Crawfordsville Weekly Journal, Crawfordsville, Montgomery County, 4 September 1896 — Page 10
VHE
Novelty
and
Campaign
Buttons
£!\.t the Corner Jewelry Store are the ^attractions of the town. Call and see "them. Special attention given to fine Clock, Watch and Jewelry repairing, and fitting1 of spectacles.
%&•
THE CORNER JEWELER.
Dr. H. E. Greene,
Practice Limited to Diseases of tbe
Eve, Ear, Nose and Throat.
OFFICE HOUHS— 9 to 12 a. in. 2 to 4 p. in.
Joel Block, Crawfordsville, Indiana.
F. B. GONZALES,
DENTIST
Office 131 East Main Street. Over Rost's Jewelry Store.
Brirag Irs Vowr Feet.
•Xet us make 'em happy. Let's make 'em feel good and easy. Let's make them look nice
A Pair of Tans A Pair of Patent, A Pair of Calfskins.
In pointed and broad toes. Let's -t put tiidui into a pair as nice as a §4.00—yes, even a $5.00 pair, and ."Charge you but
$2.00.
'•Slpuply because we'rejoverloaded we're over-stocked we're broken insi7.es. That's why.
J. W. ^Thurston.
At. the Old Kelly Shoe Store. 124 Bast Main Street.
Repairing a specii Ity.
BORSES WANTED
One car-load of horses wanted for the Eastern market, from 4 to 9 years old, wesghing from 1,000 to 1,400 lbs Must be sound and of good flesh for which I will pay the highest market price in cash. I will be at the livery stable of Insley & Morse on Saturday and Monday, Sept. 5th and 7th, 1896. If )ou wish to sell at good prices bring on your stock.
Samuel Potteiger.
Public Sales
W^nesday, Sept. 23,
Isaac Hopkins will sell at Win. Bootsfarm, 5''iniles north of Darlington and •six miles west of -Colfax, 5 head of work horses, ii milk cows, 60 shoats and other stock and lot of farm implements. A credit of 12 months on all sums over $5 85 and under cash. A. •W. Perkins, auctioneer.
.Saturday, Sept. 12,
Savanah Huffmire, 234 miles south of Alamo, will sell cattle, horses and farm implements. E. T. Ward, •auctioneer.
The People's Exchange.
«OTRAYED—A light /awn colored jersey KJ cali about 9 months old. Give information to Henry Walter, 5 miles west of Crawfordsville on Covington road. Liberal reward. d95 w9-ll
FOlt
SALE!—One first-class org-an, cheap. Soe Mace Townsley. w9-4
0 LOAN—$1,000 on real estate securltv 201 south Washington street. d9-2wlt
7T7V3R SALB—120 acres of land 2 miles south .IT of Darlinfrton at a baraain. Call on or ^address J. IS. Caves, Burlington, Indiana. 7-24-3mo
WEEKLY JOURNAL.
ESTABLISHED IN 1845.
FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 4. 1896.
PERSONAL MENTION.
Short Itom« Relative to the Coinings and Goings of Crawfordsvlllo People., ,, nnd Their Friends.
—Miss Sallie Newton is quite sick. —Mrs. tV. P. Herron has returned from a trip to West Point. —Henry Benliam, from tlie soldiers' home, Lafayette, is in the city. —W. W. Watson and wife have returned from Medicine Lodge, Kan —Will Hunt's condition is quite serious but it is thought he will improve from this on.
Lebanon Pet? ioi: J. L. Cory and family will move to Crawford&ville to-day. Mr. Cory has made arrangements whereby he will run the Wabash College Boarding house during tbe coming school year. The move is made in order to allow his son, Fred, to attend ollege..
Probate Court.
Wm. W. Husenbark has been appointed administrator of the estate of Daniel Busenbark, deceased.
more Residents.
Willard Bowen and family, of Roachdale, have become residents of this city. Mrs. Bowen and daughter arrived Tuesday.
.:$
Clover Huller Burned.
Wednesday night during the storm lightning struck a clover huller belonging to David Farris, was threshing for Oscav Stout vcst of the city. The machine was -sc mamnga
Ben Shelton r. .Downs. C. E. Graver Einina Swisher. George F.
7
r.kru Minnie M. Seek.
Micheal »hy and Mary A. Kerr. Thomas (J. Taylor and Elizabeth M. Switzer.
WINGATK.
M. 15. Clodfelter addressed the Bryan club on Wednesday. Rev. W. H. Broomfield preached his farewell sermon at the Methodist church last Sunday evening.
Rev. Powell, the new pastor of the Christian church will preach his initial sermon on the third Sunday in this month.
Wm. Jackson has retired from the patent gate and also the grocery business, and gone back to liis first love, the saw mill.
Cadwallader and Bittle have both moved into their new rooms. This makes the west side of Vine street look more business like than ever.
The ladies have organized a Mount and Landis club and are ready for the campaign. They have adopted a uniform, elected officers and are even more enthusiastic than the men in the cause'.
A McKinley Club was organized here Friday night of last week. It now has ninety-five members and still they come. The officers are M. J. Buxton, President: J. A. Long, Vice President: J. T. Simms, Treasurer Jesse M. Martin, Secretary.
KAST GARFIELD.
Eugene Owsley will attend Wabash College this winter. Thomas Burk has been suffering with tbe ague, but is improving.
Miss Jessie Milner returned Tuesday from a visit with friends at Yountsville.
Rev. Maxwell will preach at the church next Sunday morning and evening.
Miss Pearl Cox was the victim of a surprise last Wednesday night given in honor of her birthday.
E. H. Cox and wife visited her brother, Rev. \V. C. Appleby at Marshall, Parke county, last Sunday.
Misses Lizzie Binford, Antie Thornburg, Euphema Foust and Pet Foust represented our Sunday school at the county convention held et New Market last Friday.
Elwood Binford, our road supervisor has been having some work done on the hill near the grist mill. It needs more yet to make the road complete, and now would be a good time for all those that are interested to donate some work. Who will be the first? Don't all speak at once.
GUAVKI.LV RUN.
Orville Peebles has a new buggy. Miss Ivy Butler has returned to New London.
Aunt Mary Carver is visiting in Crawfordsville this week. Mrs. Martha Cloud and daughter, of Tliorntown, are visiting here.
Thanks are due some one for mowing the weeds in the church yard. Ed Wilkinson has rented the Vincent Smith farm for next year and is sowing wheat.
Mr. and Mrs. S. Quigg were the guests Tuesday of Miss Mary Hunt, at Darlington.
Ernest Moore rode up from Terra Haute Monday on his wheel. He returned Thursday.
Pleasant Butler's barn is going up rapidly under the direction of Galloway & Murphy, of Darlington.
Miss Ethel Lago has returned to Princeton, having concluded an extended visit with her uncle, Foss WiL liamson.
David Binford and daughter, of Garfield, and Miss Georgie Payne, of Terre Haute, attended services here Sunday morning.
Archie Peebles met with quite an accident Sunday morning by losing con sciousness and falling on the stove Dr. Dunnington was called and he is reported better.
Mrs. Phoebe Graves gave a reception to Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Graves at the home of Frank Graves last Monday evening. The charivari crowd went but remained silent. Why?
BEATING UNCLE SAM
Sheriff cf La! County Discovers an lUicit Whisky Still.
NATURAL GAS MAIN EXPLODES.
Robbed, lira leu i«ui Thrown From the
Cars—Wapiti Kedu ed In the Oil
Fields—XVohaUK* AMcmpled Murder* Diml on. I5er Hitsh-.md's »rnve—Fulls ZJnder a Tiain and Is tiled.
CROWN POINT, Ind., Sept. l.«—Sheriff Hayes created a sensation here yesterday, when he drove up to the jail and placed Charles and Joseph Hoffman, father and sou, behind the bars, charged with conducting an illicit still in order to beat the revenue officers. The Hoffmaus, who are saloonkeepers at Cedar Lake, and have been running the still for about live months. Sheriff Hayes was notified of the facts, and with the assistant of a depnty, succeeded in capturing the prisoners and all the material used in the business.
TWO RAILROAD ACCIDENTS.
Allie Dearmond Kalis Under Train and Is Killed.
VEEDERSBURG, Iud., Sept. 1.—Allie Dearmond and a group of boys attended the Newton fair and came home on a Big Four freight train. Just as they reached town Dearmond fell, the train cutting off one leg and an arm. He died instantly. He was of a good family and an excellent young man.
John Vincent, a" Clover Leaf conductor, received an injury to his knee that will cause the loss of the limb. He was taken to his home in Charleston, Ills.
ClvTJIiL TRICK.
Harry Crawford in Cor.vuiaii.ns n» liic lies ult of a Joke*
JjuuAriSPORT, Sept. 1.—Harry Crawford may die as the result of a practical joke. He was induced to steal watermelons, and when ho was in tho patch three confederates opened fire with blank cartridges. One boy fell, as if wounded, and Crawford ran home, a distance of two miles, falling in convulsions, which physicians say may result in death. The perpetrators of the joke will be arrested. Crawford is only a boy.
OIL RKGIOXS DULL.
Wages Being Hedueed and Many Pumpers Leaving the Fields.
LAPOKTE, Iud., Sept. 1.—There will be a general reduction in wages of pumpers at work in the Indiana oil fields. When business was firm, the wages of tho men running the pumps increased from $50 to $55 per month. The dullness of trade induced the companies to reduce th6 number of pumpers, and now a 10 per cent cut is to be made in wages. Little drilling is being done and many men have left the oil regions of the state.
MISS MARGARET HAILEY.
Has Smoked Pipe For One Hundred Years.
HUNTINGTON, Ind., Sept. 1. —Miss Margaret Bailey, is claimed to bo the oldest woman in tho state. Miss Bailey is 111 years old, having been born in CyHthiana, Ky., in 1785. She has never been ill an hour in her life, never used a cane, has excellent eyesight, her hearing is unimpaired, and she has smoked a pipe ever since she was 11 years old. She was never married.
Probably Attempted Murder.
CINCINNATI, Sept. 1.—A woman of 60 years of age, named Mary Harvey, is dying at the hospital from injuries received in a mysterious manner. She is supposed to have been thrown from a tenement house, where she lived with husband and daughter. The police theory is that someone in the tenement house in a quarrel or disturbance of some sort, must .have thrown her to the ground, whore she was found. Her own room being on the ground flooi', it is clear that she must have been elsewhere when the quarrel took place. t.
Twins Born XInety-Two Years Ago Living.
PORTLAND, Ind., Sept. 1.—John £ini Richard McGriff, the oldest twins in the United States, celebrated their 92d birthday yesterday. They were born iu Darke county, O., Aug. 31, 1S04. John lives with his son at Geneva and Richard at Deerficld, Randolph county. Both are in excellent health and have no use for a cane or glasses.
Taken In ly a Sprinter.
ANDERSON, Ind., Sept. 1.—E. "W. Pemberton, James S. Sumaker and John Dry came here from Jonesboro yesterday to back a Swayzee sprinter against Jake Saddler and Henry Cherry. The purse was $575 a side, and Cherry won. The Jonesboro men now threaten to sue Jacob Swain, who is alleged to have had both Cherry and Saddler as his men. Swain got nearly all of the $1,100.
Poisoned by Headache Powders.
MUNCIE, Ind., Sept. 1.—Lurane Bartlett, aged 7, daughter of Albert Bartlett, found a couple of headache powders in the yard and swallowed them. Since than she has been at the point of death. Last week at Bockville a man swallowed a powder found in the yard, and died as a result. The police are searching for the agent who distributed the poisonous powder.
Manufacturers Ask a Reduction.
ANDBRSON, Ind., Sept 1.—The window glass worker's committee and the committee representing the manufactures of Indiana have gone to Pittsburg to endeavor to reach an adjustment of the scale. The manufacturers demand a reduetion equal to 15 per cent over last year, while the workmen are willing to stand by the schedule of last year.
Incendiary Fire.
MADISON, Ind., Sept. 1.—Incendiaries burned Samuel Carlisle's music store. Loss, $2,500, with $1,800 insurance.
ti.YS JSXPLOSIUX.
One Man Killed and Two Injured at Morgantown, Ind.
MICHIGAN-TOWN, lud., Sept. 1.— A terrific explosion of a natural gas main here caused an upheaval, of earth and pipes and Robert Hanna of Lafayette, Ind., was instantly killed, and Thomas Wishart and Joseph Cully narrowly escaped death in the scattering debris. Tho three men, all employes of the 'Lafayette Gas company, were engaged in making repairs to the mains. They were adjusting a collar joining two mains when an expansive forco of the rushing gas burpt the pipes at that point, an extraordinary accident in natural gas operations. The men were not handling fire in their work, molten lead being no longer used in making such repairs, for rubber lu.s taken its place. But the dangor-lesf.ening innovation did not avert this peculiar accident. At the time of the fracture of the pipe Hanna was standing in a ditch making a disconnection. The force of the upheaval tossod him high in the air, and then through a picket fence, his clothing being torn from his body, and then he fell a corpse. Wishart and
Cully also went up in a cloud of gravel, tho former receiving perhaps an internal injury. Wishart, notwithstanding his injury, went into tho ditch where the escaping gas was roaring like thunder and blanketed the leak.
Kate War at Canton. O-
CANTON, O., Sept. 1.—Own N to war between competing railioils th3 unprecedented low rate of 00 cents for the round trip, good returning for two days, was granted to Cleveland yesterday, where Bryan spoke last night. In consequence a .considerable portion of the city's population uro now in the Forest city. The Cent nil Bryan silver club went in a body, aerompanied by a band and drum corps. There were just 188 members in line.
Wholesale Liquor dealers,
CLEVELAND. Sept. 1.—The National Wholesale Liquor Dealers' Association of America was organized here yesterday. A constitution was adopted and officers elected. President, E. L. Snyder of New York: secretary, W. G. Ro.ss of New York. A committee o1' 21 members was appointed which can be called to meet by a third of its members. It will control the affairs of the association so far as the regulation,of prices is concerned.
Robbed, Beaton and Thrown OfTtlie ars.
LAPORTE, Iud Sept. 1.—Charles Burris of Davison, Mich., was stealing a ride on a Lake Shore train, when he was assaulted by tramps, and after being robbed and beaten into insensibility, was thrown from the moviug train. His injuries will prove fatal. Bun is struggled with his assailants, but WUJoverpowered.
Diphtheria at Columbus.
COLUMBUS, Ind., Sept. 1.—Diphtheria is prevalent here, and a number of cases have been reported, with several fatalities. A quarantine of infected houses has been declared, and precaution is being taken to revent a spread of the disease. The opening of the public Echools may be deferred.
Robbed by an Alleged Detective.
LOGANSPORT, ind., Sept. 1.-—John Bowers, representing himself as a detective, arrested William Milton. Bowers led Milton to a secluded spot and robbed him, as it is alleged, at the point of a revolver. The accused was arrested yesterday and identified by Milton.
Narrow Escape From Burning.
VALPARAISO, Ind., Sept 1.—Tho residence of Mrs. F. Sims, near Kouts, was destroyed by fire. The family had to jump from the second story in their night clothes in order to escape. Loss $2,500 insured for $1,500.
Attacked by a Vicious Dog.
PERU, Ind., Sept. 1.—Rabbi A. Kline was attacked by a vicious dog near this city and severely bitten, his right arm being badly lacerated. He is week from the loss of blood. It is feared the bite may result seriously.
•-'.S* Eli Parker.
PLYMOUTH, Ind., Sept. 1.—Eli Parker, one of the foremost and host known citizens in northern Indiana, died very suddenly of heart disease at his home at Lake Macinkuckee. He was a pioneer resident, having lived hero 40 years.
Died oil Her litis baud's Grave/
CHICAGO, Ills., Sept. 1.—Mrs. Fraukisie Alkohoser, an agod woman, while weeping at tho grave of her husband, fell dead across the mound. Heart disease, aggravated by grief, was the cause ol death.
TKI-STATE BREVITIES.
Mrs. Mary E. White, wife of Hon. A. H. White of Litchfield, Ind., is dead at Carlyle, Ills., aged 07.
William Kapps, a printer of Terre Haujte, was drowned in the Wabash river while trying to rescue a friend.
The Porter brickyards at Valparaiso, Ind., have shut down. Three thousand men are thrown out of employment.
W. W. Dixon's barn at Qreensbur# was fired by incendiaries. Joseph Beck, William Riley and Robert McCune have been arrested and accused of tho crime.
The people of Knightsville and Harmony, Ind., have united in a warfare on Sunday baseball being played at Triplett'" park, midway between the two towns.
John Thurman of Greensburg, 73 years old, died yesterday. He had the distino ,tion of being the only colored person it the United States belonging to a white
Masonic lodge.
Local Markets.
Crawf ordsville dealers wore paying the foi lowing prices for produce on Thursday: Wheat per bushel 50@52 Corn, new 18 Oats, new 8@12 Rye .....? 20®25 Timothy Hay $o@$7 Navy Beans [email protected] Lard per pound 8 Butter 10 §s*s
1
0
Chickens iSpring chicks .. 6J£ Capons Turkeys, liens 0 Turkeys, toms 5 Ducks Geese 5U Countrj hams 8@9 Side Meat 7 Shoulders 9@10 Best quality wool 15 Potatoes 30® 35
MRS. INGHAM'S FAST.
Has Not Tasted Food For Two Hundred Days,
HUNT FOR AN INSAISTE WOMAN,
Suicided With a Shotgun Three Men Killed at ltlooinington, 111.—Horses and Mules Burned. Thieves Fire a Warehouse—German Bigamist Sentenced to
Prison For Five Years.
LAPORTE, Ind., Sept. 8.—Two hundred days have now elapsed since Mrs. Henry Ingham has tasted food. Her long fast has been tho wonder of the medical fraternity. During all that time she has not taken any .kind ol' nourishment.
Tho physicians offer
110
solution of
her case, and apparently 110 human agency can afford her relief or save her from starving to death. She has wasted away until she weighs but 75 pounds, but tho spark of life still lingers, and Mrs. Ingham continues to hope that some human or divine power will intervene to save her life. There is no change in her condition from week to week, and, while slio is conscious oi' what transpires about her, she is too weak to talk, and beyond her faint breathing, there is no indication of life.
COULD NOT AGREE.
Windowglass People Fail to Come to Terms.
MUNCIE, Iud., Sept. 3.—Tho windowglass people have failed to agreo
011
a
scale of wages. Tho second meeting this season held at Pittsburg was a stormy one, the workmen demanding an increase of 8 per cent and the manufacturers asking a reduction of 10 per cent. Each side was firm and refused to make concessions. It is said another conference was finally agreed upon, and the meeting adjourned. The outlook is gloomy for the starting of the factories before winter. Frank P. Hart, manager of the Western Manufacturers' association, says the factories may stand idle and rot before an'advance will be paid, and the workmen say they will starve before they will accept a reduetion. Result, 20 factories in Indiana closed and 8,000 men idle.
HUNT FOR AX 'iNSAXE WOMAN".
Lizzie Pearson Run Down by Bloodhounds—Slept In the Tields.
TUSCOLA, 111., Sept. 3.—Several days ago Miss Lizzie Peiirson wandered from home and
110
trace of her could be
found. A strange looking creature was seen in the cornfields near Broadlauds, and two bloodhounds from Garrett were placed on her trail. Tho dogs took the trail and led the party to where Miss Peiirson was concealed iu the high grass several miles from home. Her clothing had been almost torn from her in her wanderings, and she was partly nude. When the crowd appeared she ran like a deer. It was some time before she was caught, and then it was seen that she was insrme. She had slept in tho fields every night for over a week.
JAILED TO KEEP THE PEACE.
Jacob Alt Dies on Being Committed— Heart Disease.
NEW ALBANY, Ind., Sept. 3.—Jacob Alt was arrested yesterday on a surety of the peace warrant sworn out by his wife, and a few minutes after being placed in jail he dropped, dead of heart disease. Several mouths ago ho attempted to commit suicide by shooting himself in the head. He was 42 years old.
German 12i£iimi*t Sentenced.
DANVILLE, Ills., Sept. 3.—Henry Otto, a German, some time since deserted his wife and three children iu Botrop, Germany. He settled in Nebraska, where he again married, From Nebraska I10 came to Danville, and last. Maj' married Mrs. Prose. JV washing and hard work she had accumulated r^OO. Otto stole this aud returned to Germany to his first wife. He \vas arrested there for bigamy, and. pleading guilty, got five years in prison.
-'jv-r-.'f Throe .Men Killed. A
BLOOMINOTON, Ills., Sept. 3.—J. W. Parsliall, brakeman 011 au Alton freight train, was knocked from a furniture car at the viaduct and killed. An hour later George Kelley, United States mail transfer clerk, was instantly killed at the Union depot. He stepped out of the way of one train aud in front of another. About the same time John Riddle, a farmer, was killed, being thrown from a wagon in a runoway.
Used a Slintgnn.
CLEVELAND, O., Sept. 3.—Alexander R. Mclntyre, 20 years old, son of D. D. Mclntyre, general freight agent of tho Detroit and Cleveland Navigation coin pany, has committed suicide. The weapon used was a shotgun. Tho act was committed in a room over the Detroit and Cleveland cqmpany's offices at the foot of Superior street. The motivo for the deed is not known.
Fired by Thieves,
RIDGWAY, Ills., Sept 3.—Fire at El Dorado, near here, destroyed the large warerooms of Burnett Bros., filled with machinery, and four box cars loaded with merchandise. The fire is supposed to have been started by thieves, for while the citizens were at the fire several dwelling houses were looted.
Married Bryan's Niece
JEFFERSONVILLE, Ind., Sept. 3. Laura Millson and J. L. Martin, of North Vernon, were married here yesterday. The bridegroom* is a son of the late General G. L. Martin. The justice who married them states that tbe bride is from Salem, 111., aud a niece of W. J. Bryan.
Horses aud Mules Burned.
ROCKPORT, Iud., Sept. 3.—Fire destroyed James H. Parker's stock barn, six miles west of this city, and five mules and two horses were cremated, other property also being destroyed. I Loss. $2,500 insurance, $750
SEE THE FINE DISPLAY OF
Art
Metal
Ware
At the L. W. Goto Jewelry Store, con
sisting of Vases, Pitchers, Jardineres,
Stands and Ornaments in all the latest
finishes. These goods must be seen to
be appreciated. Call and see them at
L/.-W. OTTO'S
*n South Washington St.
N
OT1CE TO I1E1KS, CREDITORS. ETC.
I11 the matterof tho cstalo of Robert J. Cunningham, deceased. 1 the Montgomery circuit court. September term. 189u.
Notice is hereby «iven that Albert D. Thomas, us udmin'strator of the estate of Robert J. Cunnlughuin,deceased, has presented and (iled his accounts and vouchers in final settlement of said estate, and that the same -will come up for tho examination and action of said circuit court on tho 28th day of September, 189G. at which time all heirs, creditors or legatees of said estate ui required to appear in said court and showoauso if any there be, why said accounts and vouchers should not be approved, and tho belli, and distributees of said estate are also notified to be la «aid court at the time aforesitld and make proof of heirship.
Dated this 2nd day of September, 1896. ALBERT D. THOMAS, 9-4-2t Administrator.
Farmer* «u Uu Side. Those demagogues and revolutionistswho somehow managed to make themselves leaders in tho Farmers' Alliance movement, mid remained so as long as the farmers were blind to its real purpose, are^conspieuons today in the forefront of this assault that is being made upon the nation through the instrumentality of the Chicago platform and tho Chicago candidates. But their masks have boon stripped from their faces. They stand out in all tho hideousness of actual anarchists. Nor is it possible longer to decieve the farmers, many of whom in 1890 were as putty in the hands of these destroyers. It is the farmer vote that is £oing to crush out Populism and repudiation where they are now most secure in their political strongholds. The farmer is never disappointing. Of him the Hon. Bourke Cockran said in his great oration in New York: "The farmer who, when this country was in danger, shouldered his musket who set it aside when the lust shot had been tired on the southern battlefields whose moderation prevented the political warriors at Washington from pursuing a poliey ofytroKcription anil punishment in the southern states that farmer who made the policy of the north a policy of conciliation anil forgiveness of reunion whose hand it was that went out to the prostrate humble south, kneeling amid the ruins ol' her cities anil the ashes of her hopes, raising her to her feet and bidding lier "Go in peace and slu
110
more"—that farmer today is the mainstay of order aad prosperity as he was the mainstay of the Union."
The American farmer is endowed abundantly with common sense aud glories in his honesty aud his love of country. This warfare in which Bryan is the nominal leader is an assault upon intelligence, npon honesty, aud upon patriotism. The American farmer has no part in it. He will be found fighting it from now till sundown on election day.
Those advocates of fiat money who point to tho prosperity of Mexico as justification for their belief are sadlymisinformed as to the facts. Labor in Mexico receives as compensation only a f«w cents a day, and the laboring man lives accordingly. Is that the kind of prosperity American wage-eurnarB want?
MAHKTT UOO 1 1 LUNS.
Prevailing Prices For tirniu. Cattle and Provisions 011 .SepL. y.
Indianapolis.
WHEAT—Weak No. 2 red, 57c. (JOHN—Weuk No. 3 mixed, 21c. OATS—Sternly No. 2 mixed. ISc. (JATTLK—Heavy dry fed steers, 4.75 shipping and export, steers, 4.25: common to fair steers, 62.40(3(2.76 feeding steeVs, [email protected] medium to choice lieifers, S3.00(&3.75 medium to choice cows, [email protected] veal calves, $3.00 @0.00. Market steady.
S8.90«
HOGS Packing and good to choice, $3.00© 3.35: lightweights, #[email protected] pigs and roughs, Market active.
SiiKEl'—Common to choice lambs, $8.00 @4.50 export ewes and wethers, $3.00@ 3.45: common to choice sheet), [email protected] bucks, per head, $2.00@ 3.00. Market stronger.
Cliicas" Grain and Provisions.
WHEAT—Uec. opened 58%e, closed 58£c. May opened ti3i'c. closed H'^%0. COBS—Dec. opened 2l%c, closed SlJ^c. May opened 24%c. closed 24%c.
OATS—Dee. opened 16%c, closed
16%o.
May opened 18J^e, olosed 18J£c. Poiilv—Oct. opened $5.B0, closed $5.75. Jau. opened §0.87, closed 30.82.
LARD—Oct. opened. $8.40, closed $3.40. Jan. opened £3.75, closed $3.72. lilBS—Oct. opened $3.27, closed $3.27. Jan. opened $3.45, closed $3.43.
Closing ensli markets: Wheat 55%c, corn 20^c, oats. 15t£c. pork §5.07, lard $3.82, ribs $3.ao.
Cincinnati Grain, anil Stock. W liivai—uaoici
No.
2
red,
01.
CORN—Easy No. 2 mixed, 2iJ£c. OAT8—-Active No. 2 mixed, lv^c. CATTLE—Steady at
Hoaa—Active at $&[email protected]. SHEEP—-Bull at $1.50g3.25 lambsv lower at [email protected].
Toledo Grain.
WHEAT—Lower No.
2
cash,
05}£o.
CORW—Dull! Nfi. 2,.mixed'Blc. OA'tei—Active No. jB mixed, 16}£c.
East Liberty Live Stock.
CATTLK—Steady-at $2.00®4.05, HOGS—Active at [email protected]. SHtfEP—Slow at $8.00 8.75 lambs, steady at
$8.00(§4.'25,
