Indiana State Sentinel, Indianapolis, Marion County, 19 July 1893 — Page 7

THE INDIANA STATE SENTINEL, WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 19, 1893-TWELVE PAGES.

THE TABERNACLE SERMON.

PR. TALMA GE FIXDS MAXY LESSORS IS THE PREVAILING PAMC. There la Nothing; Wrong In Dealrlnsr to D Illoh, bnt Like All Unman De. Ires It Should Re nlgltllr Subjected to God's Law. BROOKLYN. July 16. The Rev. Dr. TaJmage has selected as his subject for today a topic of the greatest Interest and timeliness viz, "Comfort For Business Men." the text being Isaiah xl. 2. ''Speak ye comfortably to Jerusalem." What an awful six weeks in commercial circles! The crashing of banks from San Francisco to New York and from ocean to ocean. The complete uncertainty that has halted all styles of business for three months and the pressure of the money market for the last year have put all bargain 'makers at their wit's end. Some of the best men In the land have faltered; men, whose hearts are enlisted In every good work and whose hands have blessed fcvery rreat charity. The church of God can afford to extend to them her sympathies and plead before heaven with all availing prayer. The schools such men have established, the churches they have built, the asylums and beneficent Institutions they have 'fostered, will be their eulogy long after tllelr banking institutions are forgotten. Such men can never fall. They have their treasures In banks that never break and will be millionaires forever. The stringency of the money market. I am glad to say, begins to relax. May the wisdom of Almighty God come down upon our national legislature at their convening next month in Washington and such results be reached as shall restore confidence and revive trade and multiply prosperities! Yet not only now In the time of financial disaster, but all through life, our active business people Jiave a struKclo. and I think it will be appropriate and useful for me to talk about their trials and try to offer some curative prescriptions. The Templed Merchant. Irr the first place, I have to remark that a great many of our business men feel ruinous trials and temptations coming to them from small and limited capital In business. It Is everywhere understood that It takes now three or four times as much to do business well as once it did. Once a few hundred dollars were turned into Roods the merchant tvould be his own Ptore sweeper, his own salesman, his own bookkeeper. He would manage all the affairs himself, and everything would be net profit. .Wonderful changes have come. Costly apparatus, extensive advertising, exorbi tant store rents, heavy taxation, expensive agencies, are only parts of the demand made upon our commercial men. And when they have fund themselves In such circumstances with small capital they have sometimes been tempted to run against the rocks of moral and financial destruction. This temptation of limited capital has ruined men In two ways. Sometimes they have shrunk down under the temptation. They have yielded the battle before the first shot was fired. At the first hard gun they surrendered. Their knees knorked together ut the fall of the auctioneer's hammer. They blanched at the financial peril. They did not understand that there Is such a thing as heroism In merchandise, and that there are Waterloos of the counter, and that a man carv fig.lt no braver battle with the sword than he can with the yard-stick. Their souls melted in them because sugars were up when they wanted to buy and down when they wanted to sell and unsalable goods were on the shelf and bad debts In their lender. The gloom of their countenances overshadowed even their dry goods and groceries. Despondency, coming from limited capital, blasted them. Others have felt it in a differeot way. They have said: "Here I have been trudging along. I have been trying to be honest all these years. I find it. Is of no use. Now It is make or break." The small craft that could have stood the stream Is put out beyond the lighthouse on the great sea of speculation. Stocks are the dice with which he gambles. He bought for a few dollars vast tracts of western land. Some man at the East living on a fat homestead meets this gambler of fortune and Is pursuaded to trade off his estate here for lots In a western city with large avenues and costly palaces and lake steamers smoking at the wharves and rail trains coming down Rh lightning speed from every direction. There It is all on paper! The city has never been built nor the railroad constructed, but everything points that way, and the thing will be done as sure as you live. And that is the process by which many have been tempted through limitation of capital into labyrinths from which they could not be extricated. I would not want to chain honest enterprise. I would not want to block up any of the avenues for honest accumulation that open up for young men. On the contrary. I would like to cheer them on and rejoice when they reach the goal, but vhe,n there are such multitudes of men going to ruin for this life and the life that Is to come through wrong notions of what are lawful spheres of enterprise It !s the duty of the ministers of religion and the friends of all young men t utter a plain, emphatic, unmistakable protest. These ate the influences that drown men in destruction and perdition. The Feverlah Tblrut for Gain. Again, a great many of our business men are tempted to over anxiety and care. You know that nearly all commercial businesses are overdone in this day. Smitten with the love of quick gain, our cities are crowded with men resolved to be rich at all hazards. They do not care how money comes. Our best merchants-are thrown into competition with men of more means and less conscience, and if an opportunity of accumulation be neglected one hour some one else picks it up. From January to December the struggle goes on. Night gives no quiet to limbs tossing in restlessness nor to a brain that will not stop thinking. The dreams are harrowed by Imaginary loss and flushed with imaginary gains. Even the Sabbath cannot dam back the tide of anxiety, for this wave of worldllnesn dashes cl?ar over the churches and leaves Its foam on bibles and pm yer-tooks. Men who are living on radar ten or by the culture of the soil cannot understand the wear and tear ot body and mind to which our merchants are subjected when they do not know but that their livelihood and their business honor are dependent unon th-j uncertainties of the next hour. This excitement of the brain, this corr61lng care of the heart, this strain of effort tr it exhausts the spirit, sends a great msry of our bent men In midlife into the grave. They find that Wall-st. does no; end at the East river. It ends at Greenwood! Their life dasned out against money safes. They go with their store on their backs. They trudge like camels, sweating from Aleppo to Damascus. They make their . life a crucifixion. Standing behind desks

and counters, banished from the fresh air. weighed down by carklng cat es, they are so many suicides. Ilellance on Divine Aid. Oh, I wish I could today rub out some of these lines of care; that I could lift , some of the burdens from my heart; that j I could give relaxation to some of these I

worn muscles, it is time for you to begin to take it a little easier. Do your best and trust God for the rest. Do not fret. God manages all the affairs of , your life, and he manages them for the ; best. Consider the lilies they always j have robes. Behold the fowls of the air they always have nests. Take a long breath. Bethink betimes that God did not make you for a pack horse. Dig yourself out from among the hogsheads and the shelves, r.nd in the light of the j holy Sabbath day resolve that you will give to the winds your fears and your fretfulness and your distresses. You brought nothing Into the world, and it is very certain you can carry nothing out. Having food and ralnment, be therewith content. The merchant came home from the store. There had been great disaster there. He opened the front door and said, in the midst of his family circle: "I am ruined. Everything is gone. I am all ruined." His wife said, "I am left," and the little child threw up its hands and said, "Papa. I am here." The aged grandmother, seated in the room, said, "Then you have all the promises of God besides, John." And he burst Into tears and said: "God forplve me, that I have been so ungrateful. I find I have a great many things left. God forgive me." Again I rem irk that many of our business men are tempted to neglect their home duties. How often it is that the store and the home seem to clash, but there ought not to be any collision. It Is often the case that the father Is the mere treasurer of the family, a sort of agnt to see that they have dry goods and groceries. The work of family government he does not touch. Once or twice in a year he calls the children up on a Sabbath afternoon when he has a half hour he does not exactly know what to do with, and In that half hour he disciplines the children and chides them and corrects their faults and gives them a great deal of good ndvlce and then wonders all the rest of the year that hi children do not do better when they have the wonderful advantage of that semiannual castlgatlon. The family table, which ought to be the place for pleasant discussion and Cheerfulness, often becomes the place of perilous expedition. If there be any blessing asked at all, it Is cut off at both ends, and with the hand on the carving knife. He counts on his Angers, making estimates In the Interstices of the repast. The work d'ne. the hat goes to the head, and he starts down the street. and before the family have risen from the table he has bound up another bundle of goods and says to the customer, "Anything more I can do for you today, sir?" Duty to One's Family. A man has more responsibilities than those which are discharged by putting competent Instructors over his children and giving them a drawing muster and music teacher. The physical culture of the child will not be attended to unless the father looks to It. He must sometimes loa his dignity. He must unlitnber his Joints. He must sometimes lead them out to their sports and games. The parent who cannot forget the severe duties of life sometimes to fly the kite and trundle the hoop and chase the ball and Jump the rope with the children ought never to have been tempted out of a crust and unredeemable solitariness. If you want to keep your children away from places of sin, you can only do it by making your home attractive. You may preach sermons and advocate reforms and denounce wickedness, and yet your children will be captivated by the glittering saloon of sin unless you can make your home a brighter place than any other place on earth to them. Oh, gather all charms Into your house! If you can afford It, bring books and pictures and cheerful entertainments to the household. Hut, above all, teach those children, not by half an hour twice a year on the Sabbath day, but day after day, and every day teach them that religion Is a great gladness that throws chains of gold about the neck; that It takes no spring from the foot, no blltheness from the heart, no sparkle from the eye, no ring from the laughter, but that "her ways are ways of pleasantness, and all her paths are peace." I sympathize with the work being done In many of our cities by which beautiful rooms are set apart by our Young Men's Christian association, and I pray God to prosper them In all things. But I tell you there is something back of that and before that. We need more happy, consecrated cheerful Christian homes In America. Limited t'e of Money. Again, I remark that a great many of our business men are tempted to put the attainment of money above the value of the soul. It Is a grand thing to have plenty of money. The more you get of it the better, if It come honestly and go usefully. For the lack of it sickness dies without medicine, and hunger finds its coffin in the empty bread tray, and nakedness shivers for lack of clothes and fire. When I hear a man in canting tirade against money a Christian man as though it had no possible use on earth, and he had no interest in it, I come almost to think that the heaven that would be appropriate for him would be an everlasting poor house! While, my friends, we do admit there is such a thing as a lawful use of money a profitable use of money let us recognize also the fact that money cannot satisfy a man's soul; that it cannot glitter In the dark valley; that it cannot pay our fare ac ross the Jordan of death; that it cannot unlock the gate of heaven. There are men in all occupations who stem to act as though they thought a park of bonds and mortgages could be traded off for a title to heaven and as though gold would be a lawful tender In I that place where it is so common that , they make pavements out of It. Salvaj tion by Christ is the only salvation. Treasures In heaven are the only incorI ruptible treasures. j Have you ever ciphered out In the rule , of loss and gain the sum. "What shall It profit a man If he gain the whole world j and lose his soul? However fine your ' apparel, the winds of death will flutter it like rags. Homespun and a thread- ' bare coat have sometimes been the ; shadow of coming robes made white in : the blood of the lamb. The pearl of ' great price Is worth more than any gem I you can bring from the ocean, than j Australian or Brazilian mines strung in one carcanet. Seek after God; find His J righteousness, and all shall be well here; an snan oe wen nerearter. Loa of .Money ot Fatal. But I must have a word with those who during the present commercial j calamities have lost heavily or perhaps lost all their estate. If a man lone his property at thirty or forty years of age It Is fjnly a sharp discipline generally, by which later he comes to larger success. It Is all folly for a man to sit j down In midlife discouraged. The mar- ; shals of Napoleon came to their comj mander and said, "We have lost the battie, and we are belnj cut to pieces." I Napoleon took his watch from his pocket ; and said: "It Is only 2 o'clock in the aft- ! ernoon. You have lost that battle, but j we have time enough to win another. ! Charge upon the foe!" I Though the meridian of life has passed I with you, and you have been routed In mairy a conflict, give not up la dis

couragement. There are victories yet for you to gain. But sometimes monetary disaster comes to a man when there is something In his age or something in his health or something in his surroundings which make him know well that he will never get up again. In 1S57 it was estimated that for many years previous to that time annually there had been 30,000 failures in the United States. Many of those persons never recovered from the misfortune. But let me give a word of comfort in passing. The sheriff may sell you out of many things, but there are some things of which he cannot e? you out. He cannot sell out your fam". He cannot sell out your bible. He cannot sell out your God. He cannot sell out your heaven! You have more than you have lost. Sons and daughters of God, children of an eternal and all loving Father, mourn not when your property goes. The world is yours, and life Is yours, and death is yours, and immortality Is yours, and thrones of imperial grandeur are yours, and rivers of gladness are yours, and shining mansions are yours, and God is yours. The eternal God has sworn it, and every time you doubt it you charge the King of heaven and earth with perjury. Instead of complaining how hard you have It, go home, take up your bible full of promises, get down on your knees before God and thank him for what you have, Instead of spending so much time in complaining about what you have not. The Ark of Safety. Some of you remember the shipwreck of the Central America. This noble steamer had. I think, about 500 passengers aboard. Suddenly the storm came, and the surges trampled the decks and swung into the hatches, and there went up a hundred voiced death shriek. The foam on the Jaw of the wave. The pitching of the steamer as though It were leaping a mountain. The dismal flare of the signal rockets. The long cough of the steam pipes. The hiss of the extinguished furnaces. The walking of God on the wave! The steamer went not down without a struggle. As the passengers stationed themselves

In rows to ball out the vessel, hark to the thump of the buckets, as men unused to toll, with blistered hands and strained muscle, tug for their lives. There Is a sail seen against the sky. The flash of the distress gun sounded. Its voice Is heard not, for it is choked in the louder booming of the sea. A few IiasseiiRers escnjed. but the steamer gave one great lurch and was gone! So there are some men who sail on prosperously in life. All's well, all's well. But at last some financial disaster comes a euroclydon. Iovn they go! the bottom of this commercial sea strewn with shattered hulks. But because your property goes, do not lot your soul go. Though nil else perish, save that. For I have to tell you or a more stupendous shipwreck than that which I have Just mentioned. God launched tbls world 6.000 years ago. It has been golni? on under freight of mountains and Immortals, but one day it will stagger at the cry of fire. The timbers of rock will burn, the mountains flame like masts and the clouds like sails In the Judgment hurricane. Then God shall take the passengers off the deck, and from the berths those who have long been asleep in Jesus, and he will set them far beyond the reach of storm and peril. But how many shall go down, that will never be known until It shall be announced one day in heaven, the shipwreck of a world! Oh, my dear hearers, whatever you lose, though your houses go, though your lands go, though all your earthly possessions perish, may God Almighty, through the blood of the everlasting covenant, save all your souls. misct:i.lam:oi h smvn it km. War Is Imminent In Samoa. The Ludlow shoe company of Chicago made an assignment. The Bon Ton foundry company, Chicago, assigned. Assets, 1175,000; liabilities, J200.000. Receivers were appointed for the John Kauffman brewery at Cincinnati. Assets. $',00.000; llablltles. $150.000. Kmll Abies, manufacturing furrier. New York, made an assignment to George Fragner without preferences. Chancellor Von Caprlvl Is confined to his residence by inflamed veins. He hopes to appear In the reichstag today. The Uruguay congress has made an appropriation of an additional $10,000 for the exhibit of Uruguay at the world's fair. Eighty-five cases of cholera are reported In the hospital at Alexandria, Kgypt. Forty deaths from the disease have occurred. The private bank of Hay & Webb of Carml, 111., has made an assignment. The assets are about $215,000; liabilities about $180.000. At London Mrs. Bancroft, the wellknown actress, was thrown from a cab and run over. She received injuries that necessitated her removal to a hospital. Lord Coleridge, lord chief Justice of England, whose sudden Illness at the Newcastle assizes necessitated the adjournment of the court, has entirely recovered. The court martial that will try the oflleeis of the British Mediterranean squadron on the charge of partial responsibility for the Victoria disaster will open in Valetta, Malta, July 17. The report from Caddo, I. T., published to the effect that Governor Jones had stated that Choctaws under sentence of death for murder would surely be shot Is discredited at the interior department. The comptroller of the currency authorized the First national bank of Los Angeles, Cal., the National bank of commerce of Provo, Utah, and the Second national bank of Ashland, Ky., to resume business. There will be no more ship building at the yard of Samuel L. Moores' Sons at Elizabeth, N. J. The firm began business three years ago. Their most notable achievement was the building of the cruiser Bancroft. The Hon. Thomas F. Bayard, American ambassador to Great Britain, and Mrs. Bayard will attend the closing state ball. This function was to have been held some tlm4 ago, but was postponed in consequence of the disaster to the battleship Victoria. Col. W. L. Washington of Nashville, Tenn., called at New York police headquarters and reported that he had been robbed of a valuable gold watch and chain by a plausible, smooth faced young man to whom he had taken a liking the preceding night. M. Loze, ex-prefect of police, who tendered his resignation on the ground that the government intended to make a scapegoat of him in connection with the rioting at Paris, has received a semiofllclal notification that he is to be appointed French ambassador to Austria. The d-ad body of Deputy Sheriff John W. Thomas of Mobile county was found yesterday in the village of Whistler, Ala. He had four bullet wounds on his body and his skull was crushed. The crime was traced to Gilbert J. Deace and John Ryan, two engineers whom Thomas had arrested. j Mnp of le I n I teal State. ! A Urge, handsome map of the United States, mounted and suitable for office or home use. Is lisud . by the Burlington route. Copies will be mailed to any address on receipt of 12 cents In postage by P. S. ICustls. Oen'l Paws, agent, C, li. 1 & Q. R. R.. Chicago, III. j "Mrs. WUtlow'i Soothing Srrni Has been used over Fifty Years by millions of mothers for their children while ' Teething, with perfect success. It soothes the child, softens the Gums, al- , lays Pain, cures Wind Colic, regulates the bowelg, and Is the best remedy for Diarrhoea whether arising from teething or othr causes. For sale by Druggists in jvcry part of the world. Be . sure and ask for Mrs. Winslow'a Soothin Svruo 25o bottle.

THE

!KlDÖAFi2ÄPLä

WE T TU

PRICE, THE MARKET REPORTS. CHICAGO, July 17. The amount of wheat on ocean passage decreased 1,432,000 bushels, and the visible supply decreased 2.491.000 bushels; nearly 4.000.000. A falling off in Russian shipments was said to be causing firmness in the English markets and reports from the Northwestern spring wheat region here was no more reassuring than before. Nevertheless tonight wheat is Vac lower than Saturday's close. Corn is c lower and provisions are considerably lower. The decrease In the visible supply of wheat, although heavy compared with the 691,000 decrease In similar week of a year ago, still leaves f9, 328.000 bushels in sight compared with 22.433,000 last year. Very little business was done in the wheat pit, the bank suspensions seeming to check trading. The opening was about Ktif 'He lower than Saturday's closing, then became stronger and prices were advanced $iö'Hc, ruled easier, declining (ic, again became stronger and ndvanoed from the bottom. The decrease In the visible was about what was expected. Corn was weaker from the start, rains were reported In the West and this together with the bearish special report on corn Issued In Kansas had a very weakening effect and Indii'.'ed free selling. Receivers sold freely, one concern selling 2r.0,00() bushels. Shippers also offered large quantities. Increase In the visible whs Sll.ooo bushels, but in Chicago there was a lcal reduction of 237.000 bushels, making the stock of all grades 1.748,oO bushels against 4.1R000 bushels for the corresponding date In 1S92. Market opened with a fractional loss. and after selling off V,c more, hold steady until the car lots for tomorrow came In at 975 cars, when the offerings were again Inri eased, and the price broke XltKc more. Later the price rallied a trllle, but at the close had lost Trc. Most of the trade In oats came during the last fcalf hour. The feeling was weak and prices averaged lower, July declining $e, and September 'ie, closing weak at about the Inside. Ribs were flgnln a weak spot In the market. The receipts of hojrs were heavy and lower. There were anxious sellers of September ribs without anyone to take the offerings except at con: lerable lower than Saturday's closing prices. Chapln & Edwards, Armour & Co., and Wright were piomlnent among the sellers. Iird was weak also, but at $10 for September. Cudahy and Falrbank, or both together, put enough supporting orders to prevent a further decline. Pork was neglected by both sides. The cloning prices were at some recovery from the bottom of the day's range, hut at smart declines since Saturday. Compared with Saturday's close September pork Is 15c down, October lard 30e, and September ribs 30c. Estimated receipts for tomorrow: Wheat, 7 cars; corn, 975 cars; oats, 300 cars; hogs. 19.000. The leading futures ranged as follows: Articles. Open. High. Low. Close. Wheat. No. aJuly r-r,4 I Sept ff11 ee 75"a Corn. No. 2 July 4 Aug $ Sept 414 Oats, No. 2 July 20'4 Sept 25 c;, $ - "i $ fiVJ f.:t 7r,: 40 40 40' i 40' i 41 41 2'i 401, 20'i 2.V s Mess Pork July 1 K 1 Sept 19 W 13 W LardJuly Sept 10 10 10 10 Oct 9 50 9 50 in sr. 13 50 is sr. iy co 9 CO in no 11 a'. 9 10 9 17Vi 1,0r,Ju,,"br. 24 Sept 8 G.' 8 70 8 35 8 Caili quotations were as follows: Flour, dull and nominally unchanged; No. 2 spring wheat. CLc; No. 3 sprln wheat, f. o. I., r.'A.A.fAn- No 2 red. Ci'io: No. 2 corn. , 40c; No. 3 corn, 2c; Nf. 2 oats. 2vc; No. 2 1 white, f. o. b.. 3.'.c; No. 3 white, f. o. ., 31Vm:Uc; No. 2 rye. .'ate; No. 2 barley, imm- ' Inal; No. 3. no-salfs; No. 4. f. o. b.. 3:.c; No. 1 tl.ix seed, $l.lt: prime timothy seed, $4.10; mess pork, per i rl. M.TVvjIS.S.-,; lard. per W lbs. W.lüW'i'i.w, vt5rt rib sides i (loose). $S..T-tiX.35; dry salt. 1 shoulders ' loxe,), $H.2.ViX.5o; short clear sides (boxcdl, $'J."j'i19; whisky, distillers' finished goods, ! per pal. $1.12. I Articles Ree-!ps. Shlnt's. : Flour, barrels RO) U."o Wheat, bushels Corn, bushels 3!C.0no Oats, bushels 244.0.H) 2 IM Rye. bushels 1.000 - 20.1m) Harley, bushels 6.0UO 2.0X) On the produce exchange today the butter market was steady: creamery. iri,iw20e; dalrv. 13118C Eggs-Easier; strictly fresh, 13'j He. INDIANAPOLIS. IND.. Monday evening, July 1.. J. E. Berry's Chlcugo advices report: There was nothing In the eurly news to encourasre buying wheat except a decrease of 1 4:i2.(i0 bushels afloat for Europe. Our market opened dull and easier, selling down nwc, then rallied to Saturday's clos? on report that Russian shipments are materially lessening and on prospects of a much larger viHlUle decrease than had been looked for. which proved to be 2.4l.ouO. Very soon after this announcement was made i.rlces broke rc from realizing and from reports of several small bank failures In Kansas and Colorado. It has been a hard market to hold up. but recovers quickly from small breaks. Closing cables show no change of moment, except sltfhtly higher In l'arls and lleriln. The close was c lower than Saturday. The bearish Kansas state crop on corn, predicting a crop even larger than In 18x9, and some of the territory farther north, which was too dry Saturday, has since had good rains. Then came the estimate of 975 cars for tomorrow, musing further Joy In the hearts of the Shorts. Closing c lower. Oats utood very well. Many reports from Iowa and this state claim the crop injur ;J from too hot weather when rlper.lng. Closed w-ak in sympathy with other grains. Provisions continue to feel the effect of liberal receipts of hogs. Market has been very weak, especially for ribs. September lard was pegged at $10 by the clique. Wheat Firmer ; No. 2 red. D9Ac bid; No. 3 red. 55'ir.7c; No. 4 red. 50c; rejected, tf'oriOc; unmerchantable, XWlOc. Corn Firmer: No. 1 while. :9Vc; No. 2 white, 39i.'.c; No. 3 white. 39c; No. 4 whit?, 3tft:C.c; No. 2 white mixed. !Sc; No. 3 white mixed. 37i,c: No. 4 white mixed. 3Ki35c: No. 2 yellow, 3U,c bid: No. 3 yellow, 3Sc bid; No. 4 yellow. 3W35c: No. 2 mixed. S8c bid; No. 3 mixed, 3"i,c bid;No. 4 mlid. 305i35c; Bound ear, 38c; 40c for y? J low. Oats-Flrmer; No. 2 white, 34c; No. S. 32i3:(c; No. 2 mixed, 30c; No. 3 mixed, 2Sc; rejected. 2T.'Ti10c. I '.ran SU.0O. 1 Cay Choice timothy. $12.B0; No. 1, $12.00 bid; No. 2. $u.r0; No. 1 prairie, $7.00; mixed, $8.00; clover. $'J.O0. Rye No. 2. 63c for car lots, 45c for wagon rye. Wagon Wheat-59c. inspections-Wheat. 43 cars;, corn, YJ cars; oata, 1 car. ritODlCK MAIIKKTS. Qaotmllona from New Torlt, Clnelnnntt and Klaewhere. The week in the local market has opened with some activity in the wholesale trade, but the summer quietness still reigns supreme for all that There are no particular changes in prices to record, but an Increased firmness ts noted in the grocery trade, and sugars are still tending upward. Fruit and vegetables are in good demand at fair pricea and business In good. The rail from outside buyers la larger than It was last week, owing, probably, to the exhaustion of stocks. Th general outlook for

25 CENTS. LIBERAL TERMS TO AGENTS.

trade during the week Is considered hopeful, and merchants express themselves as pleased with the promise before them. NEW YORK, July 17.-Flour-Rece!pts, 31.700 packages; exports, 12.4oO barrels. ;',6.O'K) vacks; Bales, 5-00 packages; market dull and weak with free offerings. Corn Meal Quiet and steady. Rye Dull but steady; western, f7v."j7Va Parley MaltDull but steady. Wheat Receipts. 2.3oo bu spot; spot market fairly active for export, easier with options; closing nrm:No. 2 red store and elevator 7-'a"-Uc, afloat 73'4' 7:i'c. f. o. b. 73''i73c; ungraded red. :'(. "isc; No. 1 hard. 7;",4c; No. 1 northern, 7i";T72'ic. No. 2 northern, 7'i7u'4e: No. 2 Milwaukee, 70'i70';c: options declined htc on weak cables, large India shipments and tlner weather west; rallied ?ii',-..c on decrease on passage and In the visible supply; foil c on reports of financial troubles at the West, large imports into ine i nmn Kingdom and local realizing, closing steady at unchanged prices to a,c decline with a fair trade: No. 2 red. July, 71Vi7::e. closing 717,c; Aug., 72V"'JthC, clotting 72V: Sept., 7.Vi7r.e. closing TT.'kc: Oct., 77 7-1077 c. closing 77V: Dec. SI 1 i i si 1.'-K.C, closing R1V. Stocks of grain In store and atloat July 15: Wheat.. 9.ot.7.'2; corn.437.r.s.l; oats. 443.798; rye. 104.29.1; barley, 6.;;; malt, m(KS; p. as, 1.04 1. Corn Receipts, i:.,0"0; exports. 2"..00; sales. 9:,00 futures. r.O.UN) spot ; spots tlrm and quiet; No. 2, 48' 2' lc elevator, 4'jV afloat; options were dull and closed steady at 'i'ii'jc decline on an Increased vlülble, fine weather and good crop news from Kansas; Aug.. iS'y'u SV, closing 4SH.C. Sept., !'trUV. closing 4'.'ic. Oitts Receipts. 34.0OU; exports. 4.'..H); sales, li,(H) futures, 3H.o" spot: options dull but easier; Apg., 32Vi3:;c, closing 3;'.c; Sept., :;iV-i3P-.e, closing 31V; spot No. 2 white, 3!tV: No. 2 Chicago. 3se; No. 3 white, HSV: mixed western, 37'ii.lfV: No. 2 white. 3!Vr 4ic. Hay In fair demand and steady. llops-Uulet and steady. MMos-Fnlrly niiive and steady. Cut Meats (Julet and steady; middle. quiet. Lard julet nint weak; western steam closed at $!. '..'.; sales of 5 tierces nt $10; option sales, none; July closed at $'J.W: Sept. closed at $1.3' asked. Pork Dull but steady. Pulter Dull; western factory. rVi 17V: logins. 2P-. 22c; Imitation creamery. lVMs'?c. Cheese In moderate demand and linn. Kk'gs Quiet and weak; receipt, 7.0O) packages; western fresh. Uy.15c; southwestern, ll'i 1i11-.e. Tallow Qui t and steady. RiceSteady and fairly active. Molasses New Orleans open kettle, good to choice, dull but steady. CofTee Options opened tlrm at 5 to 25 points up, closing steady l'o up; sales. l'..ooo ha rs. Including Aug., ltS.4V; Sept.. K.Hof. 1S.4'ic: Oct., ltvloe; Nov.. 1.. fult'..10c; Dec,, 1.'. S-i'-j 16c; spot Rio, quiet and steady; No. 7. 17V- Suuar-Raw, dull but steady; retlned. quiet and steady. Pig iron Quiet nnd steady; American. $12. "Vit ir..Mt. t 'upper Quiet ; lake, $10. Ki. lead Steady ; domestic, V.&. Tin-Closed steady; straits. IIS.H.'. bi, $19 askM: platen, quiet und steady; spelter, quiet; domestic, $1. CINCINNATI. July 17. Flour Easy: fancy, $2.T.1j2.:; fatally. $1.752.25. Wheat In fair demand; No. 2 red. 61c: receipts. lo,:ion; shipments, 7,". Corn Easier for white; mixed, steady; No. 2 mixed, 4ic. Oats-In good demand: No. 2 mixed. "Vt 31c. Rye-Nominal; No. 2. .r.c. PorkQuiet at $17.5'). Da rd -Easy at $:. Hulk Meats Neglected at JS.ST'-"'. 9. Paeon-Ir regular at f 10.75? 10.87',. Whisky-Quiet; sales of .r.2". brls at 11.12. Putter Steady ; fancy Elgin creamery, 22c; Ohio. Ik'h2oo. Linseed Oil Quiet at 4'''4'.tc. Sugar In food demand at r.'iGV-I yellow, 4'Jl'4c. Eggs 11c. Cheese Easy; prime to choice Ohio flat, Gfii'e. nALTIMOICE. July 17 Wheat-Steady ; No. 2 red. f-pot and July. CSV. Aug.. G"c: Sept., 7'i7c. Corn Quiet; mixed spot ami July. 47' jc bid; Aug.. 47c; Sept., 4V. Oats-Firm; No. 2 white western. 30'v. Rve Slow; No. 2. Me. liny Strong at $17.50. (Iran Freights-Flat; steam to Liverpool, a'ad. Provisions Quiet and In light demand; unchanged. Mutter Firm; ! creamery funcy, 22c. Lggs Dull at 14'jc. Coffee Steady ; Rio No. 7. 17V. I TOLEDO. July 17. Wheat-Dull, easier; ' No. 2, cash and July, üö'jc; Aug., O'.V; Sept.. ('.:'Hc; Dec. 7'ic. Corn Dull but steady; No. 2. cash, 42c; No. 3. 41c; No. 2 i yellow. 42V; No. 3 yellow. 42c. Oats-Dull but steady; cash, 31V. Rye Dull; No. 2, 52c. Clover seed Active but lower; prime i Oct.. $rt.N0. Receipts Flour, 500: wheat. 15,coo; corn. 19,(tou; oats. 2.IM). Shipments Flour, 2,("0; wheat, 170oo; corn, 4,uw; rye, l.OoO. LIVU STOCK MARKETS. Union Stock Yards. Indianapolis. July 17. Cattle Receipts, light. The general market is very dull and the outlook not very encouraging. We quote: 1.40() lbs 4 25 4 CO Fair to good shipping, 1,000 to 1,200 lbs 3 TVj) 4 00 Common steers, 9W to 1,100 lbs... 3 Oo1 3 50 Choice feeding steers. 1,0-jO to 1,2'M lbs 3 75-7 4 00 Fair to medium steers, 850 to 1,UK) lbs 2 75ff 3 23 MW lbs 2 25'; 2 50 Good to choice heifers 3 50 3 73 1 Common to good stockers, 500 to j Fair to medium heifers 2 7T.fr 3 25 . Common and light heifers 2 oo't 2 5 Good to choice cows 2 75. i 3 25 Fair to medium covs 2 "O'a 2 00 Common old cows 1 iXrn 1 75 Veal calves 3 00i i 00 1 Export bulls 3 "o 3 25 Good to choice butcher bulls 2 3 (HI Common to fair bulls 1 73 w 2 25 Good to choice cows and calves.. 25 oor 00 Common to fair cows and calves. 13 00'n25 00 Sheep and Lambs Receipts, 325. There Is no material change In the market; choice grades steady; others dull. We quote: Fair to good lambs 4 2574 50 Good to choice sheep 3 75i(4 00 Fair to good sheep 3 )t'.i3 75 Common sheep 1 oO'2 bo Rucks, per head 1 5i'l3 00 Hogs Receipts. 700. Market fairly active and 5 to 10c lower than Saturday's prices. Closed alout steady. We quote: Choice heavy shipping $5 75." 95 Heavy and mixed packing 5 75f3 !" Eights 5 öo'.i 70 Pigs 5 ("( 00 Roughs 4 50 j5 23 REPRESENTATIVE SALES. No. Average. Price. 8 21i $5 00 C2 Kt 5 73 R7 2 k". 5 SO 79 22 5 K5 CS !' &'' C3 15J 6 10 NEW YORK, July 17. Receipts of beeves for two days, 4.733; very dull at l.V-e 25c lower; 30 cars unsold; poorest to best native corn and grass fed steers, $1.80'! j.25; Texans, $2.75'u3.35; dressed leef dull at CiSe; shipments tomorrow, 527 bceeves and 2.114 quarters of beef. Receipts of calves for two days. 1.852; active and V- higher; veals, $5'u7; buttermilk, $:!f3.25; western calves, $3.5o''( 4. Receipts of sheep and lambs for two days. 20.903; very dull; sheep V lower; lambs. V lower: 3"0 cars unsold; sheep $3.5(kJi3: lambs, $.".'!( 8.50; dressed mutton dull at 8ijf10c; dressed lambs lower at !12c. Receipts of hogs for two days. 7,111; steady at $Cu6.V5. CHICAGO. July 17. Cattle Receipts, 18,000; shipments. 3.500; market dull; prices lowest of the year; prime beeves, $l.75'f!5.15; choice, $4.5Ku4.55; good, fl.ir.fr 1.35: others, $3'a4; stockers, Wu'i; Texans, $2.251i3.10; cows, $Ti("3.fi0. Hogs Receipts, 31.000; shipments, 8,000; market closed lower; mixed and packers, $:.lO'n5.S5; prime heavy and butchers' weights. $5.nrt5.90;; light mixed, $.!üjti.ou; sorted light, $;.10'.j6.25. Sheep Receipts, 12.0W; shipments, 1.300; natives, $i.o5'i3.50; western. $I4.03; Texans, $3.35'3.40; feeders, $2.5o.;3; lambs, $u5. RUFFALO, July 17. Cattle-Receipts, N. cars through. 2oo sale; market very dull at 2T(i fc Ue.vline from last week's prices; good heavy and medium very slow sale; no export demand; good. $l..Wi 4.73; prime heavy. $4.K(K 4.'jo; mediums. $3.9on4.ir. Hogs Receipts, 47 cars through, W sale; market opened slow and lower; mediums and heavy. K20O6.25. Khep und Iambs Receipts, 27 cars through. Do sale; market opened dull and demoralized; good to choice lambs $5.50vj6; common to fair. $4.75'u5.25; fair to good mixed sheep. 13.75Ji4.50. EAST LIBERTY, July 17. Cattle Receipts, 2,900; shipments, 1,700; market ver" dull; heavy supply and prices 20 to 35c o:t form last week s closing prices; 11 cars of cattle shipped to New Volk today. Hogs Receipts. 5.800; shipments, 4.RO0; steady; medium and light. $i.2ovu6.30; medium weight tops. $;.HM7.20; extreme heavy, $T. 904(6.05; 14 cars of hogs shipped to New York. Sheep Receipts, 7,300; shipments. $.600;

L market very dull; 25c off from last week's closing prices. CINCINNATI. July 17. Hogs-Heavy, lower; $5.25ij5.SO; receipts. 3,100; shipments, 950. Cattle Weak at $23 4.50; receipts, 1,520; shipments. 170. Sheep Rarely steady at $2.505; receipts, 6,J"'; shipments, 3,7uo; lambs easy at $3 &G.10. WHOLESALE MAItKETS. Provisions. SMOKED MEATS. Sugar-cured hams-Reliable. Indiana, 20 lb average 14 .... IS lb average 14 .... 15 lb average 14'i 13'j 121 lb average 14'. 13, 10 lb average ll "Reliable" brand Block hams 14li Block hams, "Indiana" brand 14 Breakfast bacon-clear English cured "Reliable" brand li English cured, Morgan & Gray 13 V Choice si!gar-cured"Porter" brand, 7 to 3 lb average li 10 to 12 lbs average 13 Breakfast rolls, boneless 1-' Boneless hamSugar cured, "reliable" 13V4 California hamsBacon Sugar-cured, "reliable." 10 to 12 lbs 17 Clear sides. 40 to 50 lb average 12 Clear H.s. :t0 to 40 U average 124 Clear sl.l. s. 20 to 30 lb average VZ Clear bellies, IS to 20 lb average 12', Clear bellies, 12 to 13 lb average 13 Clear backs, heavy. 20 to '.W lb average. H Cle arbacks, medium, 20 to 15 lb average L' Clear backs, i;ht. 8 lb average 12, -a French backs. 12 lb average H DRY SALT MEATS. Clear sides. 40 to 50 lb average 11' Char sides. .10 to 40 lb average 12' Clear sides. 20 to 30 lb average 11T Clear IkjIIUs. IS to 22 Id average l Clear bellies, 14 lb average 12i Clear backs, heavy, 20 to 30 lb average. K'7 Freiu-h backs. 12 lb averuge 10' Shoulders English, cured shoulders, "reliable" brand, 1 1 average 10 12 lb average 11 Morgan Ä: Gray, iß lb average 10i 12 Hi average lo Morgan Ar Gray, 1(5 lb average.., Morgan Ar Gray, 12 lb average.. i neu M,er"Reliable" ham, Inside pieces and knuckles 14 Fpcetul selection of knuckle pieces or Instil pieces, Ve advance. "Morgan & Grav" ham. outside only.... 8V4 TICKLED POflK. Bean pork (cleur) per brl 200 lbs $21 50 Family pork IS M Rump pork IS 0 Also half brls. 100 lbs. at half the price of the barrel, adding Cue to cover addtlonal cost of package. Lard-Kettle rendered. In tierce. IlUe; "Reliable" brand. :i'vc; "Indiana" brand. bTc; ulso in tubs. 55 lbs net, :c over tierces; buckets, 20 lbs net, over tierces. Cans Gross weights f.O lbs. In single cases or cases of 2 cans, c advance on price of tierces. 20 lbs In case of 4 cans, .c advance on price of tierces. 10 lbs in case of t cans, ?c advance on on nrlce of tierces. 5 lbs In case of 12 cans, Tc advance on price of tierces. 3 lbs In case of 20 cans, lc advance on price of tierces. FRESH PORK. Loina (short cut). 14 to 20 lbs. 0c; (short cut) 13 lbs and under, 10'c. Cottage hams 10 Boston shoulders (skinned) g Ham huts or pork roast 8 Tenderloins 11 Spare ribs 6 Trimming t4 Sausage, etc Fresh pork sausage, in link 8 Fresh pork sausage. In bulk. 20 lb palls 74 Smoked pork sausage 91, Bologna Cloth, 6c; skin, 6,jc Wienerwurst 5'iC Spiced boneless pigs feet in 8 lb crocks. S',ic Lard OH 75c per gal. The Moore packing company quotes: Sugar-cured hams 18 to 2 lbs average, "Moore," lie; "Empire." 13 aC. California hams 11' Boneless ham 14 Shoulders "Moore." "Empire." English cured, broad cut, 16 Ilm average 104 10i English cured, broad cut, 11 lbs average 11 10? 1 :a con Clear sides, 20 to 30 lb" average 12' Clear bellies, 18 to 22 lbs average 13 Clear backs, 16 to 18 lbs average 12'. Eard Fine leaf, "Moore packing company's kettle rendered. In tierces 10 Choice pure. Spencer packing company's, In tierces J0V Dry Goods. Market steady. Bleached Sheetings Blackstone, A A. 8c; Rerkley cambrlc.No. CO, Sc; Cabot 4-4, 7c; King Philip cambric 19c; Ionsdale, SVic; Lonsdale cambric, 10'i c; Hope. 7'ic; Fruit, Sc; Masonville, 8Vc; J i ill. he; Sea Island. No. 1, 8c; Sea Island, No. 2, 7'ie; Sea Island, No. 3. fic; Forget-me-not, ti'sc; Farwell, 8c; Pwight anchor. 8c; Wamsutta, lOe; New York mills. lO'c; Peppertll. S-4. 20c; 10-4. 22c; Utica. -4, 2C'c; t.tlca. 10-4, 2SV. Brown Drill Crescent A. 8c; Rock City, 7c; Darlington. 7'ic: lVppcrell. 7c. Cambrics Edwards. 5c; Concords, 4e; Manhattan. 5c; Warren. 4c; Masonville roll, high colors, C-jC; Masonville roll, common colors, 5-ic Shirtings Hamilton stripe, lOVc; Amosnlrtings jiammon sinoe, luvc; Ainuig check. 9'c; Amoskeag cheviot stripe, c: Amoskeag cheviot plaid, S'jc; Econochecks, 7'sc; Otis, 7.3c; White River keai tic; m v ola Id. (,Kc: Carolina. 25-ln, 5Vc. Brown Sheetings Atlantic A. 6'ic: Atlantic H. 6Wc; Amory E. 7c: Atlantic D. Cc: Nashville standard. 6'ic; Atlantic P. 5c: Nashville A A. Cc; Rock City, f,.c Cumberland. 5c; Continental O, 6Sc; Badger state, ',e; Lawrence. L I. oc; Mystic River, Gc; Ixg Cabin. 6c; John P. King. A A. 6c; lVppcrell K 62e; Statue Liberty, Cc; Pepperell R, c; Atlantis L L. 6,c: Pepperell 9-4. 18c; Pepperell. 10-4. 20c; Ltlca. 9-4, 23'jc; Utica, 10-4, 2tic. Tickings Amoskeag, A C A. 12Hc; Ports mouth. LiVjc; Conestoga, R F, H'jC; Susquehanna, llc; Conestoga. F F, 144e; I Hamilton. ll'c; lorx, i-in., iu'c; iota, 1 2-in, 12c; Oakland A, GVjc; Thorndyke A, cue. Calicos American. Ce; Allen. 6e; Berlin, solid colors, Cc; Cocheco Madders. 64c; Eddystone, C'c: Hamilton, fancy. 6'ic Hamilton, turkey red. 6c; Pacific. 6',c; Simpson, black. 6Mjc; Steel River, fancy. Cc; Windsor, fancy, C'c; Paclflc, mourning and black, 6,aC. Ginghams Tolle du Nord. 10'ic; Amoskeag canton. CUc; Whlttenton. fancy. t4c; Lancaster staples, 7c; Amoskeag, staples, C'c; Bates staples, 7'c. Denims Amoskeag. 12'ic; Beaver Creek, A A. loc; Columbian, lo'jc; Beaver Creek. It B, H'-.c; Everette, blue, 124c; Haymaker, ViC; Otis, 9-oz, 15c; York, 8-oz, 13',e, Frnlts and Vegetables. New Onions $2.r(Kn 2.75 per brl. Potatoes $2.50 per brl. Cucumbers 25c per doz. Beans Pea beans. $2.25 per bu. oranges California riversides. $3; California navals. $X50; Messina, $3.50; mountain seedlings. Wa'iM. Apples New. 50c per peck. Cabbage $l..riK' 1.75 per brl. Onions 5c per dozen. Cherries $2 j 2.50 per 24 quarts. Raspberrles-$2.75'(;3 per 24 quarts. Peaches 6.'ii75e 1-8 bu. Tomatoes 4öc per Ikjx. A'atermelons-$1S'J20 per hundred; fancy, $2023. Sweet Corn $2 per brl. lemons Fancy. $f; choice. $4, Bananas Fancy, $l.Mni2.23 per bunch. Top Corn Pearl. 3c; r.ce. Coi'oanutn-Ji per hundred. New Honey 2' Green Beans 75c per bu. New Potatoes $2.25ft 2. 50 per brl; new weet potatoes. $1.60 per brl. Iron nnd Hardware. Rar Iron, Jl.R0iil.90, base- wrought charcoal bar. $2.So-'ij3.uO base. Horseshoes. Burden's $4.15; Perkins', $4.15; mule shoes, $4.25; cut-nall rate for COs steel nails, $1.50; horse. $4.3:5 per box; wire nails, rate, $1.75. Steel Plow, open hearth, per lb, 3o; spring, orPlow, open hearth, per pound 3c; spring, ordinary sues, per lb,4c; tlr, $-16 in. thick.

1893

ALRMR!Ai

FA per lb. 34c: M. In. and heavier, per lb. Sc; toe calk, assorted sizes, per lb, 4c;best quality tool. "Black Diamond." per lb. 9c; machinery, rounds only, smooth flnlsli. per lb, rates. 3?c. Barb wire Galvanized. $2.&5; plain annealed fence wire, $2.00; galvanized, faoc advance: 10, 11 and 12 sizes, the regular advances. Ammunition Rim tire cartridges, 25 and 3; R. B. caps, round, per m. $1.W; H. B. caps, conical, per m. "oc; Hick's C. F. B. caps, conical, per m. $2.oj; G. D. caps, per m. 30c; Hick's C. F., per m. 40c; Eley's E. B. Imported, per m, Oc; musket caps, pej m. t"c: Hazard's Fporting powder, per keg $1.75; do do hrdf keg, $3; do do quarter keg, $1.25; loaded paper shells, discount. 4 and 10. rrd. Dealers' prices In seeds are as follows: Per Bushel. Clover, medium, recleaned, fair to good $"' OR'rt 30 Clover, medium, recleaned. prime.. 7 55 o 'J6 Clover.mammoth, recloane l, prime 7 u5nS 00 Millet, German K'wl H Millet, common (o t 70 Millet. Hungarian 1 uoyl 2 Timothy, prime to strictly ;rlme.. 2W Timothy, reclean-d. choice 2 15 Blue gruss, fancy 1 25 Orchard grass, prime 1 50 Red top VKf 75 Euglish blue grass 1 &4I 75 Hides, Leather, Tnllow nnd Pelts. Grease Brown. 4c; yellow, 4'c; white, 6c Tallow No. 1. 3e; No. 2. 3e. Hides Murket Mugrixh an I weak; No. 1. cured 3V; N. ""red. 3c; No. 1, green, 3'c; No. 2. green. 2Vc. Leather Oak sole. j.i'u0c: hemlock soles. 2312!c; hnrness. 251131c; skirting. 34"35e: black bridle, per doz. J''itS; fair bridle. JGg ttti.". per doz; city kip. $..'! v5; Fr nn kip. lii-VH.iC; city valf fl.tiis. 7"-'Jl; French calf skins, Rvl-7o; No. 1 calf. &'(C; No. calf. 4c. Sheep Shearing. 2O'20c; lambs, 40750. Pool try nnd I'rodnr. Eggs-llc. But ter 12?i IHe: poor, PTMOe. Feathers Prime, ueese. 201 J5c per lb; duck. 20,; 25c. Poultry Hens. SVc: chickens, l'i lbs, ISM, 10i i:io; roosters, 4c; turkey, hi-ns. ?c; torn, be; old torn. 6c; ducks. &c; geese. $14. SO. The Glenn House llnrned. MT. WASHINGTON. N. II., July Pv-A lire broke out In th upper prt of the Glenn house, occupied by Charles L. Mll'.lken. atout 6 o'clock last evening. Th tire started over the oftbe and spread with great rapidity. Within an hour the lar structure was In complete ruins. The origin of the tire Is unkaun. It was the latest built sutrmer houe In lh Whit mountain nnd was provided with nioderr Improvement. It would accomodate aloul 3oi guej-ts und lost fully $loo.tft. Transfer of Horden Property. FALL RIVER. Mass.. July 13. It it learned that the daughters of the late Andrew .1. Horden have transferred to Mrs. George Whitehead of this city, nnl Mrs. Fish of Hartford. Conn., some $4,Uo0 worth of projsTty which belonged to the tat Mrs. Bor len. The b petit iat les under th transfer w re half tsters of the murdered woman. The trial determined the fact that Mrs. Bord-ti died t.rst. but It Is understood that the transfer was voluntarily made. A Monster Cat IUI. COLl'M BPS, July 1.. Special. A catfish weighing seventy-Hve pounds wai caught In White river a short distance below here labt night. Dick Stringer, who raucht It, claims this as his largest catch. A great many catilh weighing from twenty to forty-live pounds have t-en caught here this season. Hot Day nt Gray Gables. RCZ.ARDS RAY, Mafs., July Irt.-Presl-dent Cleveland passed a very quiet day at Gray Gables. The wind was very fresh In the forenoon, but as tt quieted down In the afternoon the weather Iwcame extremely hot. The president and family spent pretty much of the whole day on the veranda. Rallrond Accident In pnln. MADRID. July 1!. A terrible railroad accident occurred near Bilboa last night. A train consisting of a locomotive and six carriages while rounding a Miarp curve In the mountains ran off the tract and went over a high precipice, six persons wer killed and thirty seriously injured. AVOHI.D'S I'll II HOTEL. chTcago VIEW Tecropean, HOTEL; fireproof; rates one-half other f rst-class hotels; with all modern Improvements; electric light, call and recall bells; elevator runs all nlht; location unsurpassed; all front rooms; coolest In city; no charg for baths; Madlson-st. cable passes door day and night connecting with lines t' fair aod depots. Madisou-st., Ogden-ave. and Ashland blvd. IS 7t w 1 PLAISANCE HOTEL. CHICAGO, C137 and 1 31 Woodlawn-ave.. one square from Woodlawn entrance; baths and all modern conveniences; $1 rates. Call on Anna Carnes. 434 Massachusetts-ave., Indian apolis. wl ANNOINCLMFATS. SOMETHING PRACTICAL THE IM proved Daisy Fence Machine and th New Daisy Wire Reel. Address .legier & Harmon. Anderson. Ind. 13 40 SOMETHING PPEFPL. PKETTY. I'Nio,ne! "Blossoms of Hoosierdom ; or. Intellectual l usts!" An unpublished pamphlet of original album verses, short poems, acrostics on various names, etc., plainly written In the author's handwriting. We will mall it to any address for 25 cents. A. T. Price, South Bethany, Ind. w 4 hum si-: rroitrr.MTV. BOTH SEXES THREE BEST SELLING household articles in the world. Inclose stamp for circulars to A. J. Iden. Milwaukee, Wis. 17 1 "AVA NT EL A WE EL EDl'CATED. ENergetlc young man for local secretary of an English financial Institution. Very remunerative appointment for suitable person. Whole or spare time. Apply National Benefit Trust. Denver, Col. OK HAL1, .MlSCKI.I.ANEOl'S. ÜTsTpatentfo R'ALUA rlepiecb of machinery, or will trade for good farm land In Indiana or adjoining stales. E. J. Thickstun. Belmont, lnd. SAI.LvMEN WANTED. "SALES M EN WANTE1 "GxTjj PAT from the start. Adddress the Hawks Nursery Co., Rochester, N. Y. 17 I WEAK - MEN INSTANT- RELIEF. rr In lid... ,r fturn. -4 w III mii1 tt-rale,!) Fp tC 4o my fellow mf. gan. A Hirf our for tii.iM.um. J o M aji flood. Ntrrou potjlltt. Vn.rte)et. et? A'litrw l.'a. t rank lln. Äuic bc0cr.TRrtiri. Mich. Irtlm f füll, Tut Irr prnd-.i., -.lnc rrrtnttart Dr-T, N.r.ou. D.MIU,l.wt Unlii4, ,c , fcavlnc IM.4 la rm kmi roM..hM lrv..l tlm,M mmm f mmlU rar, wl.lrn h. will !..! .ll i CK. t to h.a n.rarv iddrn C J. IUSÜ.V , L 0. Bei II, Nr W Vor t It;, N, T. I IflY iCCVK SvU mror Mm. McC.be ' Ha.lt LA LH A0r.il 13 CortcU. Huromrr CorneU nd WtltU tha.a any olber tri n.ta W fm rrcv iL tSaa4 lur Urma, Addrvaa. KT. Lofls l OhllT CO.. lrawr 4, fek Loula, Mo. BUYS A $30. CO WATCH aa.aal.a4 4 aa. . . Kvt-L.a a H . Mraaraaalla, fclaa. i D I VI A I r1- TTartman'a treatment for Pr? al LrlllflUrirT lur kW fraa ta aa aalM. ' CtfiVAILKt. &LRSICM.IIOIEI, Columbus. O.

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