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St. Paul daily globe. [volume] (Saint Paul, Minn.) 1884-1896, February 26, 1884, Image 8

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn90059522/1884-02-26/ed-1/seq-8/

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FINANCIAL
MORNING! REPORT.
New York, Feb. 25.—11 a. m.—Stocks
irregular. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western,
Philadelphia & Reading, Missouri, Kansas &
Texas and Texas Pacific strong. Chicago &
Northwestern, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul,
Lake Shore, Western Union Telegraph and Union
Pacific a shade weaker. Pacific Mall buoyant,
rising 2% per cent, to 60%. Thirteen thousand
shares of Delaware, Lackawanna & Western were
■old at 131%.
AFTERNOON REPORT.
Money easy at 1%@2 per cent. Prime mer
cantile paper 4(j£5 % per cent. Bar silver,
$1.12%. Sterling exchange steady at $4.86
long, $4.89% short.
Governments—Firm.
State Securities—Quiet.
Bonds—Railroad honds firm except Texas Pa
cific Incomes, which were weaker at 48%.
Stocks—The hears made a sharp drive against
the market after 11 and prices declined J4®.2
per cent. Delaware, Lackawanna & Western was
the objective point. Slocks less active, and
firmer. Pacific Mall continues in demand and
sold at 49%@.50%. Philadelphia & Reading was
also freely taken. The other active shares ral
lied %@% per cent. The market closed firm.
The foundation stone of the new Produce Ex
change was laid to-day.
Morning Board Quotations.
GOVERNMENTS.
Threes 101 Fours coupons.. .123, 7«
4%sdo 114% PacilieOsof '95..129
STOCKS.
Adams Express.. 129 Mobile&Ohio 9%
Allegheny Cent.. 12 Morris & Essex. .123%
Alton & T. H.... 44 >., C. fcSt.L.... 52
do preferred... 94 N. J. Central.... 887«
American 90 North"n Pacific... 21 %
B., C. R. & X 75 do preferred... 47%
Canada Southern. 55;-' Northwestern 120%
Central Pacific... 61% do preferred.. .146 %
Chesapeake & O. 14 N. Y. Central... .116%
do 1st pref'd... 25% N. Y., C. & St. L. 9
do 2d pref'd... 15% do preferred... 19%
Chicago & Alt 135% Ohio Central 2%
do preferred... 145 Ohio & Miss..... 22
C, B. & Q 120% do preferred... 90
C., St. L. &N. O.. 84 Ontario & West.. 11
C, B. & Cleve... 35 Pacific Mail 49%
Cleveland* Col.. 63 Panama 98
Delaware & H... 111 % Peoria, D. & E... 14 %
Del. & Lack 131 % Pittsburg 138%
Denver & R. G... 20% Reading 59
Erie 26% Rock Island 123%
do preferred... 69% St. L. & S. P 21
Fort Wayne 134 do preferred... 40%
Han. & St. Joe... 38% do 1st prefd... 87
do preferreed.. 88% Mil. & St. Paul... 91%
Harlem 193 do preferred... 117%
Houston* Tex.. 40 St. Paul & Man.. 96
Illinois Central...132% St. Paul & Oha.. 32%
Did., B & West.. 17% do preferred... 94%
Kansas* Texas.. 21% Texas Paciflo 21%
Lake Erie & W.. 16 Union Pacific 81
Lake Shore 103% United States 58
L'ville * Nash... 48% Wab., St. L. & P. 17%
L:, N. A. & C 20 do preferred... 28%
M. &. C. 1st pfd. 10 Wells* Fargo...Ill
do 2d pref'd... 5 West. Union T... 76%
Memphis & C.... 85 Quicksilver 6
Mich. Centi*al 93 do preferred... 27
Minn's & St. L... 17 Pullman BoL Car. 109%
do preferred... 34 C, St. L. & Pitts. 9
Mo. Pacific 92?i do preferred... 28
•Asked. tBid. JOffered. tfEx. Int. §Ex.
div.
EVENING REPORT.
Money In good snply at 1%®2 per cent.
Prime mercantile paper 4®5% percent. Ster
ling exchange, bankers' bills steadyat $4.80% :
do. ex. demand, $4.89%.
Governments—Steady.
Bonds—Railroad bonds strong.
State Securities—Tennessee compromise sold
at 45%, Georgia sevens at 105%.
Stocks—The stock market opened firm aud
prices advanced fractionally. Soon after the
opening a brisk demand set in for Pacific Mail,
Delaware, Lackawanna & Western, Philadelphia
& Reading, Texas Pacific and Missouri, Kansas
<fc Texas. Pacific Mail scored the greatest ad
vance, rising from 48 to 50%. About 11 a. m. a
broker Identified with the old bear party came
into the room and sold nearly 15,000 shares of
Delaware, Lackawanna & Western, the bulk of
which was taken by a prominent bull in this
stock. The price fell off to 131%, rose to 139
and later dropped to 129%. The explanation
given for the heavy selling in this stock is that
the bear leaders, seeing the market dull and in
clined to heaviness, accumulated some 25,000
shares of Delaware, Lackawanna & Western
against sellers' options, and threw the stock
overboard iu hopes of bringing about a break in
the general market. The total sales of the stock
were 111,805 out of a total of 407,221 shares.
The break in Delaware, Lackawanna & Western
caused some uneasiness and a disposition to sell
set in, prices falling %®2 per cent. After the
pressure against Delaware, Lackawanna & West
ern was removed the ma.ket became less active
and firmer and prices rallied %®% percent.
Pacific Mail was exceptionally strong near the
close. It was semi-oflicially stated the company
will shortly begin tbe payment of dividends at
the rate of 5 per cent, per annum. The market
closed firm. The steamer City of Chicago, which
sailed for Europe to-day, took out $500,000 in
double eagles.
The transactions aggregated 407,000 shares:
Delaware, Lackawanna & 112,000;
Lake Shore 13,000; Lonisville & Nashville 5,000;
Missouri Pacific 7,000; Chicago & Northwestern
12,000; New York Central 6,000; Pacific Mail
20,000; Philadelphia & Reading 62,000: Chicago,
Milwaukee & St. Paul 52,000; Texas Pacific
10,000; Union Pacific 56,000. .
MINING STOCKS.
The week opened on a dull and featureless
market for mining stocks. There was no change
In the character of the mining 'market after
noon. The sales included Horn Silver at 7%©
7*8, Green Mountain 205, Navajo 235®225,
Sonora 06, Standard 6% and Bonanza King 1,000.
boston railroad and mining.
Old Colony 138% Bos.,H&E.7s
Allouez Mine Co. % do4%s Ill
Calnmet& H....239% K.C.,St.J.&C.B.7s. ...
Catalpa 30 N. Y. & N. E.,7"s. 99%
Copper Falls Atch.&Top. R.R.178%
Franklin 11% Bost. & Albany..178%
Pewabic 1 % Bost. & Maine... 160
Quincy 45 C, B. & Q 126%
Wis. Central Cin., S. & Cleve
Osceola 16 Eastern R. R 38 %
Huron Flint & P. M 28
Water Power 2% do preferred. ..100'i
Boston Land 6% L. R. & Ft. S 17%
Atch.&Top.lst7sl22 N. Y. & N. E 13%
do land grant 7s 117
SAN FRANCISCO MINING.
Alta 162% Grand Prize 15
Belcher 90 Hale & Norcross.250
Belle Isle 40 Martin White 80
Best & Belcher. .275 Mexican 262%
Bodie Consol 825 Mount Diablo
California 25 Navajo 225
Challor 250 Ophir 150
Consol. Cala 40 Potosi 137%
Consolidated Ya Savage 80
Crown Point 112% Sierra Nevada 262%
Day 237% Union Consol 312%
Eureka Con 375 Utah 187%
Gould & Curry.. .200 Yeliow Jacket.. .275
Afternoon Board Quotations.
Stocks and bonds closed at the following
prices bid:
governments.
Three per cents.. 101 Fours coupons.. .123%
4^is coupons 114% Pacific 6s of '95..129
state bonds.
La. consols 77% Tenn. 6s, new 39 J6
Missouri 6s 105 Virginia Cs 40
St. Joe 110 Consols^ 38
Tenn. 0s, old 39J4 Deferred 8
RAILROAD bonds.
C. P. Bonds, lst.H2?i U. P. land grant. .1105-4
Erie seconds 94% Sinking fund....118 "
Lehigh & W*... .107J4 Tex. P. grant B.. 48?£
St.P.& S. Cist.118 do Rio G. div.. 72%
U. P. Bonds, lst.ll4?.£
STOCKS.
Adams Express. .129 Mobile & Ohio... 9
Allegheny Cent.. 12 Morris & Essex 123*£
Alton & T. H.... 44 N., C. & St. L.... 52'
do preferred... 94 N.J. Central.... 88l£
American 96 Norfolk* W.pf. 40%
B., C. R. & N 75 Northern Pacific .'. 21 %
Canadian Pacific. 55% do preferred... 47%
Canada South'n.. 547s Northwestern 121%
Central Pacific... 61 J£ do preferred... 145 %
Chesapeake* O. 14 N. Y. Central 1165i
do 1st pref'd... 26% Ohio Central 2%
do 2d pref'd... 16 Ohio* Miss 22
Chicago & Alt.. .135 do preferred... "90
do preferred... 145 Ontario & We^t.. 11
C, B. &Q 12G& Oregon Nav 93
C, St. L. & N. O. 84 Oregon Trans 20%
C.,St. L.& Pitts.. 10 Oregon Imp 40
do preferred... 28 Pacific Mail 50%
C, S. & Cleve 35 Panama 98
Cleveland & Col.. 64 Peoria, D. & E... 14%
Delaware&H 110% Pittsburg 138?i
Del. & Lack 130 Pullman Pal. Car. 108%
Denver* R. G... 19% Reading 59%
Erie 26% Rbek Island 122%
do preferred... 69 % St. L. & S. F 19 %
East T., V. & G.. 7% do preferred... 40%
do preferred... 12% do 1st pref'd... 87
Fort Wayne 134 Mil. & St. Paul... 91 %
Han. & St. Joe... 38% do preferred... 117
do preferred... 88% St. Paul & Man... 95
Harlem 193 St. Paul & Om'a.. 32
Houston* Tex.. 40 do preferred... 94%
Illinois Central... 132% Texas Pacific 21%
Ind., B. & West.. 17 Union Pacific 81%
Kansas*Texas.. 21% United 8tates 58
Lake Erie* W.. 16% W., St. L. & F 17%
Lake Shore 103% do preferred... 28%
Lonisville & N... 48% Wells & Fargo.. .111
L., N. A. & C.... 80 Westsrn U. T.... 76%
M. & Cist pfd.. 10 Homestake 8%
do 2d pref'd... 5 Iron Silver
Memphis <fe C 35 Ontario* 29%
Mich. Central 92 Quicksilver 6
Minn's & St. L... 17 do preferred... 24
do preferred... 34 South. Pacific
Missouri Pacific. 93% Sutro 15
* Asked No sale?. tOffered. *JEx. mat.
coup. §Ex. div. 'Ex. int.
COMMERCIAL
On 'Change.
St. Pact., Feb. 25.—The market on 'change
was very dull and flat yesterday, with wheat
lower and inactive. There was no interest shown
in corn. Ko. 2 old was held at 54c with no bids,
futures were also neglected. Xew mixed was of
fered at 47c tnd several samplas were shown all
of which were more or less damp and soft, but
no one wanted any. Hay was a little firmer;
stocks ara not quite so large as they have been
and sellers hold for better prices; 1 car sold at
S7.25 outgoing fairly represents the market.
Following are the prices at the call:
Wheat—No. 1 hard 99c bid; March, 99c
bid; April 81.01 bid; May $1.05 bid; $1.08 asked;
No. 1 regular, 90c bid; No. 2 hard, 92@95c
bid; No. 2 regular, 83@87c bid.
Corn —No. 2, 64c asked; No. 3 48c asked;
new mixed, 47c asked; rejected, 44c asked.
Oats —No. 2 mixed, 32c bid, 33c asked;
Marce 32c bid, 33c asked; April 33c bid; May,
34c asked, 35c asked; No. 3, 31cbid; No. 2 white
33c bid, 34 asked; No. 3 white, 32c bid; re
jected 30c bid.
Barley—No. 2, 60c bid; No. 3 extra, 48@
52c; No, 3, 38@42c.
Rye—No. 2, 53e bid.
Ground Feed —$18 bid; $18.50 asked.
Bran—$13.00 asked.
Baled Hat—$0.00 bid: $7.00aeked.
Timothy Hay—$9.00®9.5O.
Live Hogs—$5.75 bid.
Dressed Hogs —$7.50®.8.00.
Flaxseed—$1.42 bid.
Timothy Seed—$1.10 bid.
Potatoes—March 35c asked; April 30c bid,
35c asked.
Eggs—28®30c asked; March 17c bid; April
14c bid : May 13%c bid; year 13c bid.
Pork—$17.50® 18.00.
Lard—$9.25®$9.50 bid.
The following comparative table gives the
principal quotations at the call February 23,
1883, aud to-day:
1883. 1884.
Bid. Asked. Bid. Asked.
Wheat No. 1 hard $1 13 1 15 99
" " March 99
" " April 1 14 .... 1 01
" " May 1 16 1 05 1 08
"No. 1 regular. 1 06 1 09 90
" " No 2 hard 1 07 95
" No. 2 regular. 102 87
Corn, No. 2 old.... 48 52 54
" new mixed.. 47 50 .... 47
Oats, No. 2 mixed 38 39% 32 33
Oats No, 3 mixed. 37 38% 31
" 2 white 39% 41 33 34
"3 « 40 32 ....
Barley, No. 2 70 -00
" 3 extra 55 .... 52
" 3 48 42
Rye No. 2 54 53
Ground Feed 19 00 20 00 lb 00 18 50
Corn meal 18 00
Bran sacked 1100 .... 13 00
Baledhay 7 50 8 25 6 00 7 00
Dressedhogs 7 15 8 00 ....
Potatoes 54 42
Receipts and shipments of grain, live stock,
produce, merchandise, etc., for the twenty-four
hours ending Feb. 25, 1684:
Articles. Rec'd Sh'd Articles. Rec'd Sh'd
Wheat 23 9 Wood 33 1
Corn 2 .. Oil 1
Oats 3 .. Coal 16 2
Flour 2 4 Paint I
Corn Meal 1 Merchandise 66 68
Feed 5 Barrel stock 2 1
Linseed Meal & Brick 4 ..
OilCake 1 Cement
Hay 5 4 Stone 2 ..
Sheep Pig iron 14..
Cattle 2 .. Railroad iron and
Horses & Mules. 1 .. rails 9 10
Pork 1 Agric'liniplm'ts. 4 3
Hides Sundries 35 17
Lumber 20 14
Total rec'pts, 245 cars. Shipments, 144 cars.
Among the Commission Men.
There was ao change to note in the produce
market. Butters are unchanged; beans inactive;
bacon and dried meats quiet but firm. Cheese
fair demand for full cream; dressed meats in
good demand; eggs dull; flour flat; poultry firm;
fruits and nuts quiet. Following are prices cur
rent:
Butter—Receipts liberal; grease, 5c; packing
stock off flavor, 7®8c; dairy, common to fair, 10
®15c; choice 20®23c; creamery, 28®32@40c.
Beans—Common, [email protected]; medium, $1.50®
$1.75; navy $2.00®2.25.
Bacon and Hams—Long clear bacon, 10%c;
short clear, lie; shoulders, 9%c; hams, 13%
®14c;dry salt sides, 8@8%c
Cheese—Skim, 6%®7%c; part cream, 8%®
9%c; full cream old,;i0%@12%c; full cream,fall
made, 13%@14c%.
Dressed Meats—Beef, country dressed, 5%®
6%c; city dressed, 7@9c; mutton, country
dressed, 6@7c; city dressed, 7@8%c; veal, 10®
11.
Eggs—Ice house and pickled, 24@25c; strictly
fresh, 28® 30c and nominal.
Flour—Patents $5.75®6.25; straight $5.00®
5.25; Bakers' XXXX, [email protected]; low grades
[email protected]; Rye flour [email protected] per barrel;
graham [email protected] per barrel; buckwheat flour,
[email protected].
Hides—Green, salted, 7c; green, 6c; dry flint,
12c; calf, dry, 12%c; green lie; deer, dry,
20©25c; antelope, 20@25c; elk, 20@25c; buf
alo, [email protected], damaged % off.
Wool—Unwashed, 18@21c: washed, 28@31c.
Honey—White clover, 18@20c lb; buckwheat,
16@18clb.
Hops—Washington Territory, 28c; New York
30c.
Linseed On.—Raw, 58@54c; boiled 50©57c
Linseed meal §19@20.
Poultry—Chickens, dressed", 12@15c per lb;
turkeys, dressed, 16@18c; ducks and geese, 13
@,15c. These prices are for choice birds dry
picked ; scallhvags sell for what they are worth-
Roots—(Medicina) ginseng, [email protected]; sen*
eca snake root, 35@37c per lb.
Fruits—Apples, [email protected]; peddler's stock
$2.50(<p.00: pears, Easter Burre, [email protected] per
box; Winter Weils, [email protected]; oranges, Valen
cia, [email protected] per case ; Messinas $4.00; Messi
na and Palermo lemons, [email protected]; Cranber
ries, 9.50@,11.00; Malaga grapes, 50 lb., 8@8.
50; Figs, new, 16c, 18c, 20c per lb.: dates,
black in frails 7c@8c, fard in boxes, 12c per
lb.
Nuts —Hickory, large, $1.50; small, $2.00
walnuts, 15c; almonds, 18@20c; Barcelona ha;
zel (filberts) 14c; pecans, 12@13c; Brazil, 14c;
peanuts, 8@13c.
Furs—Mink, [email protected]; coon, 60@80c; lynx,
1.50@,3.00; musk rat, winter 10c, spring 12c,
[email protected]; red fox, [email protected]; kitts, 30@40c;
silver fox, 20.00®40.00, cross [email protected]; otter,
[email protected]; fisher, [email protected]; skunk, 30@75c;
badger, 50@75c; wild cat, 50@,60c; house cat, 10
@25c; marten, 1.25©3.00; wolverine, [email protected];
wolf, [email protected]; prairie wolf, [email protected]: bear,
7.00©10.00; cubs, [email protected]: beaver, Lake Su
perior, [email protected] per lb.; Hudson bay, 2.00®
2.25 per lb., Dakota, [email protected] per lb.
St. Paul Live Stock.
Business at the stock yards is only limited by
the receipts. E%*erything sells readily at value,
and when a car holds over a day it is only because
sellers "stick" for an advance. The receipts yes
terday were two cars of cattle. As representative
sales at the transfer yards,zwe quote a car of
sheep, averaging 90 pounds, at 4%c; 60 hogs av
eraging 180 pounds, at 6%c; a lot of steers,
average weight 1,050 pounds, at 5%c; one car
mixed cattle, average weight 950 pounds,
at 4%c. Following are the prices current:
Rough mixed cattle 3%c@4; good mixed 4%®
4%c: fair steers and heifers 4%@5c; good steers
5%®5%c; prime steers 6@6%c; fat cows 4%
®4%c; bull 3%@4c. Sheep 4%®5%c. Light
hogs 5@5%c; medium 5%@6c; heavy 0%@
6%c.
Lumber.
PRICES to dealers onlt.
Common Boards $13 50
2nd " " 10 00
Cull " 7 50
Common Stock Boards 8,10 and 12 inch : 14 00
2nd " " " " " " 11 00
1st Fencing selected 15 50
2nd " HOO
Cull " 7 00
Scanting 2x4, 4x4,10x12 and 18 ft 13 00
-' ." " 14 " 16" 1250
" " 20 " 14 00
limbers 4x6 to 8x10 inclusive same as scant
ing.
Joists2x6 to 2x12 inclusive.
'* 12,14andl6ft 12 00
" 18 " 12 50
" 20 " 13 50
1st and 2nd Clear, 1 in, Ibi, lYi and 2 inch
Rough 45 00
3rd Clear, 1 in, IV4,114 inch, Rongh 40 00
A select 1 in, \%, 1% incb. Rough 36 00
B " 1 " 25 00
B " 1,4,1% and 2 inch 30 00
B Stock Boards 1. 36 00
C " " 30 00
jD " " 17 00
i A Flooring 38 00
!B " 35 00
jC " 26 00
j Fencing Flooring selected 17 oO
No.lShipLaps 16 00
iNo.2 " " IS 00
i Drop Siding same as Flooring.
I let and 2nd Clear Siding 22 60
ASiding - 2100
B •' 19 00
|C " 15 00
:D " from selected Fencing 1100
% Beaded Ceiling 50c more than Siding.
No. 1 Shingles per M 1 00
X !' « 2 00
: XX " " " 8 00
Lath " " 2 00
: Dressing 1 side, $1 per M.
; Dressing 2 " $1.60 per M.
Dressing and Matching, ?2.09 per M.
THE ST. PAUL DAILY GLOBE, TUESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 26, 1884/
P. T. OLDS & CO.,
Hew Tacoma. - - W. T.
Investments made in city and farm property,
timber and coal lands. Buildings erected. Loans
negotiated. Rents collected. Taxes paid, etc*
The building department will be in charge of a
competent and reliable architect.
Refferences: Banks of New Tacoma and Roch
ester, Minn. Correspondence solicited.
Family Retail MTarke
Bread and Flocr—Wheat bread 5c per lb,
rye bread, 5c per lb; Vienna bread, lOe per loaf;
flour 4c per lb.
Butter—Farmhouse, 30@35c per lb ; cooking,
12 H® 20c.
Cheese—12%®15c@20: Swiss, 20@25c.
Coffee —Green Rio, 5@6 lbs for $1; Java
(green) 2@4 lbs for $1; Rio roast, 4@0@7 lbs
for 81; Java roast, 35c per lb, 3 lbs for Si; Mocha
same as Java.
Eogs—Case eggs, 40@45c.
Fruits—Apples, 40c peck; crabs, 50c peck;
baskets, 90c; grapes, 30@35c lb; Catawba, (50c
basket; Velencia oranges, 25@35c doz: Messina
lemons, 25@35c doz; cranberries, 12Hc
quart.
Meats Sirloin steak, 15c; porter house, 18c;
roasts, 15c: corned, 7@10c; mutton aud veal 15c;
for chops and roasts, pork 10c; pork sausages,
10c; belognas 12H.
Poultry and Game—Turkeys 18@20c per lb;
chlckena 16@l8c; geese 14@15c; ducks 14@
15c; pheasants and grouse 75c per pair; wild
duck 60c pair; squirrels 25c pair.
Sugars—Grannlated 11 lbs for 1.00: Standard
A 11% lbs for 1.00: extra C 14 lbs for 1.00; yel
low C 12 lbs for 1.00.
Tea—Gunpowder 50<f* 00c: Japan from 25 to
70c; Oolong 40 to 90c; Young Hyson 50, 80, 90c.
Vegetables—Beans, dry 15c quart; beets 75c
bushel; cabbage 10, 15, 25c each; celery 90c
dozen; horse radish 15c lb; leeks 50c dozen; on
ions 75c bushel; parsely 15c bunch; peas, dry
15c quart; parsnips 1.00 bushel: rutabagas G0c
bushel; sanrkraut 15c quart; potrtoes 5O@U0c
bushel; turnips 60c bushel; lettuce 3 for 25c;
radishes 3 bunches for 10c.
Milk—7c quart; cream 60 quart.
DAILY MARKET REVIEW
OF THE
CHICAGO m MILWAUKEE MARKETS!
FURNISHED BY WALL & BIGELOW,
COMMISSION MERCHANTS,
Room 4 Mannheimer Building, Southeast corner
Third and Minnesota street. Direct wires to
Chicago and Milwaukee Board of Trade.
(Operator in our oflice.)

St. Paul, Monday, Feb. 25, 1884.
Following is to-day"s range of prices on the
Milwaukee and Chicago boards:
O m O H I C Q i Q
2 2- "g w % g g
3 -• = g" i o °
S M £ <* rt w
g 2 w • : o' -x
_f_ _J_ : \ : 4 :
Milwaukee,
Wheat—
March 91 Ji *>1H 91H 90=i 90?' 107%
April
May 97?^ 97?; 97% 90J£ 903Si 113J'
Chicago,
Wheat-
March 92 917a 92 91H 91%108H
April 93 92^ 93 92 92% 109H
May 97H 97% 977» 97 97% 114
June 99% 99)4 99% 98% 99 114JJ
Chicago,
Corn—
April 53K 53»4 68)4 53?b 53J{ 57H
May 58% 58!i 58% 57?« 58 CI
June 58& 58% 58?£ 58% 58 V t 61J4
Chicago,
Oats—
!
April i 32% 32?^ 32H 32)4 32»4 39%
May 30% 36% 36)4 36)4 36% 42
Chicago, .
Pork-
April 18 17 18 35 18 37 18 1018 lo'l8 30
May 18 37 18 50 18 52ll8 25J18 25.18 50
Chicago,
Lard—
April 9 82 9 85 9 85 9 70 9 72'll 60
May 9 92 9 95 9 96 9 80 9 82 11 72
Grain Movement—Following is the movement
of grain at the points helow for the twenty-four
hours ending at 7 o'clock this morning:
Receipts. Shiptn'ts.
Chicago—Flour hbls 12,065 9,490
" Wheat, bu 35,398 9,496
" Corn 186,628 115,925
" Oats 64,635 116,410
" Hogs, head 9,000
M. Doran's Reports.
St. Paul, Feb. 25.
The following quotations, giving the range of
the markets during the day, were received by M.
Doran, Commission Merchant:
WHEAT.
MILWAUKEE. CHICAGO.
t <i i \
Mch. May. Mch. May.
9:30a.M. 91% 97? 8 91% 97%
9:40 " 91 97>4 92 98
9:50 « 90 % 97% 91% 97%
10:00 " 90% 97 91 % 97%
10:10 •♦ 90% 90% 91% 97%
10:20 «• 90% 96% 9H4 97 %
10:30 " 90% 96% 91% 97%
10:40 " 90% 90% 91% 97%
10:50 " 90 % 9671 91% 97%
11:00 " 90% 96% 91% 97%
11:10 -« 90% 96% 91% 97
11:20 " 90% 96% 91% 97%
11:30 " 90% 96% 91% 97%
11:40 " 90% 90% 91% 97%
11:50 " 90% 96% 91% 97%
12:00 M. 90% 90% 91% 97%
12:10 P.M. 90% 9676 91% 97^
12:20 -' 90% 96 % 91% 97%
l*-':30 " 90% 97 91% 97%
12:40 » 90% 97 91% 97%
12:50 " 90% 97 91% 97%
1:00 " 90% 97 91% 97%
2:00 «« 90 7i 97 91% 97%
2:15 »• 90% 96% 91% 97%
2:80 •• 90% 97 91% 97%
2:45 " 90% 97 91% 97%
copy, oats Ayp pork—Chicago.
Corn. ] Oats. Pork.
Time.
MchMayJMchlMay Mch I May
9:30 a.m. 53 58%j.32 136% 18 25 18 50
9:40 » 53 58% 32 36% 18 25 18 52%
9:50 « 53 58% 32 36% 18 22% 18 47%
10:00 " 52% 58% 32 36% 18 20 18 45
10:10 " 53 58% 31% 36% 18 22% 18 42%
10:20 «« 52% 58% 31% 36% 18 20 18 40
10:30 » 53 58%!32 36% 18 15 18 35
10:40 " 52%57%|32 36% 18 10 18 30
10:50 " 53% 58 31% 36% 18 10 18 30
11:00 " 52% 57% 31% 86% 18 12% 18 35
11:10 " 52%|5778l32 36% 18 10 18 32%
11:20 " 52%j57%l31% 30% 18 07% 18 30
11:30 »• 52% 57% 31% 36% 18 05 18 27%
11:40 « 52% 57% 82 36% 18 05 18 25
11:50 " 52% 57% 32 36%!l8 07% 18 27%
12:00 M. 52% 58 32% |36%!l8 07% 18 30
12:10 p.m. 52% 58 32%:36%jl8 10 18 30
12:20 " 52%|58% 32%j36%ll8 05 18 27%
12:30 " 52%|58 32%!36%ll8 05 18 25
12:40 " 52% 58 32%|36%!l8 10 18 27%
12:50 " 52% 58 32% 36%ll8 05 18 25
1:00 » 52%|58 32 |36%18 05 18 25
2:00 " 52% 58 32 36%jl8 07%|18 27%
2:15 « 52% 58 32% 36% 18 07%jl8 25
2:30- " 52%;57%32 36%!l8 10 18 27%
2:45 " 52% 58 i32% 36%T8 05 [18 25
CHICAGO CLOSING.
Feb. wheat 91% Feb. corn
April wheat 92% April corn 53%
Jnnewheat 99 June corn 58;%
July wheat 99 % July corn 60
Feb. oats Feb. pork 18 02%
April oats 32% April pork
June oats 36% June pork.....18 30
Year oats.. 30% Tear pork 18 50
FOREIGN MARKETS.
TBy Cablegram. |
Liverpool, Feb. 25, 12 m.—Wheat quiet but
steady. Corn, demand dull.
Mark Lake—Wheat, better tone.
ASSOCIATED PRESS MARKETS.
Milwaukee Produce.
Milwaukee, Feb. 25.—Flour quiet and un
changed. Wheat dull; No. 2 91 V s c; February
90J£c; March 90^c; April 91 %c; May 97.
Corn dull and lower; No. 2 53c. Oats lower; No.
2 32c. Rye steady;* No. 1 59c. Barley
buoyant and higher; No. 2 58&c; extra No. 3
53c. Provisions lower; mess pork $18.10 cash
and February; $18.30 May; lard, prime steam
$9.65 cash and February; $9.85 May. Sweet
pickled hams firm at 12@12J4c Butter firm.
Cheese dull. Eggs steady. Receipts, 10,364
barrels of flour; 22,147 bushels of wheat; 16,495
bushels of barley. Shipment, 8,460 barrels of
flonr; 2,125 bushels of wheat; 2,080 bushels of
"barley.
Chicago Produce.
Chicago, Feb. 25.—Flour quiet and un
changed. Wheat in fair demand, but at lower
rates; opened at Saturday's closing, but soon
declined 7sc, and closed Saturday;
sales ranged: February 90M@91^c, closed at
9154c; March 91H@917sC, closed at 91H©
91Hc; April92@93c, closed at 92^@9258c;May
97<@.98c, closed at 98&c bid; June- 98%®
99^0, clcsrJ at 99&C; July qnotableat about
l@l%c over June; 5b. '% Chicago spring
90%<<591%c, closed at »l«c; No. 3 Chicago
spring 79@81c; No. 2 red winter 98c@$l.09%.
Corn in fair demand, but easier; prices declined
%®3£c below the outside prices and closed
about %c lower than Saturdays close: cash 53®
53He, closed at 53c; Febrnary 52%<^52&c,
closed at 52% c; March 52%@527»c, closed
at 52%c; April 53 %@53%c, closed at 5314c;
May 57%<&58%c, closed at 58<&58%c: June
58%<&58?.£c, closed at 58%@58%c; July 59?i
@60%c, closed at 60%c. Oats in fair demand
for cash; cash 32c; February and March' 32c;
April S2^i<8,Z2%c, closed at 3214c; Hay 36%
<&36%c, closed at 36%c; June 36%ig,36%c;
year 30c. Rye dull at 57%c. Barley dull:
cash 62@63c. Flax seed quiet at Si.53 on
track. Pork in fair demand; opened 10<&12%c
higher, advanced 2Vife5c, receded 20<g*.30c, ral
lied slightly and closed steady; cash $lS.12%r£
18.27%: February $18.05© 18.27%, closed at
3l8.05rf.18.10: March $18.07%<ai8.22%, closed
at Sl8.05©18.10; May S18.25©18.55, closed at
S18.27%@18.30; June §18.35(§-18.45, closed at
j §18.37 [email protected]. Lard, in fair demand, but
easier: opened2%@5c higher, receded 10©12%c,
and closed steady ; cash $9.60<!p.67%: March
39.62%@9.67% : Mav $9.82%<&9.9.->, closed at
89.82%<&».85: June S9.87%@*9.93. Bulk meats
in fair demand; shoulders 87.40; short ribs
$9.35; short clear $9.^0. Butter quiet and un
changed: creamery 23@31c; dairy S0@v!o.".
Eggs quiet at 22c. Whisky steady and un
changed.
Receipts, 13,000 barrels of flour; 33,000 bnsh
els of wheat: 187,000 bushels of corn; 65,000
bushels of oats; 52,000 bushels of rye; 30,000
bushels of barley. Shipments, 9,500 barrels
of flour; 9,500 bushels of wheat: 116,000 bush
els of corn; 116,000 bushels of oats ; 5,000 bush
els of rye: 11,000 bushels of barley.
The "call— Wheat, sales 655,000 bushels:
March and April advanced He; May declined
He; June declined He Corn, salts 455,000
bushels: March, May and June declined He.
Oats, sales 90,000 bushels; unchanged. Pork,
sales 3,800 barrels ; declined 2He. Lard, sales
2,500 tierces; May and June declined 2He.
Chicago Live Stock.
Chicago, Feb. 25.—The Drovers' Journal re
ports: Hogs, receipts 7,000 head; shipments
5,000 head; market good; heavy and light
grudes 5@10c higher, common grades weaker;
rough packing $t>[email protected]; packing and ship
ping [email protected]: light St>[email protected]; skips $5.50
(rr.tj.40. Cattle, receipts 6,500 head; shipments,
8,000 head: fairly active and unchanged ; exports
§[email protected]; good to choice shipping steers 85.90
(56.50; common to medium S* r>[email protected]; corn
fed Texans averaging 890 pounds 85.45. Sheep,
receipts 3,800 head: shipments 2,400 head:
active and firm; inferior to fair $3.75iJ*.4.50
per cwt.; medium to good [email protected]; choice
to extra [email protected]. The Liverpool special to
the .Drovers' Journal quotes an advance of He
on cattle: best American steers are quoted at
15He; best dressed sheep at 18c per pound.
New York Produce.
New York, Feb. 25. —Flour steady; receipts,
14,000 barrels; exports, 8,500 barrels; superfine
state and western S'--75§)3.35: common to good
extra [email protected]: good to choice [email protected];
Minnesota patent process [email protected]. Wheat, spot
grades H@Hc lower and dull; options opened \c
higher, afterwards lost the advance and declined
H&He, closing firm with recovery of H@?»c;
receipts 12,000 bushels; exports 93,000 bushels :
ungraded red87c@$1.22; No. 3 red 81.03 H : No. 2
red [email protected]; ungraded white 97ig.Sl.09H;
No. 2 red February quoted at $1.07?£; Marcb
sales 304,000 bushels at 8l.07»@1.08H, closing
at S1.08H; April sales 56,000 bushels
at [email protected]£ closing at $1.10%;
May sales 1,392,000 bushels at $1.12H
@1.13, closing at 81.12H; June sales 40,000
bushels at $1.13;''@1.1376, closing at 81.13H.
Corn opened firm, subsequently declined H@Hc,
closing steady with slight recovery; receipts 59,
000 bushels; exports 48,000 bushels; ungraded
56(fr63c; No. 3 59Hc; steamer 61c; No.
2 u2@C3c; steamer white 63c; ungraded white
6c: No. 2 February 62c, closing 62c; March
62@62Hc, closing at 62He; April 63%@635sC,
closing at 63Hc; May 64Ji@65Hc, closing at
64 7gc; June 65@65Hc, closing at 65He.
Oats He lower; receipts 55,000 bushels; ex
ports 62 bushels; mixed western 41@42c; white
western 43@46c. Hay steady. Coffee, spot fair;
Rio steady; options shade better; sales: 250
bags Rio Xo. 7 February at $10.80; 8,750 bags
March at [email protected]; 5,000 bags April at $10.90
@11.00; 500 bags May at $11.00®11.05; 6,500
bags June at [email protected]; 1,750 bags July at
[email protected]; 500 bags August at $11.20; 250
bags September at $11.25. Sugar easier; fair to
good refining quoted at 556c; off A 6H@6Xc;
mould 7 %c; standard A 7@7Hc; powdered 7%
@7 7» c; granulated 7He; cubes 7@7cJ£. Molasses
unchanged; 50-test refining 25c; Porto Rico 35®
45c; New Orleans 30@35c. Petroleum steady;
united 99c. Tallow firm. Rosin quiet but firm.
Turpentine dull. Eggs, western, active but lower
at 21%@22c. Pork dull and easier; new mess
[email protected]. Lard heavy; prime steam $9.95;
February $9.98; March $8.83-; April [email protected];
May $10.02®10.10; June [email protected]; July
[email protected]. Butter dull and weak. Cheese
firm. Other articles unchanged.
New York Dry Goods.
New York, Feb. 25. —The general demand is
very moderate for all classes of cotton fabrics.
Fabric prints, lawns and thin dress goods are in
fair request. Men's wear woolens are looked
after by many new buyers.
Cincinnati Whisky.
Cincinnati, Feb. 25.—Whisky active and
firm at 81.15.
Minneapolis Markets.
The receipts and shipments at and from
Minneapolis yesterday, were as follows:
Receipts—Flour, 1,375 barrels; wheat, 46,500
bushels; corn, 4,000 bushels; oats, bushels;
barley, bushels; miilstuffs, 28; hay —; lum
ber, 130,000 feet; coal, 568 cars; wood, 3g
cars; barrel Btock, 5 cars; Flaxseed,
bushels. Total 236 cars.
Shipments—Flour, 9,480 barrels; wheat, 80,
000 bushels; barley, bushels; millstuff, 112
tons; lumber, 360,000 feet; wood, 14 cords;
barrel stock, 1 car. Total, 226 cars.
The following were the quotations on 'change:
Flour—Patents, [email protected]; straights, $5.25
@.5.75; clears, [email protected] - low grades, $2.00®
3.25.
Wheat—No. 1 hard, $1,00%; No. 2 hard,
95%c: No. 2 northern, 86c.
Corn—None in market.
Oats—No. 2 mixed, 32c; No. 2 white, 34c
Bran—Bulk, $12.00©12.25. In sacks, S*2.00
more.
Shorts—[email protected].
Mixed Feed—[email protected].
Hat—Good upland wild, [email protected].
Dnluth Wheat.
[Special Telegram to the Globe.l
Duluth, Feb. 25.—Wheat—The markets on
'change to-day were lower and dull. Closing
prices: No. 1 hard •_May $1.04%; No. 2 hard
cash 92%c. In store, 2,408,763 bushels; afloat
in harbor 262,403 bushels.
DIPI.OMATIC3GOSSIP.
M. de Struve, Russian Minister at Wash
ington, has discontinued his receptions and
will soon arrange to go abroad, where be
will spend the summer.
Baron von Mobrenheim, Russian Ambassa
dor to England, who has been transferred to
France, will remain in England, pending
the settlement of the Mery question.
Senor Valera, tbe new Spanish Minister at
Washington, was at one time editor of the
Contemporaneo, of Madrid, and has been
thirty-one years in the diplomatic service.
Gen. Lew Wallace, our Minister to Turkey,
recently presented to the Sultan ex-Gov.
Stanford, of California, and subsequently
entertained him at dinner in elegant style.
M. de Velour, an attache of tbe French
Legation in St. Petersburg, has created a
scandal by marrying an actress, which has
resulted in his dismissal from the diplomatic
service.
Sir Evelyn Baring, British Minister at
Cairo, whose recent illness was regarded as
inopportune by reason of the condition of
agairs, has recovered sufficiently to resume
Ms duties.
Senor Emanuel Sibrela, the new Spanish
Minister to France, has presented bis cre
dentials and assured President Grevy that
Spain desires to strengthen the relations be
tween the two countries.
Herr von Eisendecher, German Minister
at Washington, gave an elegant dinnerparty
and reception a few evenings ago in honor
of Remenyi, to meet whom a number of
distinguished people were asked.
M. Weletsky, Russian Consul-General at
this port, who has been for some time past in
St. Petersburg on leave of absence, has just
been created by the Czar a Knight of St.
Stanislaus. M. Weletsky will return to New
York in April.
Mr. Plio, Chin, of the Chinese legation,
Washington, according to the Capital, of that
city, is invited to many dinners, as the ladies
find him very bright and amusing and his
English quite perfect, his Chinese dress
making a picturesque effect.
"Don't give me any more of your lip!"
said an ugly country school teacher to a pert
young miss who had "sassed" bim. "Oh,
you needn't worry, she retorted. "I would
not kiss you even if the freckles on your
face were gold dollars."—-New York Monting
■Tcnirnal.
A THIEF AT A WEDDING.
Society People at Janesrille, '..!>., Com
pelled to Submit to Being Starched for
Stolen Gold.
fJanesville Wis. Letter 22r.d.]
Janesville has been the theater of many
amusine and exciting scenes, but never,
since the founder conceived the idea of a
literary metropolis, a "school of prophets."
as it were, that should vie with Cambridge or 1
Concord, and erected his first log cabin on 1
the bank of the "ragins; Rock," has a
comedy been enacted that has so profoundly
stirred social circles as the one spontaneously
performed near here onq night not very long j
ago. Cards had been issued bearing Invita- j
tion to about a hundred guests to a wedding j
to occur on the evening referred to. In due
time part of the cream of Jamesville society
found itself In the parlors of the hospitable
host, awaiting the entrance of the pair whose
traditional happiness was about to tradition
ally begin. At last the frightened bride
groom led forth his trembling bride, and the
ceremony was pronunced in a most impress
ive and becoming manner. Then
came the usual congratulations —kiss-
ing of the bride by the young
gentlemen of the party, whieh the groom wit
nessed with a polite smile, but swearing
under his breath aud erinding his teeth in
rage. Possibly he then concocted the scheme
that later in the evening furnished the most
artistic part of the entertainment. The pres
ents, in ' great richness and variety, were
duly inspected, receiving the usual com
ments. But, alas for human happiness!
This festive occasion was suddenly turned
into a panic. Among the presents was a
neat little package containing five $10 pieces.
This package, it was whispered, had myster
iously disappeared. Before any of those pres
ent could depart they were informed by the
infuriated husband that no guests eould leave
the house without submitting to a search for
the missing treasure. The ladles screamed,
the gentlemen cursed, but there was no es
cape. To attempt it now would but fasten
suspicion, while a refusal to submit to the hu
miliation would serve the same end. Some
of the gentlemen even declared vociferously
that under no circumstances would they leave
the house until their pockets had been turned
wrong side out in the presence of the compa
ny, and their characters vindicated. The
gentlemen were huddled into one room and
the ladies corralled in another. Committees
of investigation flere appointed,
and the search began. The
gentlenian kept their hands in their pockets,
for the thought was by no means pleasant
that the thief, if present, in the confusion
that prevailed might extract their purses, or,
what was Infinitely worse, drop the stolen
gold slyly into his neighbor's pocket. Ima
gine fifty men crowded together, any one of
whom might happen to have on his person
$50 in gold of his own money. The scene
was indescribable. Boots, coats, vests,
pants were thrown off and piled in a promis
cuous heap, while their owners danced about
at the order of the committee of investiga
tion, too frightened to swear and too mad to
pray, while in the ladies' room—well, the
search in that quarter can better be imagin
ed than described.
Of course, the money was not found, but
the episode seemed \o have a chilling effect
upon the spirits of all present, and as they
left the hands of the committee they wen
silently forth into the night, more like at
company of burglars than of invited guests.
It is believed no invitations to weddings will
be issued in Janesville for at least a year to
come. They will not be accepted.
MINNESOTA NEWS.
Another bridge is being built across the
Long Prairie river at Waits Mills.
Prior Soh, Scott county, is anticipating a
boom next spring on the strength of build
ing a new city hall, and the opening of a
large brick yard.
Shakopee Argus: St. Paul real estate is on
the rise and parties from here who have in
vested considerable in St. Paul property ex
pect to realize largely.
A happy Leap year party came off at the
residence of C. W. Gore, in Rushford the
other evening. The Rushford city belles
did the honors graeefully.
Anoka Union: Nels Allen has completed
his contract on Rum river for 2,000,000 feet
of logs forT. S. King, and has been directed
to cut another half million. The logs are
said to be the finest lot put in this winter.
Perham, Otter Tail county, is about to
boom, with a new city hall to" be erected, a
new fire engine to be purchased, an artesian
well to be sunk and other corresponding im
provements.
Anoka Union: A ferocious dog attaeked
a horse that was being driven by George
Jurgens last Saturday and succeeded in bit
ing the animal quite badly in several places.
Subsequently Policeman Watson killed the
brute.
Morris Tribune: There is no farmer on
the prairies anywhere but what feels the
need of a grove for protection against these
blizzards. That being the case why are not
more of the farmers planting trees from
which protecting groves may grow?
Glencoe Register: There were in McLeod
county during 1883 one hundred and four
marriages and five divorces. Fifty-six per
sons took out their first naturalization papers.
Of these 14 were Scandinavians, 41 Ger
mans, Poles, Austrlans and Brittons. Not a
single Irishman knocked for admission.
St. Cloud Timet: By the last number of
the Lake City Sentinel, just received, we
learn that our old friend Morris C. Russel
has purchased that paper, and is once
more at the editorial helm. Well, Morris is
a whole team in the editorial harness, and
we rejoice that he has again put it on. The
Sentinel is a Democratic paper, too, which in
dicates that M. C. has reformed.
New Ulm Review: The high winds of
Monday and Tuesday sifted snow enough in
to the railroad cuts to stop all trains. As
early as 8 a. m. Monday a freight train got
stuck in the snow between this place and
Sleepy Eye, and before night two others
shared a similar fate. On Monday evening
the passenger was only able to get as far
west as Waseca. All trains were suspended
yesterday.
St. Cloud Times: The Long Prairie Lead
ed states that the occupants of the Todd
County poor house, destroyed by fire on the
12th inst., had been previously reduced to
the necessity of subsisting upon a dog which
had died of starvation; that tbey did not
have clothing sufficient to cover them; that
they were covered with vermin, and entrely
destitute of care or attention from the
County Board. The story of their suffer
ings, as told by tbe Leader, is revolting in
the extreme, and a disgrace to Todd county.
Perham Bulletin: The people of Battle
Lake are showing their pluck by at once com
mencing work on another school house; even
nicer than the one burned last week. They
will take the $2,000 insurance, and will with
out taxing the district make up the £4.000.
This they will do out of their own pockets,
but would ask all teachers in the county who
have enjoyed the free use of this building
for institutes, etc., and which will be offered
as willingly in the future, to eontribute what
they can toward helping pay for tbe rebuild
ing of same.
[Official Publication.]
Yacatlon of Part of Alley in Bloct 72,
of Dayton 4 Irae's lUiOon to
St. Panl,
City Clerk's Office, St. Paul, Minn., )
Febuary, 25, 1884. J
Whereas a petition has beon filed in this oflice,
by order of the Common Council of the City of
Saint Paul, and as provided by law, asking for
the vacation of that part of the alley running
northeasterly through block 72, of Dayton &
Irvine's addition to Saint Paul, which lies north
easterly of the easterly line of lots 2, 3 and 4, in
said block, extended southerly across said alley,
and
Whereas the petitioners state that they are the
owners of all the property on the line of the va
cation asked for, and that the object of said vaca
tion is that the portion of said block, through
which said alley runs, has been re-platted, and
that the said alley is of no further convenience
or use to the public, etc,;
Now, therefore, notice is hereby given that
said petition will be heard and considered by the
Common Council of the City of Saint Paul, on
Tuesday, the 8th day of April, A. D., 1884, at
7:30 o'clock p. m., at the council chamber, in
the city hall in said city.
By order of the Common Council.
THOS. A. PRENDERGAST,
Feb. 26 5w tnes. City Clerk.
SEALED PROPOSALS.
Mi Apt
ClTT CoJCPTROUJtB'9 OFFICE, CtTT HaLL. )
CittopSaintPacl, Minnesota, Feb. 9,1884. )
Sealed proposals will be received at the office
of the City Comptroller of the City of Saint Paul,
State of Minnesota, until 8 o'clock p. m.
Friday, the Twenty-Ninth Day
of February, 1884,
FOR
$95,000
FIVE (5) PER CENT.
SEWERAGE BONDS
OF THE
City of Saint Panl,
(COUPONS ATTACHED)
Maturing in 25 years from the
First Day of March, 1884,
as provided by law, and under a resolution of
tho Common Council of the City of Saint Paul,
passed F«.j. 9th, 1884.
All of said bonds bearing interest at the rate of
fire (5) per cent, per annum, payable semi
annually at the financial agency of the City of
Saint Paul in the City of New York.
These bonds will be issued in denominations
One Thousand Dollars Each,
and delivered to the successful purchaser in the
City of Saint Paul.
No bid will be entertained at leas than par, as
provided by law.
Bids -mil be entertained for the whole or for
any separate block or part of block.
Mark bida "Sealed Proposals for Sewerage
Bonds."
Address ROBERT A. 8MITH,
Chairman Committee of Ways and Means of the
City of Saint Paul, City Comptroller's office,
Saint Paul, State of Minnesota. 85-59
-mim
JTaey who work
rly and late the
iar round need oc
aionally the
wlthful stimulus
n patted by a
holesome tonic
te Hoetetter-s
omacb Bitters.To
I its purity and
Sciencv as a rem
ly and preventive
! disease corn
end it. It checks
cipient rhenma
■m and malarial
*mptoms, relieves
mstipation, dys
tpaia and bilious
m», arrests pre
largies, mitigates
na convalescence,
dealers generally.
■MtBiS;
UfON&HEALY
state & Monroe a«s., Chicago.^3
Will **nd prmM to tar ad dm U*/^
BAND CATALOGUE, f a
for 1343, 1W f*tm, ilO tDjraTJnfil «■
o* in.trum-TjU, Sulti, C»pfc Im\
IPompont, LpauleU, C«p-I*nu»,
Sl»n<U. Drum Wijort SUflk. ui
"r.u, Suodrr Band Outfiu, Bapafctaf
Mitertali, abo laclcd-a ltuti-ae-fefi aid *r
kctoa for Amataar BaaA* an*a I |IH|' 1 H
-TQMMBaiulMarik *
Chicago, MilwatiKee & St. Paul Hallway.
The finest, Dining Cars In the world are run on al
through trains to and from Chicago.
Arrival and departure of through passenger trains:
"T^A^GTaAlXS. | M ,X e~r St L^ u \
River Division.
Milwaukee ft Chicago Ex..'A 12 noon. IA 12:45pm
Milwaukee ft Chicago Ex..'A 7:0OpmA 7:45pm
La Crosse, Dubuque. Rock
Island ft St. Louis Ex C 4:50 a m C 5:25 am
Iowa ft Minn. Division.
Sou.Minn., la. ftDav'pt Ex. C 8:00 a mC 8:10am
Owatonna Accommodation. C 4:30 p m C 4:30 pm
Mason City,, Sou. ft West. Ex E 6.00pmE 7:10pm
Hastings ft Dakota Div. |
Aberdeen ft Dakota Ex C 8:45 am C 8:00 am
jfeRRiviN-G thains Arrive I Arrive
a#ri\i.\g tka^s. gt. Paul. |MlBneapolIs
River Division.
Chicago ft Milwaukee Ex.. A 7:20 am 1 A 8:10am
Chicago ft Milwaukee Ex..'A 2:25 pm A 3:10pm
La Crosse, Dubuque, Rock.
Island ft St. Louis Ex C 9:35 pmC 10:10 pm
Iowa & Minn. Division. |
Owatonna Accommodation. C 10:26 am C 10:35 am
Sou. Minn, ft la. Ex !C 6:55 pmC 7:0">pm
Ma»on City, Sou. ft West. Ex F 7:45 a m F 8:30 a m
Hastings & Dakota Div.
Aberdeen ft Dakota Ex C 6:30 pmC 5:40 pm
A, means dally; C, except Sundays; E, except Sat
urdays; F, except Monday.
Additional trains between St. Paul and Minneapolis
via "Short Line," leave both cities hourly. For par
ticulars see short Line time table.
St. Paul—Chas. Thompson, City Ticket Agent, 151
East Third street. Brown ft Knebel, Ticket Agents,
Union Depot.
Minneapolis—G. L. Scott, City Ticket Agent, No. 7
Nicollet House. A. B. Chamberlain, Ticket Agent,
Depot. •
MIMEAPOLIS MD ST. LOUIS RULW1T.
ALBEBT LEA BOUTE,
Le. St. Paul Ar. St. Paul
Chicago Express *7:00 a m '8:05 a ra
Des Moines ft Kansas City Ex. *7:00 a m *8:05 a m
St.Louis "Through" Express +2:50 pm tl2:20pm
Des Moines* Kansas City Ex. +2:50 pm J12:20 p m
Excelsior and Wlnthrop ""3:30 p m *12:20 p m
Chicago "Fast" Express d6:20 a m d7:45 a m
d daily, * dally except Sundays, f daily except Sat
urday, i daily except Monday. Ticket office St. Paul,
corner third and Sibley streets, E. A. Whltaker, City
Ticket and Passenger Agent, and Union Depot.
| S. F. BOTD,
General Ticket and Passenger Agent, Minneapolis.
ST. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS & MANITOBA RAILWAY.
FJLRGO SHORT LINE
ONLY ALL RAIL LINE TO WINNIPEG AND THE BRITISH NORTHWEST.
TOCE TABU.
Leave Leave Min-j Arrival Arrival Mln
| St Pan1. I neapolis. I St. Paul. ! neapolis.
Willmar, Morris and Brown's Valley j *7*30 a mi 8-06 a m! *6*00pm 5:25pm
Fergus Falis, Moorhead, Fargo, Crookston, St. Vincent
and Winnipeg : *8:00am 8:50 am! *6:30pm: 5:45 pm
St Cloud Accommodation, via Monticello and Clear
water r2:30pm ?*05pmj *I2-<X) m 11:20pm
St. Cloud Accommodation, via Anoka and Elk River— *<i:0upm 4:36 pm: *10:15sm 11:00 am
Breckenridge, Moorhead, Fargo, Wabpeton, Castelton,
Hope, Portland and Mayville. fi-COpm: 7:40pm *t7-30 a m 7:00 am
Fergus Falls, Moorhead, Fargo, Grand Forks, Devil's:
Lake, Larlmore, Necbe and Winnipeg ' *f8:30pm 9:15 pm f7-00*m 6:80 am
f Daily. * Except Sundays.
ST PAUL & LMINTCTE A.POLTS SHORT LINES.
Leave St Paul—f*7:20 a m, 7:35 a m, +*8*00 a m, 8:30 am, 8*85 am, 9*«0 am, 10:30 am, 11 JO am, "12:30 pm,
1:30 pm, 2:30 pm, 2:3.5 p in, b:3U p m, 3:50 p in, t+:00 p m, 4:30 p m, 5:30?p n, **5:40 p m, 6u0 p m, 6:30 p m,
j7'.00 p m, 8:0O p m, 8:30 p iu:
Leave Minneapolis—6 30am, 7:00 am, 7,10 am, 7-30 a m, +7:40 a m, 3 30 am, 9:30 * m, 10:30 am,
11:20 a in, 11:30 a in, +12-.U0 m, 12:80 p m, 1:30 v in, 2:30 p m, 3:30 p m, 4:3o P m, 5:30 p m, tS:-l5 p m, 6:3U p
m, 7*00 p m, \il:\Q p m. fcSr-*Elegant sueepers oh all through trains.
ST. PAUL— W. A. Turner, City Ticket Agent, cor. Third and Sibley streets; Brown & Ken<sb*l,|Agenu,
Union depot.
MINNEAPOLIS—J. E. Smltn, General Agent, and H. L. Martin, Ticket Agent cor. Washington Md
Fourth Ave. North; W. H, Winer, Agent, Nicollet bout*
LEADING BliSS Ml
ST. PAUL, - - MINN.
ATTOBIET8 ASP COUNSELLORS AT LAW.
Thoxa*. g. Eaton-, Room 50, GllfUlan bloek.it.
Paul, Minn.
ARCHITECTS.
E. P. Basspord. Room 23, Ollfllian block.
H. S. Triherxk. c. E.. 19 Gllflllan block.
A. D. Hinsdal«, Presley block.
A. M. Radci-itp. Mannbelmer block.
J. Waltm STEv*t.\-3o.\, Davidson block. Boom 23
, ARTISTS' MATERIALS.
Shkhwood Hocoh. corner Third and Wibulitv
Stevens A Rob«-,t», 71 East Third street, St. Psai
BOORS AID STATIOIERfT-
Sherwood Horon. corner Third and Wabashaw.
St. Pail Book A Statiox*trt Co., liT East Third St
CARRIAGES ASP StEI6HsT~
A. Xippolt, East Slith street, between Jaclaoa
and Sibley streets.
CARPETS ASP WALL~PAPER«
Johv Matheis, 17 East Third street.
W. L. Axdebsqs, Ml East Third street.
PRY GOODS—Wholesale.
Avkrbacu, Fixch <t Van Sltck, Warn street,
between Fourth and Fifth.
I |
PRY €OOPS—Retail.
LixDEKE, Lapp <fc Co.. 13 East Third street.
GROCERIES- Wholesale.
P. H. Kelly 4 Co., Ml to US East Third street.
HARP WARE ASP TOOLS.
F. G. Dbapbk & Co., 53 East Third Street.
JEWELERS ASP WATCHMAKERS.
Emil Geist, 8"> East Third street.
LOOKIYG CLASSES.
S-ntvE-vs & Robeetsox, 71 East Third atreet, St.
Paul.
PICTCBES AID FRAMES.
St*v*u.s* Kobebtson, 71 East Third street, St.
Paul.
TRITE BAKERS.
Crippex * L'rso.v, 7^ East Third street.
W. H. Oakland, -U Kant Third street.
WlgM UB LIQUORS—Wholesale.
B. Kuhl ft Co., Wholesale dealers la liquors and
wines, 194 East Third street. St. Paul.
WHOLESALE VOTiQXS.
Aktiht*. Wak:*kn' ft Abbott, laii and 183 East
Third street.
WHOLESALE HARDWARE.
Stboxo, Uackstt ft Co., 213 to 219 East Fourth
street.
mVEmS'GUlDE
St. Paul Railway Time Tables.
Clicai.StPail.MiDiaplis
AND OMAHA RAILWAY.
THE ROYAL E0UTE,
EAST, SOUTH AND WEST.
HO CHANGE OF "(MS TO CHICAGO,
Des Moines or Kansas City.
_ _ . Leave I Leave
-DO-ARTIXO TKAIN8. Mlnneapol|i | St . p, ul .
Des Molne* fast Express... +7:55 a m +7:20 a in
Chicago Day Express •12:00 m *-12:45 p m
Chicago 4 Milwaukee Ex... **7:00 p rn *7:45 p m
Sioux City ft Sioux Falls... t7:55 a in 7;20 a tn
Shakopee and Merriam Jet. .7:20 » m
Omaha and Kansas City *4:35pm *3:'M)p~ni
Green Bay and Appleton... +*:00 a nv*
Shakopee and Mrrrlani Jet. *2:30 p m *3:50 p in
North'Wisconsin & Superior +7:40 a m +8:15 a in
River Falls +4:30 p ml +5:05 p in
Dining Cars the finest In the world and luxurious
Smoking Room Sleepers ou all Chicago trains.
abkivin-o TBAI*S* 1 sf plul. MImSSiu
Chicago ft Milwaukee Ex.. t7:20 a ra t8:10am
Merriam Jet. and Shakopee. **12:15pin •1:00 p in
Chicago Night Ex press •2:25 p m *3:10pm
Sioux City ft Sioux Falls. .. +ll:40pm +ll:10pm
Omaha and Kankas City... '12:10 pm "11:40 am
North Wisconsin ft Superior +3:80 p m +4:15 p in
Merriam Jet. and Shakopee *11:23 p m »8:40 p in
Oreen Bay and Appleton... +7:50 p in +8:53 p m
River Falls 9:25 am +10:00 a m
Des Moines Fast Express...' +11:40 pm +ll:10p ra
LAKE ELMO AND STILLWATER TRAINS
LEAVE MINNEAPOLIS.
+7:40 a m, +8:30 a m, *12:00 m, +1:30 p m, +4:30 p m,
•7:00 p m.
LEAVE ST. PAUL.
+6:00 am, +8:1". am. +9:05 am, 10:05 am, •12:45 am,
•2:05 p Hi, +5:05 p m, and *7:45 p m.
LEAVE STILLWATER FOB ST. PAUL AND MINNEAPOLIS.
6:05 am, 7:30 am, +8:28 a m, +12:00* In, •1:13 pm,
+8:30 pm, 4:30 p m. +6:50 p m.
* Dally. + Except Sundays. % Except Mondsys.
jf-gr-Tlcket-i, sleeping car accommodations, and all
Information can be secured at
No. 10 Nicollet House liloe^. Minneapolis.
J. CHAKBONNEAf, Ticket Agent.
Minneapolis depot, corner Washington and Fourth
avenue north, H. L. MARTIN, Ticket Agent.
Corner Third and Jackson streets. St. Paul,
CHAS. H. PF.TSCH. City Ticket Agent.
New Union Depot, foot of Sibley street,
KNEBF.L ft BROWN, Ticket Agents.
H. E. HATDN, Ticket Agent, Stillwater.
1RTHEM PACIFIC R. R.,
L THE NEW
" Overland Boute !"
THE ONLY LINE TO
Portland. Ore., and the Pacific Northwest
I 'Leave
Departing Trains. I Leave Mluneap-
I St. Paul. oils.
Pacific express I *8*00pm *8:46 p m
Fargo day express +8:35 a m +9:15 a in
Fargo night express | *8*00 p m *8:45 p m
Dining cars.Pullman sleepers, elegant day coaches,
second-class coaches, and emigrant sleeping car*
between St Paul. Minneapolis, Fargo, Dak.; and
Portland, Ore., without change.
Arrive
Arriving Trains, Minneap- Arrive
oils. St. Paul.
Atlantic express »7-26 a m *7:40 a,m
Fargo day express +7:06 pm +7:20 pm
Fargo night express *7:25 am *7:40 a m
•Daily. fExcept Sunday.
City office, St. Panl, 43 Jackson street.
City office, Minneapolis, No. 10 Nicollet house.
CHAS. S. FEE,
General Passenger Agent.
JOHN MUIK, Superintendent of Traffic.
M FIXTURES.
CENNEY & HUDNEK
m and 165 Worf Third Stmt
' Opposite Metropolitan Hotel.
7

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