Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 28, Number 27, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 July 1880 — Page 8
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8 THE INDIANA STATJE SENTINEL; VTEDNESDAY, JUL.Y 7, 1880.-
FORNEY FOB HANCOCK.
111.4 Kron for Oiling III Support t the Democratic Ticket. From Progress, July 3 There ara many deathless days in the American memory; umbog them the attack upon the American fag In Charleston harbor on the 12th of April, I SGI; the battle of Gettysburg on the lit, 2d and 3d days of July, 1803; the fall of Richmond on the Oth day of April, I860, and the assassination of Abraham Lincoln on the Ith, day of April, 1SGÖ. No days in fcuraan history ever aroused a more agonizliig solicitude,or closed open more gigantic transaction, or opened a wider vista of human possibilities. Each of these events had s strange and almost providential meaning.-. Each possessed the peculiar quality of conquering in an instant millions of pre j udices. The ball fired at the old flag from Charleston consolidated the North and struck down human slavery. The victory of Gettysburg sited the second great city of the Union from the tlsrnes. The fall of Richmond was the certain ride of the Republic, and the death of Lincoln consecrated his great mission of forgiveness to all. When we come to notice the annale of our civil war, these four events, with the emancipation '. of the tlaves on the 1st of JanTiary. 1S03, will te to the historian like so many planets shedding: light on 11 otherj objects and marshalling the way to the fine lesion and duty of tie patriot. Eichwasa revolution ia itself, affecting the remotest interests and leaving all men in a new condition of thought and seil-eianiicatljn. But none of these tragedies wrought a deeper sensation or gave birth to a more' lasting gratitude than the battle of Gttysbar?, IHSl. Hero, at least, is one of thoje occurrences that can not be easily forgotten. The human race is prone to target. One philosopher says that ingratituds is the badge of ail our tribe; but like all maxims it is nest proved by the exceptions. In this instdncj we can not it we would, and, thank God, we would not if we conli, blot out what that defeat of the Confederates did for the ciiy of Philadelphia. Happily it is not bo long ago as ' to have faded out of our minds. It is only seventeen years since, and it wm a day of such sharp agony nnd such universal terror, and the victory was such an unspeakable relief, that evim the children, now grown to men and women, think cf it as gratefully as the middle-aged and the grandmothers and grandfathers. .It was the single instance m which the fiery blast of war came close to a great Northern metropolis. The Confederates advanced in tremendous fone. Led by their beloved Generai Lee and by his chosen lieutenants, they 6eeined resolved to make a 'at stand in the rich valleys of Franklin and Adams, choosing, as if by instinct, the regions called after two of the mos; precious names in American history. Grant was engaged at the came moment winding his fatal coils around the Southern city of Vicksoarg; but the point moet vital to all at that supreme moment was the field of Gettysburg. What Philadtlphian can ever forget the suspense of those July days? There was not a household that did not throb and thrill b jtwfen hope and fear. There were over 100,Cuu men, thousands of them from Philadelphia and the neighboring towns, and there was not a family that did not tremble fcr its loved ones engaged in that fatal strifo, or that did not shudJer at the advance of the foe who eeemed so near, or that did not fdncy in that advance the loss of the holy cause of the Union. On toe morning of tbe Fourth of July, lSQ'i, I was at the Union League, then on Chestnut street, ceir Eleventh, Philadelphia, in the massive baildicg now occupied by the f irmly of the beloved Matthew Baldwin. The rooms and gardens of tbe lovely mansion were filled tooverrlowicg with pale, anxious men; the streets were full of a silent, waiting crowd; the sidewalks and windows were crowded with women; even the children were awed into silence as their elders discussed in whispers the possibilities of tbe dreadful fight in the green valleys of the Cumberland. Reynolds had been killed fen tte 21 of July, along with thousands of others, and his brother, James L.. came from Lancaster, in this State, bowed down with terror at the sacrifice, and bumble women were fobbing over the dispatches already recording their losses. It was a day of tar and de?pir. I bad been nres ent at other scenes of sorrow, but noibicg like this Fourth of July. 1SÜ3. The Commandant of this Department was General J. A. J. Dana, and his office was in Girard street, near Twelfth, and I held a position as a consulting member cf his staff About noon of that Saturday I saw his tail form
croäairg inesmui street to me league, ana when Li?i eye caught mine, I saw hs was iu tears. He handed me a dispatch from Gen eral Meade, just received. I opened and tried to read it, but could not. I saw enough to feel that we were saved. And soon the good news became universal. Then all hearts exploded with ioy over tbe deliverance. It was a wonderful sight, that sudJea change from grief to gratitude Some ehed tears; rome shouted in ioy; old foes became friends, and even infidels joined in the spontaneous prayers of the preacher. Robert Browning's thrilling poem describing the man who carried the '"good news to Ghent," which broke the siege and filled the bouIs of the Flemish with a deep thanksgiving to God, might have been paraphrased in honor of the messenger who brought such happiness to oppressed and tern had and despairing Philadelphia. Who won that great fight? Who saved Philadelphia from fire and spoil? Who drove back the enemy and Baved us from a fate of which the burning of Cbambersburg and Carlisle and the forced contributions upon York were intended to be grim prepartions? A brave army of patriotic citizscs, led by three Pennsylvania Generalf George Gordon Meade, of Philadelphia; John Fulton Reynolds, of Lancaster, and Winfisld Scctt Hancock, of Montgomery. Meade and Reynolds are both gone. Meade died on the 6th ol November, 1372, in the bouse presented to his wife by the people of Philadelphia, afterward supplemented by a contribution ut $100,000 from the same source. Reynolds was killed in battle on the 21 of July, and is buried at Lancaster. Hancock is today tbe Democratic ctndidate for rrcaident of the United States. I do not stop to debate the other considerations tbat enter into this vital isine; the grave considerations tbat demand the release of my dear native State from the desperate men who in the last ten years have coldly crushed out the pride of our people and placed nnder the iron heel of brutal Inferiority the hopes of our youth and manhood, making of this fair Commonwealth a vast political Golgotha, and of our proud oity of Philadelphia an offensive roost for the moat desperate and vulgar mercenaries since the black days of Tweed and Tammany in New York. I do not stop to debate these consid erations now. It is not the time. But this is tbe time to open to the common mind our pledged word to the last of the great soldiers who placed us ander an obligation that we hastened to avow, ; and repeated over and over again. My own pledge binds me as my own note of hand. In law if it had been tinned to the promise to pay a money debt I could be held by it, end my estate if I failed to pay it. In morals it is as solemn as if I had gone before a magistrate and sworn to abide by it. And what is true of mysslf is equally binding upon others. What my fixed judgment, private and public, is of the men who saved the American Republic, I have not concealed. It is a passion that grows stronger the more I see the value of what hs been saved to ourselves and to all mankind. I feel it as the rescue of human freedom for the ages to come, -1 prize it, this overthrow of the rebellion, as the best blessing to the South which made that rebellion. .1 cherish it because the more I ponder the prioeleea value of the enormous destiny so saved, the more eager I am to tonvince the South that they must aid to perpetuate it I mm mJ j ue fcXtny C RjuhlicLJ
who will vote for General Hancock for these reasons; only one of many of the oldest Re publicans of thlsctty. who call upon me to any tbat tbey would be as Hamad of thenBel VfS if, after their words of Draise and thanksgiving for the eitvution of . Philadelphia from fire and Rebel contributions in 1S03, they should now vote against tbe man who did the most of the work. Generil Garfield is a good man, . but we owe him nothing compared to the debt to Hancock. When told tbat to vote for Hancock is to vote for a Democrat, I reply that the partition between the two parties is Very thin. The only point upon which we may be said to differ is protection, and that can not be said to be a very strong one when Hancock comes from the great tariff County of Mont gornery. Pa., and all -his friends are open advocates of protection, while Garfield was elected a member of tbe Cobden . Club in London, the great free trade headquarters in England, becauM cf has rather bold sympathies with the Western enemies of Pennsylvauia interests-
Mrs. Ooveraor Williams. Richmond Correspondence Cincinnati Gazelle. The wife of Governor William whose death occurred on .Sanday, the 27th nit, wes scarcely known beyond the immediate vicinity of her home. Sue did not visit Washington when her husband was in Congress, and since his election as Governor she ha3 cot been at Indianapolis. Only once or twice during his thirty-three Legislative years did she accompany him to the Capital, and then her stay was short. Bat by those who knew her sue will be remembered as one of the kindest, most patient and generous of her tex. Sue sterns to have devoted all her days to incefsent work for her family and friends. It wai forty four years eg that she and her husband moved into the home now occupied by the family, and as the wife of an energetic farmer and the mother of a Iari family, she was oblige 1 to rise early and work late. At one time ehe bearded eight hired men, and did the work alone. Coupled with this was tbe care of an increasing family. Yet she found time to visit tbe sick and to help the pojr. It is said of her that for more than forty years no one in the neighborhood needed assistance that she was not among the first to render it. S tie was known aa an excellent cook and model housekeeper. The family's stockirgs and mittens were of her own knitting, and the cirpeta upon the floor came from her own loom. She never assumed to be what she was not a plain, country woman, loving her home, and living for her family and friends. As a member of the Methodist Cburcb, she was faithful and generous, and as a wife and mother, she sought influence only by the force of a confiding and holy life. At the time of her death she was in her seventy -fourth year, being two years tbe senior of her husband, with whom she bad lived for half a century, and by whom ehe had hod seven children. Her maiden name was Nancy Huffman, her parents being Penn?ylvanians, prooably of German descent. The 2'exicwi Veteran and General flancock. A Washington special of July 3, says: ' "A regular meeting of the National Association of Veterans of the Mexican War was held here to night. This Society was originally formed without regard t3 party politics. Tonight a preamble and resolutions were aiopted declaring that the time bad come for a change of policy. Leading Republican Senators and Representatives are charged with having prevented the claims of the Mexican veterans to be placed on the pension rolls from confederation in Congress. The preamble continues: V,A leading Republican Senator who presided over the Republican Convention at Chicago offered a a proviso to a bill before the ncuats tüat betöre the Mexican veterans shall be pensioned, they snail first make oath and prove themselves paupers, Self-respect ar.d the common Instincts of manhood, therelore, require of us that we should combine our influence and endeavor to enlist laoji ciiinc by earnest appeal the ympatüy und aid of our fellow soldiers of all wars in which the country has ever been engsged, which have a common heritage In the glory aud jrosrity of the Nation to properly rebuke this arrogant party, grown insolent by overfeeding at the public crib, at the polls in the forthcoming contest for political supremacy: therefore. "Resolved, That we recommend our kindred associations of Mexican veterans throughout the Unfed states to organize campaign clubs, and coulially invite the ex-soldiers of the Republic in tlio North and in the south, in the East and In the West, to enroll their names witn us, and rally around tu-j old flag In a grand army of American warsmen in support of the nominee of the Democratic party for tne Presidency, General Winfield Scott Hancock, a gallant cold le rand statesman, in whom every patriot who ever bore arms in defense of what he honestly deemed to be right, may. with confidence, nope to find a frieud and wisa counsellor." CHITTENDEN'S SUIT. How General Garfield Appears in Court. New YomSun.l Georgs R. Chittenden was the agent or lobbyist who procured for DeGolyer fe McClellan, of Chicago, their contract to lay wooien pavements in the streets of Washington. The pavement was rotten, but the profits were enormous. Of these profits Chittenden claimed 23 per cent, or about $100.000, for bis share in the job. But Da Golyer t McClellan, who bad cheerfully paid James A. Gat field his "fee" of $5,000. refused to pay the larger sum demanded by the agent, and Chittenden brought suit egainstthemin the Cook County Courts. f h contractors did not dispute Chittenden's services. Through their counsel, exSanator Doolittle, they eel up a peculiar defense that Chittenden's claim was void and against public policy, because be bad obtained tbe contract by improper influences, having bribed Gaihsld, the Chairman of the Committee on Appropriations. Tbe payment of I.OOO to Gurfield, it was held, was not for "the arguments of aaid Garfield as a lawyer, tut for his infinence as a member of Congress hsvlog power over the appropriations to be made." The plaintiff, Chittenden, through his counsel, Emory A. Storrs, demurred to these pleas. The defendants joined in the demurrer, and on May 14, 1375. ex-Senator Doolittle submitted the following points to Judge Far we 11 of the Cook County Circuit Court: The p'.eas are good. They set out in substance that the oon tract was obtained by the plaintiff of the Board of Publio - Work of the District of Columbia by improper influences; that the contract waa in part to tne amount of 50, OX) square yards upon its face, contingent upon a future appropriation to be nrvue by Congress; that the plaintiff employed James A. Garfield, then being a member of Congress and Chairman of tbe Committee on Appropropnatlona of tne House of Representatives, agreeing to pay him a contingent tee of 15,00.', provided he would obtain the said contract of the Board of Public Works; that by his Influence and persuasion he did procure the same, for which he received the sum of Sö.üUO; that afterward a blU was reported from the Committee of which he was Chairman, an did pass the House, and pass Congress, and become a law, appropriating the sum of 5l.-ll,tx0 out of wnlch the payment under said contract could be paid for by said Hoard of Pubiic Works; that the plaintiff and the defendant and the said Garfield and the members of said Board of Public Wor k. well knew at the time of his haid employment, and at the time of his service lu procuring said contract,' that said Garfield, from his official position, did and would have a potent Influence in procuring the passage of sueü appropriation to carry said contract Into effect, by said Board of Public Works, and that by means of the premises the said eontract was. In fact, obtained by improper influences, against public policy, and is void. It is no sufficient answer to say that Garfield waa at the same time a memb- r of the legal proressiou. His being a member of Congress at the same time, any employment as counsel upon a contingent fee, or otherwise, to obtain a contract from a board or nnbllo officers, dependent upon the future action of Congress to fulfill, is against public policy and void. That tne plaintiff Chittenden well knew and intended that the influence of General Gar ll-l-. Z3 a xsmSer of (,'onsresa w jq be used
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in procuring too contract, raiuer uian uw arguments as a counselor at law, is evident from his letter to the defendants, set out in their f aoeAlal p et, in which be says "The influence of 4enirai uarneia Has Dea weurra Dy yesterday, last night and to-day'a labors. He carries the purse of the United States the Chairman of the Committee on Appropriations and is the strongest -man In Congress, and with our friends my demand is to-day, not less than one hundred thousand moretwo hundred in alt. Everything la In the best aliHpe, the connections complete, and, 1 have reasons to believe, satisfactory. I can hardly realize tbat we have General Garfield with us. It la rare, and very gratifying. All the appropriations of the District come from bim.A Judge Farwell Otrruld the demurrer, sustained tbe pleas, and held that tbe contract was agatnat public policy and void, because it had beed corruptly obtained. A HIGH IIOBSE INDEED. An Ohio Monster Measuring Eighty-One Inches la Height. INow York Times. June 2S' ' There arrived In this city 'yesterday by way of tbe Hndaon Iliver Railway from Albany and was conveyed directly to his headquarters in Houston street, what is believed to be the largest horse that has ever fallen nnder the eye of 1 anatomist or jockey a veritable ' equina monster beside which animals ot ' the ordinary, height are as dwarfs. The animal was bred in Ohio, from our native draught stock, and certainly no region except one of the limestone bases could have developed such an enormous equine anatomy. His registered height is twenty hands and one incb, or eighty one inches, being a foot taller than an average man. His weight is stated to be 2,450 pounds: but all these points will probably be verified tday by competent veteri" ncry surgeons. As standing in the stable the color of the animal appears to be a uniform dark bay, withont spot or blemish. It should not be judged that this height, al thoush extraordinary, is not altogether anptecedented in horses. At the Centennial exhibition In Philadelphia, in 1S7G, a ipan of horses were placed on exhibition, each of which was eighteen hands and on 9 Inch high. The animals were bred in Canada, and became the property of a Philadelphia brewer when the exhibition closed. A eterinary surgeon in this city formerly owoed a hone that was nineteen hands and one inch high a giant in anatomical structure but he found it im possible to correct a certain tendency to emaciation, and the creature was nselVss for draught or road. The late Pope Pio Nono was the fortunate possessor of one of the largest horses in Europe an am mal twenty-eight hands and one inch high, and the Hanoverian stables formerly contained another of nearly equa height, gj far as can be judged the Onio monster is in perfect health and physical condition, and may live to a good old age. notwithstanding his abnormal proportions. One of the famous European animals mentioned was living at thirty-eix years of age a longevity not often attained by torses. The monster in Houston street Is accompanied by his owner, but it is understood that be has been secured by Barnum at a price of $1,000 and will presently be plat, ad on exhibition. What Hancock Will Do. New Haven Register. The name of Hancock is first on the Declaration of Independence. The name of Hancock is first in the hearts of all true Democrats. The name of Hancock is first in the hearts of all independent American citizens. The name of Hancock is the name that will aweep the country from one end to tbe other. Never has a nomination fallen on the country so favorably. Two Anniversaries. I New i ork Sun, July 3. To day is the anniversary of the third day at Gettysburg, when General Winfield S. Hancock received a wound while heeding the Union column which decided the battle. That was seventeen years ago. It wss just twelve years ago, within a few days, that General James A. Garfield received a check for $i20 from Oakes Ames, tte corrupter of Congressmen. Which Com in a nils the Cheer? From one of Garfield's Foldiers. "Not Mission Ridge, but Gettyoburg, Commands a Nation's cheer; 'lis Hancock riding to tbe front And Garfield to the rear." Fale Reasoning. Sappofe a machine should fait to perform its work, and tbe owner, instead of trying to ascertain the cause of failure and remedy it, should conclude to run right aloDg, and argue that as tbe machine had heretof ore come around all right it would soon be so aain. I( a general and permanent breakdawn ensued could anybody be blamed but blmselt? Now, precisely this way do people set and argue when the "human machine" Is out of order. When tbe liver is "torpid'' and bowels constipated every one knows that Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Purgative Pellets afford prompt and permanent relief. Yet some guess the "mscbine" will come around all right, and do nothing. Could any system of false reasoning be more pernicious? Suppose the blood be out ot order and there be pimple, ulcers or running sores with Bcrofnlous tumors, swellings and general debility, and those thus affected should refuse to use Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery, gut säicg that the blood would purify itself, could anybody be blamed but themselves if a general and permanent break-down ot health ensued? No remedy yet known equals the Discovery in curing all scrofulous, throat, bronchial and lung diseases. Sold by druggists. Don't Tay More. Ten cents will buy a sample (two doses) Wells' May Apple Pills; best anti-bilious cathartic, liver pills. Don't Die on the Premises. Aak druggists for "Hough on Rats." It clears out rats, mice, bedbugs, roaches. Only fifteen cents per box. 1 Brain and Nen e. Wells Health Rene wer, greatest remedy on earth for impotence, leanness, sexual debility, etc ; $1 at druggists'. Iled Dugs, Roaches, Rats, cats, mice, ants, etc.. cleared out by "Rough on Rats." 15 cent boxes at drug gists, A Sure Thing. Chapin's Buchupaibs quick,' complete cure for gravel, stone, kidney, bladder and all urinary affections, $1. Bilious People. Headache: 10 cents buys all you want, a package. Wells' May Apple Pills at druggists. Easy but sure and thorough. "Rough on Rats." The thing desired found at last, Ak druggists for Rough on Rats. It clears out rats, mice, roaches, bed-bugs, etc 15 cent boxes. Skinny Men, Wells' Health Renewer. Absolute cure for nervous debility and weakness of .the generative functions, $1, at druggists. Don't Buy More Than You Want ' Ten cents will buy a package, two doees. Wells' May Apple Pills, anti-bilious, liver, cathartic. ' .' ' .The Sentinel knowledges the receipt from Messrs. W. J. Morgan A Co,, of Cleveland. O.', a fine life size portrait of General Winfield 8. Hancock. The picture represents General Hancock In the fall uniform cf his rank; and refitcti great credit on the Uthograpbio designers. Tha picture would make an excellent premium for newspaper proprietors.
FINANCIAL AND COMMERCIAL'
TIXAKCIAL. Orrtcn o?m lirotAwiponrs Bshttkbii " TcxeoAT Gnran, July . -. The transactions In the local money market have not ben on a very larje scale since our last weekly review. The demand for loans has mostly been for small amounts, and have always been readily met; and the market Is in an extremely healthy condition, there being no trouble whatever In negotiating nrst-class commercial paper at the usual rates of In terest. . - . . : . . . . . i ... COMMERCIAL. Saturday and Monday were both celebrated by a large number of . our business men, and the markets have, therefore, undergone bat few." changes, i. especially in grain .and provisions, the bulk cf : which trade is transacted on "Change, but as the Board of Trade adjourned over from Friday night nntll to day, that leaves these markets withont any changes worth noticing. There has been somewhat of a better ieellng in the grocery market and prices ruled nrm. The demand for drngs is also good and values on some articles are fluctuating. The dry goods market Is reported quit. There is but little doing in Iron and prices rule steady. Receipts of country produce are amply sufficient to meet the requirements of the trade and quotations remain rather stea'ly. Fruit and vegetables are coming In quite freely now and meet with quick sales, but prices are unsettled. Other branches of trade ruled steady. The following table shows the amount of grain In store in this city at the present time:
Elevator. 5 6 3 3 S Elevator A.. 8, 20.500 16,100 Elevator iJ 8,tj) 40,300 .. sou Central elevator 4,j0 City elevator - ... 3,wu 2;,!H) Elevator D tfjü 4,000 9,000 levator E 3,5uo 5,000 lfidO Total . 23.000 ÖlpJü 31.&IÜ 800 Corresponding day la,n year 6.00 23,(X. 11,000 4 0)0
B alow will be found the receipts and shlpnsaU at this pDlnt for the 24 hoars ending at 12 o'clock to-day:
Receipts Shipped. Flour, bbta............ 10,375 14,5"0 Wnea bu 3!.15() KJ.400 Corn, u liö.oio lw,5tjo Oats, bu 30,0 m oOOO Kye, bu................. 5,830 Barley, bu a.tiiö ... Bran, tons ....... ' m Cornmeal, bbls........ M...MMM 1,2-tO 750 dtaroh, bbls.......M..... too 0t0 flay, tons ! 0 0
THE MARKETS DAILY REVIEW. Flour, Grain and nay. Wheat Prolonged rains have more or less damaged a good portion of the wheat In Central and Southern Indiana and Illinois, and delayed shipments to that extent tbat many sellers for early delivery have been unable to furnish the cereal, and instead of a glut at this point, as anticipated a fortnight since, cash wheat is very scares and it is difficult to fill even small shipping orders. Present Indications, however, promise fine weather for tnis week. Tbe local market la stronger for cash and futures, except for first hair of July, the time being nearly out for that delivery to hold much advantage over the month. Bales of new No. 2 red, ca-h, at 'JTc, ami same b'd for more. Seaboard markets are lVo lower on July. hlcago,2$c higher July, ljc August. Flour We quote: New process, tS2XS ?5; fancy, 5 50 j 5 75; family, (1 2 i& 4 75; lo w grade, Wheat The following were closing quotaUonsMUcuui aoarai B'd Asked. ltO No. 2 red, cash, old-MM No. a red, cash, new-.. tales. t7 No. a red, July, new. HI 9S 75 No. 3 red, July first half. No. 2 red, August No. 2 red, August first half.......... H6jected U ii mere U&nt able txirn i Eld. Asked. White, No. 2. White, No I Yellow...-. High mixea Mixed. oan.... 37 eeea 5 37 35 35 '6i July August........... ....... R-jcCted ....... Unmerchantable... Oatsöl 80 33 31S Aaked. Bid No 2 white.. Mixed Mixed, August -. 20 23 20 White, August - -. Rye No. 2 nominal at 50c. Bran lk "j9'i 50 per ton. Hay Choice timothy 112 0012 50 per ton for small bales, tight pressed; good timothy, large bales, 110 C0JU (JO. The Provision Market Is nominal. We quote: Dry sal t Meats Short ribs held at 17 03 ;thoaIders held at Si 50. Lard Prime ateam held at 17 0C. Sweet Pickled Meats Mama Uj9c, according to average. Karly Vegetables and Fruits. Peaches Small arrivals of Hale's early met ready sale, but tho greater portion of receipts are vry Inferior, aud In some Instance do not sell for enough to pay expressage. It takes a very desirable peach to bring UOc per onethird bushel box. We quote lair to choice 40 c75c per ene-thlrd busuel box; extra tüc per oue-tuird bushel. Pears-Bring fl 00(31 50 per one-third bushel box. Plums Wild goose, choioe $5 00(30 00 per stacd. Blackberries Light receipts this morning met a good demand, and some extra lots brought 5 0U, but at noon tbe supply was ample and prices receded to former figures. We quote extra ii 00 per stand; common 01 50 Qi lu per stand; Lawtons ti G0'g2 2j per twenty-rour quart crate. Huckleberries Market duU. Fresh In good condition II 00 A 1 25 per drawer; UWi 5oper bushel. Raspberries Season about over. Black selltner ii SK !" 7 tit I nvr ut anri "Currants Strictly fresh 11 25Q1 50 per drawer ; lo wo uo per stand. Cherries Fair demand; Murtllo, strictly fresh, good color, CöüOO w per stand. Uoosoberrlea Slow at Si 00 per stand. Ureen Corn 15c per dozen. Watermelons Fair arrivals; 120 00925 00 per 100. The market Is fairly supplied with home grown of all but tomatoes. Cabbage Choice sound 81 50 per bbL Cucumoers 2U92c per do. Onions 25c per dos bunches. : String Beans Choice 7cc31 0) per bushel. No sale for shipped. Tomatoes In good supply; choice sell at "JcJl 00 per one-third bushel box. New Potatoes 200 per bbl. The Produce Market . Apples We quote: New apples at SOAöOo per one-third bushel box. Beans Choioe clean navy, II 80Q1 60 per bu; Clean medium, II 253160 per bu. Beeswax 20(92c per lb. Butter We quote choioe selections country at 103120 per lb; choice dairy, 2ug22o per lb; Inferior 60 per lb. Cider Ware's new clarified selling at S3 per barrel of 40 gallons. Cranberries Cape Cod, ÜOßll per barrel Eggs Shippers are paying bo; selling at So per üo from store.--Fuei Anthracite coal, per ton, 17.00; Pittsburg coal, per ton, 15 00 ; crushed coke, per ton lie; coke, per bu,12c; b'ock coal, per bu, 14c in car lots, lie ; Youehogheny, St) 60 per ton. Feathers Prime live geese buying at 40c; mixed geese and duck 2uot25o; old feathers, 1 350, according to condition. Foreign Fruits We quote: Layer raisins new, 12 W; loose Muscatel raisins, new, S2 00; London layer, old, 12 00; new, S3; currants new,6K37oper lb. .!.',.. oreaso Deaiara are buying white at fic; brown, 0. - . Kidei Green hides, 6310c ; green kip. Teals, 10c; green calf, 13c; green salted hides, SMo; green -aeJted kips, lOHo; green salted alt, lAc: dry flint hides, 12914es dry salted hides, luetic ; damaged, grubby or bull, two-thirds of tha above prices ; sheep suns, 40o91 25,
Honey "We quote new at I832O0 per lb In cases of 25 to 50 lbs. -' Poultry Live turkeys, 5c per lbl ducks, 12 35 per dox; live fowls, hens, 12 S per do j r 00 Vers, Ii 75 per dos ; geese, fall feat hered. H bü psr dos; young enlckene, S3 6034 W per dox. Bass Cotton, mixed, ljo per lb; wool Kc per lb. ' . ' Ths Dry Goods Market.-
Brown Sheetings and Shirtings Atlanta LaurelHUl,7e: Granville L L, 7y4c; Eastern sundards,9c: Pepperell 10-4, 28c; PepperellE. 9c; Pepperell R, 8to; PeppereU O, He; Pepper 11 N,7)io; Lancaster A., : ic ; Lancaster B, tte; Lancaster S.SHo. Eleached Shirtings Amoskeag 4-4, lie; Fruit of Loom, ll4c; Bay Mills, lOJc: Hope, lOo; Lonsdale, loo; Lonsdale cambric. ISHc; MasonvUle,HV; Wamsutta, Uc; New York Mills, 13Sc j pride of West, 12$c ; PeppereU 10-4, 3jc: PeppereU -4, 25; PeppereU -4, 2öo; PeppereU Paper Cam biice MftUTllle, Se: 8.8. A Sons, 7c;Masonviile, 7o; Warren, Vo; high colors lo higher; seconds, lc lower. Prints Cbcbeco, 8o;i Hamilton, 7c; Pa eine. Sc; Arnolds, 8o; Conestoga, Kc; Gloucester, Jie; Simpson, 7c; plain black, 7Se; Washington, 6V;c; Spragnes, ic; Southbrldge, 7c; Freeman's. 6c; Harmony, 5j;c; shirting prints. eVtj'iHC Bags r ran Hin vllle, 123 50; Blark A, S25: Otter Creek, 120. Osnaburgs Six ounces, 9o; eight ounces, 10c. Corset Jeans AndrosoogglnOc ,-Canoe River, 874c: Indian Orchard, 8c; Rock port, 8)40; Laconia.tte: Suffolk, 7c ; Naumkeag sateen, loc; Peonot, ScTicks Conestoga, ex., 18c; do 7-8 16o; Gold Medal, .4-4, löc; CCA, 7- 15Kc; CT, 4-4, löc; Lewiston, 4-4, lue, do 32-lnoh, ltc; do 30-Inch, 15o; Hamilton D, lijc. Stripes Amoskeag, llvo; Hamilton, HMo; Sheridan, Sc; Mechanics, 7ic; Yeomans, lie; Washington awning, 17c. Spool Cotton J. P. Coats, 55c : Clark's John Jr., 55c; Clark's O. N. T., öäc; Green k Danie. 80c; Eolyoxe, 2734c; SUribrd's, 27o. Jeans Home-made, X7&42tc; Eastern 10 Ö40C. The Drag Market. calomel, cochin HÖCC481; copperas, bbls. lb. lV4'c; copperas, kegs, lb, 2c; gum opium, lb, Vi OOa 25; Indigo, per lb, 9öc;?31; lioorlc, Calabrlan, lb, 35c; magnesia, carb., 2 ox ib (Jennings), i342c; morphine, 15 51; madder, lb, 12(1 4c. Oils Castor, best, gal, 83c9jo ; aweet,90c.a ji 75;oilve, gal, 91 733 50; sperm, gal, 1 io; bcrgamot, lb (Sanderson's), 13 501 75; easia. lb, 11 40; lemon. lb (Sanderson's), 3 50(31 75. Quinine, P. A W., o, ti OV33 10: clnchomdla, per or, 11 15( 1 20; rosin, bbl, 13 75( 50. Soap Castile, Fr. 9Ql2c. American bicarbonate soda, per lb, SVHic; soda, bicarb, English, casks, lb, 5c; soda, sal, lb. 2 O3o; soda-ash, lb, 4(a4c ; salts, Epsom, lb, HQ 4c ; sonff per case ; 4 do bottles, Scotch, S3 50 per doz, per lb 65c; snuff, Garrett's, pack, gross. 81S'313 50; pnuff, Garrett's, per case of 4 doz, 115 60,316; brimstone, by the bbl, 3lc per lb; flower sulphur, lb, 4?5c; saltpeter, commercial, lb, &j10c; saltpeter pure, lb, 15C18c ; turpentine, bbls, gal, 50c ; turpentine, cans, gal, 56c; Venetian, red. Eng., bbls, lb, 3c; enetlan.red. Eng. kegs, lb, 3ii 4c; Iodine, Vi 5031 75; iodide potassa, 14 75; cloves, 45350g; rhubarb, powdered 113125. Lumber. We quote as follows : Timber, Joist and Scantling 10, 12, 14 and 18 feet lonz, 118 on; 18 feet, IIS 50; 20 feet, 9.7 50 ; 22 feet. 113 50: 24 reet. II ft). Common Boards and Fencing No. 1 common boards. 117 50; No. 2 do, lltfiw; cull boards, 113 50; No. 1 fencing, SIS 50; No. 2 do, 916 50; cull fencing, 814. Stock Boards No. 1, 12 Inch stock boards, 12, 14 and 1 feet. 81 00: No. 2 do, 817; No. 1 do, surfaced one side, 520 uO. Flooring, Dressed and Matched Clear flooring pine, S. 00; B de, 828 00; C do, 822 50; common flooring, 12 to 16 feet, 821 00; No. 1, poplar flooring, face measure, 127 50: No. 2 do, S22 oO. All pine flooring measured by count. Biding No. 1 siding, pine, 119 uo; No. 1 do. poplar, 815; No. 2 do, 817 U0; No. 2 do, pine, 8181)0; No. 3 do. S15 50; fencing siding, 11200. Shingles 18 Incb clear, MU0; 18 inch No. 2 or clear butt, 83 Ui; 16 inch clear or star, S3 50; IS Inch extra standard, 83 25; 16 inch standard 8 inch ciear butt, S3 00; 1 Inch shaded 6 Inch clear butt, 82 50; Id inch cull S-i 00. Lath S3 25 The Grocery Market. Ooffde We quote. Ordinary, 13!al4o: fair, 15taMHo; Kood. 15HalGc; prune, ltH017c; strktly rrime l'JJQlüc; choice, lSSlSc old Government Java, 3320. Sugars We quote: Wards, 10(3110 : stand ard A, 105nc;oa:A, lOJilOJc; white extra Ü, SM410c ; Uns yeUow, H'tic ; good yeUow, y9?dC; fair .yellow, a)o; common grades, 8c. Candlee 13913e for 18 o. star. Cheese We quote : Fair, ic ; good, lis ; best full cream, 13c. Molasses and Syrups New Orleans molasses, 4ö(Jc, and syrup 4030G0 per gal. for common to choice. Rice Carolina and Louisiana, 7.n-Sc. Spices Pepper, 17918c: aLsploe, 18(5200; cloves, 4VaV)c; ginger, 2U25e; elnnamoa in mats, 253 100; nutmegs, &JO38105; mace, HXyj 11 10. Soap German and oUve soaps, 695e; rosin. 3i34o. Canned Goods We quote: Tomatoes. 2 lbs, 8120; 3 lbs, 81 50; Peaches, 2 lbs, 81 65Q1 80 3 lbs. 82 25 ; 3 lbs pie peaches, 81 25f?l &5; Blackberries, 81 35,91 40; Strawberries, 81 7&$2; Rasp berries. SI 4031 65; Cherries, red, 81 03i 45; String Boans, 81 2a; Green Peas, Marrofat 8I800I Itf; early June, 81 A),?2 00; Yarmouth Corn.81 86.3I DOjPine Apples,81 50?1 85: Salmon, lib, tlWiii; 2 lbs, 8325; Lobsters. 1 lb, 91 75(4 180; 2 lb?, $3 25; Tumbler Jellies, 90o; Cove Oysters, lib. light weight, 7&80c; 1 lb. fuU weight, 8120; 2 lbs, light weight 81 35; 2 lbs. tall weight, 81 Ü5; Sardines, by the case, 12(9 13c ; Elgin Corn, 52 per doz. Cotton Rope 2'22c: candle wick, 24326c. Woodenware We Quote: Common Duclets . ,82 OOQ 2 20 Fine churns. -.- 8 00(3111 00 12 COtflS 00 Cedar churns., Ash churns Common d rooms... Medium brooms... 8 IXValll 00 1 Sl'H 1 75 2 00(3 2 50 2 604 8 00 6 90 7 10 9 009 8 00(3 7 00(9 1 40(4 2 80 1 254 1 50 Extra brooms. ... Matches, telegrapn runs, jo. i. Tubs. No. 2 Tnbs, No. 8- . Washboards, sine see sseeaaaas Washboards, wooden The Iron Market. Screw and Strap Hinges 7o, according to size. Clevises Meikle's wrought plow clevises 103 13o. Lead PI 5&5e; bars 8c. Car-Wheel Iron Cold-blast hecla 84&30e; cold-blast cottage and bath S335c; cold-bias Shelby 31332c, Bar Iron -iSc. Norway Iron Bars and shapes 6X38c; n allrod 8.910c. Steels English cast 20-fj22c; American 15(9 lBc; extra sites and qualities additional: round machinery 10t312o : spring 10c; Swede blister 8&lCc; American blister 8310c; rolled, lay and toe calk 810c ; hammered lay and toe calk 10llo ; tire, according to size and brand, 7o; plow steel slabs 6Q7c. Shapes extra In proportion to waste in cutting. Cut Nails Nos 10 to bO, 83 25 per keg; smaller alaee regular advance. Horse Shoes Burden's, 85 50; Perkins,' 85 00, and mule shoes 81 higher. . Horse Shoe Nails Northwestern finished, 85 60 for 8s; smaller sixes regular advance. Carriage and Tire Bolts KeSned UtO per cent.: Norway 50 per ceat. Nuts and Washers Qio off manufacturer' lists. : . Iron Harrow Teeth iXc Wool. Prices still lower. Market duU both E as and West. Fine nn washed ,73c ; medium unwashed, 28c; tub washed , ii ; bury wool 5 jlOc less. Miscellaneous Markets. Candles The market rules quiet. We quote Stick candy, 12ai2c; mach, drops, UW4120; kisses 12ll5c : nnt candy, 17&25o ; gum drone, bard, 2oc, ana Arabian gum drops, 1113c; rock candy, 16917c ; lozenges, 18220o; common cle,7o per lb. Lemons, Messina. 88 6038 75, Oranges, 84 50(5 50 per box : Valencia, 8V. Leather Market steady and firm. Wc quote Oak sole at 38(344o ; hemlock sole at24032c; harness 38341c ; bridle 8j4jy0 per dos ; skirting 42,-5440 per lb: French calf 91 151 W per lb; city calf 81(31 25 per lb; city kip 5(90o per lb ; uppor kip 840(i50 per doz. N uts Almonds, soft-shelled, per lb 2392fto ; filberts, 12x9140;- Brazil nuts, 8X0: Naples walnnts, I&4140; Engliah walnuts, 12c; peanuts, red, 6io raw; 0 roasted; white 00 raw; Sc roasted. Oils Are in good request, we quote Linseed, raw and boiled-..-Lard oil, extraLard oil, No. 1 Lard oil. No. i.. Bank oil 50355 TO 65 0 Straits oil jS5 Benzine ............... 12 Castor oll 80Q81 Coal oU, Indiana -legal test OillK 4 Miners' oil JQftrU Lubricating oll..-20O40 Powder and 8hot-W eonote rifle powder at as, and blasting shot at 83 25. Tinners' Supplh at 25 per keg. Patent Market steady aad good demand. We quote: r Rest charcoal tin. I w. 10x14 and 14x20, 18 CO per box; 1 C, 12x12, 88 25 per box: I X, 10x14 and 14x20, 810 00 per box; IX, 12x12 110 per box; 1 C 14x20 roofing tin, 17 60 per box:IC 20x28, 119 00016 SO : block tin, In pigs, 24c ; In bars 23c. Iron 27 B iron ai 80; 27 C iron, tt 60; Moorehead'a galvanised 25 per csnt. dtaoount. Sheet zinc 80. Copper bottoms 34c. Planished ctrperilc. Bolder 15917c. Wire 33 per ent.
4-4, Be: reidemoat 4-4, V; New Hartford 4-4,7o: Trtonr 8Cc; Bartow.eHc; Georgia A,
Alcohol, 12 15a2 25; lum, per lb. 4Vfa5yJc:
, per lb, 75c; camphor, per ib, Sioi3c:
eal, per lb. Boc&ll: choloroform. ner lb.
offllst. Northrop'a sheet Iron roofing: M 10 per aquare.- . .
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. Xew York Live Stock Market. New York. July 5 Beeves Receipts 4.SO0 bead, making 14,350 head ior the week. The opening salfB and extreme ranges of prices were the same as reported last Friday, but the finish was bad, and closing rates were fully 1 p-r head lower; extremes It 75!7 25 lor Texan ; 1 5i(at50for poor to prime natives; t 75.10 for extra natives. Exporters tu-ed ow bead. Shipments to-day 375 bead of live cattle - for the week 2.840 head of Uve eatUe, 6,820 quarters or beef; 11,1 head ot live sheep, L2ö6 carcasses of mutton and 125 dressed hogs; for the last six months 46, head of live cattle 186,033 quarters of beef, 23.053 head of Uve slieep, Kjai carcasses of mutton, 1,851 head of Uve boas and 7,631 dressed hogs. . .. . , , Sheep-Receipt ,000 head, making S3.400 bead for the week. Market weak, with downward tendency, and sales slow at S3 6u35 25 for poofto extra ebeep aud 91 75ft 50 lor southern and western lambs: general sjilee were 14 50 for sheep and 5 75atl 25 for lambs. swine Receipts 6,' head, making 25.7tO bead lor the week. None for sale alive. The Produce Exchange dosed with quotations entirely nominal and the feeling steady and unchanged. Kast Liberty Live Stock Market. East Liberty, ra., July 5. Cattle Receipts since Friday 4.WS1 bead ot through and bUi of yard stock; total for the week it,Q2i head of through stock, and 1.4U head of local, against 8,001 head ot through and l.tigl of local fur the week before. No extra on the market. Trices areas follows: Rood to prime 84 75?J5; fair to good butchers' Ji 2591 70; common and light 8 i 75ati . Hogs Receipts 5,500 bead ; total for the week 11.370, acainst 15,2o the week before; Philadelphias 84 t"u4 70; Yorkers 54 80r4 4.. Sheep Receipts 2,7W head: totl 11.000 head, Againl 22.6U0 head tbe week before; selling slow at fuU last week's prices. Buffalo Live Stock Market. Bctfalo, July 5. Cattle Rtcel pts 3,700 hea3. Consigned through 4i5 cars. The market is hU-ady at last week's prices. Sheep and Lambs Receipts 3,200 head. Consigod through thirty crs. The market 1 (inlet and unchanged; fair to cood western sheep S3 5tQl 25. Larn os 85 60JI5 9u. Hogs Receipts 7,275. Consigned through seventy-three cars. Market steadv aud nncbanged; Vork weights 15&4 oaialit weisUts for export 81 40(4 5; beary and medium situ 4 60; fair ends WJ1 40. 3 If you are Interested In the inqniry TRiich is tbe best Liniment for Man and Ueast? this is tho answer, attested by two generations : the MEXICAN 31 US TA NU LINIMENT. Tho reason is simpie. It penetrates CTcry sore, wonnd, or lameness, to tho very bone, and drives out all Inflammatory and morbid matter. It 44 goes to the root " of the trouble, and never fails to core in doable quick time. Portable Farm Engines. Out U-b H. T x Ii vprA1f rimS t Srirtnf Separator, Co Una Om tte., aad mar a'.w be owl vtih pro2ttodri or Ml I. AY SAW MILLS. Haa ba tharaiuraly tta by tt years us, aad la (be uly Engine in (he W-tra Statut thai r-ceirrd a DIPLOMA aad M Eft Lot HONOR In Ui Said tnai of IbC V.S. Centennial JtlpOälUuB. Chandler & Taylor, Indianapolis, Ind Hill & Nichol, Attorneys. STATE OF INDIANA, Marlon county, ss: In the Superior Court of Marios County, in the State of ludlana. No. 2ö,i18. Room Jto. i. Complaint to foreclose a mortgage. James N. Marsh, assignee of Henry Meyer, vs. Charles Loiiman. John Williams. Anna E. Williams. . , Be it known, that on the 7th day of August, 187, the above named plaint) IT, by his attorneys, filed In the ofllce of the clerk of the SuFerlor Court of Marion county, in the State of ndiana, his complaint against the above named defendants; - and the - said plaintiff having also filed in said clera's office the affidavit of a competent person showing that the residence ot said defendants, Johu Williams and Anna E Williams, w unknown, and that dilgent search and inquiry has been made for them and they can not be found, and that a cause of action exists against said defendants In relation to the foreclosure of a mortgage on certain real et-tate in said county and state aforesaid, and they axe necessary parties to aaid action . , . Now,-therefore, by order of said court, said defendants la.st above named are hereby notified of the filing and pendency ol said complaint against them .and that unless hey appear and answer or demur thereto, atthecallinij of said canse on the 6th day September, 1SS0, the same being the first Judicial day of a term of said court, tobe o?uti and held at the Court House in t-eoityof Indianapolis, on the first Monday in September.l8cit said complaint, and the matters and things therein contained aDd alleged, will be heard and determined in their absence. . DANIEL II. RAXSDELL, Jnlya-Sw. . . Clerk. ANNOTJNOBMEKT. rU OHE who contemplate going to Hot JL Springs for the treatment of syphilis, gleet, scrofula and all cutaneous or blood diseases can be cured for one-third tb cost of such a trip at the old reliable stand. I have been located here for 23 years, and with the advantage of such a long and successful experience can confidently warrant a cure In all cases. Ladles needing a periodical pill can get them at my office or by mall at II per box. Office, 43 Virginia avenue. Indianapolis, Ind. . , ... - DR. BENKKTT, . . Successor to Dr. D. B. EWing. WANTED . ... WANTED An asent for every County in Bouthern Indiana for Hllrs Manual of Social and Business Forms. Address, ANSON GARDNER, 'Indianapolis, room U. Wright Block. . WANTED Agents Llvfs ot the DEMOCRATIC and REPUBLICAN Candida its for . .. PRESIDENT ,. . T . AND - VICE PRESIDENT. Two separate books, S50 pa?e each, steel engravings of all; also, other illustrations; finely bound: printed on good paper; price of eitner In cloth binding, 31.50, In halt library, 12. WUl SELL FAST. Secure territory at once by sending fl each, for prospectus books of the two books, total 12, and naming first, second cr third choice of territory. FIRST COME, yiUST SERVED. Both books are AUTHORIZED BY . - n . ' THE CANDIDATES ' ; - - ' " - - THEMSELVES. LIBERAL COMMISSIONS, fcold only, by our age&ta. " - .? . ; r...FRED ü 'HORTON' A CO., Indianapolis, Ind.
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