Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 12, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 November 1887 — Page 3

NEWS OF THE WEEK.

' Cincinnati is short in coal. Coal has taken another raise. Typhoid fever prevails in New fork state. Irving Hall Democracy talk of disbanding that organization. Anti-music United Brethren threaten to withdraw from the church. Senator Colquitt, of Georgia, is likely to succeed Lamar as secretary of the interior. The strike of negro plantation laborers in Louisiana has ended, the men going back to work.

England is now “wild” Sullivan the slugger, he creating even a greater sensation than Buffalo Bill. The northwest saw milling season is over. The cut was 2,000,000,000 feet, or #0,000,000 less than last year. The members of the British fishery commission were formlly presented to the President at noon, Saturday. Another bandit—the twentieth—has been caught at San Miguel, Mexico. The last one caught has been shot. Ex-Senator Tabor has struck it rich again in the Matchless mine, where the metal was supposed to have been exhausted.

The Union Labor party convention of Wisconsin almost unanimously tabled a resolution condeming the elocution of the anarchists. At the government diffusion process experimental station in Louisiana a yield of 200 pounds of sugar to a ton of cane was obtained. Forest fires in the swampß about Gohenda, 111., have burned much hay and houses and barns. One young man has been burned to death. The National Grange has adopted a resolution looking with favor upon cooperative societies, but denouncing all forms of socialism and anarchy. Civil Service Commissioner Oberly has joined Mr. Edgerton in opposing Mr. Lyman’s proposition to extend the scope of the civil service law. ——

An teroli'te' weighing three tons dropped in front of a bank in the streets of Amsterdam, N. Y., Friday, making a deep indentation in the ground. Jt is said that indictments for murder still stands in the Chicago courts against about seventy-five anarchists, and at the first break they will be executed. Captain Thomas C. Ring, an old and wealthy citizen of Newburg, N. Y., was bunkoed out of $6,000 in that city, Friday, by mean&of the old lottery dodge. State Senator Ketcham, of St. Louis, has been convicted of illegally registor- . ing the names of a lot of mythical peo*. pie just before the general election last fall. •

Ex-Congressman Sweet, of Portland, Maine, in an interview expresses the opinion that IVIr. Blaine will he renominated and wiil be defeated by Mr. Cleveland. During the year ended June 30 last, there was a reduction of $103,471,097, in the debt. Government receipts from all sources $371,403,007; expenditures, $266 932.179. The W. G. T. U., in its session at Nashville. Friday, re-elected Miss Francis E. Willard president. A missionary board was created to further the gospel work ic all sections. Mrs. Herman B. Fay, a “materializing medium,’’ in Boston, who has been doing a big lousiness, was completely exposed Friday afternoon by a delegation sent out by the Record. A sensation has been caused at the poor farm, near, Hudson, Wis., by the discovery there of a genuine leper in the person of Martin Donaldson, who came from Ceylon a few years ago. The story is circulated among New York clnb men that Allen Thorndike Rice, of the North American Review, won $22),000 from Pierre Lorillard. a baccarat in the Union club recently. Dwight L. Moody Sunday inaugurated a series of revival meetings at Pittsburg, at the Grand Central rink. The services

Sunday were attended by over 12,000 persons. There were fifty conversions. It is reported at Fort Worth that Indians are burning the Oklahoma country. No cause is assigned for the alleged outbreak. The supposition is that there is’ an uprising against “boomers.” Sheriff Matt Lair, while out on offhial business in the northwestern part of Fayette county, put-up at a farm house over night, and in the morning discovered some Che ky thief had stolen his horse.

Hog cholera is reported to the Illinois Jive stock comtnis-ion as prevalent in nineteen comities in the State* In some counties the fa'alittes have amounted to 70 per cent, among the young stock and 50 per cent, of the mature stock. The New York Supreme Court, Friday, refused to admit Hong Yen Chang, a young Chinamen, as a member of the bar, he having passed the examination. His application was denied on the ground that he was not a citizen and that he .could not become one. The conference of the M. E. Church south has- *di pt- d the following resolution. “Resolved. That we are profoundly convinced of ihe evil character and influence of the theater, and of its power as a promoter of irreligion, immorality and vice.” A party of for y surveyors and their assistants, um'er the immediate control of Civil Engineer R E. Peary, will leave -New York City on next Saturday on the

steamer Hondo for Nicaragua, for the purpose of makingminute and extended eurveys of the canal route. Nina Van Z&ndt is said to be endeavoring to starve herself to death. She has eaten no food since the anarchists were executed.

Deputy United States Marshal George Jacks, who is at Grand Rapids, Mich., attending the United States couid, was arrested, Friday night; charged with robbing several Muskegon stores. A quantity of the missing goods, including forty rolls of Cloth and several clocks, were found in his room. The federal land officer at Eau Claire has notified the Wisconsin Central railroad that 2,800 acres of the land in the Central’s indemnity have been entered by settlers under interior withdrawals. More settlers will go on, despite the railroad company’s threat to prosecute all persons encroaching, pending selections. i

Suit was brought in the Commom Pleas Court of Hamilton county, Ohio, Friday, by the Cincinnati, Hamilton and Dayton Railroad Company, against Henry S. Ives, Russell Sage et. al, for cancellation of $4,600,000 worth of preferred stock issued by Ives and George H. Staynor. which, the complainants assert was not legal. The committee having the matter in hand have decided to present to John Greenleaf Whittier, on the occasion of his eightieth birthday, a suitably inscribed memorial, to be signed by the public men of Massachusetts, the Governor, Senators and members of Congress, in grateful recognition of the poet’s services to the commonwealth and the na ion.

The Musical union was expelled from the New York Central labor union, Sunday, for refusing to order out the orchestra of the Union Square theater, where non-union carpenters are employed. A motion by building trades section to revoke the resolution passed at a former meeting, which expressed sympathy with the Chicago anarchists, was table. —■ - roKKiGN.: The Czar and Czarina of Russia arrived in Berlin, Friday,and was received with great ostentation. An interchange of visits between the Czar and his dignitaries and the Emperor of Germany, Bistnark and their dignitaries, followed.

NO MORMONS NEED APPLY.

Two Proxetytei-R Tarred and Ifeatl»«red— Four Harried Women Induced to Start for Vtah, For'the past three months a party of six Mormon elders have been prosehing in the vicinity of Calera, Ala., and also at several small towns across the Georgia border. Several converts were made at the latter places, and the indignation and wrath of the people could hardly be suppessed, when, on last Sunday, four married women and two men left their homes and made public their intention of going to Utah. The people then rose up at once, and gave the elders notice to move on instantly. They refused at first, but on Monday night two of them were taken out and tarred and feathered, and the next night two others were chased into the woods by hounds, and kept in the trees all night."~ The elders left the next day, and the converts are now missing, also leaving six forsaken homes. If the elders ever return there they will be shot on sight. The Mormons then moved into Alabama and began*: heir work in the lower part of Shelby county among the ignorant country people. They were more successful there, and have already baptized a dozen or more. On Tuesday, while Elders Mower and Sea were conducting a meeting at a log school bouse, fifty armed men dragged them from the pulpit. They were car ried into the woods, the mob threatening to hang them at every step, but on the intercession of friends they were released on their written promise to leave the county in twenty-four hours. Death was the alternative if they returned. Both left that night, but without their converts, escorted a portion of the way by an armed band of nearly 100. Patrols are on guard, and publicly announce their intention of killing the fiist elder who returns there. A rumor was current that Elder Masters was killeit near the Georgia line by bloodhounds, but it cannot be substantiated.

Possible Betrayal of Stanley. News received by mail from the Congo says that Tippoo Tib failed to keep his promis-t to reinforce the explorer Sianley at Yambuya. Whether his failure was due to treachery, or to the opposition of the neighboring tribes is not known. It is unofficially rumered here that their has been fighting between natives and Stanley’s force, and that the rear guard of the latter has been cut off.

Heavy Verdict for Damages. In the circuit court, at Batavia, N; Y., the widow of John Mullen, late of Stafford, received a verdict of $35,000 against the Erie Railroad company for killing her husband at the Main street crossing inlß an 111 e excursion train. H df h Pope Leo; - • • • The pope, referring to the jubilee gift from tne house of Savoy, is reported to have said: ‘ King Humbert would please me most by restoring me to my city of Rome.

INDIANA CONDENSED.

Ft. Wayne is experiencing a water famine. Mount Verudn is enforcing the 11 o’clork saloon law. A woman’s suffrage club is being or ganized at Wabash. Albert jVlichael, of Indianapolis, was sentenced, Friday, to sixteen years imprisonment for criminal assault on his 8 year-old daughter. John McCleery, while under the influence cf rum, jumped from the second s‘ory wifidow of the Biuffton court house, Friday, and was fatally injured.

Net Turiier, deacon in the African Baptist church, at Jeffersonville, shot his wife thrice dangerously, Friday night. The crime was caused by jealousy. Turner escaped. Abraham Weil, of the firm of Weil Brothers &Co., of Fort Wayne,has sued P. A. Randall, an attorney, for SIO,OOO for slander in saying that Weil set fire to Randall’s building to obtain insurance on his own goods. George Rich, aged about fifty-five years, employed in a saw mill in Uniondale, fourteen miles southeast of Huntington, fell on the circular saw and was cut to pieces. He was horribly mangled and death oocurred instantly. Ransom Happing, a wealthy young farmer boy of Delaware county, has been sentenced to two years in the State i penitentiary. He was charged with horse stealing. The offense was committed while he was drunk.

An nnusual astronomical phenomenon was witnessed at Crawfordsville, Friday, and might have been seen elsewhere. A star could be plainly seen with the naked eye in the southwestern heavens in the bright light of a mid-day sun. It was Venus. . Two dynamite cartridges were discovered in a large flour mill at Peru by workmen engaged in repairing the mill. One was concealed among the wheat on the first floor and the other on the second floor. Either of them was large enough to destroy the building, A Board of Trade, composed of the leading business men at Wabash, was organized at a spirited meeting held at City Hall on Wednesday night. One hundred names were received. The object es the association is to adyance the mercantile and manufacturing interests of the place. An old lady, aged apparently about ninety yea s, died on a South-bound J,, M; &I. train near Seymour, Monday night. Her ticket was for Crab Orchard, Ky. An effort has been made to obtain!! the lady’s name from Crab Orchard, but so far It has been unsuccessful.

Tuesday night “the mangled body of Charles Bowman, a well known young farmer near Wabash, was found by the rbadside, near his home. It issupposed that while riding" on a load of cufn~~Ee was t hrown off and the wheels passed over his body, crushing the chest in a frightful manner. Bowman died before a physicitm could be summoned. A grand jury at Indianapolis, composed of five Democrats and one Greenbacker,has returned indictments against Republicans and anti-Coy Democrats, one, it is said, being against Perkins, the chief witness against the alleged tallysheet forgers. Another is against a lawyer, Roger A. Sprague, charged with illegally swearing in a voter. It is alleg ed the indictments are malicious. Sotne changes have been made by the National Woman Suffrage Association of Indiana in the dates for holding conventions in the congressional districts of ths Suite They will be held as follows: Wabash, Nov. 18 and 19; Terre Haute, Nov. 22 and 23; South Bend Nov. 24 and 26; Fort Wayne, Nov, 25 and 26; Muncie, Nov. 28 and 26; Anderson, Nov. 30 and Dec. 1; Madison, Dec. 2 and 3: New Albany, Dec. 5 and 6. The dead body of a man about thirtyfive year of age, and apparently a tramp, was found, Wednesday morning under the railroad bridge over Flat Rock, near Columbus. His skull was crushed as if with a club, though his death might have been caused by falling through the The general opinion ib that he was murdered, and a party of four tramps, who were encamped near the spot, have been arrested on suspicion. The Grand Lodge I. O. O. F. of Indiana met at Indianapolis last week. There was an unusually large a tendance. A large gain in the membership was reported. The officers elected for the ensuing vear are: Grind Master L. T. Micbener, Shelbyville. Deputy Grand Master-J E.F. Harper,Madison. Grand Watden—C. C. Blncklei. Richmond. Grand Sccrtary-B. F. Foster, Madison, Graud Treasurer—T. P. Haughty, lud ; anapolis. Rep.e-eiit-'tive to Sovereigu Grand Lodge— A. N. Grant, Kokomo. Trustees—William Wallaoe, J. A. Ferguson and John W. McQutddy. The body of J. L. Thomas, a farmer whoresided near Ciandall,on the Air Line railway, seventeen miles west of New Albany; was found, Wednesday, under a t resile at Falling Run creek. The supposition is that Thomas fell from a train as it was going West over the trestle. In the pocket of the deceased was found a ticket to Crandall. Thomas was about twenty-eight years of age and a cost excellent man. He had a wife and child. Samuel Davis, an Air line employe, >t New Albany, upon going home at 11 o’clock, Friday night, quietly repaired to the dining room for lunch, as he desired not to awaken his wife whOe eating) But the continual crying of his

babe prompted him to go to the bedroom, where, to his utter dismay, he found his wife, twenty-six years old, dead, with the child in her arms. She was exceptionally beautiful, and a woman of ranch respectability. Bhe died of heart disease. About a year ago a man and his wife and five children went from Fort Wayne to make thejrhomein Kansas, and soon after arriving there the husband and father died, and the mother finding herseif unable to secure sufficient work to maintain herself and children, started for their old home in Fort Wayne «foot, pushing the youngest child in an old cab. On the way one of the children sickened and died,and aside from a five mile ride gained at some point, until conductor O. C. Wells picked them up, a short distance West of Elkhart, they had walked the entire distance from their home in Kansas. The journey has taken them about six months.

BARNUM BURNED OUT.

Tl>« Greater Part of HU Immenae Stock of Animals Destroy, d by Fire. The main building of Barnum & Bailey’s show, at Bridgeport, Conn., was entirely destroyed by fire, Sunday evening. About 10:30 o’clock an alarm was sent in, quickly followed by a general alarm, and in less than thirty minutes the big building, which was 600 by 200 feet and two stories in height, was entirely consumed. The first intimation of the fire was given by the roaring of the lions and tigers, which 899 med to realize the impending danger. Next the elephants struggled in their chains In an incredibly short time the flames swept from one end of the huge structure to the other. There were six watchmen employed on the premises, but they were helpless to check the flames. Oue of the men was in the horse building, when his lantern exploded, igniting the hay and straw. Five of the watchmen have reported, but one is missing. The upper portion of the building was filled with hay and all the paraphernalia of the areatshow. •Before the first alarm ceased sounding the whole buildiDg was enveloped in fire and no one dared to approach the building, being fearful of the crazed animals, Three elephants were burned Up and thirty-six broke from their fastenings and dashed through the sides of the burning building. Their roam and-

trumpetings and sounds of torment terrific. Six elephants and a large African hippopotamus rushed about the streets, presenting a sickening appearance. Their sides were burned and great pieces ofJksh..a foot square fell off.

Thirty elephants and one large lion made their escape and started ’off across the country toward Fairchild and Eaton. Great alarm has seized many residonta of tho-AKest, End, and they have taken refuge within their houses with windows barred. William Newman, the elephant trainer, is out of town and the keepers were not able, in the excitement, to herd the frightened animals. In the horse room where all the ring animals, trained stallions, ponies, etc. These were all burned. In the upper rooms wis re the tents, poles, seats, harness, etc., for the' entire shows and these too were all destroyed. In the cat room were the birds, monkeys, three rhinoceroses, hyenas, tigers, lions and ail the menagerie, which fell a prey to the flames. So rapid did the flames leap across the main building that the firemen made no attempt to save it, but turned their streams upon the chariot buildings and car sheds which they succeeded in saving, but the heat was so intense that t-iis was accomplised with the greatest difficulty. The total loss is estimated at $700,000, upon which there was but SIOO,OOO insurance. Before the building went down, Barnum’s agents were busy making arrangements for obtaining a new lot of attractions to supply the loss. Mr. Roth well, Mr. Barnum’s Bridgeport agent, stated that the show building would be rebuilt, but not in Bridgeport. The great show would probably go to New York City where better railroad facilities can be had. The watchman making his rounds discovered the tire and staried to give the alarm when some unknown person hit him on the bead with a blunt instrument, felling him to the ground and cutling a number of severe gashes in his head. He staggered to his feet and gave the alarm, enabling the other watchmen in the building who were preparing for bed, to escape. One of the three elephants burned was the famous sacred white elephant. The lion which the police attempted to kill at the time the fire broke out, was afterwards found, in a barn devouring a cow which he had killed. He was shot. Shendan’H Report, Lhn’enant General P. H. Sheridan’s annual report to the Secretary of War shows that at the date of the last consolidated returns the army consisted of 2,200 officers and 24.236 men, including Indian scouts. An increased number "6f deserters is reported, but the General sees no remedy for it. He recommends an increase of 5,000 in the strength of the army; the retirement of about old officere: the adoption of machine guns for the men. and the extending of all possible aid by the general government to the national guard of the various States. __

AN ACCIDENT AT SEA.

•Terrible Ocean Disaster off Dover, England. One Hundred and Forty Liven Lost by a Collision—The dteamer W. A. Scholten Sunk in Twenty Minutes. The Netherlands-line steamship W. A. Scholten, which sailed from R jtterdam for New York, Saturday, came into collision, ten miles off Dover, Englaud, at 10 olclock, Saturday night, w*ith the steamer Rosa Mary, and sank almost immediately. The Scholten had on board passengers and crew to the numbet of 230, and of these only ninety are known to have been saved. Of the remaining 140, twenty-seven have been; landed at Dover, -dead, and fears are entertained that the others were also lost, though a few- of them may have been picked up by passing vessels.

As soon as the news of the disaster reached Dover vessels were sent to the rescue, but it does not as yet appear that, with the exception of the ninety persons rescued and brought in by the steamer Ebro, any lives have been saved. The steamer Rosa Mary is lying ofl Ramsgate, with her bows badly stove and her timbers strained. The heads of the Scholten’s masts are visible above the water at the Dover pier. A dense fog prevailed when the collision occurred, and the Scholten was moving at half speed. No warning of the collision was given, the sudden shock of the contact on the port bow having been the first intimation to the officers of the Dutch steamer of the proximity of another vessel. The officers of the Scholten deny that the passengers on board the steamer were in bed, but it is the fact, nevertheless, that most of them rushed upon the deck in their night clothes immediately after the collision. As soon as the extent of the damage to the vessel was ascertained the order was given to lower the boats. The ship carried five boats, but only two ol them were available, the other three being unseaworfhy. The two sound boats were lowered, and at che same time it was reported on deck that the ship was making water rapidly, and must soon go down. The scenes which followed this announcement were terrible beyond description. Shrieks, prayers, groans and curses mingled with the hoarse voices of the officers giving orders, and the cries of children clinging so their mother’s skirts, rendered still more heart-rending the terror-laden shrieks of the latter. The officers displayed admirable coolness and remained on the bridge and at other posts of duty until the last, several of them,who were provided with life-belts, remaining until the vessel settled and leaping into the sea as she went down.

Within twenty minutes after the two ships came together the flchoiten was at the bottom of the channel. All of -tbe-paßOcngcra and crow who had been-, fortunate enough to procure life belts Heated and were picked uphy the Ebro’s boats, which cruised about until 4 o’clock Sunday morning. Taera is scarcely a persons among the rescued passengers who does not mourn the loss of a wife, husband, brother, sister, or child, and in some cases only one member of a large family is found to have been saved. The survivors were supplied with clothing by the officers and crew of the Ebro as far as possible, and additional garments were furnished to the unfortunates upon their arrival at Dover. There is a considerable discrepancy betweeo the statements of the passengers and those of the officers of the Scholten, a 3 there is also between the latter and the officers of the Rosa Mary declare that their vessel was lying at anchor when struck by the Scholten, while the second mate of the latter avers that he was on deck when the collision occurred and Baw the Rosa Mary come through the fog and strike the Scholten in the fore-rigging. The captain of the Rosa Mary corroborates the statements ot his office rs, andstontly declares the counterstatements of the Scholten’s officers to be incorrect. The Ro3a Mary, he says, was anchored just southeast of South Sandhead when the Scholten struck her. Finding that his vessel wa3 considerably damaged, be made for Dover roads, where he dropped anchor and made suitable provisions for keeping the ship afloat, being still unaware of the full exof her iDjuries. It is stated that a mackerel boat, just arrived at Hastings, reports that a v steamer ran across and damaged her nets in the early part of Sunday night and that the mackerel boat give chase to the vessel in the hopes of identifying her aud claiming compensation. While the steamer the crew of the mackerel boat saw her run into the Scholten. A color of truth is given to the story by the fact that fragments of fishing nets were found on the bows of the Rosa Mary.

LaMra by Fire. Fire at Decatur, Ala./ . Thursday, caused a loss of SIOO,OOO. Fire at Bloomington, Neb., Wednesday,destroyed $60,000 Worth of property; insurance $15,000." / Tae Cincinnati Southern railway shops at Cincinnati burned, Friday, Tue village ol Soloni, in Warren county, lowa, was almost entirely desi royed by fire Monday. and wesiern portions of Kentucky state

that, owing to the protracted drought, forest fires are causing great destruction in that region. Fifteen business houses and a larg* number of residences in Granby, Mo., were burned Saturday night v • - Rothschild & Go.s dry goods bouse at Owensboro, Ky., was burned, Thursday. Loss. $60,000. Insurance $43,000. Fires were never known to be so general alohg the lower Misaiauppi. The smoke interferes with navigation. Keefer’s woolen and Patterson A Seasions’s flour mills at Canullus, N. Y., were bflrned, Thursday. Loss, 800,000. York, Neb., suffered a destructive firs Monday. Seven stores, including the Union and Masonic blocks, were burned. Loss SIOO,OOO. The shops of the Cincinnati Southern Railroad company at Ludlow, Ky., were burned, Friday morning. Los*, s2oo,o##. A number of cars were destroyed.

Fire at Tompkiusville, Ky., Wednesday, caused heavy losses. Burglars are thought to have set the fire to cover np their work. The court house was burned and all the county records are lost. The steamer Arizona, of the Lake Bnperior Transit Line, was burned to the water’s edge at Marquette, Thursday. She was a freight boat, valued at SIOO,000, and was on her last trip for th« season.

Warm Greeting Dy »n Old Contributor. C. B. Lewis, the “M. Quad” of th* Detroit Free Press, is now in the 8out& writing letters for his paper. According to all accounts he has been royally received, but, on Friday last, at Eufala, Ala., he met with an unexpected reception at the hands of a man wh* walked fourteen miles to see hint. Some years ago the caller wrote Quad a letter and the humorist held the writer up to public ridicule in the of his paper. The Southener had not forgotten it, and in the exuberance of his joy at meeting M. Quad, took off bis coat and folded the newspaper man to his breast. Then he laid On ad on the floor and tramped on him. After otherwise toying with the distinguished humorist till weary, the assailant wan arrested and later paid a fine of $4. The same evening Lewis delivered a discourse upon the signs of the times, and said it made his heart swell with joy to witness the warm-hearted greeting tendered Northern men by their Southern brothers. Quad will be “roasted” whenbe gets home.

Herr Host Again iti JaiK Johann Most, the Anarchist, was arrested at noon Thursday at the office of his newspaper, in New York, by detective Sergeants Crowley and McGuire, of Inspector Brynes’s staff. He was taken directly to police headquarters and through the aldermen’s gate and locked in one of the cells in the basement. His arrest was made by direction of Inspector Brvnes. on a,warrant issued by Justice Cowing Thursday, for having made an incendiary speech calculated to incite a riot on last Friday night in a hall in Seventh street.

Our Minister to Swedeu. W. W. Thomas, ex-United Btatea minister to Sweden, arrived at New York, Saturday. In reference to the charges against minister Magee, he said: I know Mr. Magee well. He is an aftable. honorable gentleman, respected in the Inst circles of Stockholm, at court andin official life. He is received in the society there and is everywhere a welcomed guest. I know further that he stands especially high in the estimation of the minister of foreign affkirß of Sweden. I do not believe that there is the slightest ground whatever for the reports.”

Immense I.ou bj Fire. Fire, Thursday night, destroyed Compress No. 4 and 5 of the Merchants’ Cotton Compress and Storage Company, at Memphis, and 13,200 bales of cotton with forty C. & 0. cars. Over 50,000 bales were endangered, but were finally saved. The loss is $650,000. The presses were located at the navy yard and close to the railroads reaching Memphis. Incendiarism is suspected, and one Walter Mendenhall is in jail. Will Accept. Secretary Lamar stated Tuesday evening toa reporter of the New York Herald that in case he was offered a seat on the Supreme Bench he would accept the appointment as the greatest honor of his life. A B id Collision. A collision of two freight trains occurred on the Cairo, Vincennes & Chicago railroad near Vienna, 111., Monday. The two engines and eight cprs were badly smashed. The two engineers,one of the firemen and a br&kemar. were instantly killed. -

the MARKETS.

rsWAVAPOiJS November 21, 1887 GRAIN. .Wheat,.No..2 Med.„73% I Corn, No. 2 White, is No. 2 Med..." 4 I No 2 Yellow, 43 No. 2 Red... 74% I Oats, No. 2 White.... 29% Wagon wheat ..78 I Rye....... sp LIVE STOCK - Cattla—Extra choice 5teer5............ ....4.50*4.70 Good to choice steers..... :.4.00a4.5# Extra choice heijeis ...,3.00a3.2J Good to choice heifers 2.75a3.08 Good to choice cows Hoes—Heavy packing and shipping 4.70*4.#T Light and mixed packing 4.45*4.65 Pigs and heavy roughs 3 75*4.25 Shrep -Extra choice 3.20*3.5# Good to choice.. 3.00*3.25 EGGS, BITTER, POULTRY. Eggs...., ..18c I Poultry,hens per lb 5% Butter, creamery ...2ic 1 Roosters _te “• fancy country...-,12c I Turkeys..^jSr. “ choice country.,.loe ] MISTT'-LANEGCS. Wool—Fine merino, tub washed ..38*40 “ do unwa shed, med 24*25c " very coarse ..... ......26*2*0 Hay.choice timothy 1300 ' Sugar.cured ham Italic 8ran................. .T.’ji.Oa * Bacoh ctearsides 3«t Flour, patent... >.40*4.65 I Feathers, prime gooseK Extra fancy 3.65a£.-90 | Clover 5eed,..„«..._4 0* Tallow, 3**V Hides, No,l cured, 7%a7t^; Sheer •km*, 25*.004 Bean.-, 2 25*2.75; F.-esvcajfc. li*2Ct Apples, 1.50*1.75 per bbl; Potatoes, 75*80per bn Onions. 2.51*3.00 per bbl. -==■