Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 19, Number 13, Jasper, Dubois County, 31 March 1877 — Page 6

WEEKLY COURIER.

JASPKli.

G, DO J XX, Faultier. . . INDIANA.

CURRENT NEWS. ttKNKKAIj. r&flmsster-GsReral Key, Madinf; himself overwhelmed nearly with applications for Mc, ha eaused the following circular to be prepared for traasmlselea to every applloaat, a the aly answer that oab poslbly be Riven at present to any of the coaeUrntly aeouniulatiBK letters;, Sir: Your letter 1 the has been received aU plaeed upoa the Mies of the Department for eonsid eratloH under the rule of the Civil Service when vaeaaeiM occur. At present HOHe exist. W. 51. Kky, Poetiaatter-UeH era). Carl Schurz is the first GeraaH who ever filed a Cabinet place, but bo less than four Secretaries of the Treasury have been of foreign birth Albert Galtantin, bora, in

Switzerland, Alexander J. Dallas, and

Alexander J. Hamilton, natives of the "West Indies, ami William J. Duatie, an Irishman. For the first time in 16 years the Democrats had a majority in the United States Senate on the ISth, caused by the seats of Senators Cameron and Sherman being vaoant and four other Republican Senators being absent. Col. Robert O. Ingersell delivered a lecture in New York City on the evening of the 14th on "Political Questions and An sweri," in which he heartily endorsed the policy of conciliation adopted by President Have, and eulogized the members of his Cabinet. Secretary Schurz has notified all heads of Bureaus of the Interior Department that during his administration of its affairs there will be no removals of clerks or other employees, except for cause, and no promotione except for merit. It will, therefore, be useless for persons to file papers sollelting clerical appointments or promotion on merely personal or political grounds, and,

In addition to this, it can be stated that there are at present no vacancies of any

Kind te be filled.

Frederick Douglass (colored) will be ap

pointed Marshal of the District of Colum

bla, the salary and perquisites of the office

being from f 10,000 to $12,000 a year.

A plan for the adjustment of the Southern

State debts has been matured by the com

miiiee appointed ior mat purpose some

time ago by the capitalists of New York

J. ne pian recommended has reference to

the Tennessee debt (the New York commit tee having had a conference with the com aaittee appointed by the Tennessee Legis

lature), and contemplates the issue of

new bonds at the rate of 60 per cent, of the

aggregate amount at the principal and in

terest up to July,1877, the new bonds to be payable In 30 years, and bear interest at the rate of 6 per cent., payable semi-annually in New York the interest-coupons to be

receivable for all taxes due to the State of

Tennessee.

Frederick TV. Seward, of New York, has

been appointed Assistant Secretary of State,

and James N. Tyner, of Indiana, First As-

slstat Postmaster-General.

xne Bar Association of the District of Columbia appointed a committee to present

to the Senate a protest against the confirma

tion of Frederick Douglass as Marshal of

the DIstriot, notwithstanding which the Senate confirmed the appointment by a vote

of 80 yeas to 12 nays. Senator Morton has declined the chair manshlp of the Foreign Relations Commit tee, and the position will be filled by Sen

ator Hamlin, who has accepted. Senator

Ferry has been made chairman of the Posta

Committee.

A Washington special says many Ameri

cans have filed complaints against Bancroft Davis, Minister to Berlin, for discourtesy

aau graver offenses. Postmaster-General Key. in retdv to

letter of Senator Merrlmon, asking for In

formation in relation to the distribution of

patronage in the south, says: "I will en

dearer to explain the situation as clearly and briefly as possible. When a vacancy

exiew m any office connected with thlsde

pat-taunt in the Southern States,

preierenee win ne given to a Kepublican, all other things being equal; but should it be Impossible to find a

Kepublican who will be satisfactory to

large majority of the people whose business .11 It AW. A .

h uirecuy aneeiea oj ue appointment, or

In ease of a contest for ofiiee, then I shall

netnesitate to step aside and select the

perwn who, in my Judgment, will

give satisfaction to the business interests of

the community. While I shall always be

giau to receive the advice of Senators and

Representatives in Congress touching mat

tors of this kind, yet I shall not consider

myself as in any way bound to act upon it.

My desire is to do the greatest good to the

greatest number, and to this end I shall al

ways be glad to have yeur co-operation."

uov. Hampton of South Carolina has given a guarantee to the President that if

the troops are withdrawn from that State

no violence will oecur or be allowed, but

tnat he will proceed against Chamberlain by

iegi mean only, and undsr a statute

enacted by the Kepublloans in

ioto, to enable them to put

out some Democratic incumbent. This statute provides for the summary eviction of any person intruding himself Into public ofllee, by a warrant Issued by a Circuit Jadge. The party evicted under such warrant is authorized by the statute to assert his claim or pretensions in the courts If he wlshe, but he must give way first and at nee, on an Issue and presentation of a warrant, totheefleer elected. Secretary of War McCrary has Issued aeircular announcing that hereafter in his department removals will only be made for Md premeKsM ordered solely en the ground of merit. J. W. Marshall, First Assistant PertGeswral, who ave way to Mr, Ty j

nor, baa fcoen appelated Superintendent of

Railway Mall Serviee, with headquarters In

Washington. Washington specials give currency to

report that a muwatent Is en foot to elect

Fetter (Rep.), of Ohio, Speaker of the new

House, by the aid of such Southern Demo orate as are friendly to the IlayeW Adminis t ration. KAT.

The New Hampshire State election, held on the 18th, resulted in the election of the

atire Republican State ticket and two of the

three Congressmen. A man calling himself J. W. Brooks sue

oejsnwy personaieu an express messenger

on the Allegheny Valley Railroad, and on

the arrival of the train in Pittsburgh car

rled off $4,000 of the money in his charge.

James Kingan, a prominent New Yorkprovision dealer and speculator, beoanie

heavily Involved, and a few days ago fled to

escape his creditors. On the 14th his dead

body was found lying along the track of the

International Railroad, near Welford Sta

tion, New Brunswick, with the throat cut from ear to ear. It was at first supposed he

had committed suicide, but subsequent In

vestlgatlon Indicates that he was murdered.

There was a riotous demonstration by the

unemployed worklngmen of Scranton, Pa.,

on the 15th, during which the cry of

"Bread or blood" was reiterated through

the streets.

Peter B. Sweeney, one of Boss Tweed's

partners in the New York Tammany King,

has returned home to stand trial, being

granted Immunity, meanwhile, from arrest.

The steamer Kuwland, of the Bed Star

Line, from Antwerp for New York, went ashore at Long Branch on the night of the 17th. The passengers, crew and baggage

were landed by the life-saving crews.

There were five cabin and 130 steerage passengers. The vessel will pre-bably be a total

lose.

The Attorney-General of New York has

cited the officers of the World Mutual Life

Insurance Company of New York City to show cause why a .receiver should not be

appointed.

At Antrim, N. II., on the 1Mb, two young men named Campbell and Bailey had

aheated political discussion, which was ter

mlnated by Campbell striking Bailey, when the latter drew a revolver and shot the for

mer dead. Ex-Gov. Emory Washburn, of Massa chusetts, died at his residence in Cam

bridge on the 19th. He was 77 years of

age. The Bank of Lansingburgh, N. Y., sua

pended payment on the 10th, caused by a

depreciation of assets. The New Hampshire Congressional elections resulted in the choice ef Joucs, Democrat, In the First District, by a plurality of 45, and of Briggs and Blair, Republicans, in the Second and Third Districts, by about 1,300 plurality each.

WHT AND SOUTH.

Hon. H. P. Bell, the regular Democratic

candidate, has been re-elected to Congress in the Ninth Georgia District, in place of Ben Hill. Mr. Bell was a member of the 4Sd Congress, hut did not run for the 44th. Madame Ootavia Walto Levert, so well known .to the people of two hemispheres, died on the 13th, near Augusta, Georgia, her native State. Miehael Merriman, living at Rock Creek Center, 10 miles south of Huntington, Ind., who bad been In the Insane Asylum, and was sent home about a year ago, thought to have been permanently cured, on the 13th shot one of his sons, aged 18, through the head, fatally wounding him, and another, aged 16, through tbe shoulder, probably fatally wounding him also. He then shot and killed himself instantly. Joe Goss, indicted in a Kentucky court for participation in the Allen-Goss prizefight, has been arrested in New York City and taken to Burlington, Boone County, Ky., to await trial. Tassey Stewart, the California farmer who was tried on a charge of attempting to bribe ex-Secretary Chandler to render a land decision In his favor, has been acquitted. A meeting of the white' Republicans of Louisiana was held on tbe 15th, and an address promulgated to the people of the United States, rehearsing their grievances and asking for recognition from the Federal Government. The address Is signed by W. H. Dinkgrave, Chairman of Committee. Hon. Stanley Matthews received the Republican nomination for United States Sen ator from Ohio. His principal competitors, Mr. Garfield having withdrawn, were W. B. Howland and ex-Attorney-General Taft.

In Chicago, on the IMIl, Dr. William C.

Pike, a phrenological lecturer, shot and

killed S. S. Jones, editor of the JielljiorhUogopkicaljQurnal, for the alleged se

duction of his (Pike's) wife.

The store of Field Magruder, at Ben-

nlng's Station, near Washington, D. C,

was burned on the night of the 14th, and

Ebcnezer Large and his son John, who slept

in tne Dunning, were burned to death.

There Is but little doubt that both of the men were murdered, the store robbed and then set on fire.

The crusade against the "heathen Chi

nee" appears to have culminated in Butte County, California, where on the night of the 14th six Chinamen, engaged in clearing

land,wereattacked in their cabin by whites. Three were shot dead, the fourth died soon

after, the fifth was mortally wounded, and the sixth, who was slightly wound

ed, escaped by feigning death.

He says that after finishing their

work the murderers set the oabln on fire and fied, He extinguished the flames and gave the alarm. The murder was in

cold blood, and unprovoked, There Is no slew to the assassin. A number of crimes f violence have boos recently perpetrated en Chinamen in the neighborhood, and but

Ittle exertion has been made te discover the

offenders ; but this erewnlng outrage has nt

eigth reud the oUImhs, and steps arc i

being take to tMseever and punish the murderers. Four colored men were executed at Aiken, S. 0., on the ItHh, for the murder of two white men. A toiler ekploslen in the saw-ralll of Hunter Brothers, five miles east of WorthiHtfton, Ind., on the 18th, killed ten persons and wounded seven, all that were in the building. The mill ground corn on Fridays, and was trying a new set of corn burrs, and the day being wet, tbe neighbors bad gathered In. The names of the killed are: A. Vandeventer, James Hunter, John Wllkle, John Speltz, a son of G. W. Bender, a son of George Ray, a son of Wra. Hunter, a Mr. Hamilton, a son of Henry Parver, aud a son of Jacob Brudaker, The wounded are: John Brudaker, Alfred Hunter, A. Hard, a son of George W. Bender, Win. Wand, a son of James Hunter, and a man whose name is unknown. The steamer Gov. Garland, from Plue Blutf for Memphis, was burned at Red Fork, 40 miles from the mouth of the Arkansas River, on the 10th. One passenger was lost, W. D. Brent, a merchant of Mud Lake, Arkansas. The orew and passengers lost all their effects, numbers of them jumping Into the water to save themselves. Pilot Evans stood at his wheel until the boat touched land, and was slightly burned. The Garland had 050 bales of cotton, mostly for New Orleans. The boat

.was only about a year old, and cosl.OOO.

She was owned by Capt. John N. Harbin

and others, and Insured In Cincinnati offices for $15,000.

The express messenger on tbe train from

Mobile to New Orleans, on the 17th, reports

that at Lookout Station a roan boarded the express car and presented a pistol at him

(the messenger). He made a rush at the

man and received a bull In the hand, disabling him. The highwayman then

grabbed a 500 package, leaped from the car and escaped.

Joe Goss has been lined :&Jf0 for violating

the ,laws of Jventucky by engaging in a prize

fight, and committed to jail until the tine is

paid,

Ex-Detective James Whltc,of Cincinnati

has been sentenced to the Penitentiary for

13 mouths, for implication iu election fraud

last October.

The Louisiana Republican State Commit

tee, by a nearly unanimous vote, have ex

pelled Mr. P. B. S. Pinchback from that

organization.

Stanley Matthews was on the 30th elected

United States Senator from Ohio, in place

of Sherman, resigned. The Democrats

made no nomination.

Legal proceedings were instituted on the

part of the Nicholls Government, on the

10th, for the purpose ef ousting Packard

and bit adherents from the Louisiana State

house.

Judge Reed, of the South Carolina Circuit

Court, has rendered a decision in a habeas corpus case affirming the title of Hampton

as Uovemor.

The Illinois Central Railroad has pur

chased the New Orleans, Jackson and Great

Northern Railroad, sold under foreclosure

on the ISth. The amount paid was 51,050,

000, in addition to which the purchaser as

suraes all tbe liabilities of the bankrupt

road.

Wm. Hayes, a San Francisco attorney and

a notorious bully, on the 17th threatened to

kill Gen. John McComb, managing editor

of the AUm-California newspaper, giving

mm five minutes In which to sign a retrac

tion of an item which appeared in the Alta.

The result was that Hayes was badly bat

tered, knocked down and had his pistol

taken from him by McComb, who then

turned hla over to the police. The valiant

editor was given a grand complimentary dinner by the fraternity for his courageous

action.

Major Reno, U. S. A., has recently been

tried by court-martial at St. Paul for at

tempting to take improper liberties with

Mrs. Hell, the wife of a brother officer.

The evidence was apparently conclusive as to his guilt, and it is intimated that he will

be dismissed the service.

A dally mail service between Hot Creek,

Wy. T,, and Deadwood, D. T., a distance

of 120 miles, will be commenced on AprI

1, and a tri-weekly service between Kear

ney, .Neb., and Deadwood, 300 miles, on

M-y 1.

nim, was seateaeed to imprisonment for three months, Los for one year, and Gehlsen for five years. , Aetual hostilities have begun In the Kast. On the 17th an obstinate fight between the Turks and Bosnians took plae between Donaventurc and Dreugnai, lasting six hears. The Turkish forces appear to have been worsted, and were forced to fall back. Roth sides suffered heavy losses, COXCKUNft. Npcttlal Se..!6 ef Ike K.HHtc. The Senate, on the 14th, appointed a oowtnltteetii wait upon the President and Inform him that, unless he may have some further communication to make, the Senate would adjourn without day. 'Hi.- committee subsequently reported that tne President wnuhl not require the presence I lie Senate any longer than Mttimluy or possibly Tuesday next. In the Senate, on the 15th, provision was made fertile printing of a volume containing the proceedings of the Electoral Commission

and the two houses of Congress fetatine thereto,

sen

the

nate ad

After a short executive smsJoh

Journal.

The Senate, on the 10th, confirmed another batch of appointments In executive ses Dion. The Senate, on the 17th, adjourned sine ilU, after having continued another batch of appointments, among which was that of Fredrrlek Douglass ns United States Marshal for the District of Columbia.

Cerebral LocalizatieH.

A JtlHMeeeia Man, After Ruing j-j Tw Wkn, Suddenly femes te Lire Minneapolis, Minn., March (K A moat remarkable occurrence lias taken place in this city, which rivals the resurrection of Uzhhis About three wk8 ago Jonas Nulson, a lnm. berman, while working in the woods on tho Upper Mississippi, was crushed beneath h fulling tree, and, after suffering several days, died, I Us comrades placed his body in a rude pluu box, and forwarded it to friends in thh city, it was over a week before tho body arrived. At the hkuiu time tliti wcuthcr was quite cold. The remuins wore taken to tho residence of John I'derson, whoro for two or three days they wore visited by frionds. Finally one who had not yet seen tho body culled and after examining it for Homo moments exclaimed: "Why, Jonas is not dead." Those who heard him were astonished at this remark, which scorned incrodiblo; but, nevertheless, ellorts were mado to rosuscitato tho body by placing it in bed and imparting warmth to it. After a time color began to show itself in tho chocks, and shortly after his oyes opened. Tho spectators were almost overpowered with a sense that

they were in tho pretence of an unseen power. Finally one asked tho reviving man: " Nolson, arovou cold?" With.

Tho question as to how far the brain "ut ying, nxing nis oyes on bisques-

notions of "".'-" uv ux.

exorcises an inlluencoon tho motions of animals has been engaging scientific men for years. Dr. Uroca was among tho first to investigate tho subject; ho proved that when a man was deprived

of tho faculty of speech by a stroke of apoplexy, there invariably existed a

lesion at the very same spot tn tho brain,

ortions to rostoro mm were now redoubled, aud his condition since has been gradually iiuj)roviug. This is a fact. A man who has been apparently dead two weeks, and must havo been frozen in transit to this city, lias como back to lifo. Clticaiin Inter-

viz., in tho anterior region, and on tho UCan-

posterior side of tho third frontal cir- j

rOKEIUR.

The Pope delivered an allocution In the

Consistory, held at the Vatican, on tbe

12th. He passed in review the events since

1870, and said Italy took forcible possession

of Kome at an epoch when a generous nation was In sore distress. He declared that tbe Italian ecclesiastical laws deprived

him of the means of administering

the Church, and left him only the

liberty granted by ordinary laws. He la

mented his inability to prevent Immorality

and irrcllglon from permeating society. In

conclusion, he pronounced conciliation I in

possible, and appealed to foreign Bishops to Incite the faithful to the good work of

Inducing their Governments to take the position of the Holy See into consideration. The Commission appointed by the French Academy of Sciences to Investigate in regard to the phylloxera insect report that 25 departments have been ravaged, aud in many districts poverty, privation and misery have replaced afiluence.

In consequence of the destruction pf vine culture, the traffic on

railways and canals has diminished, and the public taxes do not yield enough to pay for collection. Besides the damage already

done, the districts of Burgundy, Champagne, Loire and Cher are now threatened. The commission recommend various measures for the isolation of the infested districts and the destruction of the affected vines

Herr Lob, formerly Secretary ef the Ger

man Embassy at Paris, Count Hermann von Arnlm, and Dr. Gehhen, editor of the

mionmocce, have been tried and convict

ed In the Municipal Court of Berlin ef violation ef the press laws, In publishing certain articles in the Jtetchsglockg. Her-

ann, who Is a ton ef Count Henry ton Ar-

cumvolution to tho left. Henco tho conclusion that this was the seat of the

faculty of speech in man, and thus ono

was led to conceive a special place for every intellectual action. Fritz, Hitzig, Ferrior, Carvillo, and Durct, tho most prominent among those who havo

irutiiuu me iut.-!iiiuu, upormo as iojiows : They take oil' part of the sknllof a dor,

then apply electric wiros to different

parts of tho brain thus laid bare, and watch the motions produced. Certain points cause none, so that it is not the

whole brain that acts on tho muscular

system, but only special points. Ferrior

operated on monkoys in tho prosencoof the London Royal Socioty. "According

hu iuuuucu various parts oi tno cere

brum, tho ape would shako his fist at tho public, raiso or stretch a log, or cut

lacos. it was snown that in the mon

key the center of motion of the tonguo answered exactly to that to which tho

faculty of speech pertains in man

From all this it follows that thesurcoon

may now know precisely tho point of

mo EKuu at wnicn to apply tne trepan

Thus, not long ago, a man was brought into the Hospital St. Antoino. He had

received a blow on the left temple, and

on coming to himself again, could only

apu&K. wiiii uiiucuiir, ami men no wouiu

call a fork an umbrella, a lamp a hat

and so on. Moreover, his right arm

was half paralyzod. The surgeon at

once Knew wnat no had to do; ho ap plied tho trepan to the nroner snot, ant!

hit upon a piece of bone that compress-

eo mo oram. xnis splinter was re

inoveu, anu mo patient at once recovered tho use of his right arm. A few

days later his tongue was freed from al

impediment, and ho left the hosnita

periecuy cureu. vaugnanvs Mfsstn

gtr.

Adam and Eve's Wedding.

- .

i;iuyou ever contempiato the pov

erty oi Auam wnen nc took rive for

better or worse? Only think of it

lie hadn't a hat to his head, a coat to

his back, a pair of shoos to his feet.

nor nary a red cent" in his trousers'

pocket. Lve brought no dowry; she had nothinsr to bestow savo her love

and affection, and as he was tho onlvn

i-.t ... . " i

voung ieuow arounu it was no or nobody. Equally as poor as her husband,

she came to him without a bonnet or

shawl, calico gown, or oven a pair of

suppers, iuosos forgot m nts reminis

cencos to give us any account of the wedding-trip, but from what wo can

gamer in regaru to tno wardrobes of

tnat day, then baggago would have f roved an incumbrance for a very united amount su diced, and drossimr

to please every body was of no account,

ior mere were none but themselves to please. Doubtless their wholo outfit of

traveling dresses, waternroofs. dusters.

lunch baskets and all he could havo carried in the pocket of his trousers.

They must havo startod housekeeping, also, Upon as small a capital as could woll be imagined. They hadn't, as far as can be gleaned from history, a

latr-orusn, a nne-tooth comb, a towel,

or soap: no hitters, soothitur-smm.

clothes-wringers, smoothing-iron no

notmng.

Adam wasn't afraid to invito his wife

to go on an excursion witli him through fear of having to go down deop into his trousers' pockets for the wherewithal to buy a suitable outfit for tho reason

that ho bad no pockets in his trousers; nor was ho bothered about his trunk checks, nor did ho swear at baecairo-

smaahers or brook the insolenco of rail

road officials.

There was no good and sufficient rea

son why they shouldn't havo been an amiable couple and had a good time generally. They washed their own clothes, doubtless, by a dive in the

j-uphrates, and there beinr no clothes-

ines, their clothes were allowed to drv

upon their backs, and Adam didn't care

rush whether his shirt-bosom was

smooth or not, and wliv should Eve

tother her head about it as Ion? as her

husband was suited JJlmira (N. r.

Advertiser.

Simple Cure fer DjspepMa. Milk and lime-water arc no-,v frequently prescribod by physicians in cases of dyspepsia ami weakness of the stomach, and in some cases arc said to prove very beneficial. Many persons who think good bread and milk n great luxury frequently hesitato to cat it, for the reason that the milk will not digest readily; sourness of stomach will often follow. But experience proves that lime-water and milk are not only food and medicine at an oarly period of life, but also at a later, when, as in tho case of infants, tho functions of digestion antl assimilation have been seriously impaired. A stomach taxed by gluttony, irritated by improper food, inflamed by alcohol, enfeebled by disease, or othowise unfitted for its duties as i3 shown by various symptoms attendant upon indigestion, dyspepsia, diarrhea, dysentery, and fever will resumoits work, and do it energetically, on an exclusive diet of bread and milk and limewater. A goblet of cow's milk may havo four tablespoonfuls of lime-water added to it with good effect. The way to mako lime-water is simply to procure a few lumps of unslacked lime, put the lime in a stono jar, add water until the limo is slacked and of about the consistence of thin cream; tho lime settles, leaving the pure and clear lime-water at the top. Great care should bo taken not to get tho limo-water too strong. Keep to the direction as to the consistency, and when tho water rises pour it off without obtaining any of the lime. This water is also good to apply to burns and scalds. In slacking the lime, take caro that none of the particles fly into the oyes. A family of woodcock have passed tho winter near Tort Stanley, Canada, in a warm ravino which is overgrown with shrubbery, and which never freozes. The woodcock is a migratory bird, and the fact of its remaining so

far north during the winter, instead of winging its way south, can not easily be explained.

TUB MAKKCTH.

NEW YOKIt. Mi wen ST.

BUVM-NiUn atMra. .... au.to 12.M

8HJCBP Coamo to Choke. 5.2S S.JO

JlLHi Live

COTTON-MIddllBf rMJUK-Oood toCholee. .. 0.(5

WHEAT NO. 2UMMJTO 1.4C 0

CORN Western Mixed 55 OATS Westeni Mixed.... M

rUKK New hsm H.73

ST. LOUIS

COTTON-MldiUlBC a liKKK CATTLB Unoiee 3.2.1

good to rrlsae .M Cows and Heifers... 3.40 Corafed Texas.... 2. '36

HOUS ShllinlBK 4.50

SIIKEP Coataoa so Fancy.. 2.(0

ruvum. unoiee ixHwiry i, '

AAJk ............... ts.Y.i m WUKAT Ked No. 3 l.Mi

No. S.

CORN-No. 2 Mixed

OATS No. 2 KYK No. 2

TIMOTHY SKKD-lrlae.... TOBACCO Planters' Lugs. . .

iiarx snipping vtu ft AY Choice Tlaothv;

KUTTE K Choice Dairy

gnus r resa ,

1.48

8) 0 W 1.50 .3.(0 4.0J li.oi m as

11H

I'ORK HUsdard Mess U.'JA

r . .... . 1 1 - .3 . .

i iim ama .......

WOOL Tab'Waahed, Choice

uavrasneu, uomutnit.

37 21

CIUCAUO

KXKVSS Commoa to Choioe IIOUS Common to Cboicu..

SllKKl' Common to Cholw , ITLOUK-CholoeWiBter

Cnetee StrlSK Extra

WUHAT-Spring No. 2 No. 3

COKN-No.3Mlxed....,

OATSk NO. 1

RYJfr No. 2

I'ORK Mess

LARD 1'er ewt

KANSAS OlTx,

HMXVBe-Natue Steers.... 3.25

Cows 2.9ft

HOU8 , 3.10

3.2.1 0 15 a .vi 7 50 B.W)

1.24 , 1.14XW 33 0 8i,' 13.70 y :w

COTTON Middling ,

fi.uuR unoiee b.u w CORN-Mlxed M

OATS White dj

NKW ORLKANH

rLOUK-Cttetee Kamllv 8.00

CORN while m

OATS St. LflU is 4

MAY-Prlme 14.00 PORK-NewMeei..... 1!U!K ACON I (!.'

11V 6.n 1.4:1 ,'6 M H.tO UK fl on 5. IS 4.0i) 4.R0 &.00 ft.71 7.10 6. DO

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