, . . . - . . . SUTTON POSSIBLY IN DUEL. - - Inquiry Into Death of Lieutenant - Will Be Searching One. 4 , At the second inquiry into the kill _ ing of Lieutenant James N. Sutton be- I fore a board of investigation in Ann- apolis , Md. , the real strength of the evidence collected by the mother of the dead lieutenant and his sister , Mrs. Rose Sutton Parker , will develop. Mrs. Sutton and Mrs. Parker have de- clared that the young naval officer was -E j murdered and that they expect to J 3J W prove so beyond . . . a doubt. They now : i : have all the opportunity they require I [ 1" to bring forth their proof. , _ One report has it that a new and a strong witness will be produced in Thomas Lee , a foreman watchman at the academy , whose testimony was not heard at the first inquiry. The report has it that Lee has told his friends that he heard , five shots at the time the fight between Sutton and his brother officers took place on the dump. y It is also said that documentary evi- , dence will be submitted showing that Sutton was challenged to a duel. This information is contained in a letter which fell into the possession of Mrs. ( Parker. The talk is that the letter was signed by one of Sutton's fellow- officers , and an Annapolis man , a banker , who confirms the existence of the letter , declares that it closes with these words : "I will meet you and fight you if you so desire ; but for God's sake let us cut out the firearms and fight it out like men. " The inquiry will be of the most , thorough nature and a number of wit- : nesses will be examined exhaustively whose testimony does not appear on the records of the first investigation. Every step , of Lieutenant Sutton's movements on. the night of Oct. 13 , 1907 , when his body was found on the parade ground , will be traced. NEW TUNNEL UNDER HUDSON. . New York Opens New Bore Connect- ing with Jersey City. The first train ' through the Hudson and Manhattan Railroad Company sub way , bringing Jersey City withih thi'ee minutes of Broadway , New York , by the under-the-river route , was run Monday when an official train was sent through the bore at 10 o'clock Monday morning. Regular traffic , how ever , was not started until afternoon. Jersey City experienced the wildest ex- citement over this consummation of a decade's dream. There was a chorus of steam whistles along the Hudson River front in New York and all over c Jersey City and twenty dynamite t bombs were fired in Jersey City to an- nounce the start. W. A. McAdoo , pres- ident of the company , was the hero of the hour. ' Civic ceremonies were held both in New York and Jersey City. Governor Fort of New Jersey , Secretary of War Dickinson , Patrick McGowan , acting Mayor of New York ; Mayor Wittpen of Jersey City , James Wadsworth , Speaker of the New York Assembly , President McAdoo and others deliver- ing addresses. At night there was a display of fireworks , and an illumina- tion of 11,000 electric lights in West ; Side Park. Miss Harriett McAdoo , the \ pretty young daughter of William A. r McAdoo : \ , through whose efforts the North River tunnels were made possI- ble , started the great Jersey City sys tem by pressing a button. Her hand turned on L the power in the tunnel. SEA WALL SAVES &ALVESTON. Hurricane Attacks City , but Barrier : Keeps Out Sea. Attacked by a hurricane almost as severe as that which killed thousands of persons and practically wrecked every building in , the city , Galveston on Wednesday weathered the storm with a loss of life thought to have been only sixteen , and without greater property loss than would have attend- ed the storm had it struck any other I . city of equal size. Not a life was lost in Galveston proper , so far as is known , but the hurricane , demolished ' i new tarpon fishing pier on the north jetty , across the bay , six miles from the city. IT was here that the fatalities occurred , and it is thought that there were only r ; thirteen guests on the pier. These perished , with Capt. Bettison , the man- ager , and his wife and daughter. Fif- - ty other fishermen had a narrow es- cape from the fate that overtook the guests at the new pier. Galveston is assured now of Its practical immunity from another dis ; aster like that of 1900. A general feel- "ing of confidence has resulted from the - splendid action of the sea wall , which resisted the onslaught of the sea , back- ' ed by the hurricane which beat in vain on the concrete wall seventeen feet high surrounding the city on the gulf side cf the island. Kills : "Woman ; Injures Five. , Mrs. Eleanor Hudson , an aged Los Angeles woman , is dead and five of her six companions in an automobile ride are seriously hurt because Howard 5lcGann , 19 years : old , who has been driving a car only two weeks , tried to cross ahead of a gasoline motor rail- way car at San Diego , Cal. McGann's injuries may prove fatal. i Cliicasoan Gives Himself : Up. ; < j I Worried by : conscience and the ever ' present fear.of . arrest into a shadow of I his former self , Joe Novok , who con- J . , , " Iessed himself a defaulting treasurer . of a Modern Woodmen's local " in Chica J go to the amount of $170 , "walked into the office of Chief of Police McMahon 1 , in Little Rock and surrendered him self. / " , . . . : 4 'If' . ' : . ' , { . . . . F , " _ . e if w ' , t .1 - JUHYPEEES ELLA GINGLES. ' . Acquitted of Theft , but Verdict De- clares Stories of Attacks Untrue. I "We , the jury , find the defendant , . Ella Gingles , not guilty. We further find the charges made against Miss Agnes Earrette to be unfounded and untrue. " With the foregoing double- tipped verdict the jury in Judge Bren- tano'a court in Chicago wound up the famous Gingles case-the case of com- mon larceny which swelled into one of the greatest psychological puzzles in legal annals and made reputations tremble with weird charges of "white slavery" and amazing stories of psy- chopathic nature. The verdict at once was a release for the girl from the charge of steal- ing lace and a vindication of the po- sition taken by tho State , which was that Ella Gingles lied in her terrible story of mistre : tment at the hands of Miss Barrette , her accuser and Miss : Barrette/'s associate. Tho deci- sion was reached after seven hours of deliberation , during which five bal lots were taken , the first being eight to four for acquittal. From the time of entering the jury room the jurors were agreed that the story told by the girl against Miss Barrette was un true. true.The ' 'The point upon which the four Jurors who at first stood out for con- Tiction turned in their voting was a doubt as to whether Ella Gingles really stole two pieces of lace valued at not more than $50 which Miss Agnes Barrette said the girl took from her Irish lace store in the Wellington Hotel. The decision resulted in attor- neys for both sides rejoicing in the Jratta of victory-a situation novel in any court. WEST NEEDS 50,000 MEN. Appeals for Harvest Help Heard at National Capital. A cry for help to harvest the sea , son's crops comes from the West to officials of the Department of Com- merce and Labor in Washington , one of whose duties is to find employment wherever possible for the throngs of aliens who come to this country. . Fif- ty thousand able-bodied men are want ed badly by the farmers , says Repre- sentative Stevens of Minnesota , who has been in conference with Assistant Secretary McHarg and other officials of the department. Mr. Stevens says the West is literally begging for help to gather the large wheat and other crops. Although the officials are more than willing to assist , they are not able to do much because of the almost penni less : conditions of many immigrants. Mr. McHarg is heartily in favor of the suggestion of Commissioner Will iams at the Ellis Island station that immigrants should possess at least $25 on landing to prevent their becoming public charges. He believes that- the problem of relieving the congested . centers could be solved by th'e rail- roads JI they offered to transport pas- sengers at actual cost to sections where profitable employment could be found. The railroads would profit in the end , he declares , because they would carry back the product of the aliens' labor. BOY : PRINCE IS MADE SHAH. National Assembly Acts After Ruler Takes Refuge in Czar's Legation. Mohamed All , Shah of Persia , was dethroned Friday and the crown prince , Sultan Ahmed Mirza , was pro- claimed shah by the national assem bly , composed of the chief Mujtehids and the leaders of the nationalist forces , In the presence of an immense crowd In parliament square , Teheran. Mohamed Ali has taken refuge In the Russian summer legation at Zer- zende , where he Is under the protec- tion of detachments of Cossacks and' ' sepoys , despatched to Zerzende by the Russian and British diplomatic rep resentatives. The new shah is yet in . his minority , and Azad ul , Mulk , head of the Kajar family , has been appoint ed regent. Sipahdar , one of the most a/Jtive leaders of tho movement , has taken office as minister of war and governor of Teheran. JEFF DAVIS' DAUGHTER DIES. Mrs. Hayes Last ! of President oi Confederacy's Family. : Mrs. J. Addison Hayes , 54 years old , daughter of the late Jefferson Davis , President of the Confederacy , died Sunday at her home in Colorado I Springs after an illness of six months. Her husband was president of the First National Bank there. Mrs. Hayes , the last of the family of the President of the Confederacy , after the death of her sister , Miss Winnie Davis , made a trip south a few years ago , when she was made "the daughter of the Confederacy" in her sister's stead. Her mother , widow of the Southern President , died in New York about two years ago. ! Mrs. Hayes is survived by two sons , Jefferson Hayes Davis and William Hayes , and two daugh- ' ters , Lucy and Mrs. Virginia Webb , wife of Dr. Gerald B. Webb. Jefferson . Hayes Davis bears the name of his i grandfather through a special act of the Legislature. Former Michigan Man Hanged. William Hampton , formerly of Ish- peming , Mich. , was hanged at the jail In Bodmin , England , for the murder of j his sweetheart , Emily Tredres , at St. ! Erth , May 2 last. Loss by Fire Is 30OOOO. . Fire which started in L. H. Miller's department store in Masontown W. Va. , destroyed the Fanston and Mao ; ! das blocks , causing a loss estimated at 130,000. . - ; ' l - . , . . . , . ' " . - , , . i r "WAITffiG AT THE CHURCH. " I I , / f 'a FL o 4Ll v 1r + 'U _ . rCrt . 4 , 7 r- a 4 - . h. - . : " d T t U's Chicago Tribune. _ . . I WILL ASK DEATH PENALTY. - Prosecutor Holds Four Responsible for Murder of Banker Saylor. State's Attorney John D. Pallissard : n Watseka , Ill. , announced that he would ask the death penalty for all tour defendants in the murder of Banker John Byron Sayler-Dr. W. R. Miller , Mrs. Lucy Sayler , John Grun- len and Ira Grunden. Mrs. Cora Miller , wife of the ac- Mised physician , who is in Watseka irith an uncle , John Marshall of Blairs- rille , Pa. , has $250,000 back of her in her fight to free her husband. She re pudiated a report that she had visited Mrs. Sayler in the Watseka jail , and declared her undying hatred for her woman rival. Owing to Mrs. Miller's peculiar position in the case-that of 1 witness for her husband and against Mrs. Sayler-it became probable that there would be separate trials for Mil ler and the other defendants. Mrs. Sayler , her brother , Ira Grunden , and ier ! father , John Grunden , will be tried ) Xl the charge of accessory to murder , ind Miller will be tried separately , it is believed , on the direct charge of murder. . With the opening of the vault in Sayler's bank in which his private pa- pers were stored , evidence was brought , :0 : light that not only startled Prosecut- .ng Attorney Pallissard but caused Solda , the 17-year-old daughter of the slain man , to make a change of front and : express the opinion that her fath- er was foully murdered. Miss Sayler shocked the community shortly after the killing by stating that Dr. Miller was a good friend of her mother and Jhewas sure her father had been killed by him in self-defense. Later she stated that if her father had left her any ! money every cent of it would be spent toward bringing Dr. Miller to the gallows and that she "would like to ; pull the rope herself. " Attorneys for Miller are said to be preparing to make a defense of insan- Ity. State's Attorney Pallissard an- nounced that the information found In Sayler's private box was of such na- ture that all who read the papers were out ; under an oath. BOOT ! FOR THE MILLIONS. Bulletin of Bureau of Education Shows One Library to 15,41G. There were 15,416 persons to each lIbrary and an average of seventy-two bound > volumes to every 100 persons In [ the United States in 1903 , accord- [ ng to a bulletin issued by the United States Bureau of Education. There were 2,298 libraries reporting , 5,000 rolumes or over , 3,342 reporting 1,000 volumes or over , but less than 5,000 , and about 2,700 reporting less than 1,000 volumes , each in this country during the last year. ' . .t OF Umpire Truby , of New York , has re- tired from the staff of National League umpires. Mrs. Ramsey and three companions of , New York are crossing the conti- nent to Sari Francisco : in a motor car. Jay Eye See , known the country over as the first 2:10 trotter , died of old age near Bacine , Wisconsin. : , He was born In Kentucky thirty-one years ago. His grave will be marked with a granite shaft , , Newton Colver : a seasoned sports- man of Spokane , suggests that the cli- ' matic conditions in and around Seat- tle are conducive to extraordinary run- , ning records such as have been made at that city during the past few years. At the conclusion of the Paducah ( Ky. ) Fair Association's exhibit , there will be a race meet. Over 300 horses i are expected at the tracks of the Pa- : ducah Fair Association. These entries . . will represent Oklahoma , Missouri. . Kentucky and other States. , _ : , , " 'J' : . . _ 'h , - . , . BARES BLACK HAND CRIME. Youth of 18 Confesses He Killed Rich Grocer. Tony Baffa , an 18-year-old Italian boy , who has been in this country only three years , has confessed in the { coun ty jail , in Chicago , the murder of Giuseppe Fillipelli , a grocer at 7737 Greenwood avenue , that city , at the same time laying bare for what is per- haps the first time in criminal his- tory the inner workings of those Ital- ian societies , known collectively as "The Black Hand , " whose business is murder , mayhem , kidnaping and ex- tortion. The organization to which young Baffa belonged waa called by its mem- bers the "Loguisto , " an ironical trans lation of which is "The Society of Jus tice. " Its other members , according to Baffa's confession , were Antonio Nudo , Rafaelo Nudo and Paequale Nudo , three brothers ; Joseph or Giu seppe Caro and a man called Ernesto , whose surname Baffo does not know. All of the men are laborers. Their purpose in ! banding together" ; Baffa says , was extortion by means of "Black Hand" letters , and there was no crime they were not willing to commit to accomplish their ends. CEERK IS $10,000 THIEF. Clayton T. Zimmerman , Jr. , 20 Years Old , Clears Up Mystery. Clayton T. Zimmerman , Jr. , a clerk on a salary of $55 a month in the "outmoney" office of the Adams Ex press Company , In Chicago , was ar rested Monday for the theft of the package of $10,000 In currency which disappeared mysteriously the previous Tuesday , baffling a score of detectives. Zimmerman confessed taking the money. He Is 20 years old. Handling close to $1,000,000 a day in the pffice of the express company turned the young man's head , and when he saw an opportunity to "hold out" a small fortune , he admits , he secreted the $10,000 package and went on about his work. Zimmerman plan- ned to keep the money hidden for six or seven years and then build himself a little home. He has a sweetheart and expected to get married in a few years. The young clerk als6 intended to "plant" a portion of his "fortune" in a small farm or in city real estate , but he did not figure on using any of the money until the company "had time to forget its loss. " All the money but $10 was recovered. FIGHT FOR THE PENNANTS. : Standing : Clubs In the Principal Dase Ball Leagues. NATIONAL LEAGUE. W. L. W. L. Pittsburg .57 23' Philadel'a .35 44 Chicago . . .52 28 St. Louis . .33 45 New York.47 31 Brooklyn . .29 52 Cincinnati 40 Boston . . . .24 56 ASIEBICAX LEAGUE. w. r- w. L. Detroit . . .53 30 Chicago . . . .38 45 Philadel'a .48 33 New York .37 46 Boston . . . .50 36 St. Louis . .35 49 Cleveland .46 36 Wash'gton .24 56 AilEEICAN ASSOCL TION. W. L. W. I . Minn'polis .51 44 Columbus . .47 47 Milw'kee . .50 44 Ind'polis . . .45 49 Louisville .48 45 Kan. City .41 47 St. Paul . .45 44 Toledo . . . .42 49 \ Rosa Nouclictto Carey Dies. . Rosa Nouchette Carey , novelist , died onday. She began as a novelist in 1868. Among her many works were "Robert Ord's Atonement , " "Not Like Other Girls , " "Other People's Lives" and "The Highway of Fate. " Fire Sweep : Block. Fire razed a quarter of the block on the south-west corner of Third and Austin streets , Waco , Texas with a loss of nearly $100,000 Sunday. Sev , eral firemen were overcome. . . . " . . ' , . > . , . , , . BREAK CGL. SKELL'S WILL. iTuiors : for Second Time Set Aside Last Testament of Millionaire. The third contest over the will ol Col. Thomas Snell. of Clinton , Ill. , the eccentric old man who died leav- ing an estate of $2,000,000 and cutting his only son off with an annuity of $50 , was ended Friday when a jury decided that Col. Snell was Insane at the time he made the will. This de- . cision sets aside the bequest of sev eral thousand dollars to Mabelle Snell McNamara , the aged colonel's affinity. The jury was out a little more than an hour and took but one ballot , which resulted eleven to one for the contest- Ing son , Richard Snell. The dissent- Ing juror changed his vote without the formality of a second ballot. The first trial of the contest result ed In a verdict that Col. Snell was insane , but a higher court set aside the verdict and remanded the case for another trial. If the will had stood the legal heirs would have received , all told , annuities aggregating $5,000 , and not exceeding $1,000 in any sin- gle case , while the residue of the for- tune would have been held in a weird trust agreement for heirs yet unborn. On the date set for a final distribu tion In the terms of the will , the es tate would have grown probably to 100000000. The Snell will case will go down in American court annals as furnishing one of the most amazing instances of the depths to which women have de- . scended to gain money. The most sensational feature of all three hear- ings of the case was the introduction of letters from nearly a score of wo men , young and old , all of whom pro- fessed to love the aged millionaire madly. To cater to a degenerate ten- dency which appeared to be one of Col. Snell's senile vagaries , the women interlarded their letters with unprint- able obscenities. The more vulgar the tone of the letters the better pleased the old man appeared to be , and It was found when the letters were ex- posed that he had formed the habit of marking them with his Impressions. Scarcely a letter was written to the doting old man by any of the women which did not demand gifts and money. DON CARLOS , PRETENDER , DEAD. Was Claimant for Throne of Spain- Followers to Recognize Alfonso. Don Carlos of Bourbon , who waged a war for the throne of Spain , to which he claimed the right of succes- sion , died Sunday at Varese , in Lom- \ bardy , Italy , following a long illness. Don Carlos of the house of Bourbon had.a . strong following in the north of Spain , where he took up arms in 1872 to enforce his claims. He then assumed the title of Charles VIII. and clung to his position until 1876 , when he was conquered by the forces of Alfonso XII. , who had been proclaimed king at Madrid. Following his de- feat , the pretender withdrew to France , where , as the senior male heir of the Bourbon house , he had a right to the throne in the event of the restoration of the monarchy. His heir is his son , Don Jaime , now an officer in the Russian army. Carlos' pretensions to the Spanish throne were based on the ground that Isabelle , daughter of Ferdinand VII. , who was Don Carlos' granduncle , and Christina , mother of Alfonso XII. , ow- ing to the Salic law , were debarred from succession. A recent report in Spain , when it became known that Carlos was desperately ill , was to the effect that his followers would recog nize King Alfonso upon Carlos' death. Senor Llorens , a Carlist deputy , said that when Carlos died his supporters would organize the religious element of the party into a Catholic party sim- ilar to the German Centrists ! n the . Reichstag. < a ; S - , 4- . la y Cable advices from Lemberg , Aus- tria , told of the outbreak of new anti- Hebrew aggressions , and 100 Jews and landlords were said to have been slain in Bessarabia , Southwestern Russia. The christening of the Infant Span- ish princess took place with the custo- mary ceremonies for such occasions. ITha dignitaries of the land were pres- ent and representatives from other countries. The American liner , New York , reached Plymouth England , four hours ahead of her nearest competitor in a race in which nine liners were partici- pants. The Hamburg-American steam- er , Amerika , was second. The capital city of Persia was re- ported to have been completely invest- ed by the armed forces of the revolu- tionary nationalists early In the week and the only thing that prevented their further occupation of Teheran was the joint ultimatum sent to their" com- mander by the diplomatic representa- I tives of Russia and Great Britain. Lord Charles Beresford outlined hia naval policy before the London Cham- ber of Commerce , saying that Eng- land's position was due purely to ar- rears in shipbuilding. He advocated a plan which would give the nation twenty-six Dreadnausfhts by 1914 , which , with improvement in stations and stores , would cost about 300,000- 000. At the close of the Imperial ] ; Preos Conference Beresford urged the crea tion of five distinct navies , one for each of the five national divisions of the empire . ' " . ' - . . " . 1M'iiiAL . , Y fi , . . . . . _ hgj , - n.-/ CHICAGO. . ' The usual indices of trade activity i' continue to reflect accumulating itrength and better disposition toward increasing active capacity in manufac- tures. Weather conditions favor the jrowing crops and marketings of farm products are well sustained , those of live stock showing considerable in- ' rease. : The markets for breadstuffs . , remain quiet , but packing Is more ex- . tended ( , and there is good absorption 3f provisions for both domestic and ixport consumption. High tempera- hires : stimulated demand for season- ible needs in the leading retail lines ind there is ample reduction of mer- handise stocks here and at interior points. Wholesale trade in the principal sta ples promises to show expansion. Buy- ! rs come forward in large numbers ind the demand is strong in textiles , elothlng , footwear " , fod products and - lurniture. Compared with this time last year , there is larger forwarding Df : goods to country : stores , while cur- rent bookings Indicate gain in deliver- , ies to be made of fall and winter fines. ( High prices and reasonable as surance of great crops make : a remark- . . ibly prosperous position in agricul ture , and this encourages more effort In the distribution of finished prod- ucts ! and farm needs. Bank clearings , $269,236,328 , exceed 1 those of the corresponding week in - 1908 by 14.7 per cent and compar& with $243,483,589 in 1907. Failures reported in the Chicago dis trict number 29 , against 20 last week 80 In 1908 and 21 in 1907. Those with , liabilities over $5,000' ' number 12 , against 3 last week , 10 in 1908 and 5 In [ 1907.-Dun's Weekly : Review of Trade. . , TEW YORK. Despite irregularities in crop and Veather conditions , midsummer influ- ences in trade and industry and con- servatism in placing orders ahead , business is of fairly good volume for the season of the year and shows a. perceptibly steady advance toward nor- mal proportions. In retail trade clear ance sales are universal , but there are numerous reports that reduced pur chasing power offsets the stimulus of- tered by this means of inducing buy- [ ng. Wholesale trade for immediate delivery and jobbing business in sum- mer goods is of a light volume. Fall trade reports are still relatively the best of any branch. Still , there are reports of quiet in the Southwest , and Chicago seems to be the most active market in the country , with , the North- west coming next as regards favorable reports. Business failures in the United States for the week ending with July 15 were 206 , against 182 last week , 215 in the like week of 1908 , 177 in 1907 , 18 in 1906 and 165 in 1905. Ca- nadian failures for the week number 36 , as compared with 27 last week and 28 the corresponding week of 1908. - Bradstreet's. ' " Of 111 . , Chicago - Cattle , common to prime , $4.00 to $7.60 ; hogs , prime heavy , 4.50 to $8.25 ; sheep , fair to choice , 4.25 to $5.40 ; wheat , No. 2 , $1.19 to $1.21 ; ' corn , No. 2 , 71c to 72c ; oats , standard 49c to 50c ; rye , No. 2 , 81c to 83c ; hay , timothy , $8.00 to $15.00 ; prairie , $8.00- ( to $14.00 ; butter , choice creamery , 22c to 26c ; eggs , fresh , 17c to 21c ; pota- toes , new , per bushel , ooc ; to 7Sc. Indianapolis-Cattle , shipping , $3.00 to $5.50 ; hogs , good to choice heavy , | 3.50 to $8.10 ; sheep , good to choice , $2.50 to $6.15 ; wheat , No. 2 , $1.30 te $1.33 ; corn , No. 2 white , 74c to 75c ; ' oats , No. 2 white , 53c to 54c. I St. Louis - Cattle , $4.00 to $7.10 ; ' hogs , $4.00 to $8.30 ; sheep , $3.00 to- $4.75 ; wheat , No.2 , $1.15 to $1.17 ; : corn , No. 2 , 70c to 71c ; oats , No. 2 , 48c to 49c ; rye , No. 2 , SOc to Sic. Detroit - Cattle , $4.00 to $5.50 ; hoga $4.00 to $8.10 ; sheep , $2.50 to $4.00 ; 4- wheat , No. 2 , ยง 1.30 to $1.35 ; corn , No. ffl 2 yellow , 73c to 74c ; oats , No. 2 white , 53c to 54c ; rye , No. 1 , 82c to 83c. Milwaukee-Wheat , No. 2 northern , . $1.30 to $1.34 ; corn , No. 3 , 66c to 67c ; oats , standard , 50c to 51c ; rye , No. 1 , 79c to Sic ; barley , standard , 70c to- 71c ; pork , mess , 2025. Buffalo - Cattle , choice shipping . steers , $4.09 to $6.75 ; hogs , fair to- choice , $4.00 to $8.55 ; sheep , common 4 . to good mixed , $4.00 to $4.90 ; lambs , fair to choice , $5.00 to $ 8.25. Toledo- Wheat , No. 2 mixed , 1.29 to $1.30 ; corn , No. 2 mixed , 75c to , 76c ; oats , No. 2 mixed , 51c to 52c : rye. No. 2 , Sic to 83c ; clover seed , . . \ $6.65. Cincinnati-Cattle , $4.00 to $6. * ; hogs , $4.00 to $8.35 ; sheep , $3.00 to. ; $4.50 ; wheat , No.2 , $1.35 to $1.40 - corn , No. 2 mixed , 73c to 75c ; oats , No. 2 mixed , 53c to 54c ; rye , No. 2 * . B4c to 86c. New York - Cattle , $4.00 to 7.00 hogs , $4.00 to $8.45 ; sheep , $3.00 to $5.00 ; wheat , No. 2 red , $1.40 to $1.42 ; corn , No. 2 , 77a to 7Sc ; oats , naturat . white , 54c to 55c ; butter , creamery , . - 21c to 23c ; eggs , western .V7c to- 23 c. - / . . - . , . -