Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922, August 23, 1897, Page 6, Image 6

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    TUB OMAHA DAILY WCIff : { MONDAY , AUGrUST 2 . 1H5)7 )
REACTION IN STOCK MARKET
Mot Entirely Unnatural and What Many
Expected !
HAD BEEN PRECIDED BY LARGE ADVANCE
nnil Crop * CoiiilUlonn AfToril
n Motive for IVnNlmlfttx mill
Tltnlil Opcrntiirn TnU-
IMK hail.
NEW YORK , AUK22. . Henry Clews ,
head of the banking house of Henry Clews
& Co. , writes :
The partial reaction in tin * stock market
during tfle week hn not been entirely un
natural , It had been preceded by a laigp
Rlvnnc'C covering an unprecedented range of
ItKuer. Opeiators were therefore carrying an
amount of stocks far In excess of anything
cxper.enced for man * , years pnst-n condi
tion which tended to expose holders to at
tack. The "hearts" attir a long abstinence ,
tvcro hungering for a meal , and not a few
"bullH" were wl ling to take their handsome
ipiollts , while others who had already dine
no were quite willing to se > - , If not help , a
reaction At the tnmu time ther.i . Is n cl.ips
of conservative bulls who , while bellcvlnu
that the market Is de tlned for a urcitei
rise , yet i xpeut It to eomn sti p by step and
throucli a collide of frequent cautious rcal-
4/.lnKS This class Imve some Inllue-nce * upon
"Wnll stieet opinion , and they are likely to
ct nti effective precedent of taking fair
pronto , which wilt have' Its remit In chant-
I'lilng an ove-r-Hingulne temper Another
factor which tends to encouiage these fri > -
Inuent rualis-.lngi * comes from the area !
breadth of the matket With such nn en
larged assortment of N'ues as the list now
piespiit * * , there are always stocks which have-
not hud the average rltv. nn I , when rrlcev
weaken , thusu who have profit * on their
JioldlngM me- read * , to take them and bu * .
those ne-glectrd sliaie" > In liilef. It seenm
to be n rule In * Uexk operations that when
the mntktt I" a broad one , pilce.s advance *
inoto bv a zigzag movement than In a con
tinuous Minium line.
The weather and the e-rop conditions of
the Ia t l.vo wttks hnv * afloided a motive
for pessimist- ! ' and timid operators' taking In
ttnil , Th" bears have * uxnggiTiitril the tenoi
of thebe Kports and have * made bold ven
tures * on the bartst posilbl Ity that there
may be some abatement from the fulllllmont
of the great prospects that have contributed
to thq late advance. In prlre * Si long a
it Is not wholly Impos'lble that there mnv
bo 'ome dlcnppolntmi'nt In the corn crop
land a better teiult of the foreign harvests
than has hee'i i xpertpd , It mn > be prudent
to give the boars plenty ot rfpe , ns the best
ln ani of protecting the Inlet ests of the
bulls. Indeed , It stems likely that the next
upward spurt wll be mainly stimulated bv
the ovcrfe-lllng of the prophet * of crop dls-
astert' A few more da : r will settle these
uncertain ! es , but there will still rtmi'n '
those who prefer to postpone until the fie = t
line has been passed So that , on the whol * ,
it Is- not Improbable that we may have to
face a toilet period of vncll ntlan , probablj
culminating In n " hort" lntertct 1 irgi
enough to give another good upward turn to
prices
U Is not easy to fully explain the temper
of the Ixindun market for our securities
It Is still sending ' torkn home , and It would
t < ! cm that the supply held for Bpecu'.atlve
account must bu approiehlng extMUs Ion
After "itch a sti iking dpmoiiftnitlon of the
strength of tin- home mniktt and nf tht
ceitnlntv of still higher price" In UK futiuo ,
It is not Mippopahlc that this irallzlng
m.l'jes from lack of confidence In our mar
ket. Sentiment Mem to have much to do
* > vlth th" movement England tins' , at the
moment , s. me rather emphatic gilevnnces
j .ngalnst us The tariff Is a li'ltir pill , Hie
moie so btenute It throws a wet blanket
ujion an active levlval In the tndc of the
united Kingdom Tne po tponem nt bv
conpreps of lutlon on the CIIIMMICV ques
tlon IKIH no doubt Intensified the Engll h
distrust of our finance nt its mo t sensitive
nnd positive point Secretary Sherman's re
cent blunt utterance's , coming .iftet the'
famous Cleveland Venezuela me'-saoe , FC m
to have deeply rou ul the Ire of the l/ii-
elon speculator and the English people , and
BO FsrlouMv does the Englishman appeal
to have taken these matters to heart thit
( .oncelvab'y he thinks It pmdent to nivo
American securities the co'd shoulder
Whatever c.iu = o may be assigned for the
Br.tl'ih neglect of our securities , the fact
has little 01 no pe'recptlbli * effect upon the
Now Yoik market.
The London pre'-s Is reluctnnt to concede
that there Is any near prospect nf the ship
ment of gold to this countiy. We are told
that 0111 payments for Interest nnd divi
dends , remittances m.idc on account of
citizens traveling abroad , the payments to
be made on account of securities now com
ing home nnd foi the sugar and wool pur
chased In anticipation of the new tariff ,
will about offset Europe's unusually large
purchases In the United Stales. No knowl
edge , however , Is shown of the fact that
the indebtedness accruing on these Mjveral
accounts Including the laig-e anticipatory
Importation' has already been settled for ,
nud that our Importations arc showing n
largo falling oIT , while our exports are
greatly exceeding the extraordinary dimen
sions of n year ago. Present Indications
favor the prospect of the Importation of
gold setting In before the close of the
present month nnd running on Into an un
usual aggregate.
IIEAItS IIAVI2 AN ATTACK OF
Tlielr l"reiiiiinl \XKIIIIH ( Kill I lu Ile > -
iniiriilliVnII Street.
NEW YORK. Aug 21 While wheat has
been making Its splendid record stocks have
been largely neglected. Even les Intcrert-
ing than the record Is , the record vvoulJ have
been but for the fact that as soon as the
security market showed signs of halting all
the bear traders In Wn I Ftrret began to pep
away at It , hoping to bring nbout a setback
They have accomplished practically noth
ing. CJuotatlons for the most part have
merely stood still When , n week or ten
days ago , the bigger men of Wall street be-
Kcm Urpt to realize that wheat was * In for
this quick dash upward , many of them let
KO stocks bought nt much lower prices , tak
ing profits in the tremendous trading which
had developed on the Stork exchange. James
R. Kerne and othfr men of his Klze did this
Thry frJt that they them = ' * lve.s could Join
prolltnb' : ' In the boom of wheat , and Inci
dentally they argued that , left to Itself , the
-tock market might be expected to reict
conflder.iblv Upon one part of their prop
osition thev miscalculated. They have had
n chance to make Inige profits In the wheat
bulge , but ( they have not wen the flock !
market In nny imtoilul way disturb ? ! by
the throwing over of the Htooks they Bold
Taking St Paul as a fair barometer of the
stock market , and It may always he tl'keti
ns a Bate mPiisnire of Investment sentiment.
the result Is far from being what sold out
bu'l exported On last Siturday St. P uil
sold nt 027c At today's close It Is Wt n
decline feu the week averaging juat MSth ol
1 per cent per day. i
Bear attacks upnii the market during the
\vrck have been fpirlted , and s = ome of th i
sales have been cleverly executed. The 1m I
crop news tn wl lo boost gialn was utilized
with Its most horrible vis-age to try to scare
down Block quotation * * , But what tnibitnn-
tlal Btoclc market Interests saw wnB the
tremendous swell of the foreign demand for
American grain , and crop damage tnl-o. as
carociows , were dismissed ns Inconiequen-
tlal bes-Mde the fact that finally the countrv l
to have do'lar wheat In Wall wtre-et dollai
wheat has n magnificent tlgnlilcnnce.
"Wheat .at n do'.lr-r" hns been talked ol
often. No later than last fall that goal was-
locked for , hut the bulls were dlpnn-talnled ,
nnd wheat got no higher than lUNc , but this
wan a rcmaikahlc recovery , the cereal hav
ing sold In August nt 53c , the lowest prlM
with one or two pxrcntlonp ever renchrd In
Chicago. The excfjittons were fOc In Sen.
teinlmr. Iffll , nnd 4Sio in January. IbSi
In war times dollii wheat was not a nov
elty , and for HIP several succeeding "ears
that llgur was often reached , Hut It Is tht
record of the last twelve ) years that wi'l
prove most Interc'stlncr and pervo to Htiow
whether the Ftock market bears were wlt-e
In deflr'lnir In thi-lr efforts ) to depress- prices
Tim i elation between "wheat at a dollar"
nnd stock market values cannot but "rove
Intcrestlnir In 1 * > 77 whi-n times first be'nn
to show Improvement after the panic of 187 :
wheat Fold at- high ns Jl 77 and never fell
below the dollar mark , the lowest br'ns '
)1 01 , made In Auiriiit. Here are Home cam
ple prices of rit'rood ' storks In the 'ntte'i
month * Burlington , 10U4 : St , Paul 31-h , hnv.
Ing pri'vlousiv mid ut 11 In April : Northwest
3Wj , iifli-r Billing In April at 15 ; Rock Island
ICrJ , 20 per cent above lt pilci > In April
The frlUmlnr > curH wrro the = o of Improv
ing conditions throughout the country , the
p'ory of which had already been told In
thcHi ) columns The boom In stocks' In the
jenrB , J'-'O WO nnd US1 was but n ri'llex
of the inil n mnikct , and the latter year
wheat I'rouaht ' f 1.4.1 Burlington In the be-
Klnnlic of Unit year sold at JS2U. . St. Paul
at 124'i , Inter rpnchlmr J2li ! , Northwestern
at 1311 , and Rnrk iHl'ind nt 142. with n lutT
udvnnrp lo 14S ) . In 1SK ! nnd 1K.V ) the dollar
mark was reached tout not touched ugalii
till 1S-3 , when In Hontcmbor In the corner
enilnnr > rvd bv "D'd Hutch" U rold at JJ In
that monih I urllfKton sold nt 110 , St. Paul
nt 73 > 4 , N'TilivvAi-tcrn at lie. nnd Rock
Inland at 112U While these prices were not
the best of Hie year , they were Bharp ad
vances from previous prevulllni ; quotations ,
Burlington hnvlni- Hold earlier In the month
at 109U HI , Paul's prlcn wus at nn advanrei
from iVH. ) al a made In the came month.
Northwestern' * rl o In the month was Cl <
per cent , and that of Iloik Island 7ft per
cent Northwestern had previously been
down to 102 % in April , and Rock Island to
100'i ' In Jill ) . In 1KV ) wheat inndc Its best
price for that ycnr , JUS'S , In February ,
while In June It wnn 79 cents , Burlington
sold then nt 111 , St. Paul nt tVi- % . Northwest
ern nt 100 , Hock Inland nt 100 % . Wllh the
low priceIn Juno Burlington wan 100 % . 81.
Paul ( M , Northwestern 10G % and Hock la and
Tnc following year the dollar mark was
ngiiln passed , tliu highest flpureB being ex-
artly the i-nme an lho o of the preceding
year and wcie made In AtifTUBt , while the
lowest , 7I'S , wns made In robninry. In the
latter month 81. Paul sold nt GiVfc , Burling
ton nt 101H , Northwestern nt 107 , nnd Rock
Island at SS',4. In August St. Paul sold nt
72 } , Burlington at IWi'4 , Northwestern at
111 % , nnd Hock Island at 91 % .
Vp to this wetk's dollar record that price
wns re-iulic-cl for the last time In 1S1 , the
epiutallon being J1.10 , and later on sold nt
Vi cents. Burlington ndvnnce < l In that ye r
from 7Mi to 110. St. Paul from 51-f , to S2H.
Rock Island from C.T1 , to ! K > ' nnd North
western from 102'i to HS'i.
It hna long been n favorite theory of Wnll
street , particularly of the bear faction , that
higher prices for wheat mean lower prlcca
for mock" , but enough evidence has been
adduced hire to show that the ratio of nun-
ply n nil demand plays nn Important part In
the prices of both the rerenls nnd stock1 32-
curltlc * * . It has been the cn c where our
crops fell Bhort nnd the price ot wheat has
fonrcd through manipulation of prices nnd
a cornering of the product , stock vnlues
have receded bfcnuse thn shortage meant
lr s tonnnpc for the railroads nnil corresponding
spending decrease In earnings. But where ,
like 1S7'J , nnd the present year , our crops
wcie magnificent , while * those abroad were
prie * loallv failure * , the foreign demand
e'nus-d a ! PK tlm ite advance In pr ces , me 111-
Ing moie for the farmers , unprecedented
trafllc foi the1 railroads' , heavy Increases In
earnings , nnd brighter dividend prospectH
Thn bears can find but little to pleat over
In "wheat at a dollar" under present condi
tions.
tions.Wnll ; trtrt siees In dollar wheat In 1P17
the * exceptionally ln plrlng fuel that "dol
lar wheat" Is not for the middleman nnd
the pperulntor with the producer left out ,
but It l dollar wheat ptnctloally net to the
farmer himself This Is not a speculative
temp ruv qtiotntlnn on futuic" . Dollar
wh'-at this year Is for cash wheat offcum
a'r-'ady ' In half a dos-en cities of the oun-
tiv. Ami this year dollar wheat l llkellrj-
10 inere'n'i' inther than diminish Pecp'c who
doKinntlcnlly make Htat * incnts ns to what
the Kialn marko's may do are people who
do not usually have to wait lout ! to bo con
futed But the ln tlnp quality of this year's
price has back of It the Insurance policy
of an ubsullltn foreign demand unprece
dented All the Hptlni * wheat of the ye il
ls still with the farmer , harvests have only
begun. Gieat quantities of winter wheat
ire still in the hands of the farmer 111 = 0
The middleman has this year been caught
napping. Wheat sold by the farmer pre
liminary lo this rise Is relatively In'lgnlfl-
ant The gienl gain In high priced wheat
this year Is for the farmer and the rntl-
} roads.
1 As this wheat Is not at the seaboards or
u elevatrrs at great cities It demands trans-
) ortatlon IOIIR lmul ° for nil nf It. Toielgn
Ipinnnds for immtdlnte supply mean that
thN t-ins > portatlon must be made with n
IIB . This venr the nece sltl < s f ih sltuiilon
, 'orbld ratc-cutllnt * taetlcs What Is of even
greiter coiigqiience Is that the farmer. get-
Ing higher price" for his product , will not
lie lighting ngaln-t better earnings for th"
railroads ? . If there In anything c'ear In the
'Ituptlon It Is that the railroads of the
country certainly those centering In Chicago
cage will be able till" year to make lnte'11- '
Kcnt advances In transportation prices. The
rnrrmr and the railroad together get tiros-
[ icrlty out of the unprecedcnteel crop situa
tion of 1M7
During the coming week Wnll strcel Is
likely to eci more aggressively rcH'cted
tie" * bettor conditions than vvn i the i coord
of the Inrt week with its Interruption by
crop 'lamnere sen'-atlona'lsm. In half a hun
dred conspicuous stocks there are organized
pools ready for action the moment oppor
tunities for progress are nttrae-tlve.
H. ALLAWAY
UOMITI.V ) OP M3VOHIC IIAMCS.
I'reiinrntloiiN t llce-t Ileniy DriiiaiidH
for Vlonilo > Ioerrnps. .
NEW YORK , Aug 22-Tho Financier
siys. The weekly bank Htalement was not
rcg.irded as entlicly favorable from n
ruperllclal standpoint nnd seemed to ells-
icdlt the temporary rise In loan quotations
which was repoited for a few days recently.
The udden check in the advance during
the latter part of last week , judging from
the bank returns * , was well founded. There
ire ie.i80ii8 for believing , however , that
the statement does not exactly reflect the
condition of the banks. It Is a fact that
unusual preparations are belmj made to
neet the heavy demand foi monev for crao
purposes at the present time. No doubt
heavy liquidation of loans has taken place
In New York , and this may have temporarily
rily disturbed the averages from which the
weekly statement Is made up. A more
probable theory Is that the banks have
Increased their cash In order to be In a
position to meet all claim'- upon them , nnd
It would not -surprising | f next week re
vealed quite a diminution of reserves. The
Interior movement Is already well under
way , but the demand has not been up to
expec'ntlons ' The Intel lor banks seem to
be fairly well supplied with cash , nnd there
Is n prevailing disposition among- farmers
to hold back grain on a rising market , In
order to take advantage of the highest
price obtainable. There peema to be no
question that the loans of the banks will
show a continuous expansion In the face
of prevailing conditions ! , but depos'ts ' ought
to ehow n falling off poon. Never In the
history ot American- banking has there been
in accumulation of deposits * In this center
such as reported now , and never. It should
be also wild , have the banks been doing the
tiemendous business that has marked this
season.
London Mom-v Murkct.
LONDON , AUK. 22. Money Is abundant ,
n' though the rates rose Pharply at the be
ginning of last week on the expectation of
the withdrawal of gold for the United States.
The quick response of the continental ex
changes Indicate that If the United States
wants gold the continent Is ready to snipply
It nnd as a consequence ratet eased off
again. Silver Is fairly steady at 21d per
ounce , chiefly owing to the Indian demand.
Only a small business lia * been done during
the last few dayp on the Stock exchange ,
thu holidays , the disturbed condition of poll-
tics In India and In Turkey nnd the unsettled
condition of Wa'l street , tending to depress
pi Ices and to rertrlct dealings.
There was a slight Improvement at the
end of the week on the rtrength of better
news ? from India Consols , Indian loans ami
home rallB Improved s-llghtly , but there was
no advance In the American section , wheie
the business still continues very Pimill ,
though It is hopeel the ripe In wheat will
furnish n Illllp .nter on ,
The followluir show n fall for the week :
St. Paul , 1V4 per cent ; Norfolk preferred anil
Southern preferred , " 4 per cent : Atchlson ,
Lou'ivllle , Denver nnil Northern Pacific ri
per cent A few of the bond Issues declined
from Vi to \ < n per cent. Orand Trunks are
B. mew hat eacler , Canadian PaclllcH. how
ever , following Wall street prices A I lines
of Blocks are severely affected by the fnl
In s'lver .Mining securities are dull one ;
depressed.
Textile * KnlirloN.
MANCHESTER , Aug 22-It has been a
poor week for business. On the whole yarns
are depressed , sales from hand to mouth
prices * irregular nnd quotations nil aroune
nominally 1-lfid lower than thev were a we > ek
ago. The market IP doing1 badly as a rule ,
though the lxf t fabrics ore holding their own
fairly well The Inferior qualities , however ,
are hard to move The eastern business ,
particularly the Chinese section , Is tlmph
In n state of suspense pending the adjust
ment of exchanges It IB reported that there
are largo order ? on thn marl.et on the basis'
of 3ud foi middling American cottons , but
few spinners care to take advantage ol
them ,
London ( i rn I n Murk < - ,
LONDON , Aug. 22. Tne weather durlna
the past week has been broken , many shuri
thunder storms adding1 to the discomfort ol
general bad weather Wheat In the markel
was * 4si up on continental demand , which was
strong. The English mlllerp nre becoming
uneasy Callfoinla wlunt , July , sold nt 2is !
2d Kour was 3s dearer. MaUo was Cei
dearer Mixed grade ut destination nsked
15s 3d ; September mil October males was
quoted nt 15s 9d. Barley was Cd dearer.
American barley was quoted at 15s 11. Oats
were denier. Clipped oats , August and Sep.
tember , all porti * . vvap quoted nt 12s 3d.
( 'liie-liiniitt
CINVINNATI. Auir ! l-riXH'n-nrnieT.
funo JI311MC5 , family. J3 COOS 75.
WIIKAT KtronBer and higher : No 2 reil. II ,
COIIN 1'lrmer mid lilglitr ; No 2 mixed , 3014
031C1.
OATS-Aetlvc. No. 2 mixed , lOSlSC-iC.
IlYK ririn , No , 2 , 2So lild.
Hl'LK MHATH-Sle-adr at J3.43. Ilacon , nrm
at > C V I. aril , ulrunK at Jl (0.
WHISKY Active ut JI.20.
JltTJTKU ririn , fune-y Klsln creamery. IS'io
Ohio. HO lie | ilulrj. Si .
Hl'elAU-Mrady , Iianl rc'llnfM. tt OJH5 S3 ,
r.r. < ; -smmK nnd higher ot lie- .
OIIUnSK I'lrni , gexd to prime Ohio flat 7H
llnfYalo Slue * ! ; MnrUct.
JfrPPALO , N. Y , , Aug. 22-CATTLE-
8te > ad-
HOCJ3 Actives yorkers , good to choice ,
> 4 " ! 0i roughs , common to good , S3 WWJS.Go ;
pigs. Rood to eholce , Jl Mffl 33.
I.AMUS-Good to extra choice , { 52JQ5.43 ;
culla to fair. .
SIIUEP Cholru to Delected wethers , tl.10
iil.W ; culU ana1 common , i2.75Q3.75.
NEARLY A MILLION A YEAR
Qrcjit Gain in the rohoo [ Population of the
United States.
FIVE MILLIONS IN SIX YEARS
The T > penrlt * r no 11 Tnolor In < hc
I'lnu of Kdiie-iitlon CmiNlilcr-
ittliiMN lit lie * WrlKhoil 111
it .Sclinnl.
Striking proof of the growth of the United
States In BCliool irapulatlon Is furnlsheil by
the annual teport of Commissioner of Edu
cation Harris for the year ending July 1 , j
1S96. According to Dr. Harris the enroll
ment In ttic schools and colleges , both pub
lic and private , for that > car reached the
enormous figures of 15,997,197. To thcflo had
to be added 418,000 pupils In the various
pedal ecliools and Institutions , Including
business colle-gra , munlc conservatories , In-
llan nnd reform schools , making a grand
total enrollment for the whole country of
1C.41G.107.
A comparison of the'c figures with the
returns for the jcar ending May 31 , 1890 ,
shows an enormous Increase. For that year
the attendance wns Riven as 11,674,875 , which
wai then considered a remarkable allowing.
What must bo thought of an Incrciac of
4,740.319 , or over 40 per cent , In national
school attendance In * K jcftTS. A like ratio
of Increase In the totnl population ot the
country would place It many millions above
the last estimate- the bureau of statistics ,
which was 72,937,000.
Dr. Harris' icpoit says the 178 schoola
for secondary and hlRhcr education of the
colored race had sllKlitly over 40,000 student/ !
enrolled , an Increase of over 3,000 for the
lear. Their schools Increased by eKtcen In
number , mostly high schools. There were
2.-1.092 ptiplN In the elementary grades ,
13fiti3 In the secondary grades , nnd 1,155 In
the collcRhte departments. There were 4,072
colored students studying for teachers. In
dustrial falnlng Is a prominent feature In
nearly all of these schools.
TUB TYPBU'llITBIl IX KIlltCATION.
ItH AdiiililMKi'N i\lolle-il : liy Kxpcrl-
* nie'il TnclitrN.
Whether Instruction in the use of the
typewriter should be confined to schools of
the art , with stenography and typewriting ,
is n question not jet settled , says Charles
H. Durbank in the New York Independent.
Indeed , It Is by no means settled that
stenography ought not to be taught to all
children perhaps tven before our ordinary
cumbrous sjstem of writing. We can hardly
conceive that a knowledge of telegraphy
should bo m-eful except to those who are
to make their living by it , for not every
house can have a wire attached ; but a
method of quick writing Is useful to every
body. The use of t.'io needle , everybody
now admits , should bo taught In public
schools. PG that every girl shall learn to
sew , nnd so the primal y use of tools , It Is
now geirrally acknowledged , should bo
taught to bo > & . it enters into all our best
education i\ery family tan expect to
ha\o n sowing machine. And It will be
more and more- understood that a girl must
understand and be taught how to use the
fixed needle as well as the free needle
With the typewriter the case Is some
what different from what It Is with the
sewing machine. Like the latter the type
writer can be ued to make a living with.
Both typcw liter and sowing machine arc
useful In every house , the latter for the
women of the family and the typewriter
equally for both sexes. But the typewriter
Is useful not only for Its practical use , but
as an adjunct in the general education of
children.
The great blot upon the sjstem of educa
tion Ib the Immense waste of time required
in learning to spell and to write. Probably
no less than two yeais of every child's life
is wasted In teaming to recognize and read
words which are not to be pronounced as they
are spoiled , and then to spell them and then
to write them In a different script from that
In the reading books , as well as In a way
that differs from the pronunciation. For
scholais not tlie brightest the waste Is- more
than two jears. and they may never learn.
Our language has to be learned word by
word , like the Chlncbe ; for we' have an arbi
trary spelling for every word ; but , unlike
the Chinese , our language Increases the
difficulty ot education , because we make the
written page differ utterly from the printed.
Learning to spell and learning to write are
the most disagreeable , wearisome tasks set
before our children at ochool. They have ,
all but the mobt ambitious , to bo driven to
them , and their whole education la retarded
by this meet serious burden of difficulty and
i evulsion.
What a child can do only Imperfectly and
with difficulty with Its untrained muscles ,
with muscles that ought not yet to bo
trained , It Is delighted if It can do mechan
ically , automatically and perfectly. A child
hates to sit down in a cramped pcsltlon and
try laboriously to form a series of lettero
after a pattern , nut set that child down
before a machine , let It touch a key on which
Is the printed letter with which It ia familiar
In a book , and then let it tee that letter
perfectly represented on paper , the result
of Its touch , and that child Is delighted. Ho
will sit for a half hour at a time , and call
It play , copying a lesson. All the child's
ambition Is excited to do the work well , and
he can do it with no fatlguo of position or
of fingering. He has the satisfaction of
doing his work well , doing Itell by ma
chine ; and his rapid progress to an added
delight. Teachers who have had the ex-
peilenco In hchool of the uae of the type
writer , agree In this testimony , and so do
parents who are wise enough to allow the
child to learn the machine at home.
The use of the machine Insures accuracy.
The child easily ecca that his work agrees
with the copy ; It Is In the bame kind of type.
The fascination of the machine attracts him
to the repeated trials bv which correctness
is acquired. He sect ) that proper punctua
tion and division of words Into syllables ,
the right use of capitals , and the right In
dentation of paragraphs are all Important ;
and these niceties of manipulation which
uceiii relatively unimportant In handwriting ,
when all the attention Is given to the forma
tion of Ictteis , coma out In their real Im
portance when the attention Is entirely re
moved from shaping letters and U given to
spelling , punctuation , capitalization , etc ,
The child takes a pleasure In writing a letter
when he can bay , "This looks like a book. "
nut this Implies that a child begins to
use the machine when very joung the
younger the better. Children of G or C leirn
their letters on the machine ; there Is no
better way ,
nut If they use tliu machine they will not
learn to write a beautiful hand , nut how-
few do. The present system tries to teach
a copper-plate hand , almost always falls ,
and those who learn It glvu It up when they
grow old enough to write without thinking
how they form the U'tteiu. Of course pains
must bu taKen with loirnlng to write well ,
but everything must not bu sacrificed to It.
They Irani all the faster for the privilege of
doing correct work , almost from Infancy ,
certainly In the middle grades with the ma
chine * .
All this In not mere theory ; It lias been
tested and proved in practice. U has been
tried In many schools with good success ,
The principal of the State Normal school
at Lock Haven , Penn. , eajs :
"I have obnervc-d that atudont using the
typewriter make rapid progrcfs In orthog
raphy , capitalization , punctuation and ex-
pretalon , "
The superintendent of the Canandalgua
( N. V. ) Free school eays. referring to the
three typewriters In his school1
"I find them extremely practical , and be
lieve there Is nothing to compare with them
for developing good English , In the
copying that Is done by scribbling , which
makes legible writing by the majority of
pupll.j illegible , the typewriter would roan
bring a new order of things , i hive cenfl-
dence that a great future [ a before it in
school work. "
The Gloucester ( Mais. ) Hlph school was
the flret of the New England High schools
to adopt the typewriter as part ot Its regu
lar and permanent , outfit. Mr. A. W.
Ilachelor , the principal , saja ;
"Wo are more firmly convinced than ever
of the utility and high educational value of
the ' typewriter. Particularly doea this ap
pear' In. the line of Bagllik work lu which
the errom of puw-timtlon , spoiling , para
graphing and condtfucllon are rendered all
the more glaring and noticeable In the cold
typo of the machine. "
TheccttMlmonknEof experienced teichers
might be IndcPailtel : * tnultlplloc. . They agree
that the typewriter Is nn exacting and unsparing -
sparing monitor and critic , unrelenting In
Its warfare on carej Riness , and yet stimu
lating even to thifflA leflS , In Its re it-
me H against all Incorrectness It reprimands
for every blunder. U fa not a mere machine
with which a stenographer can earn a living ,
but In Its use is n. most powerful and fas
cinating educator.
IMllciltlonhl .NutOK.
Since the war Indian * has spent $180,000-
000 for public education nnd is spending
now $6,000.000 annually. H possesses school
property to the value of $20,000,000 , and Its
productive school fund amounts lo more than
$10,000,000.
Mrs. Phoebe A Hearst will bear the ex
pense of beautifying and Improving the Uni
versity of California , which Is to be done
on a grand scale. Two professors of the
university have just returned from Europe ,
where they engaged the services of emi
nent artists , architects and landscape
gardeners.
Governor Ilndd of California has appointed
Mrs. Phoebe A. Hearst a regent of the
State university to succeed the late C. P.
Crocker. Mrs. Hearst Is to equip the uni
versity with n series ot magnificent build
ings , beginning with one for the mining
department to cost $250,000. These buildIngs -
Ings am to be given as a memorial of Sen
ator Hearst.
C. C. Cole , ex-chlet Justice ot the Iowa
supicino court , and now dean of the Iowa
law college , says that Institution has Just
turned out the > oungest lawyer In the
United States The young man is Homer
Mlllsap. n Catlfornlan. JC years old. ills
standing was between 90 and 100 In the
college examinations. Ills'youth , ot course ,
precludes his admission to practice.
The late James liarclay Jcrmnn of Albany ,
N. Y. , left $50,000 to Williams college for
the establishment ot a Uarclay Jerman pro
fessorship , $30,000 for n professorship of
political economy and International law , at
Mlddlebury college , Vermont ; $30,000 for the
Homo for Aged Men In Watcrvllct ; $103,000
as an endowment fund for a Prcsbjterlan
church in the village of West Troy , nnd
$100,000 for the Kairvlew Homo for Friend
less Children in Watervllet.
Prof. Jerome II. Raymond , who Is to leave
hlu place at the University of Wisconsin to
become president of the University of Wist
Virginia , will be one of the joungcst men
In the country to occupy such a post. He
Is only 29 vears old. Fifteen years ago ho
was a newsboy In the streets of Chicago.
He saved money suniclent to pay for lessons
In stenography and became an expert short
hand writer. Hy lily ability In this art ho
was enabled to pay his way ut the North
western University , from which he was
graduated In 1S92.
As a parting gift General G. W. C. Lee ,
the retiring president of the Washington
and I > ee university , has presented to It
portraits of General Washington and General
Lafajette , both of which were once the
property of General Washington and for
jcars adorned his home at Mount Vcrnon ,
and vvcrc finally Inherited by General Lee.
Hoth of these pprtralts are the work of
Charles Wilson 1'calc. They are each three-
quarters life slze.'and the one of Washington
lus special Inteiost attached to It as being
ono of the firbt palnlcd by this artist. It
was painted in 1772 , when Washington was
10 jears old. The time when Lafnjette's
was painted Is yncertaln , and It is not
known how Washington became the pos-
ressor of It. Gcupial Lee la a son of Robert
E. Lee and a great-grandson of Martha
Washington.
t'ij > si ( s I.-OI WBSTBKV VITBK.\\S.
HCTOC-H of the * \Vn'i ' * Itiiii < > nilMriil li >
( lie reiiiriil < .t > MTiilH-iil.
WASHINGTON , AUg 21. ( Special. ) Pen-
B\on \ < * granted , ls > ue pf August 2 :
Nebraska' Orlg.nal Geoige II. Cooper ,
Bentilcr ; James L McCldeiry , Wood Lake ;
Ezra F. S'epheivs , Crete * . Original widow ,
etc. Ariletta Tiimblyn , Humphrey.
lovvn : Orlglnn.1 Qeorgo O. Wheeler , East
DCS Molties ; 1'dwiird McGiognn , Hearing ;
Georgu II. Jennlsop , Mnson City ; Wllll.im
A. Gieen , Onavva. Suplementnl Ernest
novvermnn , Dccatur. Original widow , etc.
Elizabeth A. Schubert , Webster City.
South Dakota : Kel < > 'ue and increase
Alonzo 51. Mncumber , Hot SprlngM.
Montana : Original Henry Taylor , Town-
" Colorado : Original William S. Newell ,
Denver. Original widow , etc. Elizabeth A.
H.irlovv , Anncondn ; minors ot William S.
Green , Florence.
Issue of August 3 :
Nebratka : Increase Frederick Taylor ,
Booone. Original -widow , e'c. JInry Kin-
yon , Benedict ; Molona Cummln , Stunner.
Colotado : Original Geonrc C. lit inker-
huff , Argo ; Lawrence Duggan , Monte Vista ;
Cornelius Murphy , New Windsor. Oilglnal
Luclnda McCormlck , Pueblo.
lovvn : Original Lennder Baldwin , Atn-
llssa ; Peth Henlel , "Davenport. Additional
Levl E Metcalf , Belmond ; Joseph S. Lodge ,
lovvn City. Restoration nnd reissue John
H. Con ry , Mnquoketn Increase John
Cllppenger , Newton ; Charles L. Hcnz , Bur
lington : John C. Matheny , Platttevllle :
Oliver n. Symons , Webster City. Original
widow , e'c. Lavlna Jnqutnot , Hedrick ;
Kittle Fulmer , Kldora.
Issue of August 4 :
Nebraska : Orlglml Alonzo nice , Exeter.
Reissue ( special , August 9) ) Joseph W. Skel-
ton. Broken Bow.
1 Iowa : Original William Wet , Keokuk ;
I Emery S. Jones' , Council Bluffs ; William
I Mark , Blockton. Addltlona1 William Lo.v-
ery , Corning Increase George Yeley ,
1 Lyons ; Jonas Keihlc , Des Molnes ; William
I II. Brewer , Allertown : Andrew McConnolee ,
W.ntcrset : Ezeklcl 'Nelson , Des Molnes ;
Thomas Van Sickle Calliope. Reissue Mai.
colm W. Wl'cox. Do Witt. Or'glnal ' widow ,
etc. Mnrv A Howe , Icolf ; reissue , Mary
I Wright , Mount Hnmlll.
Colorado : Original Joseph 51. Lamb , Hill
side. Supplemental James Starr , Coloiado
! City. Orlulnal widow , etc. ( special , August
9) ) Mary M. Watts , Denver.
North Dakota : Original Spencer C. Stll'-
vvlll , Kargo.
IPPUO of August C :
Nebraska : Orlplml Edward B. Freeland ,
Omaln ; Ir.i II. Dilley ( deceased ) , Ainold.
Reissue , additional and increase Nicholas
Grass , Page. Increase John W. Bruce ,
Broken Bow : Daniel Liming , Pawnee City ;
Daniel Ben'-on , Seolln.
Iowa : Original Frederick W. Porter , Grin.
nell , AddltlonV Philo II , Woods , Spencer.
Restoration , relbuuo nn Idncroaic Daniel N ,
Tlcc. IlrdfMiJ Rp'toratlon nnd Increase *
Robert Stewart , Rlrhland. Increase Jobeph
! W Gould , Davenport ; Robert Campbell ,
! Mwcntlno ; Jo-vph A. Puckett. Dccutur ;
Thomas J. Wllcon , MuquoVteta ; Francis M ,
Edglngton , Muscatlne Relrtsue John L
i Ounn Cedar Rapids. Original widow , etc
, Mniy A , 5nrrlott ! , Viola ; I oulsa Cotter ,
I Emerson : Cluni M. Roun , De-corah ; Luelnda
' Do'ontr , Muriay ; minor of J"erry Rea , Hnzle-
ton ; Mary A. Graham , Cherokee ; reissue ,
Annie E Forrest. EJdon.
Colorado ; Original widow , etc. Kll a E.
LHt'elleld Monte Vlhtn.
North Dakota : Increase Isaac Uuncs ,
, Grand Forks.
IB-TUB of AllKUPt fi :
I Nebraska : RelfHuct nnd Increase ChlHon
| Hand , Edgar.
Iowa1 Increase * William A. Franklin ,
i Hampton ; Jametsvll , Burke. Mount Ayr ;
I Richard H Horgnp. Newmarket. Reissue
, Wellington South , J Coon Rapids ; ( ppeclnl ,
AiiKiibt 11) ) Henjnmln , R Lofton , Lee. Origi
nal widows etc - Maiparet Illlnn , Iowa City ;
I Kmma L Towijy > y , Mount Etna , ; supplu-
mc-ntal ( tpeclal , August 10) ) , minor of John
Logan , MelrobeJ-
South Dakota : MildreaHC-Willlam R. Wll-
cox , Sioux F.illC , , Original widow , etc
Amnn''n J. L' > iKJijIche , Hot Fprlngn
Montana : Original widow ? , etc. Eliza
Balemiin , Helenltf Sarah N Tnullkl 1 , Boze.
man ' ' ' -
Colorado : Increase- Thomas S , Kliker ,
Lake City. y"1'1 , f
ir/'Mri ill iI'PffcllllMlf ItCNltVIIN ,
SPRINGFIELty'lll ' , . Aug. 22-F. W
Iluldokoper of Nw York bun resignd na
president of the Chicago , IVorla A SI I.oulH
' ratlroud. It la thought that elthei E I' .
Klmball of New York , president of the St.
Louis , cmoaffo & pt. Paul railroad ( Bluff
| line ) , or H. W Gay of St , Louis , ceneral
mnnarrer of the Chicago , Peorln & St Louis
road. vvU' be selected us his successor ,
C'nliiiii I'ntrlul , > ot Aniirulilkl.
NEW YORK , AUK. 22. Manuel PluuaH , the
supposed Spanish anarchlrt , who was ar
rested here ) on th Cunard liner Umbr'a
yc-Etcrday , has proved to iho satisfaction of
tl.c > federal authorities that he \ not an an-
I nirM-t but Ib a much | iereciiteJ Cunan
patriot , lie presenli-d proof that lie VMIP not
nn anarchist , which Jws satlstled the olllcluls ,
and he will not b $ molested.
r'onlrlliiKloiiH of .Ifwrlry.
CLEVELAND , O , Aug. Z2.-At the close
of the Christian Alliance convention this
evening a collection for missions was taken.
Eleven thousand dollars wan contributed
within a few minutes * , maklntr (14,000 In all.
Several women threw diamond rings into
the collection boxen and many men did the
Bumu with their tfolJwatches and jewelry ,
OMAHA LIVE STOCK MARKET
Week Winch Up With a Nice Avorngo
Saturday Rnn ,
BUYERS BID LOWER FOR FAT CATTLE
Not Anxious fop the Stuck Ktrn nt tlif-
' I'liilcr lirnili-H Strnily
mill rirnt UOUN Aelve * mill
11 .Mukcl
SOUTH OMAHA , AUK. 21.-nocclpts for
the days Indicated were :
Ca'tlo. HOKSheep. . Ilore <
AllKllit 21 . 1,816 4'M 1,103 123
AURim 20 . 2,712 4.170 830 3
AllfiUSt 1 ! ) . 2,370 4.8S4 .
August 18 . 3.612 6,772 2.392 110
August 17 . 3,313 7,347 1,011
August 10 . 4.C97 2,503 f.,477 1
Annual H . i.Mi r..nr 14
AllKUit H . 2.091 3.1W 295
AURtlst 12 . 2.071 3.724 3.111
AllfiUSt U . 2.1M2 6.601 1,456 . . .
AURlMt 10 . 2,374 7.620 1,321
August 9 . 2,429 2.21)2 ) . . . . S6
August 7 . iii < j 4 , on . . . 3
Cattle. HORB
This week . iVtV ) iO.271 11,212
Inst week . . . 13,12 * 27,4'i4 C.2 3
Snmo week ' 9(3 ( . 1H.9M 21,2 < il r31
Hnmo week W . 20,101 12,011 2,130
S.ime week ' 91 . 11.U2 42,270 3,114
Same week ' 91 . 12.1SI 37r.l9 4.W5
Same week ' 92 . 13.070 2s,977 5,780
The olllclnl number of cnrs of stock
brought In today by cnch road wns :
Cnttle.lIoKH.Shee-p Il'is's.
r. , M. & Bt. I' . Ilv . 1
Ml .ourl 1'nrltlrHy. . . . 20 2
Union 1'nclllo System. 11 21 3
IU. . As M. V. Hy. . . . 4 17 . . 4
S. C & 1' . Hy . 2
C. , St. P. , M. & O. Hy a 4
H. & M Hy . 22 2fi
C' , II. & Q. Ilv . 11 1
K. C. & St J. Hy . 1
C. , H. 1. .t P.-entt. . . . 3
C. , II. I. & P. west . 2
Total receipts . 79 78 5 4
TIiu deposition of the day's receipts vvns
ns follow * , cnch buyer puiclinsliiK the num
ber of hc.id Indicated :
lluyers. Cattle. HOITS Sheep
Omaha "I'nckliiK Ct ) . 1 Mil
(5. II Hammond Co . 17 l.ios il
Swift nnd Company . 411 l,27fi lf.2
ClUKihy Packlim Co . 4S2 1,099 93S
H. Ueckcr nnd Oegnn. . . 91 .
Vutihant & Co . S3 .
J b Curey . I .
I , oliiuin & HoUiscHllds. . 20 .
Huston & Co . 18 .
Squltcs . 191
HuiZ . 2G9
Clldiiliy P. Co. . 1C C. . . . 727
PlnnkltiKton , Milwaukee . . . . 411
Other bujers . 7S .
Total . 2,001 4,977 1,433
CATTLE There were seventy-nine cars
received , but twenty-six were direct to kll- !
eio , so that the supply on wile did not ex
ceed 1,100 Some very good natives , and this
best western range heifers of the ne.i'on
to date were Included. lx > vvor and dull was
again quotable of the fat cattle tr.ule , but
In other branches nte.xdy prices prevailed.
Buyers of fat cattle seemed to be on easy
street nnd uniformly bid lower prices on
about all grades of fat stock except , pci-
hnps , a few handy little steer" . Man >
dealers railed today's bids a quar or below
the week's high point nnd bu > ers did not
appear very anxious ovcil at the decline ,
ilalmlnp that they \\ere steadily losing
money and that we were still out of line
with other places There uas no snap In
the trade at nny lime , and at Us close there
were still good cattle In first hand0. The
western offerings were mostly feedets and
sold to go back to the country.
Good cows and heifers llrm with others
steady was the general report for this
branch of the cattle maiket today. Hull"
and Stags were al-o steady and \enls Ilrm ,
the market for all kinds of butchers' htock
elc-slng up In good shape. Sales Included
western hclfeis at $1 75.
Stockci anil feedei speculators genet all >
try to cheapen up a little on Saturday to
help pay for carrjing their purchases ovei
Sundav , but theic was only a moderate sup
ply offered , while the outside Inquiry was
larger than usual for the last day of the
wcv-k. Desirable grades ruled steady with
i onimon to medium kinds a shade easier ,
but all are higher for the week.
HOGS \Vita fev cut * , --.even cam. 4,112 hogs ,
\ \ lilcliAcre just about the fame ns lost Situr
ila > 'a receipts , the week's supply totals 50.2T1 , ns
against 27.454 Hst week nnil 25,2f.l the name week
last > ear. While the quality Is very peed for
tie fccaEon , there Is pome Incicnt-e - In the num. *
ber of coaree , hcavj hogs ns compared with a
few weeks back 1-lRht lings were only la unall
Mipply. After fluctuations , both up und down
the market closes ttrons at the summer's highest
IlKures , v.hlc'1 lm\e aot beea reached before
plnce Ma > 1.
The market opened up nctlve nnd fitrong to Cc
higher , with the demand good for both packing
and shipping account. Under t ic preo-mro of the
liberal demand prices were later a full nickel
higher and the pins were Boon cleared , ulth
the clobc linn nt the full advance.
Heav- , hogs sold mostly at } 3 73 , with } 3 70 ns
low mark , mixed hogs and medium weights at
J3.7W3 SO nnd light hogs at J3 S < Mf3 The bulk
of all the hogs sold at } 1 70ii3 SO. ugalrbt J3 KUji
370 jc-derda * . and la t Saturday ,
SHI3r3r Toclnj'B lecclpts , five double decks. In
cluded two direct to the killers. The demand
was good for both mutton and feeding grades at
fully Kteady priced , but the market Is 10 < ifr ] > o
loner for the week , after having about 18000
more sheep on the four western markets than
Inut week I cal receipts wire 11,212 , against
0,213 a week ago nnd C.233 n > cnr ago.
CHICAGO Mvn STOCIC JIAHKET.
HOUN Ail111111 * \utfli or Two Sli < * < * ] >
IjiiNN Due til IIfu3 ( * * * | | ( .
CHICAGO , Aug. 21 Prices for cattle today ,
ns Is usual on Saturday , wue largely nominal ,
there being too few cattle In the pens to make
a market Sales In most cafes were nt prices
unchanged from icsterday. L.aige receipts of
rangers , Texnns and natives arc looked for
Monday.
In hogs , buyern took hold freely at nn nil-
vancu of from 5c to lOc , and the supply was
well taken Salts of hogi were at an extreme
range of from J3 53 to 14-"i'i. Hrgely nt fr mi
$3 00 to JI.10. and pigs MM largely ut from
f3 2r > to ( \iVi. I \ . Prices win about 5c to 7'2o
higher than a week ago. The quality of the
present receipts Is uneven , but nvirases vir\
will , although there Is a good percentage of
IUIKS nnd pigs.
I'llces for sheep and Iambi have slid down
lrn ! to 2 o this week , under heavy reci-lpts. To
day fiHHllng lots of range sht-ep brought from
JJ M to JJ G Honi lunvy Hi-stern Bhecp vvero
taken at S3 63 , nnd tin * best natlMS sold In a
rmall wiy at from (3 75 to { I Uimbs sold at
flora $350 to K 2" . , and jeirlUigs nt from J i > 0
to J1.10. reedlivc lambs biought fiom Jl to
$4 25.
ItecelplH Cnllli * . 600 head ; hogs , 1C.OW head :
nheep , 3,000 head.
St. I.oulN IUi > StooU.
ST I/3UIS , Aug -CATTI.G-IUcclpts , 1.000
head , flilpnientx , ! ! ,000 head , tnarkit Fteadj m-
the shipping nnd export uteers , HKW6JO : bulk
of hales , M 70J < 5 10. drefped beef and butcher
fleir ! , (4 23S5.00 , bulk of hikx , (4 D084 70 : light
Uteig , under 1,000 Ilia. , J375JJI55 , bulk of tul i
$3903430 , Mockers and feedi-is , J2.7JW4 5S , hulk
of Fates , $330ff415. cows nnil helfert. timtHta.
bulk nf I ows. $2 OOf/3 10 , canning cowe , $1 f & 3 S3 ,
Tcxui and Indian t > letrs averaged belter than
Inut wiek , grutfeis , $1 C04 30 , bulk of sales at
} 33'ifi3,70. cnws and heifers , $ ; 1013
HOdS Ilecclpts , 3 ( head ; shipments , 3,000
head , market , lOc iilcher , Unlit , | ( O'.ftl 10 , mixed ,
$3 S0 4 Oi , liinvy , $3703410.
Hlliii' : Uecelpts. none , hlilpmcntn , l.COO head ;
market , KOW | , but steady ; niitlxe muttons , S3 ICir
3 SO , mockers , tl COftS ( X ) ; culls nnd bucks , $ J OO Ji
2.J5 , lnnib , $ J3Sft5W
IVIIIINIIN ril > IJ\i * Sdie-lc Market.
KANHA8 CITV. Auff 21. OATTI.n-Hectlpts ,
400 head , market ttonily and umhanxed , only re.
tall trade ; Texas ftcim , $2 J Off I 50 , Texas cows ,
$1 7 { JJ.I6 ; nntl\o fleers , J30JW52' . , native eow
and hflfcMB. JJ WiTI 00 , e-owf , heifers and fredrrn
137niH 45 , bulls , } 2S5iH 15.
HonH Receipts , MO head , mJrket strong to
7'ic ' hlRhcr , hulk of sales , > 3(2'i ' , heavies , J3 lOfli
3)iO. ) packers , $17683.87' , $ . mixed and light , $373 ®
J'liii. Yorkcra , $3 KOQ3.)2'i. ! pUs $3 Z5/3 / 10.
HHIJI3I' Hecelpts , SOU aead , market steady ,
butulow , lambs , ! 3 25G5 10. iniltlons , J2 5083 M.
Ni'iv Viirk Mt < * Murk ,
NH\V YOIIK , Aug -IIIII'VIZH-Itecelptii. .
tSS hi lid. No change In cables KxporU : 1.SS2
cahes , 31 ihee'p , 4 3X ) iiuarlrrs of beef
CAI.VUH Itee-elptB IDS head , quiet unl about
stead ] , . \cals. $ ) Wfi 75 , butlennllks , $3.75l 00 ;
\\enleriis , Ji.l2'i
Klllii' : : AND I.A.MIS-Hrcelpts , 3.C2C head.
more active , good sheeii llnntr , sheep , $ . ' COW
4 10 Ixmlis , $5 COQ5 79.
IIOOH Hece-lptK , 3 , in In ml ; easier at $ < SOjJi
4t5.
Siork In
Record of rerclpts of Il\e clock at the four
principal ma.ijets for August 21 :
Cutlle Hogs Khiep.
Omaha . 1U5 ! 4.VJ2 I. in
Chicago . 10 15 ( W 3,000
Kaniraa Oily . 400 500 2 , ( . )
Bt. l < ouls . . 100 2,500 200
TutnU . 3015 i.H)2 ) C.CC2
Ilvirii < iol fjrulti nun I'ruv IxliniN ,
MViilJ'OOU : Aug. Zl. WIllJAT-No ! red.
weMern , winter , tlrin , in , .No , 1 red , northem
rpilng , Him , 6s Id ,
CGHN American mixed , spot , firm , Z 1'id ' ;
American , old , firm , 3 3d ; August , nominal ,
Ktptcmlxr. ijulel , : u M. October , ijule-t , 3 4d.
ri OUK St. IXUli ) fancy winter , linn , 9s 9d
IIOl'H At London U'nclllc coust ) , tteadW
ecs > > .
ritOVIHIONB Beef , extra India mem , flnn ,
CCs 3d , Pork , prime mem , tine wettern , firm , 47i
Cd ; line medium , weeten , llrm , 43u 9d. II ami ,
ihort cut , It to It ILL , ittady , SSJ. llncon , Cum
e cut : s to 94 lh , nrm tin. > hort rib * ,
fo to Jl Hi * firm. t < M , long rlrnr tnuldioi ,
light , U to M Ibi , nrm t ? fd. Inns clcnr mUl
did , ) invy , 40 In (5 U < , llrm : * . * ! i rt < lenr
niliMI'o , hrnv ) , 4S to 54 It * . ttuckft nhmultd ,
clour tielllrs , 12 tu 14 ll > . firm 11 M Bluiuldcm ,
MU rf. 19 to 14 lh > , Mfiuly , : t > Ijird , rpot ,
firm , 2 > 9J ,
CIIKCSiAnifrlran flnrM coloreil. nrmi 4ti > ,
TA1.IA3W Prime city , nrm , l * i M.
OILSColtonfMil , Liverpool refined , Heddyj
Hi C-l Turpfiillne spirit * , itcady , Sl 3d Ilnnln ,
common , dteadyi 4 M
DOI.I.AUvin : \r in : vcnr. * CIIICACO.
OpHoii Toiii'licM Thut I' In
ure mi ' ( 'liiinue- .
CHICAnO , Aug. 21. Dollar wheat wai
reached In ChlcaRO todny. The September
option reached that llgilie n few mlmitcs be
fore the close nnil nound up nn excited
day's session nt M'fce , nn advance of 6'4c
t'lnco J csterelny. December closed nt nn
rciunl Bit In For the first time flnce the ic-
cent phenomenal advance began , lenders of
the bull cllnttc let go of Inrge blocks of their
holding" , which In n measure relieved the
I strain The excitement In wheat was shared
. by n'l the other markets , Hading In corn
cspeolnlly being tremendous Corn closed at
Zc advance , and oats wound up P c higher ,
1'iovlitoni after an early npuit sank back
and closed unchanged to TV hlghri
Seiitembci nhc.it , which clo-vil Krlday nt
Me , oi oned toOay anvwhete from flc to SSc
and kept plunging around wildly for nn hour
between ihoso llgures and W5' ' . < * . neocmber
wis p u'allv ' erratic , opening nt PifiOT'tc ' , nn
advance of nbout 4'4 ' ( * , and fluctuated be
tween tliat price and iVic nnormous qtmn-
tltleovero nold nf those Ilguies bv people
v ho had prcvlotf'y bought It. the ales of
one of the beit known . peculators , \V. 1C.
l.lnn , aggregating milllotiH of bu liol.s. It
was current opinion that bad he- not come
Into the maiket the long-looked for dollar
market would have been reached In n Vcrj
few minute ? after the opening It was not
dllllcult to account for the lenntkabli- openIng -
Ing advance. Liverpool rpioted npot Ainri-
Icnn red winter wheat nt a 41ir advance
\\hllo California vvhent v\ns 7-40 per linslut
hlghor. Crop leports fiom the noithwest
wete even worse thin have heietoforo been
received , = emi > pteJIctlonp pacing the rtop
tl ere at not to exceed s"ven or eight buiheli
per acre. The week's export of wheat and
Hour from both coasts amounted to . " > Slv.iHX )
Im rompiicd with 1,400,000 bu the \\iek
piovlotii nnil 2M1.0iX ) foi the coricpotidlng
week of the yeat befoto Clearance's fiom
Atlantic ports aline foi the last l \ ctltfour
lioini v\ero e < j"al In wheat and Hour to
4,700,000 bit Chicago received 211 cnrs. on ! * ,
llftecn of which were of the contract grade.
The "hlpim-nts hence were 212 OOJ bu Mln-
HP.ipolli nnd Duhttli Hce-UeJ 241 nts against
4Ti it jear ago. Aigentlna did not ship an * ,
\\heat to Unropp this week Hy II o'clock
tlu > market had assimilated nil the ear ler
offering- * and hungered for more to "itch ex
tent that It losn ngaln with more than
Its original voracity and leaped like a trout
at n fly to secure the September wheat
orfe-rrd at ' ) 'V , May at the same time bring
ing Jl The confliHMilnl maiKetH weie about
as exc'ted n tjie nngllsh markets nnd this
fact had much to do with the Hiiirt fiom
07c The I'arls advance vsas citiil to 4'xJioc '
per bushel and Antwerp C'ic ' per bushel
Abnnt ten minutes l fore the close $1 wai
bid and accepted 'or n b'ook of Spntember.
amid much excitement Till * pi Ice was held
only for an Instant , however , plenty of
wheat coming on the market about this time
and at the clo = e wn bringing I'J' ' ' c , while
JiflHc was bid for December
Hil'lness In the corn pit was on an Im
mense scale , millions of bii' hels changing
hand1' during the Feslon. . The pit was
ciovvded all elay with excited ppculators
and price fluctuations wtie rapid and vie
lent. BhortM made a mad iu h to cover
at the opening and foiccd prices up 2V o
over yeMerdaj's closing. Holders of long
con let go there , the selling being prompted
by predictions cf warmer wcatliei In the
corn belt Hlcvatoi people also sold heiv-
lly on the advance and a Ic reaction
ensued The market was Influenced greath
by wheat , however , and prices again ad
vanced Local receipts were heavy 1,001
i-ara Crop reports were veiy poor S p-
tembcr opened about 1'ic higher at 31c , and
sold between 30'ic and 32e. The close was
llrm at 31MT 31'ic.
The bujing craze was alco manifest In
the oils market and an extremely big busi
ness was ttnnsactcd. Shoits covered larse
llne , nnd nil months weio taken fiecly
Sympathy with wheat and corn was of
course the chjc'f Inlltirnce. Local lecclpls
wcie C4G cars. September opened " -c * higher
it IDc. v\hlcli v\as the lowest price of the
dav. Il told up to 2Jl < c and do ° d at 10\c
Provisions v\ere al o in great request and
'harp advances all around wcie scored nt
the opening. Ai mom's brokers bought
heavily of October ribs. Heavy selling by
Cudahy and outsiders brought about a ic-
aotlon later. Cables were higher and the
hcg market llrm. At the close September
pork was unchanged nt JS G7'4 , September
lard 7'4c hlgirer at J4 a" , anil Se'ptember
ribs 7' filOc higher at $ .130fi5a ! < i.
Estimated receipts for Monday : AVhcaf ,
400 cars ; corn , 1.C20 cars ; oats , S15 cais ;
hogs , 33,000 head.
Leading futures ranged as follows :
AriTe-lfB I Opuii | lIUIi. | Low. | Close. lYusd'y.
V. he.lt-
5-rpt. . . 07QOS
Dec. . . . Ill } *
May. . . U7
Coin-
Am' . . . . : io' <
Sept. . .
Dec. . . .
May . . . 3-ili
Oath
Sept. . . . 19 in
Dec. . . inu 2 111
Miy. .
Pork
Fept. 8 85 8 or. 8 074 8 O7'i '
Oct. . . 8 M5 8 7f > H ! > 7 H 70
Dec. . . 8 07W 8 8'JVa H ti.4 H 80
Lurel-
Eept. . . 4 1)5 ) 1 05 4 S7S ;
net . . . 4 7'JSi 4 ( J7H 4 70 4 115
Dee. . . 4 80 1 774 4 80 4 7iiH
Sept. . 5 30 5 .10 9 224
Oct. . . . D .16 D M D .10 ( i 26
No. 2.
Carh quotations were as follows :
riXJl'll Active ; winter pitentsf JISOiT300 ,
Etralghts , $1 MW4 fO , Fprlng Epeclals J5.73 , uprlng
patents , } 4 rnjf 1 00. bikerl50fflSO. .
\\IIKAT-Nei Sfpriig , 93'i ' i&$104 ; No 3 s.iilnj ,
9251 U7c. No t red $1 tok.
( JOHN No. 2 , 31I.C.
OATS No. 2 , l'i'te , f. o. b ; No 2 white , 20iic ,
No 3 white , 21fi23c.
IlYK No 2 , 63V4C.
IlAltUin No 2 , nominal , No. 3 , 27Q31CJ No
4 , 21li31c.
rnxsii : NO. i ti.u',4
TIMOIHY SI3IJD Prlnii * . J2 73
PHOVIblONS Mess poik per bbl. , $8 'OlfjS 75
Uird per 100 Ibs. , $4 C5 Short ribs Bldeii ( loose ) ,
fi 20ii/fi 4r > Dry Mlted shoulders ( boxed ) $5 lOif
5 25 Short clear bides ( boxedi ) 50S-5 Wi
WHISKY Ulstllleis1 finished goods , per Ral .
$1 20
SUOAU-Cut loaf , $384 ; granuHted , $521.
itnndarcl "A , " t5 09.
On the 1'roiluce exeliiuiKe ted ly the. butter mar
ket was firm , cionmtrlcs , llttlTc , dairies , Id
.
ClUiHi-Quet | nt 7'i8Sc. '
iociS Krcart. 12V4c.
I.IV12 l'OULTIlMarket ftondy , tuikrjs , 'J@
lOc , chltkeiiH , Ti.v , rprlnK , lOc , iluckn , SilUc.
XinV YOIIK ( SHMMIAI. MAHICnT.
( liintiidoiiH of ( lie * IJny oil neiiurnl
Cum in o cl 11 ! IM ,
NHVV YOIIK , Alls. -l'JOlHt-TtecelptH , 18.-
253 bhlH. j exports , 17,100 bbl . Market ijulet , but
held de-cldedly lilglier , Minnesota patents , J3 & )
fioOi ) , Minnesota biUers , M .T-WI CO , winter | ut-
cntB , } 525 < 3'5.75 ' ; winter HirulehlH , UIM/IOO / ,
winter low uriidc-i. J3.4 < M3 W. Ilyo flour ,
Btroimcr Bupeiilnci bWiJ 10 , fancy , tJlO&IH
COftN MI3AIv-8lrniiR , > elovv | we-Blern , 7W.
ItYK hti anger , No. 2 western , &f'.c , car lots ,
*
1IAIU.13Y Dull ut 20V44J30C.
IIAItUCY MAI T-Qulel. wextirn , < s6We-
< TgM
Im , epot , ulrsnK , No 2 rid , (1 VJlt eptlona
opened Btionif on fevi-rlHh bujlntc , nnd udvancul
excitedly nil Ilio mcmlnir on hlKhir cables ,
lurk'o vvcekl > i-xporln mil Kineiul bullish newn ,
closcil Chfl-'ic ' net higher , mlllnir up He merion
on the curb ; No. 2 led , Aucuat , cloud lit
11.07'i , SejitunUr , 11 OlMf ! u < - * c , closlnu t
fOHN IteeclptB , 133i > 00 bu , exports , 101,003
bu , pot , BlroiiK , No 2 , Sft'ic ' Ojitli/ns opi neil
btr > HB und advanced all d ly on nn uctlvii trade ,
Htlmulatrd h > u bullish fiollnt , " nnd the jumji
In wheat , AucuH elOBed ut SC'.fco , Ktplemlxr ,
35iQ38 > ic. clomnK flt 2C"jC'
OA'lS Hiedpls , 237.CO' ' ) bu , , txjiorlB , W.S43 bu ;
Biot , mroiiK , No , 2 ! ' < OplloiiH fairly actlvo
and Htiiiiij- , with the other nnrkem , clonhiK f'io
net hlcher , AUKUII cloned ut i'M , .Vpliinbcr ,
*
1IAV Quli-t , fchlplilnir , 45iCOc ; fc-ood In choUi ,
C01i75c.
45 crop , 6Ko ; 1W8 crop , CfiSc ,
I'aclllo coaBt , crop 3ilK , ISjCi irop , C9c
illDI.S-riiin , ( Jalvexton , 124ill54C ! , lliirnoB
AJICB dry , lac , 'lexuilry , 12 12'/4c. ' Cullfor-
nl.i. 17c
J.13ATHiil ririn , hemlock FOC | , Iluenoa Ajrcs ,
IlKht to heavy vvrlKlit * , li)4fjue.
\VOOI.-rtrm , Mine20u7c , jiulltd , 27ff c ,
Texan , lOtilCe * .
I'HOVIHIONH-Ileef , Hnn , family , IS SOBIO 00 ,
beef ImtiiU. I2I > , | mckc-t , IS ( * 4llM < l Cut imutn ,
firmer , plc-kled | jellle , Cli4jte. pickled thouldire ,
CilOHc , jdcklecl IUIDIB , 8-i(8 ! ( , c. l.ird , tlroiiK ,
weutirn eteam , SSOo , refined , utioiiK 1'uik
Btrontt-r , old nimj , t'jK'il'JM , lieu > 1025il06U ,
rhort clear , JlO.OWinoOj family , JlOl'ijill OU. Tal
low , iiulet , hut t < lt-ud > , city , S\v , counliy , 3' ' ( j
3'sc , a to ijuullty.
Ht'TTiK-Htc.eIiil : , 3023 j.kKii , market flnn
vuHtern credinei ) 12ilk < : ; KlKlim , Uc , factory
7'/v4llc ' ; Imltullon creamery , 10fil3c.
C'lliKSi-Itfc-elpH , C330 iik B , market Mrudy ,
larKe , while , SUSjS'.ic ' , large , colored , fc' 6ivc.
Final ! , while , SHOi c ; small , colored , 'JV'J'iC ' ,
part bklmt , 6iilC'ic ! ; full tklmi , 3'ific ,
iaaH IteceliilB , 3,437 l > km ; market firm , state
anil Pennsylvania. HViftlCHc ; wentem , He.
OILS Petroleum , dull. C'ottonieed , firm , but
not active ; prime crude , nominal * prime crude ,
t. o. bt , mllll , I7oj prlmt tummtr J'tllow , ZOtf
, off iiimnur jfllcw , UaUHc , huttfr rr clfi ,
JMfJte , firlmo nimmcr vthllt tOWa , t > rlm win
ter ytllon , SJc Ho ln , qutd , rtmlntrt. commnn
jiiR M 4S01.M Turvenllne , qut t nt ISSJ
i !
' llll < l'l' : * ' oinfo'le ' , fair to utrn.
MOI.ASSHS rtrm , Ntiv Orlrnn * , open ktttle ,
Rood to
. .MKTAI.S I'lR Iron , * tendy. touthcrn , low
II 00. northern , J0 ! SOfllJ 00. Copi cf , utronu , brow.
rr 111 25. Ix-nd , strongi broker. , J W , Tin ,
quiet.
OM.VII v unMiiiAi , UAiucirrs.
Conilltlon of Trnilt * nnil IliiiitntloiiB
on Simile * nnil rntu * > I'roilncp ,
KClOS-llulk of onlc , ltM2c *
1.t'TTl3ll-Common to fair. 6fl He ; choice to
fancy. Iffflto , tcparntor creamery. IDc ;
cieAincry , 12c.
VI3AIr-Cholc * fat , tt to Ito lb . , quoted nt
"
" Inruc nnd conrun 4iTf > o
nr. fp , rocki. 3 < T4i
- .T"--- , ' " . - . Clicks , Cc , turkfjs. . .
* "at rtrMl " con not
wnnted
, 'IAV Itplnnel. * 5 fO. mldlnnd J500 , lowlnnil.
1400 , rje Mrnvv Jl 50. color makes the prlii * on
haj , llshl bales fell the best , only top t-rndcs
brlnr top prices
IlHOOMroUN-Kxtrcnifly slow mlCB new crop ,
fleiivorod on track In cnuntrv ; choice f-rce-n lf * >
tvorkltif enrpct per lit. 2O2Ue ; choice Rrten ,
runnlns to hurl rnjuxnmmnn. . IHc.
vconTAiii.ns.
W-l'rr dor
Tcr doz 150200 ,
'er tinlf hit LaM
, r < 1 1 ' . .iHO
LIMA IlKANS-Prr II. . 3c.
! ; ' . 'A Hrinel-iilrlie.1 miv > . iv-r bu. . Jl to.
( \ lllinillnnip : crown l' < c
l'OTATOis-i'r Im new rnc
\TL'UMUI.ON-H Crated 'per doz . tl 754J2 CXH
" ' ' M--l'el . .
n ' T\ ! - I.H-k.l ,
25ifri ro
. bu ,
I'lJAl'lIrS 1'er ca e. Crawford * ,
- - - \ll----tlnttlclt. . per cnic J200.
llnrdj
roijNi v rir\H-ivr ei-- ( * . ji : : ,5ft rn.
3 emovvN mt.\ris-i-er : inskct , Mwse.
TUOP1CA1. IMUIITS.
' " .V 'r ' < " . ' . * vecl , JJ.fO
1
r\lov
H V ' ' " " ' c"1"1" ' Jl ° ilieileo
HANANAS-t'holce IniRe slok I'cr h.mch.
J2 003223 ; nirdlunilri < il him. he- .
MIS-CIII.AMOL-S. : :
NUTS AlmondB , C.ilifoiul i. pel 11. . . larca
Mze. 13e. Itrnzlls , per Ib , liv ; LnniKi wnlnuu. .
! ' .tr .V ; : fnlus"f llltl' ' HWlJc. fti.ndaids , 10
Hi * , filbert" per li > Un. , picnns polished hirse.
liiioc. Jumbo. Ilri2i- , IniRe Inciiory nuts. Jl
pel liu , coin-units , 4itc ciutl ,
riS ( ! Importe 1 fancjI crown , 20-lb. boxes ,
12c. 5 crown. 50-Ib bove 1311 c.
11ONI3Y I'liolce 13ifl5e.
' | ' " - ' " J"lu' ' | 1cr ' " - " llbl ' ' ! ' 3' t > cr
MAl'1.13 ' - - - can * , each } 2 23 !
Kill. cum. tmro. per dnz . J12 CO , half gnl cans ,
J623 ; ( itinrt enni J3 DO.
rnnsiii MHATS
111II3--HI3O 1IU131 Uooil native eicc'i" 400 to
CCO lb . C'40 , good foicciunrtcis , i-tecra , 5 > 4c , good
hind.jinnlor. . S'jc ' , \\rsuin Bte-iis ic , fancy
heifers C'4c ' , Rood heifers. Cc , mind forcinmrti rs ,
helfeiK , He , Bond hlndiiu.irteni. lalfern. kc , good
cow Cc filr cons. 5.c ( ; common cov-s. jt , cow
forequaiteti. 4'tc , cow hlndniurters. 714.
1113131" C't'lS Tin lerloln * . - | .c * lionet. i trlps
SHc , Btilp loliiK , fi c , rollSijC , Klrloln huiti. So.
shouliler clod ti c , iiunp liutts 4 * .i , stcr
chuck" . 4'ic cow e nicks 4c , l.oni . lcii chucks
4e. ton plates. 2'Jc. Flei r pl.it.s , 3 < - flank
Fteak , CHc , loins. No I He , loins , No 2 IDe ,
loins. No 3 , fcc , fhloln ends , No 1 , o ,
rltii , No 1 , lOc , ilb . No 2 Sc ,
libs , No 3 , fc ; Meer rolind" . 7c ; cow round * . ,
t\fi , cow rounds , ehank on , 7'4c ' , cow rounds ,
Fhiink and runni off , S. , trimming. 4c , tiocf ,
-jhiinU-r , 2 4c ; bialns , pet doz , 3picBweetbrendR ,
| < r lb. , lev ; sweelbirods ( calv.r ) . per Ib 40c ;
kldnevs per do ? . Hie , ov Inllft euc i 3c liver * . ,
per Hi , 2c , hearts , pel lb , 2c , toiiKUe-s per
Ib. lie
Mt'TTON Ijimlix. 8'4c ' , phcep , 7'4c , maiket
racks ( loin * ) , Uc betel nickhort ( ) , 12c , legs
nnd paddle"ic ; 1 iinh less. I" ' , menus nnd
- > | p\vi 3c , toiiRiies , ench , ic
roilIC llrc oil | ilfc 6'iiCi dr. . ' 5cd hogs , to ;
tenderloins , lOe loin" , Ic , ppnre rlli-i 4c ,
hnm fnus-.iRC , buttfc , thoulderi , rniiKh , Be ,
ihoulilcti , pklnncd , 5'4c , tilnnnlni-s , SVjC , leaf
linl not i endued To , heads , cleaned 3i ,
pnoul nnd cars. 3c linckbune * * 1'jC ' , ehe.k meats ,
3c , nc * k bone2i * plKs' falls , 2c. plurks
each , 6c , chlttcrllnss. Cc , hock , ic ; heart- , per
doz , 21C , htonmchs e.ich 3c , tongues , each "i ;
nldnej" . per doz , Ifc bralni , per do * , 15o ;
plgB1 feet , per do2"c , livers each , 3c.
1111)1 S , TAI.I.OVV 13TC
lllDHS No 1 Krecn hideW , No. 2 , srecn
hides. O'tc , No 1 halted hides , ic. No 2
green silted hldc , . . , No 1 veal calf , ! < to 12
lb * , S'te. No 2 veal c.ilf , 12 to 15 I On. , tc. No 1
dry flint hides. lOSilSc , No 2 dr > flint hides 05(1 (
lOc , No. 1 do salted hide * . ! i < FlOc , part cured
hides , 'io per lb less than fully cured.
Slinni1 I'lH.TS elrem talii.l. each. 23BMo.
Krcen rnlted , shenillnRS ( short vvooled early
bkln-0 each lie , dry ehcarluiKS ( short vvoolea
early tklns ) , No 1 , each , 5c , dry Hint , Kansna
nnd Kelnatki butcher wool relts. per Ib , ac
tual weight , 4g3c , diy flint , Kansas und Ne
braska murrain wool pelts , * > cr lb , actual
weight , 3JJ4C , dr > flint Colorado butcher woo !
pelts , per lb , actual vvcU M , 4j5c , dry Hint
Colorado murrain wool Pells , per lb , actual
weight , 3@4c , feet cut ofT , us It Is useless to
pay freight on them.
St. I.oulH ( iciicriil MnrUofH.
ST. LOUIS , AUK -riXfIl-Advanccd to
conform with the rUe In wheat patents , J5 OOfP
583 , strnlKliti , Jf 05CI SO , clear , J4IHIJ20 , me-
dlum. J1C3W3M.
WHHAT HfKher , cloFln * ? with an advance of
54c for Aiiuust nod Septemlwr , 5Sc for Decem
ber nnd 56sC for Mn > . tpot , coirenpondlnKly
lileher ; December , the principal option , opened
27 c hlRher , advanced 7ic moie , declined l o
nnd subscqucntij ndvanccd 2-4C clnFlni ; nt the
top A wild openlm , ' was expected , BO that when
Jl was hid In the pit ilKlit after the bell tapped
no surprise wns felt , although a lound of cheer *
followed. The feeling was fenrfullj fcvcrlrii and
unsettled , but f peculation was really light nt
this point row outside orders were on the m.cr-
kct nnd ninnj local trudirs dU not care lo oper
ate while the market wns HO wild There was
not so much news , the usual market Bomlpie \ -
iiiB luckingns trndeis were too buwntelilnir
their deals and the private wires were Hden
down with orders The feellns continued
stialned. but Rinerally vtiy bullish , nnd as all
dome tlo marke'ts went booming- lain In the day.
COUN Advanced with wheat At one tltna
ic ( ndvance wns bid for Mil ) , but Beptembcr
bad more callerB. nnd uftei Belllns lV4c higher ,
It declined 7 c , May nlco diopplm ; 1'Ac ' I iter
nnd the close nbcut
them wns u general recovery ,
IVc above jetterday t-pot , dull but higher ,
with little olfcrlnR , No 2 cash , 27c , bid , bep-
tembcr , 2S'c ( , Ma > , SS'ic. ' . . . .
OATS While futuies were -.Irons and hlehcr
there was no triullng us no one would offer
to ucll hpot , higher. No 2 cash , elevator , 19'lo
bid , track , 20 , No i vvhltu , 23t.Me. | beptomber ,
19 > io. May , ZZV.c bid.
UYn IIlKhci , 01'4ji.2c ' , trnck.
COHN M13AIlllKher nt Jl fPffi C5
1IIIAN I'lrni , east Hack , 44c , eat.1 track , to nr-
HAY Quiet nnd easier , new timothy , 4IfiOc.
miTTiil-Murl : > i t Ilimcr , cienmery , 13aiSc [
dairy , HSiJ4c
IX(1SScarce nt 12c
1'OUI.IUY fhlckens i-tindy ; old licnn , Olto ;
fprlnw , k'ic ' , ducks. rprliiRH Cc , ge-ete , npllns ,
& ' 4o , turkess cprlnRs. 12i(12'ic. (
WHIfalCY-JI 20.
CO1TON TIUS I'm'mm i-l.
1IAHIINO ( l'ncliuniiil
MfJTAlUad , firm ut J3 70 , bid Bpellfr ,
' "
"I'flOV'lhlONS fork , firm , standard mfBs , Jcb-
hlmr in new , J8 TO , old Ijird , bliihfr , prlma
MMii'n H47'-i. ' cliolee , | I62'4 llacon ( boxed lots ) ,
extra khort c-leni , JC 25. ribs , JC25 , shorlu , J6:4',4. '
Dr > salt m-niii ( boxed ) thoiildirs , J5 , i-hort cleur.
UI3'l3'l1'Trt' < -l'lnur , 3000 hldn , wheat , 133,000
bu corn. 1-2 000 bu ; oats , 44 000 1m
HICII'MISNTH Dour. 6010 bhln , wlunt , 53,000
bu ; corn , 12C.OOO bu , imtH , ( i 000 bu.
ICiiniiiN Cll > MnrlilN ,
KANSAS CITY , Auc -WIU3AT Hard solil
nt from Ml/i ( ! * c < ' , clcwlnif nt lhe lop firlcv. , or
Cc < lilKhir than > eelerda > soft sold at 1104 und
Jl 01 , or 3c above > c8lerda > s lik'heit prleu re.
ri'lpw today were Xvn busheln , nBiUiiBt M.400
tbo Mime day last > ear , No 2 hard. ' . ' 2''t'u'JCc :
No 4 Kifii'ii. ' No t Miff. 'I7'4 ' ll 01 No 1 85IJ0
DJc , No 4 , Me , No -.prlnr. . He , No 3 , fMZ31c.
COIIN 2c hlRhcr followlnu Clilcnmi advance !
leedptfl , light. dtniJiid , fair. Sepl ml-r , 2tVio.
No i mixed , Hiinplu on track , 5j2Cc ; No , i )
white , M'jc. '
OATS Market nbout V4o hlicher , demnnil light ;
No 2 white , nominally 2 tf2le
HY13 No , 2 , nominally COc , No. 3 , 4Sc.
HAY Markit fairly ncllve , about tli-udy ;
choices prairie , 25c lower , Jl 7 rholco llinot.iy ,
JKOO
Ilim'1311 I'uney rnnmcri V4 < * liltlK-r anil ac
tlve , cifiiniery , KfTlDVii * , dairy.
IXiOH Murket tead > , Mltrourl and KiinsuB ,
lie
VlliiiiriiiiollxVlimf nnil Kloiir.
MINNI3AIOI.IH AUK -W1IHAT Keptember
opened 4Ke hlKlier at i > V.- . ' ' brokn to Hl'ic. ' nil-
vanccd to a" ' ei nnd ilond then- , December
ipinid ut ' > 490 and cloud ut ! iCc
rijOUIl 'fraile In ail Hi' In lalenU Ixx-ul
millers rf | > rt marly nil ofTeiv to iloinotlo buy-
eiH east and win > e > l.rd.i ) afternoon ucctjiicii ,
TorelkniTB urei not cenuallv | IU > | HK jiuleiilB , but
are tuklni ; IUIRO iiuuntlllis uf clc-urn , flrrl put-
on I * Jl C4j575 , ncond jiatintB , ( f > 5085 I'j , cltuis ,
J3 1583 75. ,
Cllllfiiriilii Ui-lc-il rrnltN ,
Nl'.W YOIIK AUK -CAI.iroltNIA DIIM3r >
riHUTH-CJuItt ivnp r.itiJ npiilii , prime wlra
tray. 5Hc { ur pound , wood ilried , prime5o ;
choice , Co , fa.ic > , Cl c I'runui , 3HQ > ' ! iC M-r
pound , an lo ilzu end iunllly | ApilroK rojnl ,
767ti.c , Moor pnik Rfi'jc I'e-nchc > , unpeeled , 4ii >
tc peeled lift 14 per pound
JAMES E. BOYD & CO.
Telephone 1030 , Omaha , Neb.
COMMISSION
GRAIN : PROVISIONS : AND ; STOCKS
I1OAIIIJ OF TJtADK.
Dlr ct wlrta to Chlcato nl Ntvi rorfc.