Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 20, Number 2, Jasper, Dubois County, 11 January 1878 — Page 2
WEEKLY0OURIER. C. MAJTI, rablMter. JASPER,' - - - INDIANA . WASHINUTOX. Ol. Www, ef the United iHiHes ltat;ineer Cera, uader arret fur naUeaaae ia euHHurtiea with the iliftHtr,HMBt of anpreprktkMM for the improvement of harbors oh Luke Km, of which work He ba htul charge. He will he tried by court-martial. The Comptroller of the .Cvrrescy Rive aetiee ef very dangerous eounterfelt iveinMar notes a. the FirH National Hank of Uaaever, Fa., a Hit First 2? aMeaal Hank ef Zmmmpm, All pmow shewM refute 'Mm f v.4Ur aotea of these baaks, aad the VrtJwra aaoubi forward tueh note to the redemption ageaey t the Treasury Departateat. Gea. SberbJaa has been netlied ef the Secretary of War' approval of the laal survey of the Military road from KiHsarek te the Bfcvekflttfe. Mn. Cafce4m, of Kemper County (Mi.) watraare fame, haa aeeepted a place in the Treasury Department, offered her by tmeeia! Secretary Sehurz authorize a newspaper oermponaeat te make aa uae.uaHf ed ilwnlal ef the report that he Intend to reelgn his Ilea. Wm. E. Chandler, ef 'ew Harapeblre, a promlaeat Kepubllcaa politician : aad member ef the Republican National Committee, has addreed aa opea letter to tk) Kepuhlleaaa of aU State, ia which he
4 atreaglr denounce President Hayes for his alleged " intrigues " with Southern Democrat, aad appeals to the Republicans of the .North te openly renounce the National Ad miafetratioa. The letter has created no lit tle seasathm in political circles, aad is looked apea by many as the authorized expressteaefthefeeHagsof the moreproneunewl aat'-Admiaietraticn Republican Caleulatieae regardiag the fate of the S11 ver bIH ia the Senate, ia ease ef a l'reaideu tkl veto, indicate a very cteee coateet. The e-ppeaeata ef the hill claim to have 36 votes exactly enough to sustain a veto with Sharon away. The full vote is 75. If there are 36 Senators te Httia a veto this wohUI make a tk, aad the Vice-President eeuld vote the same as if the Senate was equallr divided. A aetiee has been posted ia the Treasury Department at Waehiagtoa, which says: "Pen honorably discharged from the mWhary or naval service by reen of dfeaMHty or siekne, incurred ia the line of duty, !-ha4l be preferred to appointment for ivii ottee, provided they are ffHtad te possort the buines4 aapaeitr neccsHtry for the proper dkcharjre of thedutieri of such omce." The President kae iwued an order dieontlauiag the Sioux CHy Laad OlHce, aad direcUax its bulne aad archived to be transferred to Des Molaes, Ie wa. There are new less than aeresof puldle lands ia Iowa f ally subject to ipo-ml by the GovfefttBif an Secretary Hrarts pays that he U net going te resign, and that the utmost harmony prevails among the President and the Members ef M Cabinet. Xr. Thomaa Wal-jh, architect of the St. IkvuIs CiMm-houe, has been temperarily auspended from hi duties by the President, peading laveetigatioa of enarges agaiast him ef dtrenctioa of duty. b beensHi mnW)l hose tote t If vlforJ - " -wTfc ani,Btn tvr m aa tt,KTV! ia regard te our dBNeuitlea wkh that na tion. Ilea. Slmoa Cameron has settled the Widow Oliver's breaeh-of-premise suit by paying her $1 The silver wedding ef the President and Mrs. Hayes was celebrated at the White Heute on the evening of the 31st ult. It was a quiet and seeiabie affair, those pretest being meetly the relatives and old friends ef the family. The President and Mrs. Hayes received Kew Year's eallcrs at the White House. During the forenoon the Dipiematie corps, members ef the Cabinet aad of Congress, eAeera ef the Army aad Nary, etc., etc., paid their respects in accordance with the emeiei schedule, aad from 1 to 2 o'clock the general public were admitted. U.S. Grant, Jr., haa been appointed AsMant United States District Attorney at New York. EAST AXJD SOUTKKA8T. Fifteen colored people were recently drowned aear Reeky Point Mills, Va'.-12 oWmiren aad their parents. They were living ia the same house, and Hading it surrounded, took refuge in a ferry-boat, which, becoming dseagaf ed from its fastenings, was earrkd ever a dam immediately below. Their perltou situation waa wHaowsed by several person, who eeutd, however, render no afcrtaace. The Panwlc. County Savings Bank, of Pater, N. .7., Ium geae into liquidation. The beak's capital bao alt been lost by tinSecured bomb, ami the directors are obligated to pay the depositors la full, amounting to about $m,fm. , Netter A Co., of New York, heavy operaton ia gold aad rstoeki, failed a the 99th forfa large amouat. The wife and daughter ef James Brephy, of Rondout, N. Y., nerished la the tiames of a burning buibHag on the night of tbe'iMh. James Byd, foremm of Macintosh, Hemphill St C'o.'s foundry, l'lttsburg, wm kilted on the Mth by a crane falling upon him. He wae a member ef the City Council. The National Congress of the Workingmen'! Party met at Newark, N J., on the ah. Delegate were preet from Tarlotw parts of the United States; alto representatlves of the Kaglish, German, Bohemian and French section of the Werklngmea's Party. The principle of the society are the Mate as thoW ef the SeM Democrat of Germany, h members btine; mostly work1 JfBJWai
WtlUamMMlr, FuMUtmad Herta aad Joel X. Hay, all tbree debt bttin a brokern, have bee arrayed ia New York, ebaigod with HftbM.MC forged Hd of the CHy of St. Uuis, Cny of Qnlaey, III., and MWoarl I'adne Railroad. They are Wlievwt to be the iriw4lfc In t lie la newt, win powerful aad It orgaalied praK of bond eouaterftiten ever formed la thk country, ami their operations are thmagMPwhave exteaded throughout nearly all the Statc. The Mttr of rntm; them eat Ihm uvea umler way for nearly dx moatlw, aad It i believed the entire number tfoaeeraed will
be ultimately eaptured. It 1h believed that tea persons lot their Hvea by the burning f OreeaiVhl Jb Sows' eaatly factory, Barclay Street, .New York City, oa the 'JOth ult. A shocking double tragedy was enacted at Farwville, Prince Kuward County, Va., on the 27th. Col. William Randolph Iterkeley, a well kaowa citizen and lawyer, was coated (h bis office ia conversation with a friend, Mr. Alfred Moth, when a knock wax heard at the door. Col. Berkeley arose and opened the doer, when he was immediately shot down dead by a pistol hall catering hie temple. Ilia asasln was Col. Wm. II. Kennedy, another well known citizen. The latter then stepped inside the office, passing over the dead body of the murdered man, and placing the pistol to his own head, blew out his brains. The eaue ef the murder and suicide was not knows, bat it was reported that Kennedy had ou previous occasions attempted to take Berkeley's life. Both were men so widely kaowa and generally respected, that the news of the affair caused a most profound sensation throughout the whole State. In Brooklyn, Jf.Y.. on the 3flth, Charles E. Johnson went to the residence of bis wife's father, Mr. 11. S. Benedict, and asked to see bis wife, who, a few days previously, had left her home on account, it is said, I of her hu.-Und'f ill treatment. The wife, j down to the parlor, when her husband demanded the child. The wife rofusinir wtm ner young iwne in ner arms, came 't0 MirreBder the babe, the husband pulled out a revolver and shot his wife as she w;w endeavoring to ecupe from the room, the ball ontering her right shoulder 1 mi painj; out at the breast. The wound was a serious one, but not necessarilv fatal. The babe narrowly escaped being struck by the bullet. The parties had only been married a year, and are both members of wealthy and respectable families, the wife being a relative by marriage of the Rev. II. 1 Y. Beecher, by whom they were married. The would-be murderer was locked up, his wife making a charge against him of assault with intent to kill. He is only about 20 years of age. Near Barnesville, Md., on the 27th, Lord G. Jamison killed Thomat Warlvld in quarrel. WartleJd was paying attention to Jamison's sNtcr. (5. A. Bailey, the publijhsr of the Congres!oHal Globe, died at Deerlng, Me., on theHOth. Gen. George W. McCook, of Ohio, was strkken with paralysis while eating a Christmas dinner at the residence of his coustn, Hon. Anson G. Cook, of New York City, and died on the following Friday. The Itockland County National Bank, of Nyack, 2f. Y., has suspended. G. W". Gustin and W, II. Dessln, two ' yotmg lawyers of Macon, (Is., fought a duel ? with pistols on the 27th. Hath mUsed. r George B. Bigelow, a prominent Boston , lawyer, is charged with embezzling 54o,0i0 leIoBging to a trust estate. He has given i bail for 5,e00. Joha Bonner & Co., a well known tirm of brok0"' IMe1 R the 'Jlst' with assets. The suspension alfo brought down the Bankers' and Brokers' Association, with which they had large dealings. The Legislatures of New York and Pennsylvania convened on the Int. Gevernor-eteet llolliday of Virginia was inaugurated with public ceremonies on the 1st. The old Bull's Head Bank of New York City is te be wound up. Its capital is said to be impaired to the extent of .W),000, but depositors will be paid in full. WHST AN SOUTHWJWT. A Washington dispatch of the Mill says: The War Department to-day received dispatches In relation to events Just transpired In San EHzario and El Paso County, Texas but the only information given out by the Department ia that all is now quiet there, and that Col. Lewis, who commands in San Ellzarie, has been ordered to assist the Sheriff in making arrests, topreVent violence against all persons arrested, and to protect citizens from being pillaged or In any way Interfered with by the mob. It is unofficially stated, however, that United States troops were called upon to astiist In making arrests of parties: connected with the killing of Judge Howard and others; that in doing so resistance was offered and two of the mob killed, aad that subsequently two of the itenjons arrested were taken out and lynched by rangets. The War Department Is In receipt of intelligence from Camp Howie, Arizona, dated Dec. 2Uh, whleb sas: Lieut. Buckerand Tottcy, of the th Cavalry, have returned. They struck the party that killed the mailrider December 14, east of Stein's Peaki Ridge, ami killed one. Five days later they struck them in Old Mexico, surprised aj ranchero of i wlckleups, destroyed their camp, captured 16 horses, 50 saddles and a lot ef stuff which the renegades had taken from the train. Fifteen bodies were found on the ground, with evidences that more had been killed. The mail matter was recaptured. The Democrats of Indiana will hold their State Convention en Feb. 30, 1878. It will consist of J,G7 delegate. Hon. IV W. Hcatoa, of Dixon, III., ChiefJustice of the, new Appellate Court for that tiWrlet, died ver)-suddenly at Chloago,ou the 2th, ef heart disease. Mr. C. C. Dibble and wife, of Housten, Texas, were drowned oh the evening of the iWthjWhllo attempting to crose Cherry Creek
on the Braaiori. 3ir. Dibble was a well known oltlH, awl kl wife was a niece of Mayor Wlhtou of HouMon. Joseph O'Neill, for over 'J? years a pMienarer enplnw oa the Chiowgo aad Alton Railroad, wa shot and killed by m un
known nftAttfilH at BtootHltuften, III., at an early hour on the mernjngof the,27tli, as he ' was ort his way home from the railway station. John l'ryde was found murdered near 'IWa Creek, Lawrenee County, Am., oa the ( Silk. He was a brother of Detective l'ryde, of Memphis, who accidentally shot and ' killed his wife and babe a few days previously. I A horrible occurrence Is reported from ' VorHM Towiiwliln. fTr.twfnrl Oniiniv. Tnu-n Carl Maas and wife, farmcrc, locked their -n- 1 T - " three children, aged respectively one, two and a half and four years, in the house on Christmas Day, and went to husk corn. They were shortly after apprized by a neighbor of thefaut that their house was burning, and when they reached it It was wrapped In rhuaes and the children burned to a crisp. The mother frautioallyattempted to rush Into the flames, bvtt was forcibly prevented. The foggy morning had prevented them from seeing the tire sooner. The Ileal Kstate Savings Bank of St. Louis suspended on tho 3nth. Its loans were all based upon roal estate security, and the great depreciation in the value of the latter is given as the cause of the failure. It is said that none of the Directors owo the bank a dollar,and that Its deposits, amounting to about $245,000,vill ultimately be paid In full. The Tenseasee Legislature adjourned sine die oa the 28tu, without having adopted any measure toward the compromise ef the State debt, all propositions to that cud having beon defeated. The Indiana Hepubllcan State Convention will be held at Indianapolis on June 6th next. The Italians recently attacked a stago coach in Bassey Canyon, Western Texas, captured the four burses and killed both the driver and Gabc Valdez, the division superintendent of the stage line. A charivari party who were serenading a newly married couple, Jlr.aud Mrs. Philip Mertz,:t Monrocvillc, Alien County, Intl., the other night, were tired upon with buckshot, several of the party being badly wounded. Jacob Harness was hanged at Clinton, Tenn.', on the 29th, for the murder of Isaac White, committed more than 14 years ago. The notorious George Murrell and two other desperadoes escaped from the Adair County, Kentucky, jail, on the night of the asth. The German Savings Bank of tafaycttc, Jnrt., ha gone Into liquidation, but promUcs to pay all depositors in full. Henry Underwood, said to be one of the Union Pacific train robber, known ai Thomas Nixon, wa recently arrested at his home, 75 miles west of Sherman, Texas, ami lodged iu Jail at Omaha. There appear? to be some que.-tloh a to his identity. MISCKT.LAXKOUS. The Duke of 3Innchcster is to succeed the Karl of Dutferln a Governor-General of Canada. The French Government has requested Don Carlo to leave France, and he has compiled with tho request. The Paris MoHittttr announces that Japan has renounced all commercial treaties, with foreign nations and returned Its right to levy customs duties at plcaure, An almost incredible instance of man's Inhumanity to man Is revealed in a statement officially made by Lieut Walton, Assistant Inspector of the Life-saving Service on the North Carolina Coast. ItIsInsubstineo,tltat one EvanO'Neill.anshcrniauof Nag's Head, discovered the Ill-fated Huron coming on the shore at 1:30 a. m.,the morning the disaster occurred, and saw her signals of distress and even heard tho piteous groans and screams of those on board. The keeper of tho life-saving station lived only two and a half miles away, and O'Neill had a good boat and could easily have carried him th news of the disaster, probably in time to have effected the saving of the lives of most of those on board. Instead of doing so, however, he coollywenthomeandatehisbrcakfastanddld not return to the wreck untllaf tor sunrise. It any additional comment Is needed to explain this Inhuman conduct, It may bo found In Lietit. Walton's further disclosure of the faet, that the bodies on the beach were robbed of every article of value watches, chains, money, and even tlnger-rlngs being stripped off by those who first found the bodies hx they weje washed to the shore. A London dkpateh of tho 21) th says it Is officially aunounced that the Sultan has solicited tho British Government to approach the Czar with a view to brhiR about negotiations for peace, and the British Government has consented to do so. The Jof,ln its leading article, fays the duty whleh England has Undertaken Is nor, emtmrrassod by any tmsls for settlement of the war, ami Involves nothing more than to test the willingness of Russia to enter into negotiations, terms of peace being a matter for subsequent constderat Ion. The following is stated to be tho text of England's note todlussia; " Her Majesty V Government begs to inform the Emperor that the Portn Is ready to open peace negotiations. The Emperor's wisdom and repeatedly expressed love of peace Justify Her Majesty's Government in the hope that he will lend a favorable car to the Sultan's request." Russia's reply to Knirland's not is stated to be substantially as follows: That while the Czar wishes peace and is ready to conclude the war on nueh terms m Itussia would consider acceptable, yet no steps can be taken until Turkey Is willing to give preliminary guarantees of her desire for actual peace and not merely for delay" Tho course suggested is for Turkey to make a proposition for armistice dlreetly to the Busslan Commander-in-Chief In the Held, so that the first steps maybe arranged en a mill IA ry bii!His Sir H.G.KIIIot, recently British Atnbu' dor at Constantinople, has been appointed Ambamdor to Vienna.
TMK KAKTHKX WAK.
The Turkish transport steamer Messina, with trHHs on board, 1ms been captured by the Russian steamer HtiMland and tMttm te Sebnftbtpel. Intelligence of the SeHli Is us follows: Operations of the Russian army at Rustehuk arc fcuspemled by the snow, whleh Is over twa feet ,deep. Many animals and a few soldiers have perished. The transport service Is interrupted and the tjuarteriiiastvr'a Dc partment has declared that Itean not supply food for the cavalry. Bet authorities con cur In the opinion that the bridges across the Danube must go In a few days, and If tho winter is of ordinary rigor Held operations will be Impossible, The Servians have captured Plrot. Tho garrison of Nlseh, It is said, ia inclined to surrender, and negotiations have been opened for capitulation. As the Russians are approaching Sophia, the inhabitants have been ordered to leave. Tho Russians have suspended concentration of troops around Krzeroum on account of snow. A dispatch from Begot, 31st, says: After an exceedingly difficult passage over snowcovered mountains and frozen footpaths, the vanguard of a Russian division has occupied tho Balkan passes between Arahakonak and Sophia, aud cavalry has already been stationed on tho Sophia road. The Turks were token by surprise, consequently the Russian loss was small. Disgruntle Editor's Memily. Christmas Docomber 25, A. D. 1877. A dismal, disheartening, day-long drizzle, soaking into tho very souls of men ; air murky with earth-born vapors and loaded with. tho sulphurous steuch of burning gunpowder; street-crossings anklo-deep in muck ; women holding a draggled train in tho loft hand and tho handle of an umbrelht in tho right, while their interfering heels carried the jgud fur up their red stockings and sdHhed it over the bit of whito skirt rivealed; fivo hundred callow youths in helmet huts, who preferred caroms to carols, punching ivory iu steamy billiard-rooms; thousands of excited children beating drums, tooting horns, exploding stinktuakitig contrivances, and adding in ever' way to tho general din ; sweet peals of church organs mingling with human voices; tho broakiug loose of tho long pent-up agony of Christ Church chimes, with their car-splitting and nervo-raek-ing jangle ; fuddled men iu Mnfly ginnuils poisoning themselves with alcohol because Christ was born eighteen hundred years ago, while their holloweyed wivQs crooned to sick babies in squalid homes; catfdy-smearod infants howling with the colic; and soon tor quantity. This was Christ mas. For this Christ was born in a manger, beneath tho star.-? of Judea.while the. startJed beasts drooped their long ears in awe-stricken wonder and thu wise men from the Ktcst came with myrrh and spices. For this ho was crucified between two thieves. A Christian festival, converted into a pandemonium of noise, which puts to shame the beaten tomtoms and gongs of the pig-tailed celestials a day of excess in eating and drinkinga day to be dreaded, instead of looked forward to. "Christmas conies but once a year." Thank heaven for that f How did this infernal din ever come to be incorporated into a Christian festival, anyhow? Is gunpowder in any way emblematic of him wild brmirrhf. "flluil ttitititra nf irrtvif inv i peace- on earth and goou wiirtomon" oi iurisi, me genne, mo patient, me long suffering? is the "abominable firecracker a means of grace. We put theie questions as conundrums. Doubtless ' our readers will give them up at tho start. Hut it does seem to us that the Chriidmus lestivai litis been perverted in a way that amounts to barbarism. If a man feels glad that Christ was born and died to take away the sins of the world, does ho honor him by swilling beer in a saloon? Ia it meet that his nine-year-old should express his thankfulness for Christ by exploding fire-crackers in tho faces of pedestrians? How many men who make Christinas a day of riotous excess ever think of Christ? Tho day is, if possible, more trying than tho dreadful Fourth of July. And, with only seven days intermission, we are to have a repetition of it in the shape of tho New Year folly. The devout men who got drunk on Tuesday last, because Christ was born, will get drunk on Tuesday next, because they are one twelvemonth nearer their final doom. And so it goes in this mail world. Indtunapalix" Saturday Herald. Drank en Coffee. An Italian statuette-seller, going on Iih rounds iu tho Paris streets and carrying n tray of plaster casts on his head, stumbled upon a well stuilcd Iqnther portfidio lying in the road. As it contained $i60O In bank notes, it was a perfect bonanza to a gamin. What obuld hd not buy with it? Hut there was one thine for which ho can!d above all others. It was strong 'coffee. His first thought was that ho could drink a dozen cups of coffee a day, if ho chose. Ho rushed into a cafe and swallowed, one after another, si of Cambetta's favorite " mazagrans" and nirto "glorias" cups of strong coffee with liquor. The next day ho paid a second visit to the restaurant and indulged in a fresh debauch; and ho returned on the following day to order colfeo with the same recklessness. His continued rovelry excited the suspicion of tho police, and he was finally arrested. Ten bank notes were found in his pockets, A hundred franes Jiad lasted liim several days, aud ho was evidently congratulating himself on having resources wherewith ho could buy and drink gallons of strong coffee during tho winter.
The MinHeHtfiH Maul for Lgrgo tfrmM, A AVinuna fMiini.1 lottnr to thn'ciil.
rCHjgti limes my wo thinaw Imvoitiiu woaduiii. for' thia Sinks ditfinif tW Ihs t .--.- f ' tiuo nif tim last kaM of fhti closing year, first, the well established faet Uttit Minnesota harvwted forty million bushels of No. I wheat, and, second, the grasshoppers have all disappeared, no one knows where. Those two facts scorn to bo working great change in the entire Statu. Vast quantities of wild laud have been bought. Tho frontier has been alive with laud hunters. Tho places where land is sbld have done a laud-ollico business, and even tho cold woathorand bad traveling seem to produce no abatement in the land fever. Largo tracts of laud which have been survoyed and in market these many years without a buyer or homestead pre-omptor, have suddenly come to bo sought after by men who propose to becomo grangers iu dead earnest. Our railroads Jiave been crowded with fiassongcrs in search of Minnesota wheat aud. There is a kind of mania for largo farms'. Scarcely any buy less than a section .(640 acres). Many are buying live, tcnt or evon twenty thousand acres. Many aro preparing to open wheat farms, and to sow largely the coming spring. Tho grand success of tho groat Dalrymplo wheat farm, which is so largo as to require AW reapers with a self-binding attachment, lias convinced many capitalists that wheat can bo raised so as to pay a heavy interest on tho money invested ; at least they are tempted to buy itnmenso quantities of those lands and try tho experiment. They may find that few can do what Dalrymplo has dono. A very small amount of monoy buys a large farm. There is no expense of fencing, for no stock of any kind is allowed to run at largo. The breaking and seed will cost less than $5 per aero. Tho seed alono will cost twice as much as the land. Many hopo in a single croj to get back all tho money they pay out Una luivo tho land to boot. Winona County is furnishing a score or more of men who will make tho experiment the coming season. A few years will tell whether they will bo land rich or laud poor. If thoy do not go and personally superintend their great farm thev may fail to make tho experiment prothablo. It is often said that no man can succeed in farming with his plow-handles four or live miles long. How it will be when the plow-handles are four or five hundred miles long wo shall see If wo live long enough. It is quite sure that a crop of wheat will rarely fail in the State of Minnesota if it is properly put iu and cared for. A Dog's Obituary. " .lack," John Drought dog, died n, few days ago, of old age, general debility, and a .severe Hogging administered to him about a year ago by one of his nuns. Jack was an intelligent but dissipated animal, lie formerly belonged to John Pre.fsly, and thuti was a sober, industrious anil well behaved dog. After Ilrough acquired him he got to hanging about newspaper offices and soon fell into vicious ways. Ho frequented tho Circle House lunches, and helped him self to beer from the slop-tub. He was peaceable when sober, but quarrelsome m his tubs, and ho was intoxicated at tho time he received the terrible licking at tlw teeth of Ifis undutiful son. Unlike his two-legged comrades Jack never protracted his sprees beyond a day and night. You couldn't coax him to touch beer for a week after having been drunk. He absolutely loathed it, and preached total abstinence to his fellow-dogs. Hut Jack made tho mistake of reiving too much on his own strength, and, unsustnined by divine grace, ho would go back to the wallow as soon as the remembrance of his headache grew dim. Two-legged or four-legged, It is the same old story, in which folly and remorse alternate. Indianapolis Saturday Herald. THE MARKETS. NEW YORK, January 2, S7S BKSVES-NatlveSteers.... JH.W 11.75 Texan and Cherokee .... SIIKKl' ........................ 4.50 e 6.75 IIOUS Live .SO w 4.00 COTTON-MWdling U,V FLOUtt-Good to Choice.... S.70 W 6.00 WJtKAT-No.aUhlcago l.aH 1.31 CORN Wostero Mixed 61 Kt OATS Western Mixed , : 40 t'OKK-New Me 12.50 U 12.73 ST. LOUIS. OOTTON-Mlddllng 10',' HKEVES Choice to Fancy.. 5.12i S.as Ooodtorrlme.... 4.7ft B.00 Native Cows 2.40 g :.&0 Texan Steers 2.40 4.00 HOGS Packing 4.00 4.20 8HKRP Nattvu 2.00 M 4.U8 FLOUK-Oholeo M.) U xxx r..:n s.Jft WHEAT Uett Winter, So. 1 1.21 1.20 Ucd Winter, No. 3 1.2i'4' 1.20K COUN-No. !l Mlxod. . . . . . . i . . 4 1 45Af OATS No. 2 27 2.J.' RYE No. 2, M 67 TIMOTHY SKEI Prime.... I..'W lAi TOBACCO Dark Lugs 1.73 2.50 Medium Darn I,af ft.00 fl.OO HAY-Obolco Timothy 10.1H) w 10.S0 BUTTElt-Crcamery J52 37 KUUS-Fresh IB , 17 POKK-jStamtard Moss 11.W) 41 12 WOOL Tub.wftHhed.Ohotce 40 f 41 Unwashed Cntulilnv 20 SIK CHICAGO. . BKKVES Com'on to Choice .100 ,fi.n.f HOGS-ComtMn to Ohntco. 4.00 4.S0 8HKKP Common to Fatr.. 2.W t.OO KLOUH-Chotce Winter..... fl.74 7. Choice Spring...... 6.M) 0,00 WIIKAT-Sin-tug No. l.W i.WH k No. 3 1.0IX 1,0 , CORN-No. 2 Mixed 48K 42 OATH-No.2. WXt Wi RYK-No.S i , Mtfi , W POKK-NewMofW :nM 1,M KANSAS CITY. BKKVKS Nanvo Steers 2.75 R.S0 Cow ' 2.R0 HOGS-. 3.7 8.80 FLOUR XX to Patent, Sack 2.00 4.00 CORN MEAL -Per cwt 70 If, WHEAT No. 3, Winter 1.0 1.01 CORN-No. 2 : 31 NEW ORLEANS. FLOUR-Cholce FamUy 0.00 a C.75 CORN-White 61 61V OATS St. LouIh m H 37 HAY-Obnluc 18.00 19.00 l'ORK-New Met 12.8 X a 12.73 BACON OtlKft 07 K COTTON Middling 0K
