Plymouth Republican, Volume 45, Number 32, Plymouth, Marshall County, 27 June 1901 — Page 1
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VOLUME 45.
U;cov HÄII1IA AT THE HELM Of a Political Convention Means That Business Will Ba Expedited. OHIO GATHERING MAEES A EEOOED Tash Renominated and a Stalwart Republican Platform AdoptedBryan's Statement. Columbus. O., June 20. The ticket lioniinated by the Republican state convention yesterday is: Governor, George K. Nar?h; lieutenant governor, Carl L. Xippert; supreme judge, J. L. Trice; attorney general. John M. Sheets; clerk of the supreme court, Lawsou E. Emerson; state treasurer, Isaac B. Cameron; member of board of public works, W. (J. Johnston. The convention was in session yesterday from 10:1 J a. m. to 1:10 p. m. and broke the Ohio record by completing its work In three hours. The GEORGE KILBON NASII. Intense heat was prostrating, and Chairman Hanna not only 'cut short own speech but also those of others and then dispatched business with the utmost speed. In those three hours the convention nominated a full state ticket, adopted its declaration of principles, indorsed Foraker as the Republican candidate for re-election as United States senator and completed the party organization for the campaign. Case of One New Nomination. Of the seven nominations only thr?e were new men and one of these Nippert, for lieutenant governor was nominated without opposition after Lieutenant Governor Caldwell had declmed renoniinatlon. The nomination that caused the most comment was that of Xippert The State Anti-Saloon League caused Caldwell to run several thousand behind his ticket in 1S09, and had vigorously opposed his nomination. There were frequent calls for Caldwell in the convention, but he could not be induced to take the platform or even rise in his seat. Nirpert has been principal of schools at Cincinnati and police prosecutor there. Like Caldwell he is liberal, and the State Anti-Salocn League expresses its displeasure because Xippert in the last legislature voted against the Clark local option bill. Meantime the representatives of the liquor Interests are very much displeased over what they term tbs enforced retirement of Caldwell. Summary of the Platform. The platform Is the first one to take cognizance of the new questions coming forward, and is stalwart Republican In tone. After eulogizing the party's achievements it declares that tariff schedules which will protect American labor against the low wages paid foreign labor mut be maintained, and reaflirms all declarations heretofore made by the Republican party in favor of reciprocity: It favors navy extension and subsidies N the merchant marine, and also the construction of a United States canal across the isthmus. It recognizes the right of both labor and capital to combine when such combinations are wisely administered for the general good: but declares combinations which create monopolies to control prices or limit production an evil; advocates the prompt re-enactment of the Chinese exclusion lav; praises the soldiers and sailors, and d clares for their preference in civil promotion ; denounces the efforts south to disfranchise the negro, and demands legislation in congress against that movement: declares against mob law; Indorses the foreign policy of .McKinley from the time we waged the "war forced upon the country"" to the Piatt amendment, and Including the Chinese imbroglio, and closes with an indorsement of Xash, Foraker and TTanna. BRlN IS NOT A CANDIDATE Tor Any Office. Nor Baa fie a Candidate in Hi Mind. Buffalo, X. "... June 20. The following over the signature of Mr. William Jennings Bryan appears In The Times, Norman E. Mack's paper, yesterday afternoon: "I am not, only. not a candidate for any olSce, but I have no candidate in my mind for any office. My interest centers in principles, and men are Important only as they aid in -carrying out these principles. "The Democratic party stands for definite, positive principles, and unless I mistake the sentiments of the masses the voters will insist upon adhering to .these principles in spite of the threats of reorg inizers. Those who argue from the standpoint of expedlency.will not have Influence with the voters, because no one can saj'that is expedient We may deserve tc. wln and yet lose, "but it still remain?, that to deserve to
win is the surest road to success." Watertown, X. Y.. June 2J. Hon. William J. Bryan lectured to 2,000 people here last night on "A . Conquering Nation." In an interview Bryan said that Senator Hanna was the logical candidate of the Republican party for president in 1004 because re represented the dominant force In .that party. Vice President Roosevelt, he said, represented "the warlike spirit which was developer! by a war of contiict." In reply to Senator Foraker's speech at Columbus. O.. Monday, Bryan said: "When Senator Foraker says that I am the only Intelligent man who does not admit that the defeat of 1S00 was a blessing to the country he makes an
L unjust reflection upon the intelligence or more than x,w)Ay) people, ror mere are that many wlio do not believe that a Democratic victory in iSiJG would hare brought disaster to the nation, and they are all sufficiently Intelligent to deserve the respect of Senator Foraker." LIGHTNING BURNS A COLLEGE Medical Department of the Illtnols University Is la Ahe. Chicago, June 20. During a heavy thunder storm last night a bolt of lightLing struck the College of Physicians and Surgeons on Harrison street, between Wood and Honore streets. The fire which followed the lightning in a short time destroyed the college building, which was one of the finest of its kind in the west. The lightning struck the college squarely on the top of a I projection In the roof, and such a tre mendous crash of thunder accompanied the flash that everybody in the neighborhood thought an explosion had. taken place in the college. Adjoining the college is the smaller building of the West Side hospital, which was filled with patients, about 100 being in the various wards. As soon as it was seen that the college could not be saved, and that Its walls were liable to fall at any time, the work of removing the patients from the hospital began. The rain was pouring heavily at the time, but there are so many hospitals and medical institutions in the neighborhood that it was necessary to remove the people only a short distance, and the moving Was done safely. The College of . Physicians and Surgeons i the medical department of the University of Illinois, situated at Champaign, Ills. The loss on building and equipment is practically total, ?ind will approximate ?2PQ.ooo. BEALES GOT HIS DESERTS Bat Perhaps It Would Hare Been Better Had He Hanged. Seattle, June 20. The Dawson Dally News of June 7 says: Dick Beales was shot to death by Mrs. Thomas Herudon, near this city, while the woman's husband stood by and prayed that her hand could not fail at the trigger. ETerndn had een searching for his wife for the past three years. A chance clew led him into the Klondike region last winter, and near Dawson Herndon found his wife, deserted and suffering.- She had been persuaded by Dick Beales that Herndon was dead, and had been married to Beales. After confessing his duplicity to the woman he had wronged Beales. It ;s alleged, shot and rot bod his partner, Jeff Alexander, and taking possession of a dog team loaded with provisions started off, followed by several parties, among them Herndon and- his wife, who overtook him near Mcldon's cabIn on the AnvlL where the killing occurred. - . NOTED LECTURERDSAD Joseph Cook. Who Tried to Harmonize the t Bible and Darwin. . Whitehall, X. Y., June 26. Joseph Cook, the distinguished lecturer and author, is dead at his summer home in Ticonderoga. He was born Jan. 26, ISaS. He had been in 111 health' for several years. Joseph Cook Is best remembered by his efforts to show in his lectures the harmony of the Bible with science. The well-known lecturer had been in failing health for some time. Overwork had shattered his iron constitution and impaired his rigorous mental power, and his friends had realized the seriousness of his condition for several years. 8ita of the St. LooU Fair. St Louis, Mo., June 20. At its regt lar monthly meeting yesterday the board of directors of the Louisiana Purchase Exposition company unanimously selected Forest Park as the site for the location of the world's fair, to be held in this. city in 1003. Over 1,000 acres are available, and the site Is Ideal. Impure Cheese Slakes Them Sick. Hartford City, Ind., June 26. William Sparks, with' his wife and two children, were alarmingly prostrated last night, the result of eating impure cheese, and the little daughter of Lon , Underwood, who was visiting the Sparks family, was also attacked. They are all convalescent. ' Daughter Died of the Shock, Fort Wayne, Ind., June 26. Mr. Wilhelmina Meier, aged 63 years, died Monday from blood poisoning caused by using carbolic acid to cure a sore foot Her daughter Anna was prostrated by the shock and died at 5 p. m. i Veteran. Hilled by a Train. Hartford City, Ind., June 26. Philip Younts, 65 years old, an inmate of the Marion Soldiers' Home, was killed by a Panhandle switch engine between this city and Upland Monday evening. Owes Ills Life to a Bib. Spencer, Ind., June 26. James Green, who was. shot by Alexander McBride, last Saturday night, at Freedom, will probably recover, the bullet navmg neen deflected ty a rib.
PLYMOUTH, INDIANA,
FIFTY LIVES WEHT OUT And $2,000,000 in Property Was Destroyed by the West Virginia Cataclysm. 00RP0EATI0NS LOSE ONE MILLION, While the Other Million Falls on PrU Tate Citizens Dead Washed Out of Graves. Bluefield, W. Va., June 26. The West Virginia flood situation has not many new developments, but it Is authentically stated that the loss of life has been greatly overestimated. The most conservative estimate obtainable places the loss of life at about fifty, a greater part of whom are colored miners and their families. A great many more are missing and supposed'to have been swept away. The .Norfolk and Western Railway company will lose, at a conservative estimate, $500,000, not taking into consideration the delay to traffic, etc. It will be four days before any traffic can be resumed. The loss to the coal operators will reach about $100,000. outside of the delay at the mines in loading, etc. Pias This Million Dollar Item. The amount of property lost by private parties is very heavy, and cannot be estimated at this time. It is thought it will reach the million dollar mark. General Boggs and Colonel Hudson, of Governor White's staff, arrived yesterday to hold a conference with the general superintendent of the Xorfolk and Western railroad to ascertain what assistance is needed by the state authorities. Until traffic Is resumed and all communication opened it will be Impossible to estimate with any degree of certainty either the loss of life or to property. One point regarding the death roll is that many who have been missing and mourned as dead have turned up alive. First List of the Known Dead. Below are given the names of some of the dead so far as recovered: Joe White, Xellle Smith, Anna Smith and Charles Sheely, all white: Mrs. McCoy, Sam Poindexter, John Ballard. Bettie Brown. Trigg, Jacob Rlfiin and John Bannister, all colored; mother and babe, unknown. The colored man Trigg floated down a stream on the roof of his shanty. When near the railroad he jumped and struck his head against the rail, dashing out his brains. The nams of four persons drowned at Poundinjr Mill, Tazewell county, are: Mr. Tate, 30 years of age; Mrs. Hoops and two children. damage Done at Keystone At Keystone, a town of 2.000 Inhabitants, thirty buildings were deluged and greatly damaged. The contents of many other houses were seriously damaged. The railroad bed was washed out to a depth of twentyfive feet. The huge drift west of the town has a house witu a tree driven into the door on its top. Many dead bodies are supposed to be confined in this pile of debris. At Shawnee, where the beautiful homes öf fhe officer!? öf the Shawnee Coal company were located, with their fine lawns and tennis courts, the river Is now running. Vivian Yard is a complete wreck. Hon. William Jennings Bryan has telegraphed the Y. M. C. A. that he will deliver a lecture at Pocahontas on the night of July 2. the proceeds to be given for the relief of the destitute. OREW503IE CACE OF MISTAKE. Wild Waters Wash Away a Graveyard and Its Dead Are Released. Roanoke, Va.. June 26. A gentleman arriving In this city yesterday from the flood-stricken section of West Virginia gives as an explanation of the report first circulated that great masses of human bodies were to be eeen floating around in the water that there is a graveyard between North Fork Junction and Keystone, which towns are about a mile apart, and at which point the tonn was very severe. Eh.H graveyard is near the bank of the river. Whea the flood came the graves gave up their dead and added greatly to the number of bodies seen. J. B. Frances, a Roanoke man who is ir Keystone Installing a wafer plant and who was first reported dead, has written bis wife telling her he is safe and sound. He has the following to say about the disaster. "A big flood visited the town last Friday night Everybody had to go up on the mountain. Men, women and children were drowned . In the streets, and houses want floating down the streams with people In them. All our crowd are safe. We are entirely cut off from the L outside world and provisions are get ting short. , There Is now no water In the town." . Another letter from Keystone says between ten and fifteen people were drowned and forty houses washed away at that place. A report received here that the father, mother, one sister, two brothers and a sister-in-law, with two children of J. W. Crotty, of the Xorfolk and Western railroad, were drowned was, a mistake. Crotty Is now in the coal fields and telegraphed that they were all safe. Tazewell, Va., also suffered from the flood. The house of Paris Vandyke, four miles west of Tazewell, in a gorge of the mountains, was washed away. Vandyke heard the roar of water and started home from the field. When a short distance from the house he saw the water rushing down the mountain sides, tearing up and twisting off giant trees as if shrubs, the water leaping forty, feet high and traveling with frightful, SDeed. Van-
THURSDAY, JUNE 27,
dyke rushed for the house to warn nis family, but the water overtook him and swept the house and all Its Inmates away. Two children were Instantly killed. A little girl holding a young sister In her arms, was carried 200 yards. Another member of the family died Monday afternoon, and Vandyke Is still unconscious and cannot live. At Pounding Mill four lives were lost. "DEL" HAY IS BURIED Dls Body Sleeps on a Ulli That Overlook Jim Forest City of Ohio. Cleveland. O., June 26. In a grave on a magnificent hill that overlooks the city In beautiful Lake View cemetery the body cf the lamented Adeloert Stone Hay was laid to rest yesterday afternoon. The funeral party arrived in Cleveland from New Haven at noon and the funeral services were held in the Wade mortuary chapel a few hours later. The floral tributes were so many that they entirely covered the asket. The classmates of the deceased at Yale were the honorary pall-bearers. Secretary and Mrs. Hay showed evidence of the great sorrow they felt, and Mrs. Hay was so nearly prostrated that her husband had to assist her nearly all the time. The religious services within the chapel were conducted by Rev. Dr. Hiram C. Haydn, the venerable pastor of Old Stone Presbyterian church. Haydn delivered a funeral sermon in which he paid eloquent tribute to the worth of the deceased. OFFICIALS TAKE THE RISK They Will Oo Down Into the Fatal Pit to Hunt the Dead Miners. Tort Royal. Pa.. June 26. Interest was revived at this place yesterday owing to a dftermined effort which is to be made by the company officials to get Into the fatal pit and bring forth tae bodies of the thirteen men killed In the explosion two weeks ago. The plan Is to brattice the main shaft and divide the air supplied by the fan so that enough will be driven down one side of the new brattice and 'P the other side, making the turn at ihe face, to supply an exploring party with air. Th party is composed of prominent officials of the company, who prefer to rlk their own lives rather than ask the workmen to take the hazard. From Strator to Toledo. Warsaw. Ind.. June 2G. The directors of the Toledo and Chicago Railway company who propose to build a line from Steator. Ills., to Toledo, O., a distance of 3T0 miles, held a meeting here yesterday. Engineer R. A. Hamilton, promoter of the project, has completed the work of securing a right-of-way which touches Rensselaer, Winamac. Rochester. Warsaw, Wawasee, Llgonier and from thence almost parallels the Lake Shore railroad into Toledo. Confutation Will Hars to TJastle, X'ew York, June-20. It is safe to say that not since the yachts Vigilant and Alisa were built have they received such a defeat as that administered yesterday by the sloop Columbia In the race for the Glen Cove cups. Many who watched the Columbia yesterday agree that she Is many minutes faster than two years ago when she met the Shamrock I. She beat the Vigilant nineteen minutes and' fiftyfive seconds oyer a fifteen-mile course. To Become Related to Royalty. Buffalo, X. Y., June 20. The wedding of Count Franz Joseph von Taris h. of Austria, a nephew of the emperor of Austria, and Miss Marie Satterfiel d. daughter of the late John Satterfield. ,the Standard Oil mpnate, will take place at the Satterflelu home In Delaware avenue tomorrow afternoon. "Fired" for Printing an Irish Blast. Melbourne, June 26.- Amid scenes of excitement In the crowded galleries the federal assembly yesterday, by a vote of 64 to 17, expelled Finlay, editor of a local labor organ, for republishing In his paper the article from The Irish People, of Dublin, dated May 10, violently attacking King Edward, which caused the seizure of the last mentioned weekly periodical by the police. She ilay Öe MUs FlieTd. Manteno, Ills., June 2G. A young woman supposed to be Miss Helen Fifleld, whose mysterious disappearance fro"m Janesvllle created such a stir, is detained here awaiting the arrival of persons who can Identify her. She arrived here Monday in company with a traveling .man, who gave his name ai Samuel Warner and his residence as Madison, WT3L tr - Street Car Cat DTIe Head Off, Lemont Ills., June 26. John McGauley, a well-known young man of this place, was killed by a street car three miles south of here. The head was completely severed from the body. McGauley was returning from a visit to Lockport and fell from one car directly In front of another. Another Ship In With 8oldiera. San Francisco, June 26. -The army transport Grant arrived from Manila Monday with the Forty-eighth and Forty-ninth volunteer Infantry. The regiments are colored, were recruited in the south, and have been for nearly two years in the Philippines. Mystery in This Han's Death. Grantsbnrg, Wis., June 26. H. W. Snndler, a prominent citizen of Wood Lake, near here, was Cound dead yesterday with a bullet hole through his heart Conflicting stories are told as to the cause of his death. Consolidation of Light Providers. Sioux City, la., June 26. A business consolidation had been effected by which the Sioux City Gas company and the Sioux City Electric company have been consolidated with & capital stock of $1,500,000.
1901.
OF Law Passed That Makes Null the Statute That Outlaws the Trusts. SAD STORY OF FAMILY MISERY Told by a Woman Who Wants a vorce Dresser's Postofflce Is Unique. Di Indianapolis, June 20. The discovery has been made that the law requiring foreign corporations to incorporate in Indiana to ' the amount of capital invested by them in this state practically nullifies the anti-trust law of the last session of the legislature, for the trusts, all of which are organized in Xew Jersey, are paying the required fees to the secretary, of state and are receiving certificates from that office authorizing them to do business in this state. Cannot Refne a License. ,The steel trust is expected to comply with the law in a few days, and a certificate will be issued to It. When asked if it were not his duty, under the anti-trust law, to refuse licenses to trusts to operate In Indiana Secretary Hunt said that the law does not make it his duty to inquire whether or not the corporation is a trust. In other words, he feels compelled to authorize any company which complies with the law by paying the required fees to transact business in this nutate, and has no power to Inquire whether it is or is not a trust. Was Entirely Too "Fatherly." Indianapolis, June 20. Adolph Glick, grocer, was tpied yesterday in Justice Loekman's court on the charge of assaulting Mrs. Jennie Fulton. This is the story she told on the witness stand: "I went Into his store to buy some groceries, and he put his arm around my neck and kissed me and hugged me. I told him to stop, but he aid he was just being fatherly he Is (JO years old and cautioned me not to tell my husband." Justice Lockman decided that by acting "fatherly" Glick had offended to the extent of $10, fine and costs. SATS HER UCSBAXD IS A BRUTE. lells Some Shocking Stories of Ills Cruelty to nis Children, Marion, Ind., June 20. Mrs. Mary Wright, wife of Jacob Wright a prominent and wealthy landowner and stock dealer, filed a suit in the circuit court Monday for a divorce from her husband. : In the complaint Mrs. Wright makes SOmO Behraifonal allega--tions. She says they had four children three boys and one girl; that the husband whipped the daughter, who was 10 years of age, with a heavy stick, striking her on the head and face until the flesh was mangled and the lips and face cut and bruised while the child was screaming and begging for mercy. He continued beating her until she fell to the floor helpless and sens eless ahd bleeding profusely. TEe little girl became worse and never recovered from the assault and died soon after. Mrs. Wright also alleges that her husband beat their son, George, with a hevy club used as a poker, striking him on the head, knocking him down and rendering him senseless, thus causing him to become Insane. Great Thing for the Postmaster. Dresser, Ind., June 26. Harry Kramer, postmaster of the Indiana Mineral Springs, receives a salary of $1,400 per annum; the largest salary paid any postmaster In the United States, considering the population of the town, which is composed of about seventy people, and Is not incorporated. It is the headquarters of health sanitariums which do extensive advertising through the malls. .. tir .ZTZ', -r Sailen Man Hang's Himself, Llgonier, Ind., June 26. Milton Kaufman, clerk in the clothing store of M. Jacobs & Co., this city, hung himself in the rear of the warehouse at 3 a. m. Monday. He had been In this country seven years, and by his industry and thrift had accumulated considerable mony, but was of a morose and6ullgll disposition. He waa 22 years old and unmarried. Had Views About Funerals. Frankfort, Ind., June 26. Adam Bllnu, one of the oldest and bestknown residents of this county, died Monday morning. He requested that no funeral sermon be' preached, that no hearse be used, and that his body should be buried at 6 o'clock Monday evening. His wishes were complied with. . . De.tli SrHd a Double Event, s r.iu-r.:?, In 1, June 2::. The mar riage t f Ttsler, of Frankton, and Mrs. . Ani.a I'uuKliciiser, a bcardingUouse keeper, cccuned a week ago. It h.is been kept a secret. Mrs. Funkliousei's darghter. Sophia, was to have been married to Fesler's son. but the biide-eLc t died two weeks ago. t Sympathy for Secretary Hay. Washington, June 20. Official business at thu cabinet meeting yesterday gare way to expressions of sympathy with Secretary . Hay In his bereavement. President McKinley has written a letter to the secretary eixpressIng sympathy. There was at the meeting an Informal expression of the hope that Colonel Hay will not resign and should , he suggest such a step, both the president and the cabinet will advise against it.
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GOES INTO A WASHOUT BRINGING DEATH TO FIFTEEN Report of a Terrible Disaster on the Wa. hash Dozen Passengers Killed. Peru, Ind., June 26. West-bound passenger train No. 3. on lue Wabash railroad ran into a washout at Cass, fifteen miles west of here, at 12:20 a. m. today, wrecking the engine and five cars. It is reported that fifteen persons were killed. The train was running at high speed to make up lost time, and when nearing Cass, a switch five miles east of Logansport, plunged through a trestle that had been swept away by a washcut caused by the recent heavy rains. The engine was totally demolished and the three passenger coaches and two baggage cars were derailed and overturned. Every doctor In Peru was summoned, and a relief party left here at once for the scene of the wreck. Details are meager, but it is rumored that Engineer Butler and Fireman Adams and at least a dozen passengers were killed and manjimore nijured. Many of the killed and icjured were Italian immigrants, of whom a large party was on the train. The relief train brought 27 wounded to this city this morning, half of them women. It is expected that the list of dead will be increased when the wreckage is cleared from the creek, When daylight catne the full horror of the disaster was revealed. The dead were lying in almost, every corner and wounded passengers were huddled in groups moaning and begging for aid. Charged with Stealing Grain. Paxton, Ills., Jun- 20. R. G. Risser, company, has caused the arrtst of P. E. Alvord, treasurer of the company, for the larceny of 2;000 bushels of oats. Alvord was placed under $1.000 bonds. Fight Children ee the Tragedy. ' Louisville, June 26. Before the eye? of their e:cht children lightning struck Mr. and Mrs. George Weis dead Monday on their farm at I-Yrci Creek, nine miles from Louisville, Ky. NEWS" FACTS 11? OUTLINE The Fortieth infantry has been mustered out at San Francisco. Japan demands 57.012.247 as her share of the Chinese indemnity. Richard Friedman, of Boston, insane from overstudy, killed his sister Rosa, shot at Helen, another sister, and then committed suicide. Thugs strangled and robbed Mrs. John Koach in front of her home at Chicago. V.iholas Schwlckerlach, of Chicago, who Loll from a roof while asleep, diet later. , . .
ram ivruger s tr;emis aeny that -ne wr has sent a wreath In honor of Adelbert S. Hay. E. H. Palmer, of St. Taul, SO years old, Is the father of a fine baby boy. His wife Is 76. Alfred Anderson, of West Superior, Wis., killed his wife because she had been away from home all night. There was serious street fighting at Pampeluna. Spain, as the result of a second jubilee procession. The Pyndron national bank at Springfield, Mass., has been closed by the national bank examiner. Depositors will get 100 per cent
THE MARKETS. Chicago Grain and Produce. ""V Chicago, June 23. Following were the quotations on the Board of Trade today: Wheat Open. High. Low. .65?i .66 Close. .66$ .43V3 .44 .26T4 .26i 6Si July $ .654 6eptemher .. .66U Oorn July September .. OatJuly August S$ptömbr Pork.43 4lVi .26 26U .26& .43 ."ft 27H .26 .26 .43 44U .264 July 14.82H 14.82V4 14.T0 14.72 14.92U September .15.05 15.10 14.90 LArd J&3 8 83 September ..8.90 October 8.85 fihort Bibs July :..r...;. 8.10 September .. 8.22 October ...... 8.12 8.83 S.72H 8.75 8.90 S.77& 8.S0 8.85" 8.75 8.77 8.10 8.10 $.10 8.23 8.17 8.20 8.12 8.07 8.10 Produce: 19c pr lb: Butter Extra creamery. Pr lb: extra dairy. 14S17o: rack ing itocic, izl3c. Eggs Fresh stock, 10llc per doz. Live PoultryChickens, hens, 8c per lb; spring's, 15 16c; ducks, 7c; turkeys, 57c; geese, $3.00 6.50 per doz. Apples Fair , to choice, $3.003.00 per bbL PotatoesEarly Ohio, 7075c per bu. Sweet Potatoes Illinois, 50 75c. Chicago Live Stock. Chicago. June 25. 1 Hogs Estimated receipts for the day, 13,000; sales ranged at 4.605.S0 for pigs, $5.856.13 for light, $5.85g5.S5 for rough packing, $5,90(36.22 for mixed, and 6.00S6.3a for heavy packing cnJ shipping lots, with the bulk of sales at J6.O56.20. Cattle Estimated reoeiyts for the day, 2,000; quotations ranged at 15.90 6.80 choice o extra steers, 13.505.90 good to choice do., $5.20 5.60 fair to good do., 14.655.15 common to medium do., $4.5504.83 butchers' steers, $3.10 6.15 fed western steers, $2.S04.SO stockers and feeders. $i.004.75 cows, $2.60 ,5.15 heifera $2.654.65 buJls and oxen, 2J.755.00 stas, $4.40(5.33 Texas steers, and $4.50?6.25 veal calves. Sheep and Lambs Estimated receipts for th eday, 10,000; quotations ranged at $3.50(4.30 westerns, $2.734.30 natives, $4.6005.23 western lambs, and $4.25 C5.75 native lambs. Milwaukee Grain. - Milwaukee, June 25. What Lower; No. 1 northern, 68et No. 2 northern. 65 63c; July, 65?it?63'40s September, 66$8c. RyeSteady; No. 1, 49c Barley Dull; So. 2, I5c;.cn pie, SSCUc, Oata Dull; No. 2 white, 2c.
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