Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 4, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 29 September 1887 — Page 7
NEWS OF THE WEEK.
Pulaski county, Ky. t had four murders last week. * Gas in lal'ge quantities has been struck near Watertown, N. Y. _ i Forest fires are raging about Foley, Minni, doing much damage. The Sovereign Grand Lodge I. 0. 0. F. will meet next year at Los Aneeles. The Presidents' western and southern trip will cost him slo,ooo,it is estimated. a ’ The Treasury consents to the duty free admission of rams for breeding purposes. ' , The gold coin and bullion in the federal treasury baß increased $3,540,833 in ten days. Colon d Republicans have been given a reprei ewtation on the New York * State Central Committee. The Cincinnati Union-Labor party voted Thursday not to intercede in behalf of the Chicago anarchists. A mass meeting of telegraph operators at New York, Sunday night, pledged support to the Henry George ticket. The price of hard coal has been increased all over the West owing to a gtrike of 22,000 miners in the Lehigh region. From January 1 to September 1, 1887, 362,839 immigrants landed in the United States, against 254,679 lor the same period in 1886. In a battle with a smugglers’ band near Laredo, Texas, recently, a United State's marshal’s posse killed four. The rest escaped.' The National Republican Committee will meet in Washington early in December to fix a time and select a place for the next Nalional convention. The assignment, of C. M. Foster & Co.f New York, dealers in plushes, made last December, has been set aside on account of fraud. Their liabilities were $1,000,000 and assets $750,000. C< ptrn John Freer, of the schooner Marsh, who is said to have assisted boodler McGarigle to escape to Canada, was arrested on his s arrival at Chicago Friday. He gave $4,000-bail. A game of cards for a quart of whisky at McKinney, Tex., Saturday, led to the death of Bud Scrivenor arid Ben Eakle Albert and Jim Turner and George Martin did the killing. All escaped. The selectmen of Malden, Mass., have let the vacant rooms in the public school building in that town to the Roman Catholics for parochial school purposes. Their action causes considerable comment. The President’s proposed trip is 4.436 miles long. He will travel with a special train, consisting of engine, baggage and supply cars and two sleeping coaches, and the cost of the trip will be $12,000. No special correspondents will be allowed on the train. It is said that the hatchet has been buried by ex Senator Wallace and Congressman Randall, of Pennsylvania, and that Wallace will present Randall’s name to the next Democratic National convention for President. Over ten Ihousand dollars’ worth of silks, laces and fine drees goods were seized at the New York custom-house Monday. It is thought they belong to a dressmaker named Kennedy. The goods had been skillfully sewed inside of goods or inferior value. FOREIGN. In Belfast Sunday night a mob wrecked an inn and pelted the police with stones. The police were reinforced and order was restored.
MICHAEL DAVITT TALKS.
O * TheEftglwh Government’s Policy Will Not Suppress the Irish People. Michael Davitt left Liverpool, Thursday, for New York. Before boarding the steamer he submitted to an interview, in wHch he said: “The order for the suppression of the National League will neither intimidate its members nor in the least degree set back the popular movement. It is slipplv impossible now to grush the movement. That would mean to put in prison three-fourths of the people'in Ireland. The immediate outlook is gloomy in the reme. I look with anxiety upon the coming winter, believing, as I do, that ne action of the government will provoke widespread disorder. If the people tamely submit to be deprived of the right of public meeting and freedom of peech, they will show themselves unworthy of home rule. We must fight, we must make sacrifices, for the principle of self-government. “I have already served nine years in prison. On returning to Ireland I have a good prospect of putting in more years in prison. I believe every earnest Nationalist is ready to do the' same. I never found a people readier to make sacrifices lor a national cause, I never knew of any people in: the world more tesolute to carry on a fight. It would be infinitely more agreeable if we were enabled to continue the struggle in a peaceful, constitutional manner, but the Tory government will not let; us. A policy of deliberate exasperation has been determined upon, by the Salisbury ministry. Upon them rests the responsibility for the coming events. By far the -worst feature of the present situation is the government’s plan of resorting to the worst kind of coercion in the interest of * r' landlords. They admit that thte present dual ownership Ought to he abolish-/ ~ ed. They recognize that the existing ]
system is a complete failure, vet the movement of Irish leaders to reform the land tenure is declared Illegal, and they themselves are denounced as criminals. Tbfrname of the League might be suppressed, but the thing itself will remain. I have always declared myself a separati on principle, denying the right of any people to invade the free- 1 dom and liberty of another people. I do not believe that the majority of Irishmen would be satisfied with a constitution like Canada’s,"which,however, would probably meet the exigencies of the case. Let me add that I hope Mr. Gladstone, the next time he tries his hand, will improve on hiß previouefforts. His plan was defective and undemocratic. The two order arrangement would never have worked. The fiscal burden proposed! was too heavy and an unjust exaction from country of which Mr. Gladstone, presumably in the interests of the empire, had already been the chief financial scourge. I would like to see Ireland as free as any other nation. I believe that the freer you make her the friendlier she will be.”
O’BRIEN CONVICTED.
Sentenced To Imprisonment f>r Three Months—Balfour Determined. The trial of Mr. Wm. O’Brien at Mitchelstown, charged by the Government with sedition under the crimes act, was concluded Saturday. The accused was found'guilty and sentenced to three months, imprisonment. Notice of appeal from the judgment of the court was j given. ----- Upon Mr. O’Brien's arrival at Mitchelstown for trial he was received with cheering by large crowds, which had gathered to welcome him. The crowd manifested great excitement, but there were no indications of disorder. Mr. O'Brien was immediately conveyed hy his guards to the court room. Many English ladies were present to witness the trial, and Mr ; O’Brien was the recipient of bouquets from a number of them. The trial was emphatically a one sided &tf.tir. No accurate account of the speech for which Mr. O’Brien was arraigned exists, and the valiant orator was convicted through the testimony of incompetent witnesses. The absolute unfitness of the Government reporters was aptly illustrated in this instance. Sergeant Foley, one of the officers on whose deposition Mr. O'Brien was arrested, swore that he wrote the words of the speech from his memory. He had forgotten to take his notebook with him to the meeting, an 1 hence was obliged to rely on his mental capacity for the speech. And on the testimony of tnis presumably prejudiced man, Mr. O’Brien, was convicted. The majority of the police reporters are illiterate, and are wholly incapable of rendering a verbatim report of anything, much less a speech in which much of the language used was entirely beyond their mental caliber.
OLD-TIME HURRICANE.
Visits Brownsville, TcxiiH—Damage Very Great. An old time hurricane visited Brownsville and Matamoras, Texas, Thursday night and Friday, 1 tsting thirty Pours. It struck Brownsville at nine o’clock in the evening and con tunned all night long, the howling being mingled now' and then with the crash of a fallen house, the rending sound of falling t.~ete, and the shouts of those imploring aid. The damage in the country is incalulable. Countless head of stock were lost, and the crops of cotton, corn and sugar cane are completely destroyed. In Brownsville the chief -sufferers are among the poor. Between sixty and eighty of the cheaper class of dwellings were destroyed and fully 300 unroofed and rendered uninhabitable. The loss is estimated at over $1,000,000. In Matamoras about 200 houses, nearly all of them very poor affairs, were blown down or unroofed. The floods are general.in all this territory and adds largely to the suffering and dathage. SI
DOES PROHIBITION PROHIBIT.
A Wichita, Kansai, Drug Clerk Rather Believes It Hoes. J. A. Stewart, of Wichita, Kansas, was Friday sentenced to seventeen years and four months in the county jail, and fined $20,800, with costs of prosecution, for ttie violation of the prohibition law. He was a clerk in. the West End drug store, and pleaded guilty to anindictment containing 2080 counts. Herman, the proprietor of the place, can not be fouiid. and it is thought that he has left the country. The punishment imposed upon Stewart is the heaviest ever given in the State for violation of the liquor laws. the President’s Trip. The President and wife will Washington Sept. 30, on a three-weeks western and southern trip. No officials will accompany the party, which will consist of the President and wife, Cpl. Daniel Lainont, Wilson S. Bissell and D-r. Joseph Bryant. The first stop is at Indianapolis, Saturday, Oct. 1, from II a. m. until 3 p. m; Terre Haute, from 5:30 to 6;15 p. m. Then to St. Louis, Chicago, Milwaukee, Madison, St. Paul, Minneapolis, Omaha, St. Joseph, Kansas City, Memphis, Nashville, Atlanta, Montgomery, thence to Washington.the, only stops being madn at the places named.
GRIND ARMY BOYS.
Many Thousands pf Veterans in Camp in the Parks of'St. Louis, An laimViiHH Aitmndarce of Veterans—* anil the Numbers K« k ep Increasing—The Fwrifrty - *; ' St. l oi-rs Vl q. . Sep . 26.—The boys in blue and their friends have taken the city by storm to-day, and from daylight until far into the night, one continuous procession of grip-sacks has poured itself out of the Union Depot. From six o’clock onward there was not a lapse of half an hour without a. train, and the local rec/ ption committee, although its numbers bad hem reii.forced, found it impossible to handle the people that crowded upon them. There were timfes when chaos reigned supreme, and even when the awful rush of the Knights Templars’ conclave wasmtore than surpassed. Up to 3 o’clock this afternoon the official reports to the headquarters of the local committee showed that, over 20,000 ex-soldiers wore already upon the ground, and, aB every train brought in more spectators than Grand Artpy men, it was figured out that fully 50,000 strangers were in the city. This! does not, probably, represent more than one-third of the number that will be here by to morrow, for the delegations from many of the principal States, including Illinois and Pennsylvania, as well as the big- excursion trains, are yet to arrive at this writing. Whether this great mu’titude can be housed, even if it can be fed, is a serious question. Not a room — not even cot space—remained at any of the hotels after 10 o’clock, and the clerks were driven well nigh to distraction by'the crowds that besieged the desks and begged and pleaded for even a place to lay their heads. Every lodg-ing-house within a radius of a mile of the old court-house is pretty well filled up, and plenty of people have been glad to s cure, accommodations two or three milesuway. The rush, in fact, has up. set all calculations. As an example accommodations had been ordered iri advance for 800 Californians, and when the train came in, what with wives, and children, and friends, they were 1,500 strong. The-same in a greater or less de gree is true of almost every delegation that has put iD an appearance. Tomake matters worse, the rain of to day has so thoroughly saturated the tents in which the rank and. file of the veterans were to besheltered. that rite prospect of their occupancy is anything but. inviting, and j the men who, a severe of yeaVsago, would | have been perfectly contented with .existing conditions, are hardly willing to and to the affirmities of advancing ate hv sleeping UDon the damp ground. The arrivals to-day included the divisions fritrp Kansas.Colorado,Tennessee, Georgia, Maine and Wyoming. Most of them brought either a band or a fifeand drum corps, and despite the rain and mud they marched merrily through the ptreets to the martial strains of the music. They hardly waited to get the dust from their clothes,or replenish the wants of the mn>r man, before they were mingling with the crowds in the lobbies of the hotels, seeking out old acquaintances, and renewing the associations of years gone by. Many an affecting drama was enacted as men who had not met Since the close of the war found themselves face to face. Hands were grasped with hearty fervor, shoulders were slapped, necks hugged, and every Conceivable mauiie-tatfou of joy and pleasure was indulged in by the grayneaded veterans. Every now and then somebody would start ‘‘Marching through Georgia” or some other war song, and the crowd would take up the refrain and make the welkin ring. Good nature and jollity were the order of the day and night, and altogether the veterans ape having such a time as they have seldom if ever had before. The feature of this encampment is the sheltering of la'ge numbers of old veterans in tents, tried at each encampment before in (small numbers. The plan gave such sat.isiaet.iou and pleasure that it was decided tans to house vast, nurnberg, and the executive committee arranged to care for a greater concourse of people in the field than has ever before been attempted in any land except in times of war. Perhaps no canvass city of such proportions has eter been built in so short ati me. Within two months 3,500 tents with ample room for 25,000 soldiers more than there is in the entire United States Army, have been put together and are now pitched in ten beautiful parktrof this city, all within a radius of two miles. The headquarters areconnected by telegraph and convenient todininghalls. A bale of straw makes mattresses ior each tent; the bed the soldier brings strapped on his knapsack or grips. Five hundred of these tents are pitched in Lvon Park, 300 in Concordia Park; in Hyde Park 500, Washington Park 550, Carr Place 700, St, Louis Park 300, Jackson Park 150, Forest Park 250, around the Court House and other public places 100. In the heart of the city for several days deserted walks, and white coverings were more like the city of the dead, but tonight an army of jovial and tried spirits crowd the way. The doubt would the boys take to the tents has been dispelled, for oti a rainy day more applications for sucb shelter have been made than tents are ready lor, but the neighborhood hoteis and boarding houses o€er relief for the surplus. In many caseß
the veteran will stop in the camp and bouse bis family near by! !, A peep within the tents this evening revealed touching scenes. The warrior citizdn only knows the feeling of such glorious reminiscences. Ever and anon surging crowds on the strfeet pause to hear this bugle call, and the stentorian voice calling out a name, company, , regiment and State, sometimes a call for a comrade not seen for years. Too often there is no response, but then again an answer, silence as they meet and then a jubilee. These camps are full of pathetic meetings after years of separation anddt is this that draws so many thousands of the boys in blue .together. This evening the visitors were entertained by receptions at the various post headquarters. The halls, beautifully decorated, have been thrown open ali day, and many comrades have accepted their hospitality. At Ransom Post a band entered on the scene with martial music, and IT. .8. Grant post of Eliza-, beth, N. J., presented Ransom post, with a handsome oil painting of General Ransom. Blair post was greeted by a number of speeches and was particularly aroused by Corporal Tanner, who touched on the flag issue, the President and possible insult to the Grand Army. Lyon, Hassepdeuble and Harding posts also kept open house to all visitors.
RANDALL AS A GRANGER.
He Talks About Agriculture to the Farmers of Illinois. Hon. Samuel J. Randall addressed an agricultural fair at Woodstock, 111., Thursday. Among other things he said: “The American people in all material elements which go to make up a nation’s prosperity and the happiness of her people have advanced more rapidly than any nation on the earth. We are reaching out towards the perfeetiWV of the science of agriculture. “If I can claim commendation for any public service I feel it is for my earnest efforts to appreciate and foster the resources of our National capabilities and wealth. I have come to realize that statesmanship after all consists chiefly in full and true knowledge of a nation’s resources, To-day-the United States in agricultural wealth and in- ■ come stands ahead of all civilized coun- ; tries, its income reaching according to undisputed authority in grain crops, cattle, forrestrv, etc., over $3,000,000,000 a year. This is a remarkable statement; one which, while arousing our pride, should prove an incentive to greater result. What we have we must retair. and gain more, and to do so we must establish mere scientific husbandry, which can be most effectively and surely promoted by such an organization.of farmers as this one I now address, and can be further accelerated in a great, degree by the practice of those economics on farms which have been too much fneglected. * * The agriculture of a nation is not only the means of private wealth and individual happiness, hut it is the power which sustains every other resource and interest. Agriculture and manufacturing should go hand in hand, and they have, for we stand at the head of all nations in agricultural productions and wealth. Referring to the result of agricultural products of the country he said: In 1876 the balance of our'trade with foreign nations amounted to $9,643,481; in 1881, {259,702,718. Where imports exceed the exports, a gradual‘drain of gold will commence to meet such debt, and a stringent period of money will come. You will at once see the importance to our financial soundness that our agricultural interests should in every way be kept up to its maximum- I ask that societies like the one I now address, be continued, broadened in their scope of service and organized in every direction, because they bring into farce on the farm every economy provided by science or skill. In the administrations of nations, negligence of ordinary economy brings bankruptcy and ruin; so, too, a like policy on the part of .the farmer is followed by disastrous failures. It is absolutely essential, if we are to out strip all competition, that we should realize the best products and lay them dow n where they are in demand at the cheapest prices. Tile AnarchiHtH. Gen. Roger A Pryor has been retained in behalf of the condemned Chicago anarchists. The attorneys will apply to the United States Supreme Court for anew trial on a writ of error. Gen. Pryor Friday Faidr “I am confident that we shall obtain the writ in time to prevent the execution of the condemned men. In my judgment, formed from Captain Black’s notes, the records will show so many errors that no great exertion will be necessary for us to win. The unexpected may happen, of course, but I have no fears.” Cholera in New York. The steamship Alesia arrived at New York quarantine, Friday, with her crew and passengers stricken with cholera. Twenty-three of the passengers are ill, one of whom will die. -The others are i m proving. Two deaths had occurred Saturday. * i _ A. Whole City Council Arrested. — J Wednesday morning the wijole com-; mon council, of Covington, Ky.— six teen in number—were arrested and jailed for contempt of court. The mater causes a profound sensation. i:. n
INDIANA STATE NEWS.
1 Madison is having a boat-building boom. ~ . The Selma (Delawarecounty) gas vyell is called a “howler from Trenton.” : ’ Anarchist circulars have been posted throughout Logansport by unknown parties. James A. Forest, a nenhew of* Rebel General Forest, is now a resident of Shelby county. Charles Pitzer, of Marion, forged notes to pay his wedding expenses. Sentenced to two years north. Jeffersonville is suffering an epidemic of typhoid fever, one physician having fifteen patients on his hands. Twenty-five car loads of coal, are brought into New Albany daily by the Air line from the-mines along the line. The large barn of James Jones, near Cowan, Delaware county, was burned by incendiaries, Sunday night. Lobs, $4,000. The frosts of Friday and Saturday nights did considerable damage to tobacco in Vanderburg county, and also in Kentucky. \ Wm. Adams, who attempted to rape i a little girl named a Laria Gabriel at i Marion, last May, has been given five years in the penitentiary. Virgo Simpson, who has twice escaped the penitentiary, on the insanity dodge, has been sent up five years from Switzerland sounty for burglary. Ann Gtay, who for sixty-two years continuously has been an inmate of the Dearborn county poor-house, died at at that institution Saturday at the advanced age of one hundred years. The L., N. A. & C. R. R. round house and shops at Michigan City burned to the ground early Sunday morning. Two engines were in the building and were destroyed. The loss exceeds $25,000.
Ice and frost, the first of the season struck tSeymour Saturday morning, doing vast damage. The watermelons, tomatoes, beans, buckwheat, late corn, etc., are about ruined. The last melons were fortunatly loaded the night before. The Quarterly Joint Association of Live Stock Breeders and Farmers met at Greensburg, Saturday afternoon. Rush, Shelby, Bartholemew and Decatur counties have united their associations into one, meeting quarterly, alternately, in each county. Alexander McPheeters, one of the richest men m- Vigo'countyj was fleeeed out of $2,000 by a sharp whq professed to be a son of W. R. McKeen, president of the Vandalia road, and said he had drawn $4,000 in a lottery and needed $2,000 to collect it, but didn’t want his father to know it. L. Presture & Co.’s furniture factory at Evansville caught fire and notwithstanding the efforts of the entire fire department, ’burned to the ground, adjoining property being saved with difficulty. The factory was one of the largest in the city and the loss on the building and stock will be $75,000. Walter D. Sloan, justice of the peace and postmaster at Smithland, Shelby county, who eloped with Mrs. Theodore Lee after the latter had procures a divorce two years ago, leaving his wife, has come hack with her, and they have settled down to live in the community with the wronged wife. Developments are expected. A disastrous fire occurred at the large works of the Haskell k Barker Car works company in Michigan City Saturday morning. Two large shops, one of them being the immense building used for setting up and finishing the cars, are totally destroyed, together with twenty new cars. The total loss will reach $30,000; partially insured. The shops will be rebuilt immedia'ely. The company employs 700 men, all of whom will be thrown out of employment for a few days. Tt is no wonder that burglars frequently get confused and break into the wrong house at New Albany, where here are two Albany streets, two Beech streets, two East streets, two Elm streets, four First streets, four Fourth streets, three Green streets, three. Jacki son streets, two Jefferson streets, two John streets, four Market streets, two Poplar streets, three Second streets, two South streets, four Third streets, two Walnut streets, three Washington treats, three West streets and two Vincennes streets. The industrial display in Evansville, Friday, the closing day of the FederalConfederate reunion, was a grand affair, the procession stretching out from ten to fifteen miles, being two hours passing a given point. The column was led by Gen. James W. Shackelford and staff. There were 150 .floats and about 200 display wagons. At the grounds in the afternoon the crowd was estimated at from 40,000 i o 50,000. Governor Buckner, of Kentucky, and Governor Isaac P. Gray were escorted to the grounds, and the former maeje a brief address, after which the competitive artillery drill took place. The township trustees of Wabash county have received an important decision from State Superintedent Lafollette, that is of interest all over the State. A question arose recently about trustees employing school teachers who did not hold license to teach beyond the time they sought employment. Several' teachers who applied under these circumstances were rejected, and appealed the case to Superintendent Lafolletto. He decides that they are eligible to employment lor a full term, whether or not
their license extends to the end of the term. Mrs. Nancy J. Ridgely, or North Manchester, Wabash county, has filed suit againt George W. Lawrence, August Mills* Wm. Kiraher and J. D. Spurgeon, demanding $3,500 damages for the lose onherßtockof millinery goods in that place, by. reason of the removal of the roof of the building she occupied, hv the defendants. Lawrence, Mills <k Co., are bankersand merchants of North Manchester and owned the premises in which Mrs. Ridgely did business. They notified her last May to move and have siHce refused to receive any rent from her. She failed to surrender possession and Spurgeon was set at work tearing out the building, exposing Mrs. Ridgely’s goods to a heavy rain. Her blind husband was prostrated in the melee and also sues for SI,OOO. The State Christian Temperance unon met in regular semi-annual session at Indianapolis, Wednesday. Not over a score of members were present, but much interest was manifested. Judge Robert Denny is the president and Dr. J, G. L. Myers, of Bloomingdale, secretary. The forenoon session was devoted to routine work, and the afternoon meeting to reports of work over the State. The entire membership of the union in Indiana is now 750, and over S3OO have been collected to piomote the work since the meeting last spring. Over 250,000 pages of temperance literature were distributed last year. The afternoon meeting was addressed by the president, who stated the aims of the organization and the plan of future work. At night Rev. W. H. Hickman, of Crawford3ville, delivered an address. The World’s Friends conference began at Richmond Friday. Friends say that the minute on the ordinance question will surely be reaffirmed, and -the hireling ministry idea will be roughly dealt with AH the yearly meetings oif the world, except Philadelphia, are represented. Philadelphia yearly meeting is too conservative to affiliate with the rest of the Quaker world. Singing in the meetings for worship, prayer-meet-ings, revivals, etc., to which the western Quakers are becoming ad dieted, are the points of issue between them. The first point of contention concerned the admission of Mary Rodgers, of Kansas. She has been baptized,and rejected as a delegate, not being allowed to speak in her own behalf. Her alternate accepted as a delegate. The question of ordinances is thus sure to be sprang.
Lord Churchill Talks to Farraers.
Lord Randolph Churchill, addressing a meeting of farmers „at York, Thursday,said the present kvw prices of wheat where ruinous to the farmers. As a politician, he had not a grain of comfort to offer them. A British farmer growing wheat did not seem to know when he was beaten. Lord Churchill says he foresaw nothing likelv to cause a rise in the price of wheat sufficient to afford a profit to the grower. Foreign imports were illimitable, not from America only, but from other sources. The farmers of England should realize thoroughly that India is a tremendous granary, and will continue to pour into the English market increasing quantities of wheat. This radical change in the conditions of farming should prepare all interested in agriculture to adapt themselves to changes.
A Big Oil Fire.
A great fire in oil occurred at Cygnet, an oil town thirty miles from Toledo, Ohio, Wednesday. Parker well No. 1, a great oiler, caught fire and the burning oil was scattered far and near. The tankage and rig was completely destroyed. Well No. 2 caught from the flames. Four tanks with their contents were destroyed, and the loss will reach hundreds of thousands of dollars. An explosion occurred and burning oil was blown through the woods for a long distance, and the bins and fences furnished ready food for the flames. The Crocker and other wells were included in the destruction. Eye witnesses declare the blaze reached 1.000 feet in the air, and the heat was . so intense that one could not get nearer than one-half mile of tne burning wells. One fatality is reported.
Color Line in Georgia.
The Georgia Legislature, Friday, passed a bill withdrawing Stale money from educational institutions where the races are mixed, and makes graduates ineligible for teachers’ places.
THE MARKETS.
Indianapolis, September 26, 1887 DRAIN. Wheat, No. 2 Med.,7l I Corn. No. 2, White, 15}4 No. 3 Med..7o I No. 2, Ye110w,42 No. 2 Red...70> 2 | Oats, No. 2, White... 26 Wagon wheat.7o | Rve 45 »•- LIVKSTTOOK. Cattle—Extra choice steer* ~....“.4 30a4.60 Good to choice steets . 3 80a 1.15 Extra choice heifers 3.1«a3.35 Good to choice heifers 2.8 a.i.53 Good to choice cows ~2.50a3.1,C Hogs—Heat? packing and shipping 4.90*5.90 Light and mixed packing 4.65a4.t>5 Pigs and heavy rough*,..,, 3.»0a4.35 Sheep—Extra choice :... 3.50at.00 —— Good to ch0ice........... : _i.50a3.25 EGOS, BETTER, POULTRY, Eggs j....../ 16e | Poultry.hens per lb ..8c Butter, creamery.......2lc | Roosters 4% “ fancy country 16c I Turkeys 8c “ choice country 12c ( Spring chickens 8c miscellaneous. Wool-Fine merino, tub washed.,. 33a600 *' do unwashed, med .....27a28c “ “ very coarse 20a23c Hav.cholcfl timothy HYOXSngErcuredrhtetfclalie Bran... 112.25 | Bacon clear sides 11c Flour, patent...4.4oa4.rt'>.. I Feat hers, prime eooseSn Extra iancv...3,65a5.90_ ( Clover seed 4,25 ' • . 2i — 1 Timothy 5eed......... 2.7 » Chicago. Wheat (Oct,,) 7074 P0rk...... 12.30 Corn “ 41 Lard t 6.45 Oats “ 25G, Ribs ..8.25 Otk stock. •_ C0w5....'.. ...LiOaitO " Rough pack4.9Qas.ls Stockers 2.0na8.75 Mixed packing & ship Sheep ...ji.'joal. oi iug 440>5 0
