF 6TOKMS.

8T. LOUIS, April 13.—AH telegraph Kiul telephone wires are repaired and communication once more restored reports begin to come in of death and destruction in Tuesday's storm. The ilealh list for the state now reaches over twenty-live, and it cannot be foretold how mucli it may le increased as communication is reestablished.

Nine Killed at Coudray.

SAI.K.M, MO., April 13.—A cyclone visited the northern part of this county Tuesday evening about 0 o'clock. It made a path from -2 to 4 miles wide for a distance of about 2.1 miles. Trees, fences, houses and barns were demolished and many persons killed and injured.

The greatest loss of life is reported from Coudray, a mining- town of about 800 people. Only three houses are left standing* there and nine persons were killed. The injured number over fifty, several of whom will probablv die. Farmers on Dry fork lost their houses and many of the occupants were injured. At -Midland bridge Charles Adair was blown from the bridge and drowned.

I11 Crawford anil Dent Common. STHKI.BVII.I.K,Mo.,April 13.—Acyclone swept over the western part of Crawford and the eastern part of Dent county Tuesday nig-lit, and besides doing great damage killed many citizens. At llawkins Hank William Aslier, the engineer at the mines, and three men of the name of Lay were killed. Miss Lay was blown away and has not been found. A small child was blown away. \Y. A. Wilson is seriously hurt. Superintendent Coudray of the mines was badly hurt and his wife is also badly injured. All the dwellings and a big store were blown down. At Jabwin's Post office four men were killed. On Dry creek, Crawford county, the residence of A. M. Green, who was confined to his bed, was torn down by the wind and the old gentleman killed. Farm houses and barns weredestroyed throughout the county and reports are coining in every hour of persons killed and damage done.

Near Lexington.

LKXINGTO.N, MO.. April I:J —A most destructive cyclone passed through this city Tuesday night, accompanied by a violent electric storm and a fearful downpour of rain. Iu the path of the storm, about 300 yards in width, everything was destroyed. W. S. Fountain's house was torn into kindling wood and Mr. and Mrs. Fountain seriously hurt. The house of William Walker, county assessor, a two-story brick, was but a straw before the force of the wind. Mr. Walker, his wife and children and hired man were buried in the debris. Mr. Walker was badly cut about the head and much bruised. The roof was blown off a house on Capt. Todhunter's farm and a small negro child was killed. The house of John Luke in the immediate neighborhood was blown to atoms and Mrs. Luke and her brother killed. At the Walter place an iron pump was taken from a 38-foot well and deposited in an adjoining field. It was by far the worst and most fatal storm which has ever visited this county.

Ten Houses Blown Down.

ROI.I.A, Mo., April 13.—A severe cyclone passed over the southern part of this city Tuesday night. Ten dwelling houses and barns were blown down ami many more, damaged. The wife of County Assessor A. S. Niles was seriously injured by falling timbers from a porch.

Two Women Killed Near St. Joseph. ST. JOSEPH, Mo., April 13.—About 5 o'clock Wednesday afternoon the country northwest of Stanberry was visited by a destructive cyclone, blowing down houses and barns and laying waste everything before it. It moved from west to east, and so far as learned covered a strip a miles in width by in length. In this strip of territory every house and barn was torn to pieces and two people killed, a Mrs. Ward and an unknown woman. The fatalities would have been greater had not the people noticed the storm coming and fled to their caves. The damages will amount to thousands of dollars.

At St. Louis.

ST. LOUIS, April 13.—With the dawn of day came local reports of damages from Tuesday night's storm that are surprising even to those who feared the worst. While no loss of life has been reported there were several accidents, and it is almost a miracle that there is no death list to record.

The property loss will be great, however, aggregating over #100,000. All trains were from one to three hours late having been delayed by washouts and landslides. Prostration of wires also prevented to a great extent the giving of orders by dispatchers, and consequently

011

several roads only mail

trains were run and these slowly. Towns Destroyed in Kansas. KANSAS CITY, MO., April 13.—Eastern Kansas and western Missouri were visited Tuesday night by terrible cyclones and hurricanes. The storm prostrated the telegraph lines in all directions, and but little definite news of the storm is obtainable. Iu Kansas the area of the storm was bounded by the three tiers of counties from the eastern border, nearly every county suffering more or less. Montgomery county, in the extreme southeastern portion, suffered the most. Parker, a hamlet south of Independence, was almost totally destroyed. Many houses were demolished and cars were badly wrecked. The loss uf life is believed to have been great, but the death list is not obtainable, owing to the destruction oi

TOE DAILY JOURNAL

ORAWFORDSVILLE, INDIANA, THURSDAY APRIL 13. 1893.

the telegraph lines. Walnut, a village in Crawford county, also in the southeastern portion of the state, suffered severely in wrecked houses, but there was no loss of life. A meager dispatch from that place states that it is feared the loss of life in the outlying country districts has been great.

HIAWATHA, Kan., April 13.—Report has reached here that Willis and Powhattau, small towns south of here of about fiOO inhabitants each, were totally destroyed by a cyclone Tuesday night. Nothing authentic can be learned. The cyclone was followed by hail, which did considerable damage to fruit in this vicinity. The ground was white with hailstones.

Lots of Life hi Indlaua.

IXDIANAPOI.IS. Ind., April 13. —A tornado swept over the southern portion of Kokomoat4 a. m. Wednesday. The machinery and boiler rooms of the. American straw board mills were demolished and Robert Douglass, an employe, was crushed to death in the debris.' Other workmen had narrow escapes.

A large portion of the building is a complete wreck, and the loss will exceed $30,000. The storin moved to the northwest, uprooting trees in its way. and doing more or less damage to buildings. The mills belong to the American Strawboard company and carried no tornado insurance.

Many Washouts.

A Jeffersonville dispatch says the heavy rains have caused a number of serious washouts on the Jeffersonville & Indianapolis road. At June's Crossing, Caney Fork, Henryville, Vienna and Marsliafield much damage was done. Trains have run south of Seymour of er the Ohio & Mississippi and washouts are reported on the Air Liue and Monon roads.

Rnln Elsewhere.

The storm struck Greencastle at 3 a. m. and did much damage. The roof of the female dormitory at the Depanw university was blown off and a nunber of dwellings were in a like manner disfigured. Trees and chimneys were blown down ami the grand stand at the park was demolished. The damage was general throughout that section. At Montezuma the Riverside hotel was wrecked, part of it being carried away and much other damage resulted. So far as known no lives were lost.

At Kockport, Ind.

ROCKJ'OHT, Ind.. April l::.—Wednesday afternoon during the terrific windstorm which had been blowing all day the new three-story brick building of Honig&Co. on the public square toppled over. It collapsed with a crash, falling on and crushing to the ground the small dwelling and store of Houston Frank. Mr. and Mrs. Frank are known to have been in the store and it is believed that several men are lying dead beneath the ruins, as some assert that they saw two or three people enter the store just before the catastrophe.

Loss at South Bend.

SOUTH BEXD. Ind., April 13.—The St. Joseph river washed out a part of the land lying between it and the race Tuesday night. The loss to manufacturing property was about t'!.000. AH factories using water power will be compelled to shut down for some time.

In Michigan.

YPSII-ASTI. Mich. April 13.—A tornado struck this city Wednesday night, coming from the southwest and sweeping everything in its path through the principal part of the. city. It was a quarter of a mile wide. Houses were, moved from their foundations. Probably $100,000'damage was done. Every store in the city was damaged. The opera house was swept to the ground, the Curtis carriage factory has both ends gone and carriages are piled up in the street a mass of ruins. The roofs of store buildings were blown off and many stories forced down. Stock of all kinds is piled up in the street. The post office was blown to pieces and the mail scattered everywhere. The Cleanbusiness college, a large brick structure, was blown off above the first floor.

Many IVere Injured.

No one is known to be killed, but many were injured. l'rooaoiy some bodies will be found in the ruins. Rubbish is piled in the streets 10 feet high. The largest dwellings in the city were carried completely to the ground. The wind came up suddenly and everything in its path went. Nearlyall the buildings on Huron street, between Congress and Pearl streets, suffered. The Central Telephone and the Western Union Telegraph company's offices suffered severely, the former losing all of its main wires. A box factory was also wrecked. Quite a number of people were injured, but it is not known how many or the extent of their injuries. lii Nebraska.

PARK, el)., April 13.—A cyclone struck this place about

i:"J)

Tuesday

afternoon. The storm was traveling iu a northeasterly direction and sweeping everything in its path. Four houses were totally demolished and many others badly damaged. The Short Line depot was damaged, loaded cars were blown from the track and torn from trucks. Scarcely a single building remains intact. Some buildings were completely demolished, others were unrobfed and otherwise damaged. Freight cars were picked up bodily and dashed to pieces, being thrown across the main line, thereby delaying trains. No lives were lost so far as known, but a number of persons were injured. The loss will approximate $'20,000 in the town and its vicinity.

Mississippi Towns Swept Away. NKV40I I.KANS, April 13.—The TimesDemocrat's Vicksburg (.Miss.) special says: Conductor Thomas of the Yazoo & Mississippi Valley road wires here: The entire town of Robinsonville, Coahima county, was swept away by a cyclone about 4:30 Wednesday evening. All the stores burned. Several negroes, and perhaps some whites, arc buried in the ruins. The depot was completely destroyed and the night operator's wife killed. A colored child was also killed. Only two houses are left standing.

Many Killed.

The cyclone swept the country west iiud east of the fated villajfe and killed

many people, mostly colored. One colored schoolhouse on Indian creek. mile west of Robinsonville, was swept off and about twenty-five children are killed and missing. The teacher.a woman who narrowly escaped with her pupils about three weeks ago in the cyclone at I unica, was killed. The people of Tunica are trying to get to the assistance of their .suffering neighbors, but so far have been unable to get a train. Some Hre preparing to leave on handcars. The night is intensely dark and it is raining. .In Iowa.

DAVKNIMHU la., April Ut.—The storm of Tuesday night ami early Wednesday morning was fierce and destructive. The amount of rainfall was nearly inches. Hasements and first floors in the business part of tow,i were flooded, one furniture factory being damaged to the extent of •5,000. In the country bridges were swept away. The sewers were unequal to carrying off the water and tile streets were flooded.

Family Scattered liy tlui Wind. NKWTOX, la., April 13.—A severe tornado passed over a portion of Jasper county Tuesday evening about 8 o'clock, accompanied in several places by a heavy fall of rain. About. 4 miles east of Newton a large barn on the George Dixon farm was entirely destroyed and several horses killed and injured. The dwelling of Fred Maytag was destroyed and some of the occupants badly injured. Henry Hoskins had just moved into the house and everything- it contained was swept away and the family of six or seven was scattered to the winds. The baby that occupied the crib is the only one not hurt, although it was found many rods from the house and but one small piece of the crib can be found. Mr. Hoskins'injuries are serious. Mrs. Hoskins is also badly cut and bruised, as are also one boy and a girl. The team and part of the wagon could not be found.

In Illinois.

CHICAGO. April 13.—Reports from the terrific windstorms in Illinois during the past two days are coining in. Many buildings were unroofed and trees leveled in Roekford. Quiney, Galem Alton, Vandalia. Olney and at other points. Its (Juiney the greatest damage was done at Haldwin park, where the amphitheater was demolished, the club house unroofed and the stables blown down. At the soldiers' home one end of the wall of the hospital building was knocked out and more or less damage done to a dozen or more Oi the cottages in the way wrecked porticoes, broken windows, etc.

F.arthrjiiake at Cincinnati.

CINCINNATI, April 13.—A terrific gale swept over this city between 3 and 4 a. 111. Wednesday. The signal station reported the velocity of tile wind at 78 miles an hour. From a dozen different sources came reports of an earthquake, having been perceptibly felt during the night. In the big Spencer House building at Hroadway and the public landing. especially on the upper lloors, the shock caused great alarm. Many persons were awakened from sound sleep to hear a. distant rumbling noise like that made by 11 heavy train of railroad cars iu motion. In the Henrietta building on West Fourth street the inmates were greatly alarmed by the rattling of the chandeliers and flickering gas. Two distinct shocks were felt about fifteen minutes apart.

Away LKiwn in Texas.

PAHIS, Tex., April 13. A destructive rain, wind and hailstorm has prevailed here. Crook, Record & Co.. Harris Dry Goods cbmpany, Troy & Raglan, llutcherson it Elliott, the Lamar house and the Peterson hotel were all badly damaged. Many residences and one church were wrecked. No lives known to be lost. WANTS DAMAGES OF $300,000.

Anu Arbor Koad Files Petition Against Chiefs Arthur and Sargent. TOLEDO, O., April 13.—The Ann Arbor railroad evidently intends following up Messrs. Arthur and Sargent and the Rrotherhoods of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen. Alexander Smith and E. W. Tolerton, attorneys for the Ann Arbor company, have filed a petition in the United States circuit court in which was stated the parts taken by P. M. Arthur and F. P. Sargent in the recent strike. In consequence thereof, the petition says, the plaintiff was delayed and interfered with in carrying on its business in the handling and transportation of interstate traffic, and was also prevented from receiving freight for transportation from other railway companies. The plaintiff also says that by reason of the said willful combination and conspiracy the Ann Arbor company has suffered damages in the sum of $300.000, for which it. asks judgment against Arthur and Sargent.

Named by the President.

WASHINGTON, April 13. President Cleveland has sent to the senate the nain£ of Andrew Fyfe to be surveyor of customs for the port of Grand Rapids, Mich. The information is given on good authority that J. Q. Smith, of Ohio, has been selected by President Cleveland to bo commissioner of internal revenue. Mr. Smith was indorsed by Senator Brice and Representatives Johnson and Ilarter. He is a radical tariff reformer.

Doomed (o the Kleetrlenl Chair. NEW YORK, April 13.—The court of appeals at Albany has affirmed, the judgment of the lower courts in the cases of the convicted murderers, who will now, if Gov. Flower does notinterfere, have to die in the electrical chair. The condemned men are John L. Osmond and Thomas l'allister, of this city, and James Martel, of Saratoga. All the doomed men will be resentenced at once.

Kx-Pre*ident Gon/.ules Not Dead. CITY OK MEXICO, April 13.—The report that ex-President Gonzales, governor of Guanajuato. was dead proves to have been unfounded. A dispatch from Guanajuato says that Gen. Gonzales was believed to be dying Monday, but early Tuesday morning he rallied. He is still alive, but his condition is hopeless and his death is hourly expected.

Highest of all in Leavening

A

A London Banking Institution Goes to the Wall.

LIABILITIES PLACED AT $40,000,000,

The Failure of the English. Scottish and Australian Bank Cause* Great Cousternirtiou In the British

Metropolis.

RKOHANRJC CATSKS.

LONDON. April IS. The English Scottish and Australian chartered bank has failed with liabilities amounting to £8.000.000. or

$40,000,000.

paid-up capital of

ABSOLUTE!* PURE

No approxi­

mate estimate of the assets eau be given. They are supposed, however, to be large. The proprietors' reserve liability is £000.000. The last balance sheet, made public in September. 1S1W. showed deposits of almost £0,000,000. The only reason given for the failure is that there has been for several weeks steadily increasing withdrawal of deposits. The English. Scottish and Australian bank was incorporated by royal charter in

18.VJ

£900.000

fund of

at No.

38

Heavy IE on the Hank.

A

dispatch from Melbourne says that since April 1 more than

SQUEEZING PARDRIDGE. Vheat IK Forced 1'p to Ninety Cents In Chicago to Corner the Plunger.

CHICAGO. April 13.—Ed Pardridge. the board of trade plunger, is short from fl.000.000 to 10,000.000 bushels of wheat for May delivery and every advance of 1 cent in price means a loss to him of from $50,000 to $100,000.

Tuesday night's closing was The first sale in the morning was at 90. In two minutes it slumped to cents and in less than five minutes after that the bulge ran the price up to 88 cents. At noon it was fluctuating between 85 and 87 cents. Nervousness was a faint description of the state of the market.

At the close of the session of the board of trade Ed Pardridge admitted that he had l»en beaten by the crowd. The present deal in May wheat, he said, had gone up. as far us he was concerned, and he was loser by more than half a million.

The little plunger was laboring under abnormal excitement when seen, but while he admitted it all he said he still had over $U,000,000 with which to fight the clique that iiad pushed him to the wall, and he would make them sweat for it or lose his entire fortune.

CAPITALISTS UNDER ARREST.

Six Clothing Manufacturers Taken Into Custody for Criminal Conspiracy. NEW YORK, April 13.—The union working-men of this city have decided to see if the anti-conspiracy la ws. which are so often brought into play against them, cannot he made equally effective against combinations of employers. Wednesday while a meeting of the Clothing Manufacturers' association was In progress officers from the police court entered the room, armed with warrants sworn out by the locked-out garment cutters, and arrested President Hornthal. Alfred E. Hockstadter. Leo Kaufman, R. Holzman, John Tronnstine and David L. Ncwburg for criminal conspiracy. The meeting1 hastily adjourned and the arrested manufacturers were hustled off to the Tombs. They were arraigned in the' afternoon and paroled in custody of their lawyers for examination next Wed nesdaj'.

A GENEROUS STATESMAN.

C|iiigre**m»u Sibley, of IVunsylvanift, Wives Ills .Salary to Workln^uieii's Societies In His District.

PITTSBURGH, Pa., April 13.—Congressman J. C. Siblt'y, the -only man since the death of the late W. L. Scott who has been able to carry the Eric-Craw-ford congressional district against the republicans, has written a letter to the granges, alliances and labor unions of his district, in which he donates his entire salary to the fanners and work-ingmen. In the letter he says that he did not accept the nomination and election to congress for financial betterment or any selfldi ends, but to aid in the institution of such reforms as seem to be imperatively demanded for the protection of the interests of his constituents. tic.]

constituents.

PRICE2 CENTS

Power.—Latest U. S. Gov't Report

GOVERNORS CONVENE. Kven.itlvCM oT SIHII hern ^t.'ilc* in encp at Itichmond. Ya.--«lijeW

Mrct lug. KH*itm».v?.

itumis old stnti'houM* winch

b*

and claimed to have a

and a reserve

£310.000.

The London office is

Lombard street. Its Branches.

The suspended bank has .main branches at Sydney, Adelaide, Brisbane, Melbourne and at various lesser points in the colonies of New South Wales. Victoria and South Australia. It transacted banking and exchange business between Great Britain and the Australian colonies and had large deposits. The failure has added to the anxiety and consternation which previous recent failures of financial institutions with Australian connections have caused.

£:!00.000

were

drawn from the bank. The official notice of the suspension states that the bank was perfectly sound when the run began and the apprehensions of the depositors were quite groundless. The shareholders will be convened in this city in the near future to discuss a plan of reconstruction. Meanwhile all the colonial banks will cash the notes of the suspended bank and its ninety branches in Australia will bo kept open for the convenience of their customers.

Coniernt fh«

Va.. April U.—In

the fa

onko

lhe enn fodoraoy for a capital tin1 nors of southern states are in o!ielavf». A few are absent h»va legislatures in their stales are sion. The governor of Morhi

•rovei special use the sesi. tiov

C.OTT

.v

SOME or THE GOVEHNOIIS.

Brown, of Kentucky: Gov. Northen. of Georgia, and Gov. Stone, of Mississippi, have telegraphed their regrets. Among those present or expected are the following:

Arkansas. W. M. Fishbaek: Alabama, Thomas G. Jones Loiisiana. Murphy .1. Foster: Maryland, Frank llroun: Missouri. William .1. Stone: North Carolina, Elias Carr South Carolina, B. It. Tillman Tennessee. I'eter Turney: Texas, James S. llogg Virginia. Philip W. McKinney.

The object of the conference is to devise ways and means of attracting capital and immigration to the south. Gov. I-'ishback. of Arkansas, suggested the idea, but it was decided to hold the convention in Richmond, and. as a courtesy to the old Dominion state. Gov. McKinney was empowered to send out the call for the convention and will pre: side over its deliberations.

Promptly at 12 o'clock Wednesday Gov. McKinney, of Virginia, entered the chamber at the head of the southern governors. Prayar was offered, at the close of which tlie governor delivered a speech of welcome, saving that he trusted this would be a working and not a talking body, lie then nominated Gov. Fishbaek. of Arkansas, as the temporary chairman, who was elected. J. Boll Bigger, clerk of the house of delegates, was elected secretary. A committee of five, consisting of Govs. McKinney. Brown, Jones. Foster and Stone, was appointed on permanent organization and mode of procedure, with instructions to report this morning at 11 o'clock.

Fll'teen Thousand Men at Work. CHICAGO, April 1:!.—According to the

c'osest possible estimates 15,000 men are now sit work at .Jackson park, an increase of more that 1.100 over the strongest, force that has been within the gates since dedication. Director of Works lSuruhani was in a very comfortable frame of mind over the settlement. of labor troubles and the subscquen' increased activity in all tin- construct ion and installation forces.

Kckois Continued.

WASHINGTON, April 13.—The senate has confirmed the nomination of James II. Eckels, of Ottawa. III., to he comptroller of the currency. There was considerable opposition to favorable action on the republican side of the senate, bnt the democrats insisted on putting the question to a vote.

THE MARKETS. (Jraln, Provisions, Ktc. CHICAGO, April VI

Flour—Hull. Spring wlinnt patents, tii.75 Qi. 10 filraifjblH, l&.SO&ft.OO: Winter wheat patents, fclW)&4.00 Straiphts,

WHKAT-— Jtulod very Irregular. May, Wi-, and July, COKN— Fair trade and weak early, now stead* Jer. No. 2 and No. 2 Yellow, No. H8c, and No. "J Yellow, SK'io May, 4Ul8i'tf40%4c July, I1 ^c September,

OATH—Lower. No. 2 cash, May, July, 27m®y8i'jC September, •ir'j'd 271ic. Samples lower. No, JJ, 30^Hv'?*c: No :J White, 3?Q34c No. 2. 30»ii®3le No. X* White, 34®3M.TC.

RVK—Qulel and steady. No. 2 cash, WC, and May, Mo. Samples of No. outside One No. 3, 4,*Qt5o.

HAHLEY—Steady

for good to choice, but dull

for common Barley. Low prades. 33©38c medium salable at 40®43c, and pood to choice fair sale at 43ft55c, and fancy

LAND—Only

60®G6c.

Mens I'oitK—Trading moderately active and prices lower. Quotation* ranged at Sltf.:.'.'£

16.37H

for cash

110.13^10.4^4

for May

116.30

for .July, and 910.42|i®li5.7Q for September.

moderately active and prions

hK'hor. Quotations ranped at I0.7&®I0.15 for cash fW.7n©10.15 for May 19.752il0.20 for July, and W.80Qil0.35 for September.

LIVE POULTIIT—Per

pound: Chickens, 11/$

ll'/jc Turkeys, JOQMc Ducks, lH£13c CSeese, $4.50&6.00 per dozen.

OUTTBit—Creamery, 24®27c Dairy, iP&'-'Ce Packing Stock, I5®17c. Oii-s—Wisconsin Prime While. 7'tc: Water White. 7J»o: Michigan J'rlme White, Water White. Indiana Prime White, H'tc Water White, He: Headlight, 175 tpst, S^c: Gasoline. 87 deg's, I2e 74 deg s, fe^c Naphtha, deg'.s, 6l,{e,

LIQUOUS—Distilled

spirits steady on the busU

of 11.15 per gal. for llnished goods.

NEW YOHKI April LI

WHEAT—NO. 2 red dull and steady. Muy, 77 5-l(J«77 ll tfle July, 784^79?*c. COKN—No. 2 duil, easier. Mav, 47 5-M&I7 716c july^aj^ft'ic No. 2, OPjtpMc steamer mixed, &U4@51o.

OATS—No. 2 dull, weaker. May,

July, 34c, Western,

S8fltf£33'-fCf..