Rensselaer Republican, Volume 20, Number 45, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 12 July 1888 — Page 3
THE NEWS OF THE WEEK.
DOMESTIC. General Sheridan is getting well. Flagstaff, Aria., had a hundredrfhou-sand-dollar fire Monday. A destructive storm swept over several Western states on the fourth. Fire at Lake City, Mich., Wednesday destroyed the business portion. Loss $75,000, ; . -• ,'y Fire at Marysville, Cal., Thursday, destroyed the business portion. Loss, $200,000. The Cincinnati brewers’ strike, after lasting three months, was,on Friday, declared off. A cloud burst in Clinton and Jackson counties, lowa, Wednesday damaged the crops seriously. At Hamlin, N. Y., Wednesday, John Johnson accidentally killed his son. In anguish he suicided. It has just been made public that the postoffice at Albany, N. Y., was robbed of $3,526 on April 26th. The new Jewish orphan asylum at Cleveland, 0., costing $200,000, was formally dedicate!! Monday. The Adelaide silk mill boiler at Allentown, Pa., exploded Monday, killing three men and injuring three. It is expected that 5,000 members will take part in the Sons of Veterans’ parade, Aug. 12, at Wheeling, W. Va. David Clark and wife, of Sand wish, 111, suicided, Sunday, because of misfortune and inability to get along in the world.*—"- —— Harry C. Tucker, his father and sister, were drowned by the capsizing of their boat on Lake Johanna, near St. Paul, Minn., Thursday. At Louisville, Monday, George Guthman, aged twenty-one, suicided because Ida Beeker, aged said she was too young to many. Myer’s Opera House, at Paris, Tex., a new building, costing $60,000, collapsed, Sunday, on account of faulty workmanship, and is a total wreck. The Reading (Pa.) Hardware works were destroyed - by fire Monday night, entailing a loss of over $475,000. About 450 men are thrown out of employment. The Rock Island lines west of the Missouri River have been consolidated under the name of Chicago, Rock Island & Colorado, with a capitalization of $35,000,000. *7 _ . Heavy rains have caused bad railroad washouts in Pennsylvania, but no wrecks are reported. The high water will let loose 10,000,000 bushels of coal on the rivers.
The mother and sister of the murderer Brooks, who is to be hanged July 13,' for the inurder of Prellerat the Southern Hotel, reached St. Louis Monday to bid the young man farewell. R. P. Parrish, once a prosperous wholesale man of Louisville, and worth $700,000, committed suicide, Sunday, by taking morphine, because he could not pay a five-dollar board bill. Anarchist Conrad Ahlan hoisted the red flag over the stars and stripes on his saloon at Chicago on the fourth. A police officer gave him five minutes to have it in, and the bloody emblem disappeared. Near Pineville, Ky., Sunday night, James McGeorge and Bill Smith, special sheriff’s deputies, shot each other to death. They were sent to arrest some violators of the local whisky laws and got dniifk. 7 • ——- A telegraph operator on the Pennsylvania railroad at Wilkesbarre, Fit, msdier a mistake in givingorders and a collision of two passenger trains occurred Friday. About twenty persons were injured, none fatally, however. At Moulton, Lawrence county, Ala., Sunday night, Calvin Moody, colored, was lynched for the murder of his wife last Friday night. The lynching was done by a mob of 200 negroes, and is the first event of the kind in that State. A battery of boilers at the tannery of A. &J. Greteinger, Allegheny City, Pa., exploded Friday, fatally injuring Wpo. Wetzel the engineer, Chris. Neidt and L. L. Tovbie, and seriously injuring three others. The damage to property iA $20,000: I Gen. Sheridan has been removed to his summer home at Nonquitt, Mass. He was taken by the U. S. steamship Swatara,and several days were required,' owing to the rough sea requiring the ship to anchor. His general condition continues favorable. A. G. Campbell, Secretary of the Kansas Hity Elks Lodge, is $2,000 short in his accounts. An investigation has been in progress for some time, but the matter was kept quiet until Monday. Campbell is one of the best known and most popular men in the city. The Lodge will not prosecute him. • A stage running betweei Madefia and Hildreth, Cal., was stopped* Monday afsernoon by masked men. They jumped from behind rocks and compelled the express messenger to hand them his gun ' and then compelled him and the driver to hand over the express box, containing SIO,OOO in silver bullion. The robbers escaped. Several months ago Mr. and Mrs. L. . A. Breck. of Cleveland,were arrested for forging a will which made them heirs to the property of a peculiar old woman known as Martha Hail McDonald. Breck was a medical student and a politician. Monday he and his wife were sentenced to the penitentiary for four ' years each. The bodies of five men, riddled" with bullets from Winchester rifles, have
been found in the wilds of the Kinishi Mountains, Choctaw Nation, fifty miles from Denver 1 . They Are supposed to have been hunters from Texas. Fifty yards away was found another dead body supposed to be that of one of the attacking party. MisA Margaret Beecher, daughter of Colonel H. B. Beecher, of Orange, N. J., and granddaughter of Henry W. Beecher, was married on Saturday last to Arthur White, of New York. Adother granddaughter of Mr. Beecher, Miss Harriett Beecher Scoville, of- Stamford, Conn., was married last week to Dr. Spence C. Devan, United States Navyi ' While a man named Stokes and his wife were driving across a railroad trac)c, near Carrollton, Pa., Wendesday, they were struck by an east-bound passenger train and both almost instantly killed. Mrs. Stokes was thrown about forty feet, her body alighting in the Allegheny river. Every bone in her body was broken. She died instantly. Stokes was also fatally injured, and lived only a few minutes.
The general impression prevails that the telegraph operators are determined to avail themselves of the busy, rushing, restless activity and excitement of the Presidential year, and will ask reasonable concessions from the companies at a moment when they can not very well be 'ignored, as they were five years ago* when recognition was refused the committee appointed by the Brotherhood at that time. In the course of his weekly address before the Anti-Poverty Society, Sunday night, Dr. McGlynn said: “Some day there will be a tremendous revolution, which will eclipse the French uprising, in which the people will rise up in their wrath at interference of their dictators, and bayonet and club these monks, and priests, and archbishops, the pope, and cardinals. This is the way the Lord will deal with them; so I may leave them to His mercy.” This was wildly cheered. Mr. T. J. Vandergrift, of Jamestown, N. y.,one of the oldest and best inforined oil operators, says: “There is a well in Wood connty, Ohio, that if opened to its full capacity would flow ten thousand barrels of oil a day. There are several qT these bridled monsters in the Ohio ffeld. They are shut in because of the inability of the pipe line companies to take care of all the oil that they would produce if permitted to yield at their full capacity.” Mr. Vandergrift probably referred to the “DuCat” well, west of Portage.
The Union Bank officials of Provi deface have received word by cable that the whole bundle of securities, bills receivable and other property stolen by Charles A. Pitcher, the defaulting teller, have been recaptured in London. Pitcher had mailed them to “J. A. Roberts,” his assumed name, and believed them safe from the bank, and that it was in his power to keep their hiding place a secret until the bank would be ready to compromise and come to terms on a basis of Pitcher’s holding onto $150,000 cash. His stealings aggregated $700,000. Near Rising Sun, Miss., bad blood had existed for some time between S. H. Whitworth, a planter and merchant, and Henry McCarty, another local merchant. Whitworth, McLean and Hoskins on one side and Henry McCarty, P. H. Ivey and Sam Austin on the other side, metr Saturday afternoon. The first three entered the store of MeCarty, armed with Winchesters and pistols. Some words brought on firing, and Ivey and Austin were instantly killed. Henry MeCarty is missing and is supposed to have been killed. Whitworth and Ben McLean are badly wounded. At the meeting of District Assembly, No. 48, Knights of Labor of Cincinnati, 0., held Sunday afternoon,Master Workman Kavanaugh announced that Recording Secretary Jesse S. Jones was defaulter to the amount of several thousand dollars, and had left the city. The news created a great sensation. A committee of five was appointed to overhaul the books of the district and ascertain the exact amount of the defalcation. Jones was formerly a blacksmith, but had been secretary of the district for three or four terms. He has, of late, been leading a fast' life. John Bolch, of Fairfield county, S. C., died Sunday from hydrophobia caused by the bite of a cat. Bojch experienced no ill effects from the bite, and did not think of hydrophbbia in connection with the matter until Thursday of last week, when he was suddenly taken ill, experiencing great difficulty in breathing. When a glass of water was handed him he went into convulsions, and the physician’s skill failed to afford him any relief. During the intervals between the convulsions the , unfortunate young man was perfectly rational, and often pitiously begged his friends to kill him and end his sufferings. Henry W. Moore, managing editor of the St. Louis Post-Dispatch, has eloped with the wife of John W. Norton, the theatrical manager, They took with them about $20,000 in money and jewels, which Norton had given her. Moore is an Englishman, who game here several years ago, and has made rapid progress in journalism. He has a wife arid one child, who are now at Manitou Springs, Col. Mrs. Norton was formerly Emma Stockman, an actress, who supported John McCulldugh one season. The two families have been very intimate, and i the elopement was brought about by
Norton’s discovery of his wife’s infidelity with Moore. FOREIGN. The Theatre dee Boufifes, at Bourdeaux, France, burned, Tuesday. Loss, 1,000,000 francs. „ Last reports from Stanley are that his camp was suffering from lack of food and swamp maladies. Bismarck is workings scheme to marry one of King William’s sisters to the Czarevitch of Russia. . In the libel suit of O’Donnell against the London Times for libel a verdict has been returned in favor of defendant. The lower classes of the English people are very much exercised over a pending bill, which proposes to stop_ all liquor traffic on Sunday. An immense meeting was held at Hyde Park, Sunday, to protest against it. The English Tory sentiment is that Parnell’s denials are insufficient, and that he will rest under suspicion until he clears himself in court. Davitt, in a speech, challenged the government to put him and Parnell in the dock. As Prince Alexander, of Battenburg, late ruler of Bulgaria, was driving from Heilegenberg into the Stattback valley, Sunday, his horse shied and the carriage was hurled from the road down the side of the mountain. Prince Alexander was thrown out and fell a distance of forty feet, when he grasped some shrubs and by their aid escaped with slight injuries. The horse was terribly mangled and killed, and the carriage was dashed to pieces.
Official dispatches from St. Petersburg state that M. De Giers, the Russian Prime Minister, has informed the British embassador that after December 17 the Bulgarians may do anything and everything they please, from cutting each other’s throats to declaring their country an empire. Russia, M. De Giers declared, will not moW a finger to prevent them from following their own inclinations, and will wash her hands of the whole concern. The embassador is of the opinion that Russia does not -intend to provoke war.
PARNELL'S DENIAL.
He Vindicates Him«elt From Charges Contained in Forged Letter a. Mr. Parnell, in the House, Friday, took the first occasion to rise to a privileged question, and, pointed out the letters over what pretended to be his signature, which had been published in the Times, and produced in court, pronounced them as absolute forgeries. Mr. Parnell, in making his statement in the House, read all the letters which had been produced against him and denounced them and their signatures seriatim, as forgeries, each and all, with a single exception, which might, he said, be true. Mr. Parnell pronounced all the letters purporting to come from Mr. Egan forgeries. With regal'd to Byrne, he knew nothing of his departure and never gave him money in his life, except by way of subscription for a memorial to Dr. Butt. Mr. Parnell said he had attended the Chief Justice’s Court two whole days prepared to take his oath that the letters were forgeries, and that the letters alleged to be in Campbell’s handwriting were forgeries. Mr. Parnell explained that in 1879 he changed his signature. The Times’s sac simile of the letter dated in 1882 fibre the signature which he used before 1879, and never later. This was positive .proof of-forgery. Mr. Gladstone listened intently to Mr. Parnell’s explanations, and when they were finished showed, in common with the whole Liberal p arty, his satisfaction with them. The uniform impression is that Parnell has triumphantly vindicated himself.
POLITICAL NEWS NOTES.
Mahone and Riddleberger, it is alleged, have buried the hatchet and will labor for Republican success in Virginia. John O. Finerty, of Chicago, will be a candidate for Congress from his old district, now represented by Frank Lawler. Senator Allison, of lowa, will stump Indiana for Harrison. Blaine is to be here also, and for the Democrats, Thurman. South Carolina Republicans claim that the registration in that State will show four times as many Republicans as Democrats. A number of Southern delegates to Chicago are stranded in Washington, on their way home, and waiting remittances from their friends. The Kansas Democrats at Leavenworth, Wednesday, nominated John Martin for Governor by acclamation. The platform is the same as in 1886. Senator Stockbridge, of Michigan, has bet the best horse he owns, a stallion valued at $30,000, aganst a broncho Worth S3O, that Harrison will be the next President of the United States. / There are reports of a strong movement to make Secretary Whitney the ’Democratic candidate for Governor of New York, in order to strengthen the Presidential ticket in that State. - A Democratic Congressman reports President Cleveland as saying that he hoped his party would not mistake itself in estimating the strength of Harrison and Morton; that both men had clean and strong characters, and were immensely popular in their States; besides this, they would grow on the people as the campaign pmgrpnapA—Mr. Cleveland intends to visit a number of sections upon the request of societies, and will not only be seen but heard.
INDIANAPOLIS.
Bpe< ial correspondence. . The formality of notifying General Harrison of his nomination occurred at the General’B residence at noon on the 4th. About twenty States were represented. There were but a few, probably, fifty persons present to witness the ceremony. Chairman Estee, of California, made a brief address of notification to Which Gen. Harrison responded as follows:
•'Mr. Chairman and Gentlemen of the Committee— The official notice which you have brought of the nomination conferred upon me by the Republican National Convention recently in session at Chicago, excites emotion of a Srofound thought of a somewhat conicting character. That after full deliberation and free consultation, the representatives of the Republican party of. the United States should have concluded that the great principles enunciated in the platform adopted by the convention could be in some measure safely confided to mv care, is an honor of which I am deeply sensible and for which lam very grateful. Ido not assume or believe that this choice implies that the convention found in me' any pre-eminent fitness or exceptional fidelity to the principles of government to which we are mutually pledged. My satisfaction with the result would be altogether spoiled if that result had been reached by any unworthy methods or by a disparagement of the more eminent men who divided with me the suffiages of the convention. I accept the nomination with so deep a sense of the dignity of the office and of the gravity of its duties and responsibilities as altogether to exclude any feeling of exultation or pride. The principles of Government and the practices in administration upon which issues are now fortunately so clearly made, are so important in their relations to National and to individual prosperity that we may expect an unusual popular interest in the campaign. Relying wholly upon the considerate judgment of our fellow citizens and the gracious favor of God, we will confidently submit our cause to the arbitration of a free ballot. The day you have chosen for this visit suggests no thoughts that are not in harmony with the occasion. The Republican party has walked in the light of the declaration of independence. It has lifted the shaft of pariotism upon the foundation laid at Bunker Hill. It has made the more perfect union secure by making all men free. Washington Lincoln, Yorktown and Appomatox, the declaration of independence and the proclamation of emancipation are naturally and worthily associated in our thoughts to-day. As soon as may be possible, I shall by letter communicate to your chairman a more formal acceptance of the nomination, but it may be proper for me now to say that I have already examined the platform with some care and that its declarations, to some of which your chairman has alluded, are in harmony with my .views. “It gives me pleasure, gentlemen, to receive you in my home, and to tharfk you for the cordial manner in which you have conveyed your official message.** All the party then took luncheon.
WASHINGTON.
The Mills bill, it is conceded, will pass the House. President Cleveland has vetoed one hundred and ninety-eight private pension bills. The Postmaster General has written a letter to the President formally protesting against the proposition made by the Civil Service Commission to extend the classified service so as to include the railway postal service. During the last fiscal year the number of post-offices established was 3,364; number discontinued, 1,632; number of fourth-class postmasters resigned and successors appointed, 6,189; number of removed, 1,224; whole number appointed during the year, 11,852; number of presidential postmasters resigned and successors appointed,3B2; number removed,2o; whole number of presidential postmasters during the year, 436. President Cleveland, Friday, vetoed several pension bills on the ground of fraud or imposition. In one of his vetoes -he says: “I have considered the pension list as the Republic’s roll of honor, bearing names inscribed by National gratitude, and not by improvident and indiscriminate alms-giving. It seems-to me it would be well if our general pension laws should be revised with a view of meeting every meritorious case that can arise. Our experience and knowledge of an existing deficiency ought to make the enactment of a complete pension code possible.” One of the leading members of the Senate committee on finance said, Monday evening, on the tariff outlook: “The Mills bill will come to us from the House between the 20th and 25th inst., and will be substituted for the Republican ure we are now at work upon. The Rerepresenting the majority of Senate, will report the substitute bill to the Senate, and the Democrats on the part of the minority, will report the Mills bill. We will discuss them a week or ten days, arid pass the Republican bill, which will go to a conference committee. The Republicans will never agree to a bill with free wool in it, and the Democrats will refuse all propositions not including free wool. The conference will disagree, and the tariff question will die right there, so far as Congress is concerned. Congress will adjourn about the middle of August.” It is announced with positiveness that the Republicans are about to transfer the tariff fight from the House to the Senate. An order from Republican headquarters is said to have been promulgated to theeffieet thet the Republicans nr the House must suspend dilatory tactics and allow a vote-to--bo taken on-the Mills bill that it may be considered in the Senate with as little delay as possible. The Republican members of the
Senate' Committee of finance and Republican Senators generally, it can be stated on good authority, have decided to frame a substitute for the bill, which will simply repeal the entire internal revenue tax on tobacco in all its forms, which will be $12,000,000 more reduction on that head than the Mills bill makes; repeal the internal revenue tax on alcohol used in the arts and. manufactures and reduce the tax on sugar 40 or 50 per cent.
MORTON NOTIFIED.
The Republican Notification Committee, with many distinguished .gleets, arrived from Rhinebeck, N. Y., about 1 o’clock p. m., Saturday,and were met by the local committee, who escorted them to the house of Hon. Levi P. Morton. The latter and Mrs. Morton received the guests. Chairman Estee, wearing a Harrison and Morton badge, led the committee into the drawing room, where Mr. Morton stood arrayed in black with Mrs. Morton, handsome and richly dressed, beside Jtiim. Chairman Estee briefly performed the business of the comittee by reading the following address: “The National Convention of the Republican party, recently assembled in Chicago, nominated as its candidate for President General Harrison, and with equal unanimity selected you as its nominee for Vice President. By order of that convention we were appointed a committee to notify its nominees of their selection. This pleasant duty has been in part performed, it giving General Harrison, your associate upon the ticket, that notification. It only remains for us to discharge the further duty conferred upon us by this official notice to you. The country has. already passed judgment upon your selection and it has met with snch universal approval, that it is only left this committee to add its own expression of their high appreciation ol your own personal qualities, as well as their confidence in your eminent fitness for the position to which the deliberate judgment of the* convention assigned you. In conclusion, we believe that this notification to you will not be a meaningless formality, but that your nomination will result in a triumphant election.” Mr. Morton replied: “Mr. Chairman, and gentlemen of the Committee—l am profoundly sensible of the high honor which has been conferred npon me by the National Republican Convention recently in session at Chicago, and thank you,.gentlemen, for the courteous and complimentary terms with which you have officially announced my nomination as the candidate of the
Republican party for the Vice Presidency. I am also deeply sensible of the honor conferred upon the State of New York in the selection of a citizen of this State as one of the standard-bearers in the approaching peaceful conflict of the two great political parties of the country for supremacy in Governmental control. New York represents to a large degree the business interests of all these growing and wide-spreading communities of varied interests and industries which is the mission of the Republican party to foster and protect. The platform so wisely adopted at Chicago had this mission boldly in view, and by its enunciation of these principles makes the issue clear and distinct. I accept the position tendered by the convention, of which you are the honored representatives, and will, in due time, address to you, Mr. Chairman, an official communication to that effect.” ' Introductions ana lunch followed, and the visitors were invited to drive over to Mr. Morton’s country-seat Ellerslie.
STORMS.
Two destructive storms have recently swept over portions of West Virginia. Buildings were unroofed, bridges swept away, trees and fences blown down and the crops left in a deplorable condition. Two fatalities are reported. Bloomington, 111., was deluged Sunday. Fully half the wheat crop is in shock. The yield is wonderful, both in its exceUent quality and great quantity. Numerous washouts are reported from Wabash county, Ind. Grain suffered considerably. A terriffic tornado passed over Montpelier, Ind., leveling fences, trees and small buildings. Hail fell in great quantities and the corn y crop was damaged thousands of dollars. The entire country in the track of the tornado was flooded. The storm was general throughout Indian, an immense volume of water falling.
A NEW PARTY.
A State Convention of the farmers, laborers and stock-raisers of Texas met at Fort Worth, Tuesday, and nominated a State ticket and adopted a platform. The platform denounces the Mills bill for placing wool on the free list, demands the repeal of the internal revenue laws, demands the abolition of the national bank system, and the election of President and Vice President by the people. The State ticket is headed by" Evan Jones, of Erath county,- for Governor, and H. M. Broils, of Tarrant county, for LieutenantGovemor. A committee was appointed to confer with the Union Labot State Convention, and to urge~th*T Union Labor party to indorse the ticket nominated. An active campaign was decided upon.
ALLEGED DYNAMITE PLOT.
Four Men Arrmltd on n Charge of Conspiracy to Destroy C., B. A Q. Property. Thomas Broderick and James Bowles, members of the Hxgttierhood of Locomotive Engineers, and another,man named Wilson, were arrested on a Chicago,Burlington &■ Quincy train, Thursday afternoon, brought to Chicago and lodged in the county jail under bonds of $5,000 each, charged with conspiring to destroy that company’s property. They had a considerable quantity of dynamite in their possession when arrested. It is stated that the Burlington Company has had a large force of detectives engaged for a long time in watching the movements of the strikers. Several so-called “agitators,” whose movements corresponded with some of the past attempts upon the company’s property, were put under special surveillance. It was discovered that dynamite was used in several unsuccessful attempts to wreck trains within the past few months. The principal suspects were not allowed te make a move, day or night, without being under the watchful eye of the officers. It was impossible at first to locate the dynamite, but the officials of the “Q” assert that positive information was finally received Thursday that it wag the day chosen for a grand attack upon the company’s property. The officials are very reticent regarding their ... source of information, but the .plot is known to them, and they admit that, besides a definite plan to blow up trains upon the tracks by means of dynamite cartridges, it included the possibility of an attack upon the depot property and magnificent office building here. The officials say that if the danger had not been so imminent, they would have allowed the conspirators to go on and further criminate themselves but the plot had reached a stage where it was necessary to take decisive steps to prevent great destruction of property, not to say loss of human lives. The train had barely started when the officers sapped the men on the shoulders and made them prisoners. The men had taken off their coats, and under the two coats, lying between Boderick and Wilson upon the seat was an in-nocent-looking package wrapped in ,a newspaper. When he had captured this Detective McGuinty’slook of triumph quickly vanished as he realized the possible danger of its contents. While they were putting the bracelets on the prisoners, Broderick quickly snatched a letter from his pocket and threw it out of the window. McGuinty sprang to the bell rope and stopped the train. Running back along the track he found the letter.'- "ik'ig 1 now In" the possession of District Attorney Ewing. He refuses to reveal its contents, but General Manager Stone intimated that its contents gave important information regarding the plot. J. A, Bauerpisen, of Aurora, was also arrested, with J. Q. Wilson making the fourth. A valise was taken from Bowles, and several letters and papers. These were taken in the District Attorney’s office, with the newspaper package, and the latter was then for the first time examined. It was found to contain four dynamite cartridges, each about ten inches long and an inch and a quarter square. These were fitted with a small fuse to each, and Mr. Rhodes estimated that each contained about a pound of dynamite. In Broderick's pocket, in a purse, minating caps. All the men claimed they knew nothing of a plot. The men were taken before the U. 8. Commissioner and held to bail. The Brotherhood claim not to know the men, but are mak. ing an investigation.
BASE BALL.
Standing of the League and American Club* np to and Including July ft. = NATIONAL LEAGUE. Won Los* Chicago 38 19 Detroit 85 ?2 Boston 85 24 Hew York r. _ 34 27 Philadelphia 29 28 Indianapolis 21 35 Pitsburg 10 36 Washington 2) 38 AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Won Loat Brooklyn 44 29 St Lonia 37 20 Athletics - 37 26 Cincinnati 55 22 Baltimore - 27 38 Cleveland 19 40 Kansas City 19 40 Loniaville «... 19 38 NEXT GAMES AT INDIANAPOLIS. —With New York, July il, 12 and 18. With Washington. July 14,15 and 16. ,■ With PittsDuig. Jniy 19. rO and 21.
THE MARKETS. IndUlSapolh, July 10, IKS. CRUX. Wheat, Mo. -2 Med... 83 I Cora, No. 2 Whits, 54 No. 8 Med.:.Bl No. 2 Yelk>w*4B No. 2 8ed...83 | Oats, No. 2 White—<6* ~ I Kys...__.. m UT* STOCK. Cattlb—Extra choice shippers 5.48*5.75 Good to choice shippers ._4.60a6.10 Extra choice heiiets Si .SOM.II Good to choice heifers.... ..._2.70t8.f0 Good to choice cows 3.26*3.6* Boss—Heavy packing and shipping.. 5.50*5.65 Light and mixed packing ...5.25*5.45 Pigs and heavy rough*. 4.50*6.10 Bhx*T—Extra choice —._4.20a4.50 Good to choiee...__. ...3.83*8.80 *Bo*, BUTTER, rOCLTXT. Kgga..._— ,14c I Poultry,hens pa lb 8 Butter, creaxnery...2oc | ' Rooaters S fancy country 12c I Turkeys 7c choice country... 9c I MIBCXLLAMSOUB, Wool—Tine merino, tub washed __S3*Ssc “dounwashed, med 20522 c “ *- very coarse... ...17al8c Bay,choice limothyl7so i Sugar cured haml2 18c Bran ILOOI Bacon clear side* lie (Feather*. prime aoosSf e lover 440 OhteftfOa ... __ - Wheat (May).... _SOV4 | fork 4845 Cora “ 49 Lard -8.25 Oats “ 82 I Elba 7.42 uvs eraca. GxTTtx^Bteenß.Bsisi(rrHoo*-BStxea...Ttsoasi!s Cows „„1,75a4.90 Heavy ...5.65*5.70 BtOCkers.... 2.35*3.25 LighL..„5.25*5.60 Sheep. — 5.75*5.10 Skips UOafegß. Otaetanaa-Wheat 87; com, 51; cats. rye, 4; 14.65; 1ard.8.05; abort ribs,7.so; butter
