Rensselaer Republican, Volume 27, Number 22, Rensselaer, Jasper County, 24 January 1895 — Page 6

THE REPUBLICAN. Gb«r« E. Marshall, Editor. RENSSELAER - INDIANA

Those jolly old settlers aged eighty-three, or thereabouts, who never rode on a railroad train, are dying off at an alarming rate this winter. There certainly cannot be many of them left. A new Cabinet officer is talked of and Hon. Nathan Frank, of St. Louis, formerly a member of Congress from that city, claims the honor of having invented the proposition. The new official, if the measure materializes, will be known as the Secretary of Commerce. Mr. McEtrick, of Massachusetts, has charge of the bill in the House, and is said to be hopeful of its final age“And Isaac went out to meditate in the field at the eventide; and he lifted up his eyes, and saw, and behold the camels were coming.” This scriptural text might possibly have been the foundation for the Scotch tnelody, “The Campbells Are Coming, oh ho! oh ho!” but the probability is that it was not. We mention it in this connection merely as a passing thought. Charles IL, of England,following the downfall of the house of Stuart In the time of Cromwell, fled to the roval palace of Woodstock and was in hiding in that vast building for a considerable time as an outlawed personage, finally escaping to the continent, After the death of Cromwell, in the course of events Charles was restored to the throne. Eugene Debs has just retired to Woodstock jail, a temporary exile, by order of Judge Woods. There be those who will find in this coincidence a happy omen for the noted labor leader. Chicago’s famous merchants, Seigel, Copper & Co., who operate the great department store <?n State street, have secured leases on Sixth avenve, New York, and will at once erect an eight-story block, 200 x 500 feet, at a cost of $1,250,000, for a similar establishment in the great metropolis. They will purchase the land on which the building will stand, as soon as the' negotiations can be completed, at a cost of $2,750,000, making the total investment in the enterprise, $4,000,000. When completed Seigel, Cooper & Co. will rent the building, by departments, and they propose to make the establishment the most complete in the world. A decision from the Indiana Supreme Court, in the case of Joseph Sliney vs. Louis Gauss, a saloonkeeper, from Huntington county, is of general interest, and establishes a precedent that is likely to prove a valuable check upon the liquor traffic in the [ future. A minor son of Sliney obtained liquor from Gauss, became intoxicated and was drowned while in that condition. Judgment against Gauss was given for $670, and the Court declares that the “wrong charged against Gauss is not mere negligence or non-feasance in failing to discharge a duty imposed on him by law, but it consists jf an active, aggressive wrong, a violation of the criminal law. He made the deceased intoxicated. He set in motion a dangerous force and $ gust answer for the immediate reflowing therefrom.”

Tn® ablest lawyer, the most consisteut Christian, the best citizen, perfect man, the possessor H- ts iavery attribute that goes to make r ' ll< ttf6' I Pdblest work of God, an honest nan,”djd live in Georgia, but died thirty-eight, and was Athens, Jan. 6. He was t tbs Hon. Geo. D. Thomas, and the : 'A&c‘^'e ! 'extravagant estimate was upon his character some years igo by the late Henry Grady.himtelf almost able and eloquent man. { * grange to say, the people of Georuniversally held the same <j concerning Mr. Thomas, years, previous to the ill—which ended his life, Mr. uiitnas was Professor of the Law J ,. ) b ! eparVheßt of the State University. .iHe fl evertook part in politics. It bn Ik pleasant to note amid the rush"’hjgfidp'offlnodern life, that the race once in awhile,' of a character, a man Io perfect that all agree upon his rooWWTf'myrits, whose benignant u MpMiAvaateflucha glamour about 1 fid dBUf lilb'that art! are led to exI be - an lit* tbfttAcadppy If MusU’ftoiraXQ^.site.iA* 1 -, 6 > at Ip. m. The newspapers of Gotham lave the great divine a cordial send-

off and have dubbed the congregation “The Free Lance Church.” Dr. Talmage himself refused to sav anything about the venture further than that he would preach at he ame place every Sunday afternuvu a*i 4 o’clock. A scqpe not down on the programme occurred that some what marred the solemnity of the opening service. A handsome young man under the “inflooence” went out “to see a man,” evidently believing that he was at a theatrical performance. On his return he staggered up the aisle, only to find his seat occupied. He became angry and remarked in a maudlin manner, “I protest.” A disagreeable interruption seemed imminent and Dr. Talmage requested the ushers to “remove the poor benighted soul,"which was done, the p. b. s. continuing to “protest.” That -distinguished English visitor to the United States. John Burns, M. P., got a dose of American bluntness at Pittsburg, Dec, 28, that must have given him a pain. One Col. Rend, a delegate to the convention of miners and operators, in session, at which a resolution had been offered extending the honor of a seat to Mr. Burns, arose in his place and proceeded to “rend” the “blarsted Britisher” in great style, accusing him of the most offensive conduct toward Americans and American institutions. Mr. Rend cntered:an emphatic protest against receiving foreign visitors with honor who were in the habit of traducing American ways in any form in public, which he vehemently charged that both Mr. Burns and Mr. Stead had done. Mr. Rend said that the only object of these English reformers in visiting our country was to obtain material for the preparation of slanderous books which they would publish on. their return home, and insisted that it was time to stop lionizing such characters. Strange as it may appear, Mr. Burnd was seated at once, only one vote being recorded in opposition to the resolution to that effect —that, presumably, being cast by Col. Rend himself. Various first-class cities are already “laying the pipes” to secure the Presidential conventions of the two great parties next year. St. Louis wants the Republican convention, ana wants it bad. If the managers who control this matter for both the Democratic and Republican parties are able to properly size up the situation, they will hold their nominating conventions at Indianapolis. The reasons making this a desirable move on the part of both parties are many and obvious. The capital of Indiana is practically the center of the United States east of the Rocky Mountains. Its railroad facilities are unexcelled. Its hotel accommodations can be made ample And paramount, and above all other reasons, Indiana will be considered debatable ground by all conservative politicians, and the influence of a great national convention will be considered of great value in the way of creating prestige. If Tndianoplis has not public spirit enough to secure the next conventions, it is because her citizens have had their confidence shaken by the conduct of similar enterprises heretofore, and will not, perhaps, feel like raising a fund sufficiently ample only to see a huge slice of it gobbled up b» alleged managers.

CANTON’S EXECUTION GROUND.

Heads of Criminals Kept in Pickle in Earthen Jars. “Scenes in Canton.” bv Florence O’Drlsooll, M. P., in the January C :ntusy. We arrived at a place where a lot of rough, unbaked pipkins covered the ground. It was a narrow strip of land twenty or twenty-five feet wide and seventy or eight}’ long, the only patch of ground not built upon in the neighborhood. "This is the place,” said the guide; “itisoneof thesights.” It was not much of a sight. I thought, after a hurried glance, and I did not feel inclined for deeper investigation. Hitherto it had seemed as if nothing could upset me, but that afternoon I was doubtful. Near the middle where the pipkins were not so close together, the ground was discolored. “What is that?” said 1. “Some men were beheaded ther • ■ day or two ago.” he answe <?. “Would you like to see their heaThey are in those large jars standing near the wall.” But I declined. Some half-dozen T-shaped crosses were stacked against the wall. I inquired of these harmlesslooking instruments. “They are for tying people to, to keep them in position for the lipg-chee, was the reply. I had heard this word before So I asked about it. “Oh,” said the guide, as if imparting the most ordinary information", “the ling.chee is cutting into pieces# while alive.” “Is this form of execution often carried out?” I asked. “Yes,” be turned .toffee, The guidfl.PßlJl dwdt wishamtMta* WiM* mMfa jword;but T escapedgflmidtaft lowed evidently with great contempt for my capacity as a sight-seer.

“POINTS OF COMPASS.”

East, West, North, South-*AII Shall Be Brought to Christ. A Geographical Discourse at the New York Academy of Mu»lc byDr. Talmage. Rev. Dr. Talmage preached at the New York Academy of Music at 4 p. m., last Sunday, from the subject, “Points of Compass.” Text—Luke xiii, 29, “They shall come from the East, and from the West, and from the North, and fromothe South, and shall sit down.” The man who wrote this was at one time a practicing physican, at another time a talented painter, at another time a powerful preacher, at another time a reporter, an inspired reporter. God bless and help and inspire all reporters! From their pen drops the health or poison of nations. The name of this reporter was Lucan us, for short he was called Luke, and in my text, although stenography had not yet been born, he reports verbatim a sermon of Christ which in one paragraph bowls the round world into the light of the millennium. “They shall come from the East, and from the West, and from the North and from the South, and shall sit down.” Nothing more interested me in my recent journey around the world than i to see the ship captain about noon, whether on the Pacific, or the Indian ' or Bengal or Mediterranean or Red • sea, looking through a nautical instrument to find just where we were sailing, and it is well to know that, though the captain tells you there | are thirty-two points of division of I the compass card in the marine’s ■ compass, there are only four cardinal points, and my text hails them — the north, the south, the east, the west. The hardest part of the field to be taken is the north, because our gospel is an emotional gospel, and ' the nations -of the far north are aj cold-blooded race, Thev dwell amid icebergs and eternal snows and everlasting winter. Greenlanders, Laplanders, Icelanders, Siberians —their vehicle is the sledge drawn by reindeer, their apparel the thickest furs at all seasons] their existence a lifetime battle with th: cold. But already the huts of the Arctic hear the songs of divine worship. Already the snows fall on open new [ testaments. Already the warmth J of the Sun of Righteousness begins j to be felt through the bodies and minds and souls of the hyperboreans. I The inhabitants of Hudson bay are ' gathering to the cross. The Church missionary society in those polar, climes has been grandly successful in establishing twenty-four gospel stations, and over 12,008 natives have believed and been baptized. ' The Moravians have kindled the| light of the gospel all up and down Labrador. The Danish mission has gathered disciples from among the I shivering inhabitants of Greenland. f Alaska, called at its annexation ! William H. Seward's folly, turns out to be William H. Seward’s triumph, and it is hearing the- voice of God through the American missionaries —men and women as defiant of arctic hardships as the old Scottish chief who, when campingout in a winter’s night, knocked from under his son’s head a pillow of snow, saying that such indulgence in luxury would weaken and disgrace the clan. But my text takes in the opposite point of the compass. The far south has, through high temperature, temptations to lethargy and indolence and hot blood which tend to i multiform evil. We have through my text got the north in, notwithstanding its frosts, and the same text brings in the south, notwithstanding its torridity. The fields of cactus, the orange grove and thickets of magnolia are to be surendered to the Lord Almighty. The south! That means Mexico and all the regions that William H. Prescott and Lord Kingsborough made familiar

to literature —Mexico in the strange dialect of the Aztecs; Mexico conquered by Hernan Cortez to be more gloriously conquered; Mexico with its capital more than seven thousand feet above the sea level, looking down upon the entrancement of lake and valley and plain; Mexico the home of nations yet to be born —all for Christ. The south! Tha,t means Africa, which David Livingstone consecrated to God when he died on his knees in his tent of exploration. Already about seven hundred and fifty thousand converts to Christianity in Africa. But I must not forget that my text takes in another cardinal point of the compass. It takes in the east. 1 have to report that in a journey around the world there is nothing so much impresses one as the fact that the missionaries, divinely blessed, are taking the world for God. The horrible war between Japan and China will leave the last wall of opposition flat in the dust. War is barbarism always and everywhere. We bold up our hands in amazement at the massacre at Port Arthur as though Christian nations could never go into such diabolism.' We forget Ft. Pillow. We forget that during the war both North and South rejoiced whbivthere-were 000 more wtffcdeS'htf® the j Chin!s^itti»<tfdiked* SWfesiw leßkxWK>i«alHMt<rfhe emnfii eastwnr with ■ him. Of course there are high ob-

stacles to be overcome, and great ordeals must be passed through before the consummation, as witness the Armenians under the butchery of the Turks. May that throne on the banks of the Bosporus soon crumble! The time has already come when the United States government and Great Britain-and Germany ought to intone the indignation of all civilized nations. While it is not requisite that arms be sent there to avenge the wholesale massacre of Armenians, it is requisite that by cable under the seas and by protest that shall thrill the wires from Washington and London and Berlin to Constantinople the nations anathematize the diabolism for which the Sultan of Turkey is responsible. Mohammedanism is a curse, whether in Turkey or New York. “They shall come from the east.” There is another point of the compass that my text includes. “They shall come from the west.” That means America redeemed. Everything between Atlantic and Pacific oceans to be brought within the circle of holiness and rapture. Will it be done by wordlv reform or evangelism? Will it be law or gospel? I am glad that a wave of reform has swept across the land, and all cities are feeling the advantage of the mighty movement. Let the good work go on until the last municipal evil is extirpated. But a movement which ends with crime exposed and law executed stops half way. The law nhver yet saved anybody, never yet changed anybody. Break up all the houses of iniquity in this city, and you only send the occupants to other cities. Break down all the policemen in New York, and while it changes their worldly fortunes it does not change their heart or life. The greatest want in New York today is the transforming power of the gospel of Jesus Christ to change the heart and the life and uplift the tone of moral sentiment and make men do right, not because they are afraid of Ludlow street'jail or Sing Sing, but because they love God and hate un righteousness I have never heard, nor have you heard, of anything except the gospel that proposes to regenerate the heart and by the influence of that regenerated heart rectify the life. Execute the law, most certainly, but preach the gospel by all means —in churches, in theaters, in homes, in prisons, on the land and cn the sea. The work is not so difficult as many suppose. You say, “There are the foreign populations.” Yes, but many of them are Hollanders, and they were brought up to love and worship God, and it will take but little to persuade the Jjlollanders to adopt the religion of their forefathers. Then there are among these foreigners so many of the Scotch. They or their ancestors heard Thomas Chalmers thunder and Robert McCheyne pray. The breath of God so' often swept through the heather of the highlands and the voice of God has so often sounded through the Trosachs, and they all know how to sing “Dundee,” so that they will not have often to be invited to accept the God of John Knox and Bothwell Bridge. Then there are among these foreigners so many of the English. They inherited the same language as we inherited —the English in which Shakspeare dramatized, and Milton claimed his cantos, and Henry Melville gospelized, and Oliver Cromwell prorogued parliament, and Wellington commanded his eager hosts. Among these foreigners are the Swiss, and they were rocked in a cradle under the shadow of the Alps, that cathedral of the Almighty in which all the elements, snow and hail and tempest and hurricane, worship. Among these foreigners are a vast host of Germans, and they feel centuries afterward the power of that unparalleled spirit who shook the earth when he trod it, and the heavens when he prayed—Martin Luther! From all nations our foreign .populations have come, and they are homesick, far away from the place of their childhood and the graves of their ancestors, and our glorious religion presented t<s them aright will meet their needs and fill their souls and kindle their enthusiasm.

But what will they do after they come? Here is something gloriously consolatory that you have never noticed. “They shall come from the East and the West, and the North, and the South, and shall sit down.” Oh, this is a tired world! The most of people are kept on the run all their lifetime. Business keeps them on the run. Trouble keeps them on tbe run. Rivalries keep them on the run. They are tunning from disaster. They are running for reward. And those who run the fastest and run the longest seem best to succeed. But my text suggests a restful posture for all God’s children, for all those who for a lifetime have been on the run. “They shall sit down!” Why run any longer? When a man gets heaven, what more can he get? “They shall sit doyvn!" Not alone, but in picked companionship of the universe; not embsrassed, though a Seraph should Sit down on one side bf yon hhd 'an archangel on theOtheK 1 ‘ T ncftfee that the moat of the styles,, of! toii require Thebe arc tihe.thousands of ’girls , sueh.pefsortfi (because,or fl jack, or cusromers there ’OWfjE’tfhpllfflflhttoe btirii Wftrsv W* the 4WBeUagdskM abAtthi .ftp - ductors. In most BMf b occupations they must stand. Bat

ahead of all those who love and serv the Lord is a resting place, a core plete relaxation of fatigued muscle somethingcushioncd and upholstere and embroidered with the very eas of heaven. “They shall sit down.” Rest frot toil. Rest from pain. Rest fror persecution. Rest from uncertainty Beuatiful, joyous.transporting, ever lasting rest! Oh, men and womei of the frozen north, and the bloom ing south, and from the realms c the rising and setting sun, throug Christ get your sins forgiven ap< start for the place where you may a last sit down in blissful recover from the fatigues of earth whil there roll over you the raptures o heaven. Many of you have had sue.’ a rough tussle in this world that i your faculties were not perfect ii heaven you would some time forge yourself and say, “It is time for m to start on that journey,” or “I must be time for me to count oa .the drops of that medicine,” or “ wonder what new attack there is oi me through the newspapers?” oi “Do you think I will save anythin; of those crops from the grasshop pers, or locusts, or the droughts? or “I wonder how much I have los in that last bargain'f’Lor “Imus hurry lest I miss the train.” No, no The last volume of direful earth!; experience will be finished. Yea the last chapter, the last paragraph the last sentence, the last word Finis. Frederick the Great, notwithing the mighty domain over whicl he reigned, was so depressed at times he could not speak withou crying and carried a small bottle o quick poison with which to end hit misery when he could stand it n< longer. But I give you this smai vial of goad anodyne, one drop o which, not hurting either body oi soul, ought to soothe all unrest am put your pulses into an eternal calm “They shall come from the east, am from the west, and from the north and the south, and shall sit down.’

Indiana's Thousand Lakes,

Brooklyn Eagle. “New Yorkers rejoice in tbeii Thousand Islands,but Indiana boasts of her thousand lakes.” Is thal sentence justified, in fact, in tht State of Indiana? Answer—A dispatch in one of tht morning papers not very long age was, perhaps, the foundation upor which the author of the sentence quoted built his assertion in regard to Indiana's 1,000 lakes. From thal dispatch it appears that “huddled together in the northeastern cornet of Indiana are more than 1,000 natural lakes, ranging in size from ten to one hundred acres. They are al, within the boundaries of Steuben, DeKalb, Lagrange, Noble and Kos ciusko counties, 312 of them being ic Noble county alone. Such is Ihe isolation of this extraordinary grouf of lakes that the average Indiana citizen, outside of the small area iu which the system is situated, is unaware of its existence. It is entirely separate from the river system oi Indiana and corresponds in character with that famous group of lakei in Orange and Sullivan counties, N. Y., and Wayne and Pike counties, Pa. —literally great springs of crystal water, with bottoms of tht whitest sand. The wild charm o! mountain environment that is tht characteristic of their eastern coun terparts is lacking, however, in th( Indiana lakes, although they occupy the highest situation in Indiana. Nowhere else in Indiana is there ? lake of any size whatever. These sheets of water are the natural homes of the small mouth black bass, and ex-Fish Commissioner Dennis, of Indiana, declares that the small mouth black bass that inhabit th* waters of every part of the country came from that group of lakes.”

In perforating postage stamps i die plate is placed below the needlei of a machine carrying 300 needles. As about 180,000,000 holes are now punched a day, the wear on the di< plate is excessive; brass plates weai out in a day, and even steel plates are rapidly destroyed. A Boston manufacturing company recently celebrated half a century o: existence by making a distributior. of $33,000 among its employes on fl basis of $5 for each year of service. Some of the employes have been it the service so long that their shares reached $l5O each.

How She Knew.

Texas Siftings. Wife (listening) —There comes Dick now. Wife's Sister—l don’t see how yot can tell him from other men. Wise —He has such an elastic ste; —always wears rubbers at this season of the year. Mamma—You were a long time saying your prayers tonight. Whj was it? Teddy—’Cause I had everything 1 wanted for dinner, an' I most wai certain I’d dream." Alta had heard some of her elders talking about the possibility of the Wilson bill passing the House. Ai dinner, one windy day, a newspapei blew, past the window. ~j .“Qh,” she exclainfed, isn t thal the Wilson bill?” 'p ThUitW AH tttseb -Abu.. .

A Cynicnl Suggestion.

I f iW“W We’iWMPKSsU lome.' JflUt nnwiiflava. under tuo. imnras&ioi TO *

INDIANA STATE NEWS.

Rabbits are scarce in St Joseph county. Oakland City reports an earthquake, Jan. A “Good Citizens’ League” has been organized at Greenwood. The Sweetzer opera house, at Marion, was burned, Wednesday evening. There was a serious natural gas explosion at the paper mill at Eaton. Jan. 15. Anderson is bragging about a two-leggei dog that walks on its hind feet like • kangaroo. ’ , Wm. O'Connor, insane, was burned te death near Kennington, Jan. 15, havint set fire to liis own bed. Decker & Sons, of Anderson, have perfected a device for separating gas and water in wellsthat have been drowned out David R. Leeper has been appointed metropolitan police (commissioner at South Bend, in place of W. H. Longley resigned, The Indiana Canners’ Association met at Indianapolis. Tuesday, and discussed the outlook, which was conceded to be rather bad. Connersville is having a good deal o! trouble for want of gas. The gas is piped from the Carthage field, a distance ol twenty-six miles. The burglar killed at Tangier, Parke county, Nov. 1, by Merchant McCord, ha* been finally identified as Charles Love, o) Logansport, one of the worst outlaws that ever infested Indiana. The Big Four and B. & O. are endeavoring to have the proposed Presbyterian “Chatauqua,” recently located at Bass Lake, Starke county, relocated at Turkey Lake, Kosciusko county. Alonzo Tubbs, who disappeared from New Albany in 1867 and who has been mourned for dead by his relatives foi many years, has turned up as a member of the Missouri Legislature. Decatur merchants are being boycotted by neighboring farmers for the alleged reason that no suitable hitching yard has been provided for farmers’ teams. The movement has assumed alarming proportions. Joseph Cloud, aged seventy-two, living near Goshen, was murdered by his youngest son, a lunatic. The assault was committed New Year's Day, the aged father lingering until the 15th inst., when he died from his injuries. The Indiana Retail Lumber Dealers’ Association met at Indianapolis. Jan. 15. “The Grand Concatenation of Iloohoos,” a secret order composed of members of the Association, banquette! and “had fun” at the Denison in the evening. A man who goes by the name of “Malica Bill” Scott took morphine at Crawfordsville, Monday night, with suicidal intent. Scott had stolen some tools and sold them to a second-hand store. He attempted to commit suicide to escape at'* rest. A doctor saved his life, and now h® is in custody. The mammoth towboat Boaz, bound for New Orleans with 503,000 bushels of coal, while running rapidly, Tuesday morning, struck a mudbank on the Indiana side ot the Ohio river at a point near Leavenworth. and the entire fleet was sunk. The loss will be $50,0.0. The accident was dua to the heavy fog. Wednesday, two convicts, named Connor and Blake, were brought down from Michigan City to testify against Charles Shirk, on trial in the Kosciusko Circuit Court for grand larceny. The men were placed in cells in the Warsaw jail, and during the night Shirk got at them, saturated their bunkswith gasoline and touched it off. Fortunately there was but little of the fluid, and the men were aroused and extinguished the blaze before they were singed. 4 Louis and George Shirley, well-known railroad men of Jeffersonville, claim to be heirs to a large part of the ground on which the city of Georgetown. Ky., now stands. The site of the court house is also claimed by them. They claim to have deeds to the property which descended from their grandfather, and that the land has never been deeded from the Shirley family. The property is worth at least half a million. Attorneys have been engaged to push their claims. John P. Quinn, the famous evangelist, now in Cincinnati with evangelist E. F. Goff, both of whom are sent out by the National Anti-Gambling Association, is well remembered by old prison officials at Jeffersonville, Quinn having served fourteen months in the Prison South for working a “bunco" game. His term was much longer, but he was found to be innocent after serving fourteen months and pardoned by Gov. Gray. Previous to that he was a noted gambler, but reformed.

THE MARKETS.

Jan 19,1895. In<ll»i>»i*<»tU. CRAIN ANl> BAY. Wheat— corn. 41e; nats, 32%c; rye, 48c; hay, choice timothy, LIVE STOCK. Cattle Shippers, Stockers. »3.25(43.0i); heifers. #1.75(43.50; cows, 11(43.00'; bulls, #1.75(43.25: milkers, #16.00 (440.00. J loos— #3.00(44.50. • SIIKKI*—-#1.50(<i3.(J0. poultry ano other rnonuoK. (Prices Paid by Shippers.) Poultry'-11 ens. Ge per 1b; spring chickens, tie; cocks, 3c; turkeys, toms, 4c; hens, 7c per 1b; young turkeys, 7c; ducks, tie per ib; geese, #4.80(445.40 per doz. tor choice. Eggs—Shippers paying 18c. Butter—Choice. IWjjl'Jc. Honey—lßc Feathers—Prime geese, 30@32c per mixed duck. 20c per Ib. Beeswax—2Oe for yellow; 15c for dark. Wool—Medium unwashed, 13c; Cottaweld and coarse combing, 10,4 (3c; tubwashed. jtkji 18c; burry and unmerchantable. 5c less. Hikes—No. 1 G. S. hides, ftc; No. 2 G 8. bides, 4c. Vl)io»«o. Wiikat—s4?fc: corn,4sXc; oats, 28Xc; pork, #11.55; lard, (6.87 X. Sew York. Wheat - 03e;coru, 53Xe; oats, Baltimore. Wheat—OOXc; corn, 48c; oats, 38XcBt. Loub. Wheat—s2Xc; corn. oats, 30Jf« A'hlladelphls. L'Wiieat—Clc; corn, 49}<c; oats, 37Xe. *** tu *’ Mluneapolte. 1 hard, tioXc. k Liberty.