Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 154, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 5, 1875 Page: 2 of 8
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The Daily New&
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■ SUNDAY MORNING.
ITEM3 OF^NTERE8t7
PtrraMl wad Literary.
—Mr. George F, Bristow has for
nearly five years been occupied in writ-
ing a National cantata, which he hopes
to produce next year at the Centennial.
He has taken for a libretto the poem by
William Oland Bourne, written in 1861,
and entitled “The Republic.”
—Baron Grant, tho uew Italian minis-
ter to the United States, just arrived, is
a healthy bachelor of 40. He has been
in the Italiau diplomatic service for
fifteen years at Madrid, Vienna, and
Brussels, lie is a favorite of Victor
Emanuel, is thoughtful, prudent, and a
friend of the Centennial.
—It is not generally known that the
real name of Henry Wilson was Henry
Colbath. It is said that his father was
excessively addicted to drink, and that
the man who adopted Henry in his early
life was named Wilson, whose name the
Vice-President afterwards assumed. Ilis
brother, who was with him in his ill-
ness, retains his rfiune, S. H. Colbath.
He is employed as a messenger under
the Sergeant-at-arms of the United
States Senate.
—The Utica Observer mentions as a
fact which has escaped the notice of all
his biographers, that Edgar Allan Poe
was the grandson of Benedict Arnold.
His mother, who was known before her
marriage as Elizabeth Arnold, an En-
glish actress, was the natural daughter
of the traitor. The statement rests on
the concurrent testimony of a number
of old actors why knew Elizabeth Arnold
well. Poe himself alluded to the matter
occasionally in the company of those
who knew this chapter in his family his-
tory.
—Colonel Don Piatt, in a recent let-
ter from’Paris, says that “Gabrielle
Greeley has the face of an angel, with
the figure of the Venus do Medicis.
There is such a dreamy beauty in her
expression, that it seems to be more of
a purer world than of this. Her face is
a perfect oval, with large, lustrous eyes,
delicate yet firm nose, a mouth
‘On which the honey-bee might sip
And dream of l>lis- in June, ’
and all crowned by light wavy hair in
heavy masses that might make the Em-
press Eugenie jealous. But her great
attraction is in the sweet, innocent,
spirituelle expression of her lovely face,
that is as winning, frank, and confiding
as that of a child.”
Nchonl and Church.
—It is estimated that 11,000 people
attended the first evening meeting of
Moody and Saukey at Philadelphia.
Thousands were turned away, being un-
able to gain admission.
—The Boston Jews have been peti-
tioning that their children may be ex-
cused from attending school exercises
on Saturdays, but the School Commit-
tee l’cfuse to grant it.
—A Ladies’ Catholic Missionary So-
ciety is being formed for the purpose of
sending missionaries to the Indians. An
appeal is to be made to every Catholic
priest to form a parish society. The
headquarters of the central society are
. to be in Washington.
—Mr. Yung Wing, the head of the
Chinese Educational Commission in this
country, has purchased a large lot in
Hartford, Conn., on which there will
be erected a building capable of accom-
modating seventy pupils. This will be
used as the headquarters of the com-
mission.
—Four ministers of the Evangelical j
to be imiQi
practical resul
tinped. The
mated to cost between £
they have exceeded
t
otlve of /my
been discon-
Vrere esti-
600 and £600,
an outlay of
00%
—The poisoning of women’s legs by
colored stockings has been reported ou
bv Prof. Marriner, a Chicago chemist
He says that the seal-brown and red-
dish-brown hues contain picric acid,
which will poison the flesh with which
it comes in close contact. He adds:
“As these dyes are used not only in col-
oring all kinds of fabrics, but also for
confectionery, liquor, cosmetics, and a
great variety of objects, the danger at-
tending their use can be readily appre-
ciated.”
—Experiments which have been made
on one of the railways of Pennsylvania
to test the efficiency of wooden rails are
said to have succeeded *much beyond
the expectations of the projectors of tho
enterprise. The rails are of sugar ma-
ple, seven inches by four inches in
thickness, and -about twelve feet in
length. The ties are laid down in the
ordinary way, notched, and the rails let
into them about four inches. They are
then keyed firmly with wooden wedges
driven on the sides. The cost of laying
these rails is four hundred and fifty dol-
lars a mile. No iron spikes are required,
and the cost of track-laying is about the
same as in the ease of iron rails. The
highest rate for locomotives to pass
over such a track with safety has been
fixed at sixteen miles an hour. It has
been estimated that a wooden track
will last, ordinarily, from three to four
years.
Foreign Nate*.
—The Princess of Wales anil the roy-
al children will pass their Christmas
and New Year at Copenhagen. They
will be absent from England about six
weeks.
—All Polish landed proprietors in four
provinces have been ordered by the Rus-
sian Government to sell to their present
holders any farms rented by Russians,
upon conditions regulated at St.
Petersburgh. This, it is said, will com-
plete the impoverishment of the local
Polish nobility.
—Mr. Disraeli has a worn carpet and
plain wooden shelves in his library, and
he eats sandwiches out of hand while
strolling in tile London suburbs. Mo-
tor Hugo has no carpet on his library
floor. Thomas Carlyle smokes a clay
pipe. George Eliot lives humbly. One
would think they never heard of three- ously stated
button kids.
—There is no such poverty in South
Australia as is known in England. If a
workingman is healthy, sober, and in-
dustrious, his* family can have good
meat two or three times a day, bread
made of the finest wheat, and fruit and
vegetables are abundant and cheap.
During the fruit season, incredulous as
it may sound, the very pigs are foil on
peaches and milk.
—A cable dispatch announces the
death of Francis, the Fifth Duke of
Modena, who formerly reigned' as
Francis V. Archduke of Austria and
Prince Royal of Hungary and Bohemia,
experiencing various revolutionary in-
terruptions until his final deposition in
1860, when Modena became part of the
newly constituted kingdom of Italy.
His name was Francis Ferdinand Gemi-
nien, and he succeeded his father Fran-
cis JY., in 1846. His wife, whom he
married in 1842, was the Princess Adel-
gonda, daughter of ex-King Louis, of
Bavaria.
with warm water, and thehlred
rushed in with the garden pump. ilfcey
forced half a gallon down Benjamin’s
throat, and then held him by the heels
over the edge of the porch and shook
him, when tl|e old man said: ‘ If we
don’t get them things out of Benny ho
will be pizened, sure.’ When they
were out, and Benjamin explained that
the articles alluded to were oysters, his
father fondled him for an hour with a
trunk strap for searing the family.
Ever afterward Franklin’s language was
marvelously simple and explicit.
Hapa and Mlihapa.
—Three little boys in Brooklyn, N.
Y., the youngest 7 and the eldest 10,
were killed by the caving in of a sand-
bank where they were playing.
—J. Ititz Burns, son of Gen. James
Burns, of Lewiston, Penn., accidentally
shot himself dead while hunting deer,
near Phillipsburg, Center County.
—A kerosene oil lamp exploded in a
shoemaker’s shop kept by Conrad Ser-
gler in Trenton, N. J., and injured six
persons. One, named George Ashmore,
will probably die.
—Near Iowa City, Iowa, a lad named
Stummol was leading a spirited horse
to water, and tied the halter to his
wrists, when the horse took fright and
ran away, dragging the boy under his
feet. He was stamped and mangled
horribly. The horse ran with him,
with the halter thus tied to his wrists,
until both arms were pulled from their
shoulder-sockets and literally severed
from his body and attached to the halter.
When found lie was dead, and hardly
recognizable.
—On the 24th of September, Jacob
Reuter, of New Albany, I nil., tried to
burn his wife to death. He failed. He
then murdered her and severed his
windpipe, lie lingered on the verge of
death several weeks, then improv ed and
finally, as was supposed, he recovered.
On Nov. 24, precisely two months after
gashing his windpipe, ho endeavored to
show the doctor there was a hole in his
The Elephant la Central India,
In the region of {Central India, which
is destitute of roadways or tailwaye,
elephants are the chief reliance of the
traveler* bearing him in safety over a
country often impassable to any other
beast of burden. Even the camel is
considered less sure and trustworthy in
difficult and, dangerous passes. But,
when pursuing a journey, the elephant
is an object of great care—it being nec-
essary to insure against his declining
in strength under the fatigue of long
daily marches. Several persons are re-
quired in order to attend properly upon
the animal; therefore, the mahout, or
driver,generally takes his wife and chil-
dren along with him to assist in his
especial duties. Morning and evening
the animal must have a bath, and, be-
fore lie sets out on his march, every part
of his body where the skin is liable to
crack in the hot sun—his forehead, ears,
paws, etc.—must be anointed with
grease. When at rest, he must be
placed in the shade and relieved of his
trappings. A simple cord tied around
one leg, and fastened to a stake, suffices
to confine hint, as a docile elephant
never attempts to break away from re-
straint.
His daily rations, while ou the march,
consist of from 20 to 25 pounds of
wheat-flour, kneaded into cakes with
water, and a pound of ghee, or clarified
butter, and a half-pound of salt. These
cakes are baked ill pound-loaves, and
one-half is given at each of two separate
meals. These rations ought not to be
abated in quantity; hence it is import-
ant that t lie traveler should look to the
matter himself, as the mahout does
not scruple to rob the elephant by way
of providing for his own family. But
tho regular meals of bread do not by
any means furnish sufficient sustenance
for the huge beast. He must be regu-
larly taken to the jungle, where lie se-
cent*. At timea the whole mass of hi»
hide was convulsed with a nervous
tremor, and he uttered low, plaintive
cries. At hut, after a quarter of an
hour’s labor, the elephant ’s back reach-
ed the level of the ground, when we
leaped on the bank, and, relieved of our
weight, he soon after joined us. It may
be imagined with what feelings of grati-
tude I embraced the brave animal to
which we owed our lives.”
SEASONABLE RECIPES.
Iron rust may be removed from cot-
ton and woolen goods by saturating the
spots with ink, and removing this by
the use of muriatic acid diluted with
five or six times its weight of water,
Chocolate Creams.—Allow enough new
milk to fill 10 small cups; set it on to
boil; and Having mixed in >; pint of
milk 2 ounces of grated chocolate, add
it to the boiling milk. Just before it.
comes off the fire jjour in the yelks of 6
eggs, beaten, and mixed in a little milk,
and 4 pound of white sugar. When
cool mix in the beaten whites of the
eggs, and a small quantity of vanilla
boiled in milk. Fill the 'cups nearly
full, place them in water, and boil 4
hour. Eat when cold.
A Oooil Wash for Uu Outside oj Build-
ings.—Take a clean, tight barrel, and
slake in it 1 bushel of freshly burned
lime, by covering it with boiling water.
After it is slaked add cold water enough
to bring it to the consistency of cream
or thick whitewash. Then dissolve in
water 1 pound of sulphate of zinc (also
known by the common name of white
vitriol) and add to the lime and water,
with 1 quart of fine salt. Stir well un-
til the ingredients are thoroughly mix-
ed. This forms a pure white. If a
cream color is desired, 4 pound of vel
low ochre is added.
Light Bread.—Take 6 good-sin 'I po-
tatoes, wash clean, boil down an<! mash
leets and breaks off for iiiniself branches 11]u.0|J(;,1 a ,,olftndev M\{\ qnart# of
of particular trees-spectes of the tig | w.lt(Mf ^ pint of dour, 4 pint f yeast;
are iiis especial favorites- and, loading
them on his back, returns to camp, lie
throat the size of a nickel, and fell over i there strips off the leaves, which lie n
dead. j jeets, anil, by a single dextrous stroke
' -Suicidal record: At Delphos. Ohio, j with the delicate finger terminating his
James Wicker, an old resident, and for trunk, removes the bark from each twig,
many years addicted to hard drinking, however slight, and then, discarding
committed suicide by taking arsenic.
Depression of spirits because no one
would sell him whisky was the cause.
The daughter of William Ogg, aged 15,
residing in the northern part of Hamil-
t In*, wood as lie before has done the
leaves, regales himself upon the bark
alone.
A species of grass ('L'ljpha itephanla),
with leaves growing to the size of a
ton County, Ohio, drowned herself in ; sabre-blade, abounds in the pools of
the Miami River. The cause is vari- i Central India after the month of April,
Some sav her parents j and is preferred by the elephant to tig-
wished her to marry an old man. OtL-1 boughs. He is also very fond of tiie
but
be careful not to have hot enough
scald the yeast, let it stand over night,
and it will be a light foam in the morn-
ing; then stir it in your dour to tin*
thickness of halter, let that .-land about
an hour, or until light, mix and xu- ail
till it blisters, let it rise agai:* then
work in loaves, lot il stand til: light and
bake. This quantity makes : v*■ or six
nice loaves. Add a tablespoon ;'ul of
salt to yeast.
Breakfast Bake.- A Central New York
banker who regards cakes in general as
an invention of the evil one, ■ torses
but one kind which he desires :<s ;.a ud-
tliis is too heating a t0 ''is hreakf:ist cup of ...flee,
l iti.n ,m, 1,.?I1< i taken, as eotlee.should betake- without
ers say she was slapped by her mother, i sugar-cane,
Daniel Riddles Barker, aged 21, a rosi- food. The animal often makes up balls 1" :v
■Wo nt YurtYi iminoW, in,to „•«- of earth, generally of red loam, and mllk*. 11,ls ls :iS "
Al.m-S Them ‘Tins V!r. , U ■ gi»e it to 11IU : If COftcOelips ■ light
Od<U nml Ends.
dent of North Columbus, Ohio, was
found dead, hanging on a tree, near his j swallows them
fat her’s residence. The young man had
shown symptoms of insanity for some
time, having threatened to kill his
parents several times for trivial
offenses. John Boulting, a German,
aged 47,
Midi., • out
Temporary insanity is supposed to liavi
This bolus acts as a
violent cathartic, and is instinctively
employed by the sagacious brute as a
remedy for intestinal worms, with which
he is very much troubled.
Tho animal soon becomes attached to
residing at Salesburg, j the traveler who rides him, greeting his
his throat with a razor. ' approach with a friendly cry, obeying
Iiis lightest direction, and carefully
caused the act. John Turner, a prom- i breaking the branches bending over the
incut lawyer, editor and politician, re- path, that might strike him in passing.
siding at Maustin, Wis., committed sui-
cide. Method not stated. Adolphus
Bear, aged about 50, noted for piety
and respected as one of the best citizens
of Germantown, 1ml., shot himself in
the head, causing a probably fatal
wound. David Chapman, of Browns-
ton, Midi., cut his throat on account of
family difficulties.* Leonard Misell,
aged It), a resident of Edgefield, Tenn.,
blew out his brains with a pistol. Cause
unknown.
me:
bread dough; 2 ditto of whit • s i.ar; !.
teacup of butter; 8 eggs; 1 teaspoon of
soda; 1 teacup of stoned raisin-, i ,.,ves,
cinnamon or nutmeg to taste. ' ; i. the
raisins in Hour. Stir tie* i i - with
the hand, and if not thick on - gl add a
small hit of Hour. But a layer of the
batter in a deep, round luk _ pan.
then a layer of raisins, until a!i tt.e hal-
ter is in the dish. Blare the pan in a
warm place for two hours, or until the
mixture is light; bake.—Cura' .Mat
Yorker.
The position of the i makes all the
difference there is in “untied” and
“united,” and to all newly-united peo-
ple we say, “ Mind your eye.”
What wood is best for winter use””
building in \\rightsville, B.„ which ilsk;,Iu“ ^™r-dou™al. “ Wneigh-
1 hey erected with their own hands in 12 '",r s,W00,1 18 lmiUf S'""1'1/,koPt '!‘ :l
daws. Tliev designed it and norfonned i I,lilce* responds the Detroit free
days. They designed it and performed
all of the nesessary work for its conple-
tion themselves, and in the meantime
conducted a meeting at the chapel at
Millersville, driving from one place to
the other every evening and morning.
—The Church of St. Maria Sopra
Minerva, in Rome, over which Cardinal
MoCloskey now presides by title, was
Press.
—l’aul Morphy’s friends believe that
his insanity had its start in the, strain
upon his mind caused by playing many
difficult games of chess. He is now in
a private asyfum near New Orleans.
—Two sons of Erin were standing bv
a hydraulic press when one called out 1 •» Bloomsbury, while the stock-broker
London Communities.
A correspondent of t lie Chicago Inter-
Oeenn says: London is a curious ag-
gregation of communities, each dwelling
in a city of its own, and each striving to
intrench itself behind an impenetrable
wall of social prejudices. An experi-
enced Londoner can tell with tolerable
certainty to what caste a man belongs
by knowing where he lives. It would
be difficult to map out the exact boun-
daries of the rival camps, but Becky
Sharp knows perfectly well the social
status of Mrs. Yeneering when she dis-
covers that the dwelling of the latter is
built by the Dominicans in 137<\ in the ;t0 otker: “Jim, l d like to put yi
Italian .MM. .tjle, on the r„if of a jLdiu taWv Inn,,,™! (ro,n I.......... Thn
temple of Minerva which was founded I 'S’ , various districts are -mum-all v‘ nerfeet
who inhabits a villa at Norwood views
his neighbor with suspicion who lias
MCI* MAULEIl.
Mud Mauler was an heiress, and
Put on more airs than the folks could stand.
Hut she tenderly loved the Judge, though he
Was only a Judge of whis-ki-ee.
she used to smile when his manly tread
Sought for the sidewalk abqvehis head.
And they stood up before the Justice stern,
And she was liisn and he was hern.
by Porapey. In 1*48-1855 it was re-1 iU,*w1ar* / Squaze the divB out o’ you j
stored ami decorated anew. Jt is rich !:in 1 ‘iere ” ‘,e nothing left!
in works of art, and has statues by the
greatest of Italian sculptors, from
Michael Angelo to Tenerani. A para-
graph in the Boston Transcript says that
in this church one saint (Catharine of
Sienna), five pontiffs and sixty-two car-
dinals lie interred. Two conclaves have
been held there—that of 1481, when Eu-
genins was elected, and that of 1447,
which elected Nicholas V. j itutheoilen sighed, “Oh, warn’t I a fool?"
- ; While she combed his hair with a three legg’d
Science and Industry. stool.
. ~ ^ lump of i oal meastn ing eight feet | ^nti ghe 0{t(,n ptaret| j„ mutc gnrprise
Ml length, three feet square, and weigh- At the voice he had for oyster fries,
ing two tons intended for tin* Philadel- j Aml it ma,le him oppn hl8 woni!eri
phia Centennial, has just boon landed when she got up her motion on cold
at Cape Breton, Nova Scotia. It was
taken from the Ontario (or Diamond)
lead at the Caledonia mines.
—'The celebrated Bath bricks, known
in almost every commercial market and
house as “brick dust,” are manufac-
faetured from the deposits of the river
Barrett, Bridgewater, Somerset, Eng-
rye.s
So lie sighed in the bitterness of Iiis soul,
And plunged his grief in the flowing howl.
And she said she wa, awfully sick of him.
And brace-1 up her spirits with Old Tom gin.
Of all sad words that we ever wot,
The saddest are some we have done forgot.
—Burlington Ho wktye.
, . , - , ... —Max Adeler lias brought out the
land. As far as known, is peculiar i following interesting reminiscence:
kind of deposit has never been found | When Benjamin Franklin was a lad, he
elsewhere.
—The experiments which have been
recently made at the joint expense of
three of the principal gas companies of
London, and conducted by Mr. Vernon
Harcourt and Dr. Siemens, in order to
ascertain the best means of eliminating
sulphur impurities from gas, have failed
| began to study philosophy, and soon
became fond of applying technical
names to common objects. One even-
ing, he mentioned to his father that he
had swallowed some acephalous mol-
lusks. The old man was much alarm-
ed, and suddenly seizing him, called
loudly for help. Mrs. Franklin came
various districts are generally perfect
cities in miniature, each with its busi-
ness center, from which radiate the
dwelling-portions of the neighborhood.
Nothing gives so striking an impression
of tlie vast size of London as when, af-
ter traveling in almost any direction
from St. Paul's and passing through
street after street lined with dwelling-
houses, without a store of any kind in
sight, just as one might suppose him-
self on the verge of the open country to
j come suddenly upon the noise and bus
| tie of a neighborhood given itp to Intsi-
1 ness. There is nothing of a suburban
aspect about the stores, which, to all
• appearances, might have been trails-
i ported from the most central portion of
mince-pic*. 11|1(, metropolis. Another mile of travel
i through streets bordered by pleasant
I gardens and another nucleus is reached,
and the experience is repeated until it
seems as if tin* interminable city would
never lie left behind. The reason of
this widespread distribution is that a^
I/ondon lias outgrown its original boun-
daries it lias gradually absorbed the out-
lying villages, and while nothing re-
mains to mark their dividing lines local
requirements have promoted the growth
of local trade, and the original village
stores have multiplied until they have
become thriving business settlements,
isolated but complete.
--
Thkrk is a man in Chicago named
J. Confucius MoGillicuddey.
M. Iiousselet, to Whom we are in-
debted for tlie above particulars, em-
ployed the elephant in a great part of
his travels in Central India. At one
time he was caught in a dreadful storm,
in a march which he had unwisely at-
tempted in the rainy season. The rain
fell in torrents, the lightning played in
violent streaks along the ground, and
tin; thunder broke in incessant peals
from the sky. it was necessary, in the
course of the march, to ford a stream
that had been swollen by the deluge
into a deep ami furious torrent. M.
Iiousselet, iiis traveling companion, and
the mahout, were mounted upon a sin-
gle elephant, which was directed to-
ward the raging current.
“The sagacious beast,” writes M.
Iiousselet, “approached the water,
sounded it for a moment with his trunk,
as though to test the force of tlie stream,
and then fell hark, uttering two or three
cries like the sound of a clarion, as if to
protest against our temerity. A touch
with a pike on the crown of his head
warned him, however, that we were not
inclined to dispute about the matter;
and, bravely resigning himself, he
dashed into the water, iiis heavy hulk
seemed insensible to the strength of the
current; yet it was only by letting him-
self drift for a few hundred yards that
lie could reach the opposite bank.
There lie had already planted his fun-
feet on tlie ground, Iiis crupper round-
ed, and we had arrived in port, when
suddenly his feet slipped, and he fell
back heavily into the torrent, causing LAUD— lioiined.........
the water to dash upwards above our ''^1 ’<>L- rut» washed—Choice
heads. A terrible cry of anguish es-
caped our lips, for we were lost!
elephant, bewildered and desperate. I
was Hunting along, carried away by the
stream, and we could even hear the!
roaring of the falls of the Betwali in !
front of us. All at once the intelligent i
animal appeared to stiffen his body.)
We felt him .swimming; lie left the bed
of the current, and soon we touched tin*
bank. But there a fresh difficulty await-
ed us. We found ourselves facing an
almost perpendicular bank of clay, from
8 to It) feet in height. The elephant
buried his feet in it. kneading the mud-
dy earth; and, making it yield under
his repeated efforts, he at* length suc-
ceeded in hollowing out a passage. We
hail reached half-way to the -top the
ground was almost within reach of our
hands, and below us was the torrent,
roaring, dashing down 10 yards farther
off, over the ruins of the dyke. A single
false move of the animal would have
been certain death to us; but the ele-
phant seemed to be as sensible as our-
selves of the imminence of the peril,and
he worked on with incredible energy,
excited by his mahout, who caressed
and supplicated him in touching ae-
—The Church of the Messiah in St.
Louis has a religious lihrarv which j<
open every Sunday for public use. It
contains works by such until* > s as
Channing, Ware, Norton, Hedge, Eliot,
Clarke and other Bnitarian wri’ of
high reputation.
THE MARKETS.
X'KW VOKK, I (fi'emlmr
BEEVES—Native............^
Texans ...........
HOUS— Dressed..............
Live............ . ..
SHEEP—Common to choice.
COTTON—Middling..........
ELOBIt—Good to Choice... .
W HEAT No, j Chicago.....
CiHtN—Western Mixed......
OA'l s—Western Mixed..
POKK—Mess.................
ST. LOUIS.
COTTON—Middling ........
BEEF CATTI.E-Choice ...
Good to Prime......
Cows and Heifers .
Corn fed Texans...
HOGS—Packing.............
SHEEP—Common to Choice.
FLOCK—Choice Country.....
xxx.....
WHEAT—lied No'.‘‘j.........
“ No. 3.........
CORN—No. 2 Mixed....
OATS—No. 2..........1
KVK—No. 2..............
TIMOTIIV .SEED—Prime..
TOBACCO—Planters’ Lugs
Medium Shipping Leal
HA V—Choice Timothy.......
BUTTER—Choice.......
EGGS .....................
POKE—Standard Mots .
Unwashed—Medium
| KANSAS CtTV.
1 In* ; BEEVES-NatlveSteers ....
Colorado steers..
HOGS—Packers ............
CHICAGO.
BEEVES—Common to Choice
Texans............
HOGS—Common to Choice...
SHEEP—Fair to Good......
i FLOUR—Choice Winter Extra
Choice Spring Extra
1 WHEAT—Spring No. 2.......
“ No. :t.......
I CORN-No. 2 Mixed........
OATS—No. 2..................
KVK—No. 2...................
PORK—New Mess............
LARD— Per cwt..............
CINCINNATI
FLOUR—Family.............
WHEAT—Red..............
CORN—N-w..................
OATS-No. i................
COTTON—Middling .......
PORK—New Mess............
LARD—Steam................
MEMPHIS.
COTTON—Middling.......
FLOUR-Family.............;
CORN-No. 2 Mixed..........
OATS-No. 2..................
NEW ORLEANS.
FLOUR—Choice..............
CORN........................ M
OATS......................... 4:;
JJAV.......................... 22.00
PORK-Mes*................. 2*1.6#
BACON...................... ii
SUGAR Fair to Prtme......
COTTON—Low Middling....
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Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 3, No. 154, Ed. 1 Sunday, December 5, 1875, newspaper, December 5, 1875; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth721619/m1/2/: accessed July 1, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.