Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 25 March 1891 — Page 7
THE INDIANA "STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY MORNING, MARCH 25, 1891-TWELYE PAGES.
GOVERNOR HOGG NO HOG Ho Refuses to Accept the Sugar Bounty.
Texas Will Raise Sugar as It Pleases. No Supervision by Any Government Official. State Sovereignty Asserted, in Sound Terms. Texas 8tands by Her Record ai a Democratic State. ArsTix, Tex., March 22. The state of TTexaaown9 and runs a sugar farm, worked by convict3. Recently a bill was passed by the legislature to accept the two cent bounty under theMcKinley bill. Governor Hop;; vetoed it. The veto closes in part as follows : The itate is Bovereign of her own affairs, and cannot be disturbed in the legitimate exercise of her prerogatives. If Ehe desires to raise eugar by convict labor, under no circumstances could she Trith propriety ask or accept from any government a license to do eo. "Sot could she yield to a supervision of her aflairs by any officer not subordinate to her own laws. To do eo in one instance would lead to another and Unally to supervision by the federal government over the cotton patches, vrheat fields, Btock ranches, lumber yards and factories within her limits. Precedents by Government usurpation become ttronjrer thnn law. The worse they are, tho more difficult to overthrow. "When they are erected oa the destruction of the constitution lika this bounty act, the wrong that produced them etrengthe us the fruits of the crime spread until they become fastened forever on the people. "For my part, I shall protest and begin to strike now while theprecendentisnew. Tor no sum can the state afford to sacrifice principle nor to imperil her sovereign rights. "It is hardly decent to suppose that no measure is too monstrous for popular credulity w hen it embraces a preposition to dispense money under tho name of bounty among the citizens. Insidious And deceptive as such methods usually ere, no one can deny that at the heart of them there is corruption. It consists of the government collecting money to the impoverishment of tho masses by which to gratify the greed of favored classes. Toleration of it by a free people finds support only in their igno"Ilesistance of all monopolies and exclusive If gisilaticn for the benefit of the lew at the expense cf the many, in obedience to the will of the people, comports vith the untarnished record of Texas and cannot fail to make the course of her future bright, and she could not accept this bounty except at the sacrifice of her honor and sovereignty as a state." FITZaiMMONS TALKS. lie Is Anxious for a Fight with the Other AofttrAlian. Baltdiore, Md. March 22. Muldoon left town to day. A reporter of the Ameri can told Fitzsimmons that the great wrestler would return to the city on Thursday, and 23 he had been deputized by Joe Ila'm, Jim Hall's backer, to arrango a match for Fiizsimmons ani Hall, the reporter would like to get Fitzsimroons' opinion of his fellow-countryman. Fitzsimniona save it thus: "Hall should be ashamed of h'i3 conduct. He knows that I am under a contract, but as eoon as that expires which vrid occur in a few weeks, I intend to make it hot for all of them. It is very probable that Hall will turn tail and take the nest boat for Australia. I have known Had all my life, both of us being raised in the game place. Fcr a long time he posed as champion while I was content to work at the forge and eke out a living for myself twl wife. I disliked notoriety and wa3 adverse to going into the ring. About two years ago I grew desperate and arranged to fight Hall. I beat him in five rounds and was given the 10 shillings for it. "When I j ickedupniy 6treet clothes I found that they had robbed me of every cent I had, inciuding the studs in my "ishirt. Fake lights were then all the go, and for a mere f ittar.ee scores of youn fellows would alow Hull to etop them in four or five rounds. I was a greenhorn at the time and f adiy in need of money. We had a fake f.ght, With the arrangement that Iwrs to fail in the sixth round. When the third round had been finished Hall was so weak he could hardly hold up his hands. I became diJ-g'leted, but in order to keep up ray part of the contract, took pity on Hall and dropped to the floor at the beginning of the next round. I can defeat Hall to a stand still with Rnvthinginmy hands from a piLow to a sledge hammer. I then determined to leave home and try my fortune in America. I worked my passage over, fell into good bands and made a match with McCarthy. This chance was a godsend. I defeated him easily and with the winnings paid my debts and brount my wife to America. Then followed ny fiht with Demjsey which made me a rich man. I nevr saw Jack until I faced him in the ring; neither have I Ret-n him eince. Dempsey made a game f ght, showed wonderful courage, but was outclas-d. We in Australia thought bin invincible. I found him an easy target. "My next right," continued Fitzaimmons, "will in all probability be with Ted Pritchard, the present chamrion of England, and who recen'ly defeated Jack liurke in the Pelican club at London. The Troy people o er ?2o,000 for a match, and if Pritchard will concede to the terms he wiil find me eager for the fray." After the interview Fitzsimmons wanted to find a barber-ehop. When told that tne good people of Baltimore prohibited luch doings as shaving on Sunday he remarked that it was a "bloody" outrage. Looking for a Fight. Uixxeapolis, Minn., March 22. Charles gammic's backer! depo?'M4d a five-
hnndred-dollar forfeit with the Twin City athlet!c club yesterday for Kemraic to fight Ryan at 140 or Kerrigan at 13.3, give or take two pounds. Thesa two men are preferred, but all other one hundred and forty and thirty-fiv-pcund men are embraced in the challenge.
Xtt Chnnr of a Fllit, CniCACO, 111., March 22. The prospect of a fight between Hall and Fitzsimmons appears to be dim. A dispatch from Ha l's backers intimated that Fitzsimmons' forff it posted here would be covered by last Wednesday. Up to tonight, however, nothing further has been heard from Hall or his backers. MOB LAW. Thr la KTr Any Ezcom for It In a Settled Community. To tite EbiTon Sir: I am glad lo ice the manly stand The Sentinel, ban taken in behalf of tho cause of law and order with referenco to the recent New Orleans outrage. In new communities, as in California and Montana in early days, whero society is in a nascent state and tho machinery of the law is wanting, there may be some excuse for citizens taking the police powers into their own hand.-. Not so by any means in euch an old established community as New Orleans. If the courts are insufficient or corrupt the people have only themselves to blame. Tho people interested in the security of property and the maintenance of public order are doubtless largely in the majority in New Orleans, as they are in every other long organized community in this country. Th3 trouble is this clement stands in tho background with its arms folded and lets the bummers run the municipal machine until their high-handed misrule culminates in something like the llennessy assassination or the Haymarket tragedy. Then these political sluggards come forth and assume to be a law unto themselves. They will act as a mob or act not at all. It sounds very vwll to talk of the sovereign majesty of the people, to moralize on the theory that "when tho courts, their agents, fail to exerute the law the authority is relegnted back to the people who gave it." Such doctrine;?, as applied to the present instance, mean sirap'y mob violence and anarchv. It the sovereignty of the people can be exerciaed only in this way the sooner we acknowledge republican urovernmnt a failure the better, that we may go back to the ways of autocratic rule. The vigilantes of San Francisco and of Montana were by no means a mob like that at New Orleans. They were a court; a sort of star chamber, it is true; but a court, nevertheless. Tner did not harangue their followers in the public thoroughfares and work them up to a frenzy before they undertook the execution of the task before them. The trials wero conducted, not by a miscellaneous, irresponsible crowd, but by a select committee and as nearly as possible according to the forms of regular judicial procedure. This is the sort of organization to which Col. Sanders (now TJ. !. senator; is said to have belonged and which hsnsred Cummings, the chief of the Montana "road atents," who was then high sheriff, eventually clearing the territory of the murderous gans. lut even tl is organization overstepped itself. At Helena several years later a man, on Daniels, was tried by the court for murder and a-quit-ted. Mr. Toole, brother of the present governor of Montana, was bis counsel, fcerving without pay. The vigilantes were not satisfied with the judgment of tbo jury, and hanged the man. An indignation meeting of the citizens followed, and so general and pronounced was th feeling of condemnation expresecd, that no more was bcii or heard of the vigilantes thereafter in Montana. Let me cite another case of which I was also personally coirnLzant. A murder and robbery were committed in Eureka, Cal., Tho perpetrator of the crime at once voluntarily confessed to the deed. Seemingly as an afterthought he implicated another. The county seat was a hundred miles away and no jail even there. A citizens' court was organized as the only possible method of trial. The trial was put off eight days so as to give the b'ood of the comii'unity time to cool. If ever a matter was gone about deliberately, that was. The day of trial came. The confessed culprit was adjudged iiui'ty and handed. The trial of the other accused was attempted, but by this time the crowd had denerated into a frenzied mob. The frightened, tremblinz wretch, without the hfidov of a trial or a particle of evidence apainst him except that of the fcelf-confessed murderer, was hurried off to the nearest limb and 'dangled at the rope's end. I was astonished to see amoutr that mob men of the highest respectability and accounted amoti the most circumspect and cool-headed, actually froth at the mouth with excitement and thiret for blood. I was tborouchly impressed then and there with tbe utter incompetency of a citizens' court to pass upon tne life or death of a fellow man under any circumstances. Subsequent observation, and I have had no little of it, has served but to confirm that impression. The Cleveland riaindealtr is credited with speaking thus of the New Orleans ailair: It was not a mob of rioters, but aa assemblage of responsib'e people, called together by a paper signed by a long list of responsible citizens, and led to tot prison by men held in high regard as law abiding citizens who have the welfare of the city at heart. When the execution was done tbe executioners quietly dispersed te their homes and places of business. Not a word here but applies with much greater force to the California "assemblage." I repeat, if those "responsible people" bad at the caucus and the polls shown half as much zeal in supporting the law as they now have in tramping the law under foot, there would most probably have been no occasion for their thus brewing their hands in human blood. I must say I am greatly surprised that so large a portion of the press of the country should have endeavored to excuso or condone euch flagrant lawlessness. D. R. Leei-er. South Bend, Ind., March 21. PANIC IN A CHURCH. Tbe Result of a Woman Fainting During; the Service. Springfield, O., March 22. Special. A panic that came near resulting in several, fatalities occurred tonight at a union religious meeting in the Grand opera house, conducted by the Itev. W. A. Barnes. Miss Anna Berry occupying a seat in the parquette of the house was overcome by heat and fainted. The house was crowded, over 2,000 people being present and there was a rush to her6ide. Some one in the gallery foolishly or maliciously yelled "fire." There was a tremendous rush for the doors from all parts of tbe house, people struggled like madmen and fought like tigura to reach the outside. The ushers made a rush for the main entrance and there, by main force kept the people back. At this point the choir at the suggestion of the Bey. Sir. Barnes started up"Nearer My God to Thee." Thw had a salutary effect and a terrible disaster was averted. A icore or more persona were badly braised.
MINCE JEROME IS DEAD.
HE ACCEPTED THE RELIGIOUS RITES. The T.ttA Comes with Terrible Buffering Preparation for a Stat Funeral Skateb, of Ills Career The Princess Marianne D.es ia Corsica, Rome, March 17. Frinco Jerom Napo'eon died this afternoon. Previous to his death the united strength of four men was required to keep the dying prince in bed and his cries, caused by the pain, which ha suffered were audible in the street. Prince Napoleon left his memoirs and hia entire correspondence in the hands of Mr. Frederick Mason. This afternoon after consultation with the other physicians in attendance, Dr. Baccl'i informed King Humbert that the end was near. Tho last agony soon followed. Trinee Victor, shortly before the end, entered the room in which his father was dying, but was so overcome with emotion that he left the apartment sobbing violently, The funeral of Prince Napoleon will be conducted with religious ceremonies. Tho death chamber has been converted into a mortuary chapel, hung with black cloth and with black, velvet. An altar has been erected aciinst the wall on one side of the room. The body of Trinee Napoleon will bo interred in a crypt of the royal mausoleum in the church of La Superga on the Co Una heights near Turin. The abbe, in an interview, said he gave the sacrament to Prince Napoleon at o this forenoon when the latter was in full possession of his faculties. The abbe had conversed with the pr.nce on the subject of bis religious opinions, and the dying man had said he did not profess the atheistic sentiment att'ibuted to him; tli.it he was inclined toward Rousseau's doctrines, and that he would die like an emperor, adhering to thy principles of the Concordat and fully imbued with the religious sentiments of the Bonnpartes. Abbe I'ujol save he considers that this statement justified him in administering the sacrament to the prince. Prince Napoleon Joseph Charles Paul Bonaparte, cousin of the late emperor, Napoleon III, the second son of Jerome IJonaparte by his second marriage with the Princess Frederika of V.'urtemburg, was born at Trieste Sept. 9, 122. Hi youth was passed at Vienna, Trieste, PI-irrnce, Rome and occasionally he spent periods in Switzerland, England and Spain. In IS ll he obtained permission lo visit Paris under the name of Cerate da Moutfort, but wes soon after compelled to leave on account of his intrigues with the extreme democrats. After the revolution of February, 1843, Prince Napoleon returned and the Corsicans elected hira a member of the constituent assembly, in which he became the leaderof the extreme republican pirtr known as the Mountain. His views, however, underwent a onange, and in 1849 be was appointed minister plenipotentiary at Madrid, but was shortly afterward recalled for having quitted his post without authority, lie was made a French prince with a seat in the senate and council of state Dee. 23. 185.T, and at the same time received the grand cross of the legion of honor and the rank of a general of dtvis.on. In 1854 he was appointed to a command in the ex pe tition to the Crimea and commanded an infantry division of the reserve at the battles of Alma and Inkermann. On account of his sudden retirement from bis post, ill health being his excune, the sobriquet Plnl'lon was given him by his countrymen. In 1655 he was named as president of the imperial commission of the universal exhibition. In June, 1S53, he was placed at the head of the new ministry for Algiers and the colonies, lut soon resigned this position, lie married the Princess Cloii.de, daughter of Victor Emmanuel, late king of Italy, Jan. SO, loji', by whom h had two sons, Napoleon V lctor Jerome Frederick, horn July 18, 186'J, and h'upoleon Louis Joseph Jerouie, born July 16, 18iH, and one dauuhte, Man Letitia Eugenia Catharine Adelaide, born Dec. 1'0, 15'Jtf. In the Italian campaign of 139 he commanded the French army of reserve in the north of Italy, but was not engaged in any of the great bat ties. In the senut6 in 18 til he made at attack upon the Orleaus family, which was answered with spirit by the Duo d'Aumale. Prince Napoleon, to the disgust of a great portion of the French army, declined to accept tho challenge sent him by the duke oa that occasion. He was president of the commission to represent France in the great exhibition at Kensington in 1802. In 1865 he was appointed president o( the commissioners for tne universal exhibition at Pans in 1567, but resigned the pott in consequence of a reprimand which be received from tho emperor for a speech delivered iu Corsica at the inauguration of a statue of the Emperor Napoleon I, Msy 27,105. On war being declared with Prussia in July, 1S70, Prince Napoleon asked bis cousin to appoint him to a military command. The emperor, however, declined to do so. After the fall of tbe empire he spent some months in Brussels and in other continental cities, but ultimately fixed his residence in England. After My 24, 1873. be obtained permission to return to France, After the death of the emperor Prince Napoleon claimed to be the chief representative of bia family and endeavored, though without success, to organize a party of his own in opposition to the adherents of the Empress Eugenie and the prince imperial. At the general election of Feb. 20, 1670, Prince Napoleon came forward as a candidate in the arrondisment of Ajaccio against M. Kouher. Prince Napoleon was defeated on the second ballot, but the chamber invalidated the election of his adversary and on May 141 the prince was elected. He took his seat on the benches of the left, though he did not identify himself with any particular group. On Deo. 24, 1870, he delivered a speech iu which be made a violent attack on the clerical party. At tne eleotion of Oct. 14 he was defeated in the arrondissment of Ajiccio by baron Haussmau. On Jan.; 16. 1333, a tnaniiesto by the prince appeared in the J-'ijaro and was extensively placarded on the walls of Paris. ' Iu this document, which was an indiotment against the republio, he posed as a champion of the church and advised the nation to have recourse to a pleb tcitf, A meetiDg of the cabinet wa immediately convened and the prince was arrested and imprisoned. The chamber des mises en acousat'on unanimously decided, however, that the prince had in reality committed no offense, and accordingly, after a month's detention, he was set at liberty. He wns included in the expulsiou law of 136 and left Frrnce on its promulgation. Another Bonaparte G am, Paris, March 17. The Princess Marianne Bonaparte, n grandniece of Napoleon I, died today at Ajaccio, Corsica. ANSWERS TO CORRESPONDENTS. T.C. O., Bloomfield, Ind. (1) Answered in reply to G. S. G., Mt. Vernon. (2) A law was passed by the last legislature (approved March 5) providing for the registration of dogs with tho township trustee. Attorney-General Smith holds that under this law dogs may be registered, but that it is not necessary ; that the tax may be paid under the provisions of the old law and that in listing dogs assessors should follow tbe provisions of tho law of 183. (3) Honorably discharged Union soldiers will not have to work on the public highways this year. G. S. G., Mt Vernon, Ind.-(1) The tax law, as finally passed, provides for the selection of the first county assessors by boards of county commissioners on the first Monday in June (instead of April;, 1S91. (2) Obviously county assessors cannot visit and instruct township assessors during the months of April and May, 18'J1, because there will be no county assessors during those months. The township assessors will be obliged to get information about their duties this year by studying the law, but may properly advise with auditors, county commissioners and county attorneys, eo that they may all be governed by the same construction Of thO Ia.
A TAX NOT A LICENSE. The Treasory Gives Liquor Dealers a Few Points. Washington-, March 22. Gen. Nettleton, acting secretary of the treasury, has issued a circular letter, of which tbo following is tho text, announcing a chango In the form of the special tax stamp for retail liquor dealers: Sir Letters are frequently received at the department stating that In many parts of the country retail liqnor dealers claim to hold a permit or license from (he United S'ates for carrying on their business; that in many cases where local law prohibits public drinking places the law is openly violated by persons ho claim to do business under at least the moral sanction of a "federal license." and that this fact, together with the belief common among; many good citizens that the U. U. gov eminent does in fact ism such licenses, greatly retards the enforcement of wholesome restrictive laws and promotes disorder. It should be unucccu try to state that the U. 9. government does not irsue a license or permit of any nature to any person in any atata to carry on the business of retail liquor dealer, ami it is difficult to understand how any intel ligent citizen can be imposed upon by the opposite claim. Congress having levied a revenue s a np tav. of $Jj per annum on the business of retail liqttour dealers the commUnioner of internal revenue endeavors to collect this tax, wherever and by whomsoever tbe business is carried on; but no semblance of permission, express or implied, ia given by the U. S. government in its revenue laws orotherwise to begin or continue such business in any place con trary to local legislation. A cbauga hss ben tuaile In the form of tbe IT. S. stamp issued to retail liquor dea'er as eTldene-s thot they have paid such tax. lbs new form, which will go into 'lie July 1, next, reals as follows: "U.S. stamp for special tax; internal rercnue. ReceiTed from the sum ot doliars for specUl ts on the bi.lnes of re'ali Honor dea'er at for th period represented by the coupon or cotipous hereunto attached." And across the face of th stamp is inscribed the following statement, embracing the substance of sec. 3,213 of the Revised Statutes : Tr.is tsnip is simply a receipt for a tax palJ the government and docs not exempt the hulicrirom any penalty or punishment provided lor by the law of any state for carrying on t!ie suld burioess within such state, sni does not anthorizs the commencement nor tt continuance ol suob buai t coutrary to thalaws of sucb state, or in t Uces prob.iiiittd by municipal law. Sea sec 3,2U, Kerisei Statutes United States. It is believed that this action will leave no ground for further misapprehension. lletpeetfully, A. B. Nettletos, Acting Secretary. Asks I'iM-ctlon for Pod r.Lti.: gift line. An application has been recoived by Secretary Rusk, from a Chicazo firm, for inspection of hos designed for the export trade under the recent act of congress providing for such inspection. The regulations for such inspection are already drawn up so far as is necessary for compliance with the requirements of the law. In referring to this law and to that which provides for the regulation by the secretary of agriculture of the condition of cattle-carrying vesse:s, the firm declares that these laws will help the farming anil cat-tie-raisin intercut beyond anything it is now possinle to estimate. Foreign countries, it believes, will not take our animal products for human food without inspection, and it is persua led that by these two bills becoming a law, millions" will be eaved to the countrv.
A BONUS ON LOYALTY. Chill's President Offers Omait Indaoements to .. vl OPWra. "Washington', P. C, March 22. The bureau of American republics furnishes the following information : The president of Chili has given a gratituity equal to a year's pay to all the officers of the navy of that republic who refused to join with their comrades in the revolution. Iiecent newspaper advices trom Valparaiso 6ny nearly all of the traffic upon the railways of Chili bad been suspended because of a coal famine in tbe country. The price of coal on Jan. 17 was $55 a ton, and the 6upply almost exhausted.- Unless the blockade cf the coal ports is soon raised railway tralbc and all industries requiring fuel will have to be entirelj' suspended. Tbe official gazette of the British colony of Barbadosa, Feb. 10, Mates that the governor-general devoted his attention almost entirely to the subject of reciprocity with the Uniteii States. On tbo following day a resolution was introduced into the colonial legislature for the a appointment of a committee to prepare an address to tbe secretary of state tor the colonies getting forth the commercial situation of tbe island, its trade relations with tbe United States and tho necessity of poor action in the direction of a reciprocity treaty. Antofagasta is reported as being bombarded. A SAMPLE SETTLEMENT. Rough Trentmenthy Italians of a Pretended ?fw Orlesna "Angr.H Chicago, March 22. Charles ItaUon, a repairer in tbe employ of the fire alarm telegraph service, went into barber shop of F. Pierfola on Harrison-st., and seated himself in a chair, called on any members of the Mafia to pve him a ghave. He also announced that he had hand m settling the New Orleans troubles, being a member of the mob that stormed the Crescent city jail. For a moment the Italians looked at the customer and then fell on him en-masse. W hen the "aventter" laid in the street he looked as if he had been in collision with a locomotive. . The terrific thumping he received with pokers, chairs and billets of firewood may result fatally. Tonicht three barbers, Alexander ecozso, Michael Herelo and Jacob Saro were arrested charged with the assault on the "aveneer." Button, it is believed, was not in New Orleans at all and was trying to be funny. gTATE OF INDIANA, ALLEN COUNTY. In the AHen circuit court. In the matter of the etate of Joseph Pratt To whom it may coucern: All ergons ictorested am hereby notified that on the 18th day of Ma'eh, l-yi, Iavid C. Fisher of Alien countr, s at" of Indiana. CI d in th office of the elerlc ol tbe Allen circuit court, bN writt-n application for appointment as adalnlstrator of toe iststj of J seph 1'iOtt, statins; therrin that stud Joseph l'ra t la now deal, bo not bavins; beea luvird from for tho period ot Are years last faL Said application is made upon said grounds ai b statute in such caws provided. r-aid application will be heard 1 the. AI e i circuit eourt o the 16th day of Msy. 1891. tha same being the Judicial day of tbe April turm, Hs31, ol said eourU Wit new my hand and tbe seal of said court this 18th day of March, JH9I. DANIEL W. BOD DEB, Clerk. VTOTICE is hereby pi ren that tbe Board of Commls1 so rs of Mtrion county, itat- ot Ind an, will receive sealed proposals at the oounty auditor's office, iu Iud.aoapoiis, until May 7. 18J1. at U o'clock ni., for exemption, timber for masonry, tbe maeonry. and the superstructure for a bridge over Fall creek, on the Floral avenue free gravel roa L For detail of superstructure call at auditor's ollice, where plans and speeiftestlons can be s-en on and alter April IS. 1891. Bidder to furnish their own plans andsjieoifleat eus tbere.'or, ai d complete strain sheet to accompany ach p an. bids for the superstructure and substructure to be made separately, bonds a required by law to accompany eacn bid. Ibe Doard reserves tbe right to reject auy and all bids. By order of the Board of CVimnrminner. of Marlon county, Indiana. THOilAS TAGOAK1, Auditor. DEECHAM'S PILLS cum SICK HEADACHE. 535 Cents a Box. OB AXL XDHX7CK3ISTS.
A MOST EXCITING DAY' Grain Markets in a Great Uproar.
Prices All Go Up With Nervous Jumps. Everything on th Chicago Board Takes a Leap. Wheat, As Usual, Setting the Paces for tho Others. Corn (Shorts Pnt In av Bad rrexllcament. lNDUNAFOLU. KI Monday Evening-. March 23. f Oat?, wheat and corn were all etrong and higher today. There was a good demand for everything but very little offering. Receipts for the past twenty-four hours, 21 cars, against a total of 34 cars for Saturday. Wheat-Stronger; No. 2 red. $1.02 bid; No. 3 rel, 97c ; rejected, 80r390c; unmerchantable, 70(7"5c. Corn Strong ; No. 1 white, 64c bid ; No. 2 white, 64c bid; white rrixed, 63c bid; No. 3 white, G4c bid ; No. 2 yellow, 63c bid ; No. 3 yellow, t2Jc ; No. 2 mixed, 621c bid ; No. 3 mixed, G2jc bid; sound ear, 61c bid. Oats Strong; No. 2 white, 56 Jc bid; No. 3 white, .VScbid; No. 2 mixed, 55c bid; rejected, 50c. Bran Stronger ; receipts light; local dealers nro bidding $19.75. llav Timothy (choice), 513.50 bid; No. 1, $12.50 bid; No. 2, $10.00; No. 1 prairie, $7 bid; No. 2 prairie, $5.50; mixed hay, $5.50. speeds. Wholesale prices in seeds are as follows: Per Luthcl. Clovrr, medium, recleantd, fair to good i3 85(34 35 Clover, medium, reeleaned, prime... 4 75 Clover, medium, reoleansd, choice... 4 70fgi4 P5 Clover, mammoth, reeleaned. prime 4 3C(cf4 00 Timothy, reeleaned, prime to striotly prime 1 50(1 70 Timothy, reeleaned, choice 1 60(41 70 lllue gross, fancy 2 &5(&3 10 Orchard grass. .. 1 C0(gl 85 Eed top , ;oy t'5 F.nclish blue grass- 2 50(c2 70 Millet 8i(sj;l 2.5 Hungarian Millet 85(3,1 00 PRODUCE MARKETS. CHICAGO, May 23. The visiMe supply of grain as reported for the hoard of trade are as follows: No. 1 wheat, 23,05.1.000; increase, 15 U 0 Corn 2,071,000; increase 250.000. Oats, 2.811.000; deems 5, J,000. ltye, 459,tOJ; increase, 43,000. Barley, 1,483,000; decrease 381,000. The day was an exciting one on the board of trade during most of the session. It was a bull camp ilun in all ptrts of the floor and the bears were being tossed high in air in all of the trading pits. The excitement carried prices up in nervous jumps. Wheat was strong. It started on the jump and toward 10 o'clock, after having advanced lo rr ,u., it broke through all restraints and ina-ie a jump of an additional lo ia about five minutes. The cables were very firm, with strong upward tendency, &ud the weather in England was called frosty, A mistake in LrttJbirtet'a report of the world's visible supply, as reported Saturday, was made, reduciug the total by 50,000,000, and corn was advancing Jc at a jump. The starting price for May was anywhere from 1.12 to S-l.OJJi, with very little sold below the highest ot tbose tigurcs. Around 1.024 and up to 1.03 buying and seU:og went on at a rattling rate for about five minutes. The fluctuations went darting up and down between the quotations given with an occasional shoot upward to $1,033 during the first hour and a half of the session and then followed the excited advance a' ready alluded to. auder which May whs rushed ujward to Xi)i. The rapidity of the advance can be judged from an incident of the trading. A broker who bad orders to buy in nbont 500,000 bushel for a prominent short se'ler bought tbe first 50.000 of it at f 1.03 and although he got it si: in 25.000 and 50,000 bushel lots as quickly oa he cou-d get them on liis trailing card, the price was $1.0lj before be could complete his order. Heavy shipments of gold were engaged for exportation by Wednesday's steamers, acoordinjr to New York dispatches and some of tbe most successful local speculators were amonit the heaviest sellers ou the advance. It was Dot until the visihle supply Ktatement was published showing 153,123 bushels increase during the last week that any general disposition to fight the advance was indulged in. The price of May worked backward to $1 03, bat only rested there very briefly when lc was quickly clapped Upon the top of the quotation last set du. The higliest roint reached was $1.04, and it was wanted at within c of tbe top as trading ceased for the day. The shorts in corn were in even a worse predicament today than on any of the former days of their recent grievous trouble. The weather was damp and tbe receipts were 60 cars less than were estimated on Saturday. The longs were masters of the situations. The wildness of the opening may be gathered from the different prices paid at the first rush. There were sales ot May made simultaneously at 07c, and at many other intermediate prices all the way cp to (iSe; that was the highest point until considerably later in the eofesion, wheu it made another upwnrd rush up to 69c, the top price of the day. Strength and excited bidding up on every upturn were the prominent feature ol the day's business. Oats partook of the strength that characterized every thing else on the floor closing J(S.lo higher. New York bought, the shorts bought and the local sculping crowd helped the advance. Bartlett-Frazer led the selling. The provision pit was a counterpart of all the others. It was iiitiieult to execute orders so quickly did offerings dry up when the buyers were the pjost clamorous. Tbe receipts of hoes were 4.000 bead below the estimated and prices were higher. The shorts were run to cover and had to pay heavily for tho privilege of getting out of a bad deal. The leading futures ranged as follows:
ArUoV. 0,niii. Uiirti-.l. LowtaU Closing, WMMarT- S t W SI 02 11 00 II K1 Maj..- 1 02 1 0t?i i 01 1 OP, July S;4' 03 V.i 112; 8 Coac Mar M fi M 67 My. 67 6:l .7 6tB July. t 67Ji 65 AThZt. WVi '?4i WK1 K June. to 53 Vg! 54 M'i July- sis aa 51',! SiU Alar.... 11 85 12 65 11 M 12 51 Mar. 12 05 12 5 12 t'3 12 75 July 12 45 VSiZ 12 45 13 20 Labd Mar 6 6 71 6 50 6 70 Mar. 6 M 9.'!4 6 65 6 8TS JulT... 6 8'Js 7 6S7f 7 12, , Bins Mr. 5 70 6 05 5 70 90 Msy 5 90 6 22V SO 6 10 July C 20 C S.'V, 6 20 6 W
Cash quotations were as follows : Floor- Dull but hrru ; No. 2 spring wheat, $1.02,' ' 1.02: No. 8 spring wheat, 9ic; No. 2 red, l.041.04;:$; No. 2 corn. bv2a.2c; No. 2 oata, 53ri54c: No. 2 rye, 5e; No. 2 barley, nominal; No. 1 flax seed, $;.u;.$; prime timothy teed, mess pork, per brU, 2.& a,l2.24; lard, per 100 lbs., $&7i; short rib sides (loose). $,9t fta.O ; dry salted shoulders (boxed), $!.!( ($4.50; short clear sides (boxed), (iUlZ'; whisky, distillers' finished goods, per gal., $Llti; sugars, cut lot, unchanged; No. 2 white oats, 54&(&55 !c; No. 3dcv, 53(a54e; No. 3 barley, f. c.b.67(j, 73c; No. 4 do., 66c. Aeceittt. &jm4U. Flour, brie. USSSSSSMSSSIIS Wheat, bu 450,000 21,000 Corn.bu... 139.000 114,000 OaU, bu 183.000 1 63.010 Bye, bo... 18.0C0 12,000 Barley, bo 45.000 P.000 . . Oa j srodaoe tsvefcaaft today tfe batter
market was steady and unchanged. Eggs 21 3e. NEW YORK. March 22. Flour receipts, tt.721 packages: eiports, 3,013 bbls, 15,733 sacka; active; stronger; salsa, S6.700 bbls. Cornmsal Firm; fairly active; yellow western, $3.30) 3.65. Wheat-Receipts, 75,000; exports, 27; sales, 19.0(00 futures, 3:1.000 spot; spot market i to ?o higher; dull; firm; No. 2 red, M.1554'r3Mt5i elevator; $L18' afl -at; il.K.J ,' 1.ViZ t. o. b.; ungraded red. il.01Hl.17Ji; No. 1 northern, s1.23:vl.24; No.i hard, tl-V:7; optiooa opened unchanged to e down on expected increase in visible supply, advanced Hi fa 2 i o on better cables, (re buying by Kuro pean houses of all months and bad crops news trom France, with a general full demand on investment and coveriug, closing firm at the best of he day. exeeptin Mar, which is ,e lowrr; No. 2 red, March, f l.loJira 1.1G74'. dosingf 1.16 ; May, tl.lOX1.12, dosing tl.l2'4; June, fl.O.lTvfil.10'4. closme JUO'Julr. 11.06:'
J.OS?.', closing; tl.OS' i ; As f l.OJCJl.Ul. cb. ing 11.04; Sept., l.0-'fl.C3', closing fl.03'$; Dee., il.011.057;, o.osir.z Rye Steady, quiet. Stocks of grain store and afloat March 21 What, KwVXe ; corn, 330,472; ooU, O01.7S6; rye, 17,4j1; barley, 66,516; malt. 19t3,753; peas, 8.127. liarler Finn, quiet; barley malt. dull. Corn Receipts, r1,500; exports, 9,713; sales, 6216,HX) futures. 4".000 spot; ipot market higher, firm, moderately active, scarce; No. 2. 78(3,7a!o elevator, 14 (3,51c afloat; uncraded mixed, laHir; steamer mixed, 7."79;4'o; No. 3, 7S'7?o; options advanced 2(a2ie, with a bullish setit:ment all over the couutry and farmers delivering sopplies in a light way, with active, Luyrtg interest by shorts and longs; March, I'V'ip, closing, 7!'e; May, 72T-75 1-1'ic, eloing 74?bo; July, 70 .7:;? c oiiotr 72'ac. Oats Receipts, 74,0 JO; exports, f2; salts, 405.000 futures, llf.OCr) sj.ot; spot market lairly active, "jYd lo up; strong optiona fairly active; March, 60?afiiO,e. cloning eo"fc; May, 60V4'(561!Se, closing oO'ie: July. 5'.;.,v, closing 59,r; spot No. 2 white, eoTillc; mixed western, 6"cfcf2c; white do, fV)(,ti-; No. 2 Chicago, fJl)i(61?ic. Hay Firm; fair iemand. Hops 6teadr; quiet. C":ree Options opened steady, unchanged to 10 points down, closed barely steady; 5(i,2Q points down; salea, 9.759 baps, inc'.u l:ng April. 17.50Q 17.55; May. 17. 4 0(1 7. 50c; June, 17.ilo; July, 16.75rlrJ5e; Sept.. 16.05fli 1.': e'., 15.55c; Nov. 14.80c; spot Rio, dull; firm; fair cargoes, 20c; No. 7, l'o. ujrnr Raw, quet; firm; tefined, dull. Moiasses 1 orcign.tteady; 11 Jfo tanks ;S'ewOrkaLi. steady fair demand. Eags Quiet; weskcr; western. 4,'ic; recepts, tt.971 pekgs. Hides Steady and quiet. Pork Good demand and firm; old mej, $11.25 (12; new mess, tl3.25Gtl4; extra prime. Ill (4,11.50. Cut Meats Strontr; wanted. Mtdd.es Dull; firm. Lard Active; much higher; strong; western steam, $7; sales, 003 ti-rces; options, sales 19,500 tierces; May f.?-.'7.05, closing tr.05; July, 7.0t'7.31. clos.ng 7.30; Aug., $7. 437.44, closing j7.43; Sept., 7.38, closing $7.53. Butter Better demand ; firmer; western dairy, 15(i2Sc; do factory, l.'ifc; do creamery, 2l($'32c; El?in, ?2?i.7ip. Cheese Good deruaud; firm; skiins, G,li(j,10e; Ohio flats, 8(1 lc. INDIANAPOLIS MARKETS IvniANAroi.T, In., Monday Evening, March 23. Hut one change in the quotations on the general market has been made today and that i in groceries, simp having advanced 2c per ga'lon now being 30i Markets are all unusually firm. Wholesale grocers reror.td very good trade as aldo tho iron and hardware dealers. It being Monlay tho dry goodd trade has been hardly conn menced, though there has already been fair sprinkling of buyers on the market. The sensation in domestics seems to be low-priced calicoes. In theWest they are booming higher markets while in Sqvt York Saturday, tho day was extremely dull at the ordinary quotations. Some new lines will bo introduced in tbe local trade thi week among which are plaid domestic?, plaid 6-4 dre?s goods and high novelties in dres3 ginghams. Fruit and vegetable men had a pretty good trade, while poultry and produce dealers fcu er almost the opposite, butter and egpebeinj high ami strong with very iittle otiering and the pon try market weak. Drug merchants did fairly, but their lines exhibited no new features. Frovia on. SMOKED M3ATS. Reliable" brand Bugar-cured hams 2 libs. average M 9 17 lbs. and average .. P' 15 tb. average 9'j 12 1L.8, average 10 10 I es. average 10' t "Morgan & Grey" brand o less thin "Heliable." "lieliablo" brand, liock ham, 13 to 18 lb. av 9?X Boneless ham, "Reliable" brand . . 8 California ham 10 to 14 lbs. average .... G Breakfast bacon clear, Lnjlith cured, "Reliable" brand - Morgan A Grey - 6 Martin 4 Co., very light piece ff'a English shoulder, cured, rolled, "Reliable" brand - 7 English shoulders, "Reliable" brand. 11 lbs. average 1) lbs. average 4 CI? Morgan.! Grey. 11 :b. av 1 less Pngar-cur t 10 o 12 ib HVrire h"t Baoon Clear sides. 2i to 25 lbs. average... 6. Clear bellies, 11 lbs. average - 7 Range o 15 to 30 1obm same virility and average aa heretofore, it'ioiit re'evt'on 0'$ Clear backs, 8 lbs. average C)i Clear backs, 15 lbs. average Flitches Short backs, 8 lbs. average 6 Dried beef html "Reliable" brand 11 Morgan A Grev 6'j Knuckle plecei o iniida pieces Jfo alvanoe will be ohsrged. Beef tongues, each - 43 Bologna Skin, large te; so ail, .";ic; cloth. 5Hc Weiner worst 7KD. S. and pickled meats Clear sides, elsar bellies, elear btcxa, lit lets than smoked. Shc-rtfat baeks 7 lb. aTera-e 5'2' Bean pork (clear J, per brl, 200 lb"- $1 1 f 0 Ham and rump pork, per brl, 200 His... II 50 Also, half barrels, 100 lbs, at half the price of tbe barrel, adding COe to cover additional cost of paokaec. Lrd Pure, kettle-rendered, la tierces, 7e; "Indiana" in tierces. 7c; also in tii.rdwojd tubs of 55 lbs net, same price as t erces: bardwood buckets, lb L'S over iiies. Cans, cross weiebts 60-lb caua, in single cases, or case of 2 can. a ad ranee on price of tierces; 20-1 b in cases of 4 cans, ?, e advance on price of tieress; 1Mb in case o cans Ji'c advanoe on priee of tieret; 5-1 h In cae nf 12 cans Jic advance on price of tie-roes; 5-1 b in mse .i 10 cans, la adraaoe oa prioe of tieroes. Fresh Meats (Shipped at buyer's risk.) PorkLoins (alt fat trimmed o'Tc!isel:) GJj CotLtge hatus, lean back pieces weighing 5 to 6 lbs.. 6 Tenderloins. -. 8 pa re-ribs Trim mine Pork sausage Link Bulk, in 2Mb pails12S' 4i 5 CK ..... 6 Molasses New Orleans (new crop S53!o; medium sirups, 32(33 e; choice, Z.(i3c. Sugar Hard. 1 Confectioners A, CHo'e;o A, 6?ift6s)ie; co ee A.6)ifd)0S'c: white extra C, ti---(GNe; extra C, S-; good yebow, 55c; fair ysdow, 6;'J0.Vc; yellow, ('(5'-c. Co flee Common te good, 20HQ1Mt, prime to ehoioe, Ki($'XH fey, 25.'iW,'io; golden Kio, S7e; Java. 2dX(M)-ic; Binner package, 3 ?ie; ArbuckleV, 2 -c; Lyon. 2 ?-Jc. Spice Pepper, 15l6e; allspice. IJne; elovet, 26J0c; cassia, 1012e; nutmejs, 752$ 80c, Storeh Refined pearl, 4.Qilt per lb; cbara?!on gloss, one and three-pound packages, 6(tfl 'c; champion gloss lamp, 44'(&5c; one and three-pound paokages, 6e; improved corn, 6X7e. Salt In car-lots, 93o; small lota, (1Q1.05. Miscellaneous Rice, Louisiaoa, 6f7Ko; eoal oil, 7Hluc Beans Navy. $2.:t f42.40o; medium, I2.M32.40; marrowfat, f33.10. Iran and Hardware. Bar Iron, $1.90032.00; wrought charcoal bar, f3.90S.0a Horseshoes Burdens, 14.25; Walker's, H254.35; male hoes, $5.25; eut-nall rate for 60s and 60s, steel nails, $1.90; here, $4-50 per box; wire noils, rate $2.40. Barb-wire Galvanued, $3,50; plain annealed fence wire, $2.40; gaivamxed. 60o ad
vance; 10. 11 and 12 s'ss the regular advances. Powder 15.50 for 25-lb. keg. Shot $1.45 seek. Loaded shells 12 gauge, $1.60; 10 gauge, $1.75 per 10a Fralts and Tesblea PoUtoes $1.20 per bu. frosa ear; $L?G3L3 from store; any i om seed, $..0 per tustel early Oluo see l, i-l.feo per busbal. Ouicns .5.2'(3,5.6d per bbL; colon aetta, white. $7.00 per buibel; yellow, $100 pel bosbel. tarty vegetablee Lettuce, lS'S.le per lbs radishes, o'J" vfr rhubarh, 3(ij,.j5o pel dot; onions. lj.-'Co per;doz.; kale, $L25 pel bl'l.; sninsrh. il.50 ib. Celery Common. l.VqjJJoj fancy white plume, 40(350o per bunch. Kutabntfit It 5a Cranberries Cholee to fancy, $Tf51? en a dium,$luti per bd; boxes, $J?5(3X50; Jen
eys, vi i.ou'411. Apples Common. $2.25(0.30; ehoioe, IM OV00; fancy, i.73$JV.i . Ortoges-Floridoa, $75Q3.50 per box; Calk torn ia oramrea, tancy Kiviraide, aaorted slzee, per box, $33.25; Los Angeles seedling, 2.76(3 3.U0; navels, .Straw brrie-J53.30o per quirt. Turnips t.00Ql.25 per bbL Lemons Cboiee to fancy, t-.Vri.KQ, Sweet Potatoes Jerseys, $ .75(4.00 per brlf, Ktntucky, $3.00j3.23 per brl; Illinois, $I7o(3 4.0 . Cabbage Home grown, $2.50Q2.75 per brL Florida. (2.75 per era ts; imported, 3o per lb. Grapes Ma nk-aa, o,5j pr D. Honey New white oomb, one ponnd eeea tioni, 20c; dark. 1674)1 (to. Pst-a-Urd. 12 lb boxes, To; 001b boxes, 310c: Persian. Pigs Layer, 13H W5e per lb; bags, 7X$S Bananns ILOOS.OO per banoh. Cider Da ;y prime Jalee. $7.50 31 gaL bbh CoanuU 5.00QG.00 per hundred. Cucumbers Per doen, $L75. nid, LaatHrr, Tallow sad Flo Tallow-No. 1, 4XQ4XV, No. 2, $tfo Hides Market ta i: No. 1 tallow, 4e No, 2, 3e; prices, No. 1 cured, 5fo; No. 3 eared, 4Mo; No. 1 green, 4e; No. 2 groea, 3d. leather Oak sole, 2634e; hem look soles. 23(32tfo; harness. 8(53o; skirting. S33ei black bridle, per dos.. $55(60; fair bridle, $50d0 per dos.; eity kip. 60(3 35o; Frenel, kip, 75cGt$1.10; oity calf skins, 70c 3 $1.10; French oalt skins, $1(21.75. Sheep Shearing. 2'XJ30c; lambe, 4075e. Grease Brown, 2H'c; yellow, 5c; white, 4a, Poultry and Frodac. Egge-15M Poultry Liens, fe; spring eblekent, $ej roosters, 3c; turkeys, hens,10e ehoioe; yoaca turkeys, Po; turkeys, olJ locos, fto; Reese, faU feathered, $5.40(6 per dos.; docks, 7c Feathers Prime geese, 35'i3oe perlb.:daen. 15(($20c liutter Dealers are bidding for ehoioe roll 15lio; fancy creamery, 30350; cholosj creamery, 18S20o. TTool. We qnote farm Iota Tuh-wasbed an picked. 35(36e; nn washed fine. 182le; nn washed and medium and oo tana on grades. If li good order,2325a. Fleeoe Washed, It light well washed and is good order, 2?(3lo FANCY PRICES FOll SWINE. SHEEP AND CATTLE WERE SCARCE. One Tod of Bog Brines Fancy Prle Market Quite Active Indleatlone sua Sheep and Cattle Quito Good Some Representative Sales. Cktox Stock fains, 1 Ikdiaic apous, March 23. CATTLE Receipts, none. Indications good. Export grades, 1,450 to 1.C50 lbs...$5 20Q 5 40 Good to choice shipping, 1,200 to 1,400 lbs 4 ?5 5 00 Fair to Medium shipping. 1,000 to 1,200 lbs 3 M 4 31 Common shipviugr, 900 to 1,100 r'i- 3 25 3 73 Common to good stcckers, 500 to 800 tbs .. 2 75Q 3 00 Extra fancy heifers, 1,200 to 1..VX) R.3 - 4 0m 4 50 Good to choice heifers 3 00(Tfc 3 73 Common and liebt heifers 2 OWJ 2 50 (Jood to ehoioe cows 3 5fJ 4 00 Common to iiood cows 1 60 2 5) Veal calves 4 00(4 5 50 Fancy export bulls 2 75($ 3 50 Common to good bulls 1 50(d) 2 60 Good to common cows and calves. 20 00a35 00 Common to fair cows and calves.12 O0(g20 00 SatKP Receipts, coue. The outlook fair. Good to choice bm bs.................... $5 50 8 00 Fair to good iambs - 5 005 50 Common to fair Iambs 3 5'J3 00 Good lo choice sheep . 4 50(i5 20 Fair to good sheep. ....................... 4 00(44 5 Cotomou to fair sheep 3 004 00 Pelters per bead 1 Xa,2 OO Bucks per head 3 00u?4 50 IIOGS Rcoeipts, 1,700. Market opened active and higher. One fancy load of butcher hogs sold at $4.4-2. But the general ea'ea were $3.95 to $4.25. Shippers and packers buying closed steady. We quote: Choice heavy -.$4 304 40 Heavy and mixed paoking...... 4 10Cd)4 25 Choice hghta 4 VCKc&i 20 Common lights.. . . 3 75'S 90 Pigs 3 2o3 75 Rougba - 3 25&S 75 EEPRE3E.NTATIVE SALES. J'-. Av. Vr. 69 151 4 C5 7 2u0...m 3 40 175 -110 8 90 53 157 4 10 Ko. Jv. Tr. 60 206 t4 25 i 2.......1o3..m. 4 lj .2u5..- 4 17 2o7 4 42 ELSEWHERE. CHICAGO, March 23. The Evminq Journal reports: Cattle Receipts, 14,000; shipment, 4,000; market steady to etrong; steers, prime tofoney, f5.50r5.8o; others, $4 4.50; heifers and cows, $2.25(4.50: stockera, $2.25-4. Hogs ReceipU. S0.000; shipments, 16,000; market higher; rough and common. $4(4.15 good mixed and packers, $4.204.35; prima heavy and bu toners' weights, $4.4045 light. $4.30(34.40. Sheep Receipts, 10,000; shipments, 2.S00; market weak; shade lower; natives, $5(5.50; westerns. t3(ar'j.'0; native lambs, $5.25ti. CINCINNATI, March 23. Boot In demand higher; oommon and light, $3.754.?0; pock. iug and butchers', $4.154.40; receipts, 3,70O shipments, 1,150. Cattle In good demand and strong; sota mon, $2.0( ,S 25; fair to choice butcher grades, $3.50(0.5; prime to choice shippers, $4.755.40j receipts, 1,100; shipments. SO. Sheep In moderate supply and firm; common t choice, $3.50Q5.75; extra fat wethers and yearlings, $5.75(IjiG.OO; receipts, 260; shipcents, none. Lambs, firm for erring with light receipts; common to choice, f 9(jlL50 per 100 pounds. NEW YORK. March 21 Beeves Receipts 10,611 bead, including 89 care for sale. Market 10c per 100 pounds lower; nativs steers $4.60Q 5.75 per 100 pounds; bulls and cows $2.35450; dressed beef steady at 7(iSo per lb. Calves Receipts, 1,641 bead; market steady; veals, $57.75. Sheep Receipts, 9,430 bead; market steady; sheep, $"6.60; lsmbe, $6W7.C5; dressed mutton firm at SJ-QlOo per lb; dressed lambs steady at P&lOc. lloirs Receipts, 14.949 bead, consigned direct; nominally steady at 3.403.95. EAST LIBERTY. Pa., Mareb 23. Cattle Receipts, 3,360; shipments, 1.C27; market shad stronger in good trades; common very dull, 10(3l5oofj from last week's prices; no cattle shipped to New York today. IJogs Receipts, 7,500; tbipmenta, 4,250: market firm; Philadelphias, M.Xai C); good mixed and best yorkers, $4.3rci,1.4o; light vorkers, $110(3,4.25; P'8-s, $3.754; 10 cars of noes shipped to New York today. Sheep Reeeipis, 6.000; shipments, 2.S00; market firm; lambs slow at last week's prices. BUFFALO. March 23. Cattle Aeti vs. 10 (5l6o higher; receipts. 161 loads through; 135 sate; beat steers, $5 3-5x6); rood, $4.90(5.25; fair to medium, $4.60o,4.Sa Sheep and Lambs Recepts, 12 loads throagh; 70 sale; dull, 10(t'0o lewer; sheep, best, $5.855i6 03; good, $5.56(35.75; lambs, fait to best, $676(a7; common, $o.7526. II ofrs Active; higher; receipt. 105 loads through; So sale; medium, $1.50(4.50 ; choice heavy, $L55(g.4.6a For I'opular El action a. St. Louis, March 20. A Little Rock (Ark.) special stys that the bcuso today pasEed a concurrent resolution favoring . the election of president, vice-president and U. S. senators by popular rote.
