Bloomington Telephone, Volume 15, Bloomington, Monroe County, 21 November 1893 — Page 2
THE TELEFH 'JiNE.
llv Wax.tki: Brad?, tf.
BLOOM i NGTON
- jINDiA.i
A man void of understanding atcikcth hands and become. h surety in the presence of his friend."
Statistics show ihat one-half of!
the young men of Switaerland arc incapacitated for military service because of physical infirmities induced by the excessive use of alcoholic liquors. A young man in Mishawaka i said to have been arrested and fined ten dollars for disturbing the peace by singing the song "After the Ball" on the streets. That y. m. is verv anxious to interview the author of the song, who is said to be receiving $1,200 a day royalty from his (in) famous production.
In no one particular has modern progress attained such universally successful results as in the elimination of the patch from the wearing apparel and footgear of the human race. Patches are seldom seen, even on the garments of working people, it being cheaper to buy new than to try to repair the old. Shoddy and machinery are responsible for the change, as a rule. A New York dude has opened a shop in Fifth avenue for the sale of flowers of his own cultivation. It is the first instance on record where one of the species has been known to do anything useful or ornamental. He needs money, and having a taste for flowers, thinks he can make a handsome profit, as he can, no doubt, if he attends to business. Special qualifications for any business will succeed in the majority of cases.
East whose present refinement has been the accumulation of hundred of years of enlightened civilization rather than the result of the inherent enterprise and irresistible energy which is the one great characteristic of all Western progress. Hence the artistic treasures which arc year by year being gathered at our capital will be viewed by every Hoosier as common property, and as a heritage to coming generations which shall tell the eloquent storv of a wilderness transformed" to blooming gardens and fertile fields, and the wild beasts' lair to teeming cities of grandeur into homes of love and palatial institutions whose enduring wails shall shelter and instruct the Hoosier millions vet to be.
Comparatively few people who visited Jackson Park, and stood awe struck and overpowered amid the realistic exhibitions of immortal genius that hovered everywhere around, are able to recall the inscriptions on the western facade of the grand arch of the Peristyle. Read amidst the glamour of the wondrous Court of Honor they were impressive to the last degree, and for the benefit of the scrap books of our readers we herewith reproduce a part only of them, believing that many will cherish them as a valuable souvenir of many happy days: kYE SHALL KNOW THE TRUTH AND THE TRUTH SHALL MAKE YOU FREE." "TO THE PIONEERS OF CIVIL AND RELIGIOUS LIBERTY." "But bolder they who first offcast Their irocrings from the hahitable past, And ventured chartless on the sea Of atnrm-eng -ndering liberty.'
Progress is the watchword all along the line. Veterinary surgeons do not lag behind. Horses with ;glass eyes and cows with wooden legs are becoming a common result -of every day practice. Trephining a horse's broken skull often saves a valuable animal. Nervous horses are treated with cold water douches or hypodermic injections of cocaine. Dogs with impaired hearing are suc
cessfully treated for their infirmity. 1
A St. Louis man was the possesBorof two hearts until a few days ago. He decided to have the one in his leg 'cut out." It was situated on the inside of the right leg, four inches above the knee, and was caused by a severe blow on the limb by a piece of machinery directly over the artery. Technically the .growth was termed u aneurism," but
it exhibited all the peculiarities of j
heart, beating and throbbing in tunison with the original organ. The xnan was in danger of death from hemorrhage at any time and the operation was deemed necessary to save bis life.
The California Mid-Winter Fair, having a conspicuous object lesson fresh in tie minds of the projectors, is marchingonward toward the opening day with strides that give assurance of a great success. Golden Gate Park is being transformed into a populous city. It is expected that the five maiii buildings will be in the hands of the decorators by the end of November. The ' 'sinews of war1' are promptly forthcoming as they are needed and the work will not falter for la:;k of means or enterprise. A majority of the attractions of the Chicago Midway Plaisance will be removed to San Francisco, some being already on the way. Railroad rates 'are promised that will be a revelation in transportation circles, and everything indicates a repetition of the triumph that attended the W orld's Columbian Exposition.
REMEMBRANCE
The Sure Reward That Follows a Righteous Life.
; 'Mabion Harland," whose every day name is Mrs. Mary Virginia Terhune, who is a literary character of considerable note, sailed from New York Oct. 11, for a pilgrimage through the desert of Syria to the Bedouins and lepers. She will penetrate the mysteries of a harem at Damascus, visit the Druses of Carmel, the Sea of Tiberias, stop at the tomb of Abraham at Hebron, and visit the Grand Rabtv of Jerusalem,
wbose blessing she confidently ex- !
pects. Mrs. Terhune will be accompanied by her son, and will adopt Oriental customs and costume, and endeavor to penetrate to the inner
-circles of every place of note she j
visits as no Caucausian has yat been permitted to do, and hopes to return to New York in March with ample material for her literary projects.
A valuable flute was stolen, two months ago, from a show-case in the Manufacturer's Building at Jackson Park. It was the property of Prof. Giorgi, of the Royal Academy of Music of Florence, Italy. The flute had cost the Professor years of Voor and thousands of dollars in cash, and was highly prized. Recently the musical Italian has begun to receive humorous epistles from an unknown correspondent signing himseii "The Modern Robin Hood," stating that he had stolen the flute on a bet that the Professor would stand on the Ferris wheel platform in a swallowtail suit with a sunflower on his lapel and cry the sale of a waltz he had written in order to secure the return of his beloved instrument. Other propositions of similar absurdity were received, but the thief managed to conceal his identity and the Professor fails to see any humor in the proposed jokes, and refuses to comply with the terms laid down. The loss has lost Mr. Giorgi a number of valuable engagements, and the thief continues to make him miserable.
PJEOPLE.
Indianapolis is felicitating itself over the recent occupation of its dew public library building. It is -of white stone, the architecture being of classical beauty and simplicity and is surmounted by a noble group in lasting bronze. Competent critics who have seen both pronounce it equal to the Parthenon at Athens in point of beauty, and it is said to resemble that famous structure very much. The site of this gem of architecture is on Meridian street one-half square north of the Soldiers' Monument. That immediate locality in the Hoosier capital is rapidly be ing transformed into an art center of great interest and remarkable excellence one that will favorably compare with anything of the kind in the United States at least. Indiana within the memory of men yet young has vaulted from a position of obscurity, and from being a type of -Western life and manners but one degree removed from the customs that prevailed on the Western frontier, into ao assured standing and indisputable recognition among the .cultured . commonwealths of the
The Rev. T. W. Cutw, crested for preaching on Boston Common without a license, has bean fined one cent. Lord Dimravci, of fochVmg fame, derives a goodly portion of hU income from the proceeds of his farming operations in Americ a Ex-Preruier Crispi of Italy says that men who want war are fools. Generals Grant and Sherman took the same view. Cramp, the great ship builder, says that he does not go abroad more frequently because a a ocean voyage pros tar te him with sickness. Senator Morgan, of Alabama, is a self-made man. He went to school but one year. His lack of education, however, did not prevent him fmm studying law at an early ag and becoming a successful practitioner. His literary acquirements, for vhich he has a reputation, were gained by reading in later years. Mr. Agncw, the London art dealer, has given to the print room at the British Museum some two score etchings and engravings after pictures by Burne-Jones, Rosetti, Land' seer, Lawrence, Gainsborough and other British artists, living and dead. Although the museum receives copies of all illustrated books in England, it depends for etchings and engravings on the gifts of the generous.
The Common Fat of Worlds and Kingdom and Cities and Men, Oblivion A i;uiftrkiibl Sermon, Rev. Dr. Talmagc preached at Brooklyn, last Sunday. Subject '"Oblivion and Its Defeats' The texts selected were 3ub x:i, 20, "He shall be no more remembered." and Psalms cxii, t, "The righteous shall be in everlasting remembrance." He said: "Oblivion and Its Defeats" is my subject to-day. There is an monseter that swallows down everything. It crunches individuals, families, communities, states, nations, continents, hemispheres, worlds. Its diet is made up of years, of centur ies, of agc, of cycles, of milleniums, of eons. That monster is called by Noah Webster and all the other die tionarians oblivion. It is a steep down which everything rolls. It is a conflagration in which everything is consumed. It is a dirge in which all orchestras play and a period at which everything stop3. It is the cemetery of the human race. It is the domain of forgetfulness. Oblivion! At times it throws a shadow overall of us. and 1 would not pronounce it to-day if I did not come armed in the strength of the eternal God on your behalf to attack it, to rout it, to demolish it. "Why, just look at the way the families of the earth disappear. For awhile they are together, inseparable and to each other indispensible, and then they part, some by marriage going to establish other homes, and some leave this life, and a century is long enough to plant a family, develop it, prosper it and obliterate it. So the generations vanish. Many of the ancient cities are thirty feet deep, or fifty feet deep, or 100 feet deep. What was the matter? Any sueeial calamity? No.
The winds and waves and sands and flying dust are all the undertakers and grave-diggers, and if the world stands long enough the present Brooklyn and New York and London will have on top of them other Brooklyns and New Yorks and Londons, and only after digging and boring and blasting will the archaeologist of far distant centuries come down as far as the highest spires and domes and turrets of our present American and European cities. At the opening of our civil war the men of the Northern and Southern armies were told that if they fell in battle their names would never be forgotten by their country. Out of the million men who fell in battle or died in military hospitals, you cannot call the names of 1,000, nor the names of 500. nor the names of 100, nor the names of 50. Oblivion! Are the feet of the dancers who were at the bal' of the Duchess of Richmond, at Brussels, the night before Waterloo, all still? All still. All guns of Bunker Hill all deaf? All deaf. Are the eyes that saw the coronation of George III all closed? All closed. Oblivion! A hundred years from now there will not be a being on this earth that knew we ever lived. Oblivion! The world itself will roll into it as easily as a schoolroy's india-rubber ball rolls down a hill, and when our world goes it is so i -terlocked by the law of gravitation with other worlds that they will go, too, and so far from having our memory perpetuated by a monument of Aberdeen granite in this world, there is no world in sight of our strongest telescope that will be a sure pediment for any slab of commemoration of the fact that we ever lived or died at all. Our earth is struck with death. The axletree of the constellations will break and let down the populations of other worlds. Stellar, lunar, solar mortality. Oblivion! It can swallow whole galaxies of worlds as easily as a crocodile takes down a frog. Yet oblivion does not remove or swallow anything that had better not be removed or swallowed. The old monster is welcome to his meal. This world would long ago have been overcrowded if it had not been for the merciful removal of nations and generations. What if all the books had lived that were ever written and printed and published? The libraries would by their immensity have obstructed intelligence and made all research impossible. The fatal epidemic of books was a merciful epidemic. Many of the State and national libraries to-day are only morgues in which dead books are
waiting for some one to come and !
recognize them. What are epitaphs in graveyards, what are eulogiums in presence of those whose breath is in their nostrils, what are unread biographies in the alcoves of a city library, cornered with the imperishable records you have made in the illuminated memories of those to whom you did such kindnesses. Forget them? They can not forget them. Notwithstanding all their might aud splendor, there are some things the glorified of heaven can not do, and this is one of them. They can not forget an earthly kindness done. They have no cutlass to part that cable. They have no strength to hurl into oblivion that benefaction.
Has Paul forgotten the inhabitants ! of Malta, who extended the island : hospitality when he and others w ill hlra had felt, added to a shipwreck,
the drenching rain and the sharp cold? Has the victim of the highwayman on the road to Jericho forgotten the good Samaritan with a
medicament of oil and wine and a free ride to the hostelry? Have the English soldiers who went up to God from the Crimean battlefields forgotten Florence Nightingale? Another defeat of oblivion will be found in the character ' of those whom we rescue, uplift or save. Character is eternal. Suppose by right influence we aid in transforming a bad man into a good man, a disheartened man into a courageous man every stroke of that work done will be immortalized. There may never be so much as one line in a newspaper regarding it, or no mortal tongue may ever whisper it into human ear, but wherever that soul shall go your work upon it will rise, and so long as that soul will last your work on it will last. Do you suppose there will ever come such an idiotic lapse in the history of that soul in heaven that it shall forget that you invited him to Christ; that you, by prayer or gospel word, turned him round from the wrong way to the right way? No such insanity will ever smite a heavenly citizen. It is not half as well known on earth that Christopher Wren planned and built St. Paul's as it will be known in all heaven that you were the instrumentality of building a temple for the sky. Oh, this character building! You and I are every moment busy in that tremendous occupation . You are making me better or worse, and I am making you better or worse, and we shall through all eternity bear the mark of this benediction or blasting. Oh, this character building! The structure lasting independent of passing centuries, independent of crumbling mausoleums, independent of the whole planetary system. Aye, if the material universe, which seems all bound together like one piece of machinery, should some day meet with an accident that should send worlds crashing into each other like telescoped railway trains, and all the wheels of constellations and galaxies should stop, and down into one chasm of immensity all the suns and moons and stars should tumble like the midnight express at Ashtabula,
that would not touch us and would not hurt God, for God is a spirit,and character and memory are immortal, and over that grave of a wrecked material universe might truthfully be written, "The righteous shall be held in everlasting remembrance." O, time, we defy thee! O. death, we stamp thee in the' dust of thine own sepulchers! O, eternity, roll on till the last star has stopped rotating, and the last sun is extinguished on the sapphire pathway, and the last moon has illumined the last night, and as many years have passed as all the scribes that ever took pen could describe by as many figures as they could write in the centuries of all time, but thou shalt
have no power to efface from any soul in glory the memory of anything we have done to bring it to God and heaven! There is another and a more complete defeat for oblivion, and that is in the heart of God himself. You have seen a sailor roll up his sleeve and show you his arm tattooed with the figure of a favorite ship perhaps the first one in which he ever sailed. You have seen a soldier roll up his sleeve and show you his arm tattooed with the figure of a fortress where he was garrisoned or the face of a great general under whom he fought, You have seen many a hand tattooed with the face of a loved one before or after marriage. This tattooing is almost as old as the world. It is some colored liquid punctured into the flesh so indelibly that nothing can wash it out. It may have been there fifty years, but when the man goes into his coffin that picture will go with him on hand or arm. Now, God says that He has tattooed us upon His hands. There can be no other meaning in the forty-ninth chapter of Isaiah, where God says, "Behold, I have graven thee on the palms of My hands!" It was as much as to say: "I can not open My hand to help, but I think of you. I can not spread abroad My hands to bless, but I think of you. Wherever I go up and down the heavens I take these two pictures of you with me. They are so inwrought into My being that I can not lose them. As long as Mv hands last the memory of you will last. Not on the back of My hands, as though to announce you to other?, but on the palms of My hands for Myself to look at aud study and love. Not on the palm of one hand alone, but on the palms of both hands, for while I am looking upon one hand and thinking of you, I must have the other hand free to protect you, free to strike back your enemy, free to lift if you fall. Palms of My hands indelibly tattooed! And though I hold the winds in My fist no cyclone shall uproot the inscription of your name and your face, and though I hold the ocean in the hollow of My hand its billowing shall not wash out the record of My remembrance. "Behold, I have graven thee on the palms of My hands." What joy, what honor can there be comparable to that of being remembered by the mightiest and kindest and loveliest and tenderest and most affectionate being in the universe? Think of it, to hold di
everlasting place in the heart of God. j
The heart of God! The most beautiful palace in the universe. Let the archangel build some palace as grand
as that if he can. Let him crum;!e. 1 up all the stars of yesternight i-nd ! to-morrow nisht and put them to- : gether as mosaics for such a palace floor. Let him take all the sunrises and sunsets of all he days aud the
ess uthisynaifts8wrdaowhr ; the apportionment suit
Let him take all the rivers, and all
the lakes, and all the oceans, and toss them into the fountains of this palace court. Let him take all the gold of all the hills and hang it in its chandeliers, and all the pearls of all the seas, and all the diamonds of all the fields, and with thorn arch the doorways of that palace, and then invite into it all the glories that Esther ever saw at a Persian ban quet, or Daniel ever walked among in Babylonian castles, or Joseph ever witnessed in Pbnra'-h's throne room, and then yourself enter this castle of archangelic construction, and see how poor a palace it is compared with the greater palace that some of vou have already found in the heart of a loving and pardoning God, and into which all the music, and all the prayers, and all the sermonic considerations of this day are trying to introduce you through the blood of the slain lamb. Oh, where is oblivion now? From the dark and overshadowing word that it seemed when I began, it has become something which no man or woman or child who loves the Lord need ever fear. Oblivion defeated. Oblivion dead. Oblivion sepulchcred. But I must not be so hard on that
Papers Filed in the Marion County Circuit Court. The Ifflalatlve Apportionment AlUffad to be Unconstitutional by the KepabUcan State Committee. By direction of tho Republican State committee, there was tiled, Wednesday afternoon, in the Marion county circuit court, Edgar A. Brown (Democrat), Judge, a suit to test the constitutionality of the legislative apportionment act of tho last General Assembly. The plaintiff in tho action is Albert W. Wishard, of Indianapolis. The suit Is directed against tin clerk, sheriff and auditor of every county in Indiana. There are :!T3 defendants. The proceedings arc brought to enjoftt the election officers in the ninety-two-counties of the State from performing tho duties assigned to them under the legislative, apportionment act of isyj. The attorneys for the State committee are Albert W. Wishard. who wrote tho complaint, and John H. Elam, of Indianapolis, and M. E. Forkncr, of New Castle. The complaint makes forty-seven typewritten pages. It recites that the General Assembly at its session of 1301, tho sessien .next following the last enumeration, attempted to enact an apportionment law; that subsequently, by proceedings in tho .Henry county circuit court, and after-
devouring rrfonster, for into its grave 'ward, on appeal, in the Supremo Court of 0 all our sins when the Lord for 'Indiana, the act was held unconstitutional Christ's sake has forgiven them. and void; that afterward, at the regular Just blow a resurrection trumpet isession of the General Assembly in l;3t over them when once oblivion has an act was passed iixing the number of snapped them down. Not one of (senators and representatives, and to apthem rises. Blow again. Not a portion the same among t he sew-ral couno n f o , ties of the State. The apportionment aci a stir amid all the pardoned imqui- :,H sct out in as i8aisi'a tabllUr state. ties of a lifetime. Blow again. Not Jment showing the enumeration of mala one of them moves in the deep grave inhabitants in tho several senatorial and trenches. But to this powerless res- irepresentativis districts. It is averred ; a that by the act of March 1SJ.J, forty-threo
uiirimuu huliMjcu a vuiw icauus, count s are formed into tuvntv-two dla-
half human, half divine, and it must be part man and part God, saying, 'Their s?ns and their iniquities will I remember no more. " Thank God for this blessed oblivion! So you see I did not invite you down into a cellar, but upon a throne; not into the graveyard to which all materialism is destined, but into a garden all abloom with everlasting remembrance. The frown of my first text has become ihc kiss of the second text. Annihilation has become coronation. The wringing hands of a great agony have become the clapping hands of a great joy. The requiem with which we began has become the grand march with which we close. The tear of sadness that rolled down our cheek ha3 struck the lip on which sits tho laughter of eternal triumph.
tricts, to each of which one Senator is ap
portioned. The attorneys announce that they will press the case in the lowest court, and they expect to get a decision from the Supreme Court before the election next fall.
A
A GREAT SCHEME. Drunken Hen Adopts n Brood Hatched in the Grouad.
THE MARKETS. Nov. 13, 1303. GRAIN AND HAY. Wheat No. J r;d, hltfc; No. 3 red, 53c; rejected, 40&50c: wagon wheat, 57c. Corn No. 1 white, 3'e; No. 'J white, 36c; No, 3 white, mixed, 35)c; No. 4 white, 30c; No. 2 white, mixed. 35c; No. 3 white, mixed, 35l4e; No. 4 white, mixed, 30 No. !2 yeilow, 30e: No. ;: yellow, 35c; No. .yellow, 3uc; No. 2 mixed, 35c; No. 3 mixed, !34c; No. 4 mixed, ear corn. 35c. Oats No. 2 white, 31c; No. 3 white, 30c: No. 2 mixed, 24&c; No. Z mixed, 28c; .rejected, 23:i5c. Hav -Choice timothy, $11. W; No. 1, $11.25; No. 2, SO. 50; No 1 prarie. $6.75; mixed, $3; clover. S9, Rye No. 2, 45c for car-lots; 40: for wajron rye. Bkan $12. i,m: stock. Cattle Export grades $ 4.505.0O Good to choice shippers 4.(fcXg4.40 Fair to medium shippers 3,40(3.tiO Common shippers...". 2.7($3.8t -Feeders, 900 to 1,000 lbs 3.70ig3.2S Stockers, 500 to S( lbs 2.(K2.50 Good to choice heifers 3.03.50 . Fair to medium heifers 2.25e2.75 'Common thin heifers 1.504.00 Good to choice cows 2,CO3.0O :Fair to medium cows 2.00(32.40 iOommon old cows 1.XM1.7&
Veals, good to choice 4.25(5.50 Veals, common to medium 2.75($3.75
Pittsburgh Dsapatch. Yes, sir, I can raise chickens three days quicker by planting the egs than can be done'in the regular way' said an old man who officiates as gardener for a prominent iron manufacturer on Fifth avnue, East End. It seems stange. but chickens
arp nhrtitt. thp nnlv thi(y that, man w -Bulls, common to medium l.i
able to row. The. usual. things pro- .gflfe ""llll-tTS duced in a garden lanu sh and fail ; Milkers, common to medium... i:.0&33t.00
under his directions, but chickens Hoos Light.. $5.G5s.85
thi lve. 4,you see, I brought this idea over with me from the old country. I place the eggs in a box with a little fertilizer, then plant the box about four or five inches below the surface. "Well, some one told me you indulged in an incantation over the box," said the reporter. "Not at all; I just put a little vinegar over it, nothing else," was
the gardener s reply.
MivpH .V5.80
Heavy 5.CU&5.S0 Heavy Roughs 4.;'0J5.J& Sheep Good to choice $3.0033J8S
Fair to medium 2.;
Common thin 175
:Lambs, good to choice 3.25y
Bucks, per head -
POULTRY AND OTHER PRODOCB. LPrices Paid by Dealers. Poultrv Hens, 6c per lb; young chick ens. tic per lb; turkeys, toms, Gc per fr; hens, 7c per fancy largo youiw turkeys 7c; small and poor, 5c; ducks. 6c per ;
geese, 4.20 per aoz ior cnoice; raooiw.
XI. s rift
1 TT
You don't understand me. I !75c$l per doz.; quailf, 11.50 per doz.
mean that you use some charm or other." 'Oh no! The only rule you must follow is not to open the box except between the going down and the coming up of the sun1 was the
vvav the gardener answered.
Eggs ShiuoerA navinarOc.
Butter chou-i. 15(10c; mixed, 10ISc Honev New, 15(c$lSc. Feathers Prim gocse, 40c per lb; mixed duck, 20c par lb. Beeswax 20c for yellow; 15c for dark. Wool Unwashed medium wool, liic; unwashed coarse or .braid, 12Hc; un
washed fine monno, 10313c; tub-washed
"Then there is some mystery about than abov p-i :es. it, after all?" was asked. j Hides o t green hides, 2Kc; No, 1 41 No, you must keep the box dry," ' O. S. Hides, j'j; No. 2 U. rt. hides, rpnlied thp old chicken farmer I No. 1 calf hides, 5c; No. 2 calf hides. 3Wc iepnea xne oia cuiuten iarmei . TAf.!iw-No. i tallow. tc: No. i ttl-
The reporter gave up further ques
tioning as futile, and permitted the gardener to tell his story without interruption. 4 4 Well, you see, I let the box remain under the ground for a period equal to that required for a hen to hatch out eggs, less three days, then open thom in the evening. Then I find I have my chickens all hatched out. I am met here with a ditticuity. If 1 try to put the young chickens with a hen to raise she will peck at
them untill she kills them. It is too ewes and wethers, $?3.5C; Westerns, f&lft iy,i,V. tmnKla r nxv W thmn mir. ($3.75; Iambs, f?.ir4.25.
self, so I have to play a trick. I
low, 40. New YorV. Wheat No. 2 rod, 67fc. Corn So. 2. 46c. Oats No. 2, 340. Lard i.74c. Butter Western creamery, SSc. Chicago. Wheat 61 Jc. Corn 37c. Oats, 28c Pork $14.10. Lard, 9c. ltios. 17.30. Cattie Good to choice natives, f4.3K5.40; others, 3..w34.50; Toxan,f?.5o3: West erns, $2."oca!:iK): stocicers, tt. XK:j.2r; cows, $l.'J5-r);j.:j5. Hogs Rough and common, $5.5iK8.,V; mixed and packer, tSM (f.Vt5; prime heavy and butchers weights, 15.70(5.85; light, $5 7;'H, Sheep Th
market was active and strong: inixea
take a chicken that is not laving'
well and make her drank. I do this by giving her whisky, and soii she bogius to stagger around until at last, in a drunken stupor, she lies down. I take her, and, fixing carefully in a box I have already prepared, place the chicks under her. By morning the effects of the aloohol have worn off and the hen is going around the yard clucking to her young brood in the proudest manner. She imagines that she has been sit
ting upon the egrs and this is the re-
Clncitittfttt. Wheat No. 2 red, w)c; Corn No. mixed, 40c; Rye. 52c; Pork. $l5.;i0; Lard, 9c; Bacon, $10.50; Hatter. Eljrin creamery, 30c. Cattle 1.7ftg4.:tt. 5.SO, Sheep fl($3.25; lambs, fe'.&S. St. 1au1. Wheat 57Xc; Corn, Wic; Oats, 27X. MlnneapoUt Wheat No. l, GOc. UufTklo. Cattlk Best export steers, f4,00'35t25r good to choice shipping. H,50I4.7"i, light and medium. 91.10 44.10. lioj.;-M;uia and heavy. 95.90,40; mixed UitcUtre, f&GO ($6.10. Shoep-Common, 10(3; aeidctod. 93.2O0VO. best lambs, 93.1 OsiJOO j foir to good, 93.54.
Philadelphia.
suit of her pat ence. I have tried Wheat-No. 2 Pennsylvania, SGJfe; this a number or times and the ex- Corn, No. 2, 47c; Oats, 3fc; liutier. Vostperiment has never failH." I era creamery, 28c; Kggs, Westora. 35a.
limltlmore.
Closing Markkts Wheat Steady: spot, 04f4e; Novomhor. WfAfrWc December, 05($orc: May, 7.;i($73tfc.' ' Corn easy; spot, 4'(g4H'c: Xovoruber,
Too MucU fo.' Aiiiu. Indianapolis Journal. ilI can't slay in this town any
longer," complained the rnaa oOhe, 455ic; year. 44c; January 44c
artistic soul. Wheat Firm and higher; No. 2, No44 What's the matter r asked his vemher, 6iVfc. Corn dull aud steady; friend. ' No cash, 40c. Oats quiet: cash, aoc
'Tinct nicQA1 i woman with hair "veauu: casn, tjc. nover soea lm. and 1 ust passea a woman witanair steady; prime, cash. 15.40.
Kat Libert r.
bloudined to a delicate green, lean
mr on tho ann of a man whose whiskers wore dyed a navy blue. '
Hoos Receipts. 5,0(0; shipment, 4.105 Market dull; prime tnps. 9ti.0-k$(U0; best Yorkers and mixed, 95.yo&6: common U fair Yorkers, 9o,705.8u.
