Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 19, Number 22, Jasper, Dubois County, 1 June 1877 — Page 2

iT COURIER

6 AXJEf ?iM&kc

JASPBJt,

INDIANA.

OUIiKEKT NEWS. ORXltK.lL. It kitvb been pHblWHHl that Senator Btaine and Frtetdeat Have bad bad an In tervlew, at whieh the Southern Wft amleably ditetuwed, the Chieaffo IUr0mn' Washington eerrpondet, aj-p-ftUy upon the authority of Mr. Blaine, hMtlea that there bM been any conversation whatever between the two en poHthsal subJeafc. HeMya: "The President's position en the Southern question h no more dtntieetly taken than Mr. Blaine', ami any attempt te reeoaell their respective attitudes would be futile. Mr. Blaine mj he mm seen no oceaele te change the poattten he teekin the Seaete in Mareh lat, aadhe feeta Mr that He eorreetaeaa will, la the ad, be viedleatee1." Secretary Sherman, in a reeeiit interview wMh a Pre reporter, said that he had Just pkeed 16,000,000 of the four and a half per eeato. e the market, u a step toward re-Mi-apt ton under the bill for muniing Jan. 1, W, and that he hoped te proeeed under the bill without Interruption. The country, he Mid, had reached bard pan, price were on a specie baeie, and R would lw little leas than an aet of cruelty not te take every step possible to relieve the people of the Ineabus of an irredeemable currency. His ebief fear was of a falee apprehension prevalent at the Wet whieh bad spread to other parte of the country that by resuming the Government would strip the country of alt its paper eurreney and leave nothing but gold and silver for the payment of debts and the transaction of businet. Should this feeling take strong enough hold upon Congrm, he thought it night seriously embarrass the operations of the Administration. He ww no other reaeon to expect difficulty or dewy. Mr. Sherman deelined to wy whether the Praklwit would or would not veto any act extending the time for resuntptien. The Secretary of War bag notified disbursing eiMer that there will be no funds available for the purchase of supplies for the arajtafter July 1, until Coagree shall have had time to aet upon an appropriation bill, and all disbursements for contracts will, as the oontraete themselves will state, depend upon future appropriations. Bx-P resident Grant, wife and son, Jesse X. Grant, sailed for Europe on the 17th, in the steamer Indiana from Philadelphia. The Ruseiaa war vessels sailed from New York oh the 17th destination not known. A Washington telegram assert that a personal friend of Senator Morton has received a letter front him, in which he states positively that he Intends standing by the AdminfcrtratfoH, ami will support the President's Southern poller. The General Assembly of the Presbyterian Churek of the United States began it annua! BoMon at Chicago on the 17th. The annual convention of American Railway Master Meebanies held at St. Louis en May 1417. The next meeting will be held at Btehmond, V., beginning on the eeond Tuesday in May, 1878. A special from Washington, 18th, fay the

President has tendered the onlee ef Solicitor of the Treasury to ex-Gov. Chamberlain, of South Carolina. It was decided a month ago to appoint ex-Representative Wells, of Mlfeissjpp!, but the President subsequently changed his mind. The Secretary of War has Issued an order saying that employees for whose payment no appropriations have been, made for the next fiscal year will he allowed to continue on duty only in eases where their ee rv lees are alwolutety necessary and ordered by the proper authority, and where they will stipulate they do so voluntarily am without contract or agreement to be paid. Persons rendering services without contract or agreement may be furnished with a certificate showing the time for which such service is rendered, but the holder has no claim for compensation unlet Congress shall make an appropriation therefor. Quartermasters' and Paymasters' clerks are affected by this order. The New York 2Vfone of the 19th says, from information obtained, it has reason to believe the Russian fleet fo now keeping watch along our ooast for the purpose of intercepting vessels having munitions of war on board forTurkey,the Italian commander having lwii informed that a steamer would soon leave the vielnity of New Haven with a large cargo for Turkey. Ex.Governor Chamberlain has declined

the appointment of Sollcitoref the Treasury, on aeeount of other engagements deemed by him more advantageous, both professionally and pecuniarily. Capt. Kads, It is reported, has a plan for improving the. channel of the Mississippi Itiver from Cairo down to the Gulf, by which X feet of water will lie secured all the year round, and lands liable to lie submerged will le placed far above overflow, thin doing away with the proposed levee system, whieh is estimated to cost 14,060,000. Capt. Ends' pmn is to wring the river to an approximate width Wtween Cairo and Red Uiver. It varies between these two points from ,MX) to 7,000 feet in width. Where It is wide the current is more Hlugglsh and sediment Is deposited In the shape of sand-bar. The reduction of these wide plaees will increase the velocity or the current and make lt.unlform with the current in the narrower localities. Captain lads thinks any attempt to straighten the river will be disastrous a well as exceedingly expensive;. Ilk pbm seems to be simply the application of his new successful Jetty system to alout 80 miles of the Mississippi River. He Is eonfident that by this method the MfcwtMlppi River Ihtoral would be entirely lifted alwve overflew. A New Orleans dkpatehof the 36th says that the latest Max lean sdvke are to the fleet that a mevemtnt m enfoet In the southern and taMern part of the Republic In the

internd of lrd Tefada whkh has attained .WeraW i4gHlHw. There W also ' p-4'lve tufemation that recruiting has been eemmeneed in several American title for the punHMwe of orgatiUInc an expedition to

the KepubMe t support LeruW elaJnt to the

Prwddeney. Tabs, however, w lewguue wHh great iwereey, and but f w knew rf t he meve. The Supreme Court of the District of Columbia ha deekled adversely upon the etalms of Admiral lVrter and the omeers and men of the North Atlantic auuadroH to 9R,&),Q0d in prize money, made oh aeeount ef the squadron's share in the capture of The Attorney-General has deekled that the efiiee of General Apitraixer of Msrohan-

disc for the South, held by ex-RepreseRta

tive Morey, of LouUiana, is not warranted by the Revised Statutes, and it has therefore

been abolished. Gen. Reale, Minister to Austria, has re

signed, and the cheke of his successor lies,

It k understood, between ex-Gov. Kenton, of New York, and James Russell Lowell, the

Rev. Chester noleombe, one of the mis

sionarlee of the American Board, has been aiHointed Secretary of Legation at the

Court of Pekin. ThU is the third mission

ary chosen to the post named. The former two were t lie Hon. Peter Parker, now of

Washington.and the Hon. S.Wells Williams the author of the English and Chinese dictionary. EAST. Five children of Frank Dunnegal, a rail

road employee at Little Hook, Cortland County, N. Y., were burned to death on the

15th. The eldest was 9 years old. Dunnegal and his wife were a short distance from the house when they discovered it to be on

fire, ami made every effort to rescue the children, but the flame had gained too

much headway. The cries of the little ones

calling for help could be distinctly heard by

the parent.

Commodore Edward Carpenter, of the

United States Navy, died at Shrewsbury, N.

J., on the lmb, aged 81.

At the Instance of the Boston Hoard of

Health five prominent manufacturer in that

city have been indicted for adulteration of

candies with pobwnous ingredients.

Quigley, wife murderer, was banged at

Philadelphia on the 17th. Harrowing accounts of suffering and des

titutton come from the burnt districts; in Clinton County, X. Y. A large tract of rich farming eountry was wept clear of buildings, fences, treee and stock. Crops put in

the ground were destroyed ami the people

are utterly destitute, helpless and without

resources.

The Aeff ioric Assembly cnamuer was invaded by a large crowd of workingmen, on the evening of the 18th, on whieh occasion there wae an attempt made to pass over the

Governor's veto the bill appropriating $1,

000,000 for the completion of the new Capi

tol. The requisite two-thirds beimr want

ing, a scene of great confusion and disorder

in the galleries endued, ami a" some obnoxi

ous members appeared eutstue they were

set upon by the erewd and driven baok, and

escaped personal violence only by the inter position of the ioliet It was deemed neoes

sary to put a guard around the Governor's

hou-e for fear of anticipated violence.

At the launching of the Saratoga, a large

iron steamship, at Koaeh'is ship-yard, Cues

ter, Pa., on the 22d, seven employees were

killed and several others injured by being

crushed under the blocks. The stiperin

tendent says that the men killed cither did not hear or heed the order to get out from

under the vessel, which wai given full five

minutes before the ship started.

Glovcrsville, Fulton County, N. Y., wa

visited by a destructive, fire oi the night of

the Slot. WKST ANI SOCTII.

Judge Charles H. Ilryan, formerly of the

California Supreme Court, was choked to

death by a piece of mfat while at dinner, at

Carson, ev., on the loth.

The South Carolina Legislature, on the

16th, elected Associate Justice A.W. Wil lard to the Chief Justiceship. The Ullaoh Distiller' at Chicago was sciz

ed by the revenue officers on the I4th. The

alleged "crookedness" eonsbted in Siting tip lmrrels in the bonded warehouse connected with the distillery, access to which was gained by a secret door. Near Arlington, Ky., on the 10th, Eli Pyle, a lB.year-old negro loy, attempted to outrage the person of the wife of his employer, C. It. Pyle, a respected and wealthy white citizen of Ballard County. FalliiMf In his

purpow, he choked and beat her until bo supposed her dead, and threw her Into a cistern. The water was only four feet deep, and Mrs. Pyle had sufficient presence of mind to tic her long hair around a projecting root, so that as she became weakened

she would avoid drowning. She remained in this position Ave hours before being rescued, and, notwithstanding the severe ordeal, will recover. The criminal Is In Jail atArllngton. Major Charles Blackburn, a prominent Cincinnati lawyer, ha suddenly absented himself undersomewhat derogatory circumstances. Rumor ascribe his downfall to gambling and loose associations. Very heavy rains occurred throughout Kansas and Nebraska on the 10th, causing great damage to railroads and other property. The Collector of Internal Revenue lu the Fifth Virginia District telegraphed the Department on the 17th that five revenue oncers had been shot in Lee County while In the discharge of their duty. One was mortal If wounded. Gov. Kemper was telegraphed to for assistance in arresting the murderers. W. C D. "Whips, proprietor ef Wlllard's Hotel, Louisville, Ky., who killed John W. Stockton, his chief clerk In January last, has been tried and acquitted. At Oregon, Holt County, Mo., the other day. Mis Klngerv. teacher In a nrivatn

sohool, had occasion to punish a tmnll named

Willis Payuc, aged 18, a turbulunt nnil un

ruly boy. He resisted and struck tbatsaMh.

er with hl tin one or were blows In the

breast. he immediately turned to bar seat, fell over and expired. A post mortem examination revealed the fawt that her lunge were diseased and her heart so badly Involved that death might have been sensed any time by over-excitement. Capt. R. J. Jeflreys, ef Horn Lake, Miss., shet himself en the 17th, blowing the whole top of his head ofif with a shot-gun. Whether it was accidental or intentional Is not known. He was tft) years of age,weahhy and highly respected, and no cause for suicide is known. At Cleveland, on the 17th, a Mrs. Donovan, after having some trouble with her husband, took her two children, a boy of six months and a girl two years of age, to the river, Jumped in, and drowned herself and children. Sam Orr was hanged at Mount Vernon, Lawrence County, Mo., on the 18tb. for the murder of George W. Davis, a wealthy farmer of Christian County, on Dec. 14, 1873. Albert Cox, who assisted Orr to consummate the bloodydeed, is sentenced to be hanged on June 14. Orr's father Is now in the Springfield Jail, also charged with being an accomplice in the same murder. Collector Mills, of the Lynchburg (Va.) Revenue ontce, telegraphed on the 10th to the Department at Washington that the recent shooting affair in that district resulted in the shooting of four illicit distillers and one citizen, and not five United States officers, as was at first reported. The steamer J. Don Cameron, with 150 tons of Government freight and 70 passengers, struck a snag and sunk in 18 feet of water, 40 miles below Sioux City, Iowa, on the 16th. No lives lost. Charles Tommey, colored, was hung at Americus, Ga., on the ftrth, for the murder of Mrs. Caraway, a white lady. An excursion train on the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad ran Into a wash-out near Ellinwood, alrnut 20 miles west of Topeka, on the evening of the lath, killing one passenger, named Miller, of Fond du Lac, Wis., and injuring six or eight others. The St. Louis Dally Time was sojd at auction on the 18th to B. M. Chambers, President of the Butchers' Drovers' Bank, for $TiO,000 cash. There will be no change In the editorial department at present, except the retirement of Mr. Hutchins as edi

tor-in-chief.

Goldsmith Maid trotted a mile In 2:1 1 1-2 at San Francisco on the 18th th fastest

time on record.

A most destructive storm passed over a portion of Grant County, Ind., on Sunday

me ann. a oricK cnurcn, nine miles nortn of Marlon, was demolished, while filled with

people attending divine service. The roof was uplifted and the walls fell in, burying

the inmates. The scene that followed was

terrible. One young man was killed, and 10

or lfi persons were seriously Injured. The town of Creswell, Washington County, N. C, was totally destroyed by lire on the night of the 18th. There was but little insurance held by property holders, and the greatest dfctres prevail. On the first of June a mail serriee wil be

begun between JPaddeek, Neb., ami Custer

City, Dakota, making the sixth mall route Into the Black Hllk eountry. Levi Pyle, the negro who attempted to outrage the person ef Mrs. C. R. Pyle, the wife of his employer, near Blandsville, Ky., was taken from the Jail by a mob and banged on the night of thetiOth. FOKKIOX. The town of Woodstock, N. B., was nearly destroyed by tire on the 17th. Lossabout $800,000; insurance small. In consequence of a difference with President MacMahon, Jules Simon, President of the Council and Minister of the Interior, tendered his resignation on tins 18th. The remainder of the Cabinet subsequently handed In their resignations, hut will continue to act until their successors are appointed. The amount of property destroyed at Irjuifiue, Peru, by the recent earthquake,

was considerable, Including stores, quays, and about 10,0(0 tons nitrate of soda, ready for shipment. The harlwr and railway connections were so much damaged it will re

quire a month to repair them. The earthquake extended along the Peruvian coast and to Bolivia. At Pabellon do Rlea a nuinof vessels were wrecked. No lives are reported lost.

The resignation of the French Cabinet, on

the 16th, on account of President MacMalion's insulting letter to MT. Simon, caused the greatest political excitement In the French Capital that has been experienced

during the present Administration. Tho Chamber of Deputies, by a vote of 3W

against 154, adopted a resolution offered by

the Left, declaring that "the Chamber will

only place confidence, in a Cabinet free to and resolved to govern In accordance with

Republican principles, which alone

can secure order and prosperity." The streets were tilled with crowds of excited people, and cries were heard of " Vtee In ltejmWqHe," " ViteU Constitution," "A

Uis teJesHite." Around the Chamber the crowd was so great that soldiers bad to be posted to keep the approaches; clear. On the

17th a now Cabinet was formed, headed by

the DucdeBroglic as President of the Coun

cil and Minister of Justice. The excitement

was still further Increased by an order Issu

ed on the 18th, proroguing the Clmmlier far one month.

bo!ler of the French war steamer Be-

vancho exploded on tho 15th, causing the death of some 30 persons. As many more survived their Injuries.

There were startling rumors from London,

on the 18th, to the effect that English participation In the pending war was considered a foregon a conclusion. The Russian Embassador had gone home to warn the Czar of the Impending danger, alidoourlers fol-

ow him in rapid nuoeesslon with reports of

the situation, which are too compromising to be intrusted to the nost or to the tle-

grapli.

Information 1ms been received at the De

partment of State, from the Consul-General

atCaleutta, that Captain Henry Smith, his sister, Chief Officer Dyer and three seamen, of the American imrk Mdmond Phlnney, died suddenly of cholera nt Akyab on the

9ftth of last Mareh. The cholera has prevailed te an alarming extent In the dlstrlet about Chlttegong and on the Islands along the eeast whieh ware Inundated by the great storm wave on the 31st of October, 187. Mora than M),000 deaths have been reported from the uholera alone, and In addition te these there have been large numbers from pestilential fevers attributed to the same general causes the Infection of the air and water by the decomposition of the multitudes of human beings and cattle which perished at .that time. This statu of things Is likely to continue till the heavy rains carry off the remaining impurities. The Catholic Church in course of erection at St. Hypolite, Quebec, was blown down by tornado on the lfcHli, killing the contractor, Benjamin Bollleau, and mortally wounding his son. A number of other buildings were razed and several persona injured. During the Whitmonday amusements at Hull, England, a Imlloon about to ascend was blown against a gas Jet and exploded. Eighty-six of the spectators were injured, six dangerously. Louie X. Delostro, United States VlceConsul at Tamplco, Mexico, Is dead. Information has been received at Washington that a proHunciamento has been issued in the State of Guerrero, in the mountains of Mexico, by the friends of Governor Alvarez, against the Central Government of Mexico. Austin Humphreys was hanged at Windsor, Ont., on the 22d, for the murder of his employer, Frederick Affel, In January last. Thirty person were recently drowned by the sinking of a coasting vessel off the coast of Australia. The -War. A dispatch from Bucharest, Iftth, gives the following as the Russian plan of campaign: The army will cross the Danube at eight points simultaneously, and press forward toward tho Balkans with all possible rapidity, leaving behind Bulgarian civil officials charged with the reorganization of Institutions. The Roumanian army will remain on the defensive within its own territory. War telegrams of the 17th deny officially that the Russians, had crossed the Danube in

any locality. The slowness of the Russians

A Remarkable )rf. Count Joseph Bornwlaski wax aptly tunned " a perfect cqjiy of nature's tin. mt works in thuhleclmo." His intellect wh rewHrkakJe and wae early develop, ed. Ho epoku several languages. To soumlnoes of umleMdnmlinfr hu comtiln. wl quioknosH of apprehension ntul solidi. ty of judgment. Ho won acquired an elegance of deportment only Httainctl by intercourse with polished society, H0 was born in Challoz, in 17H1), nml lneas. urcd but eight inckua at birth. He was exceedingly well proportioned, and be. came a protege of the Counter Hiun'ts. ka, a woman distinguished iu her birth anil personal accomplishment, she soon took him on a tour through the leading eourbi of Kurope. He reached Vienna at the age of fifteen, ami at that time was but twenty-five inches in height. Ho was presented to Maria Theresa, who became much attached to him. That great Princees was at the time at war with the King of Prussia. The Queen asked tho dwarf alxmt liU opinion of the Prussian monarch. Madam," replied he, I have nul tho honor to know him; were I in his place, instead of waging a useless war against you, I would uomu to Vienna to pay my respects, thinking it more honor to'gain yout esteem than to gain a victorv from you." Tho Queen took him iu fior lap and kissed him. He laughed. The Queen asked him what he was laughing at. His quick reply was : 4 To see so .small a man oh the lap of so great a woman." This gsnswer procured him fresh caresses. He gazed at a ring on

tlio hand of the Queen once when sit-

if he ied:

king

estv

me

iu advancing to the Danube Is explained by

i their lack of facilities for transportation. !ii i i ...,.,.. .... .i t...

nirj wic icn aikij nnuw, tiu im; lulling stock of the railroads is ridiculously insufficient. The Bussian army at Armenia had advanced from Kars towards Krzeroum, and the Turkish force at the latter city was to meet it. A pitched lwttle was expected at

Toprak-Kaleh, a little town on the road from Krzeroum to Bajazld. The Turks appear to

have gained a signal victor at Sukum

Kaleh, for the Russian garrison was completely dispersed, and bands of Circassians were being organized o raid the railroad from Poti, on the Black Sea.toTitUs, in the

Interior of Georgia.

A ulspstcn rrom hrzeromn, lath, says an attack of the Russians on Ardahan has been bravely repulsed by the Turks. The

following aeeount of the situation on the

Danube ii furnfrhetl by a correspondent:

AtGalatz the Russians have prelected pro

diglous lines of fortifications, behind which

are assembled til) brigades of infantry, ag

gregating 170,000 men, 15,000 cavalry, and a

great mass of artillery fiulng southward to

uitemtzn. ine army rorms a continuous front in echelon, embracing a total of -WO.OOO men. To the westward

of this, at a distance Of from one to three

miles from the Danube, a thinner line Is carried to Widdln, on the extreme Itussian

right. lteinforcementswereiM)iirigin ins In

ly on the left and center. Koumanlan levies

were used to mask Itusslau movements and

every artifice adopted to lull the Turks Into

the belief that no formidable movement would be. attempted on the Danube. It was

open talk In the Htisiau camp that the Russian army of the Caucasus wa to advance steadily toward the Bosphorus, drawing ofl

the Turkish forces in that direction, and

leaving the army of the Danube an easy road

through the Balkans.

A St. Petersburg telegram of tin? lfKh mvn

that the Czar, accomiwnled by the Czarevitch, was alMut to start for the Russian headquarters on the Danul. Active operations, It was thought, would be commenced Immediately upon his arrival. There was a report that the RusfdaiH had captured Ardahan, In Asia Minor. Servla declared her Intention to take no pari In the war.

A Vienna dispatch of thotilst says that tie

Roumanian and Russian authorities have issued a decree prohibiting all traffic on the Danube, hut that Count Andrasy has de

cided to take immediate steps against such

measures la-log carried out. The Russians made another determined onslaught upon the fortifications at Kars, on the SOth, as reported from Turkish sources, and were again repulsed with great loss. Rumors are iu circulation In Vienna that negotiations are pending for a triple alliance between Germany, Austria and England. A Bucharest dispatch announces that Ronmania has proclaimed her Independence and declared war against Turkey, but will remain on the defensive. " A Paris dispatch of the i!2d reports that War between Greece and Turkey is considered Inevitable.

ting on her lap, and she asked him

thought it pretty. Itormvlaski rep ' It is not tho rinir that I was loo

at, but the hand I beseech your Ma, to kiss." This was grauUMl, am

Queen twk from her daughter a dia

mond ring ami gave it to Horowlaki. Tho young lady from wltose linger the ring was" taken waa the unfortunate Mario Antoinette, afterwards Queen of France. Maria Theresa made strenuous cllbils

siu urn v mi - - f (i i vi.i iiiv nun - -ii iier Court, but Countesa lluiniska would not consent to the arrangement. When in Paris, Count Olinski gave an entertainment to some lsdins of high distinction, anil, to please them, iie put Bornwlaeki into an urn. Tho urn was placed on the table, and a funny noise proceeded from it. The Count refused to uncover the urn, and tlte curiosity of the ladies was raised to tho highest point. At length tho cover was removed, ami out sprang Bornwlaski, who ran about the table to the no small astonishment and diversion of the ladies. Ho visited various Courts of Kurope, his reputation preceding him, and everywhere was he enreseed by the ladies, who universally took him on their laps and ktesed him. At 25 lie fell in love with an actress and proposed to her; she laughed at him. At 40 love again Interfered to disturb his peace of mind. He married shortly after Isaliim Harlmnton, and w;u turned adrift into tlte world by his former benefactrew, Countess Hiimiaka. He set out and gave concerts for the .support of himself and his wife. A little daughter of one of the members of the nobility heard him sing, and aked her father to go buy the little man for her. When asked what she would do with him, replied; I will keep him iu my room and drei him like a doll,' Once, when tho wife of llornwhki was sick, lie setit for Dr. Walker, who, seeing Hornwlaaki in the room, hade hint keep quiut. It whs with dilllcitlty ho was" made to believe him n husband and a father. He had two children and lived to the extreme age of t6.

THE MARKETS.

SEW YOKK. Ma . J

BKKVES Nstlve Steers

niiKEr-uashora

shorn 4.ee

HOGS-Uve 5,

uo i'i u.n .wiuuiinff

I.OL H GckmI to Choice. . . .. WHEAT N'o.2 Ohteeeo

OOKX Western Mixed OATri-Weatorn Mixed......

1 OKH"N tJW HwiWfe

..W 0 fll.OO

m 0 4

1.7M :; 41 14.SO

50 5.73 7.M r-o a

Proved Innocent After Many Years. Twelve years ago, in tho township of Home, Edward linker was tried for stealing a quantity of gold and silver coin.' from liis grandmother, Mrs. Ilrooks, ami, although circumstantial evidence waa .strong against him, he wa not convicted . A short time ago tho old lady died, and, among other bemteeta, left a bed-tick to a neighbor, who ripjied it open, and cleared Mr. Baker from the suspicion resting upon him. In tiie mattress was found a bag containing $12 in gold, $22 in grconlmcks, some silver, and $150 in notes. Undoubtedly they were found just where Grandmother Hrooks hud placed them forsafo keeping. She had hidden her treasnro there, and with her failing memory had forgotten the hldlng-plae, Adrian (Mtck.) Timet.

ST. LOUIS.

OolTO.V Middling

11 KEF CATTLE Choice..... s.;

Good to l-rlme.... ft. in a Cowuand Uciferx. 3,W Texan ami Indian 3.00 noGS-ShipplHK.. MIEE1' Common to Fancy. .M e FLOUK-Hilee Country.... W1IKAT KeUSo.a l.St " So. 3. ...... ... 1.71 COKX-So. 2, Mixed I7K OAT-5 So. 2 IO E No 2. ................. . TIMOTHY SKEW lTtme.... IM TUHACCO-Dark Ltis 2.H)

Medium UHrki-oai.. m

HA Y Choice Tlmuthv 11 .AO

ItUTTKIt-Cholce Dairy

EGGS Freh

I'OKK-Standard Mim WOOL Tub.waHhcd.OliolGe Unwashed CouibloK CHICAGO. RKKYES Common to Choice HOGS-Common to Cliolee.. SIIKKP Common to Choice FLOUU-4holce Winter. Choice SpringSt-pcr W1IEAT-M)HhNo. 1 " So, 3 COftX-Xci.SMtxed OivTii'-"Xo $ KwNo 2, t I'OUK-XuwMeeti

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B7 it.r. aa lit

' I.7S J.7fl R.7S 1.W

47H B7

5.75 SXh 5.1X1 4,73 1 '.si i.l'JS .75 7.75 1,87 1.73 47V 4.1 7i .) 3.75 7.W1 12 JO IS (W 14.50 37 7J

5.75 5.20 (1.75 19.75 6.26 1.56 1.40 47 V 40 1.7.87X

KASSAS city. FLOt'K-XX to Patent S. 1 COItX MKAIjaeaaea $0 X IIEKVKSJ Native Steers S.5e " Cowh...... 2. HOGS 3 WHEAT So. 3..... M

COltX No. 2. .......

MEMI'IIIH. COTTON' MlihlllMK FLOtm-Clwlco V.V CORX-MI.xed 70 f OATS-Whlte W SKW OHLKAS.l FLOUR-Ohoico Family 9.75 COKX-Wlilte.. l OATH St. I)uIh 4 HAY-lTlmc 1C.2 rORtC-N'owMww IK. to m IIACO.V... OS corros Middling

5. 1.00 5. t.no 1h 1.70

m 73 Sft m 50 1.50 10K