Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 9, 21 August 1884 — Page 1

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RICHMOND, INDIANA, THUKSDAY, AUGUST 21. 1884. NINTH YEAR WEE KIT BITAIII-WHEDIMI.I IIAILI EHTABLUHBDIOT. I

TO-DAY'S

at... "fcTTelearan BelllT rank Dally illallnns,Tnrsns;si FOUR O'CLOCK, P. M. THE DEADLY (US. ttmwrm Mm Periiib la a PB;lfaal 4'oal Mia. Siiamokin, 'A.,Anjr. 21. Fire broke .-out yesterday in the Buck Ridge mine 'slope, 1,500 feet from the surface. The company bought the Greenback col liery adjoining, the workings of which are higher than those, of Buck Ridse '1 colliery. The intention was to bore a "hole thirty-six feet in length from the Ureenbaek to liuck Kulge colliery and turn the creek into both collieries and by Hooding them put out the fire. While men were engaged in this work to-day gas suddenly poured in from the burning mine, and before they could escape seven men fell victims to the deadly gag. It in impossible to reach their bodies, as both mines are tull ot gas and the tire is increasing. Eleven mules were also burned. Rraalra of the 3tn Oeorsjln Resjrlment Macov, Ga., Aug. 21. At the reunion of the 5th Georgia regiment to-day. representatives ot nine com panics from different portions of the State were in attendance. The regi ment served throughout the war. en gaging in battles from Virginia to South Carolina. An address of welcome was delivered by Congressman Thomas Hardeman. A feature of the meeting was the restoration ot the battle nag, captured at the battle of Coosahatchee, in lat4. by the With JNew York reeiment It was presented by L. C. Young, of mat regiment, touowed by a touching scene. 1 he veterans stood when it was received, and many shed tears. Captain Kidd, who was to receive the flag, was so overcome by emotion that he could only reply in a few words. Received by tne President.

New York, Aug. 21. President Arthur this morning received at the Fifth . Avenue hotel the officers of the Greely r ' relief expedition, including Commander

Schley, Commander Collin, Lieutenant mery, thiet Engineer JMelville and a dozen others. Secretaries Chandler and Lincoln and General Butler, who nad called to see the President, were present. Secretary Chandler informed Commander Schley that the President had decided to appoint him chief of the bureau of equipment and recruiting, in place of Commodore Earl English, who commands the European squadron. With the office of chief ot a bureau in the Navy Department goes

t jrie ran or commodore.

A allgn-Taned fanfldrar Operator. Sharon, Pa., Aug. 21. A confidence operator calling himself George Frask, of San Francisco, son of the most extensive canner of fruits on the coast, has been working this section several days and succeeded in victimizing numerous hotels and borrowing money from various persons. He is a man of tine appearance and polished address, and has possession of dozens of forged letters and telegrams dated San Fran- , cisco. He represents he has a draft for $."MN) awaiting him at a distant point, aud shows telegrams to that effect. New Counterfeit lead. Washinuton, Aug. 21. The secret service division is in possession of a new counterfeit $10 note on the Third i National bank of Cincinnati. It is of ' the series of 1S82, with a chocolate colored back. The vignettes on the face of the note have a coarse, smetehy aplearance, but the back is well executed aud calculated to deceive.

v Judge Jacob A. Ela, auditor of the treasury for the postoffice department, died to-day of erysipelas. Mr. Ela served two terms in congress from Mew ' Hampshire. fatal Boiler Explosion. ' Memphis, Aug. 21. The government launch lafney, employed at the works here, exploded her boiler this morn's , ing, killing Paymaster .N. God- , deu, who was blown overboard, aud seriously scalding Engineer A. ' Graham, Pilot C. 1. Ryan, deck hand Peter Walsh and a newsboy who was on the launch. The body ot Godden has not yet been recovered. i e e Plenro-PneamonlA Anionic Cattle. Springfield, III., Aug. 21. In view of the developments respecting thts presence of pleuro-pneumonia among herds ot Jersey cattle in " Illinois, Governor Hamilton, has called State Veterinarian Paaren here to consult upon su-ps to be taken. The herd where the trouble first appeared ' came from Ohio, and one or two from the neighborhood of Washington, D. C. rinerty In the field. Chicago, Aug. 21. Congressman John F. Finerty, who was elected as an independent in the Second Illinois congressional district two years ago at a ; large mass meeting of his adherents last ' night, announced be would again make the race in accordance with the ex- . pressed wish of those present. HolCs Majority. Frankfort, Kv., Aug. 21. The official count of the vote tor Appellate Judge in the First District, shows W. H. Holt (Republican.) received 33.1503 votes and Riddell (Democrat,) 32,lSa. Holts majority, t23. The district comprises forty -one counties. LMki Like War. London, Aug.21. The Times' Pekin dispatch of this date says: "The French v consul lowered his flag at 1 o'clock today. The interests of French subjects were entrusted to the Russian minister. China absolutely refuses to admit the French claims. Bemryw Keaaaina to be Taken C n. Lincoln, Nkb., Aug.21. Miss Dora Buck mailed yesterday a paper establishing her. relationship to Private - Henry, and aathorized the coroner to take up the remains.

TBI TEACHERS' I HTITITE.

WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON. The institute adjourned to the United Presbyterian -church for the exercises of the afternoon s session. The programme having opened with the usual devotional song, Mr. Mac Dherson Droceeded to introduce Dr. J li. Weist, who occupied the first hour ot Uur I'resent School fcystem. I he doctor's delivery is very emphatic and distinct, and consequently was listened to by all with a more than usual show ot attention, lie first denned the re la tive duties of teacher and physician and the bearing, direct and indirect, of those duties upon the welfare ot the people mentally and physically. A true education should embrace "more than a knowledge of the shadows of things. It must make us creative like God and nature, so that every pulsation will leave behind it a monument." The first step toward the attainment of this education consists in developing the physical powers of the being, which is what our ordinary educational system fails to achieve. Consequently "the whole Nation suffers. Indeed, the very hand ot .death is upon it I Pauperism, crime, insanity and a general degenera tion are destroying the masses, aud salvation can only come through a proper education ot the people. thus is clearly demonstrated the great responsibility of the teacher. The people themselves constitute the most impor tant capital ot the state : hence the value ot enriching that capital. 1 he du ration ot human hie is - less than it was fifty years ago and continues on the de crease, which facts, together with that of the growth of consumption, insanity, crime and pauperism, show great cause for alarm on the part of the intelligent thinker. 1 he controlling iorce ot the age is thought, which may be defined as a product of the cells of the gray matter of the brain; or, in other words, "the result of a change of form in inor ganic matter taken into the system as rood. Iheretore one readily appreciates the necessity of the proper nutri tion of the brain or ot the cerebral cells. How is this to be effected without physical development? Educators have emphasized and labored for the one end ot mental development and the result of their efforts is a multiplicity of evils. The education of each individual should be adapted to his peculiar organization "hence the develop ment of the race and that of the indi vidual can be best secured when the one is treated as the end and the other as the means." A system of education should be judged by its effect upon the Deonle or nation rather than upon the single mind. Every condition of the physical system is hereditary, especially when an entire neoole is trained and directed to a common end. "Enlighten ed thinkers insist that a criminal should not be treated as a blank but as a collection of hereditary tendencies,"should our schools and teachers, therefore, tall behind the keepers ot prisons in knowl edge and method I In the deterioration of a race consequent upon neglect , of physical development, tne aecay is nrst to be detected in the moral sensibilities. How evident, therefore, is the end! ' State Superintendent John W. IIolcombe occupied the second hour of the afternoon in giving to the institute a clear idea ot the school economy of the State of Indiana. He demonstrated the simplicity of the Indiana system and stated that frequent calls had been made by new and distant States for a similar system. Wayne county is renowned for her supremacy in educational matters. In some of our neighboring States each county is hampered with some one or two hundred trustees which in an accumlated body must be influenced to each and every ' reform. Thus the machinery of the educational system is rendered cumbersome and unwieldy. THURSDAY MORNING. Opening exercises were conducted by Superintendent Wood. Mr. Reece followed in a discussion of music, the best methods of instructing in this branch and the varying degrees of adaptability shown in the average child. Illustrations were drawn upon the blackboard. The best of teachers have taught this subject without any share in the production of tones, this partot the lesson being confined exclusively to the class. The remarks of Mr. Reece were-succeeded by the rendering on the part of the institute of the songs, "Singing of Jesus' Love" and "Faithful Laborer." After a recess, Prof. Cyrus Ilodgin spoke concerning the constitution and matters bearing upon the same. The question was propounded him: "Did all the members of Congress sign the Declaration ot Independence? We are informed that all did so save one Robert Livingston, of New York. The reason of his not signing is not made clear. He was also a member of the legislature of New York at the same time, and it is presumed that he was summoned from the deliberations ot the supreme legislative body to partake in those of his immediate State. Whether he regarded these last as the more important, we cannot say.. The fundamental defect in the so-called articles of confederation.was the form of that document, its looseness, its vagueness, its failure to bind obligations irrecoverably. There was no executive under these articles, no judiciary. Congress was its own executive. The States, in brief, were supreme, the government subordinate.A recess was here given which was followed by remarks, from Dr James F. Hibberd. The doctor drew a line ot difference between habits,; in the individual, and those things which are inherent and natural. The doctor's remarks were very interesting. 'I Dentil of John Peterson. John Peterson, one of our xldest German citizens, died last' evening at 5 o'clock, after a long and painful, illness of dropsy, aged about seventy years. Mr. Peterson came to, Richmond in 1335, fifty years a go. to work at his trade as a stone mason, and wjany of the stones in the abutments of the National road bridge over Whitewater were laid by his hands. Being an industrious and frugal man he soon acquired considera-

ble property, and being a man of quick perception, sound judgment and a fluent talker he took an active part in local politics, and frequently represented his

ward in the city council. We was always considered a safe legislator, at all times keeping the welfare of the city in view. He was a member of the Lutheran church, and we believe was one of the founders of St. Paul's church. He has gone from among us, but his mem ory will not soon be forgotten. . THE WATIB WORKS. Tne Complaint Filed by tne Klen- , mond Water Works in tne Clerk's Office Teaterday. The Richmond City Water Works complains ot the city ot Richmond and the S. L. Wiley Construction Company, and says that said plaintiff is a corporation duly organized and existing under the laws of the State of Indiana, being organized for the purpose ot construct ing, operating and maintaining a system of water works to be used in supplying the defendant, the city of Richmond, Indiana, and the citizens thereof, with water j that in pursuance of said object plaintiff made propositions to said city through its common council, stating the terms upon which plaintiff would conday of February, 1884, the said city, by ordinance duly ordained by its common council, did agree that said plaintiff might construct said water works upon the terms therein named, to-wit Agreeing among other things to con struct buildings, machinery, reservoir, titration galleries, pipes, mains, hydrants and other appurtenances of the kind, quality and capacity set forth in said ordinance, by means whereof it would sup ply said city and residents thereof with water of a fixed standard of purity tor domestic and mechanical purposes. and maintain water in said pipes, mains and hydrants at not less than a stipu lated pressure, with provisions tor extra pressure in case ot hre. and supply said residents with water at prices specified in said ordinance and furnish water free of cost to said city and certain others for certain purposes, and to lay its water pipes and mains upon certain streets, named in said ordinance, and extend them from time to time upon terms and conditions named in said ordinance. And in consideration of these obligations said city did by said ordinance agree with the plaintiff, among other things, that plaintiff should have the right to lay its water pipes and mains under the surface of the streets, highways and public grounds of said city, subject to specified conditions, as to the manner of making excavations and restoring the surface to its former condition, and that said city would for the term ot seven years from the completion of said water works rent one hundred and eighty hydrants to be placed upon the lines of plaintiff s pipes at an annual rental of ft0 tor each hy drant, said ordinance providing that said city should designate the points of said lines where said hydrants should be located. And by the terms ot said ordinance plaintiff was given thirty days from its passage within which to signify its acceptance of the terms of said ordi nance by hhng a written acceptance thereof with the clerk ot said city, together with a bond in the penal sum of one hundred thousand dollars conditioned for the faithful performance by plaintiff of the obligations of said ordinance and ninety days from the filing ot said acceptvnee and bond within which to begin the construction of said work. And for greater certainty a copy of said ordinance is filed herewith. And plaintiff says that within the thirty days allowed for that purpose in said ordinance plaintiff did file with the clerk of the said city its written acceptance of the terms, conditions and obligations of said ordinance. The plaintiff is represented by Harrison, Miller & Elam, Baker, Horde & Hendricks, Thomas J. Study and Henry C. Fox. Serious Accldent. Edward Cooke [Edward Cook], who was night watchman at the union depot for eight years, but who took a position as brakeman on a through freight a few months since, met with a serious accident at Honey Creek yesterday. In attempting to board his train while it was in rapid motion, his foot caught in a cattle guard and he was thrown down, and fell with one hand on the track, which was badly mashed by a wheel passing over it. Two fingers were amputated on his arrival here, and the removal of a third may be necessary. He was also struck on the hip by a car, which inflicted a painful wound. He is receiving every possible attention, and the indications now are that he will recover. Married. On Tuesday evening at the residence of the bride's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allen Harris, Mr. Robert Benton and Miss Ella Harris, all of this city, Rev. Frost Craft officiating. The guests comprised only relatives, and these complimented the bride and groom with many handsome preseDte. The newly married pair left yesterday morning for Maryland to visit, tor two weeks, the parents and other relatives of Mr. Benton. Returning, they will make Richmond their home. The Palladium offers many warm congratulations to the happy young pair whe start out so auspiciously on their wedded career. Republican Bally. The rally on next Friday evening at the Tenth street Park, will be the red hot meeting thus far in the campaign. Good music and the best of speeches will be had, and every Republican in Richmond is expected to be present and assist in making the night memorable. Died. James P. Burgess, at his residence three miles south of town, Wednesday morning at 11 o'clock, of paralysis, in his S3d year. The funeral will be on Friday next at 2 o'clock p.m. Services at the church, near his late residence. Interment at Elk horn.

A VANISHING IDEAL.

Iways In Stent, Yet Never Qalts Wllhln Oar Grasp. Bob Bnrdetts in Brooklyn Eagle.) Man never attains his ideal, lie comes nearest it the day ha leaves school; all that year he hovers aronod it in pleasant proximity. Sometimes I think Le quite attains it on commencement day. But a year away from school he and his kieal part company. He sees it drifting farther away from his eager hands. I have, in my own brilliant and aggressive career, pursued several fk-eting and more or less perfect ideals, rrom wnere l now stand, at the distance-pole. I can sse the majority of them scooting under me wire, and 1 tee I that I am shut out. One, I can see, is yet in nearer sight, and I am very loth to see it get entirely away rrom me. I have myideahof physical perfection in the aged. This is the mannar of old man I want to be. I am not a tall man now. I do not really have to stand up to look ever the baca ot a car seal. 1 stand up merely because I can see farther. But as I grow old I want to fat up. I want to develop a capacious Day window, so Uiat when my summer vest is hanging on the line it will look like a schooner coming down "wing and wing. " Then I can wear mv watch in my fob. with a great big seal dangling irom it li Ke a oeii clapper. 1 want to be short in the breath and wheeze when I climb up-stairs, and pun: and pant when I walk up-hill, and have to take two steps to cross the gut ter. And I would wear a claw-hammer coat, with wide lapels, all the time, and carry my handkerchief in my hat. 1 would like my hair to turn snow-white or else fall off, am not very particular which. I would like my mustache to bleach out until it looked like a streak of flour across my lip. I believe this is all. I think that is a photograph of the kind of an old man I would like to be. This is my ideal old man. Cane and wheezy laugh, of course. And I am just as confident as I am that I will die rich that, as I grow old, I will shrivel up and dry out until I look like a shoestring with clothes on. ' 'Twas ever thus, from childhood's hours I've seen my fondest hopes decay; I never tried to save an hour but What I wasted half a day. I never took a girl to church, the longest way back home to plan, but that she left me in the lurch, and walked back with another man. I never had a fond gazelle to glad me with its dark blue eye; 1 never bad a goat, whicb knocked me out; my uie is marred witn mitts, said I. The two eye-Is which constitute the rhyme in this closing stanza, you will observe, are like Gen. Butler's, they are not mates; they are just similar enough to spoil the rhyme and diverse enough to mar their harmony. . . t ; How to AVold Cholera. 1 St. Jamas' Gazette. J A corresBondsat sends usthe following hints as to "how to avoid the cholera,1 fathered, he tells t, from th4 advice given y the best medical authorities. Live well that is to say, on cutlet, turtle soup, poultry, game, or whatever you fancy, provided it is not uoaipe. fniit.: Drink the best claret, champagne, diyyherry and old cognac tut cm bm procured in fact. Keep yourseu np. " a. mini worry ot every description. Uo not! worry yourself or letXthers worry you. Point out to your wife and children the absolute necessity ot protecting the "btead winner" from annoy ancaun less the family is prepared to iose its head. Indulge yourself tn amusements so long as ' they do not fatigue you. Allow ysu-rself "horse exercise, " butJke careful not overdo it. Walk tn moderation, and always take a hansom when you feel anything approach ing weariness. Bftrly hours a desirable so ar as .going to bed is concerned; but early rising is not to be recommended, inasmuch as it induaes fatigue. Avoid, as far as possible, political and all other discussions. Leave public questions alone, and take no part in conversations of a controversial character. Read only tight literature. SmOke according to inclination so long as the epidemic lasts, but only cigarettes or cigars ox tne best quality, isy regulating your habits according to these simple directions, you will find a great improvement in your htSith, and be, at all events,' in a better Condition to resist cholera if it attacks you. The Dear Little Brnte. (Cambridge Tribune. A fashionable young lady at the Grand Union, in Saratoga, gives the following account of bar sttMr noodle: "He's a daisy, he is. So filer aad clever. He has his loom bruin and seeps just as suu wnen the maid uses it with the powder. He barks to have his hair oiled and combed. and takes a shampoo with perfect delight. Wnen be goes to Dea be lays ms bead on the pillow and goes to sleep like a tired boy. It's lot of work caring for the brute, though. There's one thing I'm thankful for, he's always dressed in the morning. Air Brush Portraits. Chicago Journal ' The air brush was one of the useful and interesting inventions exhibited at the photographers' convention in Philadelphia. A littie holder is charged with India ink, and by a bellows operated with a foot pedal, after the manner of a sewing machine, the fluid is blown upon a faintly outlined portrait, the result giving a picture superior in many respects to the best crayon drawing. A life-srze portra't may thus be made in a f w hours, where aformerly by the use of the stump and pencil as many weeks were required. . Cnmbrens "Cash." Foreign Letter. One of the great curiosities in Japan to the stranger is the wonderful variety of coins that are used daily. In some instances it takes 1,000 pieces to make $1. These are called "cash. " and are seldom received by foreigners, who, as a general rule, refuse to tafce them in change. Imagine a trade of 5 cents and giving" a man a 50-cent piece, then receiving" in change 450 of these coppers. Babies Cap. Exchange. One branch of trade shows no effects of the panic. "I am a manufacturer of babies' caps, " said a Sew York merchant, "and I regard it as the most staple business in the country. Babies are coming into the world all the time, and every mother will stint herself before she denies her infant a cap. No panics interfere with my business. " A SdcstMc Varna. fNw Orleans Pics rune Dr. Dio Lewis now has a scheme for a scientific farm. He will take pupils, and after they have worked for him three years they got a graduating certificate that they are competent farm hands and worth $15 a month and found. . 1 Black Dog and Strike Axe are; the opposing candidates tor the presi in the Osage nation. 'ilL

Cnele Tom's Casta. Mrs. 8wisshfilm' Autobiography.

The Washington Rational Kra hai a large circulation and high literary standing, but Dr. Bailev (Its editor) was troubled about the difficulty or impossibility of procuring anti-slavery tales. Mrs. Southworth was writing aerials for it, and h nad noped that she, a southern woman with northern principles, could weave into Her story pictures of slavery which would call damaging attention to it, but in this sue nad tailed. AnSi slavery tales were wnat uie good doctor wanted. Temper ance had its story-writer in Arthur. If only abolition had a good writer of fiction. one who would interest and educate the young. He knew of but one pen able to write wnat ne wanted, and, alas! the finances of The Era could not command it. If only he could engage Mrs. Stowe. had not heard of her. and he explained that she was a daughter of Lsrnan Beecher. was surprised and exclaimed: "A daughter of Lyman Beecher write abolition stories! tviul among the prophets!" I reminded the doctor that Passident Beecher and Professor Stowe had broken up the theological department of Lane seminary by suppressing the anti-slavery agitation raised by Theodore Weld, a Kentucky student, and threw their influence against disturbing the Congregational churches with the new fanaticism; that ttiwaru iieecner invented tne organic sin " rtevu, behind which churches and Individuals took refuge when called upon to "come up to the help of the Lord against tne mighty. Hut Lit. Bailey said he knew them personally, and that, despite their pubuc record, tbey were at huart antislavery, and that prudence alone dictated their course. Mrs. fctowe was a graphia story-teller, had been in Kentucky, taken in the situation, and could describe the peculiar situation as no one else could. If he could only enlist her. the whole family would most likely follow into tne aoontion ranks: but tue bounty money, alas! where could he raise ttr w here there is the will there is the way and it was but a few months after that conversation when Dr. Bailey forwarded f 1UO to Mrs. btowe as a retaining fee for her service in the cause of the slave, and lo! the result, "Uncle Tom's Cabin. " As it advanced he sent her another, and another f luu. Their DMerent methods. Pittsburg; Chronicle-TeWraph. 1 In stopping street-ears a Boston woman shakes her book, a New - York woman throws her parasol at the driver's head, a lirooklyn woman whistles, a Chicago woman puts her foot on the track, a iSt. Iuis girl winks at the conductor, a Cincinnati woman says, "Huha! Iluha!" and a Pittsburg woman paralyzes the horses witu a snuie. Louisville Courier- Journal: It turns out thnt l'oe nevr had a bust of Pallas. Ills own busts furnished him all the brie -a brae he coul'J stand up under. , R. B. Haves umpired a game of base pan recently. The St. Andrew's Fair Closed last eyening. The school room was crowded to its utmost capacity and the last night was considered one of the most enjoyable of the series. The fair had been a success from the start pecuniarily, and it has been the source or a great deal ot enjoyment. I he mangement was in the right hands persons whose sole aim seemed to be to please the people who visited them. We are laa to learn that the receipts largely exceeded the expectations of its projectors. Excursion to Chicago. The Panhandle road will run an ex cursion to Chicago on Fridav. August 22, for one fare the round trip, on account of the races. Tickets limited to during the races. tj. W . (Jartwright, Agent. aug21d2t ORAiai AND PBODVIE MARKETS. SfW Torh Market. Naw York. Aug. 21. Flour reoeirta. 17.000 barrels: sales 11.000: market dull. Wheat receipts, 19,000 bushels, opened &: lower, irregular, more doing in options, moderate spec ulative uenuaa wuieinoixiiiuu ; sates ot,uJV bushels : No. il red September. B9fck490Me : SljOOO bushels; October, lK92o.; &A),0U0 bushels; November. 9893),o; 160,000 bushels; December, 48,000 bushels; January, 97a-97He ; 8,000 bushels ; February, JH 99c 1.000 bushels. Oorn receipts 37,000 bushels. H1 lower; mixed western spot. B6U(af.2c: futures. 56M63e; sales 440,000. Oats receipts 6S.000 buHhcls, nominal. O&ta unchanged; western S6&46 ; sales 66.0UC bushels. Beef quiet, new messflSUO. fork Crm; mess, 19 00. Lard lower: sttam rendered. 8 lu. Butter firm. western, enao. Cheese dull at l10y,c Bugar quiet. Molasses steady. Petroleum dull. Baltimore Market. EAI.TTMOM, Aug. 2L Flour market oulet : steady; Superfine, $2 SOUS 00; extra, S3 25 4 00: family. S4 3&a5 85. Wheat, western easier and quiet ; No. 2 winter red spot SaaS'-j ; September, B8&89c; October, 90t90fte. Corn no offering and no bid. Oats, steady : western white, a4tg3ec; mixed, Bli$33o; Pennsylvania, 32-a.f7e. Bye. 60i62e. Hmr dull: prime to choice, Pennsylvania and Maryland 117 00g i uu per ion. provisions nigner, and active. Mess Pork, CIS 75. Balk-meats, shoulders and dear rib aides, packed, lH&Uo; Bacon shoulders 8je; clear rib sides 12fce; Hams, 15i$16o ; Lard refined, Butan duU ; western, &&15c ; creamery, 15208. Egg firmer at l18Vo. Petroleum stead v: lower: refined, 7?Sc. Coffee steady; quiet. Bio earow orainaryjco rair value, sugar quiet, A soft, 6o. Whisky nominally steady at tl It. Chf. Market. Chicago, August 21. Wheat. lower: 77He tot cash: 78 "e for September: SOo or October; 81 He November. Com, 530 for cash or August; S2'-sC for September; 51ys October. Oats 83e for August; 2&c for September. Bye, 5fic Barley, 63 He. for September. Flaxseed, 1 31 S. Whisky $1 10. Pork doll at m-Jb mi lor August; w s lor beptesaber ; 13 ju for the year. Lard lower: 17 SS for Ausnst: f7 57V.tor September; 7 674 for October. hoi receipts, lauoo need : market active and fair, 5c higher; light, JeS eo 70; rough packing So 9096 2a : heavv packins and shipnins. M 30 t$6 90. Cattletreeeipts 7,009 exports t6 407 00 ; good to ebotee, V iwifd SO; common to fair, 4 3U5 50; Texans. S 504 30. Sheep receipts, 2,500; market weak; common to good, 9t 404 zu. Cincinnati Market. CrxcontaTI. Auc 21. Flour- market nrriat. arttve ; family, 3 7594 10; fancy, t4 00&4 50. Wheat, firm: new. 61,482a. Corn firm: "No. 3 mixed 57c. Oats firm at 96.27 ; old SOSe. Bye steady at C6c Pork firm; steady ; 18 30&1S 7i Lard strong at 47 80. Bulk meets firm at aiaiO1- Bacon steady at 7iUllJ4cwnissy arm a mivt t Toledo Market. Tolbdo, Aug. 21. Wheat, quiet aad steady: No. 3 red caiih or August &Hae: September SI e bid ; October ttV bid; November 85e. Kd. 3 soft 84 t No. S red TSatSOe Corn firm and steady ; No. i cash or August, 664c ; .September. 54 Sc ; rejected, 54e; no grade, S3c OatsBomiaal; No. cash or August 26aa&c ; beptemoerxD. LtrersesI Market. LrvzafOOX. Aug. 21- I JO p. m. Beef 6vAl - India mess 30s; extra, 9s. Pork dull; prime mesa, eastern. 7Ts: prime mess, western, sua - Bacon dull; Cumberland cot, 53s; toeat clear 0s Id. Lard, prime, western, duU at Ws. Cheese, American, choice, doll, fisa. Corn, new mixed, 6e5d,

C3. F-

Boot and Shoe Dealer. 725 llain Street, Odd Fellom Block, Has a complete line in erery department, inclnding Men's Women's and Children's

Men's and Boy's Hoavy Shoos,

-AND

Finest Line of Slippers in the City

Gall and Examine Goods

-bd York (grocery

830. Hittie Block, We have the Large aud Finest steker

IN THE CITY, AND CAN AND VTIXI,

Save Yen Sweaty-five Pe? GobI

OITTHISCLASS OFCOODS.

AURORA COFFEE, 1 lb. package, roasted, pure, choice quality of Golden Rio, - , - . . . 16 cents. A choice Ureen Coffee at . . . , , . . 12 1-2 eta

6 lb. package Choice Roasted Rio, Best qualities of JAPAN

mnssmal. ehnlea VslTtWCl nW'alSTaW a. - a

a"" jammwAee wwv. jr3a- srwiasata. Imperial, 40c per pound.

Best quality of Sugar-house Molasses, Finest quality Syrups, . . .

See These Goods tril30(Uwtf

LouM. EMMONS,"The"Clothier,

706 Main Street, Opposite HantiAgtonlHoase

GOOD, RELIABLE CLOT

MEN, YOUTHS and BOYS. I will guarantee my prices the lowest. A compajnson of prices wul convince you of this

PAVDS,

-THjE-

THEand Prices Before Buying.

I.espectfUlly, R. R DAVIS.

9 - - - 14 1-4 eta TEAS. OO and 6S cents mi 42 cts. 40and 45 eta. and You Will Buy. A. PRATT, fr.