Indiana State Sentinel, Volume 34, Number 10, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 April 1888 — Page 7

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY MORNING, APIUL 11, 1888.

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IN THE WORLD OF TRADE. SEW YORK, April 9. Money on call easy at 2 OS pxir cant., ehisliig ofiered at 3. Prini mercantile paper, 3 J 7. Isterling- exchange, actlre ini Crm -wilh actual basiat-M at Sf l.i"li for 6o-Uay bills ami fordiruand. Tha total sale of stocks today were 249,203 ha res. Transactions in the stock market to-day, except for those of the first hour, wre dull, Cuue and unInteresticf , with a general drift toward lower values and accompanied by small and insignificant fluctuations. There was some baying fur fcreyn accouLt, U which was due the advance hown at the opening and what little strength narked tho dealings at odd times, but the liquidations of tb past week were continued, though on a much smaller scale, and of this the bears were quick to take advantage. There was no special pressure noticeable, however, except in Missouri Tacine, Union Pacific, Burlington A. Qttlnoy, and few specialties. The Richmond A West Point steck, however, were a marked exception to the general rule, the hoyicf in them beim fcry od, and early in the y sharp advance were established, which had the effect aUo oi rallying the general list. Tlie pnrebaaea were gene.-ally croditad in the board t the Wee party. The uattal leading shares, lUjaJins, IacVawaana. Wettet n Union ami St. Paul, were active, b t their fluctuations were not important, and vary little foatnre developed. The Optoing salsa under the deaiaad trow the iorelsrnera were made at advances over Saturday's closing ripurea of from V to S par cent., but the bears raided the market immediately, paying speciiü attention to I'oUq PaoiCc and BnriiDton 1 yuiocy, the latter dropping 2S rer cent. The decline was checked quickly, however, and the Richmond t West Point stocks displaved marked strength, but the market t&en became dull and la thea'tornoon the general li-t brake awav from the Kichniond A West Point txrks, aad NerfcAk A Western prafeired slowly settled down until the aalna ot tm morning war completely wiped at and losses in addition scored. A small set-back oocuried in the last hour, but the market Anally close dull and heavy at close to the lowest prices of the day. Almost every thing is lower, though a few fractional advances were made, but Burlinrtoo A Quincjr is down 2, Canada .Sinthern and Wheeling A Lake Krio IV. llock Island I, and the remainder fractional amount. Railroad lxuxls quiet; aales, JS".'1; generally heavy, and closing prices are lower in most instances. Pcnsacola A Atlantic firsts lost 2 at 4, Minneapolis A St. 1-ouis Krsta 3 at 107, Chesapeake A Ohio saiics "A" rose to St, Paul, 1. A 1. extension 2 to 124. tiovrnaieat steady and Grin. Mj!e bonis rerj dull and steady.

V. S. 4s 12-lV. Kansas A Texas IS' '4 V. 5. 4e eanp 124J-, Lake Erie A West. V. S. 4U -..Mr,4, do. preferred TJ. S. 4ks coup nj:.l Lake shore Pacifto ii of 'Vi Lnuivi!!e A Nash 53? I Louisiana stamp 4a. ... 90 luisilk , N. A. A C. :w Missonri Oa U1 McmphU A l'liarIos. .rl Tenn. G settlement. ..I'iO " Michigan Central 77 Tenn. ."settlement... 92 i M., L. .S. A W. Tenn. 3s settlement... 6V., do. preferred.. Canada Southern 2s. 90 , Minrienu. A St. L.... ent. I'ac. ftrsts lis Den. A K. (i. tirsts..12t do. do. 4s. 77 Pen. A R. O. W. brst ft Erie second.. 97 do. preferred 111; "-s Missouri l'aciüc I Mobile A Ohio iNashvilleA Chat.., New Jf-rsav ( ant... .K.iT. Gen. . V.; Norfolk A V. pfd... i i do. du. fib :orthern i 'acme... 21 Mutual Union 6s 91 do. preferred Ts 44 N. J. C lat. Cert. 1'ilM' Chic. liic. Nort h wer; tern 1 1 n;:) . referred 141 lortbern Pae. firsts.-ll I do. p do. seconds.. iful iNew ork Central. lOtA 14 620 M 1? 50 87 i 1H,. Northwestern cons 141 N. V. i A St. L. do. debenture ä. llf I do. prcferre'l Oregon A Trans. Cs.... 96 Ohio A Missls.ijpL ft LAI. M. gen. 3s. CI i do. preferred wt, L. A San Fran lift iOntario A Western... ct. Paul consols.- J23 Oregon Imp ft. P. Chic. A Pae. lsJl Oregt.n Navigation.. Tax. P. Und grants... 4JV Oregon Trans.-on T. Pa. R. H. ex-coup 6S IPacitic Mail t'nloa Pacific nrsts...M4 fl'eoria, IVcatnr A H Vest fhora Vrl PtttsbursAdams Express 135 Pullman Pjlace Car...MH Altan A Teire H 35 do. preferred 70 American Express.107 Bar., Cd. R. A N 25 leilJU ... ............... Kock Island lt9 St. L A Sar. Fran 26-, do. prei'erred ;-, do. first rfd tl-J: r t Canada Pacific Canada Southern.... Central PaciSc Chesapeake A Ohio. do. pfd. firsts da seconds ... 59 49. St. Paul 71 29?.,'. do. preferred 110 1 -St. I"aul, Min. A Man 1(H)' yst. Paul A Omaha. S.V ' 0't An. ti.x.1? Chi wag A Alton 132 'lenn., C, I. A K. 2ßI Chle.. Bur. A u 118 iTexas Purine... .. 2-.1 .. 40 C, St. L. A Pae 12.S Tol. A Jhio pfd do. preierred .T2 , Union Paci1e. S2' CJn., -n. A Cleve 8?4' C S. Express 71 Cleveland A Col 47 .Wabash, St. L. A Pac i:t Pel. A Hudson ..10GV do. preferred 2-1 Pel., Lack. A West....l2: , Wells Vario Express.! Jen. Kio t.ranrte... lv . L . Telegrat ii Tai Eat Tenneasee. . f:'Aro. Cotton Oil 2x', do. 1st preferred., do. 2d preferred-., Erie do. preferred....... . .V itclurado Coal. . 2.1 SHonicstnke . 24 , Iron Silver 10 ...3Ö0 -' a '"" .a 12 . -ii ; j Ontario Fort Wayne I.V.'-,, Quicksilver.. lt. V ort h A len,ier- 34) j' do. preferred.. Hocking Val ....... 18 ,Sutro. Houston A Texas...... 17 iRulwer... 90 Illinois Central m: Kirh A V. Pt ti ?o i., a. a u Clearings and Balanses Tester lay. t7earTncc. .... f 1.M2.2M 9.146.7W 7.470.61 1.241.6H1 .. 2,S:if).K7 9,C77,t'JO Jadwe. 24.2..2 1.4. 1U5 4.31i.li5 1.A4S.W 379,213 Baltimore Psiladelphla ?ew York Boston...... .......... . .... St. Louia..... Ch lea go CHICAGO, April 7. New yremiunj. York exchange was S0o INDIANAPOLIS WHOLESALE MARKET. Thw PrcHluce Market. Fcrs Fresh, per dozen, lc. Bntter Extra country roll, IKS.Tc. Poultry Hens. Sc; spring chickens, ?c: roosters, 4;tnrkeys, Bic ; geese, large, füll feathered, 3c; ducks. 7e. Feathers Prime geese, 35c; mixed and duck, 2rtc. liars 51 per cwt. Waul Medium and quarter blood, unwashed, 27 ? Z'.r; braid and verv cours 2t'?2:te': tine unaaahe l merino, i-.-Jc; tub-wabed, 'a'i)c; buirv and fleece crown, figlOc less. Groceries. Sugars Hard, 7' Jc; standard A, 6 37e ; eoftee X. Ri'rtirc: white extra C, Wi-tVAe; go,."d yellow. 6c; common to fair, 3, -;. Iouie New Orleans, new crop, 3fva.0c; nicdiuin syrnp, St.V; choice, 3SiJt4"c. " Un-Uiraraon to rptxi, 14-aiCc; prime to choice. Lake salt, car Iota, 9c?f. Means, navv, $a!i 2")"; medium. 32 90; marrowfat, i Canned roods Blackberries. It 13(1 2U; peäthes, :UjKiind f2 7-3S; peas, $1 40jl GO: salmon, I pound, Ut 7".; tonrntof, 3-pouud, $1 IÄJ1 40; yucar-com, 10'i 1 at). Paisins towb London layers, new, :l p-rbox; Moscatel double crowa, new, $ 2''fi &1 Pmnea, 4-y4tCic Currants, 75c. Seeds. Shippers' paying prices: Prime clover, $3 50rt 3 60; prime tlotnthy, t2 50,2 70; cxtm cleaned bl'i grass, $11 20; red top, 7i; orchard crass.fi 40: Alaika, So 1U; English blue grass, he. The Provision .Market. a Below are the present jobbing prices: Smoked meats tollable Itrand. Sagar-cnred Hams 2.1 lbs. and over .. 22 lbs. avcraje. 20 lbs. averjiz?. .. 17J-J lbs. averpgo. 15 lb, average 12 lbs. average. 1) lbs. and overBoneless hams California hams 10 to 11 lbs. average 14 to 15 lbs. averag Cottaire hams, 4 to 6 lbs. average EagÜsh-cured breakfast laon,e!rar. EnHsh shoulders light and medium. , Rolled shoulder IriM beef bams.. BacoD Clear sides, lieht or medium weight.. Clear barks, light or medium Clear bellies "Morgan A tirey" brand 10 II v !? iys My. m a "? Haws. Jic lcs than "Beliable;" shoulders and Veakfaat bacon, Vc less than "EellaMc;" Caliteraiana, none at present. Mistmts a XA bboiilders "Porter Brand" triad beef hams D. S. and Pickled Meats English cured, clear sides, unmokel Bean pork (clearl par brl, 2X) Ils Ham or rump pork, par brl. 2'4i lbs 10 8' $18 Oo 14 00. Also in one-hall brls.. containing 1'" lbs , at ball the price of barrels, with 5oc added to cover additional cost of package. J srd Pure leaf, kettle rendered in tierces, rc; half barrels c advance on ;rice of tierces; .V-pouiid ans in PSKpound cases, 'c advanctson price of tiercas ; 20-pound cans in M-pound cas- s, J.4c ad vaure n prioe of tlcree: 0-ih.u-i1 cans, in fl'-iou nd c:es, Jidttnon price of tWcea; 5-roiin.I ran iu oopound eases, advaneecn price of tierces; 5-pound eans in CO-pound cases, advamon nnco of tisree. Indiana Packing Company's Ijrd "Diamond A," In tierces 84r; family lard. ,' Jc; 2 and 10 ponnd can at usual ad ran e on nric of tierces. cmoaea rauage liouna akin, large or small. pIa! Vi Ta ' 7ic; cloth, 7c. COMMERCIAL. Receipt! and shipments for th past forty-eight hours s'aow an increased movement of grain. Local meipta are smaller, thirty-three cars being Inspected sin Saturday noon. Of this but a small part is intended for local ue, therefore it has no effect on our market. The attendance on 'Change was small, and but little spirit In bidding. Wheat Market is dull, with 4c track bid for 3 red and cooler! ngs. Millers say it is hard to get any wheat at prices current, and when they get tho wheat it Is still harder to sell the product, so they re rather indifferent purchasers of small lota. Bids. Vheat No. 2 Med... Eid. When t Jul y. No. 2 l. 4' Kc,,ected.;......S So. s Kd..nu Cotjt La qwtcd off, although den and continues od. Tae wUl? corn buyers report tone country

t'i.-e, tancy, iiiic; goiuen rvio, zu.i Jura, 24;2!ie: Levorin's E. L. ('., roasted, K'V; "Schnnli A K rap' standard, 14-!;c: Arbnckle's. l;A4c. MLscerianeoua (lice. hU:M. Coal' ..il- ?iri4.

offerings, but at prices a point above thorn. They are receiving morn Inquiry for their goods, but they cannot accept them"enly in limited way, as holders of white corn keep their prices Just above a working basis. Indiana yellow ear Is salable at Mg54c; good Illinois about lo luss. Bid. i,lt. No. 1 White 5ti No. 2 Mixed......... 50 No. 2 White - 53 ,No. 3 Mixed 50 White Mixed 52 I No. 4. Mixed TO 1 No. S White . MX S. K. White 55 No. 2 Yellow .VjVfS. F. Yellow 5 No. 3 Yellow ....50 E. Mixed 50 Oats Market is rather quiet, pricas rcmaiuing about the same as on Saturday. BUU. Li'it. No. 2 White xöji'nejectcd. -........30 No. 3 W h i to .May ...Zill No. 2 Mi xed ... . -32la! liar Continues to be in fair request at unchanged prices. Rye No. 62c. Bran, J 10. Hay Choic timothy, $16; no. 1 timothy, $15.25; no. 2 timothy, $13. Receipts and Shipments by Kail Past Forty, eiglit Hours.

j j Hoccipt.Shipin'ts. Flur Barrels. 7ftoj 1.2."0 Wheat liitsliels S,4) ü.o-H) Com . j Bushels ISM.j 5,4u0 Oats j BunIu'Is 2t,7"i al.GeN) Uye Bushels l.JOoj sJ BhtIcv ... ... Bichels a.rtoo1 l.wiO Grain in Store April ?, 188H. I Wheat.) Corn. ats.j live-

Elerator AElevator B Capit.rl Elevator Elevator 1 I. J. i S. Elevator 4,.Wj 9,507 17,W0 57 ,; 14.2C7i 4,5.0; 2,sa,5J,s' 2,007 l..OIH V,IO 13.WJU 2.WW' 1 Total r.... 8l,to2! 61,200 12'.,47 i7ia"it 6K.7SO; 4",Voi 2.P67 t42 Cor. day hunt vear LIVE STOCK MARKET. Uxio.x Stock Yards, lKniA.roLw," April 9, ) Cmakoes, Dockack, Ar. Yardage: Cattle, 20c per head; bogs, 7c; sheep, 5c Commissions: Cattle, 50e per head; calves, 2"c per head; hogs, single deck, $5; double deck, $10; sheep, single deck, $3, double deck, $10; dead bogs weighing undor 100 lbs of no value; 100 ami over per lb; pregnant sows are docked 40 lbs i-aih; stu; s SO lbs. Jrecd: Corn, 51 per bu; hay. SI. 'per lOulbs. Cattlk Ueceipts very Hht. Market stronij at Saturday's prices. The supply is nt equal to the demand. Prime shipping steers of 1,410 to 1.600 pounds . . SI C55 00 Fair to g-Kd shipping steers of l.vw to l.C'Nt poiitüts 4 2."34 00 Fair to ul shipping steers of I,2M to l,:!is pounds 3 754 25 Gnol shipping ! leers of l.luO to 1,2.K) iH.tinds 3 00 Fair shippim; steers of fUO to 1,WJ putiiuls 2 7.)n,:l 25 Prime bei.ers 3 25.l 50 Fair to giMd heifers 2 6ori..1 no Prime butcher cow? 2 75(. 'to Fair to good butcher. Cows 2 0tfji 50 Common cows 1 25,1 75 Prime heavv bulls 2 5($i W Fair to good bulls 1 5w,i2 25 Veals 3 0i.r. 00 Milch cows, calves aid sprtners 20 OOiapJ 00 Hugs Keci'ipts, 275; shipments, 160. There wert not enough lns in to maioi a market. I'rices about 5c hifiher tlian Saturday and close steady. Best heavy .'hipping S 'Jöfii.1? 40 Heavy mixed loads 5 flVi3 20 Choice lijcht, 170 to i!0 pounds 5 1 VLi5 25 l'ins and pnuniiin lihis 4 30y5 00 Sheep No reccipUs of shoep bxlay. The market steady at unchanged prices. IVlinö sheep, Ui ounds and upward $1 75rt5 50 Good sheep, 110 to 100 pounds 4 U0ti4 50 Common to medium suecp 2 30(r:$ 50 Prime spring Iambs 3 Zm 75 Fsir to good spring lambs. 4 ni.4 75 Bucks, per bead . 2 0ti54 00 l.Uewhere. CINCINNATI, April .-Cattie-Iteceipts, 1.13ft; shipments, none. Active and steaciv; common to choice butchers, $2.2.ia4.49; shipplnz. Siikep Receipt. SS; shipments, none. Common to prime. $3.i5.50; choice wethers, Jj.TOaS; lambs steady at 1 (425. CHICAGO, April 9. Cattle Receipts, 7.C00; shipments. 2.C00. Market steady and firm; steers, $3.4Ja 5.0Ö; stockers and feeders S2.3öa3.70: cotvs, bulls and mixed, t!.70a3.25; Texas fed steers $3.304 40. Hons -Receipt. 1S.0CO; shipments. Mmket elronw and 60 hiffhr; mixed, j.l.Sai.Si; heavv. $.i.25a.t.i; licht, aö.lutö.30 ; skips, $5.7öa4.90. Shefp Receipts, 4,000. Market dull and lirm: natives, $ 1. 60u5 ; weslern, 1.75a.10: Texas J3a5; lambs, $5aG.15. ST. LOCIS. April . -CATTLB Receipts, 900; shipments, 200. Market strong. Native steers, 4. 40-. 5.W; fair to good native steers, 4 (4.40; butclierb' steers medium to choice, 3.10a4.20; Storkers and feei'.e rs. fair to (food, 2.1ba3.30; rangers ordinäre to good, J.7Sa4. Moos 1'ceipts, 2,300; shipments, 1.3UC. Market stronger; choice heavy and butchers' selections, a.V30 i, 6.45; packing, medium ti prime, $5.0fiS.S0; light rrades, ordinary to bet. $4.907j.l5. Sbekp Keceipts, 0; shipments, 300. Market steady: fair to fancv,4'. 6.SJ. ' '" KANSAS CITY, April o.-CATTLE-Reeeipta, R.-0; shipments, none; dull but steadv; good to choice cornfea, It.fc i4.ö; common to medl'Jin, f 1.2-i.i I.Vj; ntockers. ti i2.90; feeders, 3-1,3.; cows, r-'J.äo. Hous Receipts, 1,300; shipments, none; fairly active; values steady to strong, and in some cises 5c higher; good to choice, fj.lftcö.a; common to medium, $4.eorff-5.05; skips and pie, $34.. Sheep Receipts, 3,7üU; shipmenu, 1.O-0; steady ; ßood to choice, IH-bO " 5.30; common to uietlium, $i.Mi.a 4.-C KAST LIBERTY, April 8. - Ca TTI.E - Receipts, 1.083: hhinments. 369: markrt lnll. and IS m r.rr from la--l week's prices; 13 ears of cattle shippoj to . ion to-aav. uuos neceipts. s.juu; snipments, 3.RC0. Market active at a decline; Philadelphias, $-".S0; mixed. ,i.40a.V4ö; Yorkers, .S.3Ua5.45; common to fair, J'i.l.iaö.'.'i; pijts, Sl.SOa.V. Fifteen cars of hous hipped to N-w Verk to-dy. SHtCP -Receipts, 3,203; shipments, 2,300. Market linn on good: common and medium, dull, snd 23 to 40c off from lust week's prices. NKW YORK, April 9. Bkf.vf.s Receipts. 3,200, mavii'if lo.boo lor the week. Arrivals included 70 carlouiis lor the market and 118 carloads for slaughterers and exportrcs direct. lUlher former with talvs of pMr to prime steers at ( 4.1IK 4.M; bulls and dry cows i.7Vi3.7V Kxports for the week: 2,lu0 brjvt s a:id9.3S0 quarters of beef. Srkef Receipts, 9,'n-O, m.ikin 2t,4t)0 for the week. Firm and unchuii.ied for good stock: dull and weak for Inferior; extreme for unshorn sheru H.1-' ; unshorn yearhngs, $ 2j"t'.25; clipped sheep. 4.7.V ; spring UmUg 3.50 i.6.a0 each, hous lU.ceitts, 6,670, making 27,100 for the week. Nominallv weak al 6.40.t5.70. MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. l'rodure. CtllCAOO, April 9.-The bulls, who have bad a bard time of it in the provision pit for several months, came to the front to-day in surprisingly good form for ones who have been ca'iled so excesMv el v for margins, and not only turned the table upon the beara. but drove them to cover at a lively rat. OuUidera who let pork severely alone for a long time also sex.t in numerous buying orderx. Many new faces were also In the pit. It u said the Arm which t th recognized heaa of the bull party waa readv to lake tn crsh pork on Hit contracts and pay for It, and exchange 5,W0 barrels of May for an equal quantity of cash at 1.1.80 with the Pacine company. It was rumored that a local bank had ofleied to loan the Ann H'H).'"JO dollar. If neesary, to carry the deal through. The officials of the bank, however, are noted for their close-mouthe dness, and even If they were willing to loan anv such amount they would not be apt to tell of iu The atorv, bowever, had the effect or scaring tho bears Into covering with unusual rapidity. There was Utile offered, and the price for May advanced 13.40 to 13.50, hung around that fizure for a time, then suddenly started upward. A good many stop-loss orders were "in the market at 13.60 and above, but brokers were unable to cover at the limit, as the market waa a decidedly one-sided one, and advanced to 14 with hardlv a reaction of importance. A recessiou to 13.H7 followed, but price agin touched 14 and the market closed firm, after slight fluctuations, at 14, an advance of 5-5 over Saturday's cle. The large bears traded freely, and bought and sold on the wav up, but bought more than ther sold. Short riba were active and closed 10c higher. Mav aold at 6.9ia 7.02 j, and closed at the top. Lard quiet at 7.50a7.5j, and closed at 7.62Sa7.o May. The train pits were fairly active, with a firm feeling and steady prices at the opening, followed by alight deebnes la all directions before noon. Receipts were about a estimated and the visible supply figures showed the expected decrease all round. For May, sales during the morning ranged: Wheat. 7nia76S; corn, 03'-a52Hc; oats, JOa . 31'i,c. There were many skeptica on the subject of damaged crops, although authentic reports from Indiana aud Illinois points said that M per cant, of the winter wheat acreage wag being plowed ander for oats and corn. The deferred futures showed more weakness for May, which cloned but Vasc lower than on Saturday, while June and July closed at about tc lower. May sold at 7c lo open, then 7s Ve, and lower to't'e, closing at 76 Sc. June sold at 77a77 e, closing at77't. July sold bet ween 77 a7S't,c. It was a day of scalping in corn. There was do special prominent Interest at work to ait her bulge er depress the market. The prospects of the opening of navigation make short sellers cautious. May opened at, &2c, the best point of the day, sold down to 62 e, tfcen up to .VJc., and later in the mm touched W'.;a, closing at o2i,e. oats sold as they have for davs, ciosln.x around 31c for May. The opening was Jle.'the lowest point30jaJO'e, the highest :i,e, and the eloslng 30.c. The leading fulurss ranged as follows:

t;"i- Jiijh- Lor- Coitjl. ttt. iuy. - 76-, -H'4 76H 77 ii V 78 77:, 78 7' 77U ?7h W 80 V 79 j 79 5J6 8?H BT-i M'4 8." 62:, . 6! S , tl, : 62! 61', SI S1 30Zri 30',-- sot, 30 M i so:, . 30 i 27. '. U 40 14 0! 13 40 13 97' U 47 '1 11 67 i 11 474 13 f.J 14 00 13 77 i 14 V9 7 60 7 47 -4 7 60 7 6? 7 6i 7 AO 7 5 1 7 67', 7 87 -, 7 67M 7 17 7 62 7 65 7 62, 7 65 97 7t7S 9 7 024 7 Oft 7 2 t . 7 05 7 10 7 12i 7 22 7 12 i 1 17-5 7 22 7 30 7 24) 7 25

Wheat No. 2May . June July I ecembei- .... Corn No. 2 May.. June.-". July Oata No. 3May Jone July .. August . Vesa Pork, per l.rl. May June . . July Lard, per 100 lbs. April May June. ...... ........ July 8. Ribs, per 100 lbs. Majr . June ............ July August .... Cash quotations were as fol'ows: Flour- Stesdy and Unchanged. No. 3 spring wheat 7i '',75c ; No. I spring wheel, 7Jf78'se; No. 2 rd, 81e; No. t corn, list; No. oats, 27is"v'e; No. J rye. 49 c; No. 2 barley, 77a 80c: No. 1 Caiseed, f1.45; prima timothy seed. $I.4; mesa pork, IVVl4; lard. S7.6Ja4; short ribs sides (loose:, $7a7.0S; dry salted ahoetders (boxed), 5.75 (e 6 ; short e'ear sides ' boxed ), I7.4n.'7.; whisky, $1.13; sugar, cat loaf, 7a4c; granulated, (Vie. AHirlr,. itec'lfd. Shipment. Floor, brls ..... 24,000 , ;i,0C41 Wheat, bo . 47,fs)0 4.0C9 Coro, bu.... ... lit Wlfl M.000 Oats In 12I,(X3 0.ov0

n.. hn 240,000 Barley, bn $2,000 -. 11,000 On the Produce Exchanpe to-day the butter market was quiet; creamery, 232öc; dairy, '8a26e.. Eggs Bou) ant; fresh, 17ai7,c Chicago, April 7. The following table shows the visible supply or grain for the week ending April 7 and also the comparison with the week endiug March 31, indicating the increase and decrease, as compared by the secrttarv of the board of trade. Wheat, 33,51, 1J; decrease. 808,199. Corn, ft.6W.957; decrease, 4s7.8i.b Oats, 3,755,1121 ; decrease, 364,305. Rye, 327,499; decrease, 6,514. Barley, 1,561,204 ; decrease, 213,231. NEW YORK, April 9. Flour-Reeeipta. 23,597 pekgs; exports 2,354 brls, S14 sacks; steady; common to good extra western and state, $2.75 a3.35; good to choice do, $3. 40a 4.); common to choice white wheat. western extra, 4. 2fia4.M; fancy do, H-60a4.90; common to good extra Ohio, fi.80al.90; common to choice extra SU Louis. $2.SOat.90; patent Minnesota, extra good to prime, 4.40 a4.60; choice to fancy do, 4.654. 83. Wheat Receipts. 7.150; exports, 41,469; sales, 4,104,000 futures 6M,0O0 spot. Options opened strong and soon advanced Na l',c; later a weaker feeling set in, leading to a reaction of Ma V.c, chulng steady; speculation only moderate; spot '-a 'o higher but very quiet ; no. 2 spring, nominal. W)-jc; ungraded red, 8sHa93c: no. 3 red, 90 1, a 911qC in store and elevator, 92a92c del., 91 '4 e f. o. b.; no. 2 red, April, 90Ha90 -16c, closing WsiC; May, 90 '4a 90 'tc, closing 90'fe: Jane, 8a'a88''fic, closing SHsc; July. R7as7e, clc&lng 874,c: Aug., S6aS7'tC, closing 87c; Sept., 87a7-c, closing .c; Iec, 84a90tc, closing 63c Corn-Receipts 61,000; exports 400; sales, 26-t.OOO futorr; 33,000 spot: cash dull and more or less nominal; options a tri.te better but very quiet; ungraded, 63'a65c;no. 3, 62!f,a62c; steamer, 6363 '4 c; no. 2, 65c nominal, store; no. 2 May, fclablc, closing 61 'ic; June, 53a59 3-16c, closin g Mfrc; July, 5,ia.')9sc, closing 69.;c; Ang., closing 69HiC. Stock of grain in store April 7: Wheat, 304,977: corn. 712,802: oats, 819,646; rye, 16,073; barley, 70,344; malt, 211.000. Oats Receipts, 113,000: exports, none; sales, 115.000 futures, P22.QOO spot; a trifle better; mixed western, 36a40c; white do., 41a4Sc. Coffee Spot lair: Rio 14V Mugar Firm; centrifugal. &7-16c; refined quiet Molasses Dull. Pork-Firm; only moderately active. Cut meats Firm. Lard A shade stronger, but rather quiet; Western steam, spot, $7.M; April, f7.s5ai.67; May, I7.83a7.8.j; June, S7.Ä4a7.85; July, S7.87i7.89: Aug., $7.9ila7.92; Sept., $7.917.91; Oct., $7.91a 7.94; city steam, $7.60. BuUer-Qulet and heavy; Western, 17b28c. ST. LOUIS, April . Flour StlftVr and better Inquiry, ranging from 2.30 to 4.20. Wheat Opened Ann and'advanced c for May, others advanced c, then declined, cloiing at the opening price -No. 2 red, cash, 81c; May, Wj'i'j 61He, closing 80 lnc; June, 80v80-, closing BOVc; July. Hi'Tl jc. closing 79Se; Aug". 76 -i, i 77 Sc, closing 76,c; Dec, 80 V!'.81'c, closing fc0c. Corn-Opened ''e lower, recovered but closed weak; cash, 47'..c; May, 47v,a47),e. closing 47)c; June, 47: July, 471t;a47c, closing 4.c nominal. Oats Firm, cash higher; 31vv30'c; May, 2f,c. Provision Firmer; pork. " 13.87 Hl4.0o; lard, 7.15; dry salt meats, shoulders (boxed), 8.7 V; long dears, 7.007.10; clear riba. 7.12'a7.20; short clears, 7.37a7.AO. Bacon (Boxed) shoulders. 6.3 V. ; long clears, 7.637.75; clear ribs, 7.75a.SO; short clears, 7.95aS10; bams steady, 10.0Cal2.U0. CINCINNATI. April 9.-Flour - Firm; family. 3.30 a3.50; fancy, SS.75a3.90. Wheat-Firm ; no. 2 red, 87 '-c: receipts. 1.0O0; shipments, 500. Corn Easitr; no." 2 mixed, 52hc Oats Steady; no. 2mixed,34c. RyeFirm; no. 2,67c. Pork f irmer at $14.12. Lard Stronger st 67.TOa7.35. Bulkmeats Firm ; short rib, $7.12 S .25. Bacon Steady ; short clear, $$.50. Whisky-Firm at $1.09. Butter Firm ; fancy northwestern, 32c; extr3 Ohio, 22c; pi Ime dairy roll, 20a2.'c. Sugar In better demand; hard rtUuedj 7,l-.-Sc; New Orleans, 6a5 MINNEAPOLIS, April 9.-Flour-Firm; patents, in sacks to ship, cariots, 4.1Ca4.25; in barrels 4.2a4.35. LOCISVILLE, April 9. Grain and provisions quiet and imcbangtnl. Foreign 3Inrket. LIVERPOOL, April 9. Wheat Firm; demand fair; holders öfter sparingly. Corn Firm; demand fair; new mixed western, 4s 4d per cental. Lard-Prime western, 38s 3d per ewt. Bacon Short ribs, 40s 6d per cwt.Cheese American finest white, 60s 6d per cwt. Dry s. NEW YORK, April 9.-Iry Goods-There was a very fair demand present at jobbing hands, but aside from deliveries on former orders by agents, that are supplying many wants, the business with first hands was dull.

A COMMUNITY HORRIFIED. A School Teacher of Laporte County Com mlts an Outrnge Upon a Scholar. LapoeTE, April 5. Special. This community was horrified to-day by the development of a dastardly outrage committed by a school teacher named Michael Reilly some four miles north of here. It appears that Keilly detained a little irl after school was dismissed for the day, and when the other children were pone he assaulted and outraged her. The child is thir teen years old and was frightened into silence by Iteilly's threats, but the refused to go to school any more, and when compelled to tri by her parents she told the story of the villain's Mioct'sful nesiult. When confronted by the father Keilly denied the charge, but finally admitted its truth. The father let him go and c:ime to town to secure the necessary papers for his arrest, but before this could be done the scoundrel fled. Ileilly lives near Stilhvtll, Ind., and has heretofore borne rather an unsavory character. Death of Jacob Sharp. N"EW Yor.K, April 5. Jacob Sharp died at 9:20 o'clock to-nighL About b" o'clock: he was seized with a severe fit of coughinp, aal, though it subsided somewhat, he never rallied, but lay in a state of coma, dying without having recovered consciousness. The members of his family wer at his bedside. His death was the result of a complication of heart disease, affection of the kidneys, bronchitis and worry over the Ictrnl troubles which htm over him. It was understood that he was soon to be tried a second time on the charge of bribing members of the board of alderiuan of 184 to grant him a charter for a street railway to lower llr jadway. No arrangements as to the funeral have been announced. Jacob Sharp was neventy.one years old and a millionaire. IjisI summer he was tried and convicted fur bribing certain New York aldermen to seenn; his scheine ot buil ling a surlace railway on Iirnadway. lie wat sentenced to several years Imprisonment, but beiore lieing removed to Sing Sing sectir-il a new trial, a hich would have taken place h'ittly. Mit health bad l-en precarious for many months and his death will not occasion any surprise, lie was for many years the president of tb "Cross-town" street railway system of Kew York city. The w t hier Justiec. Washington, April 5. It is semi-ofllcially stated that a successor to Chief Justice Waite will soon be nominated. There is, it is said, little probability that any gentlemen whose name ha fibred in public prints as a candidate will be nominated. Judge Thurnian would probably be the man but for his advanced age. The democrats on the bench will nor be advanced, Field beeause of his aire, .Miller because of his connection with the electoral commission. A Southern man will not be nominated, the president well knowing that he cannot be confirmed who has been connected with the rebellion. The nominee will probably come from the East, New York possibly, and with a full consideration of the political effect as well as the candidate's fitness. He will also le a man whose appointment will pivc such general satisfaction that the senate cannot aflord to delay his confirmation. Jadge Greshnm's Favorite Porkers. Chicago Herald. Judge Gresham owns a handsome farm near Indianapolis, and is never so happy as when he is there attending to things. Judge Gresham is not only fond of bis fann, but he is particularly fond of pigs. He was in Springfield holding court a few months ago, and the genial Col. Wijrgius of the I -eland took him out to see the famous Lei and fann. Of course the judge was delighted with that model farm and garden, but that which pleased him most was a herd of long-nosed pigs that had been bred from some of Col. A igjjina' favorite Itcrkshires and a number of Mississippi razor-backs sent him by a Southern friend. Judge Gresham cast such wistful eyes at these long-nosed fellows that Col. Wiggins made up a box of them and sent them over to the Indiana farm. You can no more w can a man borti along the Ohio river from bis love for long-legged, thin-backed pigs than you can tear out of him his love for horses. A Fiendish Mx-Ycnr-Old. Cincinnati, April 5. At Industry, a few miles down the Ohio river from this city, has been discovered a colored boy with the most fiendish propensities. 'His mother goes out to wash. uud leaves her children iu care of a girl thirteen years old. The charge consisted of a boy between live and six years nnd twins, ten months old. On Tuesday the girl left the house for a hhort time, and on returning found the tw ins screaming with pain, the boy with a cut ou his head begging her to Irown him, and the itove overturned. The boy had upset the stove ami was hurt by its falling, but it was found that he had deliberately broken both thighs of one of the Italics, and a thigh and an arm of the other. Kvery eiWt to get him to tell the story of his cruelty a il ed. A Town Nearly Destroyed. AMrsurnY, Mass., April 6. A fire, which proved the most serious in the town's history, broke out about 7 o'clock last night in the wood-shop of the F. A. Uabcock carriage company s manufactory, and spread rapidly into other buildings ow ned by Mr. Uabcock, three of which were destroyed. Other carriage manufacturers suffered heavy losses nnd about half the business portion of the town was destroyed. Fire dwellings are among the burned buildings. Over one thousand people are thrown out of employment, and the ahock to the busiuess prosperity of the town will be evere. The fire was not under control until nearly 1 o'clock this morning and was still burning fiercely. The total loss is estimated a nearly one million dollars, but it is impossible to five an cttbaatc of the insurance.

BURDETTE ON HOW TO LIVE.

THE HUMORIST WAXES ELOQUENT The Wisdom of Mind lug Your Own Business. The? Way of the Transgressor is Hard. A Gloomy Foreboding. Child, hood's Happy Hours, etc. Copyrighted, 1SS3. To-day! "We stand on the threshold ! We stand there ! Waiting! To tie asked in. Life! Is a river! We meet it boldly. Hope, courage, and high purpose thrill our hearts! We cannot tear aside the veil that hides the future from our view. The future! Is before us. The rast! Is behind w. right by us. bravely on. hourtrikes The present, however, stays We do not fear it. We press Onfrard and upward! The the noontide of the world. With resolute hands we grasp the shadows on the dial. Ik-hind us is the school. A long ways behind as the most of it. Ccfore us lies the world. AVe accept it. Grave are the responsibilities fo the trust; especially the trust fund. Kut we accept them. Life lonjr will be the labor of reform. We have put our hands to the plough, and we will never look back until we get to Canada, whence we may look back in safety, and become lions and ornaments in Canadian society. As the years roll on, which they will probably do, we will never forget 'our alma mater, but we will shake things up on the street ourselves, and if there is any rehypothecating to be done, inquire within. Hoc tempore, the world is in bad form. Vice rules the world. JJonos riros take back seats in the convention. Lupus sits, in the high places and judges the people in the gates, while alcus ekes out a precarious existence in the wool business. Our rulers wallow in vice. The tc moles of commerce are dens of thieves. Mistrust, guilt and suspicions stalk through the land, nudus . membra. All this has come to pass while we were at college. Life I is rtu ocean! Let us, then, cleanse its Augean stables of this blighting leprosy, aud beard this lion in the bud, and, in the gathering gloom which marks the footprints of decay, throttle it in its cradle, ere yet its black wings shall strike its fangs deep into the soil of American freedom aud with a Judas kiss betray our fondest hopes and brightest dreams into the sand-swept waste of this sirocco-stricken maeltdorra that yawns at our feet, waiting for some self-sacrificing Curtius to lay the axe at the root of this deadly Vpas-tree that shadows all the land with the lurid light of its basilisk eve, which, siren-like, charms with its delusive song, only to chill into pulseless stone with the Gorgon horror of its icy blast ! M1XD VOL'R OWN BCSI-VUSS. "Diligent in his business!" It is the man who is diligent in his own business to whom this exalted position is promised. There are people, dearly beloved, who are diligent in everyltodv t-lse's business, and have, fherefore, no time to attend to their own. They do not stand before kings; they more frequently stand ln-fore the police judge. Their diligence is not commendable. A workman is known by his chips; so, alas! is the faro banker." ! yiiu be diligent in your own business and be content w ith its rewards. You may not walk no many miles in six lays as Fitzgerald, but you. can sleep a great deal more in that time; and it you do not get so much money for it, neither do you get so many blisters. On your little salary at the suspender counter, vou cannot clean up &i)0,000 on Wall-st this week. IJut then neither ' can you be cleaned out of ? 150.000 next week. You may not be able to pet tho fashions in male attire, but you can fill your soul with nameless joy and an endless exaltation of celestial birth, and climb to the top of high Olympus, and lean back and pile your feet on the sofa, aud make yourself easy with the immortal gods, by paying vour landlady every Saturday and keeping even with your tailior. You may never be a Washington correspondent of a society paper . but then your hair wont turn white in the agonized eli'ort to explain what it is about a senator's vife, who has red hair, freckles, no upper teeth, a hair wart un her nose, nnd a twang in her shrill voice, that "makes her so bewitchingly beautiful and universally admired." Jubt be diligent in your own business, and wait in patience for the reward of your diligence. It may be a little slow in coming. The mills of tb gods grind slowly, so does a hand organ on tho "Last ltose of Summer" stop, but it always gets there. And don't pay more for the reward than the reward is worth. A man who lives on twenty-niilc- cents a day will Lo apt to die wealthy, but he won't "die very fat. It is the liberal soul that shall be made fat. THE WAY OK THE THAXSGKESOlt 18 HARD. Mv son. you say it is "so hard to be good!" You say it is easier to break all of the Ten Commandments thau to keep one of them. Well, you mistake. It isn't hard to be good. It is bard to be bad. Ah, yes, my boy, its hard to be bad. N'ot right at the time? oh, no. The wine is sparkling, the sonjrst are stirring, the stories are brimming with humor, and the air is full of laughter. You are just as bad as you know how to be, and it is lots of fun to be bad, and you never want to bei good oh, yes, it seems to be very easy and very delightful to le bad at night. Ihit the next morning, mv boy? Where is the difficulty then? Who feels serious in the morning? Whose head can't be covered with a tub? Who is ntraid and ashamed to go out on the street and meet people! Who wants to hide? Who wonders where he was last night, and whom he met, and who saw him, and what be said, and where he went, and how he did? Not the loy who went to the sociable nnd ate cast-iron pound-cake and washed it down with faded lemonade. Not the young man who passed the evening in the company of the goody, goody at the debating-society. Ah, no! He didn't hear the rollicking songs that you heard, my boy, and he didn't hear the racy stories that "broke you all up." But he is feeling much better than you are this morning. lie finds it easy to be "gool," very easy indeed. But to be bad, to have the headache, to have a sour, rebellious stomach, to have uncertain eyes, to have a treacherous memory, to have a sense of shame, to have a dread of sunshine and a horror of daylight, to have a set of quivering nerves "and a faltering speech, to have a raging thirst that water cannot appease and a gnawing hunger that loathes food, to have a dread of meeting your own mother, mv hoy, nnd a fear of seeing your sister, and a shame of speaking to your good old father this is hard, my eon. This is being "bad." And look me in the eyo, Telemachus, look me in the eye honestly now, honor bright, do you think this is easier than ; being "good?", My dear boy, you may call your "good" friend a milksop und a "mammy boy" if you will, and you may in your better moments sometimes say you would like to be "good," but it is so hard, but just weigh the "good" and the "bad," weigh them honestly, and tell me, tell me honestly (and I am not now the "funny ruau," but rather the Reriotiä adviser), which is the harder, to be "good" or to be, "bad?" Ah, uny boy, I .think you will agree with me that it is easier to be "good.,, .. A GLOOMY FOREBODIXO. " "Edward" writes me that ho is just finishing the clcjinj etuiia sfjiii acir

I fwimm wmimßf fei ")j Li For a case of Catarrh In the Head which they car.net cure. vXV 1'

CATARRH Ki THE HEAD.

' SVTJirrOTIS OF THE DISEASE. Dull, heavy headache. Obstruction of the nasal passages, discharg-es falling- from the bead into tho throat, sometimes profus, watery, and acrid, nt others, thick, tenacious, muenns, purulent, bloody and putrid: tlie eyes are weak : thrre is rlnjrini In th cars. doafns. hacking' or coughing to clear tho throat, expectoration of offensive matter, together with scabs from ulceri; tho voice is chatig! and has a ''nasal twn?"; tho breath is offensive; smell and tasto Impaired; there is a scnaution of dizEinf-ss, with mental doproBSion, a hacking cough and perioral debility. Only a few or tho above-named symptoms are likely to be present in any one esse. Thousands of c:is'-s annually, without rnanifcstini hnlf 01 tuO above eyniptoms, result in consumption, and end in the grave 2io disease is ko common, more de?epti ve and danircroua, less understood, or more unsuccessfully treated by pbyaicians.

If you would remove an evil, t'rft at V root. As tho predisposinsr or real cause of catarrh is, in the majority of cases, somo weakness. Impurity, or otherwise faulty rendition of the system, in attempting to cure the diseiuo our chief aim must bo

Cgmmoh Sehse Teutkent."

directed to the removal of that cause. The mora wc see of this odious disease, and wo treat successfully thousands of ensrs annually at the Invalids' Hotel and Surgical Institute, the more do sve realize the Importance of combining with the use of a local, (OOthiag and healing application, a thnmvgh and pcrstitcnt internal use of blood-cleansing and tonic mcdlcinci.

In curin? catarrh and all the various diseases with IjUirp I which It is so frequently complicated, as throat, v.iiki bronchial, and lung diseases, weak stomach, caPritiypr I tarrhal deafness, weak or Inflamed eyes, impure nCLlflftUC. j bl.Kid. scrotulous and other taints, the wtmdertavaaaCTaJ fnl powers and virtues of Dr. Tierce's Golden Med-

lcr.1 Discovery cannot be too 6trongly

t.;' TT T- A t Irl'Vf.Wf I ' -7

i i

Sold by Druggists. 25 Cents a Vial.

HKINO PtUELY VEOETABI.E, Dr. Pierce's Pellets operate without disturbance to the system, diet, or occupation. Put up in irlass vials, hermetically uealed. Alwiys fre-sh and reliable. As a trentle laxative, nltermive, or active purgative, they pive the mibt x-rfect Futisfactlon.

"I lo not know the tlay wher ihall tlie." Right, 1-MwarJ. my boy, correct you are. Always .stick to the truth, and you may never be a irreat poet, but your woiil can bo believed and depended on, in which respect yen will lay the preat poets in the tan-bark without a strudle. You do not know the lay when you will die, but the pentleinan who preside over the paper to which von tend the poem does! Oh, yes, Edward, he does! lie has prophesied" the tlay when you will v:tnt to die, and it will be on the bright April morn when you walk padly down the eyrie btcps six at a time, with your poem strapped to your quivering back with a eowhide slipper, no. 1 hist, iutir-plv ami half tanned. s MAnnnviNV. acqcif.cfnti:. "Try to avoid debating with people," nays Mr. purireon. UL'ht. Charles, rijrht. Xothinsr in nil this irritating old world will make the other man lose bis bead so completely and yet him so howling mad as for vou to keep perfectly quiet just when you know he is xettinpr the better of you. and look at him with an exasperating smile of conscious superiority and pit v. IJut you must look out that he doesn't brain you with a table-ley. IX THK H APPY IIOl'RS Or CHILDHOOD. See the von man. lie is not quite a? tall as hi.s "younger siter; but then he is much slimmer. His cheek are ruddy as rifH-ninaf peaches, but they arc not quite so downy, lie is rai-inV :i mustache. When he pots two more hairs sprouted on the riyht side anl one more on the left he will have three .nl toother, lie has been nearly live weeks out of st hool. and if he lives aud keens his health he will be nineteen years old three years from now. Is be nii editor? Oh, no! He is the man who writes all tlie ninny joles about married men, and how they talk nt niyht in their dreams, and what a trial and expense a la rye family of yrown-up daughters is, and how many larye hills a married man has to pay, and how he is always bald, nnd stays at the club ever' niyht, and always comes home drunk, and plays ttokcr, and yoes to theaters with stranye ladies, and dod yes his creditors. Does that very youny man write all those funny thinysV Yes, dear. It is because he is so very youny that he writes them. Will he know more as he grows older? Perhaps; ii he should live to be a couple of thousand years he miyht know a little more. Is the young man fresh? Is he! Well, now! Why, if he should wade throuyh the ocean, dear, the blue waters of the loud-soundiny sea could forever after be used for drinkiny purposes. the nivrr. and thc ekook. The shallows murmur, but tho deeps are dumb. And do you know, to put a new interpretation on an old hit of wisdom, that is why we love the shallows. We stroll beside the broad, deep, voiceless river. There is no sony in all the silent stream. Its bosom bears the fleets of commerce; shallop and steamer and raft drift down its silent current to the pea. 15y dock and slip and bc-ndiny willow sweep its" noiseless waters. I.ut when wc reach the windiny brook, sinyiny over the white, shininy pebbles, murmuring around thc mossy rocks, whispering throuyh the swaviny reeds, wc sit down and listen, and the music and the charm of its incessant babble drive away every care nnd even' thoupht of sorrow and trouble. Who is it that said the music of running wabere produces in us a mild insanity, or something like that? True it is, "tho shallows murmur, but the deeps are dumb," and so w love tho shallows. Yes my son, yes. That perhaps is the reason why so many people love you. 15y and by voü will bo older you will become deep, then wc will hate you. Oh, it is so true, ko true ! - THE COMING BATMSG 5CIT. . What wifl h( thc . stylish " bathing suit this season ? Why, you ought to know ; jWlS iTS'iii, towa uicro tinm 1 ai.

f CVTTTUCItT, lSST. J

effect upon the lining mucous membranes of the nssal snd other1 air-pareaires. promoting the natural secretion of their follicles and glands, thereby softening the c:tcased snd thickened menihrane, and restt rlns 'it to its nnturnl, thin, delicate, moist, befit hy COD ditiou. As a blood-puriricr.lt is unsurpassed. As thoae disease which complicate catarrh are disease or the Hain mucous membranes, or of the blood, it will rcsdily be seen why this mcdicino is so well calculated to cure them. ' I

ful antiseptic, and speedilv destroys all bad smeil which accompanies so manrcsKsof catarrh, thus affording great comfort to those who suffer lroiu this disease. i

Peemikeht Cures,

effects upon the lining- membrane of t lie nasal passagr. it aids materially la restoring the discas'-d, thickened, or ulcerated mcrnbrano to a healthy condition, sui thus eradicates the disease. When a euro Is effected ia this manner ft is permanent.

Both Dr. Tierce's Catarrh Remedy arc sold 1 1.X, six bottles for uair-cozen potties j-.su. A complete Treatise

clothing, diet, and ether matters of importance, will be mailed, postvpaid to any address, ra itch tptof a 2-ornt postrge stamp. Address, World's Dispensary ?Iedieal Association, ' 2io. CC1 Main Street, Buffalo, J. Y,'

extolled. It lias a spedac.

r-r M js än rJ&Knuh .X r

ITTLE LIVER PILLS.

PURELY VEGETABLE ! PERFECTLY HARMLESS ! Am a LIVEIt rilX, they are I'nequaledZ SMALLEST, CHEAPEST, EASIEST TO TA3CE. Beware of Imitations, which contain Poisonous Minerals. Always ask for

Dr. Pierce's Pellets, whtca are i"i ';nr-cparn "3, or Anti-bilious Granules. ONE PELLET A DOSE.

SICK HEADACHE,

miiona Headache, Dizziness, Constipation, Indigestion, llilloua Allarks, and all derangements of the stomach and bowels, are promptly relieved nnd permanently cured by the use of Dr. Pierce's Pellets. In explanation of their remedial

power over so irreni a variety or aisciuw-s. u. mj truthfully be said that their action upon tho system is universal, not a gland or tissue escaping their sanative influence. SaiiBfactnred by WORLD'S DLSPESS1BT EEDICAL ISSOniTIOX, BUFFALO, "V.

There won't be much ch.mye. I am not an authority in matters of fashion, but as near as I can tell the fashionable bathingsuit this season will be just like the one of last season, with the suit left o'f. You can easilv make over yours of last year by cutting In two, and throwing away the pieces. THEY ARC TSIO IS NAME. As I wander up and down thc land, I cant help observing at the stations that the smaller the town the bigger thc name. The poorest, most distressed, hungriestlooking passengers always yet otT at the smallest, lorlornest-laoking towns with the biyyest names. Oa mv last trip a man got oil' at Canton City, lie got on at Liverpool City. He didn't have coat enough to sew buttons to. His trousers wcro j made of gunny-bays, with patches of tarpaulin and shreds ot llannei, and his hat wasn't maile nt all. It was something that grows wild some we re in the dark. And the city is usually on a par with the man. We passed Ix)udon City. It is a compilation of cabins and shanties, with one grocery with ji dashboard front, where the natives in the evenings hold their mouths open and sav "Hey" when any one ventures a remark relative to the price of hoys. It is the wild, ungovernable ambition of every wretched little hamlet about the size of a piano box, stood down in a desolate swamp or treeless! flat, to choose for itself somo high-sounding name nnd tack '( it)'" on to it. S it is that wc have Boston, New York, Brooklyn, Philadelphia, Chicago, etc. That is all very well, but when you take a trip on the Lost Creek narrow-gauge, you find Metropolis City, llorlin City, ICdinhurgh City, Vienna City not a single plain mouosyllable town on the line, and not a city that can raise one hundred people to go to the circus. Still, such is tlie way of mau. I do not feel harslv toward these cities, because I feel that 1 am one of them, for I abandon my home t ight months in the vear to lecture on "Home," and the rest of time 1 lecture on the "Mustache," while I haven't hair enough on my lip to tickle my noso. THE WESTEr.N SIIOE-FLV. At a recent marriage in Milwaukee some thoughtless friends threw an old shoe after the departed carriage. . When the terrified horses saw that Milwaukee shoe sailing darkly through the aflriyhtcd air, they thought it was a barn wafted upon the the wings of a Kansas cyclone, and they made for thc timber, broke the double tree, went smashing down into another carriage, and raised Cain generally. When a Milwaukee girl heaves her shoe out into space, the abashed earthquake that happens to bo prowling around in that quarter of the universe crawls under D YLE'S EAR LINE OS.sESSES ECU LIAR URIFYING . Ii.OrEK.TIES D RESS AND UBLIC KONOUKC3 EARLINE ERFECT.

PRUDENT ''VfNj ÄSZ EARLINE. J y

I I AS a local application for rivaling- thediM-aned condlLnniL I ioa Jn tlic head. Dr. Cage's Cntan n Remedy Is beyoml , I 11 comparison the best preparation ever Invented. ÄpriJT I It is mild und pleasant to us producing- no rniarnngr HBfnii I or patn, and containincr no strnr. Irritating-, or cautic drusr. or other Poison. This Remedy is a power

Tho Golden Medical Discovery is the natural "helpmate" of Lr. Zaire's Cntairh Remedy. It not ouiy cleanse, puriiica. regulates, and builds up the system to a healthy standard, nnd conquers throat, bronchial, snd lung complications, when any such exist, but. from Its speefüo

Golden Medical Discovery and Dr. Page's by drugjiets the world over. Disco cry 5.00. '. ur. fcaro :s'g Catarrh Keraedy 60 ct-nta; on Catsrrb. ßivintr vnluable hints as t

ORIGINAL

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the bed and stays there until the shoe hts settled. NEGATIVE ENERGY. An eminent scientist is writing; about "the sun as a source of energy." Somebow it never seems to lend much energy to the man who sits on a dry-goods box cight hours a day, basking in the rays of this infinite source of energy, and wishrig Fome customer would happen along or that he could think of something that would keep him awake until bedtime. IIOBERT J. BrUDETTE. A Komniiee in Real Life. Chicago, April 6. Mis Agnes Master, aged 19, young and beautiful, attempted suicide lat night, bat was prevented. She had been governess in the Jiouse of a wealthy resident of this city, uhoe name is withheld, and had fallen in love with hi son, who returned her affection. The father sanctioned their marriage, but the mother drove the girl from the house. The younp man then proposed secret marriage, but the girl objected. However, tlie young man continued to viit her until month airo, when he suddenly stopped. Itwa. then learned that he had been sent to Europe by his mother to cure hitn of his infatuation. Since that time thc girl has pined away. Last 1 nitrht f he got some poison, but her sister, who was warned ly the lrue:rit who sold it, per' suadod her from using it. " The girl declares" that she will kill herself at the first oppor tunity. . How Joseph Captured Mr. Vanderbilt. All Paris is talking of the extravagant price which Mr. Vanderbilt pavs for his new cook, Joseph Keil. The figure is JlO.Oou a year. Joseph said that he did not want to go to America, and that he named a priee that he believed would be prohibitive. To his surpristt the rich American accepted, and closed the bargain on the spot. Joseph first captivated Mr. Yandcrhilt's heart by a dih of wild duck. After slicing all the meat out of the bird he put its carcass into a press and squeezed every drop of juice out of it. He then cooked the meaC over a spirit lamp on a silver dish aud made its sauce out of thc juice. Joseph is a ereat pugilist and fencer, and used frequently to organize fencing bout and kicking or savate parties. There arc lively times iu store for the tplendid kitchen on Filth-uve. Tun ljtfayette CWMhinks the president "must be credited with sufficient foresight to know that it would be bad policy to interfere in the tally-sheet cases." (rover Ci.evei.ani has cotirag enough to interfere if he thinks it would be right to do so. He has courage enough not to interfere if bethinks it would be wrong to do so. That's the way he is built. Diamonds are as closely associated with weddings as formerly. Colored stones prevail for engagement. rin-Js. and the yrooiu's bridal gift is iiiore often pearls than diamonds. Even with the men that loud gem is losing caste, and silver or moonstone as a held holds it iu modest retirement.