Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 52, Number 26, Jasper, Dubois County, 1 April 1910 — Page 7
UEBDLES MAKERS
PUBLICANS AND DEMOCRATS
,ELECT MEMBERS FOR RULES COMMITTEE.
31 ARE INDICTED IN
PITTSBURG GRAFT PROBE
Director! pf Six Banks Are Charged
by Jury with Giving Bribes.
..ii f Penna Will Probably Be
Choien Chairman When House
edifice the Nomination "Insur-
gents" Express Satisfaction.
Pittsburg. Fa. Mar. 26. The most
startling nummary of civic unrlght
RMONY REIGNS IN BOTH Brand Jury was the presentment made
uy wie Pittsburg jury which hag been
investigating councllmanlc Kraft.
In addition to Indicting 31 past and present counoilmen. including the president of the present common council, the grand Jury ordered six
of the moat prominent banks la tha
City to Invest firnftt
VuaiaKiou. ... "c" ates and report on Mond.v th n.m-
m committee on rules will consist of the dlrec,ors guilty of paying over
ae wiu.u6 -v.-. ine ,i02i0oo bribe money to the coun ejwbllcans-John Dalzell. Pennsyl- cfI collecting clique.
Ji; waller i. araiui. J. aioai 0n top f th fa , Comntrolli.r t N- ? ordered the wlthdjaof Th7 S
uuu oi city funds now in the six de
positories. Legal steps will be taken
at once to have the ordinance making
mem depositories declared void. Tn nrnvont mne .n it.. .. i i
Fer,ld. New York; Lincoln Dixon. concerned Comptroller Morw Terti.
Med that the banks were solvent. The
ig: Sylvester C. Smith. Ca 1 1 for
George P Iawrence. Masaachu
jaoerats Champ Clark, Missouri;
r Underwood. Alabama; John J
tea.
4 If u... n-.a,
insurgen c rrc.cn, oU fmd u , b wUh(lrau.n rnHl,a,
!1 the -Insurgents" with the excep- y in order to prevent the embarrass-
oft. sraner oi .assacuuseiia were ment of any Institution.
Hit at toe Republican caucus and
d ud such of them as Morris and RAIL BILL IS REPORTED OUT
(be rt-sult
hen (be caucus was called to
r Representative Tawney took Soor and made a most impassioned cb for harmony. A similar speech made by Representative Pa'yne of i
York. Balloting Was Secret.
Democrats Are Preoarlna Minority
Report and Will Fight Many of Its Provisions. Washington. Mar. 25. The adminis
tration railroad bill was reported out from the house committee on Inter
state and foreign commerce and takes
SPRING
I
12 DIE III FLIES
EMPLOYES OF FISH FURNITURE COMPANY ARE CAUGHT IN BLAZE.
CARELESS BOY CAUSES FIRE
Ignites Benzine While Filling Cigar Lighter Several Persons Are Missing Ten Bodies Recovered Woman Jumps to Her Death.
Hire Hubbard, and seconded by i of New York, that the ballot
Id I secret
ioe ruminated by the insurgents
Gardiner. Cooper. Murdock, Da
m. Martin and Norris.
following was the first vote an-
tt decided on motion of Repre- precedence of ail Taft measures for
consideration in the house.
As the bill leaves the committee it !
is the most drastic railroad regulation
measure ever laid before the house. It will be fought bitterly. The Demo
cratic members of the committee are preparing a minority report In oddo-
d. Smith (Iowa). 16S; Dalzell sltion to the committee report The
aiylvaniai. 146; Iiwrence (Mas- Democrats oppose government control
jietts. 12$; Fassett (New York), of purchases of competing Hne3. con-
finita (California). 92; Bouteil trol of issuance of stocks and bonds
rat, aa. rvaun luaiuorniaj, at,; au ie creation or tne special comnorth i Ohio), 33. merre court.
e first four were declared elected. A number of amendments which the second ballot the Important I failed in committee will be presented
were Smith of California. 136; to the bill in the house. Among them
s one to give the commerce court
jurisdiction over questions as to com
pelling roods when mergers are con
templated. Many members want this
authority tested In the Interstate com
mission
:! of Illinois. 10S; Longworth of I
5s. the first two being declared
j a a -
r insurseais uiu noi snow up
g Id the voting. Gardiner of
tchusetts, who was sick and ab-
got 33 votes, the highest number.
i got 5; Cooper. ; Madison. 4;
ocfc. ; Fish. 7. and Davidson. 5. peaker Cannon Was Present.
aker Cannon was present during
aucus. but took no active part In
roceedlngs.
Loogworth was nominated by nsurgents. Taylor of Ohio and
GEN. BELL INJURED
CHIEF OF STAFF OF ARMY HURT AS AUTO IS WRECKED. MRS. SLOCUM IS KILLED
Chicago, Mar. 2G Twelve persons
at least and perhaps eighteen died
In the Are that wrecked the six-story
building of the L. Fish Furniture Company, 1906 and 190S Wabash
avenue.
Ethel Lichtenstein, a stenographer.
plunged to her death from a sixthstory window; ten bodies have been taken from the ruins, and a number of employes are missing, and, It Is feared, are dead. It was a fire of remarkable fierce
ness, marked by unusual horror and remarkable escapes. The fire department was bitterly criticised for slowness in responding to the first alarm.
and still more fatal slowness in try
ing to reach the men and women en
caged by flames on the sixth floor.
ROOSEVELT GETS BIG
Wife of Major In Seventh Cavalry Receives Fatal Injuries Gen. Bell Has Rib Broken and He Suffers Other Painful Injuries.
STATE IS FOR INCOME TAX
Kentucky on Record After Tangle Be
tween Governor and Legislature on Resolution.
... . . ... -
rraiiKion. ivy.. .Mar. 2a. u was
announced that Gov. Willson has de-
tt of Iowa Hit largest vote, com- elded that the Kentucky legislature's
a tae second balloL was 59. or three atterants to adont the federal In
5 more votes than were cast by come tax resolution were productive
tsurgents on the adoption of the of at least one passage
s resolution. Twice the lesls ature adonted th
Insurgents have promised to resolution, only to have the governor
ft tae caucus nominees in ballot- send it back on a technicality and dur
Ing the third attempt at passage the
legislature adjourned.
Congressman OHie James arrived
here from Washington with opinions
the bouse, and by their votes
i caucus pledged themselves to
out that promise.
Harmony Prevailed.
Democrats selected their com- ot lromiD lawyers. Including Sen
?meo in caucus with 140 mempresent. Harmony was the word of the assemblage. Sims of Tennessee presented a J'ir-a Immediately after the
was called to order by Chair- to cert,f" th resolution.
Clayton Instructing the new
ator Root, that the second passase
was legal
It was said that Mr. James was pre
pared to make a test In the courts, but the governor had already decided
-ratic members on rules to use efforts to bring from the genatnmlttee a resolution providing
election of a committee on
ttees by the house. This com
' io name members of the
rwtnmlttees. 'n:y Makes Point of Order, "y of Illinois promptly made 1tf IlMtW A -
lUHi me caucus was primarily to select members of
tmm!ttee on rules and Clay sttned the point of order.
selection of the members of the t o a
'rrs on rujeg was by Daot ' nominations. Tho vote re-
Underwood. 102; Dixon.
iseraw. 93.
as a large scattering vote
i? tammond. IS; Slayden. 69; - 4. Sulzer. 5; Italney, 4; ClaySberley. 3. and A. Mitchell
BRIDE; THEN HIMSELF
McDonald of Chicago. Believed Be Mentally Unsound, Takes Wife's Life. 'M. la . Mar. 26 Rather than " '"erace of bigamy. If. D. McChicago lawyer, known Jn tl as H. v. ward, murdered f six weeks and then sent 1 crashing through his own two bodies. locked In each rB. were found lying In a railroad cut east of ChauPrk by laborers. Each had a outid In the right temple. Turfman Myers Killed. ,a HL. Mar. 26-George V. ooe of the bt-known horse- ' orthorn Illinois and owner rlg of 1 race horses, was a Chicago & Northwestern r his home at Rochester, III. Cudahy Goes to Coast. M 'Hy. .Mo.. Mar. 2C.-John F. ho figured In an affair with W'lte In the Cudahy house , wks ago. will spend the ,r n his father's ranch near Ji Cal
WILL RAISE WARSHIP MAINE
House Passes Bill Appropriating $100,-
000 Bodies in Wreck Will Be Buried at Arlington.
Washington. Mar. 24. Twelve years
ago Robert Cousins of Iowa made
patriotic appeal In the house for the raising of the battleship Maine, sunk
by explosion in the harbor of Havana
The house now passed the Loud bill directing the war department to raise or destroy the wreck as a menace to
navigation.
An appropriation or jiikj.ooo was authorized for immediate use. The
bodies of the 63 sailors, entombed in
the hull, are to be recovered and
burled In tne national cemetery at Arlington. The masts of the Maine
are to be nlanted over the graves of
the men who died when the Maine
sank.
NO HOPE FOR PEACE IN MINES
Joint Scale Committee to Report Dis
agreement in Cincinnati.
Cincinnati. Mar. 26. With all tentatlve propositions for compromise re
jected, the joint scale committee of
miners and operators of Ohio, Indiana
and Western Pennsylvania adjourned
after deciding to report a failure of their effort to agree. The report will be made to the joint conference of the
central competitive field.
Perfects New Anti-Toxin. New York. Mar. 25. Dr. Simon Flcxner of the Rockefeller Institute, who has been laboring for years to find an antidote for spinal meningitis.
has at last succeeded In perfecting a
serum that, in early stages of the disease, 1. as effective as the anti-toxin
which h&s swept the fear of the death
from diphtheria.
Name Tawney's Opponent. Rochester, Minn.. Mar. 25. Judge
H. L. Uulck of Winona was selected
by First District Democratic conference here to fight Representative
James A. Tawney, Republican, next election.
Washington. Mar. 24. MaJ. Gen. J. Franklin Bell, chief of staff of the United States army, was injured, and Mrs. Herbert J. Slocum, wife of a major of the Seventh cavalry, was killed in a collision of their automobile with a trolley car on the Tenallytown road In the northwestern out
skirts of this city. One of Gen. Bell's ribs was broken, and he suffered also a bad scalp wound and severe bruises. Gen. Bell was taken first to the post hospital at Fort Myer, afterward to his residence at the fort. Mrs. Bell remains constantly at his side. He absolved the trolley car motorman from blame for the accident Details of the Crash. Mrs. Slocum. whose husband Is attached to the headquarters of the department of the east at Governor's Island. N". Y.. and Is a nephew of Mrs. Russell Sage, was visiting her sister, Mrs. H. L Green, at the Wyoming apartment house in this city, but went to Fort Myer to visit Mr. and Mrs.
Bell, with whom she and her husband were on terms of Intimate friendship. It was on the way back to the Wyoming that the fatal collision occurred. The Tenallytown road, officially known as Wisconsin avenue, runs north from Georgetown through the western environs of the city and Is a favorite route for automobiles. Crossing the Georgetown bridge near Fort Myer Gen. Bell's car turned north In Wisconsin avenue and was about to turn east along the northern boundary
of the city when at Garfield street the
collision occurred. The fast-moving trolley car demol
ished the automobile when the two came together. The automobllists were thrown far through tho air.
Dies on Way to Hospital. Mrs. Slocum fell on her head. It
was seen Immediately that her condi
tion was serious, and she was placed aboard a trolley car to be hurried to a hospital.
After going some distance In the
car she was transferred to an automobile, and the driver hurried with all speed to the Georgetown university hospital. When the hospital was
reached the surgeons pronounced Mrs.
Slocum dead. She was 50 years old.
British Government Fearful for Safety of Ex-President Because of His Speeches. Cairo. Egypt, Mar. 25. That the British government actually fear for the safety of Col. Theodore Roosevelt, owing to this city being the hotbed of
the Egyptian national movement was
THE NEWS IN BRIEF.
These charges were denied by Chlof Horan. who pointed out that tho build-
OVATION AT CAIRO lng had no fire egcape I front and
umy one an o;cMashlonod ladder device In the rear. The coroner announced that hr4
woum make a thorough Investigation
to fix the responsibility for the deaths, spirits despite the fact that she fell
if nxed it could be. backward from a five-story lire es
The financial loss is put at J200.- cape, landing in a basketful of wet
clothes. She was scarcely scratched
Musn tor the stairways. I nited States senators are to be
Thore were forty or fifty employes rubbed down and massaced at covern
in the building when a report of an ment expense in the magnificent bath-
Inchan Angan, the Korean who assassinated Prince Ito of Japan at Harbin, Manchuria. October 20 last, was executed at Tort Arthur. J. P. Cudahy, who attacked Jere F. Lillls in Kansas City. Mo., two week ago, will pass the uext year on his father s ranch In Pasadena, Cal. Newspapers In Vienna, Austria, publish alarming accounts of the condition of Count Tolstoy, the Russian novelist, who Is said to bo critically III. Virginia Karle, ten years ago ono of the brightest musical-comedy stars on Broadway, Is ill and destitute lu New York, having been found uncon. sclous in a shabby flat. John M. Hayes, an Okluhoma City (Okla.j prohibition-enforcement attorney, acting for the state, has sued the Santa Fe road for J3Ü5.000 on tho charge of storing liquors consigned to dealors. Towels have been tabooed at tha Michigan college of mines at Houghton as being relics of barbarism, insanitary and expensive. Students now use big sheets of paper Instead tor drying. As a result of the affectionate regard
of Mlnnesotans for the late Gov. John A. Johnson, a fund of $22,000 has been
raised in the state to provide an in
come for his widow for tho remainder
of her life.
Although facing a charge of embez
zling ?25O,O00 from the National Cit bank of Cambridge, Mass., George W. Coleman has taken out a license to marry Miss May Hlghtower of Kan-
sas City, Mo.
Mary Davin. n 13-year-old New York
girl, is in good health and cheerful
dsmnnst rataii hr tho ikmnf,. 1 1 I
,i.. .J 'T. . explosion was heard, followed almost rooms In the new sennt nfllm hnild.
men mat guarded the ex-president
from the moment his train arrived until the khedive's royal carriage had deposited him at the doors of Sheppard's hotel. Col. Roosevelt's speeches at Khartum and Assouan. In which he pleaded for native co-operation with the British authorities, has aroused the resentment of the Nationalists and in view of their recent assassination of Boutros Pasha, the premier, the government decided that every precaution should be taken to guard the ex-president. The colonel, himself, laughed at the
Idea of danger and requested that no
instantly by a puff of smoke and some Ing. A professional masseur will of-
ones wild cry of "Fire." flclate in these baths at a salary of
in tne general offices and mailing J1.SO0 a year.
aepartment on the sixth floor were 20 At the request of Frank Fehr. cousin men and women preparing for the of Alma Kellner, the child kidnaped at
uaj s worn. At the first alarm some Louisville. Ky., last December. Gov. rushed for the stairways, while oth- Willson of Kentucky has withdrawn
ers delayed to lock up the office tho offer of $500 reward, which is be-
books. This delay, it is believed, lieved to have kept tho abductors
causea th death of a number. from making terras.
uc.mc iuc in si uremen couia run Mrs. Charles T. Yerkes, widow of up ladders to the upper floors Miss the Chicago traction magnate, who Lichtenstein appeared at the sixth- died four years ago. will sell at auc-
siorj winaow lacing in Wabash ave- tlon the mansion at Fifth avenue and nil A CnA stll- twl 1 ...i a I . ..
uuiiucu um ua wie winaow sixty-eigütti street, New York, to-
siii, nesunieu
a moment; there was cether with all its art iretns. tn atlfv-
0"" mm 141 b llJ I . ... I -
special police guard be furnished, but " u f e e'W her' and cla,ms of "editors.
the authorities would not listen to him , oue J eu . ine 8iaowalK Enraged because his wife had gone
and scores of policemen mingled with 1 ana ,reraRn P,CKea aor up and to tne theater with her brother. Alfred the crowd at the station and stayed , Was, U t0 Stl- ,LukB's hospital Mitchell, a New Orleans carpenter.
close by tho colonel all the time. Mr. """""""' amuuiuuce Roosevlt u-allroH thraneh o Hn.,Hio Powerless to Aid.
line of Eerntinn nniioo frm th. o- Employes in the State street store
stens to the kherilv' rrrh. of the s11 Company suffered a har
Cairo irnvo n rnrlh I croctfmr tn fkn rowing experience. Though power
ex-nresident. Thnns.mHs thmnrH th ,ess tQ Se aid thsy could look across B,nnt,na. ia , ,u j , ,.,
station and nearby streets to see the a,,ey and 8ee tne'r ro-trapped ,iam TelI ,n 8hootlnK the apple from colonel. ' fellow employes struggling vainly for the hGBd or hl8 gon spnt Hnrrv ...,.-
lifo ThoV amtr (Kn nntit n.l.l..u I
MOUNT ETNA STILL MENACES ing d forth to the ? buiieC nrVd of h. bI windows screaming for assistance. struck Lacked lip instead of tho
Fifteen New Craters Open Up, Accom- f ! OI lDe y0 . g women wer cl,nB- cigaret which he held between hla
shot and probably wounded her, wounded his 12-year-old son and seven-year-old daughter and then shot himself in the head, dying Instantly.
Re-cnactmeiit In a Cincinnati (O.)
panied by Earthquakes and Vio
lent Explosions. Rome. Mar. 26. The eruption of
Mount Etna Is Increasing in violence
Ing to one another with part of their teeth.
nair ana wearing apparel blazing. 111 .a
uai ueieu inose wno are now
listed as missing. In the few minutes
of horror nfter the alarm reached
TAFT AND DAY NOT TO MEET
hourly. Fifteen new craters, opening tnem' may never be known. The one
laterally, are sending forth blue and gold flames, burning cinders and melted lava, accompanied by terrific earthquake shocks and violent explosions. A black and scarlet stream of lava.
or two who did escape from the sixth floor were saved by remarkable good
luck and the presence of mind of em
ployes on the first floor of the build
ing. -ri . i .
jnese employes inrew a score or
more of mattresses into the alley, and
President Cancels Engagement to
Speak Before Syracuse University Annual Dinner at New York. Syracuse. N. Y.. Mar. 26 President
Taft and Chancellor James R. Day of
Syracuse university will not. accord
ing to the present outlook, brush elbows next Wednesday evening as guests of honor at the annual dinner
enormous damage. Nlcolosl. a small a,Ive but Practically unhurt
FORM NEW POLITICAL PARTY
Labor Unionists at Philadelphia Take
Initial Step Toward Formation of Independent Organization. Philadelphia, Mar. 25. Resentment
by union labor against the political Influences which have been at work In
support of the Rapid Transit Company during the street car strike took tangible form when there was formed In Labor Lyceum hall an Independent labor political party.
Approximately 1.000 delegates, rep
resenting the large majority of union
organizations in the city, met behind closed doors and decided upon this step, which Is in accordance with the
call issued by the State Federation of
Labor In Pittsburg last December for
an Independent labor party.
Is flowlne down th mn.mtnin .m. ,i a raa" aId boy who jumped and
w m v .. a . I kUUS lit UI 11 (J 11 LH ILL IHM 11 IUI UK 1 flilillMr-
the rate of 22 yards an hour, doing ! not only of the New York Alumni association
of Syracuse university at the Hotel
Brevoort, New ork city. Announce
ment was made that the president bad
withdrawn his acceptance of an invi
tation to be present and speak and hla reason, it was explained, was that ho
did not feel that he could attend without offering some defense to the criti
cism of himself and his administra
tion made by Chancellor Day at Pitts
burg last Friday.
but prosperous town two hours' climb from Catania, appears to be doomed. Borello and Belpasso, their suburbs, are entirely deserted, the inhabitants and the shepherds streaming down to Catania. The cultivated fields and chestnut woods are burled under a fiery stream ten to thirty feet deep. Panic and despair have seized upon the peasants, who plant images of fa
vorite saints and then flee. Cardinal
Boy Causes Fire.
Leo Stoeckel, who was taken into
custody after the conflagration, ad
mittcd to the police that it was he
who started the fire.
Stoeckel appeared heartbroken and
told his story with difficulty.
"I was employed as a clerk In the
office." Stoeckel said. "Mr. Mitcholl
gave me three cigar lighters and told
me to go to the finishing room on the
Francisca Nava visited Nlcolosl bear- f?urth nor and flU tnem witn ben"
lng the veil of Saint Agatha, In order zine" 1 u,u 8a 1 Ußed a nve-gallon to fiton th emntlnn nt lnrn ran of the oil ' "ad filled two of the
No loss of life has been reported as ,f8hters fnd 'as working on the third
THE MARKETS.
yet, but the property damage Is Im-
when there was an explosion. A
mens. Entire villages financially.
New York. Mar. 2.
f.IVK STOCK-Sten 16 50 6 C,
Hoci 9 7a Sh-p 5 ft)
KUH'R-Winter Stralau.. 5 20
. 1 shAft nf (tamn nlmiuf lillnrlait mn nn.i
nro m nod 1 ----- ......w... w...iuiu mi. uuu
v.u. . . ... . ,r i c . i.iiiLvi 1lih c iin.. u u
i remcmoer only aimly what happened wheat May l a after that. I did not regain my senses ...:;: !'
. I r..M ii r ..., . ... wis-,iunii iiii "
WAN BALL NUtK U tS hi lu"-,um",rawuuiB 8l- KYK- No 2 WesWn Si
trio )
if 50 '5 5 o 1
t
Hurt in a Riot. St. Louis. Mar. 26. Ante-election
troubles In Wellston, a suburb of SL
Louis, culminated in an attempt to
lynch City Clerk Howard Butler and thet stoning of the city hall. Several
persons were hit by flying missiles.
Attorney for Glavis In Pinchot Inquiry Declares He Will Call Secretary zs Witness. Washington. Mar. 26. Attorney
Louis Brandeis, representing Glavis
and others, sprung a decided surprise
TO PROBE SUBSIDY LOBBY cmkksb
BCTTKU-Creamery 20Vii KGOS 3) Ü CIIKKSn 6 ft
i I EJ 31 31 13
House Committee Favorably Reports
a Resolution to Inquire Into Steenerson's Charges.
Washington. Mar. 25 Another in-
a i S3 ft 7 r. fr 75 7
before the Baliinger-Pinchot invest!- (u,ry ,rto ?"ef.od ,1lleBal ofrorts
gating committee by declaring that he
wished to call Secretary Baliinger as
one of his witnesses. Attorney Vertrees, representing Mr.
Ballinger, objected. The committee will decide the matter In executive
session. The concluding days of the "prose
cution" will be taken up with an ex
planation by Mr. Brandcls, attorney for Louts R. Glavis, and others, of a mass of documentary evidence sub
mitted at one of the sessions last
week. The alleged interest of
fluence legislation Is to coise with an
Investigation of ship subsidy and antiship subsidy lobbies.
The bouse committee on Judiciary
determined to report favorably the Stcenerson resolution demanding the
inquiry. Mr. Steenerson charges that
CHICAGO.
CATTLE Prime Steers 17 50
Medium to uootl Cowb.. 4 75 Cows, Plain to Fancy.... 4M Cholre Helft-rs 5 0)
Calves 4M 0 9 j0
HOGS-Prime Heavv 10 9 ÖH 00
Medium Weight Butcher 10 83 'rflO Yt pics to oc mo SO
Ul'TTEH-l'reamery 17 ft 31 Pnlry 21 23 UVB I'OL'LTUV 10 Ö 17 EGOS 16 Ö 21 POTATOES fn?r hu.) V, it 30
KLOCH-Sprln Wlioat. Sp"l 6 20 it 0 40 (HtAIN-wVat, May 1 13H 1 1;
Torn. Muy MVS Oats. May 4if? 41(4 MILWAUKEE.
unrair meinous were naonted bv nh!n nnAiv vhnt v i Nnr'n tt it et is
s tn tnrou hlc I July '. 1 QViÜ 109
Corn, .inly ww
subsidy advocates to force his support.
He Insisted they had threatened him with defeat for re-election.
41 ft
SO ft
44 f 4
King Edward Has Bronchitis. Biarritz. Mar 23 It Is announced
that King Edward, who has been here
lor several days and w
to rumor, has not been
has had a sharp attack of bronchitis, i short (20,000 In his accounts
Car Wrecked, Many Hurt.
.Montgomery, Ala., Mar. 2G. A sub-
the urban trolley car was wrecked nnnr
iluggennetm-.Morgan syndicate in the Pickett Springs, a suburb, and ten It l t . l I . . . .Ml I . . .
tunumsuttw Junius aiso win occupy persons were painfully Injured. Mlt.
the attention ot tne committee. creants had placed slues nf imn in
switch.
Cajhier Gone; Theft Charged. Seattle, Wash.. Mar. 26 Arthur Watklns, cashier in the office of a lo
om, Standard lly
KANSAS CITV.
GltAIN-AVhent. N'o. 2 Hard II 11 (t 1 2i
No. 2 l I? ' l 21 Corn, No. 2 White fil ft 6lA Oat, No. 3 White 41 & l! Hye 7i V 73 ST. LOUIS.
CATTLE Nail ve Steers R SO W S 50
Tfcxa SteerM s s
HOOP-Papker 10 70 10
nutcluT : 10 v. ra n w
SHEEP
Natives
OMAHA.
Kentucky Fire Costs $100,000.
MorKanfield, Ky.. Mar. 2ß. Pire
who. according cal realty company, has disappeared, caused a loss of more than $100 000 cattle-Native Stix ... In good health, and his employer alleges Watklns Is partially covered by Insurance. Many tÄ Md",ilir71,'r" W.
nne buildings were destroyed.
Hnr;s Heatv
5 0) fr I 50
, r, oo & (i is 4 00 it ' 0) 3 i". it " 10 fS ?l l')tvri 7 75 ii ica
