Hope Republican, Volume 2, Number 14, Hope, Bartholomew County, 27 July 1893 — Page 6
THE NEWS OrniE WEEK Tlie manufacture of the new army rifle, the Krag-Jorgenson, is being pressed vigorously. Hy an explosion of naphtha in a sweat band factory at Hrooklyn, Thursday, four men were killed. The headquarters of the National Republican League have been closed in Now York and will be established In Chicago. 1 Antorganizatlon of Germans has been formed in Sal in a, Kan., the sole purpose of which is to fi*it prohibition and equal suffrage. The first Columbian souvenir coins to be returned to the United States treasury has been sent in for redemption by an Atlanta bank. A. W. Little, a banker of Kansas City. Kas., shot and killed Benjamin Johnson, a rising young lawyer of that Wednesday. tine hundred tons of hay were shipped to Germany from Galveston, Tex., Tuesday, the lirst instance of the kind in the history of that port. Frank Egan, an amateur pugilist, of New York, killed John McDonald, a butcher, in a glove fight at a lumber yard in that city, Monday. Ewan, Mich., a village of 2,030 inhabitants, was nearly destroyed by fire, and it is reported that the people lynched the man who started it. The Santa Fe railroad officials have unearthed frauds on the Topeka & Chicago division by which, it is said, the company has lost, $17,000 a month.
s-sloseph Jefferson, the actor, is near death with a cancerous affection of the neck, the result, partially at least, of the yaroiess treatment of a boil. A Presidential boom for Walter Q. Gresham, Secretary of State, is said to be already under way, and it is believed will receive the hearty support of the Cleveland Administration. There was a miners’ riot at Weir City. Kan., Thursday. A pitched battle resulted between striking miners and men taking their places. Several persons were seriously wounded, A man with onlyone leg has ridden a bicycle from San Francisco to New York in sixty-six days, nine hours and forty-five minutes, knocking twenty days off the best record of riders with two legs. The arrest in New Orleans of James M. Dowling, cashier of the U. S. mint there, is the result of an investigation conducted by the Troasu ry Department following a fire in a vault in the mint discovered on June 20. / Governor.! Markham, of California./Saturday, appointed George C. Perkin/as the successor of the late Leljrfd Stanford in the United i States Senate. Perkins is an v ex-Governor of the and was born in r<4a1k>",ln 1829. EighfThouauid people will be thrown ut of workday the closing of the Amosoag mills, in August, as determined upon jy the directors at Manchester, N. H. It is the. largest cotton mil! in the world, with a monthly pay-roll of f225,000. :i Five people, driven to fire-escapes from New York tenements on account of the excessive heat, fell from their improvised sleeping places, Monday night. Two were injured internally and will die; the other three had broken arms or legs. “From California to the World’s Fair or bust” is the sign on a big covered wagon that passodfthrough Topeka. Kan., Tuesday. The driver started from his home at Fresno, Cal., May 18, and expects to arj rive in Chicago before the last of July. | An official inquiry into' the cause of the | Victoria disaster is being conducted at Valotta, Malta. Lord Guilford, flag lieutenant of the Mediterranean squadron, and son of Admiral Tryon, testified that his father said to him after the collision: “It was all my fault.” The coro ner's jury investigating the cold storage firdvat Chicago,Tuesday, returned ■ holding Charles A. McDonald, MI. Skinner. D. H. Burnham and E. ftjirphy guilty of criminal negnigenco Mkuiring that they bo held until disnj \by due course of law. r- jin Westinghouse Electric and Man ..ituring Company’s big works, in New1k, 400 men were temporarily laid off on Jonday night. This is about half ttie tee. It is said that the company binds consolidating its works at Brinton, The outskirts of Pittsburg, and that jn the Newark plant is to be removed to It place. (lews was received at the World's Fair /mnds, Monday morning, that the first I the homing pigeons liberated from in onto! the Government Building, at 10:10 .. m., Saturday, reached Ozone Park, (Ong Island, N. Y., at 7.18 Sunday morng, covering the distance, of over one ousand miles in twenty-one hours and ht minutes. A flight of Philadelphia ds took place from the Fair grounds, i mday morning. I burglar at Hillsboro, 111.. Wednesday night, caught in the house of Mr. Jacob Kaberick, finding himself getting the worst of the fight that ensued, used a blunt instrument and a knife on Kaberiok and his wife, inflicting dreadful injuries and leaving them helpless. He then escaped without booty, but Kaberick succeeded in giving the alarm, and the police succeeded in capturing one Fritz Mast, who was identified by Kaborick and. wife, and ho is now in jail. Dr. Meyer, who was arrested at Detroit, charged with wholesale poisoning in order to defraud insurance companies, was arraigned in New York, Thursday. Carl Wimmerand his wife, Mary, were held as accessories to the various crimes charged against Moyer, and although \not under arrest, arc kept under strict 'surveillance. The details of the crimes charged against Meyer arc startling and. if proved, will be without precedent in their e-.normity. Three more banks failed at Denver v Wcdne/iday. The Old German National Wasontof them. The notice posted on
the doors of the German read: “This bank closed by order of the board of directors. Net assets, $1,100,000; liabilities, $310,000.” The other banks claim twice the amount of assets necessary to pay their liabilities, yet could not realize on them fast enough to meet the clamorous demands of excited depositors. 1 The World’s Fair was closed Sunday. A solitary man about noon offered a ticket at the 64 th street entrance and demanded admission but was refused. Fireworks have been prohibited in the neighborhood of the buildings. Saturday night a bomb was sent up and exploded before attaining a great height, and fell on the Manufactures’ Building, crashing throngh a skylight and setting fire to a curtain. Prompt work saved the building, but no more risks will be taken with fireworks. A Nyack, N. Y., physician reports the death, after seven hours’ existence, of triplets which must be classed with the most remarkable ever born. The mothers’ name is withheld. The triplets weighed in the aggregate fifteen pounds. They were two boys and a girl. The boys were joined by a ligature almost precisely like that which united the Siamese twins, and were otherwise perfect. The girl was joined to the boys by a band of flesh from the hip of each. When the death of the girl and one boy had occurred an effort was made to save the life of the other boy by cutting the ligature, but death ensued. James Mullens, of Lake Titus, N. Y., while in his pasture, Thursday, saw a ferocious bull belonging to a neighbor coming toward him. Mullens is seventy-five years old, but very quick and wiry. He saw that escape by running was impo Bible, so ho dodged the bull, and, springing on the animal’s back, held on firmly for ten minutes, all the time calling loudly for help. The bull made frantic efforts to throw the old man, but he held fast until the owner rescued him by shooting the animal. A year ago the v bull gored a farmer to death at Moira. It has been officially decided by the local directors of the World’s Fair not to return to the National Government the $1,939,120 profit derived from the sale of souvenir coins. No vote has been taken on the question, but a majority of the directors are not in favor of returning the money, and consider their action of last Friday in voting to rescind the rule providing for opening the gates on Sunday and for the return of the souvenir coin appropriation as all that is necesssary in the matter, as that action was a sufficient expression of their opinion. i'C The bulletin of the American Iron and Steel Association says that the total production of pig iron for the first half of 1893 was 4,563,918 gross tons, showing a decrease as compared with the first half of 1893 of 206,765. The production of the second half of the present year, the bulletin says, will undoubtedly be less than that of the second halt of last year, so that the total production of 1893 will jje much less than the total production of 1893. The total stock of pig iron on the market December 1,1892, was 535,616, as against 579,831 on June 1, 1893. The Columbian Liberty Bell committee has sent forward from Troy, N. Y T ., all of the swords, guns, chains and filings that it has received that could not be used in the Columbian Liberty Bell, or availed of in the clapper, to Messrs. Deere & Co., plow manufacturers, Moline, 111., who have volunteered to maae the Columbian Peace Plow without cost to the committe. The Columbian Liberty Bell committee now desires wood of great historical interest for the wood part of the plow. Persons having control of such wood are requested to send their contributions to the manufacturers at Moline. Small contributions of great historical interest will be inlaid in the wood of the plow. FOREIGN. France has sent an ultimatum to Siam, demanding heavy indemnity. War will be declared in case of its rejection. The revolution in Brazil is assuming serious proportions, and the stability of the present government is threatened. The British steamer Blue Jacket from Marseilles arrived at Cardiff, Wales, Wednesday. She had cholera on board and was ordered in quarantine. The Princess Eulalia, who has been in Paris since her American tour, left that city, Friday, for England where she will visit the Duke of York and his bride, Princess May.
CAMP MATTHEWS. The Indiana militia went into camp at Markle, four miles east of Terre Haute, Friday. The encampment will continue one week. About two thousand men are in camp. It is the largest military encampment ever held in the State since the war, owing to the formation of new companies at El wood, Covington, Oxford and Fowler. Brig. Gen. W. J. McKeee is in command, and the camp has been christened “Camp Matthews” in honor of the Governor. The infantry are encamped on on an island in Otter creek, five miles from Terre Haute by rail and six by road. This, it is thought, will check the tendency to risk guard house imprisonment by running through the lines to visit the city. Swimming and boating facilities during the hours off duty are also cxi pected to counteract city attractions. ROYALTY SAILS AWAY. The Emperor and Empress of Germany Depart for Denmark. Emperor William, accompanied by the German empress, sailed from Kiel, Monday, on the imperial yacht Hohenzollern. Their majesties will visit Bornholm, an island belonging to Denmark, in th ) Bai • tic sea; Gothenburg, in Sweden, and other places in that country. Emperor William and the empress will also go to Stockholm, where they will meet King Oscar and other members of the Swedish roya' family.
IMAM STATE NEWS. Indiana has ninety Statei banks. Frankfort is troubled with burglars. Thq blackberry crop in Franklin county is large. Columbus has a chewing gum factory in operation. Muncie factories are claimed to be in a healthy condition. Fifteen thousand people visited Camp Matthews, Sunday. Grasshoppers at Mishawaka are doing a great deal of damage. A man at Napoleon, Ripley county, advertises for 3,000 old tin cans. Mrs. George Stahl, near Farmington, sells forty dozens of eggs weekly, A new postoffice has been established at Dark Hollow, Lawrence county. There is an epidemic of throat disease near Houston and many children arc dying. Work on the now Ohio river bridge at Jeffersonville has boon suspended indefinitely. The Citizens’ Gas Company, of Greenfield, has struck a fine gas well three miles oast of that city. 6 A Lagrange county man is working on a bicycle that will be propelled by the weight of the rider. Farmers drilled a gas well at Farmland, the estimated daily output of which is three million cubic feet. “Seventeen-year” locusts, of extraordinary size, have appeared in Randolph county in great numbers. Robert McBeth, of Farmland/received the highest score, 97, for July for butter in the World’s Fair contest. Ex-Mayor Denny was nominated for Mayor of Indianapolis by the Republican convention, Saturday night. The wheat crop of Clark county is turning out immense, many farmers realizing forty bushels to the acre. Clinton complains of hoodlum rule and a wide open policy on the part of the authorities. Everything goes. The Blish Milling Company, of Seymour, has been shipping large quantities of bran to Amsterdam, Holland. 1 The Waynetown News reports the prevalence of the “cholera and phantom” among the children of that place. The Michigan City police are enforcing the Sunday closing law on the saloons and beer can not be had on that day. The Attica & Covington branch of the Wabash railway will soon be laid with steel rails from Covington to Fountain. There are 113 threshing machines in operation in Bartholomew county, and the average work of each is 1,030 bushels a day. George N. Martin, a bricklayer, was terribly maegled and instantly killeji by a motor car at Indianapolis, Thursday night. The Montgomery county commissioners have ordered the construction of a new orphans’ home. It will be a fire-proof structure. The American Protective Tariff League has received the acceptance of Flavius .1, Van Vorhis, of Indiana, as Secretary of the League for Indiana. William Pickerel, who was whipped by “white caps” at Seymour, Wednesday, returned to his homo, Thursday, with his body covered with welts. Within three hours after Dr. Kennedy, of St. Louis Crossing, had taken out an insurance policy his barn and 800 bushels of wheat wore destroyed by fire. Charles Patterson, of Thorntown, in jail at Frankfort on a charge of assault with intent to kill, made his escape, Wednesday | morning, in a mysterious manner. John Brandt, of Fort Wayne, while returning from the circus, Tuesday night, was beaten and robbed by three men. His injuries resulted fatally Thursday night. The Kelly Ax Manufacturing Co., of Louisville, will probably remove to Alexandria. The town has offered $40,000 in cash, $300,000 in land, and free fuel to secure the plant. The books of Treasurer Armstrong, of Tipton county, now show a shortage of $43,000. This is the final result' of the investigation. and is at least *10,003 worse than was expected. There Is a scheme developing at Richmond to build a branch railwary from Beeson’s Station, near Cambridge City, on the Lake Erie & Western railway,through Richmond to Manchester. Crawfordsvillq compla ins of a local financial stringency because of the World’s Fair. It is estimated that Montgomery county will have dropped *350,000 because of the big show before its close. Mrs. S. E. Givan, of Lawroneeburg,owns a gebanium plant which has ninety-five buds and blossoms. C. E. Rice, of the same city, has a pear tree nine feet high which has 350 pears developing. The two-year-old son of Sherman Young, of Kokomo, fell into a well where the water was ten feet deep, and some time afterward he was found floating on life surface, alive and uninjured, Isaac Kroot, aged eight years, was crushed to death by a motor car at Indianapolis, Tuesday, and his brother, aged eleven, dangerously injured. The motorman was arrested and held for trial. Olsaac Wall, a paralytic, threw himself under a passenger train on the T., St. L. &■ K. C. railway at Clark’s Hill, Friday. He did it purposely to escape going to the poor-house. He was terribly mangled. 6 The four-vear-old son of Noah Howe, near Edinburg, tried to burn out a rat that had taken refuge under a straw' stack. The burning straw communicated fire to his father’s stable, and *1,500 loss resulted. Newport vas visited by a destructive fire, Friday night. The north side of the public square, except two buildings, was wiped out. In less than two years the four sides of the square have been destroyed by fire. While R. D. Wharton and wife, near Sharpesville were hastening home to avoid a storm, the wind blew down a tree, which struck the vehicle In which they
w re riding. Mr. Wharton was killed and his wife seriously hurt. 6 The Citizens’ gas company of GreenfieJd, i has struck another good gas well on the ' farm of Charles Wiggins, throe miles east. They are only eight feet in Trenton rock, and the flow of gas Is now so strong that it is difficult to continue the drilling. The entomologist of the Agricultural Department at Washington has sent out a warning that seventeen year locusts may be looked for in many localities. Among the counties in this State likely to be visited are Knox, Posey and Sullivan. Rev. Wm. Knapp, a minister of the separate Baptist denomination, near St Louis Crossing, was stricken with apo plexy and died w'hile kneeling at prayer by his bedside, Monday night. He had been fishing all day in the hot sun, and. this is believed to have induced the attack. A Shelby county girl has taken a novel way of deciding between three lovers. She wrote their names on as many eggs, which a faithful hen is now trying to warm into life, and the young man whose name is on the egg which hatches first will secure the prize, heart and hand. There is great destitution among the ( working classes at Elwood. Two thou sand men are now out of employment with starvation staring them in the face. A relief meeting has been called by Mayor Duiiority to devise means to supply the immediate wants of the needy. An unknown party throw a lighted dynamite bomb under Roper’s meat market at Hobart, blowing up the floor and badly wrecking the interior. Mrs. Charles Heck was in the act of passing out and she was thrown some distance by the force of the explosion and badly hurt. Lopez Mumaugh, an Indianapolis ciga maker, drunk and infuriated by the re-' fusal of his divorced wife fo see him, shot at his sister-in-law, and then blew out his own brains, Tuesday night. He left a highly sensational letter addressed to his wife, indicating his intention to commit suicide. What is known as the polecat case at New Albany has resulted in a fine and costs being entered against Benjamin N. Jenks, a saloon-keeper. Mr. Jenks persisted in kpeping two polecats as pets, and Abram Stonecipher made complaint as a common nuisance. Jenks will appeal to the Circuit Court, There is an odd law suit pending at Terre Haute. Prank Marney’took the gold cure for the liquor habit, but he refused to pay for the treatment, alleging that it failed to check his appetite for liquor and that he' still gets drunk with old-time regularity. The Sprague BiChloride of Gold Company is the plaintiff. Cadets appointed to West Point from Indiana the past week were: John D. Long. Columbus: James P. Hughes (alternate), Cloverdale. The list of naval cadets from this State for the next classincludes: Third district, Scott Appiewright; Sixth, H. W'illiams, R. S. Charles, (alternate); Seventh, D. H. Bynum; Ninth. A. P. Perrill. Ten tramps went to the home of Mrs. Henry Minnich, near Areola, and demanded food. She replied by calling the house dog, a savage animal, which was shot by a tramp as soon as he made his appearance. Mrs. Minnich then appeared with a revolver, but she was disarmed before she could use the weapon. Her resistance, however, was so determined that the tramps finally sought safety in flight. An old landmark, a monster oak tree, in the business portion of Brazil, was lelled to the ground, Tuesday. During the rebellion it was topped, and at the top a platform was erected, from w'hich a martial band daily discoursed military music to keep up the courage of those left at home by the soldier boys. Tears were freely shed as the grand old tree came down Lafayette Swain, of Parke county, who was shot by his brother, will recover. Moses Swain, who did the shooting, has been committed forkillingGabriel Bryant. He is also held under $200 for shooting Lafayette. Public sympathy is witli Moses so far as trouble with his brother is concerned, because it is claimed that Lafayette treated him shamefully. Had Lafayette been killed instead of Bryant, who was an inoffensive old man, there would not have been general regret. C. W. Cole, Auditor of Harrison county, was shot in his room at Gorydon, on an upper floor, Thursday morning about 3 o’clock, by a burglar, who had reached his bedside, and was evidently intending to steal the money in the pockets of his trousers. Mr. Cole ran the burglar to the head of the stairway, when the scoundrel turned and shot him. The bullet took effect on a floating rib, glancing around and coming out at the side. The burglar made his escape. Mr. Cole will recover. Charles W. Depauw and the New Albany Rail Mills Company made assignments, Saturday afternoon, for the benefit of creditors., The failure was caused by the liability of Mr. Depauw for debts of the Premier Steel Works of Indianapolis. Mr. Depauw was supposedjto be worth at least $1,000,000, but is now practically penniless. The assets of the two estates are ample to pay liabilities. Philip Lint deliberately killed Levin Poynter, his brother-in-law, at North Liberty, near South Bend, Tuesday. Poynter was over sixty years of age, while Lint was a young man of thirty, and is well known as a drunken, worthless character. After his arrest he claimed to have no knowledge of the crime, and insisted that he did not see Poynter at all. His defense will be temporary Insanity. There has been an old man going about the city for some days past selling “strained honey,” which he says is a pure article made out in Brown county. It is said the old man buys one pound of pure bee honey and fifteen pounds of granulated sugar of a certain merchant in this city, and, mixing them, boils to the proper consistency and then peddles it out, and goes back to the same grocery store and purchases the material to make some more. Good man.—-Columbus Times,
WORLD'S WHEAT crop s „ 0IlT " American Farmers Shoals Present PM Cc , Not SeU ** The St. Louis Journal or A treating editorially of the c ondi tioii the present wheat crop and the prow, vanco in prices, says Americ an & ropean authorities agree that th c , deficiency will be at least lOO.ODo.io,. , 1 els. The most reliable figures Pl aC(J ' ‘ total American crop of 1893 at abo at _ 0C0 COO bushels. England .will want ably 250,000,000 bushels, and the horn" trade needs 370 000 000 bushels. Journal believes that in view of that the American crop is 130,COO,000 sb 0tt as compared with last year and as with a short crop is now grabbing u,, Xinerican wheat as fast as she can without attracting too much attention, the time has come when American farmers should not sell a bushel of wheat at present prices. For granting, it says, that prices do not advance, it will pay much better to feed to stock than .to sell at present figures. KNEW THE ROPES Hut Oot Caught—Arrest of au Kx-Col lector of Customs. James Lotan, ex-collector of customs at Portland, Oregon, was arrested Monday afternoon on an indictment charging him with smuggling opium and landing Chinese from British Columbia on fraudulent certificates. Robert G. Paddock, deputy custom inspector, and C. D. Cardinell, who was dismissed from the customs service a few months ago, were also taken Into custody. All were released on $20,030bail. William Dunbar and Nathan Blum were arraigned jointly to answer ten additional counts for smuggling. Blum and Dunbar were agents for the steamship Haytien Republic. The grand jury found a number of other indictments against parties alleged to have been connected with the smuggling ring, but as the arrests have not been made, their names have not been made public. THE MARKETS. July 21. 183 3 Indianapolis. GRAIN AND DAY. Wheat—No. 2 red, 59c; No. 3 red, 33(« 54c; No. 4 red, 50c: rejected, 45@50; unmerchantable, 35@40c; wagon w'heat, 00. Corn—No. 1 white, 40>4c; No. 2 w'hite. 40c: No. 3 white, 39c; No. 4 white, 32c; No. 2 white mixed, 38c; No. 3 white mixed, 37c: No. 4 w'hite mixed, 30c; No. 2 yellow, 38c; No. 3 yellow, 37c: No. 4 yellow, 30c; No. 2 mixed, 38c; No. 3 mixed, 37c; No. 4 mixed, 30c; sound oar, 41c for yellow . Oats—No. 2 white, 33c; No. 3 white. 32c; No. 2 mixed, 1 39%'c; No. 3 mixed, 29c: rejected, 25@30c. Hay—Choice timothy. $12.50: No. 1. *12; No. 2, *9: No. 1 prairie, $7: mixed, *8: clover, $9. Bran, 111. I.XVK STOCK. Cattle—Export grades $ [email protected] Good to choice shippers [email protected] Fair to medium shippers 3.50®4.0O Fair to choice feeders [email protected] Stockers, 500 to 800 [email protected] Good to choice heifers [email protected] Fair to medium heifers [email protected] Common to thin heifers [email protected] Good to choice cows [email protected] Fair to medium cow's [email protected] Common old cows 1.00(^2.00 Veals, common to good [email protected] Hulls, common to fair [email protected] Bulls, good to choice [email protected] Milkers, good to choice [email protected] Milkers, common to fair 15 [email protected] Hogs—Heavy packing and shipping [email protected] Mixed [email protected] Heavy roughs [email protected] Pigs [email protected] Sheep—Good to choice clipped. [email protected] Fair to medium clipped [email protected] Stockers clipped [email protected] Spring Lambs [email protected] i Bucks, per head [email protected] POULTRY AND OTHER PRODUCE. [Prices Paid by Dealers.] ! Poultry Hens, 8)4c lb; young chickens, I 12@14c $lb; turkeys,young toms, 8c lb; hens, 9c $ lb; ducks, 6c $ 1b; geese, *4@ 4.80 for choice. Eggs—Shippers paying 12o. Butter —Grass butter, 10@,12c: Honey—18@20c. Feathers — Prime Geese, 40c $ H> ■ mixed duck, 20c lb. BEESWax—20c for yellow; 15c for dark. Wool—Fine merino. 12@16c; medium unwashed, 17c; coarse or braid wool, 14@16c; tub-washed, 20@25c. Detroit. Wheat, 05c. Corn, No. 2.40c. Oats, No. 2 white, 3134c. Clover seed, 86.35. Minneapolis. Wheat, 60c. New York. Wheat, No. 2 red, 71c. Corn, No. 2. Oats, 35c. Lard, *9.62. Butter. Western dairy, 15@18c; creamery, 17@22c. Chicago, Wheat, 6534c. Corn, 40c. Oats, 29c. Pork, *19.05. Lard, *9.25. Short-ribs, $8.80. Cattle —Prime steers, *[email protected]: others *[email protected]. Hogs—Heavy mixed and packers, *[email protected]; prime heavy. *[email protected]; prime light, *[email protected]; other lights, *[email protected]. Sheep —Natives, *4.50 @5.50; lambs, *[email protected]. Cincinnati. Wheat, No. 2 red, 60@62c; Corn, No. 2 mixed, 37c: Oats, No. 2 white western, 30c; Rye, No. 2, 45c; Mess Pork, *20.10; Lard, *9.00; Bulk Meats, *9.15; Bacon, *11.25. Butter, creamery fancy, 20c; Eggs. 12C. Cattle, »2.50@$5.25. Hogs, *6.25@*6.90. Sheep, *2.50@*4.75. Lambs, |[email protected]. St. IaOuIs. Wheat, No, 2 rod, 6134c: Corn. No. 2 mixed, 36%; Oats, No. 2, 29c; Butter, 20c. Buffalo. Cattle, *[email protected]. Hogs, heavy, *[email protected]; mixed, I6.80@ *6.90; light, *7.00@*7.10. Sheep, native, *4.80@*500.; Texas, *3.25@ *8.50. Philadelphia. Wheat, No. 2 Red, 68c; Corn. No. S Mixed, 47c; Oats, 37c; butter, creamery, 2834c; eggs, 12j4c. Baltimore. Wheat, No. 2 Rod. 67%c; Corn, mixed: 4834c; Oats, No. 2, White Western, 39c, Rye, 60c; Pork, 121.03; Butter, creamery. 2c; Eggs, 14J4c.
