Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 53, Number 1, Jasper, Dubois County, 7 October 1910 — Page 3

SIX DEAD IN CRUSH

-Ar-riON COACH

WITH CAR NEAR TIP TON, IND.

COLLIDES

CHARLTON MADMAN;

ALIENISTS SO REPORT

TWELVE PERSONS ARE HURT SeCOnd Smashup on Indiana Road, within Week-Motorman Who umped and Saved Himself Says ., Guess We Overran Instructions. ......... Sent726. Six persons

-. ' killed and 12 injured, several of

th. m l-robably fatally. In a coi s.cn oi, , Z lidUna Union Traction lino two mil, k north of here. rbi;was the second disaster on Indiana 'traction linos within a week the trTi .mine occurred ou the Wabash va l, 1 u-t Klngsland on Wedncs-

The deatn oi wiju .,.-.. -

Ind.. brougnt uio uumw. . n tiinf disaster m to

41 Tb. two wrecks were brought about

circumstances wuich .u

In both cases mere In the orders one of

,! train overran tue -hlrh it was to stop and met the other

i ,...rvrt in II IieUUKJU tum

CO

Warren

und r

mot Identical, was a mistake

Declare- Grandfather Wa Paranoiac and That More of Family Were Defective. New York. SepL 23 "It Is our oplnIon that Parter Churlton Is of unsound , in I ml and liable to attacks of impulsive violence and that his moral sense is pathologically defective. Ho should bo taken to a hospital for the lnsana and there kept indefinitely, for ho I likely at any time to bo a menace to society." This is tho conclusion reached ly tho alienists who examined tho slayir of Mrs. Scott Castlo, tho actress, who

was Charlton s wife, at Lake tJono, Italy, last Juno. Judge Hlair of tho Hudson couity court, New Jersey, declined to receive their report on tho ground tt he had no Jurisdiction as a comumt ng court to consider such a plea. Tho alienists who examined th risoner were Dr. Allan McLane lü mil-

ton. Dr. Kdwnrd D. Fisher and IU W. J. Arklltz.

MIDNIGHT

It V ...... .,)llUlIIE ikt A

roftwsD taw r.i.. rVuY -

HOW FAX UPTHt "tv

neu t-"' -

V,QC

motorman, lagans-

FINDS HER KIDNAPED CHILD

Texas Woman After Traveling 5,003

Miles Recovers Child at Eva .sville, Ind.

SON

o fj i i 'Aoor hall r . t"w-o" -. - - r -j. jfi n i i

Ajama I'M . . - irfaw

GRAFTERS ME HIT

I SPARKS FROM LIVE WIRE

BOTH ILLINOIS STATE POLITICAL CONVENTIONS SCORE CORRUPT LEGISLATORS.

REPUBLICANS PRAISE TAFT

President's Tariff Plan ApprovedDemocrats Denounce Their Opponents for Failure to Carry Out Platform for Revision.

Evansvllle, Ind.. SepL 23.- After search of a year, extending ov- v stato and Into the Interior of Vit1 Dottle Harrows, fourteen-year o d kidnaped, she says, by Dr. G G Martin, sixty, formerly of Chi -a itinerant dentist, August 17, P 09. Houston. Tex., was found heie t

mother, Mrs. Elolse Barrovs. Harrows had traveled 15,0-4) visited every large city in t m 1 States and written 2.0OO let: -ire

lice chiefs. The last cent of J3.000 t 4 r possessed when tho child '..; was spent buying her c nnt : Penniless, mother and d. ight two small bos started b to

a sharp curve

felon Thf dead: Haktr. Joseph,

Port . . i Hroo. L.ewis, Kokomo. Ind. Holthouser, Dr. V. C. Hrooklyn. Holthouser, W. Ii. Hrooklyn. Kaüsback, Verdel. Hymeula. Ind. Wabh. D. F.. Marshall, Mich. Killed on Way to Wedding. Hr W C. Holthouser, who was killed

in th? wreck, was on his way to ivokomo. Ind.. where he was to have been marrk-d. His brother, , who also was killed, was to have been tho best man nt th" wedding. The bride to have bern Is Miss Nellie Coxon, daughter of

th- wcreiary oi mu , miidt im t.v ;cnU

company of Kokomo. Miss nU Dun I oUli nuni ut f .luiv

a ry

Ii iia an om her tr. ;Las. Ited JK thr ared uere. und exa.

MY DIE III WRECK

ROCK ISLAND TRAIN GOES THROUGH OPEN BRIDGE INTO RAGING WATERS.

SIXTEEN KNOWN TO BE DEAD

GILMAN IS COMMANDER-IN-CHIEF OF GRAND ARMY

Fared Others Been Washed AwayHeavy Rainfall Causes Small Creek to Become Seething Torrent Disaster Near Clayton, Kan.

Covin was prostrated when sue nearu t f tri- d'ath or her llnnce. Th. col!lt-ion was betweon a northbound limit, d passenger train and a fo iihtound freight. Tho south-bound motorman had orders to wait at the iirst ctop north of the crossing, it Is

nald. but overran that point. tninKing L,. could make another switch. A . lump of trees hid the approachlnp cars and they came together at a .-unc The freight train plowed through the front of the limited, demolishing the smoker. The motorman and all the passengers In tho smoking compartment of the limited were killed. Th" motorman and conductor on the freight car Jumped and were not injured. Says Order Was Violated. "I guess we overran the orders," said Motorman Dan Lacy, when he had fully recovered from the shock caused by Jumping from his car. Conductor Sebree was equally dazed at the occurrence and could not explain why It was they had passed tho switch.

Famous Autoist Throw- Fr Car While Going Seventy Ml'- an Hour and Painfully Injt. 1

a I ' ,t t. rve

..fT- ', in as

STATE CONTROL CHIEF ISSUE

National Irrigation Congress at Pueblo Will Be Lively Bryan and Others Speak. Pueblo. Col SepL 2G Second only In Importance to the subject of Irrigation Itself, the question of state v.mis fedrral control of v.d"r add natural resources looms large before th.- clshteenth National Irrigation

longross which opened hero today. The Colorado delegates, both from h San I.uls valley and from Denvt r. are prepared to attack the govrntmnt's position In refusing resrvoir altes In tho San Luis valley while the water of the Rio Grande Is tfowtnR nut of tho stato bocause it Is r '-ilmed ii may bo needed for the Kacle dam project. Kansas. New Mexico and Texas have fT.t unusually strong delegations to r'f'M any attempted action on tho r-: -ft of Colorado looking to state control of ater. In conn, ct Ion with the congress Is h V hi.-. year a splendid National Irrlcrion poltion where delegates 'tM! bit..rs nee the practical results

o' th- i nzntion wnrlr

Now York. Sept. 24 e ertson. one time Vand rbllt winner, and one of the automobile drivers of " thrown on tho Massa;equa, tho Long Island :otor pav

painfully Injured. With Robertson, who was cotnp enty miles an hour In a praMe rnr f i V.mdorbllt cun next e-k

Stophon Reynolds of this ry. Robert and Reynold -rc thrown thirty feet or more Robertson was rendered unconscious, but beyond a few scratches afcd tinus Reynolds was uninjured.

RICH, SHOOTS WOMAK. DIES Detroit 3usiness Man Wounds Companion and Suicides After Diy of "High Life." Cleveland. O.. SepT 23. A man who

committed suicide an hour after his arrest for shooting Mrs JPrc Singer of Cleveland In a roadhowe j . Rocky River, is believed to have been Burton V. Yatos. a Detroit business man, reported worth uenrl J&0O.O00. Ho had told tho police be was II. W. Yates. The shooting folio M a day of automobllo rides and vlt.lt to wlnerooms. The woman was taken to a hospital, where It Is said she will recovor.

Th. chl.f addresses of tho opening j mlnmos"

CHAVEZ FLIES OVER ALPS Peruvian Aviator Hjrt When Craft Is Wrecked Weymann. an American, Attempts Flight Falls. Milan. Italy. pL 24. Georges Chavez, the Permian aviator, flew from ilrlg. Swifar'and. over the Simplon pass and xrlved at Domodossola, on the ItaMnti Ride of the Alps. in nHchtinc Ch.irrt fell beneath his

machine. He injurod and his monoplane wnf destroyed. Honry Weymmn. the American aviator, ascen 11 t Brig in an attempt to follo Chavez, but descended aftor having txen in the air four

s-l. m w.r made by William Jonn ng.s Itrv.tn. former Gov. Alva Adams and Governor Shafroth of Colorado.

ASK PARDON FOR J. R. WALSH

ENTERS SNAKES' CAGE, DIES

Man Bellevino He Had Power Dodge Reptile's Strike Is Bitten by Rattler.

' Clayton. Kan. Sent. 24. Sixteen

known to bo dead, probably others I killed and thier bodies washed away J and 11 injured is the result of a terrible railroad wreck which took place fon tho Rock Island railroad two tulles

east of this placo when a fast train ran through an open bridge Into 20 feet of raging water. Nine of the dead have been ldontlt;pd, while seven are as yet unknown. Yet others may have boon washed away by tho torrent. The stream which wrought the destruction Is at ordinary times simply a dry arroyo, with no water, but with us banks 30 feet below the level of tho railroad bridge. A tremendous

rain had fallen uurlng the night and the ordinarily dry bed was soon filled to the brim with a wild torrcnL Tho bridge itself was quickly broken up and carried away. Train Plunges Into Ravine. Shortly after one o'clock In the morning, while tho storm yet raged, the fast Rock Island passenger train

from Kansas City to Denver, traveling at a forty mile per hour speed, rushed headlong into the gap and the forward end of the train took the plunge into the water tilled ravine. The locomotive, tender and baggage tr. and the enginoer. fireman, bag

gageman and conductor were all in-

car disappeared entirely unaor me wa-

stantly killed. The smoker, which stopped on the brink of the stream, was telescoped by a chair car and many of the passengers killed outright. Others were thrown Into tho stream and drowned. Pullman Stays on Ralls. With the exception of tho last Pull

man the entire train leit tne tracK and tho cars and coaches were plied In one big honp or rolled into the ditch alongsido the rails. Tho dead: Conductor J. W. Usher. Donver. Englneor Plckenbaugh, Goodland, Kan. Fireman William Mills. Goodland, KanHnggagonian Huffman, Kansas City,

Mo. Gilbert Yoms, Fullerton. Neb. John Sloop, lloylo. Knn.

W B. Shlvely. Agra. Kan. Henry Miller, Smith Center. Kan. James Winston, KansnB City. Nineteen Injured In Crash. Terre Haute. Ind., Sept. 24. A work train on the Southern Indiana railroad was In collision with a passenger train a few miles south of

Terro Haute, and la persons wero injured, four of them perhaps fatally.

Boston fAan Is Elected to Highest Office In Gift of Old Veterans McElroy Withdraws. Atlantic City, N. J., Sept. 23. John E. Oilman of Boston was elected commander-in-chief of the G. A. It. for the coming year. John McElroy of Washington was the only other candidate

and he withdrew his name before the balloting began. In opening the business session of the national encampment the retiring commander-in-chief. Samuel It. Van

Sant of Minnesota, gave a comprehensive review of tho work of the or

ganization for the past year and outlined what might bo accomplished for tho good of tho order In tho future. Hie commander spoko earnestly as he expressed his gratification at tho increasing fraternization of tho "blue" and tho "gray." When ho said that no braver troops were ever raarshalod for conflict than the southern soldiers and that the Union veterans now Teallzo that no men ever made greater sacrifices for what they believed to be right than their former foes, the commander was applauded.

While the roll of tbo Grand Army Is steadily shortening, tho commander In chief urged that every effort be made to keep the organization up to its fullest possible strength. Ho ouotcd tho flcures showinc that G. A.

It. at the beginning of the present year had still 213,901 members In good standing, as against 220.C00 at the beginning of 1909. The loss during the year was C.7S1, of which 5,323

was by death.

FIND NEW BRIBE EVIDENCE

law. laws

to

Petition on Behalf of Ex-Banker Filed With Department of Justice at Washington. u Ellington. SepL 26. A petition f' f th? Immediate pardon of John R. Walsh, the Chicago banker now servl a torm In Fort Leavenworth prison fui irregularities In connection with the failure of tho three Walsh banks.

was filed In tho department of justice tllom

" itforfo l. uuckinghatn, representI' t Mrs. Mary L Walsh, wife of the lü oner, and Richard W. and John W. WaNh. his sons. Accompanying the petition aro a lirg. number of letters rrom bualnoss tiin all over Illinois, the 12 Jurors ho convicted Walsh, stockholders of the w recked bnnk. and many others.

Pipestone. Mmn.. Sept. 23. Because ho thought he possessed the power to dodge tho strllirtg of a reptile, George Taylor, a former Pipestone mnn, Is dead. Taylor aa a contortionist with a carnival eonipsny and went Into n cago of nakes to show that tho reptiles wore not quick enough to strike him and .hut ho could mesmerize

One of the rattlesnakes bit

him on tne arm. anu uo muo snoruy afterward.

Kaiser's Daughter Engaged. Berlin. SepL 33 It Is reported In

rnnnoctlon with the kaisers present

PRESIDENT BACK AT CAPITOL Taft Returns From Western Trip and First Cabinet Meeting Is Held Today.

Washington. Sept. 2G.-Pros dent Taft roturncd from his Cincinnati trip Sunday and the llrst cabinet meeting

was hold at the Wime nun -! eleven o'clock this morning. There t jmnpt' irtnrn.

will bo formal meeiuiK- t,u- """ ntii ihn end of tho week. In ad

dition to the Informal discussion that

will be hold around tne mine i

time.

Charles Luke, Now Dead, Is Said to Have Confessed to Getting $1,000 for Vote. Springfield, 111., Sept. 2C State's Attorney Burke of Sangamon county has obtained Information that another member of the Illinois legislature received 51,000 for voting for William Lorimer for senator. The man who made this admission was Charles S. Luke of Nashville, who represented the Forty-fourth district

in the house, and who has since died. Mr. Burke obtained the knowledge of Luke's admission somo tlmo ago, but It could not be used as evidence in any pending criminal case. It Is pertinent, however, to the broader matter of Lorlmer's election now under investigation by the senatorial committee In Chicago, and may be used in that Inquiry.

The admission was made by Luke, according to one of Mr. Burko's staff

familiar with tho mattor, to Hugh V Murray of Carlyle, now state's attor ney of Clinton county.

The dato of tho conversation in

which Luko made the confession was

August 18. 1909, months prior to tho nubllcatlon ot tho White confession

and tho corroborative confessions of Bockomoyor, Link and Holstlaw. Luke

Is said to havo told Murray: "I got 1 1.000 for my vote for Lorl

inor nnd Heckomoyor was a fool If

he didn't get the same."

THREE SCALDED IN WRECK

Ainn Frelaht Train Is Derailed and

16 Cars Burned, Causing Loss of $50,000.

Shoots KM, Kills Himself. OrknlooMi. la., Sept. 26. William Itcwton. aged thirty, is dead, Miss Susie Lotion, nged twenty-nine, Is dying ns a result of a Jealous quarrel at the home of the ulrl's fntlinr T W

Tim nrnsldent will leave here next

visit to '.Nino tnai wie engagement t SaUir(iay for New YorK to uumui is bclr. arranged for tho kaiser's only sudress b0fOro the convention of the daughter. Victoria Louise, to the arch-: Nntlonal League of Republican clubs.

duke Karl ÜTanz. eldest son ot tne late Archdukn Otto

Train Make Fast Run. Ixjgansport. Ind.. Sept. 23. Panhandle pastetigor train No. 12. arriving in thin citr from Chicago, came from

LosBon, at Crickot. a small mining , Kotits at the rate of lu nines an nour.

camrt tnn rviti. f --i.- ' i,iner p.7 Tiillnc In 51 minutes, ins

loosa. train cpnslsted of eight coaches.

Incubator Baby Man Fined. Louisville. Ky.. Sept. 26,-Flnes and costs aggregating $242 were assessed by Magistrate Dacuer against Pr. 11. K Snyder and his wife of Pittsburg.

I Pa who conuuetcu an unuu-wi 1 at the state fair In which three babies 1 died.

Bloomlngton. 111.. Sept. 20. in a freight wreck on the Chicago &, Alton

at Washburn Engineer w. w. small wood of Bloomlngton nnd Fireman Wil

Ham Kenne of Vera wore fatally

scalded. r.nd Hrnkcman George Lawler

of Dwlght seriously scalded. The on

clno was derailed by a defective frog

Tho train took fire and 16 cars were

consu

cars

Springfield, 111., Sept. 24. Tho Republican state convention which met here adopted a platform approving

I the administrations of President Taft

and Governor Ueneen. Tho tariff plank follows the lines laid down in the president's campaign letter to Chairman McKinley of tho Republican congressional committee. The platform commends President Taft and congress, who, as "agents of

the people, have carried forwaru another step tho principles and policies which havo dominated and controlled

the Government of the United States j

for tho most progressive half century of civilized life." Continuing it says: For Permanent Commission. "We favor the creation of a permanent tariff commission to study the changing conditions of business at homo and abroad and the difference in the cost of living nnd of production which prevail in this country and elsewhere to furnish to congress a guide In auy revision of a particular schedule of the tariff which such changes may mako necessary In the future. Revisions should be made, schedule by schedule, as changes occur, so as to avoid the harmful consenuences of business unrest and un

certainty which always accompany a general revision of tho tariff." Congress Work Is Praised. "We congratulate the country upon tho unparalleled legislative accom-

nlluhment of the Sixty-first congross

in enacting into law practically all of j

the pledges of tho last Republican national platform. "We commend President Taft for his Impartial and fearless administra

tion of tho national laws. He tias brought to tbo bar of Justice those unpllcatod in sugar frauds against tho government, recovering millions of revenue due; successfully Intervened to prevent arbitrary Increases In freight rates; Impartially enforced the anti-trust law and enforced a policy of economy in governmental expenditures without crippling the public

service. For State-Wide Civil Service.

Other recommendations aro: For a state-wide civil-servlco Amendment of Btatc-election

to prevent fraudulent voting. A corrupt practises acL Strengthening of the direct-primary law. An employers' liability and work lngmen's compensation act. Closer regulation of railroads and public-service corporation. Abolition of minority represent

tlon.

A constitutional amendment pro

viding for the Initiative and referendum.

Direct vote for senators. Stato ownership of water power

sites.

On legislatives scandals the plat

form says:

Wo denounce the corruption that

has been oxposod in the last general" assembly and demand tho most rigid

Investigation thereof by granu jurios

and courts; we favor the exnausiive

investigation of the charges wnicn havo been made nnd punishment

where guilt Is proved.

We denounce tho bipartisan com

bination of 60 Democrats and 21 Re

publicans, which controlled tne legislative machinery of tho house of representatives in the last general assembly and disavow any party rospon-

siblllty therefor."

Trustee of University Named. Otis W Holt, a banker of Geneseo,

was nominated for trustee of tho Univorslty of Illinois to succeod Dr. Charles Davidson of Chicago, who re

signed. Mrs. Mary A. uusey o ur-

bana and W. L- auuou oi -utuBo wore renominated for tho other two trusteeships.

Democrats Adopt Platform. T?aq SL Louis. III., SopL 24.

Boodlers, grafters nnd leglslutlvo corruption are denounced in strong tonus

in i ho n atform naopicu vy mu umuu-

cratic stato convention. Tho initiative

and referendum, and anti-corrupt prac

tise act. and an honest extension oi

civil service, are given as the romedlos for crookedness In public ofllco nnd administration.

On tho tariff the piauorm says: "Wo denounce tho Republican party for Its failure to revise the tariff downward in accordance with tho pledges contained In its platform as explained by President Taft in tho last national campaign. Denounce Payne Bill. "Wo believe In a tariff for revenue, a tariff which in a period of rising prices will mako tho burden of the administration of the government fall

those wno uro consumers

Krmlt Roosevelt returned to New Vtlr- fVstm t.tirj-i w. nnl iliifllrwl thttL

i IUI ii 41 UU1 UtliJjiVi tM uv-m- "

uo wont auroau to woo auss numciford, a stepdaughter ot V. K- Van- ' derbllt.

Tho United States census bureau la Its 1909 Investigations Hhows that Infantile paralysis and pellagra are found In epidemic form in many part of tho country. Four students of Purdue university at Lafayette, Ind., were hurt In the annual "tank scrap" between freshmen and sophomores. The freshmen class was victorious. A plague among the cattle of Russia threatens norlous consequenceR and the United States may insltute a. quarantine against cattle imports, la the Information given out in Washington. , Announcement was made at El Paso, Tex., by Morris & Co.. tho packing firm, of the purchase in Mexico ot 1.25O.000 acres for one of the largest ranches in the world. A $1,000,000

packing plant la to be built. Capt. John J. O'Connell of the Twenty-eighth Infantry, stationed at Fort Snelllng. near St. Paul, has been missing for two weeks, and his su

perior oflicers fear ho has been murdered or has committed suicide. Mathew Walters, at Detroit. Mich.. whose supposed body was burled by relatives after it had been taken from the river, has been found alive In a hospital and attended the Inquest which was originally set for his case. Colonel Roosevelt in Oyster Bay refused to discuss Mrs. Bellamy Storer's letter attacking his veracity. "That Incident was closed four years ago." he said. Archbishop Ireland also refused to make any statement. Twelve passengers on a street car on tho Appalachian exposition lino at Knoxvillc. Tenn.. were injured in a stampede that followed the burning out of a fuse. Mrs. A. S. J. Davis may die. She Jumped and was trampled on. Stephen Stuper. aged nineteen, emnloved at the Homestead (Pa.) Steel

works, was Instantly killed while fooling with an arc lamp. His hand came in contact with a live wire and 4.SO0 volts of electricity passed through him. Gen. Samuel Crocker Lawrence's resignation .is most puissant grand commander was announced at a session of the supreme coun'M of sovereign grand inspectors general ot the thirty-third degree Ancient Scottish Kite at Detroit. Mrs. F. Carl Schwenker . of Redbank. N. J.. was expelled from the National Poultry association and the American Game Bantam club for hav

ing an alleged painted Red Pyle bantam game cock on exhibition at the Allentown (Pa.) fair In an attempt to deceive tho judges.

AUTO WRECKS KILL SEVEN Three Die at Cleveland, Like Number at Philadelphia and One In New York. Cleveland, O.. Sept. 26. Mrs. Lillian

Stepp, wife of Dr. Morris l. aiepp. Jr.. their five-year-old son, and Mario Stepp, their five-months-old daughter, were killed and Dr. Stepp suffered posslbly fatal injuries when their automobile was struck by a car of the Cleveland, Columbus & Southwestern traction line Just west of Kamm's Corners a western suburb of Cleveland. Philadelphia. SepL 20. Three persons, two men and a woman, were In-

stantly killed when tne automauuu which they were riding was struck by an electric train on the West Jersey & Seashore railroad at an unprotected grado crossing In Gloucester City. N. J. New York. Sept. 26.-An lutomo bile gliding down tho Church Hill in llastlnss-onthe-Hudson. after an allnight ride that started In Now York, jumped the road, crashed through a ..ti,n fmn shot over a stone em-

bankment and plunged 23 feet down Into a brook. Miss Marlon Morgan was killed and threo othors sevorely Injurod.

THE MARKETS.

Now York.. Pr-t 21.

LIVE STOCK Steers Hoics Sbwp IPLOCR Winter Straisht. VHBA.T-Spt ember r-OUN Septnlxr ÖATS-No. 2 White rtYB-Ko. t Weatfrn

ntTTElt-Cremry

CIIKESK CHICAGO. CATTI.U-Cholce Hoevos... riir.lt HoeC Cowh

Cows, IMntn to Fancy.

10 41 7 W y jq frH io It -IB O 3 SO 4 X) if 4 l OtW t C5H m c ts SI P M

em

57 00 4 36

4 00

Good rteor Halfan " w rnlves ?. 11

11008 Prime Heavy......... VLi... u'nifht mi tellers 9 M

tUvwiuiii " - n

9 0)

20 a

llnll.II . V"

'.Y.Y.'.'.'.'. 11

g s 49

b 5 75 6 5

(t 9 GT. 9 IS it 9 3.1

mo w

lightly on

train toon lire am, io cars er ho nccos8ilr,ea of fo mied with a loss of $50 000. Ton I'rtwpa 0 the pacAldrich were loaded with whisky. w .)rlnclpal cause of raising

Chicken Thief Gets Ten Years.

Mason City, la., SopL 26. One of the most severe penalties for a minor -rin.n over meted out In Iowa was

Imnoscd on Lcroy Billings, twenty-

elcht vears old, when Judge Fellows

sentenced him to ten years In tho Iowa penitentiary upon his conviction of tho charge of stealing chlokens.

n the principal uw ji raining

and perpetuating the high cost of living".

Anna E. Mcnois oi umcngo was nomlnntcd for trustee of tho Illinois university. Ccorgo S. Pago of Peoria, A. L- White of Vermilion county John IL Trcvett of Champaign, Isaac S. Raymond of Champaign, John G. McLennan and Fanny Hacker also wero nominated.

314 27 H tu

6 -6 5S 1 tßKtt 1 01

IW 62'4

llnlrv

UVB POULTRY KOOS POTATOKH fpor bu.) .. FLOUIt-SnrlriR Wheat Bp'l

jllA ",,l""' rii'

MILWAUKEE. KANSAS CITY.

GItAIN-Wheat. No. 2 Hard "n 2 lted - Corn. No. 2 White

Oats. No. wmic ttVrt

8T. LOUIS.

J DS 1 03 1 01&?? 1 W 51 1 514

t1 I A 1

6 77

J7 00 dp S 10

3 IJ V i i'l 8 75 4f 9 26

J 23 (ft 9 10 4 00 U 4 3S

CATTI.H NatlV'! Steers.. Texas SUrn

11008 racuers itutcliern

SHUEP-Natlvcfl

OMAHA. CATTLE Native Hteers 4 50 7 Jj Blockers anil Feeders.... 3W 6 Cows and Helfen 3 2 HOGS Heavy 5 29 S ! 2 BHEEr-Wethers 3 75 4

f,