""i!Wl Ji W r KITTY'S By Author of Mnunti CHAPTER II. (Continued.) "You poor little Kitty!" said Meg, sighing; and, coming 'round to where I sat, she bent over my chair and put hor cheek caressingly against mine, then added In a tone more mocking than compassionate: "To be turned quite suddenly Into a pnragoness! Oh, tho shock or it! Dora, my dear, let us make her elegy. Wo may regurd hor na having passed nway from this life. You poor little thing! Don't cry, Kit ty; lot us look upon the bright side of It." "There Is no bright side," I inter posed, with a littlo sob. "Oh, nonsense!" said Dora, reassur ingly. "Hundreds of things may hap pen. He may change his mind that's not at all Improbable. He niny marry you and die during the honeymoon." "I have always longed to be a wid ow," reflected Meg, musingly and cheorlngly. "A widow," added Dora, still In a tone of reassurance "la the happiest, freest, most enviable being In the world! Think of tho Independent, love ly times sho has! Her relations can't tyrannize any longer. She has to be treated with respect, gentleness, defer ence, and great courtesy. Oh, to bo a widow! Cheer up Kitty. GIvo her n little shake .and make her stop crying, Meg." "I think it is we who should cry," said Meg, with a comical attempt to speak dolorously. "Wo have no chance of being widows!" And Meg laughed again, her sweet, rippling, light-hearted littlo laugh; and then she kissed me to soften the cruelty of the laughter. Once more there was silence in tho room. Dora sat opposite, regarding me with an air of grave reflection; Meg stood bcsldo me, bending down to rest one elbow on the table, and looking closely at me with smiling eyes. "When does ho mean to speak to you, I wonder?" said Dora at length. "And how will he frame his strange pro posal? What days and nights of re- I SEATED MYSELF AND flection it will cost him! Ho will look down at you benignly; he " "He will pat you encouragingly on the head," added Meg, patting mo her Belf to give point to the remark. "Bo suro you say 'thank you' pret tily, Kitty, my child" tutored Dora. "Fold your hands meekly across your apron and speak prettily." "Her aprons will bo no more!" said Meg In a tragic tone. "Pinafores and pigtails are henceforth to bo dis carded." "He'll bring you a ring," said Dora. "Say you havo a fancy for diamonds. Kitty. Say you prefer the diamonds to be big." "Ho'll bring you tender offerings of flowers," added Meg. "And I shall be able to woar them." "And I suppose," observed Dora, gravely and very doubtfully, with much hesitation "I suppose now ho will feel constrained to say that ho loves you, Kitty." My cheeks, already crimson, grew hotter suddenly. I put up my hands to cover them. I pushed back my chair from tho table and turned away with helpless anger, which for a moment would not let me speak. "Oh, a thought has struck mo!" ex claimed Dora, in a thrilling tone "a truly appalling thought! Kitty, my doar, you will have to call him 'John!' Kitty, don't go don't go; wo want to talk to you I" I had turned to flee. I had my hand on the opon door; but I looked around fiercely before I went, "I hate you!" 1 cried. "I detest you!" And I shut the door and ran along tho passage to my room, CHAPTBR III. Two hours later I was seated, sew ing in hand, opposite to Aunt Jane In th drawing-room, listening tor the MtMi? Ms. .1J ! s s J i HUSBAND "Hetty," Etc. '' 4 tmtf study door to opon nnd for the sound of n footstep on the stairs. My face, an I stooped over my work nnd tried to cfrcupp Aunt Jnne'a keen scrutiny, was hot nnd Hushed; tears were still very near to my eyes; my heart was beating fast with strangely mingled feelings -li'dlgnntlon, outraged pride, excited expectation. "Kute, are you listening to me?" de manded Aunt .Tano suddenly, In n tone of accusation. I started guiltily. I had been listen ing, not to Aunt Jnne, but to ccrtnln sounds which nRccnded from down stairs the study door's being opened nnd shut, two deep, grave voices in enrnest talk. "I told John Mortimer that ho should have opportunities of seeing you fre quently," continued Aunt Jane, in her clenr, level, decisive tone; "so present ly I shall go away nnd leave you alone to talk to one nnothcr. I havo only one thing to say to you, Kate remem ber that he spoke to mo this afternoon In confidence; you were to know noth ing of his Intentions; you will bohavo pleasantly but quite naturally." With a sinking heart I sat and list ed to Aunt Jane's impossible ndvlco of fered so easily. "Dehavo naturally!" Could I ever again stnnd, sit, speak, look or think In John Mortimer's pres ence except with painful, tcrrlblo solf consclousness, with a haunting remem brance of all that Aunt Jane had told me? Why had she tqld me? I had liked him I had liked him so much! He had been so good to mo, so kind! Ko ono clso had been so kind! I had said what I liked to him always; I had treated him as a dear elder brother, with whom I need not stop to weigh my words. If I had seen him ahead as I went to school In the morning, I had walked fast to overtake him; when, In the evening, he came to see us, I had always been glad, and had always told htm so with a smile that made the words emphatic. 1 had always been sorry when ho went away.; and that, TOOK UP MY SEWING. too, I hnd told him, simply, without re serve. "Natural!" I had behaved nat urally with him all my llfo! I could never be nntural with him any moro. "My denr child," said Aunt Jane, looking at me with sharp, attentive scrutiny, "If you wear that tragic air, I shall regret that I told you anything." "I wish oh, I wish you hadn't!" I cried, reproachfully, with sudden pas sion Unit overcame my fear. As steps came up tho stairs, I turned away toward the window. Tho window was shut, as Aunt Jnno preferred all windows to bo. Through the hot, dusty panes I looked out at tho tree tops in the square garden, and never turned my head, A minute Inter John Mortimer crossed the room to where I stood. "Kitty," he said, quietly. He put out his hand. He was stand ing beside mo, his gray eyes smiling gravely at me. My eyes had no an swering smile as I raised them slowly to his. It was a grave, quiet, somewhat rug ged face at which I looked a face at the same time stern and gentlo. The gray eyes were deeply set, beneath level, thickly penciled brows; they smiled; rarely and, when thoy smiled, the Bmlie was more grave than merry. He was still a comparatively young man, though Dora and Meg always spoke of him as though he were their father's comtomporary. He was thir ty-five no moro; but his dark hair, his short, brown beard were already touched with gray; and his face, his voice, his manner were all older than his years. '"What is happening down there?" ho asked, taking up his stand beside mo and following my glance. My oyea were fixed Intently on the dusty railings of the square garden. Around the corner of. the square came a sad-looking man, with a sun browned face, bearing an oil', organ and a very wizened, mour.iful little monkey. "Will ho stop?" I exclaimed, with sudden woll-slmulated eagerness. "No ycsl Yes, hols going to stop!" "Kitty, whnt a child you nre!" said John Mortimer, In a quiet, wondering, half-tender tono; nnd the tone or tho words sent the hot blood rushing to my cheeks nnd set all my pulses throb bing. "I know I nm n child," I said quiet ly, almost fiercely. "I llko being n child. I don't want to grow up. 1 will be a child as long as ever I can bo." He was looking down at me with an observant glance, though 1 looked so steadily nway from him. There was n suspicion of lnughtcr In his volco when, after n moment, he spoko ngnln. "In spite of yourself, Kitty, age la creeping upon you. In our mothers' and grandmothers' days seventeen, I believe, was a very mnturo age, In deed." "Hut not now," 1 said eagerly, with too much earnestness. "Seventeen Is nothing nowadays. You're only old enough at seventeen to go In for senior Cambridge examinations. If you wnnt to go to college, you enn't they won't havo you because you're so young. Hol loway will take you, but Glrton nnd Ncwhnm won't. Do you know how old our sixth form girls are? I'm tho youngest; somo nro eighteen, some nro nineteen, nnd somo nro over." Although my fnco was turned toward the dusty, out-of-door world, and my back toward the drawing-room, I was conscious that Undo Rlchnrd had been sent nway by Aunt Jnno, and that Aunt Jnne was preparing to follow him. In another minute wo were loft clone. My cheeks wore burning, my heart wbb beating nngrlly nt tho con sciousness of why we wero left alone. "1 novor realized beforo tho extreme youthfulncss of seventeen," said John Mortimer gravely. Dut, looking nround at him, I cnught the amused smile with which he was regarding mo. "Why havo I mado you so Indignant, Kitty?" ho continued, In a different tono. "Why havo I brought this severo lecturo upon myself? Is It all apropos of tho organ man?" "It's apropos of nothing." "I know an old man of seventy-seven once who could never pass a Punch nnd Judy In tho street. If ho enmo in only for tho end of tho performance, ho would trudge along with tho urchins to the next street to hear tho begin ning. If seventy-soven takes delight in a Punch and Judy, seventeen may sure ly bo nllowed an organ-man nnd a monkey. Did I imply otherwise? If I did, I retract." He opened the window aa he spoko and threw out a little silver coin, which tho organ-man, smiling sudden ly but somewhat sadly, moved hastily to secure. Tho window, once opened, remained open; the room was a little less stifling than before. A soft ovonlng breeze that was almost cool stolo In. Across tho square, beyond the housea, tho sky was red; Indoors tho light was begin ning to grow dim. Dim light Improved Aunt Jane's drawing-room. Buteven in tho gray est twilight it remained an ugly room. Its ugliness was hopeless, without ono redeeming feature. I seated myself at tho foot of tho twisted little sofa, close to tho open window, and took up my sowing, which I had dropped Just now to listen to Aunt Jane. John Mortimer sat down opposite me in Aunt Jane's chair. He leaned his elbow on the arm, and sat in a thoughtful, observant attitude, his head resting against his hand. (To Be Continued.) LIVELY TIME. When a Leonard Invade i Town In India A Hath DUturuei!. Amrlta Bazaar Patrika: About 4 a. m. to-day a Gurkha soldier, who was bathing in n tank on tho outskirts of the city of Gorakphur, was suddenly attacked from behind. Thinking his assailant was a pig, he (gosh ke lalach bc. as a Hindustani official loftily put It) grappled with it and both rolled over into tho tank, where thoy had n bit of rough and tumble. The assail ant turned out to be a large leopard. He left tho Gurkha something ,to re member him by In tho shape of a num ber of claw marks, and then proceeded to invade tho city, attacking and wounding a number of persons on the way. Ho Anally took up his position In a Kumbar houso, situated in the heart of ono of the, bazaars, quite close to tho principal octroi post, tho Golbar. Intimation of his presence was at once sent to Mr, Innes, the D. S. P., and to Mr. W. Calnao, tho collector. Tho nows also crept around the station and a regular posse of other sahibs assem bled. Mr. Calnan and Mr. Innes got on tho roof, of the houso whero the ani mal was, and, by pulling off tho tiles "and poking the animal with a long pole, 'succeeded In shooting him. He turned out to be a fine male leopard, in most sleek condition, and measuring Boven feet three Inches. During bis brief career In tho city he had Injured no less than eleven persons, some of them very severely indeed. The lives of two men aro despaired of; one of them bad, among other wounds, his el bow crushed from a bite. Tw6 men had their eyes dislocated. A few wo men wero badly scratched all over the body. Tho good folk of Gorakphur wero all keenly Interested in tho oc currence. Hundreds of them visited Mr. Innes' compound to inspect tho carcass, and large numbers also went to tho hospital to Inspect the wounded Ethical llfo Implies the election of motives othor than selfish, in our age who will dispute this, seflshnesa has been apotheslzed as tho one rule if conduct? Rev.. Dr. E. G. Hirscb. SCIENTIFIC TOPXCS CUnnENT.NOTES OF DISCOVCRf AND INVENTION. A Hiitulltuln for I'limimntlo Tlr The WhUtllujr lluny ThH Ncir MotUe I'onrr NlnrtliiK fire with Ice New Alr-t'oollnjr Machine. Tlin New Moth Power. That the uge of steam, especially as a motlvo power, draws rapidly toward Its close, Is everywhere conceded. Hut what tho new motlvo power Is to be does not manifest Itself with so much certitude. It may bo compressed nlr, or It may be electilrlty In mimu one of Its manifold forms, or, again, It may be something else. Hut until It Is cer tain the necessarily great expense of tho change from one form of motive power to nnothcr gives all tho rail roads pause, while the equal necessity of keeping abreast of tho times makes them watch with keenly Interested ces the experiments that nre going on nil over the country In the hopu of dls- covering the new king. Tho Long Is land rond, on a hulf-milo stretch, In a carefully guarded Inclosuro near Ja maica, lias recently been testing n third rail electricity carrying dovlco for which the Inventor claims econ omy, effectiveness and snfety. ' Tho third rail carrying the current and laid unguarded between the other two mils, which was adopted by many roads, proved dangerous In tho extreme, for any ono stepping from tho innocuous outsldo rails to the electrically charged third rail Immediately completed a cir cuit and received tho full force of tho current. Injury always resulted, and very often death. This was an In superable objection to tho system," and since then snfety lists been ono of tho results striven for. Tho Bystom tho Long Island railroad y trying consists of a copper cnble carrying tho current, which is set in n hollow wooden beam running along tho tics parallel and equldistnnt from tho mils. On top of this copper cable Is another smaller cablo about tho slzo of a telegraph wire, lying loose. Ab a train passes along n powerful magnet on the bottom of tho cars lifts this smaller wire, which thereupon becomos electrically charged for tho length of the enrs, but, it is asserted, is at the name tlmo dend and harmless two feet ahead or behind tho car. Tho owners of this third-rail systom clnlm to hold unnsBallablo pat ents. President William II. Ualdwln, Jr., of tho Long Island railroad, in speaking of tho tests, said: "Theso tests havo been mudo on our road for the last two months in an experimental sort of way. I havo been much Inter ested in tho development of this idea. It secniB to havo tho necessary olo ments for a successful third-rail sys tom. I havo no personal Interest what soever in tho matter, beyond tho doolro to find some third-rnll system that will prove economical, effective and snfo. If tho owners of this system nro ready to mako a business proposition for Its uso, wo would consider favorably tho application of that system for experi mental uso, with a view to Its adop tion. Wo would experiment with any third-rail system that nppealed to our Judgment." To Mnke Itnnni Fireproof. A new dovlco for making rooms ab solutely fireproof comes from Holland. It is applied to each room separately and involves no general reconstruction of tho house. It consists of a sorlos of fireproof plates, to be laid on tho wnlls, floor, and celling in place of plaster. Tho material used Is said to resemble nougat In appearance. By this simple process any fire Is strictly confined to the room in which it originates; there can bc no spreading. A severe test has been applied. In a room properly sheathed with these plates tarred wood was heaped on the floor nnd fired. In spite of tho fierceness of the combus tion, which filled tho whole room with crackling flames, thoro was no effect beyond tho protected walls. The Whlmllng-IInoy. Tho accompanying little illustration shows n devlco which, had It been In position on the Manacles, would havo saved the Paris and tho Mohegnn from running ashoro on that danffarous hit of English coast. This machlno is what is known as tho whistling buoy. It is capablo of giving out a much moro effectivo signal than tho old-fashioned bell buoy, which it has Just replaced off the Manacles. This new buoy works automatically, and every short wbllo emits a most doleful but far reaching whistling scream. New Air Cooling Machine. A machine has been built on novel principles for cooling tho air of houses and apartments. It differs from tho refrigerating machines now In use, which convert mochnnlcnl onergy Into heat, abstracted through the medium of liquefied gases, In that it depends on utilizing tho great latent heat of evaporation of water, says the St. Louis Globe-Democrat, it 1b not In tended for heavy refrigerator worl-,but .for cooling at maximum clllclency over the range of 10 to 25 degrees Fahren heit, required to keep u roam at com fortable temperature on a hot summer day. To furnish the forced blnst which provides both the air circulation and the chilling effect, all that Is required la a little electric motor blower. This evaporates the water, which Is distrib uted In a capillary film so effectively that 10,000 cubic feet of air per hour can bo cooled to about C8 degrees Fah renheit. There Is nn automatic ad justment which keeps the tempernturo nt any desired point and at any de sired degreo of humidity. The water can he taken from the local supply and current from tho nearest available source. The apparatus requires no more attention than a common fan motor and can readily bo set up In sick rooms or hospltalr., where such an appliance Is often Invaluable. Tho ease with which tho apparatus can be handled and operated, In fact, may In suro Its adoption generally In all kinds of buildings during very hot wenthor. It Is not only far moro ellleleut than the ordinary refrigerating apparatus, but It practically ennhles any ono who Ir very sensitive to Indoor heat to pass through the most trying summer In comfort. A Hiilmtltiltn for rnrtinmllo Tlrr. An Inventor, Bovine, has been grant ed n patent for a bicycle, If generally adopted, would revolutionize cycling. Each wheel of this bicycle has two rims. The Inner one Is connected to tho huh by tho ordinary means of spokes, hut between the Inner and outer rims Is an arrangement of lint springs having one end fastened flrmly to tho outer rim, while the other end Is fastened by a yielding slot connection to tho Inner ono. This combination Is said to bc moro comfortable to ride than tho pneumatic tire, as there Is n wider range of movo ment. Nliirllnir it IMrn with lei. Two very surprising things mny bo done with ordinary Ice. First, you may mako a burning glass out of tho Ico which will burn holes In paper and even start a flro In tho woods. The only tool you will need will bo a pocket knife, nnd with this It may bc well to remember that no hoy need freeze to denth In tho woods when tho sun shines nnd thero In plenty of ice nround. Ho tuny mako his fire as follows: Solect tho clearest Ico you can find. In frozen ponds will often be found n little hil lock of Ico caused by an eddy In tho water beneath. Knock off a plcco of thlB clear Ico and whittle It into tho shape of a doublo convex lens. You should havo no trouble doing this, for Ice can bo cut very cnslly with a pock ctknlfe. Perhaps It may bo well to Inform tho uninitiated that n doublo convex lens Is one which bulges on both Bides. It gathere up tho rays of sunlight nnd concentrates thorn against one spot, which Is called tho focus point. Ordinarily a lens is mado of glass, but Ico will perform tho same feat If correctly shaped. First cut your ico into a flat piece, a littlo thicker than and as round as a silver dollar. It might bo well, also, to leave a long sliver on one side of the circular plcco to sorvo for a handle. When you havo cut your flat circular piece, scrapo down tho edge, gradually working to wards, the. cenlcr, until you have round ed off, both sides. A little practlco will onablo you to do this evenly, al though you may wasto or break two or three pieces of Ice In tho effort. As you go adng with tho work of scraping put the round piece, or Jens, In your mouth every few minutes. Tho heat of the mouth will not only polish tho lens, but It will smooth away those ex tremely flno ridges or knlfo marks which might otherwise Interfero with tho concentration of the light. By holding it n proper distance from a piece of paper, say about an inch, it presently will set tho paper on Are. The othor feat spoken of nbove Is tho mak ing of a good magnifier out of n pleco of Ice. If you aro in the woods some winter's day and wish to examine aomo minute objects thoroughly you may do so, very readily with ice. Proceed as when you mado your lens, only Instead of making slightly convex sides make your lens In tho shapo erf a ball or sphere. Opticians sell glass balls filled with water for magnifying purposes. The ico will act the samo as tho water filled glass ball, and It is wonderful how much you may add to a day's en joyment in this very simple way. Ther are winter Insects, branches of trees, dead loaves and bark, snow and Ice, all of which will reveal hidden wonders under this very simple microscope which nature places' within the reach of any ingenious boy. Of course tho city boy may also amuse himself with Ice quite as readily as his country cou sin, and ho may do It in summer time, If need be, with the help of the com modity which tho Ice-man leaves at tho door every day. An engineer in Tunis hns Invented a deep sen diving apparatus which has Icon tried without accident ut a depth of 174 feot near Cherbourg. Tho in ventor declares his purpose of search ing for tho hull of tho Alabama, which lies where she was sunk by tho Kear earge, off Cherbourg harbor. in (ii:ni:hat. Officials In Washington regard tho Venezuelan situation ns critical, A bust of ex-Speaker Reed Is bolng executed In bronze for the Maine legis lature. Tho war department hns chartered the steamer Dublin, which will carry HGO animals to Manila. General MIIcb has accepted nn Invi tation to net iih marshal of the Dewey parade nt Washington, D. C. In the past eighteen months Presi dent McKlntey hns been the victim of camern fiends over three thousand ttmcB, An Insano merchant of Berlin named Herman Hordasch haH been iirrentuil at a hotel in Lelpuic for threatening to kill tho king of Saxony. Mayor Buck of Portland, Me., n gen tlemnn 76 years of age, has Just com pleted tho feat of walking to tho sum mit of Mount Washington, N. II. , nnd back iigaltt. Tho owner of StonchunKO, tho old Druid monument on Salisbury plain, threatens to sell It to tho highest bid. dcr unless tho British government will give him 1026.000 for It. The directors of the Mcrgonthnlor Linotype company has dcclarod tho rogular quarterly dividend of 2 por cent nnd nn extra dividend of 2 Mi per cent payablo September 20. Edward Bulwer Lytton Dickons, bod. of tho novelist, has been appointed u rabbit Inspector by tho New South Wales government. He was formerly, a inombcr of the colonial parliament. Experiments nro about to begin In Louisiana for tho manufacture of pnpoi from refiiBo sugar cano. Paper mado from sugar cano should ho In great ro quost for tho correspondence of uwcot-hcarts. Tho house In which General Shermnn died In New York, has been sold by tho holrs for about $3fi,000. It is situated on West Soventy-flrst street, and was purchased by tho general a year before his death. A platform car recently complotcd at tho Boston & Mnlno railroad shops, in Sulom, Mubb., has a carrying cupacl ay of 100.000 pounds, 40,000 pounds more than any other car on thu road. It Is thirty-two foot long. Tho colobrationsof Old Homo weok la Now Hampshire towns wero so suc cessful tills year, tho first of Its ob servance, that they nro likely to bo repeated annually hereafter, though tho dato may bo changed. Smallpox sproad In Altoonu, Pa., and tho town board of health ordered tho killing of all dogs nnd cnta in infected houses, that they might not distribute tho germs of tho disease. Tho ,uouiea of tho uulmals wero burned. Ono of Pension Commissioner Evans' critics recently accused that ofllclnl of having n "Htorary bureau." Mr. EvaiiH replied emphatically: "Yes, I havo, and It consists of every roputablo nowspaper in tho Unltod States." Tho wooden belfry of famoim Faneull hall, Boston, hns been replaced by ono exactly similar of iron, nnd It IB hope that th6 work of altering and strength ening tho historic building will ue complotcd by tho mlddlo of September, A hearing in the action rf tho sUto of Now York to recover $1,500,000 in penalties from Armour & Co., of Chi cago, for violating tho nntl-oleomni-guiuio laws, was to havo boon held in Albany yesterday, It was adjourned until Soptembor 20. Thcodoro Tllton, who spends his time between PnrlB and London, hns lost none of his aptness for repartee. Tho other day a friend asked him when It Is a man begins to feol old. Ho replied nt onco: "I'll toll you when. It Ib when ho Is a sophomoro In college." Twenty-eight head of specially fed Abordeon-AngUB cattle, 2-yeur-oldB, raised in Indiana, near Terre Huute, by John McFall, sold in Chicago Sep tember 0 at JG.85, tho highest prlco paid for cattlo thoro slnco Christmas, 1892, and tho highest In Soptembor slnco 1884. Tho pocullur disease from which tho czur Is said to bp Buffering Ib known as aphasia, and in plain English is using one word when nnothor lu meant. If his majesty wnntB hlB hat and ennt't remember tho word "hat" ho asks for something else, and ho lit unable to recollect the meaning of words when ho reads them. Tho roport reaching Toxns from York that Charles D. Loving has mado his big cattlo syndicate with $40,000,000 capital stock a success awakens much, Interest in cattlo circles, Inasmuch aa thero is somo opposition to the pro posed ayndlcnto among cattlo men. Those of Indian territory nnd Kansas, It Ib said, will Join with the TexaB cat tle men In fighting Lovlnk's syndicate, making probablo a tompornry reduc tion in tho prlco of meet on the hoof. LIVE STOCK AND PRODUCE. Ouialm, ChlCHKO K" York Market Ui'olutlon. OMAHA. Ilutter Creamery separator. 17 0 Ilutler-Cholco fancy country 16 if Kkkh Fresh, per ilox ,3!W Chickens. .BnrlnK, per lb 'Atil 18 18 14 10 w riKcous Llvo. per Uoz 76 it Lemons l'er box,.. 4 7S Cranberries Jersey, per bbl. 6 25 H E 60 it S M Apples per barrel 3 00 it 2 25 I'otuioeB new, per ouinei., si Sweet potntoeH Per bbl 2 0) Huy upland, per ton COO t 30 ii 600 Q 4 30 U 4 25 SOUTH OMAHA. Hogs Choice llffht 4 25 Hogs lleuvy weights 4 17 iseor steers 4 u il' 6 10 Hulls 3 00 BtUKB 3 10 Calves 4 00 Westerns 4 CO Cows 3 60 IlelferM 3 65 Blockers nnd foedoni 3 DO Sheep lambH 4 75 Sheep Feeder wethers 3 C5 t 3 BO il 3 25 IU6X if 5 25 Vt 3 65 f 4 00 4 15 4 90 D 3 B0 CHICAGO. Wheat No. 2 spring-.., 67 Corn ror bushel , 31 Ultrley-No. 2 3fi Oats Per bushel at! Hye No. 2 US z 67U 22U it 57 Timothy need, per bu 2 20 ( 2 25 Pork Per cwi, ...... ...... 7 20 805 Cattle Stockers and feeders 4 20 lur.l ,. n 17 it 85 St 6 30 f630 W 5 65 6 25 ItuntrwH .. .4 00 HoHH-Mlxcl , 4 20 Sheen 1umba , 4 id Sheep Nntlve wethers 4 35 4 40 NBW YORK MARKET. Oats-No. 2 24 0 Wheat-No. 2 red 74 ?i Corn-No. 3 red ,. 33Vi P KANSAS CITY. Hhoeo Muttons 3M S'BO 4 37 lloirtv Mixed :..;....:. 4Hu I Cattle Stockers una leaders 3 SP 4 71 S. l 1 ,.r i; ilttVtUK'rfA ,'u.-.i