Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 7 June 1893 — Page 7
THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL. WEDNESDAY MORNING. JUNE 7, 1803-TWELVB PAGES.
DISCUSSING THE FARMER.
A RECENT PAPER READ BY WILSON A. DOAN. II Talk of the Ffinnrr In Modern Civilization and Picture for Hint a Place in III, tory The Pioneer from the Landing of th Pilgrim Father Fresh Blood Is Needed lu Cities. At- a recent meeting of the Marion county agricultural and horticultural r-o-eiety Mr. Wilson S. Poan reai a paper on The Farmer in Modern Civilization." It was as follows: "To measure tbe influence of any one class aa a factor in civilization with ex actness ia aa impossibility. It takes the mountain as well as tbe valley, the ruth' In torrent aa well as the placid lake to make up the whole Df the landscape. Neither tain, river nor plain can lav that thid beautv ia beauty tnounalone mino But each owna all, yet no one composes ill. A kind of an estate in the entirety, lust so with the factors of our ci viiintion school and college, farm and factory, plow and railroad, court and legislative chamber have all joined in building the edifice Df our modern civilization. And the.o forces if you will permit me to confine myaelf to our own land, have built a structure grand but not perfect indeed a structure with many tiaws a ftructuro that wants much yet before it ig com plete. "Look at it one moment, the resources of the broadest and moat fertile plain upon the globe, and of mountains bursting forth with rich ore are ltd lirm foundation tones. Ten thousand factories are its waha: railroads and telegraph M ires are ita beams and refters. The public school, adorned by the ornaments of college and university, is its' roof to protect ua from the floods of ignorance and superstition ; and a religion that knows no one creeJ form.-; its windows to let in the liwht of Leaven from a'.l bides. bat cats, what race, what profeibion tan ay that we have buiit this structure ourselves nnd it is ours alone? It ties been said of us, that we boast perhaps sonie of it is pardonable. Whatever may be in the future, one thine is pure in tho drama of history, our civilization is the filth and culminating act of the great p. ay. The Kirnt Soene. ''The Hebrew played the first cerie, and he gave the world a morality and religion. The tireek played the second, and he Bare to the world a language and a literature. Home Dlaved the third, and she gave to tho worid a civil biw. Lngland played the fourth, and ehe gave the world a trxde, a commerce, togeihvr with colonization. I'.ut on the suimet side of the world, in a virgin noil, (iod laid the scene of the fifth act. which should combine all the former acts. We are accustomed to boast of thw pilgrim fathers on Plymouth rock. They were indeed a handful of wheat eifted from the thatl of an old and weedy field and planted in the clearings of the primeval forests of New Fnglaud. "We are proud of the history of the Pennsylvania colonv, we like to 'huast of the o!d t'Jker colony that ner one hundred rears prior to the 1'eclaratlon of Independence iaid th inundation stoiieH of a democratic tovernuient. U huve made the ground where the- Mmc imaxoii eliu stood fcacred. Tho most reverenced piece of uit'tai with us is not the diamond of crown or gold of scepter, but the cracked, rough o.d liberty bull. We chernn the.e thing as the buds nay but the tirst promise of th llower of our civilization. I'.ut all these things rpeali of nothing more thun our babyhood. We wert not fairly commenced. Tho ground had not vet been c eared for the structure of our modern civilization. I'.ut I want to call your attention to another class ; Hih foundation htoueHof an empire ai.d state aro not Iaid in luxury; the framework ot a civilization ia not buiit by nun who ride the palace cars. Not worthy of less honor, not worthv of less fame than the pilgrim lathers ia that great arrav of pioneers, each of whom in the early dawn of thin century left the old homeetead in Pennsylvania, in New York. In Virginia, in North Carolina or outh Carolina, and, in an old covered wagon with his plow and ax and his guri.cii i bed the extern slope of the Alleghemes to look over on what? A fertile piain composed of rich and producfve farms and dotted with city, hamlet and village? A Chicago? A t Louis? A Cincinnati? An Omaha? Schools? Colleges? Universities and churches? Highways and railroads? No. not one. lie looked into the primeval forest a wilderness der.ee and deep it only highway was the Indians' trail and the dot. ra' path ; i'a city was the Indian village or a frontit r trading post; the only home the Indian's wigwam. Yet feariees, having faith in the ax and gun and his own right arm, he pressed along the trail until he buried himself in the midst of the forest. Ife built Ids cabin out of the trees that surrounded him. he built ita chimney with sticks and daubed it with mud, and his hearth he male of boulders picked from tho brook thai raa by his door. He covered it with great clap-boards split by his own hand from the oak that crew before his door. He built the floor of puncheon, he cut out a log in the wall and then pasted a piece of greased paper over the opening to lt in the light by day and a pie of hickory bark blazing on the rude hearth etone a Horded Lim light by niht. Nothing in Theorie. "Men in professors' chairs and college halls may talk about the philosophy of history and the development of our civilization they may have a hundred theories and a thousand caused but the fact remain! that the foundation stones of the commonwealth of Indiana and Ohio were Iain in just auch homes as theftu by your grandfathers and grandmothers and yoj and I have inherited it as our birthright. What is true of Indiana and Ohio ia true of Iowa, Kansas and Nebraska and all the Northwest. Civilization carried her foundation atones there not on vestibule overland fliers owned by a (iould or a Yandcrbiit, but she carried tbetn in a prairie aebnoner and she laid them in a thousand homes whose walla were eod and whose roof 3 were sod and whose floors the bare ground. Out of each homes as these came soma of our leaders and statesmen. Such wer the loyhood homes of our Lincoin and tiarfielJ, of John Drown and Lovejov. Pat the old cabin has long since decayed, the sod house is no longer found except no the far frontier. Instead of the trail, a network of rti roads has sprung into existence. This has cotne as junior pa.-tocr of the plow ; instead of the trading p st and frontier 7illaga the crowded metropolis. Instead of emigration to the far no today beholds an emigration the other way. Th junior partDr of the plow has coins far too near to usurping the control of the firm. The farmer has maintained the even course of hn way. while many who have handled his products and manufactured his goods have grown rich. Thirty years ago (he farmer ruled. Today Chicago and New York rule. "There ia a road rush away from the old homestead, and as soon as tho young man ia free from the restraints of childhood e gathers his gripsack and ia oil to the
city. He is caught by the promise of some cleakship, or perhaps a professional bee in his bonnet, and many a good farmer has been spoiled to make a poor doctor or an incompetent lawyer. The city may be the better for his being there, but the country is weaker. It is less able to rule, it has weakened its force and its power aa an element in our civilization. "Such things ought not to be. The cities are not able to mould and direct tbe growth of civilization they are ruled not by statesmen, but by ward politicians. In them wealth often increas.es at the ex penae of business and moral integrity. Of them it may be iaid : "111 fares tbe stats to hastening ills of prey. When wealth accumulates and men decay. "The fact of the matter is that in our great cities men do decay. Fxtrerue wealth and extreme poverty arealike productive of vice and crime. They are both alike dangerous elements in our civilization. The son of the monopolist is rocked in the cradle of luxury and indolence while the con of the farmer is rockod in the cradle of labor and industry. It is too often the case that the one spends his young manhood smoking cigarettes and playing pool, while the other follows his father's plow. Of the two, who is worthy to mould and nhape civilization? The first may bo developed into a ward politician, but never into a statesman, the second haa been developed into a statesman. New IMood Needed. "It is fortunate for the city when it secures him, for whatever else may be said, one thing is sure, just aa the pampered civi ization of old had to be invigorated from time to time with fresh infusions of barbaric blood, so our great cities, where great wealth on the one hand is inclined to make men less robust, self-indulgent and lesa moral and extreme poverty on the other is inclined to make men give way to every de gree of immorality and vice, must be infused with the purer and stronger blood of the young man from tho farm. We nii?st go back there to draw the fresh blood of ptrong manhood. We must go back there to draw a purer supply of business integrity. We have said that our cities rule, but who rules the citv ? Not the) men who have the interest of trio city, county or state at heart, but by men who have the interest of their own pocket-books at 6take. The statesman bus too near become like the mound-builder, a race that has perished from the face of the earth. Whatever may be th situation cf today, if the past is to be taken as an index of the future, the time will come when some Letter factions will be cast into the problem of our civilization. The time will coma when no .such a cceue shall be enacted aa that of the last legislature in Indiana. Wren tho people of this state demanded that railroad corporations should be made responsible to tfieir employes for the negligence of cnemployes, und then that legislature permuted the leading counsel in this city of one of the greifest railroad systems of Indiana to write the bill, and he wrote a farce. The time will come when the old blood of the Indiana mid Ohio pioneer will assert itself. It will find expression, though every political party that is organized today be swept from existence in the el.'ort. "The time will come when it will be said to the dt-uh rs in stock in Wall-et. and to tho men of the stock exchange of Chicago that you are none th lea gamblers than those who piav for the drinks in the lowest dives in the slums in our city. You are both alike cancers upon the face of our civilization, and we will take the oh: weep-hook of our grandfathers and cut you from it. Fanaticism upon the temperance question is to be avoided. It accomplishes nothing but up from the farm, hamlet arid village a moral force will. come that will say to the man ta ho habitually driuks his wine from a golden go'nlet that you are none the less n drunkard than he who habitually drinks bock beer from a schooner. You must both leave your hand oil the helm of the ship of state or else become sober men."
BERTHA MANCHESTER'S MURDER. The Arrest of tho Portuguese Charged w i 1 1 1 the Crime. Kam. IiivEir, Mass., June 4. Joseph (or Jose ) Carreiro, suspected of the horrible murder of Pertha May Manchester, is under arrest in the ceutral police station charged with homicide. That he really committed the murd.T there appears to be little roo-ii to doubt in view of the developments made in the investigation, which ended aftjr 4 o'c'ock this morn in;. Jose Carreiro gave himself up to the police last evening, and from 7 p. m. till after midnight he wai on the rack. At first his story was a good one. but one little break was made ; then came a change. Contradiction and lalsehood followed and he was ordered under arrest. After the investigation closed the mayor and ollicers of the police department decided that the public had a right to the facts in posstp.-sion of the police, so far as they could safely bo given. To this end a statement was read in the marshal's oilite, which recited that on the day of the murder Carreiro entered a 1 reach Canadian shoe dealer's store near the south end of Sagamore Mill and asked in broken English for a pair of shoes. He pulled out of his pocket a silver trade dollar, brightand apparently new. He also nulle 1 out from his pocket a silver halt dollar with a hole in it. These pieces answer the description of the part of the money taken Irom bertha's bureau drawer. 1'ertha's sister testified that the trade dollar came int i llertha'a possession fourteen or fifteen years ago, and un examination disclosed the tact that it bore the date ls7s. 1 luring the investigation Carriero denied he had ever offered a silver half dollar with a hole in it to the shoe dealer, but a Portuguese who acted as interpreter with tho storekeeper stated positively that he hud. The shoe dealer said tiiat Carreiro had what appeared to be a lady's pocketbook with aciasp on !t and he took money from it Her pocketboo was taken from llartha's room. Testimony was also introduced to show that a man answering the Portuguese's description was seen running from the direction of the Manchester farm. The authorities say there h additional evidence of such strength that the po.ice have not yet worked into proper shape to give out. Today funeral services were held over the remains of the dead girl. trnek with a lturnlrig I. imp. Omaha, June 4. Annie Prown and Ilelinda Arnold, inmates of a house of illfame, quarreled this morning and J'.rown Ktrtick Arnold over the head with a lighted lamp. The lamp burst and blazing oil flowed over tho unfortunato woman, literally cooking her. Hie Brown wonan is in jail. Arnold died at the hospital in awful agony. ".Mr. Window's Moot hing Syrup" has been used over Fifty Year by millions of mothers for their children while Teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the Gums, allays Pain, cures Wind Colic, regulates the bowels, and is the best remedy for Diarrhoea whether arising: rum teething or other causes. For salo by Druggists in every part of the world. Pe sure and ask for Mrs. Wins low's toothing Hvruo. 25c a bottle.
SAD DROWNING ACCIDENTS.
TWO VICTIMS NEAR DETROIT AND TWO IN CALIFORNIA. Charte Wngnrr Narrowly Kurnpes Death While Trying to ltescue His Daughter and MUn Dingmnn Two Others Lose Their Hve in the Pansaie. Detroit, June 4. The saddest drowning accident that has been recorded in some time occurred about 1 o'clock this afternoon in tho river at Dearborn, a few miles south of Detroit. The victims are Lottie Dingman, the thirteen-year-old daughter of Peter Dingman, the wellknown sash and blind manufacturer, and Clara Wagner, his five-year-old granddaughter, whose father, Charles Wagner, is a prominent brick maker. The latter tried to save both the girls after they were in the water, but tho current prevented him. although ho made a desperate ellort. and nearly lost his own life. Mr. Wagner's residence is situated on the old arsenal grounds and the river bank is about UK) feet in the rear of it. Just how the children managed to get into the water is not known, but it is thought that Clara fell in accidentally and Ixittie, while trying to rescue her was also carried away by the swift current and both drowned. Drowned in the Pnxsaie. Newap.k, N. J., June 4. Peter McGovern, a young gas-fitter, and an unknown girl were drowned in the Passaic river tonight. They were out rowing, and shortly after 0 o'clock people ou the river bank heard tnem screaming. Several men rowed out to where the two were struggling in the water, but did not reach them in time to save their lives. The bodies have been recovered. th Drowned. U.iKFnNFiEM, Cal., June 4. James M. Peed, forty-three yeara of age, and his wife, Mary, aged thirty-eight years, were drowned this afternoon in the irrigation canal. She went in the canal to bathe, got into a deep place and disappeared. Her children noticed her actions and ran to their father who was in a tent close by. He jumped in to save her but both were drowned. EPIDEMIC OF SUICIDES. Ten Deaths at l'tiiladclptiia the Past Week. Pmi.APEi.rniA, June 4. This city seems to be having an epidemic of suicides. Three successful and one ucsuccessful attempt ware reported todav. One of the former, that of Adam was of the sensational order, who was an inmate of the etate tiarr, was onlv nineteen years Comfort, Comfort, He came from Myersvillo, Hoyder county, Pa., and was serving a three yeare' sentence for attempt to kill. Yesterday he deliberately laid his head on the ground in front of a loaded cart which was passing through the prison yard and the wheel passing over his neck fractured the vertebrae. He lived only a few hours. Cause despondency. John Met juaid, aged 52, who came here from San Francisco in December last, blew out his brains at the home of his sister today. He had been brooding over the death of his wife and the dieappear ance of a son. In the dead man's trunk wan fouud $0.000 in cash. Jane Mooney, aged thirty-four, ended her life with a dose of laudanum today. Cause, rum and poverty. John O'Connor, a farmer aged fifty-two, who came to town from Ovorbrook, Ph., was found lying covered with blood in the street this morning. He had cut his throat because had been unjustly accused of stealing. His chances of recovery are fair. During tho past week there have been ten deaths from suicide in this city. The body of an unknown man, who is supposed to have committed suicide, was fished out of the Delaware river this afternoon. v DR. ELDERKIN'S SUICIDE. He Performed a Criminal Operation on Mrs. Culton Who Died. IU ffalo, N. Y., Juno 4. Another account of the death of Mrs. Colton and suicide of Dr. LTderkin is given in a special from Chautauqua today which says: Mrs. 0. C. Colton, a married woman, ?' years old, went to the cilice of Dr. W. K. hlderkio which was in the cottage of Mrs. Harwood. It was about fullO o'clock. Mrs. Harwood left the house on an errand. When ehe returned at about 8 o'clock she heard heavy breathing from the doctor's room. She went to the door and found no light and could get no reply. On going into the room she found tbe dead body of the woman on a lounge and the doctor was unconscious in a chair. A telephone message was immedivtely sent to Mayville for medical aid, but Klderkiu was dead before it arrived. He left a written statement saying that he had performed a criminal oper tion upon Mrs. Colton, which resulted in death from shock and heart failure. He fa t that he could not endure the consequences and had administered a hypodermic dose of morphia. Tbe husband of Mrs. Colton was absent in Garland, I'a., where they formerly lived. J jderkin was about forty vears of awe And has a wife and child living in Cleveland with whom he has not been living for some time. Coroner Yon Dusen was called this evening and held an autopsy which proved tlu truth of the statement regarding death. f SCHAFFNER'S SUPPOSED FATE. The Missing Chicago Hanker Doubt, less Jumped Into tho Lake. Chkaoo, June 4. The impression is growing that the man who committed suicide by jumping from a row boat into the lake ia Lakeview Friday was Herman Schailner, the missing banker. Developments in the case today lead the police to consider this the most plausible theory. The principal reason for this belief is that the hat found in the boat has been identified as the one worn by Mr. Schaffner ju-t previous to his sudden disappearance. Two of Mr. Schalluer's Hons today Menti tied the bates having been worn bv their father. Some of the depositors are talking vigorously of prosecuting Schnfl'ner's partner and Scbatlner if he turns up alive. Threatened Kevolution In 1'ern. Washington, June 4. Semi-oflieial reports continue to reach Washington from Peru indicating a threatening revolution ia that country. A private letter received from Lima today represents an extremely critical political situation ' and grave danger is apprehended for a revolution before the day of the presidential election.
LOWEST NOTCH YET.
July Wheat Fall Uelow Any Former Figure. CHICAGO, June 5. Another record was smashed today and .wheat has sold ljc lower than heretofore for Juiy, and has also shown a sharp decline in the deferred futures but not to the same extent. The failure of Meadowcroft brothers, private bankers, this morning, gave the market quite a shock. Then cams the failure of the Kansas City grain company, and prices took another dip downward. On this decline It was announced that Nelson, Yan Kirk fc Co., small traders in wheat, had failed, and this, in the strained condition of the market, proved sufficient to send prices oil" again. Still, as prices were so low before, tho total decline was only about lie on July and considerably less on the longer futures. The nearby futures are feeling the result of the tightness in money more seriously than others, as is ebown by the fact that at one time 4c was paid to change Jul' to September, in the hope that before that month came around financial conditions would mend. It was a great day for the rumor mongers, the calamity howlers and the whisperers, who kept the trade full of feverish apprehension. Thero was apparently no disposition to buy wheat, however cheap it might seem, except to cover shorts and get in profits, but with wheat below the cost of productiou the selling is altno't entirely on exhausted murgins and liquidation, few indeed being nervy enough now to short the market. The general rains followed by hot, forcing weather, the indifferent cables, the European reports of cholera cases a three important cities, the increase of 000,000 bushels in wheat stocks at Liverpool, the increase of OO.OOO bushels on ocean passage, the large India shipments reaching !f0.000 bushels for the week, the receipts of t'y7 cars at Northwestern marketsall these were natural influences against the market. The woret break of the day in wheat came at tbe Inst hour. Instead of 2,000,000 bushels decrease in the visible, al ter lonir waiting the trade got over 200.UOO increase. The uneasiness was greatly intensified by " the run on I.aSalle savings banks, which traders could see from the windows of the exchange. The opening was about the same as Saturday's closing to Jc lower and with some fluctuations prices declined 1'c for July and 2c for September, then recovered slightly and closed easy about L'lc lower for July and lie for September than Saturdav. Corn, owing to some demand for the spot article was comparatively steady at the start, opening trades being tbe same as tbe closing prices of Saturday, but tbe market later on sagged oil' ' Uc owing to the down turn in the surrounding pits. The principal feature was the liquidation of July and buying of September, the premium of the latter in consequence widening to 1cod9 time. The increase In the visible was a decided disappointment; closing prices were about at inside. Oats were aUected by causes pimilar to those active against corn. There were a few rallies, but they were in turn followed by declines and the close was about the lowest point with a net loss of 1 (("10 on near futures and J on September. There was a decrease of $1. 10 per bbl. in pork, 'Alke in lard, and 45c in ribs. In pork the decline was brought about not through transactions at gradually receding prices, but by sellers offering it at lower and still l iwer price without any buyers appeariug to make definite quotations possible until almost tho entire decline had taken piace. The close was at a reaction oi 20c for pork from the intdde and 5c each for lard and ribs. Freights weresteady with a fair demand at -c for wheat and I4C for corn to lluti'alo and lUc for wheat to Kingston. Estimated receipts for tomorrow: Wheat, 75 cars; corn, 1,100 cars; oats, 500 cars; hogs. 111.000. The leading futures ranged as follows:
ArlUtan. Opening.! II gb(t. Lowttt. Closing. WHKAT-1 j I I June... fiiVYi r,.V;j 61 5 fip; July....-;TX'.!', S-H f..VJ f.'i ept. T-JV.'' ,' TO i T;C'OKN I I June... 3-V r.vV 37' 37'4' July... 3fV S:-143s3:;n-h38J:W Njpl... 41 iV3U io-li Oat-. I June... 2V 'i! 2T 2T Julf... . '4 24i j;', S)t W-4 2i Z.TS1 V-a Pork July... 21 2 212" 20 20 20 20 spt ... 21 75 21 W 20 .VI 20 70 Laki Julr... ID 17!, 10 25 9 90 9 '.(5 fept... 1U 61 10 t.4 10 30 10 35 8 Itn July... 9 .'.0 9 S2 S 9 17' J Nni... y 7.3 ü 77J; 9 ;o j 40
Cuah quotations were as follows: FlourNominal. Mo. 2 spring wheat, G3f'54?,.'o; No. 3iuriog wheat, 56(4 die; No. t red, 6lil-i(g H4',c; Ho. 2 corn. 37,'e: No. 3 coro 35o. N. 2 oais. 27e; No. 2 whits, f. o. b., UU 'i 32Jic; No. 3 white r.o. b.. 2Ji(31io; No. 2 rye, SKiöl'ic; No. 2 barley, uoinir.al; No. S f. o. b., 3S'.re; No. 4. t. o. b.. 32(;3'c: No. 1 flax seed, 1.03; prince timothy seed, f3.80; mess pork, per bri., t-2.20Ta 22.50; lard, per 100 lbs., pJ.70(a 9.72; hon rib, sides (loose), '3At)Gi'A22 ary salted shoulders (boxed 1. 10 (i,10.S.i; bort clear sides (boxed), fi0.37J4C4 10.(12; whisky distillers' finished goods, per eal.. 1.12. v Jiecet pts. Flour, bris 9.JjO Wheat, bu 28,100 Corn, bu 1 18.400 Oats, ba 347.100 Hre, bu 1.200 Parley, bu 15,(00 On the produce exchange today the market was lirm; creamery, ICfJLlÖc; 11.400 28,KX) 633.700 73';,500 6,300 butter dairy. 15$17c tggs Steady; strictly fresh, Uty Indianapolis, Ind., i Monday Evening, June 6. i Co.' Chicago adviees are ai J. E. Berry follows: Increased stringency in the money market, increase in visible supply, looresss 00 passage, large increase iu India shipments, several large commercial failures, a run on some of tbe strongest banks, two small bank failures and a general feeling verging on a panic, if not an actual one, is responsible for a 2c deoline in wheat, le in corn and oats, 00c in ribs and -10a in lard. It is not a queatioo of whether a th'.og is cheap or worth the money, as there is plenty of commercial paper, bank stocks and other valuables offered at prices vastly below their aotual value. We are not rasp enough to venture an opinion so long as ths fioaucial condition remains ia its present state. Clearances of wheat are large with very lame export business here. Kich men can baj wbeat and grow richer. Wheat Weak; No. 2 red. C2 J bid; No. J red, C9c; No. 4 red, 5lo; rejected, 60oj nomerchantable, 35täI'Jc. Corn Weak; No. I white, 410. No. 2 white, 4i'c; No. 3 white, 4le bid; No. 4 while. 30o; No. 2 white rniied, 3.'c; No. 3 white mixed, S.s'-ie; No. 4 whits railed, 35c; No. 2 yellow, 3'Jc; No. 3 yellow, 34c, No. 4 yellow, 36o; No. 2 mixed, 3'Jc; No. 3 mixed. 38c bid; No. 4 mixed. 3'; sound ear, 4'Jo; 42o bid for yellow. Oats Dull; No. 2 whiu, 35o bid; No. S whits, 3:t(ry34,e: No. 3 mixtd, 31o lid ; No, 3 miisd, 30c j rajsotad, 2(30432. bran fll.60. Hay Choirs timothy, II 4; No. 1, $13.50 li l; No. 2. fl2; No 1 prairie, $7; mlxsd. fS; elovsr, 9. Urs No. 2, 5So for car lots; 50o for wagon rye. Wasen Wheat S2c Inspections Wheat, 7 cars; corn, 31 cars; hay, 3 car. PRODUCE MARKETS. Quotations from New York, Cincinnati and . tJsewhere. NEW YORK, June 5. Flour lUoslpts. 41,3-0 packages; ex ports, 4.(21 Iris, 4H,WjS sacks; sales, ti.OOo paotages. Markst duds
weak. Cornmeal Quist, stsady; yellow weit-
ern, 5i0U(;i,2.7u. Kye Dull; weoterD. (WlaWc liarley malt Steady, dull. Wheat Ileoei pts. 21.'50 bu; exports, 164,f2 hu; sales. 13.761V.0CO bu futures, 416.000 bu spot; spot market 2)4(4 3o lower; aotiver tor exports, heavy; No. 2 red, store and elevator. 71(r71?c; afloat, 71?i(72; f. o.b.. 7171(Jtc;"No. 1 northern, 72; No. 2 Northern 7üJ-i. Options were active, excited, heavy and 2l:(t$3o lower on increase on passage invisible supply and in store du 1 easier cables, foreign selliuir, htuvjr Chicago and free realizing, July 72.4(575', closing 72H; August 74(7t'i. closing 74!4': Sept. 75 (7, closing 7ti; Oct. 77J79. closing 7;2; lJec. fc0;(u53, closiug SU.1'. Slocks of grain in store ond afloat June 31: Wheat, 6.292.405; oirn. U&.h54; oat, 3D3.100; rye. 30.4h'J; barley, o3; malt. 220,(102: peas, 1,044 bu. Corn Ueoeipts, lyti.oOO hu; export, 4'J.09 bu; sales, 1.12G.0ÖO futures, 21G spot; spots weaker but iairly aotire; No. 2, -l';1(a.47c elsTator, 47(cr18',0 alloat; ungraded mixed, 47 5cc; options were HQ'-o lower, and fairly active, closing weak. '1 be declin du to the weak West and (ollowing wliPHts; June, 4tV(l6;,40. closing 4C 'sc; July, 46 470, cloHinv 40,4c; Aug.. 47;iQ47;,c, cws. ing 4750: fcept. 47XH4S :'-c, closing 47?4cOats Receipt, 120.55o; bu; exports. 1 1,710 tu; ales, 170,000 bu futures, lHO.UOO bu sptSpots lower and weak, fairly active lor exports. Options dull, lower; weak; June 35 (d"'!. elovini 30; July S4'i.-.3j. olosing 34! i; Sept. 31k(31K. clofcini 2IJ4. Fpot No. 2 white, 40; No. i Cbicaso, .3S; Fo. 3. 5l; No. 3 white 'H'. mixed western 37(a3D: white do 31K337. liaT quiet, steady. Hops quiet, firm. Hides quiet nominal. Cut meats Dull, eteady; middles inactive, weak. Ird Dull, lower; western steam closed at ?1VJ5; sales, none; option sales, none; June, closed $10.1:1, nominal; July, closed 10.20, nominal; September closed ll.ö.", nominal. Fork ljuiet. easy; old mess, 21.25; new mess, j2i(W. Uutter Crlotted firmer but less actire; western dairy, ll('i 16c; do sreamer, lOiiac; Klgins, ltfcCald'o. Cheese Weaker. Eggs Opened tinner, quiet; receipts. y.4'.0 packages; western fresh, 10' i(Vl6'i Tallow -(uiet, steady ; city (fj per package), I) c bid. Rice Dull, steady. Moiases New Orleans open kettle, good to choice, steady, quiet. Cotee Options opened steady at 10 to 10 points up; closed barely steady, unchanged to 30 up; sales, 18.750 bairs. Including July, 15.75'. 15. Woo; Aug., 13.6 15.7üc; Sept., 15.C50vl5.7Oe; Oct., 15.45Ql5.öuc; Deo., 15.30(15. 40c; spot Uio. linn: quiet; No. 7 at 17H(4tl7'4C Sugar I law, firm; quiet; ceiuruuguls, iHi test 4l4(4IHo; sales, 200 tons muscovado b: tet, at 3)e, and 6,547 bags molasses sugar, 89 te-t, at 37-lGo; r lined fairly actire. Pig irou Pall, steady; American, $12.7515.50. Copper Quiet; lake. iflO.SO. Lead Steady; domestic $.X92i. Tin Steady; straits, JrlS.l'O bid, $VJ asked; plates, quiet about steady. spelter Nominal. CINCINNATI, June 5. Flour In moderate demand; fancy, f J.l0(trj:j.lO; family, $2.2002.40. Wheat Dull; No. 2 red, 3.".c; receipts, 4,1'W); shipments, uone. Corn Kay; No. 2 mixed, 41(v42o. Oats Dull, eanier; No. 2 mixed, 3U-v 31)io. Kye Weak; No. 2. Oc. Fork Kasy at?30.25. Lard Dull t ?J.37Ji. ilulk Meats Ka-i-r at .0.75. Bacon In light demand at $ll.(J2i. Whisky In light demand ; sale. 6f5 brls at ifl.12. Hutter Kasy; fancy Klgiu creamery, 20(21c; Ohio, 20c; prime dairy. l.'K'idlo. Lioaeed Oil bleadjr at 4'.(i,51e. Sugar firm; bard refined, 6',iic; yellow, 3?4c. Fggs Hteady at 13f;i.l3i. Cheese steady; prims to choice Ohio llat. i(9;o. TOLEDO, June 6. Wheat Actire, lower; No. 2 cash C6'jo; July, 6c; Aug., O?7. Corn Hull; No. 2. cash, X)-,c Oats Quiet; cash, 32'iO. Kye Dull; cash, 57e. Cloyerseed Inaotive, pris-s nominal; prime cash, $7.50; Oct., $5. SO. Ueoeipts Flour. 367; wheat, 1S.437; corn, 7,!d2; oats. 3.0'.; ryo. 1,000; oloverseed, none. Shipments Flour, 2.430; wheat, 62,000; corn, 45,400; oats, rye, clover, seed, none. 11 ALT IM OHE, June 5. Wheat-No. 2 red Com spot Dull ana and June, 70' Aug., 73' ;o. Jower; mixed spot and J une, 47,'jjC; July. 46,7h". Oats Firm; No. 2 whits western. 42'jc. Kye Dull; No. 2 red, COo. Hay Firm; 1C(;j,17c (irain freights Steady; steam to Liverpool, 21 Ijc Frovisions I'ncfinnged. Butter Quiet: ereamsry fancy, lo. Egcs Firm; 16)$e. Collee Firm; Kio, No. 7, 170 "Xc. LIVE STOCK MARKETS. Umok Stock Yarps, I Indianapolis. June 5. f Catti.E Keeeipts lieht. Market steady, but tbe outlook not very favorable. Weuuote: Export grades, 1,450 to 1.650 lbs...$ 5 25( 50 00 60 00 uood to choioe snipping, l,2M to 1.400 lbs Fair to good shipping, 1,000 to 1.200 lbs . Ccmnion steers, 900 to 1.1C0 lbs Choice feeding steers, 1,000 to 1.200 lbs Fair to medium steers. 850 to 1.000 4 75 23Q 50( 4 10 4 CO lbs 60 Common to good stockers. 500 to 3 00 eOO lbs - Extra ohoioe heifers Fair to medium heifers Common and light heifers.... Good to ohoioe cows Fair to medium cows Common cows... Veal calves Export bulls Uood to choice butcher bulls Common bulls Good to choice cows and calves... Common to fair cows and calves. 2 25 60 75 25 25 50 EO 00 75 25 25 00 4 3 500$ 2 iH'Jt 3 750 3 1 006 4 3 5UU 2 75(4 1 -Xu 30 oor., 15 00&25 00 8 II KEP AND LAMBS Keeeipts, 250. ket qtiotably steady. We quote: The marSpring lambs 4 500 00 00 60 60 2.) 75 00 Oood to hoioe yearlioc, o ipped- 4 50(:d Fair to medium yearlings, clipped. 4 25 U Uood to choioe sbeep, clipped 4 26((i Fair to medium sneep, odpped.. .. 3 750$ Common sheep, clipped 3 00' iy Buoks per head 3 GOOy Hogs Keeeipts, 1.0C0. .Market fully 15 cents lower. Trading very slow and closed lOo lower. We quote: Choice neavy shipping Heavy and mixed paekiog. M 85(27 00 6 S0(it6 1)5 Choice lights C Common lights 6 Figs - 5 Houabs 5 CHICAGO, June 5. The Evening 8 fati 95 Vjht'i 75 5o(a6 60 00itC0 Journal re ports: Cattle Receipts. 16.000; market slow, 15(.2oc lower; shipments, 4,500; prime steers, jö.10 ($5.75; mediums, $1.7(faöl.95; others, S4.40C9 4.U0; Texsus, 3.10(44.10; native cows, $30&3.p..-. Hogs Kecsipts, 21,000; shipments, 7,000; prices at one time 5ooi.40o lower, but closed somewhat better; mixed, fi 4' '('). 00; prime heavy, !Ö.70f't,tJ.lH); light, Sheep and Lambs Keoel pts, 17,000; shipments, 1,(00; market sLjw, lofl.'uo lower; oatives, $4.75f!i.5.60; Texans. $4.0i'5; westerns. j5.10((5.3i); lambs, $5.25(n,6.50. BUFFALO, June 5. Cattle Receipts, 97 loads throuuh, 120 sale; steady, or good heavy steers firm for light; handy to good, 1,250 pounds, to shade lower; common green aud slippery 10 to 15o lower; sales, good heavy steers, f5.40. IIocs Receipts, 40 cars through, 60 ssle; opened shade wuaLer; sales, Yorkers, 7.45; pigs, $7.40. Sbeep aud Lambs Receipts, 6 loads through, 40 sale; opened steady but weakened; sales, early extra fancy heavy wethers tor export, $5 60; good mixed sheep, 5; ohoice lambs, fO.60. EAST LIBERTY, Ta., June 5. Cattle Re. ceipts, 1,500; shipments, l.Suö; market dull; 15oto20oif from lant week's prices; 33 curs cattle shipped to New Yore today. Hogs Reosipts, 6,000; shipments, 3.1'ÖG; 10 cars of hogs skipped to NewVork to day. Sheep Receipts. 3,000; shipments, C.700; market slow, shade off' from last week's pr.ces. CINCINNATI. Juns 5.-Hog.-Weak and lower at $0.25(47.00; receipts. 3,950: shipments, 1,050. Cattle Easy at $2.C0(u,5.23; receipts, 2,730; shipments, 630. ettieep Steady at f2.75f.S.J V. receipts, 4.000; shipments, 1,200. Lambs Barely steady at 41.507.40. Oil Matiouai Imnmt Certificate. O Hi hm Lifo- Closm ft . t1. Oil City ti-; en FitUhurg 02 ' NEW YORK. June C. The t52 Ü2)i petroleum market was firm. Pennsylvania oil. snot sales, none. July options sales, 10.0(0 bris; ooenlug, closing, lowest, C2.'c and closing 021 bid. Lima oil, none; 2'i'o bid. Total sales, 10.000 brls. Elgin Uutter. ELGIN, III.. June 5. Kutter steady; sales, 3,600 pouuds at 19c lry (iood. NEW YORK, Juns 6. A fair business, considering lbs finaDcittl situation, was reported in the dry goods market. A good deal of business bas been dona iu fall -inghanis. subject to
opening prices, and some prints liars also sold
freely on the same conditions, the attention ot borers was largely tsken np by an auction ssle of table oil cloths by Thomas Fatten, Sons & Co. Tbe pricos rYi7 i were lrom LS5 to 1.3;?, chielly ui :.::: si-d INDIANAPOLIS WHOLESALE MARKET. I'roviatuiia. f-MOkED MSATi. r-ngar-enred bams
lie U Jnrf i. oh t. fir. J20Ibsaverage - 151' 15 18 lbs average .1& i 15 15 lbs average 15 15 123 Ibsavera.-e 1574' 15 10 lts average . lü'4 15 "Heliable" brand rlock hams, 16 to 20 lbs av IC!; LreaKfist bacon clear English eured Keliabie" brand 151 Englisli cured. Mnrgan & Oray - 14 Choice sugar-cured "Porter" brand, 7 to i lbs av 15 lOto :2lbsar 14'i ßrtakfast rolls, boneless..... 15'4 lioijeitsi haul fsucar cured, "reliable"... 15 Ckhloruia hams
Sugar cored. Veliabls." 10 to 12 lbs., 13 non St ti ir at s Aitrat V "Morgan i Oray"Bacon Clear sides, 40 to 60 lb average... 13 Clesr sides, 30 to 40 lb average 13,'; Clear aidea. 20 to 30 lb averaue.. 14 13 14 12' If' 13'i 12. Clear bellies, 18 to 22 lb average Clear bellies, 121b average Clear backs, heavy, 20 to 30 lb average... Clear backs, medium. 10 to 15 lb average. Clear backs, light, 8 lb average Freuen backs. 12 lb average DRY SALT MBAT9. Clear sides, 40 to 50 lb average Clear sides, 30 to 40 lb average Clear sides, 20 to 30 lb overuse Clear bellies, 18 to 22 lb average Clear bellies, 14 lb average , Clear back, beavy, 20 to 30 lb average.... Clear backs, medium, 10 to 15 lb average.. French backs. 151b average 12'. 12 13 . 12", Li'. 11 '. 12;. li;. Shoulders Eimlish eared, shoulders, "Reliable" brand 16 lb average 12 lbs average Morgan &. Oray, 10 lb average 12 lb average12 12' n; 12 Dried Beef Reliable." barn, inside pieoes and knuckles 14 Special selection of knuckle pieces or inside pieces, Ma advance. Morgan & Grsy" bam, outside only IM'.'KLI'D POKE.. Bean pork (clear) p. r brl 200 lbs.. f 25 00 Family pork si Od Rump pork 21 5) Clear pork, "1'orter" brand .. 20 0 Also half birreU. 100 lbs, at half the price of the barrel, adding 60c to oover additional cost of package. Lard Kettle rtndersd, in tierces, 12'2c; "Ke liable" brand. 12n; "ladiana" Drand. 11 '4o; also in tubs, 65 lbb unt. .' .o over tierces; buokets, 80 lbs net, o over tierces. Cans Gross weights 50 lbs. In single oates or car.es of 2 cam. !4o advauoe on price of to. 20 lbs in case of 4 caus, a advanue on rnoo of tci. 10 lbs in case of 6 cans, 3o a4 vanoe on price of tcs. C lbs in case of 12 caus, J0o advance on price of tea. 3 lbs in easo of 20 cans, lo in advance on price of to. FKESH l'OKK. Loins (shortcut). 14 to 20 lbs.. 1 1 1 2 c ; cut). 13 lbs. and under. 12c. tibort ....U ....10 ... y ....it .... 7 .... Cottsge hams Bostou shoulders(skiuned) Ham buts or pork roast Tenderloins Spare ribs. Trimmings Sausage, etc Freeh pork sausage, in link in bulk, 20 lb. pails. Smoked pork sausage . 9 - "J .10 Bologna Cloth, 6c; skin, CHc. Wienerwurst ),c. Spioed boneless pig's feet in 81b. crocks, 9c Lard oil S5c per cal. The Moore paoking company quotes: Sugar-Cured Hams 'Empire." i4;4o .ir'o 14?4o "Empire." 14 to 16 Ibsaverase. Californian hams.... Boneless ham Shoulders .15' Moore.' English cured broad cut 10 lbs average 12 o English cured broad cut 11 lbs average 12!4o BaconClear sides. 20 to 30 lbs average... Clear bellien, 1H to 22 lbs average. Clear backs, 16 to IS lbs aversge.. Lard 11?'C 12 o ..13!4o .13 e 13' ( "Moore l"ki'g Co.'s I J Kettle Rendered." t Fine leaf in Tea Choice pure Spencer ;er pscli- I Ta. I ,,- yiales ll'i lug V'Ve o I J urscerio. Trade steady. Canned Goods Klack berries, 2 Ib., 90; cove oysters, 1 lb full weight, ?1; 1 lb lightweight, 75c; 2 lb full weight, ?1.9U(v2.00; light weight. (1.200)1.30; peaches, standard. 3 lb. (2 Ci2.l0; seconds 3 lo. $l.s0(.t,1.90: pie, fl.30; pineapple, standard 2 lb, $1.40(1.75; seoonds 3 lb, JK U.10; string beans. 80.90c; salman, 1 11, $1.4Ufit2; pineapples. Bahama. 2.60C.L2.r)5; peas, sifted; $l.85f2.25: early June. 1.151.25; marrow, Ktl.25; soaked. 75($s5c; tomatoes, firmer, 3 lb. 1.25i' i.1.35; corn, sUndard, L15(j 1.25; cream, fl.356il.60. Spice l'epper. 15c alls-pice, 12159 ; cloves, Ij(o,20c; caisia, 10(o,lc; nutmeg. 75(o0a. Sugar Hard, 5;Ta6c; confectioners' A. 6.2S(j,5.3Co; Ü" A, 6.22c; white extra C, 6v$ blic; extra C, 5c; good yellow, 4.S4o; fair yellow. 4.78c; yellow, 4.22(34.(iOc. Starch Refined pearl. 3li(AS4o per lb champion, gloss, one and three-pound packags, COjiS'ic; champion gloss, lump, 3?i(4a; one aud three-pound packages, 5(o.5!4c; itnproxed corn, 6?o,6,4c. Molasses New Orleans, 30(3,40c; fair, 4Qo; choice. 42(430. Salt in car lots. P5c; small lots, L Coilea Common to good, 21(230; prime to ehoio. 25'(,2Co; fancy, 26'4Q27Hc; golden Kio, 27)i(a29ic; Java, 30'i(.j,3mic; Kanner packages. Ü4'4c; Arbuekle's, 24e; Lion, 24?4'c; Jersey, 24?'e. Miscellaneous Rice, Louisiana, eoal oil. 6'-410c; beans, navy. ?3.25 me dium, J2.2U; marrowfat. $2.75(3.00. Fruits ana Vegetables. New Onions 11.50 per brl. Lettuce lOo per lb. Radishes 20o per dozen. Potatoes lletroci and Burbanki, $1.10 per bu; Early Rose, seed, $1.25. Rhubarb 10(r,12c per dozen. Cucumbers '.'Oed 1 per dozen. Beans Marrowfats. $150 per bo. ; ns vy, $2,15: Lima bsans, 4c per lb. Oranges California riversides, t3.3.60; mountain seedlings, 2.50fi,3. Apples Baldwin, $1.00 per brl.; fancy, $4.25. Cabbage Mobile, $2.73(3.00. Onions 10(0,12', o per dozen. Strawberries New Aibauy, $5.00(6.00 per crate. lemons Fancy, 5.00: choice, $3.25(.3.5!X Bananas Fancy, l.50(V$2.?5 per bunch. Fop Com Fearl, 3c; rice. 3,'io. Cocoanuts j5 per hundred. New Honev 20c Green l'eas LCO per bs. Green Beanb 1.50 per bu. ?tCl. Dealers' prices in seeds are as follows: Per JituheU Clover, medium, recleaned, fair to eood . i& 55(,7 RO Clover, medium, recleaned. prune... 8 O.V-1,8 45 Clover, raiinruoth, recleaned, prime 7 65(oi 60 llillet, (iermsn Millet, common ... ... Millet, Hungarian Timothy, prime to strictly prime... . 10 tJOtru 70 oot ur 2 23 2 40 Timothy, recleaned, choice... Ulue grata, far.cv Orchard gn , pricie Ked top English blue grass 1 1 65(1 50 75 75 W o..l. Shesritig is late on account of tbe cold weather. Almost all who h ive sheared havs aold their wool prunit.tly, whioh baa proved to be the wiest course. Ytry few merchants and wool dealers are piling ud their wool to wait for a buyer. They either hip the wool in five aud ten bag lots to our Indianapolis dealers or ship euit to the commission houses. The small shipments are so numerous to this c.tr that the dealers are unable to Krade aud report on the wool as fast n it arrives. The orders which one of our dealers was so fortunate as to get early iu the sa.ison will be filled when the wool now in sight is graded, and they are uow at sea a much as anyone as to the rrnl values of wool. The uncertainty as to tarill legislation and the tight mooey market make future valnes very problematical. No eastern buyers ard iu this market so far as we
2k '5
O
FT. ij hEidiiViiü li y lis ALL STEEL PUH1P1KG 03 GEARED SJJ3E FffiCE For 'n lonclt of tho public, the Aormotor ('oni:niv li'f'.urcs u tliViictid ;i:id riHlJcs the above prices u.4 -ryr tueans of d:strii.iitiuu' It. A -', ,k Tlic.e prices will Lo -on- JS' -r A tinned only until Its fj3 i surplus r ' - - - - - " , out"! motor Compr.cv 4 acres cf i-' -mI m Hiring '.tut of very many, iii t-'s the ix-t 'm.'for the pnrpovo, A c r m o t o r ( 'o. "i the f.Jl Chit .': 1 Of l A the lt lnaiic'ucl CliU'itgo.wllh iiianv. Of t'oor k;viC Ml:d r.". A iiiciitc-f rnachiixTV, U in cxistfiin-. The i ll teol. in thi crowning C'olumld m yenr. that it -;ui utt'ord V le rr-i-crous. A'o ' ill hip from 'hlciuo to uny one iinvwlirrc at the a.t-ue prio-s. THE AERMOTOR COMPANY, 2th and Rockwell Cts. CHICAGO. can learo. Ilealers here are still paying foi waL'onlot: rtiwaahed iiicdiutn, lc; unwashed coarse, lCr"cJ17c ; unwashed liue merino, 15( 17c; tub washed, 23J7c. iron n:ii Hardware. Bar iron. $l.MjCv0o, bane: wrouaht charooal bar, i2.'M ,:;.0O, base. Ilorseshuss Hurden'a, 1.15; Ferkins', $1.15; mde shoes, $5.25; cutnail rute for OOh steel nails, l.5ü; horse, iLiG per hoi; wire null, rule. 1.73. Meel Flow, oj't-n tu artti, prrll', J -; spr.ug, ordmarr sizvs, per lb. 4c; tire. 3-16 !d. Illicit, per lb. t in. aud heavier, per lb. 2c: toe calk. a-orl-d ai.es. per lb, 4c; bet i'j.-ility tool, "l'.lack limond," per l!, iaie, :; uachinc-rr, rounds only, smooth r.ih, per ll, rates. o!to. Karbwire (ittlvaiii7ed, iZ.i; plain annealed fence wir, galvinizei. ;"Oo advance; 10. 11 and 12 s;res, the regular advances. Arriruuuilioti Rim tire ctrtridgea, dm., 60 and 3; center Sire cartri les, dm.. 25 au 1 3; K. es', round, per m, 1.0; It. 1. cfi. corneal, per m, j2.0."; G. I), caps, per m. 30c; ILck's C. F.. per ru.. 4Mc; lliey'a E. lt., icnporteJ, per Id, 60c; musket caps, ptr m. 0c; Hazard's porting powder, per ke.', j3.5ü; do do bait keg. fS; do do quarter kej, 3 1.25; loaded paper shells, aiHcouot, 40 and l'J. Hide.. Centner, Tullow and Telts. Uood trade. Grease Brown, 4c; yellow, 4e; white, 6a. Tallow No. 1, ic; No. 2, 4,Sc Hides Market sluggish aud weak; No. 1 cured, 4"i',4 1 j"". No. 'i curo i lo leas; No. L green ir.', No. 2 green, 2'iC leather Ouk sole. 2J' t,30a; hemlock soles. 2(i2o; hsrne-s, 25'(,31c; kirüng. 34r(35o; black brid.e. per doz, ''.!'Cu,03; fair bridle. föperdoz; city kip, iäütv,ci: French kip, 75 (it.tl.C5: oity calf skins. 75c(l; French calf skins, tl(1.7i'. Sheep Shearing, 20C30c; lambs, 40(75a. I'oiiltr- ana i'rujuc. Eggs U'eak at 12' jc Batter lOo: poor, d'U?o. Foultry liens, fc; chickens, l lbs., lc9.1, 20c; rooster, Tc; turkeys, hen, t'c; torn, lis; old, toms, 7c; ducks. 7c; geee. ;4.Q.6u. Feathers l'rime gees , 3j(,35o per lb; dock, 20(j 25. THE PRESIDENTS RETURN. Arrive at Washington ns Hroivn aa a Hcrry anil I'eclini; Good. "WAsitiNtiTOV, June 4. President Clevaland returned to Washington at 7:40 thil morning from his i-hort fistiing' trip at Cape Charles, Va., and was met at the station by Private Secretary Thurber with the president's carriage and the two men wire driven to the white licuee. Mr. L, Clarke I'avis did not accompany the president to Wa-hington. Very few peopls) were at the Pennsylvania station at this hour os tho time of tho arrival of the presiueni'a car, uttuchod to train No. 41, from Wilmington, was much earlier than tha public expected, ; (Vclock beiug the regular schedule time. The president iast night pent a telegram to Mr. Thurber. informing him when be would arrive. The run lrom Kxmore to Washington was mado quickly and without niiphap of any B rt. Mr. Cleveland stayed at the white house half an hour. He theu called tor his carriage and waa driven to "Woodley," hi. summer villa in the 8ulurt)8 of Washington, where be bad breakfast with Mr-. Cleveland. Mr. Cleveland ia now aa brown aa a berry and the brief re-pita from business has bad the efl'ect of refreshing him both mentally and physically. He has had good sport and ia much pleased with Lis trip. STRUCK BY LIGHTNING. Three Persona Killed and Others Stunned Duritiff a Storm. Frank roKT, Ivy., Juno 5. During ail electric storm yesterday afternoon the bouse of James Uedding, a farmer neas Swetzer Station, this county, was btruck by lightning and three of the occupant! were killed instantly and one of the otherr badly Btunned. Those killed are: JAMF.S Kl-DDIN'G. ALLN BAKl'.Ol'K and Mrs. JOHN LVMEK. Mr. Joseph Harbour it ia thought will die alto. Thre were seventeen persona in the house at the time and all were morv ' or leea shocked. liirihinn IVnaious. ORIGINAL Kichard Powell, Henry Byers. ADDITIONAL. T. Murray Kirkpatrick. StlTl-KMESTAt. Joseph Shafler. REISSUE. Marion Cum minus, EJmond Lahne, Jabofc Soudng. Jonathau Bundy, John Davis, Aletan der Kinnniiion, La wis Carson, Henry Lannia, Charles Walker, William .Stewart. ORIGINAL WIDOWS, ETC. Jennie Cofiin, Jone Cain, Jennie Fisher, minor of George Taylor, minors of William Weeks. Attnrked by Highbinder. SroKANi:. Vafli., June 4, Chinese highbinders attacked Frank Wong and Charley Lutn, agents of the Chineee six companies, in an alley last night and nearly killed them. Clubs and knives were used and both victims were badiy wounded. Wong and I.um were suspected of giving information to the police which led to a raid on the opium den. The highbindeis escap Id. To TKE KplTClt Sir: Alter thoroughly toxi lug; the Sewing Machine pur cliAKcd or you last December, we ara coiiviiiced ttint it Is equal to any ma chine we ever eaw, both in simplicity and durahllity. Voure respectfully, ( II KLi:s II. MRSSMnil Martinsville, Ind.. Mutch 13.
ciirnlng. r -.- cro suiflcientlv x??.'Zr 'jiJ worked tr. m, -.t, --f --iA lias lroJclx t, J-: nid a very 8r.:till ' Xi J rrollt on a very
