Rensselaer Republican, Volume 21, Number 10, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 8 November 1888 — Page 7

THE NEWS OF THE WEEK.

DOMESTIC. ' ' * Mr. McChoane, U.S.Consul at Portamouth, Eng., died Saturday. $4 ,400,000 during October. Powder mills at Gambo, Maine, exploded, Monday. Two men were killed. An extensive ranch will be established at Garden City,' Kansas, for thp propogation of the buffalo. A freight train was wrecked Sunday near Vicksburg, Miss., and three of the train hands were killed. Charles Tinkler, of Cincinnati, aged nineteen, is a fugitive on a charge of having forged checks for $5,000. President Cleveland has issued his annual proclamation fixing thanksgiving day, this year on the 29th of this month. Bernard Naughton, laborer, has been awarded $45,000 for the loss of a leg in an accident at the coal wharf of Wm. White, at Boston. John B. Doris, the ex-showman, has offered Lord Sackville-West $2,000 per week, to appeal 1 in his New Yprk dime museum for two hours each day. H. L. Critchett, of Boston, has disappeared and his accounts are $25,000 short. He was a collector for the real estate firm of Daniels A Critchett. Gen. Asa S. Bushnell, was assaulted by roughs at Springfield, 0., Thursday, and dangerously hurt. He had conducted a Republican demonstration the day previous. ' ‘ Several prominent merchants of Charleston, S. Cl, have been sent to jail for refusing to pay license to do business, as provided by an ordinance recently adopted in that city. A threshing machine boiler exploded near Reading, Pa., Friday, killing six men and wrecking the barn. Some of the men were hurled a distance of 125 feet. " The Monticello Academy at Godfrey, 111., was burned Sunday morning. A domestic jumped from a window and was killed. The institution was one of the most famed in the west. The loss is $50,000. While four young men, James Hayes, Henry Gormley, William Sellan and Charles Cogan, were sailing in Dorchester bay, Saturday, their boat capsized, and tne three first mentioned were drowned. Rev. Christopher Flirfchpaugh, pastor of General William Henry Harrison, was buried, Tuesday. He was born in Germany, and distinctly remembers Napoleon. He has officiated at three thousand funerals. John Ray and W. T. Wilkerson, two well-known citizens of Elmer county, Ala., engaged in a duel, Monday. Ray was instantly killed, and ' Wilkerson lived but a few minutes. The trouble arose over a business transaction. President Strong, of the Santa Fe Road, has reduced his own salary twen-ty-five per cent., and will reduce the wages of other employes, excepting engineers, firemen, switchmen, brakemen and mechanical operators, ten per cent. Charles Fendrick, son of a leading hotel-keeper of Mercersburg, Pa., has been arrested fbr incendiarism. In the ty valued at SIOO,OOO. He had' Beveral confederates, who will probably be arrested, also. . - Jacob Diekerhoff, aged 70, went to Akron, 0., to purchase property and settle down for the remainder of his life. Thursday, he was waylaid by high-

waymen and nearly murdered and $7,3200f his money taken, leaving him penniless. Mrs. Grant has compromised the suit with Gen. Badau. Badau claimed joint authorship of Grant’s memoirs. Mrs. Grant would „pot concede this. He finally waived his claim and the amount due for assistance rendered Gen. Grant was promptly paid. Terrible prairie fires raged in the Sioux Valley, Michigan, Friday. * Henry Ray was burned so badly that he can not live. A four-weeks-old baby, a six-teen-year-old girl, named Mollie O’Conner, and a woman and her son, name unknown, were burned to death. A,Republican procession, largely composed of negroes, met a Democratic procession at the corner of Twenty-sixth street and Sixth avenue New York, Wednesday, and a fierce fight ensued, in which four men were dangerously shot or stabbed, and others hurt. The police finally quelled the riot. W. T. Lewis, Master Workman) of the National District Assembly No. 135,composed entirely of miners, has issued a lengthy and caustic reply to’ the questions contained in General Master Workman Powderly’s recent circulars. Lewis intimates that the miners have already quiet'y left the order. At Freelandsville, on the I. & V., Monday, Mrs. Fred. Stolting, Sr., was burned to death while endeavoring to start a fire with straw. Her dress catching fire, she was soon enveloped in flames and was burned so badly that she died shortly after. She was seventy ‘ years old and an estimable lady. Her death is deplorable. Thomas Kane, an Irishman of JPittsburg, stabbed his wife in the abdomen with a pen-knife, Sunday, inflicting a wound that will prove fatal. The woman was sitting up with her dead child, and Kane, who had been drinking, came into the room and accused her of laughing. She denied the accusation, but without further warning he drew the knife and thrust it into her abdomen. Her husband is under arrest.

A package containing $4,000 belonging io thb Republican National Committee; was stolen by some one in the .employ of the Express Company at Waco Texas. It was a confidence game and robbery combined. It seems that $4,C00 was sent a few dayS ago by the Republican National Committee to be used for the overthrow of Roger Q. Mills in his district. Some telegraphic correspondence passed between New York and Waco aqd it"iff said that the thieves put up a job from the information received from these messages. The package disappearedjwhile in the hands of the ExpreßfyJJdmpany awaiting delivery, A well-dressed man got off a Fourth avenue surface car,, at Thirty-eighth street, Nejv York, Tuesday night, staggered a few steps and fell upon his face. He was picked up and taken To Uaptaih Ryan’s Station House. He had been badly cut by his fall, and was unable to tell how he happened to fall. He appeared to have been drinking. He said his name was Zachariah Meade, and that he was a banker in Wall street. In a big pouch in his pocket Captain Ryan found money and certified checks to the amount of $15,031.85. Captain Ryan sent him down to Wall street in the company df two officers to save him from losing his treasure. The seizure of an American ship in the Hay tian Republic by the authorities at Port-au-Prince, Hayti, as a blockade runner, has given rise to some considerable talk in official circles. The alleged reason for this seizure was stated that the ship contained arms and ammunition for the revolutionists and the seizure of a British ship a few days later for the same reason proved that the Hay tian Government had established a blockade against all Nations. Acting Secretary of State Erives, was seen at the State Department Saturday afternoon, and his attention was called to this fact, and he was asked what was the usual course pursued in such cases. He replied that the action Of the Haytian Government was all wrong, as they would pretty soon find. When a Government contemplates such a step the proper thing to do is to have the blockade first effected and established and then notify the maritine nations of the world that their poits are blockaded. This the Haytian Government did not do.

"< FOREIGN. Emperor William is preparing to take up his residence in Berlin. The Catholics of Australia and India have presented the Pope with $1,000,000. An explosion occurred in a coal mine in Averyon, France, Saturday,* and eighty miners were killed. A reservoir at Montreaux, on the Lake of Geneva, used to work an electric railway, burst Tuesday, destroying numerous houses and drowning many persons. Hon. Michael Henry Herbert, says a London cable, has been appointed Charge d’Affairs at Washington. Lord Sackville is going to England immediately on official leave of absence. It is understood that the Government will allow the Sackville incident- to rest trntil after the Presidential election in America. The^jews-of—Cleveland’s defeat has surprised London,as there-was a general in his continued political succesfe, but what might have been a general regret at his failure to be re elected is tempered, if not wholly replaced, by a sense of gladness that Mr. Cleveland’s summary treatment of Lord Sackville is revenged. The Norwegian bark Nor, Captain Bjonness, from New York, Oct. 2,'for Stettin, collided with and sank the steamer Saxmundham, off Cowes. Twenty-two persons are missing and are supposed to have been drowned.. Eight survivors have landed at Weymouth. The Nor was abandoned. Her crew have landed at Portland.

TIDINGS OF STANLEY. Couriers from Taoora bring direct news from the Stanley expedition, a portion of which was met at the end of November, 1887, by Arabs trading between Lakes Victoria Nyanza, Nzige, and Tabora. They stated that Stanley was two days ahead. The expedition had suffered greatly on the march through a thick forest, where it was impossible to advance more than a mile and a quarter daily. They had also suffered in the marshes where many had disappeared or died. Forty were drowned in crossing a great river flowing fiom east to west. One white man had died. Itanley was obliged to fight some tribes that refused to supply him with provisions. The expedition had often halted in the expectation of receiving reinforcenuents from the Congo.

A HEAVY ROBBERY. The United States express messenger on the train on the New Orleans-A-North-eastern railway was robbed betweefl Lacy and Darby stations, fifty miles from New Orleans, Saturday morning. The officials refuse to state amount of the robbery, but it is understood, to be between $40,000 and $50,000. The messenger and the baggagemaster were in the car when the robber entered. He presented a pistol and required the men to hold up their hands.. He then threw a sack over the head of) each. He then secured the money, pulled the bell rope and when the train stopped quietly disappeared. Only one robber was seen.

MINISTER WEST "FIRED.” By direction of the President the Secretary of State Wednesday informed Lord Sackville that for causes heretofore made known to her Majesty’s Government his continuance in his present official positiqn in the United States is no longer acceptable to this Government, and would consequently be detrimental to the relations between the two countries. The grounds for this action on the part of the United S tates Government are stated in a report of the Secretary of State to the President dated the 29th, which is as folio ws: , The undersigned has the honor to submit for your consideration the following statemen with a view to receive your direction thereon: On September 4, last, a letter purporting to be written by one Charles F. Murchison, dated at Pomona, Cal., was sent from that place to the British Minister at this Capital, in which the writer solicited an expression of his views in regard to certain unsettled diplomatic questions between the United States and Great Britain, stating at the same time that such an expression was sought by him for the the purpose of determining his yote at the approaching presidential election. He stated that he was a naturalized citizen of the States, of English birth, but that he still considered England the mother country, and this, fact led him to seek advice from- the British representative in this country. He further stated that the information he sought was not for himself alone but to enable him to give certain assurances to many other persons in the same situation as himself, for the purpose of influencing and determining their political action as citizens of the United States of English birth, but who still regarded their original obligations of allegiance as paramount. The letter also contained gross reflections upon the conduct of this government in respect to questions how in controversy and unsettled between the United States and Great Britain, and both directly and indirectly imputed insim cerity in such conduct. To this letter the British Minister at once replied from Beverly, Mass., under date of the 13th of September last. In this letter he stated that “any political party which’openly favored the mother country at the present moment would lose popularity, and that the party in power is fully aware of that faet; and that in respect to the ‘questions with Canada which have been unfortunately reopened since the rejection of the fisheries treaty by the Republican majority in the Senate, and by the President’s message to which you allude,’ all allowance must, therefore, be made for the political situation as regards the Presidential election.” The Minister thus gave his assent and sanction to the aspersions and imputations above referred to. Thus, under his correspondent’s assurance of secrecy, in which the Minister concurred by marking his answer “private,” he undertook to advise a citizen of the United States how to exercise the franchise of suffrage, in an election close at hand, for the Presi-

deney and Vice—Presidency- of—the United States, and through him, as the letter suggested, to influence the votes .of ''.wtawy Upon this correspondence being made public the Minister received the representatives of the public press, and in frequent interview’s with them intended for publication, added to the inpugnments which he had already made of the good faith of this Government in its publio action and international dealings. Although ample time and opportunity have been afforded him for the disavowal, modification or correction of his statements, to some of which his attention was called personally by the undersigned, yet no such disdisavowal or modification has been made by him through the channels in w hich his statements first found publicity. The question is thus presented whether it is compatible with the dignity, security and independant sovereignty of • the United States to permit the representatives of a foreign Government in this country not only to receive and answer without disapproval and confirm by his repetition, aspersions upon its political action, but also to interfere in its domestic affairs by advising persons formerly his countrymen as to their political course as citizens of the United States. As between this country and Great Britain there can be no controversy as to the complete severance of the ties of the original allegiance by naturalisation. Disputes on this point were finally put at rest by the treaty of naturalization concluded by the two countries on the 13th of May, 1870. Therefore it will not be contended nor was such contension ever admitted by us, that citisens of the United States of British origin are subject to any claim of the country of their original allegiance. jv

The undersigned also has the honor to call attention to the provisions of section 5335, of the Revised Statues of the United States, by which severe penalties are visited », upon the citizens of the United States, who, without the authority or permission of this Government “commences. or carries on any verbal or written correspondence or intercourse with any foreign Government or any officer or agent thereof, either with an intent to enfluence the action of such Government or its agents, in relation to any disputes or

I controversies with the United States, or with an intent to defeat the measures of , the Government of the United States.” These penalties are made equally applicaple to- every citizen of the United States, not duly authorized, who “counsels, advises or assists in any Such correspondence,” with similar or unlawful intent. The undersigned respectfully advises that the attention of the Attorney General of the United States be directed to these enactments, in order that an investigation may be made with a view to ascertain Whether they have not been violated in the present case by the correspondent of the British Minister. By your direction the attention of the Brit* ish Government has, in a spirit of comity, been called to the conduct of its Minister, as above described, but without result. It, therefore, becomes” ne<s6SflAl*y for this Government to consider wheth • er, as the guardian ofits own self -respect and of the integrity of its institutions, it will permit further intercourse to be held through the present British Minister at this capital. It is to be observed that’ precedents are not wanting as to the question under consideration. It. is a settled rule, essential to the maintenance of internal intercouse, that a diplomatic representative must be persona* grata to the government to which he is accredited. If, by his conduct, he renders himself persona non grata, an announcement of the fact may be made to his government. In tne present case all the requirements of comity have been fulfilled, and the facte have been duly communicated to Her Magesty’s Government, with an expression of this Govment in regard thereto.

LORD WEST’S RECALLThe papers in the were made public, Tuesday evening. The first is a letter from Lord Salisbury to Lord Sackville, and is dated October 27. It is as follows: “Mr. Phelps, who is staying at my house, informs me that Mr. Bayard’s request for your recall is not based upon the letter to Murchison, but upon a newspaper interview. I replied that I was glad it was not true that the request was due to the writing of the letter, which was made public only by a betrayal of confidence, and it was hardly practicable to lay down the principle that diplomatic representatives should be prohibited from expressing, even privately, any opinion upon events passing in the country to which he is accredited. The language of an interview is different. You must be taken as having intended it for publication. Before admitting the need for a recall I was bound injustice to you to know exactly what the alleged objectionable language was. I thereto re asked Mr. Phelps for a copy of the interview, in order to ascertain from you whether you had been accurately reported, and I then told him that I would then bring the matter before my colleagues.' Mr. Phelps replied that he had not received the text of the interview but would take steps to procure it. It is consequently understood that until the copy was received there should be no answer to the request of your recall.”

On October 29 Lord Sackville sent -the -following communication to—lx>rd Salisbury. “The letter was a political Republican plot. I-havemailed-an-explanatiom Theplotwas due to the approaching election. If my recall is demanded, I beg to express deep regret at what has occurred.” Onthe s9th Lord Sackville cabled that he had received a passport. On the 81st Mr. Phelps informed Lord Salisbury that the United States Government had given Lord Sackville a pass port, and added that President Cleveland hoped that another Minister would be sent to Washington. On the same day Lord Sackville sent the following dispatch to Lord Salisbury: “I beg to repudiate Mr. Bayard’s of the reasons for my dismissal as an unjust attack on my integrity.” Lord Salisbury at once sent the following reply: “Place Mr. Herbert, as Senior Secretay on the spot, in charge of the legation.” On November 1 Lord Salisbury, in a communication to Mr. Phelps, referred to his promise to furnish him with a copy of the Sackville interview, and informed him that as he had no further information as to what Lord Sackville’s statements contained, or to whom they were made, he was unable to form any judgment upon the considerations which dictated the request for the recall, or the forwarding of a passport. To this, on the next day, Mr. Phelps made reply as follows: “Our recollection of what passed in the conversation we had on Saturday differs slightly in one particular. It was not intended that the letter should have no part in the reasons for the request for the recall of Lord Sackville. You say that the Minister’s remarks in the published inten iew were thepfecipal reasons. I am still withoptrii copy of the interview. Have sent XTMr. Bayard a copy of your Lordship’s note requesting full details of the language and circumstances.” A letter written by Lord Sackville on October 26 was received by Lord Salisbury on the 4th inst. It incloses the Murchison letter and his reply to it. He says. “I have certain information that the Murchison letter was fictitious, and was concocted by a well known firm, in conjunction with the Republican Committee in New York. It was sent from Southern California to prevefit suspicion. Mr. Bayard, whom I saw to-day, said he

f regretted the incident very much. He accepted my disclaimer of any thought j or intention to interfere with thedomes- , tic policy of the-country. He said it was a campa gn trap, but he frankly told nje that I had been indiscreet. I expressed my deep regret, and Mr. Bayard assured me he boie me no ill will.” A TERRIBLE EXPLOSION. An explosion occurred in a coal mine in Clinton county, Pa., Sunday. As soon as the report was .heard steps were taken to relieve the men in the mine. An appalling state of affairs was found inside. Of the twenty-one men who had been working in the drift, only three or four had escaped death or injury. At the end of an hour’s hard jvork fourteen dead bodies were recovered from the drift. Two of those who we injured subsequently died. One man was missing, and his remains were found out in the woods, where they had been blown by the force of the explosion through the air shaft. The fatal number of killed or fatally injured was found to be seventeen. All but four of them were Hungarians or Italians, whose names were not furnished. The four English-speaking men are named Samuel Killinger, Patrick Donnel, Michael Curran and J. Carliston. The driver, J. Farrell, was entering the drift when the explosion occurred. He was thrown toward the mouth «atid; escaped. His mule was killed. The force of the explosion was shown in the fact that bodies were blown clear out of the moflth of the drift. _ • •

A MINIATURE EARTHQUAKE.

Over a> ton of nitro-glycerine was exploded at Shamokin, Pa., at 4 o’clock Monday morning, and people for miles arou,nd thought there had been an earthquake. So terriffic was the shock that windows in houses three miles distant were broken and the concussion was felt for fifteen miles. The cause of the explosion is a mystery. It -is supposed, however, that a tramp who was seen in the neighborhood Sunday, being ignorant of the danger, in some way ignited the stuff and the explosion followed. There was between two and three tons of it in the magazine and the concussion shook the very foundations of houses between Rochester and Pittsburg. The earth was torn up for a distance of 500 yards; trees an eighth of a mile away were rent asunder and many houses were wrecked. The residence of George ana William Wilson and Thomas Mc6oy, situated a half mile away, were completely shattered and the occupants thrown through the windows. Fortunately, they were not seriously injured and as far as can be ascertained no ono was killed, with the possible exception of the tramp. The loss will be heavy but can not now be estimated.

A DREADFUL ACCIDENT- . A telegram received Saturday morning from Hopewell, Pa., contains the information of a terrible accident that occurred on the Huntington & Broad Top railroad Friday. Fourteen employes of the road .were coming down from the ore mines on a handcar, guided by Wm. Stull, when the forward wheel broke and with awful results, —the —occupants of the truck being scattered in every direction; some of them were picked up forty feet away from the track. Samuel Hastings was caught and wound up in the wheels. He was instantly killed. Mahor Zeeth, the mine boss at Sanday Run, had his skull literally crushed in by the shock of the fall. He fs dead. Samuel Knight and his brother, Lon Knight, were terribly cut up. Samuel Knight is not expected to live. Nicholas Stevens is thought to be fatally injured. Daniel Swisher had his back broken. A second car truck following the first was signalled just in time to prevent a fearful crash. The scene was ghastly to an extreme.

Young Jesse James' Position. St. Louis Chronicle. Jesse James, jr., only heir of the great land pirate, is fifteen years of age, and —strange irony of fate—works for T. T. Crittenden and hi? sons, for that very Governor of Missouri who hounded his father to death, and received his uncle Frank after the surrender of. the latter. The story of the boy’s engagement to work in Crittenden’s real estate Office is interesting. The boy, it appears, answered an advertisement for an office boy. Half a dozen eager applicants were before him. Crittenden asked him what he could do. . ‘ll’ll fight, run a foot race, or write a letter with any of these kid’s for the job,” answered the brigand’s son. “Write a letter,” said Jesse complied, and proved to write a better hand than any other applicant. “What is your name?” asked the exGovernor, kindly. “Jesse James, jr.,” answered the boy. Doubtless ex-Governor Crittenden was as surprised that he was about to hire the son of the notorious Jesse, whom he had'hired assassins to kill, as the boy and his mother were to lsarn that the former's employer was the ex-Governor. Economy. First Dame—What shall we do today? Let’s go to the matinee. Second Dame—Can't; we haven’t got any money. It takes money to go to the theatre. ' “ First Dame —So it does. I did not think of that Well, let’s go shopping.

A POLITICAL SENSATION. The Indianapolis Sentinel, of Wedneff i day, published an alleged letter from Wm. W. Dudley, and declares it is genuine. Mr. Dudley and Republicans in authority declare it to be a forgery and Mr. Dudley says he will prosecute the parties forging and issuing it. Mr. Huston, of the Republican Srate Committee, comes out in a Card saying that Mr. Dudley has had no connection with the Indiana.campaign. The body of the letter reads as follows, and is supposed to have been received by a chairman of a Republican County Central Committee: Dear Sir—l hope you have kept copies of the lists sent me. Such information is very valuable and should be used te great advantage. It has enabled me to demonstrate to friends that, with proper assistance, Indiana is surely Republican for Governor and President, • and it has resulted as I hoped it would, in securing for Indiana the aid necessary. Your Commitee will certainlyre-, ceive from Chairman Huston the assistance necessary to hold our floaters and doubtful voters and gain enough, of the other kind to give Harrison and Morton 10,000 pluiality. New York is now safe beyond peradventure for the Republican presidential ticket; Connecticut likewise. In short, every Northern State, except perhaps New Jersey, though we still hope to carry that State. Harrison’s majority in the Electoral College will not be less than 100. Make our friends in each precinct wake up to the fact that only boodle and fraudulent votes and false counting of returns can heat us in the State. Write each of our precinct correspondents: (1.) To find out who has Democratic boodle, and steer the Democratic workers to them, and make them pay big prices for their own men. (2.) Scan the election officers closely, and make sure to have no man

on the board whose integrity is even questionable, and insist on Republicans watching every movement of the electionofficers. (3.) See that our workers know every voter entitled to vote, and let no one else even offer to vote. (4 ) Divide the floaters into blocks of five, and put a trusted man with necessary funds in charge of these five, and make him responsible that none get away and: that all vote our ticket. (5.) Make a personal appeal to your best men to pledge themselves to devote the entire day, Nov. 6, to work at the polls, i. e., to be present at the polls with tickets. They will be astonished to see how utterly dumbfounded the ordinary Democratic election bummer will be and how quickly he will disap-~ pear. The result will fully justify the sacrifice of time and comfort, and will be a source of satisfaction afterward to these who help in this way. Lay great stress on this last matter. It will pay. There will be no doubt of your receiving assistance through the National, State and county committees—only see that it is husbanded and made to pro duce results. I rely on you to advise your precinct correspondents, and urge them to unremitting and constant efforts from now till the polls dose, and the result is announced officially. We will -fight for a fair election here if necessary. from us, as they did in 1884, without publican do his whole duty and the country will pass into Republican bands, never to leave it, I trust. Thanking you again for your efforts to assist me in my work, I remain yours sincerely, Wm. W. Dudley, Please wire me the results in principal precincts and county. W. W. Dudley has brought suit m the Supreme Court of New York for $25,000 damages in each case against the Times, the World and the Commercial Advertiser for publishing his alleged letter of instruction to Indiana Republicans. Two Victories. Washington Post. Mrs. Waters is a temperance worker, but her husband is not. She went off on a ten day tour recently and met with such succes that she telegraphed as follows to Mr. Waters: “We have met the enemy and he is ours.” T Mr. W. was on a glorious lark with the boys when the telegram came, and at oned telegraphed back: “So have we. • Let the good work go on.”

THE MARKETS.

ZmiANAPOLIJB, Nov. 7, 1888, i 9BIIK. wneai.No. 2 Med....1.(8 I Com, No. 1 White, 45J< No. 2 Red....l 07 No. 2 Yellow 44X No. 8 8ed....1.03 | Oats, N 0.2 White...44X uva stock. Carrtw—Rxtre choice shippers......... 4 6W5 23 Good to choice shippers—.......... 3 60a4 3u Kxtrs choice heifen. —2 50a3.00 Good to choice heifers... 2,50*3.00 Good to choice cows. ..........A3W2.7S Hoes—Heavy packing and shipping _5.J555.45 Light and mixed packing _5.8555.45 425*4.50 Shxbf—Extra choice ........... _3.aa3.75 Good to choice ......_3.c0a3.40 ■eee, bctto, rotn.nv. Eggs „.. ;?o | Poultry,hens per lb 8c Butter, ereamery....23c | Roo6tera.„._4 •‘fancy country ....12c i Turkey! 8q “choice country— 9c I MI3CKLLANXODB. Wool—Fine merino, tub washed. i .3Sa£o “ do unwashed med.... ..... .20*22* “ very coarse.— _17*184 Hay .choice timothy 12.0 I Sugar cured ham 13K Bran —13.00 | Bacon dear sides.—He _ , . I Fea there, prime g 005350 I (Hover see' 1 — 4.75 Chcago. WheaHNov.h- IJ4 I PorkCorn •' .........—3B I Lard...———3.—~ 817 Oats “ .....25 I Elbe 7.40 LIV« MOCK. Can mt—Beeves 3.50*5 25 I Hoex—Mixed..l3s*s.96 Cows.... l-30»2.50| -Heavy.. 5.40*5.80 Stockers XuOaS.2s | Ught._J.»>*s.6k Sheen , 2.76*5.701 sHpa... .4.1X1*5.15 Tol-do— Wheat, Lie; oom. 45; oats, 29; clover eed, 86.00. Cincinnati-Wbeat,l.o7; com, 45;oats, 25; rye: 54- pork 815.00, lard. 89.50; butter creamery, X: dairy, 16; eggs, 16.