Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 24, 3 December 1910 — Page 6
PAGE SIX.-
HE BICH3IOOT PAIXADITJ3I AND . SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1910.
TRUSTEES DESIRE A HEW STATE LAW -' . - -..,,( Want Radical Changes Made in the. Government of Townships of State. As a result of the exposures of the way many township trustees In the State have been carrying on tbelr official business, which exposures wero made by field accountants of the State Hoard of Accountants, the Indiana trustees asMoctatlon has approved of a law which will repeal many of the existing laws governing this Important office and make the duties of the official more specific. The trustees of the different townships of the county who were in, the city on Saturday were satisfied with several provision of the proposed legislation. In short, tho drafted Jaw, provides that the election of trustees shall be In the oft year and not when the State ticket or the national ticket is elected, abolishes the- township advisory board; provides for the appointment of road supervisors by the trustees, thus doing away with the election of these officials, makes it optional with the official whether ho employes office help when he serves a large township: repeals the law requiring appropriations for public expenditures and gives the trustee tho power to fix the township tax levy, subject to appeal to the bourd of county commissioners. This proposed measure was drawn up by an Indianapolis attorney on the suggestion of the sub committee of the legislative committee of the state trustees association.' This committee Include Charles Plttcnger, Muncle, chairman; John C. Becker, Hammond, secretary; E. T. Loyd, Prairie Creek, and Henry J. Brown. Wanamaker, The committee will report at the State trustees' association meeting In Indianapolis on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of next week. It will be the most Important matter considered. These are the first radical changes suggested for the government of townships since 1889. 4 It "is probable that at the State meeting, the trustees will modify tome 'of the provisions but essentially the measure will be as now proposed. .
MEXICANS PURCHASE BUFFALO IN TEXAS Announcement Is made that the largest buffalo herd remaining In America Is to be taken from Goodnight. Texas, by the famous Charles Goodnight, owner of the buffalo, to Mexico. Representatives of ; the department of 'agriculture of Coahuila, Mexico, are now on their way to the big Goodnight ranch in the Texas Panhandle to make arrangements. The entire Goodnight ranch, it is said, is to be removed, with its thousands of head ot stock. Mr. Goodnight has been experimenting for years along lines aiming to perpetuate the now almost extinct American bison. He has been breeding to the pure buffalo cattle, and these called "cattalo" very closely resemble the buffalo. The Goodnight ranch is but one of many that are now being moved to Mexico. The cutting up of the large cattle ranges Into small farms has been the cause, to a great extent, of the exodus. Gradual encroachment of the homesteader and the farmers are driving the cattlemen out of business In the United States. There is no more room for the great herds. The farmer from the eastern, southern and central western states is crowding out the stockmen and as Iowa and other states show a falling off In population, the western states are showing an increase along with a decrease of live stock prairies. There are many who point to Mexico In answer to the question where will the United States get Its beet supply in a few years from now, it the farmer continues his encroachment upon the ranchmen. For years Mexico has been the big haclendado, the man who controls millions of acres of grating lands. .The southern republic has brought its cotton and its corn to a large measure, and its wheat, from countries where there is more agriculture. Land Is too valuable in Southwest Texas to permit ot the retention ot the big cattle ranch, where only cattle are grown. Almost every day there are sales ot cattle ranches ranging in site from 40.000 to as high as 200,000 or 300,000 acres. These are divided Into smaller tracts, water for irrigation Is secured, and they are placed upon the market. Buffalo Sunday News. Union Labor Briefs. Chandelier makers ot New York de mand n forty-nine and one-halt hour week and an increase of pay ot about IS DAT cent. The settlement of the machinists' strike of the Mlsaourl-Paclflc railroad. which has been on since last April. eeems as far off as ever. Labor bodies of Greater New York have united to push the plan of Dr. Lederle for the establishment ot mu nlcipal mlli departments throughout therltr. John Snyder of the ironworkers, the new seventh vice president ot the New York State Federation of Labor, is said to be the youngest man ever selected as state or national officer of a labot body. 1 James P. Mclturh. recently re-elect ed general secretary-treasurer of th International Journeymen Stooecut ten' association, was first elected to his present office In 1SS8 and has been re-elected each rear. The Bookkeepers, Stenographers and Accountants union of New York has elected Miss Alice Morris, private sec retary to John Mitchell of the A men ran Federation of Lsbor and the Na tlonal Qrle federation, delegate from tke union to the convention of tat ZjBerlcaa Federation of Leber.
College Football
COLLEGE Amherst Annapolis Brown Carlisle Chicago Cornell Dartmouth Georgetown Georgia Harvard Holy Cross Illinois Indiana Iowa Layafette Lehigh Michigan Minnesota Mississippi .. Missouri Nebraska New York Ohio State Pennsylvania Princeton Rochester Swarthmore Syracuse Trinity Vanderbilt VI Kan ova Weslcyan West Point Williams Wisconsin Yale CEMENT HOMES CHEAP Cost About $750 for Comfortable Abodes. London, Dec. 3. Two neat little tiled cottages at Newlands corner. near Guildford, stand for a practical and successful effort to deal with one of the most pressing questions of Eng lish rural life the problem of cheap housing. In building the comfortable, well ordered dwellings for two ot his undergardners at a cost for the two of $1,500. St. Loe Strachey, editor of the Spectator, has justified the fair which he publicly expressed and which moved him to promote the cheap cottage exhibition at Letchworth in 1905. The argument which Mr. Strachey then advanced and has now established is this: The agricultural laborer can not afford to pay more than $1.50 a week house rent out of his wages. Any Improvement in his dwelling 'above that standard must ordinarily be pro vided by philanthropy. The obvious way to cope with this situation is to cheapen the cost of construction. This Mr. Strachey. in co-operation with a local builder, has done, by using for the. walls of his cottage concrete blocks made In molds on the spot The ground floors ot the cottages have a scullery, a pantry and a large kitch en-sitting; room, from which an open staircase leads picturesquely to the upper story of three bedrooms. As Mr. Strachey points out, this ex traordinarily low cost of $1,500 for a pair of cottages $2,250 is the f gure a L . a. usuauy accepiea nas oeen reacnea not only by the employment of cheap material but by rigid exclusion of showy and unnecessary ornament, by dispensing with an architect and by leaving only a small margin for build er's profit. At the same time he maintains that his experiment has shown that It would be possible for any country landlord to bouse his people at the same cost by employing the labor and material of his estate. Further, Mr. Strachey asserts, the addition of $50 to the sale value ot the cottages would turn them Into a profitable venture for the commercial builder. TOLSTOY'S SON IN A BITTER ATTACK St. Petersburg. Dec. 3. Count Leo Tolstoy has published a bitter denunciation of Count Tschertkoff. the Inti mate friend and literary agent ot the late Count Tolstoy. The son declares that Tschertkoff was the worst enemy that his father had in all educated Russia and the civilized world and that he was direct ly guilty of the tragedy of Yasnaya Poliana. "The malign influence of "Tschertkoff," writes Count Leo, "caused the premature death of my father, his superhuman sufferings and the separation from his family. "But for his literary agent," the son adds, his father would have lived for many years peacefully at Yasnaya Poliana with the familv who loved him so devotedly. The arrival of Tschertkoff waa the beginning of the end. "SPOOKY" CORPSE STOPS QUARREL Burlington. N. J.. Dec. 3. The crowd at the Metropolitan hotel waa given the scare of their lives when a farmer named Buzby came to life 10 minutes after he had been pronounced dead, and while two coroners were engaged in - a heated argument as to which ahould take charge of the case. Buzby was found apparently lifeless in a room In the hotel, and the undertaker and coroners were notified. AH ready for the trip to the morgue, the "corpse" removed the blanket covering and exclaimed: "Where am I? What's the matter?" His malady is a peculiar kidney trouble about which the physicians are much puzzled. ' - Quite a Distinction. "If you will be very careful to est plain food." said tbe physician, "you will eujoy good health.' , "If 1. have to eat plain food." answered the epicure, "1 may have good health, but 1 won't enjoy it." Ex-change-
Games of 1910
. GAMEE8 Wen Lest Tied ..4 3 1 S 0 1 6 2 1 8 5 0 2 5 0 5 2 1 5 2 0 7 1 1 6 2 0 8 0 1 3 3 2 7 0 0 5 1 0 4 2 0 7 2 0 2 6 1 3 0 3 6 1 0 5 1 0 4 2 2 7 1 0 2 4 1 6 1 3 9 1 1 7 1 0 6 2 1 5 3 0 5 4 1 7 1 0 8 0 1 0 3 2 4 4 1 6 2 0 1 3 3 1 2 2 6 2 2 POINTS Own Opp. 55 31 99 183 235 24 165 111 178 281 155 54 90 100 82 135 46 29 179 124 78 260 47 1S2 181 101 53 144 53 122 166 6 62 96 52 19 90 0 41 67 60 44 27 26 36 0 6 15 21 9S 9 6 9 17 36 59 27 19 5 14 59 42 26 8 61 .41 12 72 46 39 WOUNDS GODFATHER Betrayed Girl ami She Wields a Hatchet. Pittsburg, Pa., Dec. 3. With a clothesline around bis neck, Obalda Slara was dragged from the home ot Joanna Slara, his goddaughter, at Bunola and a mob of nearly 200 frenzied Italians tried to lynch him, while the blood streamed down his face from three wounds inflicted by tbe girl, who said he tried to betray her. Obalda will probably die. Both he and his daughter were taken from the little mining town of Bunola after a riot call had been sent in to county detectives this evening. The girl says that her godfather came Into her room, and, after he had embraced her, he attempted to drag her into a back room. He was intoxicated and she persuaded him to lie down in a front room. He did so, and the girl went into a back room, where she procured a keen edged hatchet and slashed him three times on the head. Obalda sank unconscious to the floor and screaming "I've killed him." tbe girl fled through the streets of tbe settlement. When she told her story the Italians broke through the doors of the house and were about to lynch Slara, when the girl's father pacified them and saved Obalda's life. He is now in a Pittsburg hospital and the girl is in JaiL The case Is almost exactly similar to that of 13-year-old Catherine Bottl, who killed her god-father and was acquitted here a few weeks ago. SAYS DANCING IS A FORM OF RELIGION Chicago, Dec. 3. Skating and golfing and dancing, when it is real play, and not mere social labor, are all forms of religion; for play is a preparation for religious life and often one of the chief means of Its realization. So says Prof. Carl Seashore of the University of Iowa, in an article contributed to the current Issue of the American Journal of Theology, Just issued from the University of Chicago Press, and he seeks to prove religion in a higher form of play. "Play is the means of and a large source of enjoyment," says Professor Seashore, drawing his analogy. "Religion is a growth; it is a preparation for a greater life. Take out the element of growth in religion and you take out religion. And this growth comes about through exercise. The labored, set, necessary exercise produces a servile, negative and stale religion; the religion of love, happiness and faith, on the other hand, grows through spontaneous self-expression for tbe love of expression and this is play. Our ceremonies, services and observances, whatever purpose they serve, have much in common with games, play attitudes, sacrifices and actions which characterize play." LYNCH WILL AGAIN HEAD THE NATIONAL Cincinnati, Dec. 3. With fve National league magnates lined up and ready to cast their votes for him, there isn't a chance of President Thomas J. Lynch of tbe National league sot being re-elected at the meeting to be held at tbe Breslin hotel in New York commencing Dec 13. President RobIson of the St. Louis club, Is the latest to Join the pro-Lynch forces. Herrmann of Cincinnati, Harris of Boston, Dreyfuss of Pittsburg. Brush of New York and Robinson of St. Louis will cast their votes for Lynch. Murphy of Chicago, Ebbetts ot Brookln and Fogel ot Philadelphia are naturally on the other side. A Cloodsuinir.g Earthworm. South Africa is tbe borne of a species of earthworm, a creature closely related to our common angleworm, which is not only a giant among the denizens of the soil, but which is reputed to have a taste for human blood. There are two species of this uncanny wlggler one of a dark red color and tbe other almost black. They are larger than one's finger and from three to tour Inches In length.
PALLADIUM WANT ADS PAY.
SUPT. SMITH SAW FRIEIinTRICKEH Gilbert La Rue, Building the Southeastern Hospital Is Victim of Paralysis.
Indianapolis, Dec. 3. Gilbert La Rue, 57 years old, superintendent of construction of the Southeastern Hos pital for the Insane at Madison. Inddied last night shortly after 10 o'clock at tbe Deaconess hospital from paraly sis. He was stricken at about fivethirty in the office of Herbert FOltz. architect, 1108 Indiana Pythian building while in conversation with Dr. S. E. Smith, superintendent of the East haven Insane asylum. Richmond, Ind. He did not regain consciousness. Mr. La Rue met Dr. Smith by appointment, the latter having acted as special medical advisor for the Southeastern hospital board during J"je construction of the building, and the men were closing up the business affairs of the hospital prior to a meeting of tbe commission to be held next week Mr. La Rue appeared to be in his usual health and the stroke was unexpected. Without warning, Mr. La Rue fell from his chair. He was attended by Dr. Smith, who hastily examined him. Realizing the seriousness of the stroke Dr. Smith summoned the City Dispensary ambulance and Mr. La Rue was taken to his home 1623 Ashland avenue. Dr. Smith went with Mr. La Rue In the ambulance and Dr. J. H. Taylor was called to the home. Upon the advice of tbe latter Mr. La Rue was taken to the Deaconess hospital. Mr. La Rue was born in 1853, in Harrison, Ind. Early in life he moved to Fairmount, Ind.. where he was active in business until 1906, when be moved to Indianapolis. He Is survived by a widow and two 6ons, Victor La Rue, Madison, Ind., and Paul La Rue, Indianapolis. ALLOWED TO FIX HIS PUNISHMENT Washington, Dec. 3. Charles W. Adams, an old actor, who says he played with Booth and Barrett, appeared in the police court on a charge of obtaining money by false pretenses. According to tbe police Adams obtained from business bouses advertisements for the Adams Comedy company, which, he said, was to play at one of the theaters here this week. In extenuation Adams said to the court: "I have been on a debauch since August 22, and I did not know what I was doing. I needed the money and needed it badly, for I was down and out I was at one time in the company of the great Booth. Ah! there were actors then." Saying he could get employment at the Washington asylum, he begged to be allowed to go back there. Judge Aukam accordingly committed him to that institution for six months. TAFT FULFILLS TEDDY'S PROMISE Youngstown, Ohio, Dec. 3. President Taft carried out one promise which Roosevelt failed to do when he sent to each one of the triplets of Mr. and Mrs. John Boggins a gold medal. When the triplets, Margaret, Mary and John, were born four years ago the father sent word to President Roosevelt to get on the job with the gold medals. T. R. promised to send them, but he did not live up to his promise, the father says. Then he wrote to Taft. sent the medals because Roosevelt who had promised them. ETHER, NOT LIQUOR CAUSED HIS ARREST Ft. Wayne. Ind., Dec. 3. When William Russell, charged with drunkenness, appeared before Judge Moungovan in the city court he was able to convince the Judge that he had not been drinking, but that ether inhaled as a medicine for neuralgia had caused him to dance and do other things in the street which might be attributed to Intoxication. Russell was making repeated attempts to give away his overcoat and other belonging when the police arrested "him and put a charge of "plain drunk' opposite his name on tbe police blotter. He declares he remembers nothing of what happened after he purchased the neuralgia specific and inhaled it. He was released. Labor Opposes Congressmen. The Connecticut branch of the American Federation of Labor, in convention at Danbury recently, took a decided stand against the returning to congress of Senators Bulkeley and Brandegee and Congressmen Hill, Tilson. Henry and Higgins. This action, taken in the form of a resolution, was unanimously adopted and was to the effect that the state's represents? had voted against bills introduced in the interests of labor. A resolution was also adopted, deploring the recent dynamiting of tbe Los Angeles Times building and resenting the charge that It was the work of union men. It also expressed the hope that tbe perpetrators of the outrage would meet with swift punishment. I t 4 U 1 11 1 1 1 M 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 4 ' NO CASE ON RECORD. j J How many times has a mantf- j facturers" association ever established a sborter workday. Increased the pay or bettered conditions in any trade or calling? Not once in a thousand years. Only labor organizations do that. Buenos Aires is also working for the "city beautiful In nine years it has set out 142,000 trees and has opened SO parks.
FUR FASHIONS.
Charming Combination ef Pelta and Velvet Seen Thia M It ONS OF THX KZW SCAXF BTOXiXS. Never was there a time when the combinations of fur and fabrics were more alluring than this season. The lovely model shown is one of the new scarf stoles in gathered velvet edged with ermine. Photography For Women. Photography as a work for women was brought into prominence recently wben the national photographers held their convention In Cleveland. A hun dred or more women had prints on ex hibltion which were of high grade. Miss Lena McCauley, art critic, In an address on photography as the art of the hour, spoke with enthusiasm of it as a work for women. She said In part: "Photography is tbe living art, tbe art of the hour, the art of today. It is the latest child of the pictorial arts and the art most concerned in every day living. We can think of no phase of human activity in which It has no part, for it is an aid not only of pleasure, of beauty and decoration, but it is an important factor in literature. In science, In the manufactures. The sur geon depends upon the camera. The astronomer and the microscopist use it to extend their vision and to record myeteries and discoveries. "Photography offers a wide field for the service of women. Woman is natu rally an art lover and takes kindly to instruction in art. The profession is not hedged by precedent, as are law and the medical calling. Woman enters on the same platform as men. and, the avenues of work being so varied, she is welcome and may do the work best fitted for her without standing beside her stronger brothers." r; - American May Be Queen. The-Princess of Braganza, who was Mis Anita Stewart of New York, now stands a chance of being queen of rortugifj, her husband being the pretender to tbe throne, who may be seated there in case the republic fails and 'King Manuel is not able to hold bis own. Her money, which she gave in exchange for tbe title, was made in Chicago by "Silent" Smith, who married 4ierr mother. At Last, a Comfortable Motor Veil! "At last there's a comfortable motor veil." sigbed a woman who recently purchased a motor veil like the one seen in the illustration. When tbe winds do blow the average auto veil has an unfortunate habit ot parting - "w X. x. 4 r VT W-a FOB TBS WOUAJ WHO VOTOBS. company from the headgear worn with It. This newcomer does nothing of the sort, for It is partially sewed to a broad piece of ribbon which fits securely over tbe hat. and nothing short of a blizzard will detach it from the wearer's head if properly adjusted. England's Newspaper Tax. On Jue 15. 1S55. Kug)and"s newspaper stamp duty was abolished, and the rein of the cheap daily began. Tbi tax on knowledge" waa first imposed' in 1712 and was made most severe1 by tbe act of 1830. which fixed it afiS cents a sheet, with 87 cents duty on each advertisement. The Whigs reduced tbe duty to a penny ia 1S3G. but wben tbe Crimean war broke out and every one wanted the news even a penny duty was found to be intolerable. Its repeal is called the Magna Charta of the British press. ;
1 fl " Jri In mm TS'i. I if k m s tPl fit Jm 'o 1
Market
NEW YORK STOCK (Furnished by Correll and Thompson. New York, Dec. 3. Copper Smelter eiee V. S U. S. Pfd Pennsylvania St. Paul .'. 15. & O New York Central Reading Canadian Pacific Great Northern Union Pacific 4 Northern Pacific Atchison L. & N Southern Pacific N. Y. BANK STATEMENT Reserve, Dec $ 6,390,625 Loan?. Inc 14.664,000 Specie, Dec 2,771.500 Deposits. Inc 11.674,600 Circulation, Dec 115,200 CHICAGO CHICAGO GRAIN AND PROVISIONS (Furnished by Correll and Thompson. Odd Fellows' Hall. Phone 1446.) Chicago, Dec. 3. Wheat-
Open Hlyl Lo Close Dec. ... 90 91 90 91 May 96 97 96 974 July ... 94 94 94 94 Corn Open High Low Clos Dec. ... 46 46 46 46 May ... 48 48 47 48 July ... 48 49 48 49 Oa's Open High Lew Close Dec. ... 32 32 32 32 May ... 34 35V 34 35 July ... 34 35 34 33
PITTSBURG LIVESTOCK Pittsburg. Dec. 3. Cattle Steady; prime $6.00S 6.30;butchers $5.256.65. Sheep Steady; wethers $4.104 25. Hogs Receipts 30 decks; prime $7.65; yorkers $7.757.80; pigs S7.807.85. Calves $9.5010.00. Lambs $4.50 6.25. E. BUFFALO LIVESTOCK East Buffalo. Dec. 3. Cattte Steady; prime steers $6.40 6.75; butchers $3.006.25. Hogs Steady; heavies $7.40; yorkers $7.65 7.70; pigs $7.75 7.85. Sheep Slow; prime $4.25. Lambs $6.006.25. t Calves 75c lower; choice $10.25. CINCINNATI LIVESTOCK Cincinnati, Dec. 3. Cattle Steady; shippers $6.10; lower. extras $9.50. Hogs Higher; choice $7.55 7.66. Sheep Strong; $3.75. Lambs $6.50. ' Calves $10.25. INDIANAPOLIS LIVE STOCK Indianapolis, Dec. 3. Hogs Receipts 6,000; top $7.55. Cattle Receipts 800; top $6.35. Sheep Receipts 300; prime $3.85. Lambs $6.50. INDIANAPOLIS GRAIN Indianapolis, Dec. 3.Wheat Corn Oats Rye Clover seed 93c 46c ...34 He , . . . .75c .. .$5.UU TOLEDO GRAIN Toledo, Dec. 3. Wheat 96 Vic Corn 50c Rye -"78c Oats ' 35c Clover seed $910 ' A Colorado rancher is said to have recently completed harvesting 125 bushels of grasshoppers and to have bit upon tbe idea of drying and sacking them and using them for ben feed. It is truly inspiring to note tbe ignatio with which tbe average resident of tie corn beh views tbe many days of sweltering heat which are necessary to bring this great staple crop to a proper maturity. Not infrequently the man who complains that those who live near him are not neighborly will be found, if his case is looked into closely, to be himself lacking in some of the essential qualities which characterize a good neighbor. Tbe Shropshire sheep is moderate in size, hardy and is probably more raised for general purposes than any other single variety. Like Poland-China or Duroc-Jersey hogs, they are first claus debt payers and mortgage, lifters, and every farm should have a few of them. It Is interesting to note that, while many a tabby cit may keep pretty well away from tbe house in her state of single blesednes she seems to understand human nature enough to know that wben her little one are presentable she will be accorded a friendly reception. While the western poultryman gets 60 per cent more for his eggs and poultry, be has to pay Just about tbe samtper cent more for tbe ration he feeds his ben. and. while be gets more eggs in winter, he has to fight lice and mites harder in summer. So all in ail it Is about a standoff.
Reports
QUOTATIONS - Odd Fellow Hall. Phone X4I6.1 Open High ' 74 73 115 127S 120i 105U 110H 145H 121 169H 1134 n 1404 112 Low 63 U 72 S 1154 127 119 104 1444 191 120 1677 112 99 139 112 Closet 64 74 73 115 127 120 10o4 110 14 192 121 169 112 99 140 112 63 te !a .. 74H .. 73 ..U5V4 ..127H ..120 ..103 ..110 ..145 ..132 ..120"i ..1684 ..1134 99Ai ..1404 . -112'i RICHMOND MARKETS PROVISION MARKET. Fruits. (Paid Br J. SI. teggemeyer & 8ont , Pears, canning, per bu. ,...$1.1S31.25 Concord gra.ies. fancy, per basket 22c to 24 Seckel pears, per bu. ...... 1.6B Bartlett pears, per bu .... 1.401.50 Peaches, yellow, per tu. . . 2.00 5i 2.15 Peaches, white, 6 basket crate 1.90Q2.0O Apples. Jonathan. fancy bbls 6.25 5.50 Apples, MUdcn Blush, fey bbls 5.00 5.25 Apples, Jonathan, No. 1 bbls ....n 4.33(1? 4.50 Apples, Cooking, common bbls 3.25(32.50 , Vegetables. Tomatoes. Home Grown, fey per bu ; 6070o Cucumbers, Home Grown. 4 to 5 doz per box 6570o Peppers, Green, per box ... 65o Peppers, Red, per box ..... $1.00 Pickling Onlcns, yellow, per bushel box 7585n Dill, per large bunches .... 20f 25c Cauliflower, Home Grown fancy, per doz. 1.701.8O Wax Beaas, Home Grown per box 7585j Green Beans, Home Grown, per box 6o 75d Lima Beans, fancy, 24-pint case z.i&WiJ.ou Head Lettuce, Home Grown .' per bushel box .......... 1.001.10f Parsley, curly, per dozen bunches J520o Leaf Lettucj, Outdoor, per bu sbel box 3540o Eudive, Home Grown, per bushel, box ............. 600754 Celery, Golden Heart, extra fancy, 6 dozen box ...... 1.000)1.10! , Egg Plant, Home Grown, meSpinich, fancy, per tub . . . . 85904 Celery, White Plume, faacy large flat box .......... 50 554 Sweet Corn, Home Grown per sack 6575d Okra. fancy, 4 basket crates 45 50a Garlic, fancy, per pound ... ll12q New Carrots, fancy, 100 " bunches 1.401.5I New Beets, fancy, 100 ' - bunches 16001.78 New Turnips, fancy,, 100 . bunches ........... ... 2.50) Radishes, fancy, 100 bunches 1.72.0u) 1 crse Radish Root, dozen bunches ................ 1.09 Horse Radish Root, grated dozen bottles 80s fancy, bbl 4.25 150 Cweet PotatoesJersey, extra Cabbage, Home Grown large : Potatoes, bushel 761.0O Potatoes. Early Ohio., bu S085o Rutabaga Turnips, bushel. . P570o Danish Onions, fancy, per crate 1.00 1.10 Yellow Onions, Home Grown fancy, per sack 1.40l-5O White Onions, per sack ... 1.651.?5 Red Onions, fancy, per sack 1.5001.68 PRODUCE. Old HensTper lb. ................. 96 Turkey on foot, per lb 15c Roosters, per lb. SO Butter, country, per lb. 27o Young chickens, 2 to 3 lbs. per lb 11c Ducks, per lb 8c Eggs .... GRAIN MARKET. Prices paid per bushel for grains!' by the Richmond Roller Mills, Second and North C streets, are as follows:; No. 2 wheat, 88 cents; No. 3 wheat, 85 cents; oats, 30 cents; corn, 48 3 new corn 40 cents; rye. 65 cents; c1ot er seed, $6 $7. WAGON MARKET. Wagon market quotations fumlslM ed by Omer G. Whelan. South Sixth street are: Oats, 30 cents per bu.? corn. 45 cents per bu.; rye, 70 cents per bu; hay, loose.good timothr $1516 per ton; mixed $1314 per ton; clover, $9 per ton; straw, $6 pee ton. SEED MARKET. Quotations as furnished by J. Rung and company for seeds per bushel, are. Timothy, $4.00 to $4.35; clover, $7.50 to $8.00; rye, 70 cents; oats. 24 tats Th tma aroond which aU tb. otbar emafl tevohre, sad open which ttwy ara largely da pendent for their welter, to the stomach, when the functions ot tb. stomach bacoaM impaired, the bowels and hrer also become da -sated.' To care a caaaaa of tb stomach. Utm or bowels ( or U bottle of Dr. CaldweO's Syren Peoeia at yoer drtara-iat's. It la
