Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, July 05, 1897, Page 6, Image 6

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    0 THE OMAHA DAILY IllfKn JULY 5 , 185 > 7.
PARADISE FOR THE TEACHERS
The Hawaiian Islands So Regarded by at
Educational Investigator ,
SCHOOL SYSTEM EESINTIALLY \1ERICAf *
S < * critnr > - Wlloun'N Olitprt nlloiiN ui
tin * Vuliio of Mini 11 Collcm- *
' lilest Ciitli-KC .Men l-.ilu-
Clllllllllll .VlllVN.
A writer In the N'nrth Amrrlcnn Itcvlov
clttlmB Hint tl Hawaiian Islands nro i
paradise for t-'aehurs. Thu public st-lioo
usi'teni rutnlillxlicil thure Is esse-titlaU ;
AmiTlfcn. "American ti-vi hooks arc u.-u-i
aMtioft pxcliuUuly , which , of course , In
eluile for Ihu lilKlicr srailoa tlio cream o
ICtiKllah clamlcs. Tito only exceptions , '
savg tlic writer , "are Hawaiian Keotsrapli !
and history. More than one-third of thi
tcaehcrn In all schools , public and lmlepun < l
i-nt. arc American. It Is no sllfiht t < stimuli !
to HIP efllr-leiicy of the system that Hawallai
and part Ilinvnll.ni teachers come next It
number to American , and form but a llttli
under one-third of the entire teachltiK staff
This Is happy result of the policy o
training teachers at home , a thi'so are ac
mm in ! i-il from the first with thu pcrnllm
tUlIli'iiltics of coinliiriliiK a school of ml.xei
races. Kor many years lioiiie-tralne < l 'each
< -is had to do their best to earn certificate :
by wnrkhiK tipmi the furnlslied syllabus o
pcrluilleal cxninln KloiiR , but few within tin
past few years there hns bren establishe-
n Honolulu u normal school with a prac
tee--schuol | attncbi'il. Fioni this instltulloi
n militant. supply or hclentlllcally traliipi
teachers is assured , which , it Is Imped , wll
ju. > n overtake , or , at least , approach tin
drnmnd An admirable featine. of the sys
tern is the virtually permanent tenure o
thi' teacher's ollli'c. Teachers urn i-mployri
during the \i-ar Si-hooln are In session
' in in remote country districts , for fortj
wcrks of the fifty-two. Once employed
ti hers are privileged to remain In th
Kent IIP unlit they resign or are removei
for cause. Itemovals are rare. Within i
fer. years past a splendid esprit di- corps
lias rlc vt-lnpc'l nimniK the teachers. Tliej
have formed at.socintinns III the dlffcreli' '
Iri'iinilii Tor mutual Improvement In the pro
fessioii. anil they hold a national summoi
Mmril with the same purpose each year it
Honolul'i. Eminent edtlcatnrs from tin
Vnllcd States are induced to become Hit
principal lecturers before the fciiiiinui
m liool. < . The Inspector Keiieral. who If
chief executive ollleur under the Hoard o !
School Commissioners , Is in nriililiiK more
zenloiM Ilian in ytlmulntltiK the teachers li
effort in this line of mutual Improvement. '
NKKH OF AIOIIB COU.KOI-JS.
"It never occurred to me that there were
were too many collcKeK. " said Secretary
James WlUon to tlic ChleaRO He-conl's-
Washington correspondent. "I have ( ilwajf-
thouRht there were not enough. I have
heard of men belriK e < lncatcd beyond their
capai-lty and women beyond their sphere ,
but I am very sure that the learning they
acquired must have contributed to their
happiness , as well at ) to their usefulness ,
I have heard of men lieiiiK spoiled by edu
cation. but I luve never s-ee-u such u thing.
nnd It seems to me that a man who Is a
fool with an education would be a bigger
fool without one. A man who Is spoiled by
education. If mich a thing Is piMsMble , must
have been made of very poor stuff to fiogin
With. Von can not make a sill : purse out
of a sow's ir. That has been demonstrated
by the- experience jit centuries , but In all
my career as an educator I have never
found a boy or girl who wasn't the better
for learning something , and the nearer you
get the * colUges to the people the more pe-n-
plo you will get Into the colleges. I don't
believe In big institutions. I don't believe
in the. centralization of educational facili
ties. I think they do more good if they an
scattered. The. fewer the pupil. " a profcssoi
huts the more attention ho can give them ,
nnd while , of course , he ought to have
enough to provide him n decent compensa
tion , ho ought not to have more I ban he can
handle. Tluro are forty colleges In Io\v-i
already , and they are multiplying all tin
time. 1 hope. to see the day when there h
a college In every county and neil students
in ivory college. These lo il colleges may
not. afford the same privilege * for a scien
tific education that a young man can obtain
at Y.ilo or Harvard or Princeton , but you
must remember that comparatively few
families are. nblo to send their sons to suel :
Institutions , or any consldeuiWe distance
from home. The moot useful college fui
the , western states Is one which lets the
students go to their homes every l-'rlilay
night and stay until .Monday morning. Some
of the Institutions out went are very poor
but they are not too poor to give a boy
cm education , and they can teacli him les
sons In economy In addition to the othoi
"Another thing I object to. " continued tin
fcpcrctary , "Is the talk I hear about the ex
travagance of the farmers. A farmer has the
right so live as well an anybody , provide' !
IK- ran afford the expense , and I never yel
have known a man to mortgage his farm tt
pay household cxpeiuca. The condition o
our farincm is growing better and better al
tlm time , and I like to nee U. Formerly thej
used to have a home-made rag carpet In tin
parlor and lure lloors over all the rest o :
the house. .Vow th y have pretty Ilrussch
carpets and have sent the rag carpets to th <
chamber * . Formerly people went to rhurcl
nnd to town In lumber wagons , and If the ;
worn pretty well off they had prlng seats
Now nearly every farmer out In my countrj
lias a carriage and a handsome set of bar
miw. Formerly It used to be the heigh ! o
n woman's ambition to have a inclodton 01
n cabinet organ. Now she must have a piano
Formerly the girls made their own clothes
now they have their Sunday gowns cut on
by the dressmaker In the nearest town , nl
though they Kllll do ihe stitching themselves
And they are all the better for It. Thli
ndvancc has harmed nol dy and has hrough
u great deal of liupplinvs. It is the result o
education anil refinement and the elevatloi
ot the taste , and I do not think tho.su quail
ties are any more out of place In a tarn
liuusii than In a brown-stone palace In th
city."While
"While these advantages and enjoyment
have added to Ihu cost of living , nobody ha
Keno to the poor house on Hint account. Th <
Kamu degree of Intelligence Iri Just a valuabl
on it farm as in a counting hoime. or a man
iifautory , and the mortgagee that lie upon Hi
farmn of Iowa are not due to extravagance
but to Improvements. They represent mor
land and Improved Implements , and line
cattle and horses. The farmer gels a bette
crop and more of It , and ho keeps addlni
to his own wealth as well as to the wealtl
of the mil Ion. "
OMH-ST : COIIi-fK : MK.V.
Samuel Ward Chandler of 1'hlladelphl
end the claws of IS:1:1 , now nearly HI year
ot age , In Harvard' ) * well-pretervcd oldest
ho Is the father of FriincUi W. Chamllei
professor of architecture In thu Mawiacliii
t-ctts Institute of Technology. Dartmouth'
olikflt living graduate IB Mail ; Wcntwort
Fletcher of Wayne , III. , clam of 1S-J5. wh
Is within a few months of being IIH ol
as Harvard'K oldeut , Kmlllus Kltchell tiayr
of Montlrcllo , Mo. , who la In feeble luult
In hla eighty eighth year. lx Amlu-rHfH old
st ; he was In the class of I82S , of whir !
lie In the sole uurvlvor. The ohlrst William
graduatt'H of the ame clam of 182S are Jn
tcph Lynian Partridge of Ilrooklyn , yi : year
of age. and Kev. Kbeneze-r Hanlsim Ht'ni
ton of llranchport , N. Y. The oldest fu
Ilowdoln college In Frederick Walte liurk
of New York City , 91 yeara old. of the clan
of 1824. WYsleyan's oldest , and Indeed In-
very flrtit graduate , U Daniel II. Chase , wlr
llvra at M Milk-town , and now and then at
tenils the morning chapel servlctMelir
Fitch of Wiot Newton and the clans of IS'Jt
now ! )2 ) yearti of age , beads the list for th
University of Vermont. Lawyer Albert War
1'alno of llangiir , Me. . l the oldtat gradual
of Colby unlrt-rklty at Watt-rville. Me. Di
Ilenjamln 1) . Sllllman of HroDklyn , N. Y
tiolda the seniority for Yale.
KXAMINATION OF HKM5N KKU.Kll.
Jn the Cambridge school , locked away froi
all disturbances , Helen Kuller , the famou
deaf , dumb and blind girl , took her prelim
Inary examination for entrance to lUdcliffi
college , taut week , and a dllllciilt task It wa
not for the brilliant b'lrl , but because Mi
nilnian , her examiner , had to use the manua
Janguatte In determlnlnK what the girl knew
It waa advanced German MUu Krllcr wa
lu. tna ( be did remarkably well
Most girt * take- advanced German In thcl
finals , but Helen Keller was taking thn
language In her preliminary rxamlnatlonii
In two years she will go to HadcllfTe , It fib
liken , but Mr. Oilman prefers to have Mis
Keller enter Itadcllfle In three year * , les
the strain of two jelrs1 constant woil
tbould affeet her health.
"In the French rx.unlnatlons , " Raid Mr
Qiltnan. "I talk to MIM Keller , and she , b ;
frcllng the movement of my lips. Is able t
dPtermlno what riucstlon 1 r.sk , her sense o
touch being remarkably acute , but In tin
Herman examinations I form the letters 01
the hand bv the sign language. "
At first the insk of fitting the deaf , duml
and blind girl for college seemed lnur
inountable. but her icmaikiible brain am
native Intelligence have stt at rest an ;
doubt on that point , and to college will gi
the girl of 17 years of age In whom nil tin
country has bin Interested for many a day
! s mathematics ami general Knowledge Ml3
Keller will not have the slightest difficult ]
In passing all the tests , for at figure * she I
little short uf being a phenomenon , and he
fund of general Information would bo re
markable In n person In the full posscsMlot
of her senses.
KDUfTIONTAI. . NOTHS.
John 1) . Horkofe-Jler has notlfle-d the Do1
Molnes ( Iowa ) tlnptlnt college that be wll
give $ .1 for every dollar the college will ral.'i
from other t-oiirees.
William Homer IViskell of Merrlmac
Matf. , 22 years of age , II.IH won the Long
fellow travel ! ? scholarship offered by tin
lloston Museum of Fine Arttt. He Is to re
celve ffioo a year for tbrcH years , which In
must spend In art schools In Europe , nndei
NtipervUlon of one or more American patnten
In encb [ dace.
H. J , Heinz of I'lttsbtirg. who gave ? 20.00 (
to the Kansas City .university some tlnn
ago. haM JiiBt given It $10.000 more ,
Pi evident Hyde of llnwdoln college says
In his annual report , just submitted to tin
trtiHtees , that the institution will probablj
receive , under the favorable decisions of tin
courts. JIDO.OOft from MM. ( Sarrelon'n estate
and finu.ooo from the Fayerwcathcr biursts )
and that It has , besideti , roctlvcd ? l".r > 00 li
beiiest | OurliiK the year now closing.
Dr. 1) . K. Pearsons of Chicago has addci
another to hlfl many acts of benellconce t (
the western college . Tills * time llelolt col
Icge is the beneficiary to the extent of $40.001
wlili-h the doctor has given it for tile build
Ing of a woman's dormitory.
The annual report of the alumni fund o ]
Harvard shows that during the y.ear endei'
the 15th of Juno $ n.71S was paid In. Tin
total rccclptfl since the fund was started In
ISsiO are $ tifii,4ll. ; of which $3.715 has beer
designated n principal and the remaindci
ban brcn available aej Income and largely
used for university purptses. The Colorade
Alumni association last year contribute ! '
$ W10 , theKrncx County ( N. J. ) association
$755 and the New York association Jl.if ( > 0
The Individual contributions Included tlnei
of $200 each , nine ot $ .100 each , twenty-thrci
of $30 each and forty-four of $25 each. Tti
total amount contributed since the beglnninp
of the fund has been given by 1.300 aluuin
and about 6,700 have failed to subscribe.
HIKS ! TAHT ACIIOSS THU KOIIHSTS ,
DolcKitttoiiK friini All ScetlniiH Ki > -
riiuti- ( < > > l IIIII < - ( | | | | .
CINCINNATI , July 4. The Klks of the
Olnclnnatl , Coviugton , Newport and other
lodge's leave for Minneapolis tomorrow on especial
special train , via the Cincinnati , Hamilton &
Dayton and the Wisconsin Central lines. A
few of the prominent KlltB In the party are :
Kxalted Ituler Dr. 12. S. Kclfer. Past Kxalteil
Killer John Callln and wife , ex-Kxalted llulei
Hon. Ilurvey M. Mayor * and wife , Henry
.Moiganthaler. Henry Xelgler , Will SCclgler ,
William Grautman , W. F. Keefer and wife ,
Past Kxaltcd Killer K. W. Donham and wife ,
Frank Krug and wife , E. 1) . Allen and wife ,
U. U Ileile and wife. Charlie Their and uls
ter , John Moore-ley anil family , Harry Tinn
ier and wife. William liodemer. S. S. Loavltt ,
Cieorge Flcke , wife and mother , John
Williams. 1C. \ \ " . Sprague , Morris Hichmonil
an 1 wife. William Shuler , Past Exalted Ituler
Oeorge It. OrillHh. John J. Ilrennan , Hen and
Sam Lew , Lee Uamberg , Frank T. Fobter ,
Jr. , nnd wife , J. T. Thompson and son.
Jilts. .I01I.\S < > \ A I'ASTHUll I'ATIBM1.
MlKilV. . C. 'I' . I' . I.ciiilrr lln.o
HI--M IIUIcii liy Ili-r Ci-llli- .
NEW YORK , July 1. A distinguished pa
tient was at the Pasteur Institute for u few
hours today. She b > Mrs , Addie M. Johnson
of St. Louis , president of the Woman's Suf
frage association of Missouri , and one of 'he
best known members of the Woman's Chris
tian Temperance union In the west. She Is
highly connected socially and a woman of
large wealth. Early In June Mrs. Johnson's
pet collie was bitten by a dog which had
rabies and two days afterward was seized
with convulsions. While trying to adinlnu-
te'r medicine to the collie Mrs. Johnson wan
bitten on the right hand. She came to the
Pasteur Institute to aee what they thought
of the wound , as it recently gave her trouble.
I.IISSI'.S IIIOAVV ON 1IDTI1 .SIDKS
niNiiNtroiiH I-'iKlitliiK Midi tbe iTvliels
In Ilrii7.ll.
LON'DON , July C The ( orrcfipondent ol
thei Tlm ° s at Itlo de Janeiro says : "It U
reported hero that thu government troop- ,
attacking Antonio Consethelro , thu leader o !
the fanatics -at Canudcs , Itahla , have lice :
tliricu repulsed , It-Mint ; over l.OOf ) men. Con
fccthuiro's losses arc still greater. Klglitlut
has be-en continued dluce Juno t7. "
I'ntiil I'louils In 1-Viiiice.
I'AItIS , July 4. Fourteen bodies have beei
rccove-rcd from the Hoods canccil by tin
rising of the river Garonne , most of then
beliiK found near Audi , capital of the de-part
tue-ut of ( ! crs. on Hit river Ocrs , we-st o
Toulouse. It Is feared thai othe-rs have heei
drowned , as many hoiiFe-s have beei
swept away. The Hoods are now subsiding li
the province of Gere.
TOITL.OUSK , KrancD , July 1. The lllve-i
Save has overflowed at Islen Dodcii , destroy' '
lug forty houses and drowning thirteen pe-o
pieAt St. Laur three pe-oplo liave > beei
drowned and thirty bouses swept away ,
Di-iitliH ot ii DMJ- .
KANSAS CITY" , July 4. Or. Alfred Lo
fevre , a member of one of the oldest Hiigue
not families In America Is dead at his homi
hero of cancer of the ritomach. Dr. Lefevre
came hero from Dayton lu 1S55. II was ban
at Troy , O. , In 1822 , and wns < a direct de
sccndiint of Isaac Lcfovre , one of the firs
French Huguenots to come to America Ii
1708. Judge O. E. Lefevro of Denver , toi
of the de-erased , will tuko the remains ti
Ohio for burial.
EME11SON , Neb. . July 4. ( Special. ) Mrs
William Ni-Uon , a farmer's wife llvlni ; north
west of town , died yesterday morning as i
icBiilt of an operation. The funeral wa
held vestcrday afternoon at this place , Kev
Sandder of the Presbyterian church olllclat
Inc.
Inc.DETIIOIT.
DETIIOIT. Mich. . July 4. A special to th <
Trlbuno from Jackson , Midi. , says : Mr
Sarah Loulise Hlalr. wlilow of the great wa
governor , Austin Illalr , died lust night o
ai.jplt-xy , aged 73 years. Tne end. thnugl
long expected , eamu suddenly and wan pro
clpitated by tlio extreme heat.
llALTIMOItE , July 4. A cable to tb
American announces the death In Drosde :
of Miss Hose Carroll , elder daughter o
Mr. William H. Carroll , United States consu
general In that city.
lluulili- 'nutii ! I at Wyiuiiri * .
WYMOUE. Neb. . July 4. ( Special Tele
gram. ) The funeral of Charles Seymour an
wife today was conducte-d by the Hoya
Highlanders and tire department. Companle
from lleatrice were prevent and took par !
The burial ceremony of the Highlander
i'as uft-d. There were no services at th
church until after the Interment. An im
incuse concourse Dispeople followed th
I'jjfortunate couple to their last restln
place.
Whlinv In I'oiiinl Miirilereil.
tJHEENVILLE , S. f. , July 4.-Mrs. Haiti
Woud Howell , u widow , wild fouml elea
Saturday morning' in the kitchen uf he
home In u i-pum-ly settled part of towr
The body \viis lying upon the Moor with ,
bullet wound In the throat , while by it
side was u revolver , two chambers of whlcl
were rmpty. It La believed that Hhcva
murdered.
NEW YOHK. July I. HiluarJ
14 years old. who stnteil that he wan fron
Ilock Is and , HI. , wns he-Id for trial In tin
Yorkvlllo court today for breaking Into th' '
house of Dr. Thomas H. Street , u puret-oi
In the Hrooklyn navy yard , eurly this morn
\ng. \ lie had packetl up uliout HOO worth o
fllverwuro when dUcovc : < > and arrcstto.
SLAIN BY THE HEA'l
( Continued from Flret Page. )
rtglsteted 99 and th ? Instruments on th
streets Indicated a temperature of from It
to 115. Many caces of prostration bav
hern rcportnl , but none of them have beei
fatal. Many boifes dropped dead In th
street ? . Had It not been for a light brcez
prevailing nuny deaths would have nn
doubtcdly occurred.
HITrilOIT. Mich. , July -I. The ma\li.ini
high tcmporatiirc today , according to th
official observation taken from the rcof c
t'i ' eleven-story Union Trust building , wa
94 degrees. The temperature rem.ilne.l &
nearly that figure most of the day. Othc
the-imometi-rs Indicated thro ? to six degree
hotter. The excursion and ferry steimor
were thronged with people seeking a coolln
breuzE- and even at Hello Isle the crowd
found little real comfort. The only sever
c.ucs of prostration In the city were tbos
of two employes of the Hotel Hare-lay , wh
v. 'io reported out of danger at the huspltn
tonight. An unknown man died ne-.ir Wyan
dotlo from the excessive he.it and the-ra wer
several minor cases of prostration. Ca-Jts o
sunstroke are reported from some of th
southern Michigan towns ,
The extreme heat beating down throng ]
a skylight this afternoon caused th
blowing out of two automatic fir
plugs. The torrent of water thu
re-leaded bowed down through th
building , damaging the dry good" stock o
liurnham , Sloped & Co' , and the clothlni
ritock of the Peerless .Manufacturing com
pany to the extent of nearly $100,000. Tin
lire plugs were set to e-ecape at a tempera
lure of 130 degrees.
Wl-JSTHUN S.VAKi : STOIIV.
'I'olil In ( iiiixl l-'nllli ! > > Hun.Vlllliui
lllll.iiiil or ( InIIK | | IIIII-C.
As an evidence of good faith and a voraclt ;
above reproach the Hon. William Hlllyon , ox
mcniber of the legislature , and a hunter o
repute In the Itocky mountains , was ilrlnklni
cold water with a dash of npjlllnarlri In U.
"As for snakes , " he said to the New Yorl
Sun man , with the caution befitting a ma ;
who had lived most of his life lu a stale o
suspense. "I have seen a good many snake
lu my time , and partleularly In the eanyoi
country of the Uockies , where the foil o
man never trod to any great extent. Thei
are some places out there , where the cliff
turn theniM IVI'G up to ( he sunshine for iibou
eight months uf tlio year , that will brcci
fiiakiK right out of thutsolld rock , like .Mor-o
knocked the water in thu wilderness. .Snake ,
Jlko the warm sun , nnd 1 am heit.to sa :
that the .sun gets warm In tome of then
canyons In a way that would astonish yoi
eastern people. I've broiled an antelop
ste.ik on the hot rocks many a time , and
remember bow a tenderfoot , out with m
once ou a hunt , shot blnuu-lf in the leg am
had to go home , by laying bin gun down 01
a boulder and laylnz down in the shade ot i
rotk to rest. Ho had Jusi dropped off 'in i
snooze when the gun got .so hot it couldn'
hold In any longer and banged a hole througl
his leg. He complained of the country 01
account of It , but 1 told him be ought to b
glad U hadn't hit him In thu head , for If ;
bullet had hit a head as soft as hl.s wis ther
wouldn't be anything left of it at all.
"However , I'm hitting wide of the mark
What I started to say was about enakcs , am
ono of the incut remarkable Miako exper
Unce'rf 1 ever went up against was In a eanyoi
In Arizona that was called Itrimstone Gulch
It was about ten mllcH long and a half mil
wide , and the walls were straight up am
down and about 300 feet high. I had heari
a heap about It , but had never been aruum
It much. The fact of the business was no
boJy was e\er mound It any more than the ;
eould help. I spent the forenoon of one da ;
there , and 1 wasn't near It again for tei
years. The last tlmo I went there lookini
for a. mule that had got away from our camp
about fifteen miles down the valley , and
found him dead at the foot of the cliff. Some
how or other ho had tumbled ove-r , and , o
course , that ended him , and my partner am
I went down thu cliff to get the saddle am
bridle and traps off of him. It was th
closest picking I ever undertook to seal
down that wall , and lots of tlnu-u wo Jiwt hai
to hold on by the skin of our teeth.
"About titty feet from thu bottom wo com
to a bench about three foot wide , and ther
we btt down to catch our breutb and pull our
selves together for the last climb. The bcncl
seemed to run Into the clift a hundred feet ese
so around a corner there was , and we sllppei
along tbo narrow path to see where I
went to. Wo found that It turned Into a him
of a set-off , or side canon , which wasn't any
thing more than a cave. The cave was quee
enough , but a good deal queerer was th
sight of three or four skeletons of cattle an <
a lot of bones of all kinds of animals. Ilov
they over got there was a mystery beyond ui-
for we could see where the cave and the n ? . "
row path ended , and they surely couldn'
have climbed down the dirt like we did. Bu
we didn't stop there long to study out th
puzzle , for In a minute or two we heard i
now like a wind blowing through the cave
and looking up , we saw millions and mllllor
of snakes hanging from the rocks above an
coming out of the cracks In the walls every ;
where. I uon't think I ever saw anything
that scared me worse than them snakew dill
and the way wo got out of that and bad
along that narrow path vtua u caution.
"Somehow or other wo climbed and slid am
fell down the lat fifty feet of the cliff , an
when wo struck bottom wo went down th
gulch at forty miles an hour , leaving th
mule and his trappings to take care of them
nelvcfi. All I remember was that as I looke
back Just after we bad cleared the cliff an
got straightened out for our home run ther
wan a great fringe of snakes hanging eve
the edge of the narrow path we had got ol
of to quick , and looking for all the wo Id Ilk
the hair that I used to see In pictures o
some of mythology Iadle . Furies , I bellev
they called them.
"This was about 3 o'clock In the aftcrnoor
and wo got Into camp about 7 and reporte
what we had discovered. Of course they gav
UK all sorts of guying , but we held on to ou
story and agreed to show them next Cay I
they would go back with us after the saddl
and trappings on the dead mule. They sal
they wanted particularly to go and eeo thos
okelctous up tbo ellfT , for they bad alway
understood that there were herde of buffal
and cattle and oven horses and mule's. I
Arizona with wings , and this would prov
the matter beyond doubt and give the gov
eminent a chance to send a corps of Smltli
sonlan Institute experts out to get on to th
wing business.
"The next morning wo set out for th
snake Joint at 7 o'clock and by noon w
lu > d reached the spot , showing that me
afoot , when ncared , will travel faster tlia
men on horseback , when they ain't. An
when wo turnd the last corner and como on
within 200 yeards of where wo had Ie-1
thu dead mule the entire party of us stoo
like wo had been struck with paralysis , fn
the mule. Instead of being on the groun
where wo hud left him the day before , wn
now forty feet up the cliff and slowly rlsliu
At first we could not understand , but as see
as we got our wits together we did , and w
had the whole mystery explained to no n
the same time tuwlt : The snakes ha
formed thcnibelves Into an Immense cjbl
vhlch thev wrapped around the mule , an
were gradually lifting him up to their cav <
ts be disposed of at their leisure. They ha
done the same thing with other animal
that had dropped over the cliff , and the
hi < d prohahlv been doing it for ages , an
nobody could tell bow many animals thei
snakes bad dragged Into their den and eat.
"None of us had ever saw a sight Ilk
that before , and we Just set theer on on
horses and gazed at them till ono of on
crowd all at once gave a yell and a cm
and then wo saw that thu snakes not bus
with the mule had started for us , and w
didn't stop to get any particulars to re
port to the scientific department. It wa
nlu and tuck with us for a mile or two dow
the valler. and then the xnukes give It u
r.s a bad lob and went back to their mul
meat.
"Of course. " concluded the Hon. Wllllai
In oomewhat of an apologetic tone , "some e
you , gentlemen. I can easily understam
may not believe my story , but If there b
any such I can show him In two minute
on any ordinarily good map of Arizona th
e act location of the county In which Itrlir
Btono Gulch lies. "
"Lies , did you say ? " asked a man wh
went out hunledly ,
Tire llrnUvmi-n ArtKllliil ,
I'ENSACOUX. Flu. . July 4.-A train c
empty llateara on thu Muscogee branch rui :
road , while being backed down to the mil
struck u 'handcar und was thrown from th
truck and badly wrecked The people o
the handcar saved themselves by Jumplni
/rue two colored braKcmcn ot the train , Jo
.Tnnrs nnd Henry t > ( iyi , were killed , bit
bt-lnc lii-trtlily mniii'li-H. Cotiiturt-'r Mnrtl
Urey was severely bruised.
ALL'S K.UIl/iy StTII CASKS.
Kntlirr TliimuM He llnil HIVny li
Itlx SIIII'M MnrrliiKV.
When the young , mprrled man tells thl <
story he makes nire that his father Is noi
within catshot , eays the Detroit Free
Press :
"I never had bilt one falling out with
the governor. " be declares"When I wcnl
home one evening nnd told him thn I was
' engaged he crors-tnlrsHoned me like a law-
yer. and each answer Incteased his wrath
till he positively forbade the banns. 1 have
something of a temper myoelf , and aftei
i n stormy Interchange we agreed upon r
compromise. He did not like the girl'sfam
ily. He would have It that she WPH a for
tune hunter He could never approve of bci
under any circumstances , but If 1 would ge
abroad for two years , see other women
hold no communlc.it Ion with my flnacee am !
then return to marry her , ho would Inter
pose no obstacle. 1 accepted his terms.
"After 1 had been In Paris n yen1 1 niel
an American girl who was In all res-pects
my Ideal. She was with a wealthy aiiul
whose name she hid taken and whose for
tune she wns to Inherit. I wrote the gov
ernor about her , sent him the opinion o !
some of my countrymen whom he know
and eild that his scheme had proved a gooi
one after nil. With his permission I wouli
wed the girl lu Paris.
"He cabled Ms permission and his ap
proval , but In the letter that followed there
was a tone of mild reproval for my Incon
stancy. You notice that my wife Is a prlmt
favorite with him. Ho never tires of sing.
Ing her praises and docrn't allow day tt
go by without reminding mo how he navel'
me from - blunder that would have spollei'
my life. "
"Hut wasn't H a little hard on the cmi
you left behind ? "
"Not at all. She's the fi.ime girl I niel
In Paris. lint he doesn't kno.w It , and ]
mem that he never shall. "
I'KXSIO.VS TO WKSTI4II.V VHTI-2HAXS
Survivors of < lnItcliillln 11 Itcllicni
lii-i-i-il liy tinlivniM'iil ( ! overniiei t.
WASHINGTON. July 2. ( Speclnl.-l'eii )
slon * granted , Issue of June ITi , 1W , were :
XebraHui : Origlnal--Wllllam S. Hampton
Ognl.il'n. Increase -Peter T. Krintzlli-ld
I-.ilrllcld. Original widows , etc. S.irnh I1
. nnlng , Sa'em ; minor of.lnme0 ' . < Padgett
Supi-rliir : Kmlly M. J e'ooley. Lincoln.
Inwii : Original iSpeclal , June lb. ) Wll
llr.ni O. Otis , I.acclle. Ue-.storatlon nnd re
Issue Jimu'S Hooves ( deceased ) , Montrose
IncreiiFe Thomiis M. Tumble-son , Entsb
Cii-ovo. lie-issue nnd Inoreiisp John Dubols
ManrhePtor. Original wldmvs. etc. Martin
I. Palmer , nulnniue : Hannah I. Honnr
Oceeola ; Hnnnali K. Jewell , Ivivehind ; ( spe
elul , June IS ) Surah J. King ( mother ) , Haw
llinin.
r'.ilorndo : Original Clmitncpy I , . Hull
I'atUison. Original widow Hcissuc Cor
delln L. Hnwkln.v. Delta.
IFSUC of June 1(5 ( :
Nebraska : Increiifio William U. Vnn Oil
der , Hriinswlck. Original -widows , ete.-
Mlnor oC Andrew J. Corlc.k. Cozad.
Iowa : Orlelnal John I , Hyorson , Si'vc :
rily ; John Hoehsjipier , Alia Vista. Aildl
tlonnl Oeorco C. llolx-rllng , Saluiln ; Clari
don I ! . Campbell. I'arK Kestorntlon and In
crease Frederick 1-VrnnH ( iluceised ) . Win
throp. Increase Jt-wi ; Dowell , Kldou ; Hen
lam'n ' F. Ste.irns , Dos Molnes : U'-ron C
I'.nuton , Hartleys Wll'lnm K. Johnston. Heil
ford. Orlulnnl widows , otc.--Spt-cliii. ( Jum
2D Hell MeCihumltlln. He-rwlek : minor o
Andrew J. Corlck , Moulton ; Mnr.v Nelson
Keokuk.
South Dakoti : : IlelsMie Albert Webb , Hu
roll.
Colorado : - OriginalJohn II. Lavender '
nniniih ; Wll'lam WHafnett , Denver.
Issue of June 17 :
Nebraska : Original Joseph F. ICcndnll
Superior : Charles Huberts , St. Llborv ; Jaimi
HiiMick. Geneva : Clinton Mitchell. Duff
.Tnhil Corb'ss' Hooper- Renewal Smltli P
Hrown , Smith Omiihn. Increase Slmoi
itbfbv , Ansley ; Wil'lam II. Frost , \Vynioie
Ji'si-pb Willovi-r , M n v wood.
Towa : OrlRlnnl-I'lillliti A. Miller. Mn
qiioketn. Ineroa.se Samuel lingers , Oakltnd
( ! ins Hamilton , Ulverton , Charles K"y #
Mar.sbiilltown ; Jubn npmpsev , Ottuiir.vn
Thmiiii" J. Hell , OsknloosMj Thomiis .1. He
l-'ord , DCS Molnes ; Hosen K. Oould. Alb-nton
I'el sue 1'idiralm JJ. Weaver , llos Mo'.ne ' ?
Otlyrlnal widows. Me. Simih Kmerlek. Le
nitr. ! : Mnrv L. McKlnlcy , Melrose ; Sarah K
Orpjfory , Marlon.
South Dakota : Orlclnal widows , etc.-
Mlnor of Archibald Hell , Taopl. Oilrlnn
widow , restoration and reissue Sarah A
Hell ( deceascil ) , Taonl.
North Dakota : Increase Joseph Fold
hinn'Ti , Hlsmarck.
Colorado : Or'ulnal ' Chnrlen F. Devl.in
Iil-iho Sprlncs : Thomas Mahoney. Honanxa
John O. Keith , Leadvllle ; Iluthvcn W
Houghton , Dfnver.
Montana : Original Edward M. Parrno
lee , Marston.
It-sue of Jimp IS :
Nobrnska : Original John Izer Liberty
Ail'lltlonal XPlson Ilogers. 'Mllford. Uesto
rat'on ' , rel sue and Increase Hc-n-y C. Vn"
online , Omalm. InereaFe Oottlleli Arnilt
Hlnn Hill ; Clinton Kendall. Hroken How
PiivNon Arnarlne. Norfolk : Henry Swlgart
Itcsi-lanil ; .lobn M. Mc-Tord. lli > d Cloud.
Iowa : Original Cliarles L. Dorson. Hen
tons-port ; Samuel Harcus. D < - " Molnes
Chailps W. r-'iirk , Allerton : Wlnlleld S. Hek
aril , Burlington ; Henry T. Shepherd , Hen
tcmsport ; .Martin Adams. Hussell. Aildl
tlemal Ji'mi-H Hrnelt , Tunnel : James M
Hrown , Mount Avr : Walter KnnK For
Madlxon ; Henry II. HloilgPtt. Charles City
lit'Storatlon and Increase--Kllsha K. Xlni
( deceased ) , Des Molnes. Jle"toratlon and re
Issue He-nry F. Iliiuh , Wllllamsburs. In
creasi1Mjrnr L. IllcP. Des Molni-s ; Rrad
ford J Peas'ey. Primghar. llel sue Samue
I-"lfe , St Charles : Samuel O. Clark , mains
burg ; .John Hush Hrown. Truro ; Mark \Viilt
ney , Kensau < | ua ; Andrew I-Vrsuson. Wash
ingtoii. Original widows , i-tc. Mary A.Inn
pp'i Molnes ; minors nf William It. Davidson
Alton ; Marv J. Clifford. Delmar ; minor o
Jr-lnh II. Hlltts Cherokee.
South Dakota : Inerr-risp Jacol ) IDIsmuUe
Conde. He-Issue John 1'pstrom , Slouv Falls
Marcus J. Rowland , Deadwnnd. Orlglna
widows , ote. iMarthii J. Ht-'I , Miller.
Wyoming : Additional James M cOlver
nipy , Nylln.
Issue of Juno 10 :
Nebraska : Original Joseph M. Hurd , Oran
Island ; Vlnson P. Davis. Osceola ; Join
Halm , Ilontrb-e ; Maiirlre FltzKe-rald , flre-i-n
wood. Aildltlonal ( "llnton T. linker. Salem
Increase- William II. Fleming. He-emer
John W. ICby. Wll-nnvlllp. Original wl-lowf
etc. Minor of Lewht C. Powell , Callnway.
Iowa : OrlKlmil John Melshn , CheNnn
Joel Hodgson , Hiingor ; John W. Hii-h. Ot
tiimwa. Additional I'Mwnrd I'erry , Mar
shalltown : Napoleon | l. Thnroman , Water
Ino ; Ilk-haul Moore. IlelnlicPlc. llestorn
( Ion nnd Increase Andrew Tlsor. di-cease-il
I'nlon ; Sidotnon Weaver , Knrlliuin. In
en life James If. Hrown , Cedar llapbi.s
Ji hn II. Drill. Okaloo-a ; John II. L nigs
dorff , Ames ; X.ai-linry T. Plonk. Fremont
John M. CreiAldm ; Ansi-1 A. Wallace
F < rt Madison ; William Kvi-rton. Knrlvllle
John X. Hosenberscr , Lailora ; Marlon lllte
lied Oak. ItelssuiTliomaK Murphv. fit
tiiimvn ; Isaac D. Vorp , Mnsi-atlne ; Wllllan
II. llaker , De Molnes ; William Whitlow
Northborc. llelHsinand lnereasi ll rac
llllBI'olen. . Original widows , etc.-Mar
urct VoRPl , Davi-iiHirt | : Anna 1C. Some-
Fort Dodgp ; Xnncy 1-3. Tlsor , I'nlon ; Isa
Ixlla llouch , Oelweln ; Mary C' . Mitchell
Coon ItupldR ; Louisa Mclntlro , Cory'din
Hettii * llaiina. A'lnlbn ; Lucy .1. Harrli-
Sioux City ; Maria A' . Jones , Srn-IMiuri ? .
S'Hilli Dakota' Ite-stririitlon and addltlnna
William Wendt fiUci-ased ) Sioux P-ilt |
Original widow Marwrel Wendt , Slou :
I-'nll" . , '
Ni rth Dakota : Original F.ngel 15. liayne
l-'urno.
Colorado : Original widow Cynthia Laugh
Hn. Pasosa Sprlilgw.
Montana : IncrenHf Asa O. Heals , Hoze
man. .
Insue of June 21 ;
Nebraska : Orlgln.il Alexander N
ThoimiH Aurora. Addltleina'--Alnnzo ' II
Ki-lcy. Lexington ; Amos O. Coinlsli. Hart
man. Increase -John Norwood. Cli-arw.iter
Alexander lire-en , Somerset. Original wld
own , etc. Minor qf Jithn M. l-'oster , Stark
Iowa : OrlglnoJ .Injm II. Pli-kutt. De
Molnes ; Alixnil ( > r 1,1. Sloan , HelliPl'ilin -
William II. ShenPtml. Lutnn. Aildltlniial-
Willlam KultH , Knrlvllle : Oeeirge W. llalrd
HIiaiiiflfM : Henjamln F. Hi-ynoldH , Lak
City. IniTeiiHH Kni.m-U Hill , IMewonil
William H. Hrewer , Kverly ; Thomas H
Dii-kens , Alpha-l ; > tfvfil Hujjg. MIIFUII City
Original widows AMig Parker , Toledo ; Julli
A. Day , Storm Lake.
Suuth Dakota : Inirpase William M
Toops. Hot Springs . He-lssuo Juhn Proud
Aberflren.
North Dakota : Additional Lemuel Her
bert. Monango.
f'i lorado : Original-August Hiu-e-k , Ha
worth ; .lames J. Hhodi-s. Love-land. In
< ri-ii.se Jesve W. Hlep. Di-nvi-r. Kelusue-
Wllllam P. Davis , Selbert.
l-'llllil-r nilll'j'H .Silver .liil.lli-e.
NKW YOItK , July 4.-The celebration o
the Mlver jubileeof He-v. J nines Duffy , pas
tor of St. Agnes church In Hrooklyn , li
honor of hU having uttulncd the twenty
fifth anniversary of his ordination , wan con
eluded today with the ceremonial of tin
church of Itointt. A sptclal feature of tin
iccaslenru the preuence of Cardinal ( Jib
bens of Hultlmore.
Stiilibril til Dt-alli In a lliiiim-1.
PHILADELPHIA. July 4.-Antonlo Die
dele , aged 35 year' , wan stubbed to deutl
tonight by Colora Hartlllo UH the result o
a uuarrtl over a S me of cards. Durtilii
wus urrcstcj.
HMTft'f iini'r"i'iiiii HP 11 PIK
PRICES OC1S1R1P DhALLll ;
Market Has Readied a Point Where Bnyin
Must Stop.
SETTLING DOWN HAS A HEALTHY EFFEC
Operator.- * Who Are Short In Tlivl
lms Ueiniiuil CIIIICO > I | < IIIN
\Vlili-U Arc Nut C run toil mul
'riiiniiil ( < itit Ai-e Siniill.
NKW YOUK , July 4. Henry Ctrw * . hea
of the batiking hottfio of Henry Clews & Co
In hla weekly letter nays :
The past week In the market for Freurltic
has exhlbltt-d , nn HIP whole , n r'-aellotiar
movement In price" . After a steady upwnr
drift , extending over some six weeks an
showing a handsome range of protltn , thi
Is no more than might be evpected HIII
fi-r varlou reasom , It portendadvantay
for HIP futin-p course' of the market.
Strong as the tone nf vulin-s ha been nn
still Is , yet HIP market has lacked breinll
and activity , Hip dally transactions bavin
nvpriiised only about SfrO.Wt Hlnups. As Ind
ciile-d In our advices e > f last week , this In I
il considerable measure due to a rush i
"outside- " buying , having run nwny with tli
iniiikct anil can led up prices , while tli
class of Inrge local nppruloro has bppn le-l
In the lurch and has refused to e-ouie In r
the lilRher taupe of values. In the im
way. London , which Is ralflng1 its pstlmut
of our soe-urltli-s. ban been left 111 tin- eel
by tin- Into rise niul besltnte-s to e-ome 1
until purcliasi-H ran be niadint some col
cession. The houses ) which have It In thei
power to largely regulate- ( lie course of bus
neson the exchange Imvp not liked thi
situation. A position which keeps out i
tin- market the class of operators whlc
Ixissess the .spirit , the menus , tin- tactic :
skill and the alliances with laigv eapttallstl
forcer , l clearly not one to make the be
ef such ici'tippratlve InlliK-nce.ijis are no'
coming Into active operation In Wall stti-p
When thpso opera tors stand still , theinutkt
si-em stagnates and the best lullupuoes ma
conn mul go without eonferrlnu any ti-m-n
The nrew-nt position of tlil < Inlluentli
clns or oponitors appe-arn to be about thi.
They n tv fully uvuikito the fact that
great recovery has cmuo over tinbuslnef
nf tin- country and that all the Inlltieiii-f
affi-ctim : tin- value of Investments nro coi
spiringto produce a very important n
vlval of business on the Stock evelmngi
They constriii' the active Inves-tini-nt d <
maud for bonds and dlvldpud paylim stod <
an the s'.yns of a coming b-iom , and the
are. therefore , i-i-ady to take their part I
tin- coming ivvlval. Hut they have e-ompai
atlvi-ly few stocks , and It then-fun * Milt
their tactics at tin- moment to dlscourun
the rlsHun tendency In prlce-n and leave tli
narrow outside inaikei to the fate thn
must ove-rtiiko It In the absence of their ii
lluentlul support. As already Intltnatci
Ixiiiilon appear.1 to be In the same p isltlo
and dlfpruvd to fntlnw a like waltlni ; pollcj
LKFT 1tl2HIXn IN THU HACK.
What concession In prii es It may tnUe t
satisfy these Important wouldbebuyer
Is not easy to say. Probably some initfl :
be willing to .supply tln-Ir wants at near em
rent prices , but that mlvlit not liteasl'
done , for Important purchase.- ) ) would ui
doiibtedly stall up prices agiiin. Much inus
depend upon ! the cours - of event" . There 1
no saying what may be tin- effect of tb
e-cniple-tlon of the tariff In starting up li
due-trial activity In the many quarters I
which production Is now bi-ing In-bl in sus
pen.se > . It Is also to b" considered that tb
crops arc In a position which prmlts e
flue weather giving them an Imp--tus bi-yon
what Is now calculated upon. In any even
there U everv probability of buslm-ss pro-
pects exhibiting a inaiked improveiii- !
from this time forward. Thi * situation ma
at least be oxppet'-d to keep tininnike
strong for KOIIU time to conic during whlc
these Intending buyi-rs may gi.niually gt
si nirslrx'kM but It does not seem llkel
that it will penult nnv appreciable fall t
prices ; the great busne ! > s factors of th
hour are too decidedly bullish to admit
that except In the event of some uuforsec
adverse circumstances , which Is about tb
mily chance these belated buyers have lei
to count upon.
T'pon tblp series of uncertainties depend
the cours.e of the stock market ilur'.n ' ; : th
milliner mont'.is. ' A re-illy stagnant nnirkc
seems Improb-ible. Ther- are too man ;
guodposslbMltlis within sight for that t
happen. All are reckoning upon It as a tlm
forgetting Into the market. Fi-w regard th
rise of tlio p.ist month n" being sulllclen
to discount the lion -fill future that nov
fnci-s > the country. Operators , therefore , ar
likely to keep their accounts open with Hi
commission houses and stand rc-adv to bu ;
If circumstances should favor. Tint ma ;
not necessarily mean a rcal'y active pumme
murket , but It doe. " merin at lenst a stead
and safe , one. and strongly suggests a boot :
In the early fall.
Ht'SIXESS IS KXPANDINO.
The general business outlook grows In
crea&ltiRly bo ; 'fid. Many inutiufaeturers ar
already sullleiently satisfied with HIP prob
able detal's of HIP new lailff to begin ojii'ra
lions upon an extended scale , and In Hi
laiger Industries the resumption of full woi !
1st becoming comparatively general. In clt
nu-rcantllc circles also a marUed Improve
mi-lit of tombeglns to uppeir. It conies to
late to materially increase Hie volume o
the summer business , but It is having ;
who'esomo effect noon the confidence1 an
expectations of distributers in res' ' ect to th
full trade. The reports and orders sent b
commercial travelers s-bow such an Improvj
ment that they are receiving Instruction
to jirolonif tlu'lr slnv In the Interior , all o
which goes to strengthen mercantile ex
pi-ctiitlona as to the volume of trade durliii
lln second half of tinyear. . Chiming wit ]
this Improvement conies tincenernlly hope-
fu' cliaractcr of the government crop re
polls , -which are ev--n exceeded by tin * sin
Ivlce" froini railroad of
t'lilm * tenor of the n
liib'ls and nii-n of buslnet-s on tours e > f In
i-pi-ctlon In the west ami south. MI-II o
busini-s-s ii-c turnlntr tln-Ir attHiitlon froi
the still fretful agit.itlnns of politics , In t'i
conviction that two years remain to the ] ;
before there can be any absorption of puhll
attention by factional aKitalors , and wll
tin- hope that , during that Interval , puhll
opinion will frown dnwn violent issues' an
support only safe and who'esmip policies
Tin * revival of biiBlni-ss will nowe-rfully con
tribute toward that tendency.
During the week , there has he-en a rnnrke
movement toward ease In the foivlgn ex
crangcH. The large remittances n-iiuin-d fo
caFli FPttlements for anticipatory Importa
lions of sugar , wool , lildcs. etc. , and fur th
payment of July Intntrtit on our serurltle
held abroad , its . ell as on account of trav
elers , ' credits , are now about over , and rate
for foreign bi'ls have conse-uenlly | fulle ;
be-low the gold export p'dnt , sn thai no ship
merit" of the metal have been miiliilurln ;
tinweek. . This hns had an cncounitrinv of
feet upon Wall stri-pt. for nlthougli , wit ]
our present stocks of weld , we iu > iild alt'oi' '
li > ? art with more If necessary , yet we nr
liketo ! need a if.iod stot-K of money In th
bank. . HF the probabilities point to Importnn
li-HEfers of ciirrenc. to the Interior ufte
this month In conin-i lion with a liberal cro
movi-mi nt at rclatlvi-'y good prices. In vie ;
nf tiie prospective introilhi-tl m of nn-aHun
or i-iirre-ncv re-form Into e-ongrcss. It may b
of no small Iniportancc to their success tha
Wihbould IKIVP ample stocks of gold In th
banks and In Ihe treasury ; thus , whati-ve
tcinl ! ' to augment our supply of the yell - \
nutal must help to the continuation of pub
lie confidence. KuroiMtin advices r port ut
cxpi elation of go'd being soon exported t
the- United States , which uppeiirs la be.var
HMitfd bv the central facts of .our Inter
biislnes-s rclalioMs.
IIIM.I.S AVITIIS'I'AVU Till- : MAIDS
| ! IIMIIH uf ( InllrniH l-'nll In I'psi-l Hn
Mnrlii-1'n l-'lriiiniNN ,
XKW YOHK. July I. Wall street has hrn
In Homo partlriilars a lively -wci-k. Cjuiila
tii IIH an gone-tally up somewhat , thougl
not in any ppi-cla'ly con i-iiiieutial way. It
some I'arts uf tinmaiket the bulls and th1
bi-ars baviliml lively tilts , and at time
It has lookci'1 as If thenrnlg'it be- some sub
stantlal victory won by one- side or Ihe other
but the wci-.t closes without much for elthe-
party to bimfl of.
More ban lnn arcompllxbi-d , judgltiK b ;
Kiirfieo condllloiiH , by tup bulls than by th' '
bi-ai'H. Much manipulative effort has bo-i
iM-r.i-d tu bring ubuiil a materlu : reactloi
In market values. Scumof the hhrewde-s
and ahh-t-'t tit-rators un tin- Stock exbaim <
l.avo worked for that result. Sunn- develop
mints In the situation have brcn P'ipularlj
( onrtriieil uf nt brarlsh iinFeiiimcc. | . Ap
p.iri-ntl ; ' therelias been liquidation in soin
i-uni'iU-U' | ' > iiH iuartt-rs. | Trie-re has IK.-UI in
unmistakable extension of tin- short Inter
i-st. Kuch and all of tln-.si- under oi-llnar ;
11 nilltluiis would have hi-cn lnllueiiti.il li
brfnKliiK tlio reaction which the professlona
bears and bc'ated bulls alike have bi-i-n si
anxiously Kecking. And on oinor two dayi
tln-rc pei-nn-d surface Indli-ailoni' that i
i-luirp si-tback was at hand. T-ie n-cjnl o
tbu we-ek , however , rt-sultr In net ihangei
\\l-lch are chli-lty on the side of advances.
Homo factor has been Influential ciioug )
to i ft' * et the udrolteal nmni-uvers of inanlpu
bitlon. Hut is the public In t'ie inarkt-t'
This cantlnm- ques'lon of lin'inrtanee. /
( aiivatH of thu foremost corninlxi-lon houfei
In Wall street li-avcs un Impiln-r uneeriaii
us to what tin- facts In that lurtlculiir inn )
be In some quarter * It 1 ; oi > itlvly Hutei
that oillsiile orders have been executed am. .
me still in evidence In large volume. K'HC
Where the statement IK that tbo pub'ic hai
m t yet sho' 'ii any substantial intiist It
the current ntoi-k market movement , and ai
odd featureIn that authorities iii st entlnul
UbtkMllv bullish urc num * the less ernjihutli
In declaring that go fur the market hut
developed without the co-ope-ratlon of Ke-n-
era ! outside Interest manlfust In It Them
same authorities are , however , earnest 1 (
tln-Ir confidence that tt can be but a Ittb
while tipfore HIP public dm * Mnc In. oni
that largely.
It Is cortnln Mint whether HIP general pub
lie is or lr > tint In there Is activity on tin
Stock exchange on orders from many of tin
moM ImiKirtnm financial magnates of tin
country. The present Improvement In tin
market lipcan on pure'liasemnde for the ac
count of Standard OH millionaire' . This It
Wall lreot clrcle-s Is nn open ? ecrPl. Whet
nn n of the caliber of the Hoehcfo'lorwill
tln-Ir opportunities for knowing what tin
fin-In of HIP bii"liie < > situation are. SIP ti
warrant for buying stocks the outlook niusl
be clear. They do not tike to wa tc mom y
any more than poorer mortals like It. Mel
of this conefueiicp an- not only largely Inter -
ter - te-il In Ihe Mock market that ban l-itelj
dpvelnpod. but they are openly Identifying
thiinsp'vc. " with the bull campaign. Xothinii
of this sort hue hiii'pcneil since br-foie tin
pnnlc times of ISM. 11. ALLAWAY.
COSDIIIOV OK MVOHIv IIA.NK1
IXpnuilon of I.IIIIIIN MI-CM KM All
l're IOIIH ItoeoriN.
NRW YOHK , July l.-The l-'liiancler fays
The stnteim-nt of tbo nssoelnte-d bunks ol
j New York rity for the week ended July I
conllrrns the fact that the prunietlty si
long awnlteil Is at length here. The nston-
It-hint' expansion of $11 IM.SW In loans haf
never before- been ciiualod e-Nci nt once 01
twlcehen spi-clal causes accounted fol
the Increase , but In the current stateme-nl
no unusual factors beyond an actual revival
In business lire ti > be discovered. Out ol
the sixty-live liunltulloti- : now colinectcil
with Ihe clem Ing boiifo Ilfty show an in
creased loan account , whl'o only HftoPii show
dlnilnlshe-d dlsroiints. This Is a larger percentage
centageof Increase than has bo'-n teportpi ]
for months n.i t. The National City hunk
and the National Hank of Comiiiprcc , It Is
true , are responsible for half the total In-
cicat'o , but the remainder , which of Itscll
Is a note-worthy gain. Is distributed aim > st
uniformly among the other banks. The pre
diction in. nilIn this analysis last week that
loans wou'd assume record-breaking i'lupor-
Uons has been fullllled much sooner tnan
anticipated. To dellno In what lines tlilf
expansion has run would bidllllcult , but
July iiettlemonts. heavy customs payments
and heavy morehundls'ltig , .together with re
discounts and the shifting1 of Investment se
curities by largo corporations , have been rc-
rponslble for a large part of the e-mugi-s -
The deposits , as might have been exported ,
show u similar Increase , the actual gain hav
ing been $ " , . ' - . ' 0,11X1. The tola : deposits for
tin tlrct tlmo In the history of the cleat Ine
liousi- exceed tin * $ rHitwn.Oiii ( mark , and now
slnnd at Jilil , ' . : ' . ,7Wi. which , of course , es-
tnldlsln-s n now record. The heavy dcp-s | !
M present have liiorea pd HIP . : , " per cent
les-eive to about $1M L'l , " > ! ' 'J" . T.nbanks arc
gaining specie , ilo'plto tin- heavy deniand
fir ch ant one bank , the National 1'aik.
now has over $10.0 ii.ooit , , 71 per cent of
Its r-isb n-s'--rvo In gold. The lo-s In legal
ti nd * rs for the week ns $ . ' H"v.4f-0 - The 111-
teller movement In this dlrtctiou c.-ntlnui - s.
but the withdrawal of legal tenders for gold
export and the b * : tvy customs p-iynn nls arc
unteriictliii ; It to some extent. Domestic
cxchnnuv Is noticeably pa-dor at Interior
center" and tills foreshadows a dlmlnls-liliu :
of the Hood of mono : ' which has been nour-
! ny into New York all season.
I.OMHI.V M ( M-2V > \IIKKT l IIIIVM-IW ,
I'rlee-4 nil the StoK l-\ < * ! iaitut * lliM't * n
' 1'einli-iu-y- | < i | { | < * .
LON1X1N , July I. Money Is plentiful. .
with loann for one week to ton days at ! ' , <
per cent ; two innnths , 5fiH | I-H ! per cent
for four months , l-lfritlTji per cent , and fn >
Ix monthslUf'l'i per cent. It is llk'-ly
to ret. min easy for some weeks to come.
The St'ie-k o.xrhnnpireip'tnd briskly aftei
'be Jubilp" ho'ldays. tboinb t'le ' activity has
not continued , and theie have been simn
l -jis of lenctlon. A hopeful fueling pre
vails , however , and the tendency of prc-- !
Is to advance In spite of the snrill volume
of business. Ihnnrail - continue dipresse
by fears of strikes ami the dlsnppnlntnm'il
at the comparatively sninli amount i I' lub- !
l"e Irulllc. Hut American- ! are de Idodh
tiengIn const-iiuence of Seeu-tnry ( lagi' .
lfclanitlr > n - on the s-.ibiect of the currency. .
Tlic-i'p Is , howkvor , a disposition to ro.i la <
In view of the holiday lumen row , aid thi-
has caused somelliictu itlons. A fi at lire ol
the market Is the steady nbsorpt'-m of tin
bond Issue.- . Lake Sboie has fallen 1 p.dlit
Norfolk prefeired 14 and Norfolk comniot
U pe-r cent , AtchKin proferreil.julsvllU
.mil Northern I'.icific preferred each % p--i
erit , l > enver preferu-il * * ; ier e-cnt and or
dinary 14 per cent ; Milwaukee and I'll ! in
I'.icllle I'D p-r i-ent. ( iinadl-uis Irive b-eli
largely bought on the strength of the M-iy
tntemoiit , but In sympathy \\itli Amerl'-an
rnll . famidlan 1'nelllc 1'e'l"s ' per cent -ut'l
Unuid Trunk guaranteed first preference ' , i
i-e-r cent.
> | IIIICICMIII'l' -\lllc Trndi * Itcle v.
MANCIIKSTIOH. July -I. A fair business
In-'i been done for Ihe last ten days- , prices
follow Ing the lead of cotton , though not
-how Inn a stendv Improvement. Iniia hii !
1 en tiiklni ; moderate lines of yarns , while
China and Japan huve n'so made ennsliler-
ible purchases. Home consumer : ' ha\e beep
crrrntlnff more freely In cloth and sum- .
RI ud sales1 have been made. China and Jnpa1
nave demaiidol slilitttmP and sln-etlims , and
India shirtings as well as a niKcelbincou-
selection of light fabrics In antic1. atlon < f
Ibe weather fol owing the monsoon. Slnga-
iiprc Is mole active In Its demands ami tin
ieiiiiests fioin 'I'urkey are larger and more
in olliulile. Hut t'io outlook In South Aincr-
lea from the point of view of tills market
Is very unsatisfactory. On the whole the
In-me trri'io ls > now fairly go id. and tr-o wce-\ !
closed with n strong undi.-rono. ! Most of
the machinery is now well engaged and
nninv looms and spindles which have been
Idle for sor.ie niontns have started again.
HrlUxIl U'ei-kly ( Jriilll Iti-vletv.
LONDON , July I. Tin- weather during the
east week has been favorable to the < -r ps.
Wneut In the market was rather cheaper.
Olfirs of white ' .vbeat wore scan- " . Califor
nia wheat , September and October delivery.
wan quoted at 151s l'sil. ' Parcels , September
and October delivery' , were ipioled at Mis 2'id ' ;
Seiilember and October delivery quoted at
20. " Oil.
Fleiir WIIH quiet i > nd nnnltircd.
Miilzo was firm , near jnslllotip , old mixed
American maize , July do'lve-ry , was qir > tcd
at Ills lid.
I'lirley was quiet and unchanged. Amer
ican spot barley was quoted at * 4d , lowest
price.
Oats was steady. Ann-ilcan clipped oats
Now York , July delivery , was iiu.itoil at
11s Od.
o.tiAii.v < ; I-MU.\I : , \ittcirr.s. .
Condition of 'I'rnil * * nnd ( lnolll llonx
on Slnpli * mill l-'niu v I'rnil ni-i * ,
KGOS lilllls uf side.7c. . Hut wenther Is
cniflnK li-'avy IIHUH. In FIIIMIcatK us liluh ut
Hve to eipht ilnzi-u per caue.
llt'TTKIt e-iiiumnn to fair , "e ; elioli-e In
fnncy , 10Jjl2c ; Fi-pnrnlor creamery , 15o ; giith-
i-n-d cii-nniiiy , 12c.
VlAICliolio fat , SO to 120 lljs. , nuoteJ ut
Sid't ; IUIKII mul i-onrte , tfilc.
I.IVIJ I'lJI'l/rltV He-llB. BPJ coi-UH , Sf4c | :
tpilne i-liliki'iih , jicr ll > . , 12Hc ; ibiL-Uu , Cc.
riliCONK lA\i ; TlfjiKip ; ileail plKe-ona not
\\Htlll--l
IIAY-irpl.-inil , J.VC.O ; midland. H 50 ; Inwlnnd.
J4 00 ; rye rliaw. J < .SO ; e-olor niiiliOK t.ic pilctun
liny. UK ) ) ! biile tell the 'jot , only loji nraik-i
lirlnK Inp plIri-H.
IIHOOMrolLV i\irrniPly : flow Kale ; now cron.
- lcllv'iil liui-k
un In cinnilry ; cliulre Krecn K-lf-
workliiLr CHipi-t , per Ib SOZ'.ie ; choice Krccn ,
niniiliic lo hurl , snjiin. rrinrnon , lic. !
viain'Ani.i-s.
Olll-iN : : I'AH | ; I't-r ' .S-lin. hanla-t , DOSWe.
I'JK I-I , ANT -I'p- , II , . . lie
( 'I'CI'AIlilllis J't-r ilnSOflllc. .
' ' -l t-r 4-l-uil.et i-iiite , ! ) Oc iJ1.00 ,
-IVr , lai. , H'ira ' (
. . . .
WAX IIIOANSi | i141,11. . | , ox , " 60.
S'i'ltlMJ IIIJANS-l'i-r 14-1111. bo . Me.
I'AIIHI.UV-JVr < lni'O&SSc. .
O.S'ieJNS-l'i-r II- . , SP.
LIMA lliANS-l' Hi , Be.
IIHA.NSIliiiidplrkiil navy , per bu. , SLID.
CAIiliAiiilino.1 ttink. Si :
roTATOKH-Ncw , , ! , . ! | , n. , Mo.
I-'ItUITS.
AI'ltICOTS-1-i-r ca > c. fl.lMil.a
I'ALIFOIt.M.x Clliilllll-s-l't-r : : 10-lb. box.
l'.Ull 10.
III.ACIC IIAKI'lllllltliS : - I't-r 2l > lnt case.
W'ul.lO , qu.-llt l-IIM-K. il i--S 1.71.
IILA'KHiilllis ( : | : IVr ! 4-it. | c-n/e , tl.Kfll-K.
AI-i'Ll-js-Nn fliij.jiini : noc-k.
IIISI-IIIHIUIS i-t.r si-qi. ruse , fi.w.
I'lIACIIIW-l'i-r IA-IJU. .
THOI-tr-AI , l-'llUITH.
-Mi-illli.-n.ini-iili niel > , tl.DO ; 1.
MliMHrli * , 14 e .
I.KM'iNK-Mi-rkliiat. ' } 1 IK.3.00 , tholctJ fallfor-
nlu. 14 : s 4.W.
IIA.S'ANAS-i'holce Inrsi ! Hork. per bur.cfi ,
Si ; intilluin-hl/-d Mnuhm.l \ ti'i. < ,
NtJTS Afiiionilb , i-uu.uiiila , | ier IU , Lirxv
cut- , ! ' - , Jir.uiln. pt-r H > , lUc ; iiiKlli-li ; walnuin ,
per HI , fiuiuy , rufl t-hell. litilAe ; M inlunl > ,
jOUllc , Illl-rilti , lr IblUc : I-I-IUIIK liulinlinl ,
lull. * , VfllUu ; Jumbo. ll < jic ; UIKV lile-Kory nuu.
tl K per Im ; rot-uiiiintK , 4' c well.
rilJS linp'irli-il r.inry 4 cnmn , 20-llj. liaatt ,
1Ut crunii , M-lb , Imko , 13UMC.
IICI.NiV-'lii'lce , 131/ltc.
t'll'llll I'larllleU Juice. f > e-r half Mil. . I2.J5 ; per
lit ii. . o.oo'uc ; .
MAI-I.i : iiVHI'l'-KI\p-B l. cun , rath. 12 S3 ;
t-ul canv. pure , prr iloz. , ! ! ! ; Imlf-Kul. cun .
te.St ; qunrt can * , nil
\Vitnl llnrUelH.
ST I/JI'1H. jul > 3VdOI. . l-'liiiiiT. wllh be-t-
ti-r lii'iuli > . f lr to i hi'lrr Ki'-'l'- " Mlmourl nd
' ' inrillinn l4iilV ( , Ilk-til line
llllni-ln. lC'i.ril7'v <
loiill- , , liiavy line. 11 ' . tub u > lifj. nil J' ' i.
Ni\V ; VUliK. July J-W n l-nrin.
Aiuc-rlcnii Si-cnrllli-H In London.
IXJ.S'UON , July 3Tlie inurtc-- ! for Aimrlran
perurltlcn. uflcr modrr tv llucluatloim utri-iiKtli-
cntl on general ncvulatlvtileinanj , clottd
VfltU o.
OMAHA LIVE STOCK MARKET
Receipts Indicate tbnt Shippers Anticipated
the Holiday.
SCANTY OrftRINGS SELL QUITE READILY
lei-H TnUe l-\ i-r > Ililnu ; lu tin * \Vnj-
of t'nltlo ui Men OK I'rlccx .
llouMriiiiu nt I'M e
C'enI * .
HOl'TII O.MAI1A , July 3.-llecclpts for the
dnya inellcatedcrc :
, , . Unttlo. HOGS. Shrep. Horses.
July 3 woioi
Total tocolpts' . -13 fill
The disposition of the day's reccli > tn WIIH
a1 * follows , e-aeli buyer purclui ! < lnK the num
ber of head indlcale-d :
Huyeis. Cattle * . H-'ns Sb-e-p.
Oinnlm 1'ackliiKi . ' . - !
The < ! . II. Hammond Co. . I'O'.l Sil . .
Swift , -t I'o . r.iS 1,271
Cudahy 1'aoUliif ; Co . VI51 1,21s . . . .
J. I. . Caioy . fC .
lllll .t Lewis fo . M .
Hammond , Kunsat City . 100 . . . .
Cudaliy Co. , Kansas City ir.f ! .
Nelson Mini-Is , CIlie-aKO , . 1 .
other biivers . 75 . . .
I .eft over . iM
Total . 1.03S tJ17 :0)
Total ivceltits for the weeU with compart-
suns' :
Cattle. HOKS. s n 1 1 >
Week eildlne ; , luly 3 . li Ml ! : ! i',1-7 > > i..i
Wtck I'tidliiK June 20 . H.MisI'J.ii : ! . .
Wool ; e-nilliiK June 1 ! ' . 13.211I13 li.-b In. Ml
Wick endlliK June 13 . 10.MI : * ; t.-ivi \OJO
Tin-re will bo no inaiki-t oil Mmnliiy
CATTLITile : week cKr-e-il wlt.i lyli l re
ceipts of cattle * , shippers evidently In lug
afiald to forward in my eatllo with iw b < 1- |
d.iys. Sunday iui.1 .Mo.nlay , liefor > - them
\ \ lib so few cattle in ciKlit tinbuyi rs were
not loiin In clean. UK Unyaids , eveiytblni ; m
tin y arils hi-iiiR so d and \viUheil up IOUK bo-
fuic tnklilay.
Tbi-ie weie noery ojil beef steel s In the
ynr > : s , but whin caitle there were suld at
slia 'v ' tu MreniK I'llees. ' The bulk of tlio
entile breiuulit $ l.ltliil.tO. :
CO-AM nnd belt'ers nis-o sold at strong prices
and thereV.MS one load of he'fcrs ' K" ° < 1
enough to brine ; fi.m.
Only two or throe loads of stot-kers and
fee-di r- wenonerod and they sold at about
Heady pile-i-i' .
lliiiis HunliinKiil up Hits iiKirnliiK i n s-plt , *
uf lt lielllB III' ' 111" ! ' ! ' ! > "f tillHLlk. . ,111.1 IU
spiteui piiiptitlviliiilliia > s.
Tie iiiiiK : uptneil a little MuiiiKi-r.
liaully ri i-i-nls1 hlKliit , fiinl was arth-- the
II.IMIUIO. 'I'liisupply was MHUI i-\lniu-.t--il ami
the iniiilu-t tliisi-il i-iul > " 'itli I-M-I.V Ililni ; - . .
Tlie bull ! ef tinIllUS' mill at } 3.iil. \\ltli illito |
. < sprlnKIIni ; nt ! .l.i"v ami ! --'J"i. \rMii.l.ij al-
nuist linlf of tinlni | , selil below JS.'Jii.
'Ihe hiK Ml.llKlt ui Hie p.istMlK l-vpi-l | i In l-il
siiitpe-r Iliu-tiiiitli'tisi In valiu-s limn ii.is I fi-n Itiu
rule must weiku "f late. At II . pi-nlnc i-f tiiu
week Hie iniitki-1 was lll ) \ ll to very m > ar\ ! thi )
low pulnt "f tininniilb. . un Tui'Ml.i.v II i.il.ieil
llallly. | the ailuiiii-e on an IIMIIIKanioiuitinr ;
to S i-i-ntH. \ \ 'elnnlM > 'tt innilietassti.ulv ami
Thin s-ilay'H voiy nraily sn. but un KiM.iy imno
a bnalt of r- < t iitf wlilrh wat > fnll < \ \ liy a
Hlilit Hilvunef at Hailusi' of Hiewnl > .
Slll-'ICl'-'llie-ie nn slu-o | > luru t < i makea
niaiUut.
SI. I.oni.t LU e MOCK.
HT. 1-OflP. July 3.--'tATTM--Ili-ieipts MO
hi-ad , all T xaiii' . Maikit. s-u-ady ; uati\e --luii'
pint , Mi em. 14..VHj.V Mi. bull. , ut Mil.u i.uii4 so.
drLseil bi-ef and butelnr fti-i'i-H. Jl.iimiM K. . bulk
tl4i . luu.ami In Ifei-H. S2.4UJI.I. l.V
IKM1K lleei-lpl-i. S . 'nil head. Mlilki'l. l-priu-J
. -teaily ; cli.M-d . w.-ak ; tUlil , ti.l.Vi.uo : , niupil ,
KlliKI : > ll.i-eli'ls. mini.Mnikit iiil.cl ilull ,
pllees Pli-lld ) . N'atlteIliutluiix. . f2.fIWiii : 7'i eul H
ami bu UK ( I.r > { i2.u. ; Texas i-bi-i-n i.i , .1141.1 ' . '
Iambs JJ.iHitiJ.Mi.
CIllelllAO l.fvc Stork.
< 'llfAOCi. | July J.-I-iU-esi fur cat Hi * wenin. .
eniil ) mi lilHlicr than n wu-k UK < I , with sali-it
of native M.I-IH at fium $3 > 0 to J.1.I."i , the bulk
luliiKliiK fiuin 14 li. J4S.i. !
Scalesuf IIOK * \w-le at all extreme llillKC uf
fliilll J3.ll > to } : i.4.t ultli the liulk nt flillll MM
lo JX10.
Sliiep wi-io tillable at fium Jl.'fi to } 3 W ;
l.nnlis at Horn ! 3 tu ( ' , . 'J' , , rlilelly at froiii S4-Ml
to J5.
lteeelpls > CattleIM heail ; III-BH , 1.4DO lu-aj ;
- di.iia.deio lie-mi.
\i-iv \ oi-U Ll\e Stnelk.
NI\V VOIIK , Jui > : ' . -iti-ivi-s-iii-piH i ( n
heail ; mi irinllnt : , ruble * um-lianKt-d , pxpuita ,
1 r.sl i-attle and I.IT : ' . iuallei-H | uf luef
"AIjVIJS Ili-o-lpts 11' ' Ill-nil , Heliily at J4 00 J
OKI ; liillh ililllk- . ! - ' ; elty dieisiilralH. . KS-IOci
eouiiliy ibi-ssed. I'i'j.fiiiie ' pr puiiml.
sni-i'i : : * ANI > I.AMIIS iten-iptH , HIM in-ai ;
Klii'l1- Vl'iy K I. Hi in ; lamlix. Imi l.'ulower ;
iijieep , - Jl'.rMH ui ; l.uuliH , J4.7./fi.i. .r > ; dii-M--ed unit-
mil. fi'--S ' . - iilnpMd , lamlis , 7'i-ifilOi- .
HueiS Iti-t-elpls , S 47k head ; lower at 13 MlH 10.
. Mlixl llllfl'lll'i l.lSlucl. . .
IAST IIITI-'AIXI , July 3. IKICS i-ij-s ami
IlKhl Imlelii-ih. } .I.MKi.1 1.1 ; MiURliK , iinunnn to
Kuud. M.WCii.l.'i : ! plKx ; t-klpsi , CUIIIIIKU ) to fair ,
ti : iiiii3.rii.
Slliir- : : < ; uil to ilmli-e lamlis. I3.r , i I ; rnun ,
and eoiritiKiii jeailliiKx. t .iK"'M.2r > ; natlxi i llppi-it
xlii i'p , eliok-e welheiH , tt.lMiZ.'U ; eullH and cnni-
niuu uliecp , t".rn5ii,75. :
StueU IniKlil. .
Itci'iinl of lec-elplH of Ihe stork nt tbr four
pilnrlpal ninikulss for July 3 :
e-ntlle. HOKK Sliri-p.
' . ' ' ' > 4 0.- |
Ilinabn
l-lilra--0 IWI 1 4'il ' ( 3.000
Kain-asi city Ml ' ' " "I
200 , ' .i" )
St. I jiilsi
TutulB 1.W M',71 3 oo
M\V : VOIIK IIMU.\I : , M\IIKIT.
( tooditloiiN of ( Inllli.v on ( ieiii-rul
4'i iiiinnil 11 II-M.
MIU' YOUK , July 3. liialii nnd pluUsilim
niiiikelx anelosi.l tuila > .
IKH-si ( jiilel ; Hale , L-UIIIIIIUII to t-huli e . IMS
' - I'aillliroiml , lf.05 .
. fi'illnI'aillli
i-i-up , 3 i4iIfM ; ir'.p. fi'illn- ;
m p , 3i4e : UW ! cup. Mlllr.
llll'CH-ljiilet ; ( i.ihii'liiii. HiMinium ; Ayri-u ,
IfcV il'.ii" Ti-vim , IICaliriiinla. ; . ! " .
LI'.A'I'IIKIt-giiH'l ; hunlork hule , Jim nun
All-en , WlSUe.
lll"ITiit : l-'lnn : we > iein tieaimry. ! ! ! . ' * ;
wei-leiii fin-tuiy , 71/ylilit r ; Klijlnsi , IfrfIniltn -
llun I'li-aineiy ' , S' Si iS' e ; time ilaliy , 1'iviUr ;
Htate i-iiami ly , HSilli- .
CHCIIHi-gulil : dale. Inrwe , 7r , mniill.
flint.-)1 , W/u t\-j ; pan fkhnsi , sysiie ; full fknim ,
; f < ar.
IKiCH Sleaily ; Mule nnd I'rtini-ylwiiiln , Hlt >
HVvc wentirn fii-uli , I0i lO e ,
'IILH-Cuttunrnil , < ] tie | | , pibnu rrude , 'We ,
niiiiiln-il ; piliueyrllow , " 'I'it ' lHi : retn.leuiii ,
ilull ; I'nlleil. MIIIimill il ; I'-nnnyUulila i-nidr ,
tinbid. . lluHlnHI. . rtin.ned. toMimun tu K' ' > < 1 ,
tl 7S',3fll.75. Tuipi-llllne. ilull : 'ii < l27 <
IIICK-Klvady. fail lo i-j.Ua. 4 > , < tiliJapun , 4'/t '
04V.
Mi tli MUSICS Uuli-l ; Ni-w ( irU-iuiH , upi-n ki-ltli- ,
Kl-iil tieholre. . r. ' l > i' .
.Min'.M.HI'll , - Ilull. Hi-u.ly. KuullK-in. Ji ! Jijf
10.M in/ilia i n , Ho.eiei4il'.iHi. i'ip.r | , n-jdy ,
l.nikim . , qvili-l nl til li ( ill r.o. l.i-ad nli.i.ly ,
broki-iii , ! 3 : iTin , quli-l , s/Uiiim / , | l.l uniiH Mi ,
pluti-n , iUlcl. | Hp , | | , -r , iUb-l , doiniKil , ( I zcy
I 33.
I.I < i-riiool ( 'roll , nnil I'rot | HOIIN.
I.IVL'ltl'ixil , . July D.-WHCAT-cioiiliiK Hpi.l
No. 'i itul uiHiui nlnlci , no slr.ik. Nu 1 ri-ii
lie.illii-ili , vprliiK , ilull , . ' id.
( 'lJtXHn | | , ( . Ami-ilri'ii Illlxi-d , IH'W. Bll'lldy ,
! a bU'l ; Aini-rlian inlxi-i ) , nil , Hiajy , JH ! < yd ;
fuluii-H Hi adj. July , i.'s > 7fd ; Aucurl. 2 Mid.
Siipli-nil.i-r. SH D'.il.
I'l/M'll Hi. 1iilu. . funci wlnle-r , Hemly. 7n 9.1 ,
IKil'.S-At l .ndun ll'ueine count ) . Heady ( Xljp
; oi.
I'ltiU'IrilUNH Hit-f. eilra liulln imt , dull ,
; 3 , Kd , primiueri , dull. ll , I'urk , ilull , priniu
miss * , line -Ai'tun , 4r.i. nu-dlinn ui-hii-in 42n
r.il llutim , , ln.u tut dll ' 'j c-l , Mint , ril.ii . ,
L'CB. Ii UK eli-iir nildlliInit y , tli-iult r. b | ,
lonx eli-ar inlilUiihra \ > . Mi-aily , : | > Oil lu.it
u-ur ml-lilli * ! lii-ii\ > M , . , . ! > . ; - uinar bi-l-
Iliu.tead > . 'i- Hl.i uldi ii- , njuaiiilull 2u C < 1.
Uii-l , prlnif \M--IIIII Hiuly. SOh 'Jl.
JAMES E. BOYD flc CO.
Tclcplionu 103 ! ) . Omaha , Nub.
-COMMISSION
GRAIN : PROVISIONS : AND : STOCKS
IIUA1IU OK TIIAIIK.
Dlrtcl wins to Chicago nd Ntvr fork.