The Perry Daily Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 297, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 4, 1894 Page: 4 of 4
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^Rou0.vV«|(
BANK ROBBED.
Masked Men Seize All the Money in
Sight in a Kansas Bank.
THE
pension claims.
Several Tlioii**iid Affected by a Ult rul-
ing of the Departuieut.
Washington. Sept a. — Several thou* I
j sand pension claims arc affected by j
Jour recent rulings of Acting Secretary
(of the Interior Reynold*, eonstruiug
GOOD ROADS.
Many Interesting Experiments to 8« yv
Made at the Columbia Meeting .'alien The market wa quiet ateer* weak
b | .o 10c lower calve* and Lulls kteady feeder*
weak Texas catt'e barely kteady The fol-
MARKET REPORTS.
Kmiim« C'itjr llitt nlw'k. •
calve* -lo. ^Lipped yesterday 4.uo7.
C ASH1EH SHOl DEAD, the act of January* 1S'. 3, which pro- K()VI) \| \ k I \(' \| ll'lll VI-' Tl's/I owlnir are representative sales
of nontlAH .11\1.1u .u itlll.in 1 r«> 1 pressed HLEI' AVU LXPuKT STk.fc.Ks
THE COMMISSION OF INQUIRY.
Ihe three rr.nlleil.ni appoint)-.! t>v Pr. aidant ci ««land to In vi-Ntl 'ute the
Kt-rnau. of N«« Vork
I l'e.M.a, lb regaided 0
i,,..,, _ . , . ; • • ••uiiuiHiuurri-f labor. John D.
. f t, I ,"f K lnV'fr !v aud Judge Nicholas K yVorihlaglon el
) of the ablcut lawyem of Illinois. w
EASTERN DROUGHT
New York State Burning Up for
Want of Rain.
KUINOl S FLOODS IN TEXAS. in Kansas
— | "f judges using fr
The Valley of the l.enua and Other Ntreaiua
Laid U'MHte Many Live* Thought I
to He Lout Kallroad Irm k
Washed Awav.
KANSAS OFFICIAL PANHRft.
Ktery stair miller Well Su|i|illo<l by lli*
Kallroadn.
Tofkka, Kan., Sept V.—Labor Com-
mishioner Carroll I). Wright's admis-
I sion at ( hicago last week that he car-
, u,'l a Pullman pass has caused a din-
to the propriety
railroad transpor-
tation. It has been the custom for
railroad companies to issue passes to
all state officers and district judges
und the recipients have used them
without concealment, ami until this
year there has been no public criticism
Hcffalo, N. Y., Sept 2.—Western or eveu discussion of the practice.
New York is almost literally burning 1 <iov* 'swelling and all the other
up, the drought being without preee-, Ktu^' officers and their subordinates
dent. Farmers mourn the loss of crops ' I,av*' PasM's'an(i uI1 except Associate
und fear havoc by tire and starvation ' ,'ust'ce Allen of the supreme court use
of stock. Counties like Chautauqua f ^UMn- Justice Allen admits that he
and Krie, which have dairy interests of J,:is 11 st'^* says that he has rclig-
great magnitude, are the chief suffer-1 ioUh,y ! •* fare ever since he took the
era, and unless rain comes speedily and oftice. It is, however, known
copiously this entire end of the state ' Us,,,l them when district judge,
will experience great financial loss, i ' '''''f Justice Morton and Associate
The Canadian province of Ontario is Justice Johnson admit that they have
similarly parched. | passes and that they use them. Justice
In Middlcport, Look port, llrockport I J°i'UKoii s use of his is confined mostly
and other inland towns of Niiyfara ,n the l-nion l'acillc between To()eka
county hay fields lie burned and black- 11,1(1 ,lis ,l,"iu* in Ottawa county and oe-
i#. ed; crops have been dwarfed, fruit j t,asi°,lally to Kansas City. Chief
lias deteriorated and trees have been Justice llorton seldom uses a pass ex-
shoru o/ their foliage. Through the j ''^pt on the Santa Fe to Atchison or
f*iit section there has been a general I Kansas City.
attempt to overcome the ruin by arti-1 Mt ltDKltKl) fits WIFE.
iicial means.
In Allegheny county the loss will A N<,,,r""k Woman Killed and Hurled by
aii ""11 to many th.Misan.ls of ilullars. I Chitim.. Ncl,., s",""': -A murder
ti inUoiaif"1,', I i T sl,.l"nkf'""""u-. Das ji.st unearthed i„ this part of
thlid to half and it has become neces- ,|„. country. (In May last \nna
haiy to feed in more than half the l-Yohn, wife of Jacob Krohn iliaap-
I'raVs^mmM'rs'ha 'l^r,'Sl 'l' 1 "f! pcared. Her husband told the negh-
i Nr 'i"'1111", borH liad ™> 11 visit to her
. . i . _ ? serious damage j brothers in Cedar county. This story
was believe<l until a few days
has been done to the pasture lands and
many fanners have to feed their cattle.
Oats and buckwheat have been affected
seriously and fields of the former have
been cut before maturity to save them.
The drought has ripened the potatoes
prematurely and the yield will be
small.
Lake Chautauqua has fallen feet,
Chadakoin creek has shrunk to a rivu-
let and Stillwater creek is utterly dried
up. Farmers about Jamestown are
carrying water many miles to feed
their stoek. Acres < f pasture lands
have been burned over and lires arc
raging in timber lands, (ireat damage
is done to the dairy interests and a
milk famine is feared.
lU'l.NOUS FLOODS IN TKXAS.
San Anionio. Tex.. Sept. The
Southern Pacific Railroad Co. at mid-
night sueeeded in rebuilding- the tele-
graph wire between this city and
I valde and other points in the district
which a flood due to fierce rains had
devastated yesterday* and then for the
first time it w is learned positively that
many lives wore lost, just how many it
will probably be several days before
auyonc can possibly determine, as
there arc a number of small settle-
ments in tile Hooded section several
miles I railroad and telegraph com-
munication.
1'or a distance of 100 miles east and
west and extending south from the
Southern Pacific railroad to tile Itio
Grande, SOI) miles away, thousands up-
on thousands of acres of pasture und
farm land were flooded and 40 miles of
the Southern l'acillc road were swept
away. It is estimated that the il;
to crops in the valley of the Leona
river alone will reach ?.">00,000, while
in the valleys of the Saco and Nahinal
rivers the losses will be fully as muuh
more. Many thousand head of cattle,
horses and sheep were drowned.
So far as known now at Dhanis two
children were drowned and at Uvalde
three Mexican families and six other
persons met their death in the raffiiiif
flood. Nothing has been heard from
the settlement of seventy-live families
below Uvalde and the worst is feared
fur them.
.IIImh Gould'* Filial Love.
Kingston, X. v.. Sept. a.-Miss Helen
i.ould. who proposes to beautify Uox-
bur.v, Delaware county, the birthplace
of her father, where she has erected a
church to his memory, lias bought a
large tract of lowlands surrounded bv
hills, through which a stream fed by a
liever-falling spring Hows. Several
thousand dollars will make of the low
lands a beautiful lake and add to tin
attractiveness of the duaint villauv
ago,
when the neighbors became suspicious
at not hearing from her, and knowing
that the domestic relations of the
couple had not been the best, began a
search, which resulted in the finding
of a grave in the barn. No
body was found in it, however.
1 his soared the old man so
badly that ho acknowledged that
his wife was dead anil said she was
buried 7."> feet from the barn. The
body was found in a badly decomposed
state, but was recognized by neigh-
bors, the head showing marks of vio-
lence. A coroner's inquest was held,
and the jury returned a verdict that
Mrs. Frohn came to her death by being
struck on the head with a blunt instru-
ment in the hands of Jacob Frohn, her
husband. Frohn was arrested and
bound over to appear in the district
oourt in October, (ireat excitement
prevails and threats of lynching were
heard. The prisoner lias been secretly
removed from here and taken to Sid-
ney.
The Attains Case.
Washington, Sept. 2.- Sccretany
(rresham yesterday received a com-
munication from Minister (Jrav, at
Mexico, in relation to the case of Ed-
yvard I. Adams, the Texan convicted
of murder. M iuister (iray had made a
presentation of the case to President
Diaz, and asked that the sentence be
commuted. President Diaz informed
Mr. ( ray that the Mexican govern-
ment was making a thorough exami-
nation of the case, and that if it were
found possible to comply with the re-
<|u««tt of the minister such action would
be cheerfully taken.
Itarrett >lu*t llaiu;.
Santa Fk, X. M.. Sept. '. In the tei*
ritorial supreme court yesterday tin
decision of the trial court sentencing
.lames liarrett to be hanged for murder
at Kddy was aflirmed. liarrett was a
former railroad man from Missouri.
While suffering from alcoholic mania in
a reservoir graders' camp at Seven l.'iv-
ers he ran amuck with a shot-gun and
killed John llollihan whil
asleep in a tent. Harrett's
takes place September 14.
A Deputy !u ( barge of SU groe« Ac-
i u ed of luceudlarUm U Halted by a
Mob and the I'rtaouem
Are Shot.
Salina. Kan , Sept. 1.—Two masked
men entered the Itank of Tescott. is
(niles north of here, soon after it
jpened for business this morning, shot
the cashier dead and, seizing all the
money in sight, rushed to their horses
and r«xie away southward. The
•ashier had hardly opened the safe
this morning when two men rode
rapidly into town. Their slouch
hats were pulled down over their
faces and it was not until they dis-
mounted that it was seen by one or
two persons in the vicinity that they
wore masks. Leaving their horses
unhitched in the struct they entered
the bank. The cashier was busy at
his desk and looked up to be eon-
fronted with a revolver in the hands of
one of the men, while the other leaped
over the counter. The cashier grap-
pled with the latter.
After a brief struggle, a shot rang
out and the bank officer fell back with
a bullet through his heart. He was
dead when citizens entered the bauk.
flic two men then seized all the money
i n the counter,rushed outside,mounted
their horses and rode away at full
sjiecd. They secured several hundred
dollars, but the amount is not yet
known. (. itizens soon started in pur-
suit and Sheriff Allen was notified and
organized a posse to try and head the
desperadoes off.
six nf.gho fimin us shot.
M km i'll is, Tenn., Sept. y.—For over a
year the people in the northern part of
the county ubout Millington have been
kept in a continual state of excitement
by incendiarism. Hums and d welling*
have been burned and recently the
buildings on the Millington fair
grounds were destroyed. Suspicion
finally pointed to Daniel Hawkins.
Robert llaynes, Warner Williams, l£d
Hall, John Hayes and (Sraham White,
negroes, and yesterday they were ar-
rested near Kellyville, in the western
part of the county, by Deputy Sheriff
Richardson.
The deputy started with his prison-
ers, all chained together, in a wagon
for Milliugtwn. When they reached
Dig creek, ' miles west of Millington.
somebody in the woods by the roadside
called out: "Don't try to cross there!
I lie bridge is down—come this wav."
Richardson got down and, taking the
horses by the head, led them into a
path that opened in the direction from
whence the warning had come. It was
dark in the woods, but suddenly Rich-
ardson saw two guns aimed at him and
a stern voice said: "Throw up your
hands!"
"What does that mean?" demanded
the officer.
"None of your husinc
reply, "throw 'em up."
The oflicer obeyed, and when the
negro prisoners, divining the purpose
of the unseen mob, attempted to leap
from the wagon, a volley rang out from
forty or fifty guns and they fell back,
wounded and dying. A dozen of the
mob leaped into the wagon, and threw
them out. Volley after volley was
poured into the struggling mass, and
in a few minutes all was still. Hawk-
in's head \\*is almost shot from his
shoulders, and some of the others were
terribly mangled.
The mob, after making sure that all
six were dead, mounted and rode away.
Atchison, who was with the deputy,
then mounted one of the mules and
hastened to Justice Hill's house, some
distance away, and notified him.
The lynchers were not masked, but
the otliccrs recognized none of them.
An inquest was held on the bodies
this morning and the jury, which in-
cluded two negroes, found that the
prisoners had come to their death in
the manner state I "at the hands of
persons unknown."
Hawkins was lirst arrested a year
ago with several others, charged with
the burning of barns and houses in
the Kerrville neighborhood. They
were brought to trial, and two of them
were sentenced to terms in the peni-
tentiary after they had made full con-
fessions. implicating Hawkins as the
leader of the band of firebugs. Hawk-
ins got a new trial, however, and
after spending some months in jail
was re lea stM 1 a few weeks ago. Since
that the burnings had re-commenced,
and the Millington neighborhood as
well as Kerrville suffered.
vides for an increase of pension from
Ss to SI'2 per month on account of I
service in the Mexican war. The act- i
iug secretary holds that the increase I
granted under the act dues nut com- !
rnence at the date of the act. but from I
the date of approval of the increase '
claim in the i>ension bureau; and that
the increase does not apply to the case
of widuws.
The act, says Judge Reynolds, does
not include those j>ersons who com-
posed Powell's battalion of Missouri
mounted volunteers, who were direct-
ed to be placed u|n>ii the pension rolls
subject to the provisions of the act of
January 29, lss?, pensioning the sur-
vivors of the war with Mexico.
The department also holds that the
fee of claimed by attorneys, under
articles of agreement, cannot be al-
lowed, and no fee in excess of 8? can
be paid, as provided in thu act of March
3, lHftl.
The C Mrago Civic Federatluu to lu%e tl.
Kate CiaiubliiiK lu That City Tha
Kauaa 4 haniplouahip VI uu
by WtuUeld.
HT Hints AMKKICA.
The Helffluiu <io
amine «mi
Washington, Sept. :.\ Secretary
Morton is in receipt of advices from
the secretary of state of a cable re-
ceived from the United States minister
at Brussels to the effect that an order
of the Belgium government subjects
all American cattle to forty-five davs'
quarantine. An exception is made for
cattle en route before August but
this only on condition that they be
killed at the public slaughter house on
arrival. Dr. I). K. Salmon, chief of
the bureau of animal industry, refer-
ring to this quarantine, said:
We were buildln*r up quite a little trade in
Belgium, a line of cattle sliip> having been es-
tablished between New York und Antwerp.
This exception noted in regard to cattle shipped
before August Indicates that the roneesslon
uliowed by the British government, pennittiiiK
the landing of cuttle provided thev be siuugh-
tered within ten days without leuvingthe de< k.
is not to be accorded by the Belgian govern-
ment. The ulleged cause < r thes. restrictions
Is the sickness of some cattle recently landed
from the United States, which some a Isfucre
has pronounce i to be contagious pleuro-pneu-
Cattle in question were part or a ship-
ley. and none of them
•u subjected to infec-
inonia.
inent sent frojn
could possibly h
Hon.
Van
pre-
1 s U a;
.. A.
was the
PYTHIAN NlNTF.KIIOOII.
The Supreme Atteiubty at Wttfthliiffton
Fleeted Olllet*i*H yesterday.
Washington. Sept. The supreme
assembly of the Pythian Sisterhood
yesterday elected officers for the ensu-
ing two years: Mrs. lieorge Bemis, of
\\ orchester, Mass., was chosen supreme
chancellor, tosuccecd Mrs. A. A.Young,
of Concord, X. H. others were: Su-
preme vice chancellor, Mrs. ti. L.
\Nert, Jersey ( itv, N. ,1.; supreme
late. Mrs. W. A. Dillworth, Xebri
supreme mistress of 10., Mrs. I
Small, re-elected; supreme mistre:
arms. Miss Anna L. Mueller. Rhode
Island; supreme assistant mistress at
arms, Mrs. Robert Smith, of Ohio: su-
preme I. <}., Mrs. J. Loring of New
York; supreme O. (J.. Mrs. K. C. Cole,
of Maine; supreme organist, Mrs. ,J. 11.
Brown, of Rhode Island.
OFFICIAL FROM HLI FI I FI.DS.
.Minister linker Sends a IHxpatrh Anent
the MoHquito Troubled.
Washington. Sept. 2. — Minister
Baker yesterday sent a dispatch to
Secretary (Jreshuin concerning" the ex-
pulsion of the persons concerned in
the Mosquito troubles, which states
the president of Nicaragua, acting tin
der an act of the legislature, issued a
decree expelling from the
country all persons concerned in the re
bell ion. I he minister protested against
the expulsion of Americans without
trial, lie informed the Xiearaguan
government the United States held
that without trial and conviction upon
some offense. Nicaragua had no right
to banish American citizens. The min-
ister also stated the Americans who
had been arrested were now on parole.
Com mhia. Mo., Sept. 2.—This city
ha' been selected for the meeting of
the state good roads convention, to l e
held during the third week in October.
Many interesting and novel cxperi>
ments in road building will In- made,
and a large number of newly invented
road-making machines will be tested.
Stone will l c put at some convenient
place by the city council, loo tons or
more, ready for laying on the streets.
Sixteen horse excavators will Im put to
work in the fair grounds addition
building new roads ami streets, in
carrying on the practical work of the
convention the effort will be to make
it as instructive as |M>ssiblc. Kxhaust-
ive scientific tests of the different ma-
chines will la* determined and applied
under the direction of the engineering
department. These will include tests
of drafts and capacity of tin* graders,
capacity and efficiency of the crushers,
effect of wide and narrow tire wagons
on road surface and others of similar
character.
During the evening there will be dis-
cussions. Auiotig the speakers e*
pected will be lien. K. v Stone, who i
in charge of the office of road inquiry
department of agriculture, Washing
ton. County courts of the state, city
councils, road improvement societies,
farmers' organizations and oth
bodies Will be asked to send delegates
to the convention, and everybody in
terested in road improvement is in
vited to come.
"A Mill.IN O AT CHICAGO.
« iii« \go. Sept. 'j. —Anxiety amount-
ing almost to consternation disturbs
the combine of officials by whose com
plalsance or connivance gambling is
permitted to flourish unmolested in
Chicago. That there is open, public
gambling, and plenty of it, is not
denfed, and the civic federation h;
begun in a systematic way to investi-
gate gambling; to learn how much the
gamblers pay for protection; to whom
the bribe is given, anil how the spoil is
divided. It is known that only those
gambling houses willing to pay a stiff
price for protection are permitted to
do business. The sum given is 89,000 a
month now. It was at first fixed at
sls.oo<I, but the gamblers rebelled and
it was reduced to $r>,000, Si?,000, Slo.-
'**). and, finally, to 89,000. An ex-po-
liceman who lives in swell style at a
big downtown hotel is one of the col-
lectors of the fund and a county of-
ticial is his associate. The names of
these men are in the possession of the
federation, and also evidence against
them.
1>
1.344 $4.75
1 4s.S |4 40
1 3H1 4 30
!. • 4^5
i .'46 A : •>
i\
1 13.' a Ml
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i i a
Id
1 1U0 3 30
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STEKKS.
CM
1,1 SS # t7 . i
41 Col
1.387 |3 50
k)5C«il
...1,147 3 4S
*51'h 1
1 021 SO
27 Phd
<45
OU N M
I ous ;•
l'hd
. Sum 4i
CUWS A Mi
H Elk'EMS.
1 150 fj 7
S
1.0S0 f* 15
s
SI3 «5
lu
1 '"00 jo
5
1 "Jo4 -JU
V
i isy 2. jo
15
W34 i 30
S
7SS SIJ
W
715 2.U0
«l .V M
s a i .sy
V40 2UU
• N M
707 i ny
IW
OKI I
4
I i:* Mi
1 '-'40 1.7. 1
4
fife) i «y
.1.01)1 150 !
soo ttt
1
7dU |.0i) ,
STOCK Kits AM' rEFUICHS
\
21
.1,173 |A S)
t!
I.J0I 13 00
.... HOI SO) I
TKXAS AM. IN Id AN STt.lt ti
.... ww s.y |-jot
m$ $M m
Kts i.:w I 61
texas and indian cows
Hogs Ro
K 3 1 D5
.swr 1.40
etpts, ft.TV;
lie was
xccuAion
Thirteenth Allasourl Republicans.
De Soto, Mo., Sept. i'. -John IF,
Itancy, of Wayne county, has been
nominated by the republicans of the
Thirteenth Missouri district for con-
irraati
FolHoned by tireen light*.
Anderson. Ind., Sept. !!.—Raymond
Wood, a contortionist who performed
here last Friday in preen tij,'hts, per
spired freely and the dye covered hi^
letfs. The next morning his le^s had
beeome discolored and swollen to twice
the usual size, and it is now feared
that amputation will be necessary, it
more serious results are not caused bj
'blood poisoning-, extending over the
entire svstein.
One hundred Indians from the Fort
Hall reservation are slaughtering game
in Owyhee count y, Ida., and have killed
uUiiiiuiuaii. Settlers are much alarmed.
The Taylor Hrotliers.
St. .Ioskimi. Mo., Sept. 2.—The Tay-
lor brothers. the alleged murderers of
the Mecks family in I.inn county, are
getting very tired of jail life here.
William Taylor, who does the talking,
said yesterday afternoon that nelther
hc nor his brother George were ut all
apprehensive of going back to l.iuu
county, and that when the circuit
court convened at I.inneus, the first
•Monday in September, they would be
there, and would be ready for trial.
Taylor said he has no fear that an
effort will be made to lynch him and
his brother. In his opinion the re-
ported intense feeling there against
them has been greatly overdrawn.
stay of KiM-uttnii for "Hut" nhci.
Amianv, X. v., Sept. X—"Hat" Shea,
who was convicted of murdering IJ.ib-
ert Koss at Troy during last spring's
elections, and who was to have been
punished by electricity next week, will
probably enjoy life for another year.
A stay has been granted, pending an
appeal, which has not yet been tiled.
All the testimony has to be printed,
and in the lluchanan case this con*
suiued a year.
C. II. J. Taylor, recorder of deeds for
j the District of Columbia, is having no
| end of trouble, the latest of yvhlch Is a
, movement against him by the New
| Yurk culured democrats.
The National Lilian ecu.
Washington. Sept. 2.—The cash bal-
ance in the treasury yesterday was
$r.Vi.87;,.44o. i f whieii >" : .• Is.o-/:{ was
gold reserve. The total receipts from
all sources at the treasury during the
present month amount to SI 1.0,.'i.:i3o,
and the disbursements;.:u. ss.sol. leav-
ing a surplus for the month of
Mrt, although tin- disbursements yes-
terday exceeded the receipts by v.t is.-
512. Of the receipts Si 1,801,014 were
from customs and .**■.'7,.'7.'S from in- |
ternal revenue.
yyiNFIEI.D WON THE CHAMPIONSHIP.
1 vmI'oItlA, Kan., Sept. 2.—The third
and last game for the state champion-
ship was won yesterday by the Win-
ticlds by a score of !i to Kmporia s 7.
The game was witnessed by the larg-
est audience that ever gathered at a
baseball game here, and was the most
interesting and exciting contest c
played on the grounds.
TALK OF ft'sION.
Willard fur <' ii(ri'.a unit Clark for Su-
prpnie Court .III.tier May lie Ketlreil
| Tout Scott, Kan., Sept. 2.—Judge
quito ''"d. of Marion, a populist member of
the state board of pardons, stated that
negotiations were now pending, exclu-
sively in the populist party, for the
withdrawal of Willard, their candidate
for congress, in favor of Moore, the
democratic nominee, and that thev
were also considering the proposition
to withdraw ( lark, their candidate for
associate justice, in favor of Judge .1.
I). McClevcrty, the democratic nom-
inee. This, he argued, would assure
the populists the support of thousands
of indifferent democrats in the stati
and thus elect the other candidates on
their state ticket.
fchipped yesterday,
i.m«. The quality wai common The uisrket
was quiet und ubout steady The top a a-. f& K7>^
*nd the bulk of hitlt'i 11 50 < > r.'> u«aln< t uo
for lop i ud #.' frfKfi.fi |Ti for bulk yesterday The
following are representative sule-,
itW fo 7J
1W S 70
214 ftifl
.'pi
ttl 5 rtti
:.*)
'> 5.SO
-An 6 fid
•oi f>
IW7 ft A
II
i.w |5.87
i nr
153 |5 .7 5
i •
55
J54 5 75
IIS
215 ft. 75
75
7.1
5 7.1
77
IH-1 507V4
J3 > 5 •!*
1 3.5
2J4 ft ti,
rtO
7W
..IW5 5 SO
31
I7U f. fj«l
IVS
2-il 5. SO
1 S3
182 ftrio
20
flft
||fl in
53
til
20S ft 50
<17
201 ft.ftO
l-
41
•J«N ft SO
1 S3
214 ft 45
•j>)
.211 5.37
« 40
217 5.85
(VI
<1
127 4 H'l
0
175 4 10
Sheep Hec«
ipts.
"jo shlpmt
uts
IS7
'i he murket vm
s more active
to higher. The following are representative
•♦ales:
<0. Ariz . IN)
IV*Ariz W
Hopes Receipt
IN. The market i
I 111 IS fj in
| 85 M0 2 45
rts. shipments yesterday,
t quiet
Lite stoek.
Hogs Kecelpt*. lOOUO;
shipments veiterdsy,
ek. lUO.h.'l, >hlpiiit i.ti
Hare spoelnien
Lawhence. Ka
Hill
ball (m hi en.
NATION At, I.I .Vt.l'K.
At New York Sew York, fi: Boston, 1.
At Philadelphia Philadelphia, 10; Washing-
ton 8. Second jjame -Philadelphia, II. Wush-
for the ('Diversity.
Sept. 2.—Chancel-
lor Snow and party returned to-day
from New Mexico, where they had
been for six weeks collecting specimens
for the natural history department of
tlie state university. They collected
I'i.iwtj specimens of Insects, including
many new to science and many more
| new to eastern collections. A rare
i mountain rattlesnake was found in the
| Magdalena mountains. This and one
j found there by ( hancelloi* Snow in
I8il are the only specimens known.
i liiraKO
Sept. i
oftlciul yesterday. 17.:
receipts for the
for the week. 4H712; receipts for the corre-
pondiiiK week lust year HL\II shipments for
he corresponding week last year 3<5.7-kl,
receipts for month of August. 414.371 shlpl
outs for mouth of Augusi '133,4pm. receipts fur
rresponding month lust year ftuw.lfjw. ship-
ments for the corresponding month laht year,
I5J.244 average weight for month of Auguit. '."^4
pouads; average wi Ight foi Um eorreepondiac
month last year. JM pound*. pack-
ing from March I to date J irts.uuu packing to
late last year, I HSO.om left over, about S.UJO;
luality the poorest of the season, market au-
live and firm prices ty(|uc higher. Sales
ranged at ft.4.^6 06 f« r ll^ht fr. :<o,£5 ft) for
rough packing; |ft.40®fl.I f..r mixed;
d20 for heavy packing and shipping hits pju^
W 00(^5. CO.
Cattle Keceipts. 2,.V)() official yesterday. 9 -
M; shipments yesterday. 4 051; market slow
and weak
Sheep Keceipts. I.Oft); official yesterday, fl,.
5IH. shipments yesterday. 4.y.v market strong.
St. Lou lit Live St<H*k.
st. Louis. Sept. 1.-Cattle Receipts. 3uo;
market stea.lv Hogs Keceipts. MM; market
stroiiK to 10c higher, heavy, |ft.VuiU5.|0:
mixed. |5.0O®a.OD;llKht. 15.70^-vW No sheep.
Karma** City (iruln.
Kansas City* Sept. 1 Trade in wheat
was rather slow to-dav Prices were '-fcc lower,
And some sales at the close were Ic lower than
yesterday. Samples were offered freelj and
demand wis not active. Hard wheat sold
imewhat more readily than soft wheat.
Receipts of wheat to-day, 152 cars. \ ear ago,
153 cars
Quotations for car lots bv sample on track at
Mty at the close were nominally ai
ITc No. :: hard Itl-ft
rejected, 11, So i
m l«H' No 4 red,
follows; No. 2 h,
MHio; No 1 bard Cc
red. 4«5i x'<r, i7e. No. 3 r« I
15c; rejected, is -
There were only t ir<
the tables and there wu
car of mixed sold at f>.l<
offered at 5.Mtc.
Receipts of corn to-day •
101 ^ rs.
No. 2 mixed. 1 car *3c. K
mixed. 51c. N ., I. 5 k- N , j
•r*2MjC No. white, .Me
Outs sold rather slowly an
were 4c lower, though h<
firmly held. Some ordinal \
offered at 30^0 at the close.
Receipts of oats to-day. 17
" samples «if corn on
1 no demand at ail. A
and while corn was
o 2 mixed oat>.
nominally 30 |:to ,<•
I80 Na t white oa
white, uomlnally «
Haj Receipts (H
eboioe Tun ithy .
|r.0)'is.5u; low grade
"0; choice, 17.50
packing hav. fl..M) ( >
C hle.7o <lri
car-i 31c; No :t mixed,
^o. I outs, nominally
nominally 3Ce, No. 3
irs inarki t llrm for
O); fancy prairie 00
in,<fton. 5.
At Ualtlmore—Baltimore, ft; Cleveland, I.
WKMTSKS I.KAOUK.
At Kansas City -Kansas City, 17. Toledo, 4.
At Sioux Olty Sioux City. 15: l etr dt. 7
At Milwaukee-Milwaukee, i.'. Grand Kan-
Ids, H.
WKSTRRN ASSOCIATION.
At Jacksonville -Jacksonville. 10: Peoria, 7.
At Quinoy Roek Island, 9 Quincj
At St. Joseph OUi iha. 13; Si Joseph, fl.
At Lincoln Lincoln, Jfl: Des Moines. 7.
YKL131K A I'HIC IIKKVITIKS.
At Fort Wayne, Intl., on the 31st,
Robert J. lowered the 'world's
record to
John Laug'.ilin, the Topcka asylum
attendant who beat a helpless inmate, I
has, it is reported, left the state.
A wild freight ear in the Missouri
Pacific freight yards at Topcka, Ivan., I
jumped the track and clashed iht
house occupied by f. II. McCiltclleon
and family. They narr.iwl
death.
Robbers lu Silk Hats.
I < iiu.'Afjo, Sept. 2.—Three men, clad
j in silk hats, long cutaway coats and
tan shoes, entered the office of
1* rank'lin picture frame factory, just
j a block from the Maxwell police sta-
tion. last nigiit and tinding Isaac Stein-
btirg, the office boy. alone overawed
him with revolvers while they opened
the safe and secured a box containing
| 812." in cash ami diamonds worth $1,400.
, 1 he boy was then sandbagged and the
men disappeared.
Sf. .loneph's l'luiubli«f Trust Sued.
St. .lorn-Til. Mo., Sept. 2.— Prosecut-
ing Attorney Culver began a civil suit
in the circuit court yesterday against
six plumbers i 11 this city for violating
the law against pools and trusts, en-
acted in 1?.M. They are charge ! with
* | entering into an agreement May I to
1 1 the price of plumbers' stip-
•seapeii j |jIies> an,j it is alleged that the com hi-
pacing!
Sept. 1. Opcne
Wh t
Sept i
Dec. U,
May i-j
Corn -
Seut . . 57
(Kt. ... ftii•
May. ! 3
Oats -
Sept.. 3"
iKt :io'
May 3\«
Pork
Sept . 13 S5
Oot.,
JM 18 9S
Laird
-Sppt s 4 v
Jim 7 yj ,
tibs
Sept. . 7 7-
It M
S 45
s
J 1
St L<
oIH I
St. I
DIR. Sept 1 |
bu. la-st year. I04.7D5 t
year 56,5flo in
S)«) bu. Hour
•;ipl-
wheat. CO.416
4.1SS) bu. lust
oats. 37,bu; last year, 4^',
'••«*) bbls; shipments wheat,
x.Tv.i bu; corn, none: oats, 0.I.7J bu;
5|« libls Wheat < a - h. !!• '4
®50c; December. ' ".:i
Cash. r.:c«a,- s«>pteiuber
4We May M)",e Out. t
tember. 3t)'4c; May. 35'•<t-
flour, 5,-
September, 4Vif
Mi) Me Cora
■"«c December,
sh, 3)'4c; Stp-
Kansas ( 11y I'roduee.
Kansas city. Sept i
market quiet and a ti lth
Supply fair;
strictly fresh,
U«M
'"'i'* separator. ..j..
lair. H,- ilulrv ' ""J' '
Ilalrv. raaey, llrm. l7(i£He.
iliulrc ciiuntry, hrin IV^ISc. ehc,li'«
imoklli* steady, lie Poultry ll^in
seUinii stuwly, v. choice
larKe, ~
hens,
spring
small
NN • C. T. 1J. convention
I nation still exists. Judgments of $100
si. 1 I- , ' I a day since the pool was formed is
Second Kansas congressional district provi(lei, for t„ . ^
at 1-ort Scott, passed resolutions '■
strongly dcnoiiueing tiie l.ewelling ad*' Arehlentally KHU.il,
ministration an.I declared for the "pro-j Ai.Tov, III., Sept. 3. While a party
hibitlon state ticket. | °' young men were linking asocial
Clearinghouse returns for the prin-
cipal cities of the Unite I states for the
week ended Air_*ust :il showed an av-
erage increase as compared with the
correspon lin r week last year of 11.11;
in New York the increase was 12.5;
DUtside the increase was 17.7,
call yesterday evenln.'. Paul I, a lure
playfully drew a revolver. One of the
young ladies, Miss Annie (iottentrue.
seized the revolver by the barrel, as if
to take It away from binge, when it
was discharged, and the ball, entering
lier head, killed her instantly. Lauge
U uow under arrest.
, 7' l"™1' «'.u: roosters. I Tur-
kujs receipts ||„|,t n„t wanted, youn* uiisaU.
plentiful ||(<(|^P lu Plums,«li(.VIe per- Vj '
basket. I Jains. HI. e-a ti-; vi Imi Texas peach
scarce, boo.1, KOSTao per basket, fane' *1' „
t« per basket. Il.;.® i„, l) basket cratn.
Ic 's an,!1' ,?' 'lualltv, almost worth.
"•' ""salable. : ,(«■ , noire r,,,
"r"'T ' ««rmt.lua,. dull.
f",.'l"/■ 1 aiiteloiip,.,. sl.„|.,.,, ,, lllr,,. '
VcetaWe, I.'abbaye. scarce !l 00 ■ a
Ke'do"'- *&** 1 small,
A Noble He.|iie.t for Unfortunate..
Sas I1 IIAN'cist'o, Sept. The will of
• ■ \ l)e!,avage provides f.ir ti
a hospital for the deaf, dumb and
'iitut to be located at Sauta t'rui, aud
lo cost a million dollur*.
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Greer, Bert R. The Perry Daily Times. (Perry, Okla.), Vol. 1, No. 297, Ed. 1 Tuesday, September 4, 1894, newspaper, September 4, 1894; Perry, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc116512/m1/4/?q=communication+theory: accessed July 5, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.