Indianapolis Journal, Indianapolis, Marion County, 12 April 1886 — Page 6

6

THE INDIANAPOLIS NATIONAL BANK Designated United States Depository, Corner Peons Odd-fellows' HalL WPO. P. Hapqkbt, Pres’t. H. LAtham, Cas’fa. CONDITION OF THE MABKETS Moderate Trading in Wheat, Followed by a Gradual Advance in Prices, ProYisions Slightly Lower, hut the Market Gives Indications of Strength—Corn in Moderate Demand by Local Purchasers. MONET, BONDS AND STOCKS. A Moderate Demand for Railway Bonds—An Unusually Dali Day in Stocks. New York.. April 10.—Money on call was easy at IJ®2 per cent Prime mercantile paper, 4®5 per cent Sterling exchange was doll bat steady at $4. 86 j for 60 days, and $4.88 for demand. The total sales of stocks to-day were 165,547 ■hares, including the following: Delaware, Lackawanna & Western, 16,900; Erie, 7,775; Lake Shore, 12,483; Northwestern, 5,350; New Jersey Central, 8,600; Pacific Mail, 24,500; Reading, 3,720; St Paul, 21,360; St Paul & Omaha, 3,400; TJnion Pacific, 8,750. Western Union, 1,755; Northern Pacific preferred, 3,139; Oregon & Transcontinental, 5,805. Government bonds were dull and steady. State bonds dull and strong. Railway bonds in moderate demand. Sales, $1,571,000. The changes are generally unimportant. The tetal sales for the week amounted to $9,852,000, against $7,777,000 last week. Stocks were duller than at any time for several months past The sales were 165,547 shares. The early nows indicating the possibility of further trouble at East St Louis, led to a rather weak opening. The market was dull but firm until towards midday, when there was a small decline, followed by renewed strength that continued to the close. The extreme fluctuations were generally under 1 per cent., and in some of the old active stocks not over Final figures were generally at or near the best of the day. Dispatches from the Southwest indicated further trouble, and at one time it was said the firemen on the Northwestern railway had threatened to strike, but later reports contradicted this statement. The changes this evening, as compared with the changes of yesterday, are generally in favor of higher prices by fractions of i to I per cent., but some of the usually inactive stocks show greater changes, including St. Paul & Duluth, which is 31 higher, and Milwaukee, Lake Shore & Western preferred, 1. On the other hand, Jersey Central lost I and Texas Pacific $. St. Paul, notwithstanding the statement for the first week of April showing a loss, compared with the same week last year, of $62,727, closed uncbaneed. The result of the week’s operations is a small advance for the general list, the gains being, in nearly every instance less than 2 per cent.; but Pacific Mail and New York & New England are 24 lower; Central, of New Jersey, 5, and St. Paul & Duluth, 14. The total sales for the week were 1,490,190 shares. The closing quotations were: Three percent, bonds 100% Louisville & N’shville 3858 United States 4%5.. 112% L-, N. A. & C 33 United States new 4sl‘2t>%iMar. & Cin. Ist prof.. Pacifie6sof Df> 127%’Mar. & Cin. seconds Central Pacific firsts. 115%1 Mem. & Charleston.. 32 Erie seconds 102%'Michigan Central —. 66 Lehigh & Wilk’sbarrelVi jMinn. & St. Louis... 18% Louisiana consols.... 85 |Minn. * St. L. pref’d. 45 Missouri Os 10 1*3, Missouri Pacific 104 St. Joe 118 ! Mobile & Ohio 11 St. P. A S. C. firsts.. 125*31 Morris & Essex 138 Tennessee 6s, old 58 iNashville & Chat 145 Tennessee 6s. new— 58 |New Jersey Central.. 63 Texas Pac. I’d grants 37 Norfolk* W. pref’d. 27% T. P. Rio Grahde 57 Northern Pacific 26% Union Pacific firsts. .llG%jNorthern Pac. pref’d. 663a U. P. land grants 1031fliChi. & Northwest’rn.lo7% U. P. sinking fund —llß ; C. &N. W. pref'd. ...139% Virginia 6s 44 New York Central.... 102*4 Va. con. ex.mat.coup. 55 'Ohio Central 1% Virginia deferred 10% Ohio & Mississippi... 23% Adams Express ..145 lOhio & Miss, pref’d.. 90 Allegheny Central jOntario & Western.. 17% Alton* Terre Haute 39% Oregon Navigat ion... 99*4 Alton &T. H. pref... 90 jOreg’n & Transcont’L 20 1 4 American Express...los%'Oregou Improvem’t.. 21 B. C. R. & N 60 jPacific Mail 56 Canada Pacific 65%:Panajna 98 Canada Southern 40 %! Peoria, D. & E 22% Central Pacific 41 7 8, Pittsburg 150 Chesapeake & Ohio.. 10 j Pullman Palace Car ..131 C. & O. prefd firsts.. 17% ! Reading 24% C. AO. seconds 12 ;Rock Island 126 Chicago * Alton 141 St. L. & San Fran... 19 C. *A. preferred ...155 ;St. L. &S. F. pref’d. 42% C., B. * 6 134%!5t.L& B. F. Ist pref’d. 101 % Chi., St. L. & N. O 0., M. & St. P 87% 0., St L & P 1Q%|0., M. & St. P. pref’d.llß C., St L. & P. pref’d 27%jSt Paul, M. * M... 116 0., 8. & C 30%jSt. Paul * Omaha.... 40% Clevel’d & Columbus. 48%, St. Paul * O. pref’d..lo3 Delaware* Hudson.. 100 'Texas Pacific 10% Del., Lack. & West. .12638:Union Pacific 49% Den. & Rio Grande.. 14%jU. S. Express 19% Erie 25% Wab., St. L. & P 64% Erie preferred 59%|YV., St. L. * P.pref’d 8% East Tennessee 2% Wells & Fargo Exp.. 16% East Tenn. pref’d.... 5%,W. U. Telegraph ... 120 Fort Wayne 145 Colorado Coal 65 % Hannibal & St. Joe Homestake 24% H. * St. J. pref’d Iron Silver 17 Harlem 215 Ontario 190 Houston * Texas 27 Quicksilver 29% Illinois Ceutral 136% Quicksiver pref’d .... 7 I. B. & W 23% Southern Pacific 21 Kansas & Texas 2738,5utr0. 17 Lake Erie & Western 11 |N. Y., C. & St. L 6 7 8 Lake Shore 81 %;N.Y.,C.&St.L. pref’d. 15% The weekly bank statement, issued to-day, shows the following changes: Loans, increase $332,100 Specie, decrease 076,100 Legal tenders, increase 5,132.500 Deposits, increase 2,367,700 Circulation, decrease 57,800 Reserve, increase 3,564,475 The banks now hold $16,517,618 in excess of the 25 per cent rule. NEW YORK AND CHICAGO. Yesterday’s Quotations ou Produce at the Two Great Centers. NEW YORK, April 10. - Flour dull and heavy; receipts, 11,571 brls; exports, 9,141 brls, 6,387 sacks; sales, 820 brls. Wheat—Receipts, 3,850 bu; exports,*s2,297 bu: ipot moderately active; options opened heavy, tlosed firm: sales, 2,170,000 bu futures, 120,000 bu spot; No. 2 spring, 91c; No. 1 hard, 97fc afloat; ungraded red, 81® 98c; No. 2 red, 81®91$cf. o. b.; No. 1 rad, 99c; No. 1 white, 95c; ungraded white, 84c; No. 2 red, May, 90i ®9l!c, closing at 91§c; June, 914® 92 316 c, closing at 92Ic;July, 92®921c, closing at 922 c; August, 92j|®92ic; September, 93£ ®93j(c; December, 96§®97j|c, closiug at 97i0. Corn firmer; receipts, 3,600 bu; exports, 57,076 bu; sales, 488.000 bu futures, 74,000 bu spot; ungraded, 42®42±e; rejected, 411 c; No. 3, 44±®444c; Steamer, 44j| ®4sc elevated, 46®46jc afloat; No. 2, 45J®46e elevated, 47®475c afloat; steamer yellow, 46c; steamer white, 45jc; No. 2, April, 45Jc; May, 461®46§c; June, 46|®4610; July, 47f475c; August, 48$c; steamer, April, 44Jc. Oats fairly active; receipts, 10,450 bu; exports, 20,589 bu; mixed Western, 36®43c; white Western, 39®46fc. Hops quiet. Coffee—Spot fair Rio quiet at BJ®BJc; options steady but quiet: sales. 11,000 bags; April end May, 7.20 c; June, 7.15 c; July te September. 7.10 c; December, 7.15 c; February, 7.20 c. Sugar firmer but quiet; fair to good refining, s®s}c; refined fairly active; C, 4195 c; white extra C, s|® 6fc; confectioners’ A, 6ic; off A, 5{ ®5Jc; granulated, 6516 c, Molasses firmer, 60° test, 20c. Rice steady and demand fair. Petroleum firm; United closed at 73$e. Tallow steady at sc. Rosin firm. Turpeutine firmer at 46c. Eggs doll and lower; receipts, 7,268 packages; Western, 13c. Pork dull; family mess, $11.50. Cut-meats qnietand firm; pickled bellies, sic; pickled hams, Sic. Lard fairly active; Western steam, spot, 6.25 c; April, 620 ®6.2ic; May, 6.20®6.220; June, 6.25®6.2Gc; July, 6.31 c; August, 6.38 c; September; 6.45 c; October, 6,60 c; city steam. 6.15 c. Batter firm aud in fair inquiry; Western, 15® 35c; Elgin creamery, 34®35c. Cheese quiet; Western, Bi®lo4c. CHICAGO, April 16.—Wheat opened at the >o west price of the session to-day, and sold steadily

up to the highest—an advance of lie. The trading all day was on a moderate scale, and all agreed that the demand was of a local character. The fact that twenty-eight boatloads were laden for shipment at New York yesterday, and the continued talk of export purchasers to-day, inspired a very general attempt at “short” covering. During the last hoar of the session the market was slow and steady, and values declined on the bearish condition shown by the government report At times the provision pit was deserted, though at no time was the market quotably weak on the basis of opening prices, though it ranged rather under yesterday’s latest figures. Corn was purely a local deal, May selling moderately at 374®37fc, the inside and outside prices for the day. Flour a little more active, and prices 5® 10c lower than those current before. Wheat —The sales ranged: April, 72§®73fc, closing at 73ic; May, 77®784c, closing at 77fc; June, 79®80c, closing at 79|c; July, 81®8l|c, closing at 81£c; No. 3 Chicago spring, 65®68c. Corn—The sales ranged: No. 2 cash, 334®3(Hc; April, 33£c; May, 374®37£c. closing at 37i®37jc; June, 38®38Jc, closing at 38£®38jc; July, 38J® 394 c, closing at 39®39±c. Oats—The sales ranged: April, 26c; May, 29$ ®29Jc, closing at 29$e; June, 80i®30ic, closing at 30i®304; July, 30®304c, closing at 30c bid. Rye—No. 2,61 c. Barloy—No. 2,60 c. Flax-seed steady; No. 1, cash. $1.07. Pork—The sales ranged: May, $9.30®9.35, closing at59.30®9.32i; June, $9.35® 9.424, closing at $9.35® 9.374; July, $9.45® 9.50, closing at 9.42®9.45; dry-salted shoulders, 4® 4.10 c; shortrib sides, 5.324 ®5.35<k Whisky $1.14. Receipts—Flour, 10,000 brls; wheat, 10,000 bu; corn, 86,000 bn; oats, 54,000 bu; rye, 1,000 bn; barley, 16,000 bu. Shipments—Flour, 10,000 bu; wheat, 10,000 bu; corn, 31,000 bu; oats, 36,000 bu; rye, 4,000 bu: barley, 23,000 bu. TRADE IN GENERAL. Quotations at Philadelphia, St. Louis, Baltimore, Cincinnati and Other Points. ST. LOUIS, April 10.—Flour steady and unchanged. Wheat firm but dull, prices fluctuating within very small range, closing at %®%o higher than yesterday; No. 2 red, cash, 86c; May, 85%®86%c, closing at 85 7 8 c; Juno, 86 3 a®8G 5 Bc, closing at 86%c; August, 82%®82%c, closing at 82%c. Corn very dull and easy, closing %®%c lower than yesterday; No. 2 mixed, cash, 33%c; May, 33 7 8®34e, closing at 33 7 5 c; June, 34%®34%c, closing 34%®34%c. Oats firm, but almost entirely neglected; No. 2 mixed, cash, 29 %c; May, 29 %c. Rye firm at 60c bid. Barley, very dull; American 60®80c; Canadian, 80®97c. Lead dull; refined nominally higher at $4.65®4.70; chemically hard easy at $4.60. Hay quiet and unchanged. Butter dull but firm: creamery 27®32c; dairy 18®28c. Eggs lower at 9%0. Flaxseed weak at SI.OB. Bran easy at 59c. Corn-meal dull and weak at $1.75® 1.80. Whiskyjfirm at sl.lO. Wool quiet and unchanged. Provisions quiet but steady. Pork $lO. Lard firm at $5.85c. Bulk meats firm: loose lots, long clear, 5.35 c; short ribs, 5.45 c; short clear, 5.60 c; boxed lots unchanged. Bacon firm; long clear, 5.82%®5.85c; short ribs, 5.90®5.95c; short clear, 6.10 c. Hams steady at $8.50® 11. Receipts—Flour, 1,000 brls: wheat, 8,000 bu; corn, 81 000 bu; oats, 6,000 bn; rye, 3,000 bu; barley, 1,000 bu. Shipments—Flour, 3,000 brls; wheat, 2,000 bu; corn, 1,300 biq oats, 1,000 bu; rye and barley none. PHILADELPHIA, April 10.—Flour weak and unsettled. Wheat steady but quiet; No. 2 red, April, 90%®91%e ; May, 91%®91%<u June and July, 91%c. Corn a shade firmer, with good demand for export; steamer mixed, 44%c; steamer yellow, 45%c: No. 2 yellow, afloat, 46%c; No. 2 mixed, April to June, 46%®47c; July, 46%®47%e. Oats—Spot strong aud higher; white, 38%®41c; futures a shade firmer; No. 2 white, April, 40®40%c; May and June, 39% ®4o%c; July, 39%®40c. Eggs steady; fair demand. Receipts—Flour, 3.000 brls; wheat, 3,000 bu; corn, 5,500 bu; oats, 14,000 bu. Shipments— Wheat, 28,400 bu; corn, 4,700 bu; oats, 18,300 bu. BALTIMORE, April 10.—Wheat—Western about steady and dull; No. 2 winter, red, spot. 90®90%c; April, 91c asked; May, 91%®91%e; June, 91 7 gc asked; August, 89%®90%c. Corn—Western steady and dull;, mixed spot and Jane, 45%®45%c; April, 45%®40c; May, 45%®45 7 80; July, 4568© bid; steamer, 43%®43%c. Oats firm, with fair inquiry; Western white, 39%®43c; Western mixed, 38®39c. Provisions quiet. Other articles unchanced. Receipts—Flour, 2,649 brls; wheat, 6,000 bu; corn, 50,000 bu; oats. 1,000 bu; rve, 600 bu. Shipments—Flour, 536 brls; corn, 3,400 bu. CINCINNATI, April 10.—Flour easy and unchanged. Wheat quiet; No. 2 red, 89c; receipts, 1,100 bu: shipments, 1,000 bu. Corn dull and lower; No. 2 mixed, 37c. Oats dull; No. 2 mixed, 32%c. Rye strong; No. 2, 65®68c. Barley dull and unchanged. Provisions steady and in fair demand. Whisky steady at $1.10; sales, 750 brls finished goods on this basis. Butter quiet and unchanged. Sugar higher; lard refined, 668®?%; New Orloans, 5®5%c. Eggs easier at lOc. Cheese quiet and unchanged. LOUISVILLE, April 10.—Grain quiet; Wheat, No. 2, long berry, 91c; No. 2 red, 89®90c. Corn— New mixed, 37c; white, 38c. Oats—New No. 2 mixed, 32c, Provisions steady. Bacon, clear ribs, 5.90 c; clear sides, 6.12%c. Shoulders, 4.37%c. Bulk meats —Clear rib-sides, 5.50 c; clear ribs, 5.75 c; shoulders, 4c; mess pork, $10.50. Hams—Sugarcured, 9.50® 10c. Lard—Choice leaf, 7.75 ®7.85c. LIVERPOOL, April 9.—Cotton firm; middling uplands, 5 l-16c; middling Orleans, 5%c. Sales 10,000 bales, including 1,000 bales for speculation and export, and 7,600 bales American. Wheat quiet and demand poor; holders offer moderately. Corn steady and demand fair. Lard—Prime Western, 31s 3d per cwt. Refined petroleum, o%d per gallon. DETROIT, April 10.—Wheat—No. 1 white, 85c, nominal, cash; 85%0 May; 86%c June; cash Michigan red, 85%c; No. 2 red, 84%c cash; 85%c bid May; 80 7 ec June; No. 3 red, 82c, nominal; receipts, 10,000 bu. Corn 39c; receipts, 4,900 bu. Oats, No. 2, 32%c; No. 2 white, 36e; receipts, 800 bu. TOLEDO, April 10.—Wheat quiet; cash, 87%c; May, 85%c; June, 86*580; August, 86%c. Corn quiet; cash, 38c. Oats nominal. Clover-seed dull-* cash, $6.15, Receipts—Wheat, 2,000 bu; corn, 2,900 bu; oats. 1,000 bu. Shipments—Wheat, 14,000 bu; corn, 3,000 bu. NEW ORLEANS, April 10.—Flour dull, weak and lower; choice: $4.25; extra fancy, $4.85; Minnesota and winter wheat patents, $5.40. Other articles unchanged. Cotton. NEW ORLEANS, April 10.—Cotton quiet; middling, B%e; V'w middling. B%c; good ordinary, 7 7 ec; net receipts, 905 bales; gross, 1,479 bales; exports to the continent, 719 bales: coastwise, 3,200 bales; sales, 4,000 bales; stock, 253,065 bales. NEW YORK, April 10.—C. L. Green & Co.’s cotton report says: Scarcely enough to make a market until late in the day, when a sma'l demand to eover a few short deals gave an advance of 2®3 points, and closed nominally steady. Cotton steady; uplands, 9%e; Orleans, 9 7-16 c; sales, 285 bales. Futures closed steady, April, 9.15 c; May, 9.20 c; June, 9.38 c; July. 9.47 c; August, 9.50 c; September, 9.40 c: October, 9.25 c; November, 9.22 c; December, 9.26 c; January, 9.33 c. Dry Goods, NEW YORK, April 10.—For the closing day of the week, there has been a fair order for many small assortments, but as a whole the market has been dull. Oils. OIL CITY, April 10.—Petroleum—National Transit Certificates opened at 73c; highest, 73%c; lowest, 72 7 8 c; closed at 73%c. Sales, 708,000 bbls; clearances. none; charters, 20.078 bbls; shipments, 85,369 bbls; runs, 623,665 bbls. PITTSBURG, April 10.—Petroleum quiet and firm; National Transit Certificates opened at 72 7 gc; closed at 73%:; highest, 73%c; lowest 72%c. NEW YORK, April 10.—Petroleum was dull and firm, with fluctuations between 72%c aud 73*580, closing at 73%c; sales, 2,607,000 brls. LIVE STOCK. Cattle Slow and a Shade Lower—Hogs Active bnt Slightly Lower in Price. Indianapolis, April 10. Cattle—Receipts, 400; shipments, 350. There was a liberal supply, generally of medium quality; very few good cattle here. The market was a little alow at a shade lower prices on the class that was offered. Export grades $5.25®5.50 Good to choice shippers 4.75®5.75 Fair to medium shippers 4.25®4.60 Common shippers ana feeders 3.85®L35 Stockers, common to good 3.00®3.65 Good to choice heifers 3.85®4.50 Good to choice cows 3.65®4.25 Fair to medium cows and heifers 3.00®3.50 Common old cows 2.00®2.75 Veals, common to good 4.00 ®6.25 Bulls, common to good 2.00 ®3.50 Milkers, dull, common to good 20.00®40.00 Hogs—Receipts, 4,500; shipments, 1,350. Quality fair. The market was active bat a shade lower on light and mixed grades, while good medium and heavy were steady, dosing quiet, with all sold. Medium and heavy packing and shipping. $4.40® 4.50 Light and mixed packing 4.15®4.30 Common to good light 3.80®4.30 Heavy roughs 3.75®4.15 Sheep—Receipts, 200; shipments, 200. But few good grades here. Market slow at prices a •bade lower than yesterday. Good to choice..*..... $4.7596.25

TUB INDIANAPOLIS JOURNAL, MONDAY, APRIL 18. 1886.

Fair to medium 3 85 ®4.40 Common $.00®3.60 Calls, per head.... 1.00®2.00 Elsewhere. KANSAS CITY, April 10.—The Live Stock Indicator reports: Cattle—Receipts, 839; shipments, none. Firmer, but not quotably higher; choiceto fancy, $5.10 ®5.40; medium, $4®4.50; stocks ?s and feeders, $3.30®4.20; cows, $2.60®3.40. Hogs—Receipts, 5,867; shipments, none. Strong and a shade higher; good to choice, $4®4.20; common to medium, $3.70®3.90; skips and light, s2® 3.60. Sheep—Receipts, 1,013; shipments, 526. Strong; good to choice, $4.25®5.20; common to medium, $3®3.50. ST. LOUIS, April 10.—Hogs—Receipt#, 1,800; shipments, 500. Market very dull, but prices very firm; Yorkers. $4.00®4.20; butchers, $4.20®4.40; packers, [email protected]. Cattle—Receipts, 300; shipments, none. Market nominallv firm, but prices unchanged; export steers, $4.85®0,25; common to choice shippers, $4.15® 4.75; common to choice cows, $2.40®3.75; stockers, [email protected]; feeders, $4.00®4.40. Sheep—Receipts, 400; shipments, none. Market dull but steady. Prices ranged from $3.50® 6.00. CHICAGO, April 10.—The Drovers’ Journal reEorts: Cattle Receipts, 1,100; shipments, 500. larket steady; shipping steers, 950 to 1,500 Ifos, s4® 6. Hogs—Receipts, 12,500; shipments, 7,000. Market about steady; packing and snipping, $4.25®4.50; light, $3.(K)®4.45; sldnß, $3®3.75. Sheep—Receipts, 1,100; shipments, 5,000. Market steady; natives, s3® 6.50. BUFFALO, April 10.— 3,580; good shipping demand; fair, to prime native steers, $4.50®5.25; extra, $5.50®5.70. Sheep—Receipts, 700; no quotations. Hogs—Receipts, 7,935; light pigs, $4.20®4.45; mixed pigs and light Yorkers, $4.45®4.55; selected Yorkers, $4.60®4.70; selected medium weights, $4.70®4.75; extra, $4.80. EAST LIBERTY, April 10.—Cattle—Receipts, 304; shipments, 456. Nothing Jloing; all through consignments. Hogs—Receipts, 3,400; shipments, 3,900. Market fair; Philadelphiaa, $4.80®4.90; Yorkers, $4.50® 4.70. • Sheep—Receipts. 2,800; shipments, 3,000. Market only fair; selling 10c lower than Friday. CINCINNATI, April 10.—Hogs quiet; common and light, $3.50®4.40; packing and butchers’, $4.10®4.65; receipts, 1,578; shipments, 752. INDIANAPOLIS MARKETS. The Volume of Business Fair, Considering the Unfavorable Conditions. Indianapolis, April 10. While the volume of trade in the week closing to-day has not reached expectations at the coming in of April, yet it is up to what might be expected when the unfavorable conditions are taken into consideration. The labor troubles make country merchants timid in their purchases, they buying only to meet immediate requirements. In speaking of the condition of trade, the New York Shipping List says: “The controlling features of general trade and the existing condition of commercial affairs throughout the country are not altogether encouraging or satisfactory, nnd the movement of the past two weeks not indicate the progressive improvement that was to be expected in view of the hopeful feeling that has prevailed. In almost every department of legitimate trade, as well as of speculative activity, a spirit of hesitation is observed that points to a feeling of uncertainty respecting the future, and this very naturally restricts operations and causes a Dostponement of fresh ventures. There is nothing in the existing condition of affairs that threatens to permanently disturb the prosperity of the country, but there is enough to lead to conservatism and retard aggressive operations. The strikes have, no doubt, resulted in mischief to industrial enterprise, disorganized trade in many caused the loss of many thousands of dollars, not only to wage earners and those who supply them with the necessaries of life, hut also to invested capital; and the fact that the most important of these strikes is no nearer a settlement than it was a month ago, but is daily becoming more defiant in its attitude, toeether with the threat on the part of labor of another general disturbance a month hence in an effort to enforce an eight-hour rule, is not reassuring to the enormous interests that will be involved in such a contest.” The local market today presented few new features. There is a slightly improved tone to the provision market. The produce markets are fairly active. Eggs, poultry aud choice butter firm at quotations. The grocery market is a little tame, prices on" most of the staple articles, however, are steady and strong. GRAIN. Receipts continue unusually light, the better prices of a few days past not seeming to increase shipments. Asa consequence, the prices given below are readily realized: Wheat-No. 2 red 86% bid. No. 3 red 81%®83 Rejected 73 offered. Unmerchantable 55®61% Corn—No. 1 white 36% bid. No. 2 white 36 bid. No. 3white..., 35%®36% No. 2 yellow 35% bid. No. 3 yellow 35 ®35 7 8 No. 4 yellow 34% bid. No. 2 mixed... 35% bid. No. 3 mixed 35 bid. No. 4 mixed 34%®34% Ear, white 35% bid. Ear, mixed 34% bid. Oats —No. 2 white No. 2 mixed 30%®30% Rejected 28% bid. Rye-No. 2 62 bid. Bran sll.oobid. Timothy Hay—Choice 11.75 bid. No. 1 11.50 bid. No. 2 10.00 bid. The Jobbing Trade. CANNED Go(>l%. Tomatoes—Two-pound cans. 80®85c; 3-pound, $1.2 5® 1.50. Peaches—Standard ; 3-pound, $1.75 •®2; 3-pound seconds, $1.25® 1.60; 2-pound standard, $1,30® 1.40. Corn—Revere, $1.10; McMurray, sl.lo® 1.20; Yarmouth. $1.30. Miscellaneous— Blackberries, 2-pound, 85 ®9sc; raspberries. 2-pound. sl.lo® 1.20; pino-apple, standard, 2-pound, $1.60® 2.50; seconds, 2-pound, $1.25 ®1 35; cove oysters, l-pound, full weight, 90e®$l; light, 55®65c; 2pound, full, $1.70®1.80; light, 90e®$l; string beans, 85®95c; Lima beans. 80c®$1.20; peas, marrowfat, 75c®1.50; small. $2®2.25; lobsters, $1.95®2.05; red cherries, 90o®$l; gooseberries, 90®95c; strawberries, $1.40®1.50. COAL AND COKE. Block. $2.75 3P 1 ton: Jackson, $3.50; Pittsburg, $3.75 Raymond Citv, $3.75 ton; Winifrede, $3. 75 I* ton: Kanawha, $3.75 ton; Hocking, $3.50 ton; Island City, $2.75 -P* ton; Highland. $2.50 ton; Piedmont and Blossburg, s'* ton; Dugger, (Peacock), lump, $2.75. nut, $2.25 Iff ton; chestnut and stove anthracite, $6.50 ton; ege: and grate anthracite, $6.25 <(ff ton; gas 10c -iff bn, or $2.50 load: crushed coke, 12c 4ff bu. or $3 Iff load. All soft coal, nut size, 50c -iff ton less than the above prices on the same quality of lump coaf. DRY GOODS. Tickings—Amoskeag AC A, 12%c; Conestaga BF, 14c-, Conestoga extra, 13%c; Conestoga Gold Medal, 13%c; Conestoga OCA, ll%c; Conestoga AA, 9c; Conestoga X, 8c; Pearl River. 12%c; Lew'ston 36inch, 14%o; Lewiston 32-inch, 12%c; Lewiston 30inch, ll%c; Falls 080, 32-inch, 13%c; Methuen AA, 12%c: Oakland A. 6%c; Swift River, 6c; York 32inch, 11 %c; York3o-incl.. 10%e. Bleached Sheetings—Blackstone AA, 7c: Ballou * Son, 6c; Chestnut Hill, 5%c: Cabot 4-4, 6%c; Chapman X. 5%e; Dwight Star S. B%c; Fruit of the Loom, 8c; Lonsda’o, 8c: Unwood, 7%c; Masonville, 8c; New York Mills, 10%C;OurOwn, 5%c; Pepperell 9-4, 18c; Pepperell 10-4, 20c; Hill’s. 7%0; Hope. 7c; Knight’s Cambric, 7%c ; Lonsdale Cambric, 10%c; Whitinsvllle 33-inch 6e; Wamsutta, 10%c. Ginghams—Amoskeag, 7%: Bates, 7c; Gloucester, 7c; Glasgow. 6%c; Lancaster, 7%c; Ranelmans, 7%e; Renfew Madras, 9c; Cumberland, 6%c; White, 7c; Bookfold, 10 %c. Grain Bags—American, $18.50; Atlanta, S2O; Franklinville, S2O; Lewiston, S2O; Ontario, $18; Stark A, $22.50. Paper Cam brigs—Man ville, 5%c; S. S. & Son, 5%e; Mason ville. 5%c; Garner, 5%c. Prints—Albions, solid color, 5%c; American saucy, 5%c; Allen’s fancy, 5%e; Allen’s dark, 5%c; Allen’s pink, 0c; Arnold’s, 0c; Berlin, solid colors, 5%c; Cocheoo, 0c; Conestoga, 5%a; Donnell’s, 5%c; Eddystone, 6e; Hartel, 5%c; Harmony, sc; Hamilton, 6c; Greenwich, 5%c; Knickerbocker, 6%c; Mallory, pink, 6c: Richmond, 6c. Brown Sheetings—Atlantic A, 7c; Boott C, 6c; Agawam F, 5%c; Bedford R, 4%c; Augusta, 5%c; Boott AL, o%c; Continental O, 6c; Dwight Star, 7%c; Echo Lake, 6c; Granite ville EE, 6c; Lawrence LL, 5%c; Pepperell E, 6%c; Pepperell R, 6c; Pepperell 9-4, 16c; Pepperell 10-4. 18c; Utica, 9-4, 22%c; Utica 10-4, 25c; Utica C, 4c. DRUGS. Alcohol, $2.15®2.30; asafeetida. 25®30c; alum, 4 ®sc; camphor, 28®30c; cochineal, 50®55c; chloroform, 60 a 05c; copperas, brls., $3®3.50; cream tartar, pure, 40®42c; indigo, 80c® 1; licorice;. Calab., genuine, 30®40c : magnesia, carb, 2-oz , 25 ®3sc; morphine, P. & W., oz., $2.75®2 90; madder, 12 9 14c; oil. castor, gal., $1.50 ® 1.60; oil, bergamot. §► lb, $3®3.25; opium, $3.60®3.75; quinine, P. & W„ # os.. 85®90c: balsam copaiba, 50®60c; soap, eastile, Fr., 12® 16c; soda, bicarb., 4%®6c; salts.

epsom, 4®sc; sulphur, flour, 4®0o; saltpeter. 8® flue; turpentine, 60®56c; glycerine, 20®22c; lodide potass., $3®3.25; bromide potass., 40®45c; ohlorate potash, 25c; borax, ll®12: eiaehomdia, 20®25c. Oils— linseed oil, raw, 43®440 -iff sal.; boiled, 46 ®47c; coal oil, legal test, 9% ®l4e; bank, 40c; best straits, 45c; Labrador, 60cj West Virginia lubricating, 20®30o; miners’, 650. Lard Oils—No. 1, 50® 55c; do. extra, 55®60c. Whit* Lead —Pure, 7®7%c; lower grades, 6®7c. FRUITS AND VEGETABLES. Apples—Choice, $1.25® 1.50 brl; common, Y6c $1 4ff brl. Cranberries— Fancy, $4®4.50 Iff brl; fair, $3.25 ®3.50 V brl. Cabbage—sl® 1.25 brl. Onions—s2.so® 2.75 iff brl. Onion Sets— Top, $3 f bu; bottom (white), s4® 4.50 bu; bottom (yellow), $3®3.50 4ffbu; potato, $2.50 Iff bu. Potatoes—Rose, 55 *Boc bn; Burbanks, 60c. Sweet Potatoes—Philadelphia Jersey, $3.50® 3.75 brl; Baltimore, $2.50®3. . FOREIGN FRUITS. Ratsinb—London layer. $3.25®3.35 box: loose muscatels. 2-crown, $2.65®2.85 -iff box? Valencia, 10%'®ll%c ft; citron, 26®23c ft; currants, 7®7%c lb. Bananas—Aspinwall, $2®2.50: Jamaica; $1.50®2.50. Lemons—Choica. $5.75® 6.00 iff box. Oranges—California. $2.75®3.50 Iff box; Navel. $5®5.25 -iff box; Messina, $3®3.50 box.- Valencia, $6.25 ®7 per case. Dates—Fard, boxes, 11c: frailed, 6c. Figs—New, 14® 17c. Cocoanuts—ss®6 iff hundred. Prunes—Turkish, 4%®6c GROCERIES. Coffees—Ordinary grades, B'®B%c; fair. 9®9%c: good, 10®10%c; prime, 11®11%o; strictly prime, 12®12%c; choice, 12%®13c; fancy green and yellow, 13%-® 14c; old government Java, 23®25c; iml tationJava, 18®22c. Roasted—Gates’s Al, 15%c; Gates’s prime, 13%c; Arhuckles’s, 13%c; Levering’s, 13%c; Delworth’s, 13%c ; McCune’s, 13%c; Bchnull & Krag standard, 13c. Cheese—Common, 6®7c; good skim, B%®9c; cream, 10®llc; full cream, ll®l2c; New York, 11 ®l2c. Dried Beef—ll%®l2%c. RlCE—Carolina and Louisiana, 4%®7%c. Molasses and Syrups—New New Orleans molasses, fair iff prime, 28®35c; choice 40®45c. Syrups, low grade, 20®22c; prime, 24 ®26c; choice to fancy, 28®350. Salt —Lake, 90c, car-lots; 10 ® 150 more in quantities less than a car-load. Spices —Pepper. 18®20c; allspice, 10® 12c; cloves, 18®20c; cassia, l3®15o; nutmegs, 65®85 -iff lb. Sugars—Hards, 6 7 8®7 7 8c; confectioners* A, 6% ®6°BC; standard A, 6%®638c; off A, 6%®6%c; white extra C, 6®6%c; fine yellows, 5 7 g®6%c; good yellows, 5<%@5%c; fair yellows, s%'®6 8 8c; common yellows, 5%®5%c. Starch—Refined pearl, 2% ®3c <lff lb; Eureka, 5® 6c: Champion gloss lump, o@7c; improved corn, 6% ®7c. Shot—sl.4o®l.so bag for drop. Flour Sacks—No. 1 drab, %brl., $33 & 1,000; % brl. sl7; lighter weight, $1 1,000 less. Twine—Hemp, 12®18c 3ff tb; wool, 8®10c; flax, 20®30c; paper, 18c; jute, 12® 15c.- cotton. 16®25c. Woodenware— No. 1 tubs. $5.500>6; No. 2 tubs, $4.50®5: No. 3 tubs, $3.50®4: two-hoop palls: $1.25® 1.35; three-hoon pails, $1.5G®1.60: double washboards, $2.25®2.75; common washboards, $1.40®1.85: clothespins, 50® 85c-iff box. Wooden Dishes—Per hundred, lib 20e; 2tb, 25c; 3 tb 30c; 5 tb 40c. Lead—6®7c for pressed bars. Wrapping Paper—Crown straw, 18c Iff bundle; medium straw, 27c: double crown straw, 36c; heavy weight straw, 2%®2%c lb; crown rag, 30c Iff bundle; medium rag. 45c: double crown rag. 60c; heavy weight rag, 2%®3c-jff lb; Manilla, No. 1, 7%®9c; No. 2, s®6c; print Daper, No. 1. 6®7c; book paper, No. 3, S. & C., 10® 11c; No. 2 S. & C., B®9c; No. 1 S. & C., 7%®80. IRON AND STEEL. Bar iroi* (rates), 2c; horse-iboe bar, $3.15®3.40; Norway nail rod, 7c; German steel plow-slabs, 4c; American drill steel, 12c: Sanderson tool steel, 15c; tire steel, 4c; spring steel, 6c; horse shoes, keg, $4; mule shoes, -iff keg, $5; horse nails, 3ff box, Bd, $5; cut nails, lOd and larger, $2.50 -iff keg; other sizes at the usual advance; steel nails. $2.75. Tinkers’ Supplies —Best brand charcoal tin—lC, 10x14, 14x20, 12x12, $0.25; IX, 10x14, 14x20 nd 12x12, $8.25; IC, 14x20, roofing tin. $5.75; IC, 20x28, $11.50® 12.50; block tin, in pigs, 20c; in bars, 27c. Iron—27 B iron, 3%c; 27 C iron. 6c; galvanized, 50 4ff cent, discount. Sheet-zinc. 6%c. Cop?er bottoms. 22c. Planished copper, 32c. Solder, 5® 10c. Wire, 50 eent. off list. LEATHER HIDES AND TALLOW. Leather—Oak sole, 33®37e: hemlock sole, 26® 82c; harness, 30®35c; skirting. 87®38c; black bridle doz. $60®65; fair bridle, $60®78 Hff doz; city kip, t60®80; French kip, 85c®51.20: city calf skins, se®sl.lo; French calf skins, $1.15®1.80. Hides—Green, 6%c; heavy steer, 7%c; green salt, 7%®Bc; green salted calf, 10%C; dry flint. 12c; dry salted, 10c. Damaged, one-third oil the above prices. Sheep Skins—3oc®sl.2o. Tallow —Prime, 3%c. Grease—Brown, 2%c; yellow, 3c; white, 3%c. OIL CAKE Oil cake and oil meal, 1,000 tbs, sls; 2,000 fts, S3O. Bags ahd drayage extra. PRO DU 08. Butter—Creamenr fancy. 28®30c; choice country 12® 14c; common, 8® 10c. Beeswax—Dark, 18c; yellow, 20c. Eggs — Shippers paying 9%c; selling from store at 10%c. Feathers—Prime geese, 45c lb; mixed duck, 20 ®2sc-F lb. Poultry—Hens, 8c ft;roosters, 4%c; ducks, 7%c 3ff ft; geese, $5 doz; hen turkeys, <e <ff lb; toms, 6c lb. WOOL—Tub-washed, 28®32c; unwashed, medium. 20®22c; unwashed, Cotswold, 19®21c; burry and unmerchantable, 15c. We quote prices on farmers’ lots; on large lots slightly higher prices are paid. I'RO VISIONS. Wholesale Prices—Prime lard, 6.05 c; short ribs. 5.40 c; dry-salt shoulders, 3%c; sweet-piekled shoulders, 4%c; hams, B%c. Jobbing Prices Smoked Moats Sugar-cured hams. Reliable brand, 15 fts average, 9%c; 17% fts average, 9%0; 20 tbs average and over, 9%c; light, 10 lbs average, 10%c: 12% fts average, 10%c; Morgan & Gray brand, S. C. hams, %c less than the above; cottage hams, Reliable brand. 7c; California hams, Reliable brand. 6c; English breakfast bacon, dear. Reliable brand, B%c; English breakfast bacon, clear. Porter brand. 7%c; English shoulders, Reliable brand, 12 lbs average, 5%c; 17 lbs do., 5%c: Morgan & Gray brand %c less than the above. Dried beef, Reliable brand, 12 %c; Porter brand, 10c. Bacor., clear sides, light or medium, .7%c; backs, light or medium weight. 7c; bellies, 7c, Dry Salted ana Pickeled Meats—English-cured clear sides (unsmoked). 6%e; backs or bellies (unsmoked), 6c: bean pork (clear) brl 200 tbs, $12.50; clear pork. brl 200 lbs, $10.50; ham pork, brl 200 fts, $10.50; also, in % brls, containing 100 fts, at half the price of the brls, with 50c added to cover additional cost, of package. Lard—Pure kettle-rendered, in tierces, 7%c; also, in % brls and 50-tb tubs, *%c advance on price of tierces; 48-lb tin tubs and 20-lb pails, %c advance; 10-ft pails, l%c advance. Sausage—Bologna, in cloth, 5%c; in skin, 6c. SEEDS. Prime clover, $6.50®7 bu; prime timothy, $2.25®2.75 -P’ bu; extra clean blue grass, $1.40® 1.60 3ff bu: red top, 75c ®sl bu: orchard grass, [email protected] bu; German millet. $1®1.25 Iff bu; common millet, 75c ®sl bu; buckwheat, 60®90c Iff bu. Early Vegetables on the Farm. Philadelphia Record. But few farmers grow a plentiful supply of vegetables, and especially of those that are put in the ground early. This is due to the fact that they are usually too busy attending to the preparations for the regular crops to give attention to so small a matter as a garden. If they really considered the self-denial they ware practicing in failing to prepare a garden they would not neglect so valuable a privilege even .if a field crop had to be sacrificed. Farm life can be made more enjoyable by the use of a garden, and no doubt many of those who prefer a change to the city are influenced by the sameuess of diet and scarcity of those luxuries eDjoywd by the inhabitants of cities, but which could be obtained more plentifully and in better condition on the farm. The farmer who denies himself a garden loses one of his opportunities for enjoyment. There is no reason why he should not only prepare a hotbed, secure early vegetables, and also raise a later supply for winter use, hut have a variety of small fruits as well! The space required for a strawberry bed necessary for an average family need not be over forty feet square, if properly managed and the best varieties used, while raspherries, currants and gooseberries may be grown along the fences and on the borders of the walks. It is best to plow up the location for the garden in the fall, apply a heavy coating of manure and harrow it over. Early in the spring it should be plowed agAin, given an application of well-rotted manure, and harrowed down till the soil ia as fine as it can be made. If a small Bpace only is required for a garden, the spade and rake may be used. Os the early vegetables onions and peas are usually the first to go in. For table use, the White Queen onion is the earliestand of mild flavor. Any of the dwarf peas will serve for securing an early supply, bot as they seldom afford but a single picking, the crop usually ripening at one time, successive plantings of the seed may be made with advantage. Radishes may be sown early, either in rows or broadcast, while such garden herbs as parsley should go in as soon as possible, owing to the slow germination of the seed. Kale is another early and quick-growing crop, and even lettuce may be sown and the plants thinned out as they gradually mature. Early cabbage and tomatoes are usually started in hot-beds and transplanted. The quick-grow-ing early crops may be followed by later vageta-

*bles as the season advances. Beans of all kinds cannot §o in until the danger of frost is well over, but carrots, parsnips, and beets should be got in soon, in order to give them an early start ahead of the grass. Early potatoes may be hastened somewhat by pulling out all but one stock to the hill after the plants are up. While they will come earlier and be more uniform in size compared with the method of allowing all the stalks to remain, the crop will not be as large. The most essential requisites in gardening are fine soil, plenty of well-rotted manure, with thorough and clean oulture. EX-SENATOR CONKLING. His Peculiar Style of Dress and His Remarkable Memory. New York Letter. Gonkling is a veritable curiosity, so far as his personal appearance goes. His style of dress is, happily, unique. He comes into court with what the susceptible women correspondents of Washington used to call his “magnificent torso" enveloped in a pea-jacket, which serves as an overcoat in all weathers, and the thickness of which does not seem to incommode him as he sits hour after hour plying a witness with questions. His trousers—at least the pair he wore on Saturday—are what is vulgarly called loud, light in color and very large in check; and the partiality of the ex-Senator for this Bort of personal adornment is emphasized by the use of the same striking cloth for the gait* i * over his boots. The contrast between the At ivy dark-blue stuff of the pea-jacket and the light-gray, checker-board trousers is very decided, and the combination does not permit one to class the wearer as a man of the highest and most refined taste in such matters. Mr. Conkling’s hair is white, rather long and curly, and his Van Dyke beard, so closely cropped on the sides that the ruddy skin is plainly visible, is of the same color. He sits at the side of the table with his legs crossed and a half sheet of paper in his band, to which he makes only occasional references. His memory is remarkable. One often hears of instances in which public men have displayed wonderful power of memory, but not infrequently there is more or less fiction mingled with the truth in the recital. On one occasion, however, that came under my personal observation Mr. Conkling performed an astonishing feat. It was in the campaign of 1880, when Conkling, then a Senator, was advertised to speak on the political issues of the day in the Academy of Music. There was great interest felt in what he was going to say in support of the ticket, Garfield and Arthur, in view of the prolonged fight that the famous “306" delegates, under his leadership, had made in favor of Grant for a third term. Until it was learned that Conkling had his speech written out, there was no little anxiety in some of the newspaper offices. It was put in type, however, before the meeting, in the Tribune office, and a stenographer was sent to the meeting with a copy of the speech in type, in order to make any additions or corrections that might be necessary. There was only one change necessary—th* insertion of a question from someone in the audience, “When are you going to say anything about Garfield?" if I recollect aright, and Conkling’s quiet rejoinder, “We’ll come to that presently.” The address filled eight and three quarters columns of tho Tribuue of the next day—about 16,000 words—and with the exception of less than a column of statistics in relation to the commerce of the Southern States, etc., scattered through his remarks, Conkling repeated from memory every word of the speech exactly as it appeared in the proof-slips. The tables of figures he read. By thos? who were familiar with the facts this was regarded at the time as a remarkable feat, and the present inquiry shows that Mr. Conkling’s memory remains as strong as ever and enables him to keep in his mental grasp the multitudinous threads of evidence which have been developed. How to Prune. Gardeners’ Monthly. It is, indeed, safer to prune not at all than to have a sharp knife in the hands of an ignorant man. Much of the iudifference the culture of the dwarf pear has fallen into came about from the bad mistakes of ignorant pruners. It is not at all uncommon to see a dwarf pear tree with all its youne, vigorous growth cut away—nothing but fruit spure laffc. All the force is thus sent into the flowering condition in the spring. The trees are mountains of snow-white blossoms; but few fruit follows. A judicious thinning-out of weak branches, so as to get a good form to the tree, is about all the pruning required. If there is a tendency to produce an overproportion of fruit spurs, cut out a good portion of them. The apple often requires pruning when somewhat advanced m years. The old stunted branches should be cnt out now and then, whenever a young and vigorous shoot is inclined to take its place. Peech trees especially love this sort of pruning. The grape-vine, when trained on lattice work ortrellisses, is very liable to have its strong branches at the end of the vine; and the good pruner is ever on the alert to get a young strong branch np from near the ground. When he can get this he often takes out an older one weakened by age or bearing, and replaces It with youth and yieor. The rule in pruning grape-vines is to shorten the shoots in proportion to their strength; but if the advice we have given in former summer hints has been attended to there will be little disproportion in this matter, as summer pinching of the, strong shoots has equalized the strength of the vine. Those who are following any particular system will, of course, prune according to the rules comprising such system. As a general rule, we can only say that excellent grapes can be had by any system of pruning; for the only object of pruning in any case is to get strong shoots to push where they may be desired, or to add to increased vigor of the shoot, which pruning supposes will follow the act, increased size iu the fruit it bears. Blackberries, raspberries and currants are also much assisted by having the weaker canes thinned out, and those left shortened a fourth or fifth of their length. Gooseberries need thinning, but not shortening. It pays to plant plum trees and fight the curculio, as the labor of so doing deters from planting trees and causes the fruit to be scarce, the result being high prices. T. J. HODGEN & CO;, BROKERS IN Ms, Bonds, Grain and Provisions, No. 33 South Meridian St.—Room 2, Up-stairs. KKFKRENCSB: First National Bank Indianapolis, Ind. First National Bank Evansville, Ind. Louisville Banking Company Louisville, Ky. Citizens National Bank Louisville, Ky. Covington City National Bank Covington. Ky. tyPRIVATE WIRES. ■ #|TI I■ ■ /I GKRJIAS ASTHMA CURE ft Mk i BJ Ban 111 Instantly relieve* the U 1 Fit gel ALB mot violent attack*, nU B I [] BIX rHI and Inaurea comfort- “ BIEP "..able *leep. Used by inhalation, thug reaching tho disease direct, relaxes the spasm, facilitates free 11 n*• Q expectoration, and EFFECTS w UVICiO where all other remedle* fail. A trial raavlnre* the moat Bkeptlra! of IU Uanedlate,direct and never-railing effect. Price 50c. and pi.oo; of druggtat* or by mall. Trial pkA^te^o^tamp^r^B^tlllFPßAXjSUPanljlllnn. rlilwaytTmeta bleT Evansville & Terre Haute Railroad. (Via Vanda’.ia Line.) Lve Indpls. 7:3oam p*l2:oom t4:oopm s*lo:4spm Ar Ind pis.. 3:soam tlO:OOam 3:35pm 4:lspm (Via I. A St. L. Ry.) Lve Indpls.*lo:sopm 15:30pm *ll:ssam 7:loam Ar Indplis.. 3:45am tlOiOOam 3:35pm 6:25pm ♦Daily, tdaily exeepfc Sunday, p parlor car, s sleeping ear. These trains carry the magnificent Monarch parlor, sleeping and bnffet ears, the finest run in America, between Indianapolis and Evansville. Cars are open for passengers at 8:30 p. m. Train does not leave until 10:45 p. m. Fort Wayne, Cincinnati A Louisville Railroad. (Leave Indianapolis via Bee-line.) % SOUTHWARD. Leave Fort Wayne. 11:00 am 5:30 pm Leave Bluffton 12:03 am 6:30 pm Leave Hartford. 12:58 pm 7:22 pm Leave Muncie 3:57 pm 8:20 pm Arrive Indianapolis 6:00 pm 10:25 pm XOBTHWABT. Leave Indianapolis 4:00 am 10:10 am Leave Muncie 7:55 am 1:30 pm Leave Hartford 8:35 am 2:10 pm Leave Blufftou 0:25 am 3:00 pm Arrive Fort Wayne. 10:25 am 4:00 psa

RAILWAY TIME - TABLE. [TRAINS BUN BY CINTRAL STANDARD TIMS, j Trains marked thus, r. c., reclining chair; that,** sleeper; thus, p., parlor car; thus h., hotel car. Bee-Line, C., C M C. A Indianapolis. Depart—New York and Boston Express daily, s 4:00 am Dayton. Springfield and New York Express 10:10 am Anderson and Michigan Express. .11:05 am Limited Express, daily, r. c 3:50 pm New York aud Boston Express, a.. 7:10 pm BRIQHTWOOD DIVISION. Daily 4.00 am 2:00 pm Daily 10:10 am ... 3:sopm Daily ...11:05 am 7:lspm Daily except Sunday 6:40 pm Arrive—Louisville, New Orleans and St. Louis Express, s 6:40 ami Wabash Fort Wayne and Muncie, New York Limited, daily, r. c...11:30 ami Benton Harbor and Anderson ExExpress 1:55 pm Boston, Indianapolis and Southern Express 6:30 pm New York, Boston and St. Louis Express, daily, s. and r. c 10:25 fW BRIQHTWOOD DIVISION. Daily 6:40 am....... 4:4opm Daily 10:45 am 6:30 pm Daily 11:35 am 10:25 pm Daily 1:55 pm. == —: Chicago, St. Louis A Pittsburg. Depart—Eastern Mail and Express, daily... 4:00 am New York, Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore and Pittsburg Express, daily, 5..„ 4:30 am Dayton and Columbus Express, except Sunday 11:00 MR Richmond Accommodation 4:00 m New York. Philadelphia, Washing- ' ton, Baltimore and Pitt*bur' Express, daily, s.,h 4:55 pats Arrive l —Richmond Accommodation, except Sunday 9:40 am • New York, Philadelphia Washington, Baltimore aud Pittsburg Express, daily ...11:45 mm Columbus aud Dayton Express, except Sunday 4.35 pm Western Mail and Express, daily.. 9:40 pm New York, Philadelphia, Washington, Baltimore and Pittsburg Express, daily 10:20 pm CHICAGO DIVISION VIA XOMOMO, P., 0. * ST. L. R. *. Depart—Louisville aud Chicago Express, p. c 11:15 am Louisville and Chicago Fast Express. daily, s 11:00 pm Arrive—Chicago and Louisville Fast Express, daily, s 4:00 am Chicago and Louisville Express, p. c. 3:35 pm Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St. Louis A Chicago. CINCINNATI DIVISION. * Depart—Cincinnati and Florida Fast Line, daily, s. and c. c 4:00 am. Cincinnati, Rushville and Columbus Accomodation 11:33 aaft Cincinnati, Washington and Florida Mail, p. c 3:50 pnx Cincinnati and Louisville Accommodation, daily 6:55 pm Arrive -—lndianapolis Accommodation, dailylo:ss am Chicago and St. Louis Mail, p. e.. .11:45 am Indianapolis and Lafayette Accom. 4:50 pm Chicago and St. Louis Fast Line, . daily, s. and c. c 10:45 pm CHICAGO DIVISION. Depart—Chicago, Peoria and Omaha Ex.... 7:10 am Indianapolis and Logausport Ex... 7:10 am Chicago Fast Mail p. c 12.05 pm Lafayette Accommodation 5:05 pm Indianapolis and South Bend Ex.. 5:05 pm Chicago. Peoria and Burlington Fast Line, dailv, s.. r. c 11:10 pm Arrive—Cincinnati and Florida Fast I^ne, daily, c. c. ands 3:30 am Lafayette Accommodation 11:15 am South Bend and Indianapolis Ex..11:15 am Cincinnati and Washing’n Mail.p.c 3:35 pm Cincinnati and Louisville Accom.. 6:40 pm Logausport and Indianapolis Ex., - 6:40 pm. Indiana, Bloomington A Western. PEORIA DIVISION. Depart—PacifioEx. and Mail.daily.s. and r.c. 7:50 am Kansas and Texas Fast Dine. r. c.. 5:10 pm Burlington & Rock Island Ex- * press, daily, r. c. ands 10:50 pm4> Kansas City Lightning Express.... 12:00 m Arrive—Eastern and Southern Express, daily, r. c. ands 4:00 am Cincinnati Special .4020 Atlantic Express and Mail, r. e 3-45 prat Express and Mail, daiiy, s. andr. c. 8:30 pm EASTERN DIVIBrON. Depart—Eastern Express Mail, daily, s., r. c. 4:20 am Atlantic Express, c. c 4:05 pm Night Express, daily, s. andr. e... 9:oopn\ Arrive—Pacific Express, daily, s. and e. e.. 7:20 am Western Express, r. o 4:45 pm Burlington and Rock Island Express, daily, b. and r. c 10:20 pm Vandalia Line. Depart—St. Louis Mail 7:3oara Fast Line Express, dailv. p., h..... 12:00 m Terre Haute Accommodation 4:00 pm Western Fast Mail, daily 10:00 pm Western Express, daily, s 31:00 pm Arrive—Eastern Fast Mail, daily 3:45 am Eastern Express, daiiy 4:15 am Terre Haute Accommodation 10:00 am Cincinnati and Louisville Fast Line 3:35 pm Day Express, daily 4:40 pm Indianapolis A St. Louis. Depart—Day Express, daily, c. c 7:25 am Limited Express, daily 1 * :55 am • Mattoon Express, daily 5:00 pm New York aud St. Louis Express, dailv. s. and c. c 10:50 pm Arrive —New York aud Boston Express, daily, c. e 3:45 am Local Passenger, p 10:00 am Limited Exnress, daily 3:35 pm Day Ezpress, c. e., daily 6:25 pm Jeffersonville, Madison & Indianapolis. Depart—Southern Express, daily, s 4:15 am Louisville and Madison Express... 8:15 am Louisville and Madison Mail.p.c.dy 3:50 pm Louisville Express 6:45 pm Arrive—lndianapolis Express 9:45 am Indianapolis. Bt. Louis and Chicago Express, daily, p 10:45 am New York and Northern Fast Express 6:45 pm St. Louis. Chicago and Detroit Fast Line, daily, s 10.45 pm Louisville, New Albany A Chicago. (Chicago Short lane.) Depart— l Chicago and Michiean City Mail . ..12:10 pm Frankfort Accommodation........ 4:45 pm Chicago Night Ex., daily, s 11:15 pm Arrive—lndianapolis Night Ex., daily, s 3:10 am Indianapolis Accommodation 10:00 am Indianapolis Mail 3:40 pm Wabash, St. Louis A Pacific. (Indianapolis, Peru & Chicago Division.) Depart—Michigan Dity and Toledo Mail. 7:15 am Detroit. Toledo & Michigan City Express 2:15 pm ♦Detroit and Toledo Ex., daily, s.. 7:10 pm Arrive—Detroit, Toledo & Michigan City Express, s 1:40 am tDetroit& Toledo Express, daily. 8.10:45 am Detroit, Toledo and Michigan City Mail 6:15 pur *Rleeper daily except Sunday to Fort Wayne; to Detroit. tSleeper from Detroit Indianapolis A Vincennes. Depart—Mail and Cairo Express 7:15 nk Vincennes Accommodation 4:40 pm Arrive—Vincennes Accommodation 10:45 am Mail and Cairo Express 6.30 pm Indianapolis, Decatur A Springfield. Depart—Decatur and Peoria Through Mail.. 8:30 aa&Montezuma Accommodation, daily except Sunday 6:00 pae f Fast Express, daily, r. c. and ■ 10:50 pa Arriv* —Fast Express, daily, r. e. and 5.... 3:50 am Montezuma Accommodation, daily except Sunday 8:50 mm Through Mail 5:30 pm Cincinnati, Hamilton A Indianapolis. Depart—Cincinnati, Dayton and Toledo, d’y. 4:00 am Cincinnati. Dayton, Toledo and New York 11:00 mm Cincinnati, Dayton, Toledo and New York Express 3:50 pm Oonnersville Accommodation 5.30 pm Arrive—Connersville Accommodation 8:30 am Cincinnati. Peoria and St. Louis... 11:48 am Cincinnati Accommodation 6:00 pm Cincinnati .Peoria and St. Louis, d’y 10:45 pas Cincinnati, Wabash A Michigan Railway. (Over the Bee-line.) Depart—lndianapolis and Grand Rapids Ex. 4:00 am' Michigan Epress . 11:05 am Louisville and Wabash Epress.... 3:50 pm Arrive—Wabash and Indianapolis Express..ll:3o am Cincinnati and Louisville Express. 1:55 pm Indianapolis and St. Louis Express. 10.25 pat