Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 16, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 11, 1877 Page: 2 of 8
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The Daily News.
denison.
SUNDAY MORNING.
ITEMS OF INTEREST.
Personal and Literary.
—North Carolina has a newspaper
called the Pee Dee Bee.
—Major Hamilton C. Williams, who
was President Polk’s private secretary,
has just died in Maryland at the age of
70. He was a Tennesseean and a law-
yer.
—Bishop Haven is now in Liberia,
among the colored brethren. He pre
where it mounts up to 57.64. The low-
est is in Maryland, where it is 23.55.
In Alabama it is 54.19; in Georgia,
56.06; Mississippi, 53.91; Louisiana,
52.46. Florida, 64.76. The average
percentage for 14 of the Southern States
is 45.27.
Seleneo and Industry.
—Mr. Gatling, inventor of the gun
of that name, has brought out a new
mitrailleuse, from which 300 rounds a
minute can be fired.
—The Pacific Mills at Lawrence,
Mass., are sending to market every day
225,000 to 275,000 yards of their fabrics,
requiring four to six freight cars for
their transportation.
—The value of sugar lands in Lou-
isiana is steadily on the increase. Re-
sided over the Methodist Conference, oentiy Mr. Ernest D. Burguieres pur-
whioh was held at Monrovia, and chased the Cypremort plantation of
which called out almost every body in Mr william F. Weeks for $90,000, half
T ikauia i J___
Liberia.
—Miss Dudu Fletcher, the writer of —French potatoes, a novelty in the
“ Kismet,” is a young lady still in her jjew yor^ market, are arriving in
twenties, very sparkling in her talk, —j—1-.—* *---ka n\n
wwcuwco, vwj ***»“& *** ““*“1 mouentie 1UU3 UI 11UU1 W aw umino.
pretty, and thoroughly accomplished xhe duty is 15 cents, gold, a bushel,
”* and at the reigning price of $4 per bar-
in several languages.
—The venerable
Doctor Loviek
—Madame Janaushek says that her
knowledge of the English language
was acquired in a year’s hard study
with three teachers—one for conversa-
tion, another for elocution, and the
third for grammer.
—Chief-Justice Moses, of South Car-
olina, is completely prostrated by a
severe attack of paralysis. He has no
control of the limbs on his left side,
and even the muscles of his face are
affected. His mental faculties, how-
ever, were unimpaired at the latest ac-
counts. Judge Moses is 72 years of age.
—Mr. J. G. Raymond, it is reported,
says that Mr. Ciemens thought Col.
Sellers a pathetic part, and wanted Mr.
Lawrence Barrett to play it. This ap-
pears to be • something like a joke.
Mr. Raymond is also said to declare
that the funniest thing in the feast of
turnips to his immediate friends is the
fact that he never eats vegetables; he
“detests them as some people do
cats.”
—Under a portrait of Robert Burns,
which hangs in the great room of the
reporters of a Louisville journal, is
written: “This portrait of Bobbie
Burns is here displayed out of grati-
tude on the part of local reporters the
world ovei, for it is through his genius
that they have been enabled to use so
frequently, and with such admirable
effect, those indispensable phrases,‘wee
sma’ hours ayant the twa’,’ ‘gang aft
aglee’ and ‘a man’s a man for a’ that.’
Mr. Shakspeare, Mr. Byron and Mr.
Scott—or rather their ghosts—will ap-
preciate the motive, and recognize that
no disrespect to their memories is in-
tended by this conspicuous tribute.”
—In the course of a sketch of Mr.
Abram S. Hewitt, a writer in the Phil-
adelphia Times says: “He and his
brother worked their way through col-
lege together in an original and highly
fraternal manner. The brother had an
occupation in which he could earn
enough to support them both, so it was
agreed, as both were equally thirsting
for knowledge, that the brother should
stick to his business and that Abram
should enter Columbia College, and im-
part to him every evening all he had
learned during the day. They kept up
this system with incredible industry
and self-denial, and were both gradu-
ated at the same time.”
School mid Church.
—There are 3,000 Chinese in the
Sandwich Islands. About 30 of them
profess to be Christians.
—Father Wilbur, the Indian agent at
Fort Simcoe, reports the conversion of
100 of the Indians under his care.
cash down.
moderate lots of from 50 to 100 barrels.
—aims veuurnuie rel there is a profit.
Pierce, now in his ninety-third year, is -Cotton-seed oil is largely sold for
writing & series of reminiscences of the 0]jve 0ii( which it is said to equal for
century. He is the oldest Methodist cu]inary and table uses. There are five
minister living on this continent. cotton-seed oil factories in New Or-
leans, producing an amount equal to
the entire production of olive oil in
France.
—A New York house has a bureau
and a mantel made entirely of glass.
Among the small ornaments are beau-
tiful cornices, picture frames, brackets,
cigar stands, match safes, and paper
weights. These are made of ordinary
French plate glass and are very strong.
—Yankee girls are now cutting and
polishing diamonds. The art has been
monopolized by Amsterdam experts,
who have uniformly refused to teach
any apprentices except Dutch boys of
their own selection. Henry D. Morse,
after employing Dutch diamond-cutters
in Boston for many years, learned the
secrets of the trade. He opened a shop
inRoxbury, and privately taught six
or eight young women this mysterious
occupation. He finally apprised his
Dutch workmen that American boys
must be taught by them. They peremp-
torily refused to instruct the appren-
tices. He then discharged them, and
brought the young women from llox-
bury to fill their places. Twenty-three
of them are r.ow at work.
Ilnps and Mishaps.
—Col. A. B. Wade, Postmaster at
South Bend, Ind., was drowned in the
Kankakee River, on the 28th, while
hunting ducks.
—A young man named Louis Wilson
committed suicide in Detroit by shoot-
ing himself with a revolver. He be-
longed in Coldwater, Mich.
—Joseph White, clerk in the County
Commissioner’s office at Cincinnati,
shot himself through the head while
suffering from the result of a recent
debauch.
—Rev. Geo. Weiner, of the German
Reform Church, committed suicide by
shooting himself, eight miles from
Abeline, Kansas. He formerly resided
in Doniphan County.
—A. J. Moreland, wh# resided near
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, shot and killed
himself in the water-closet of a car on
the Union Pacific Railroad, near Oma-
ha, on the 22d. It was not ascertained
whether the shooting was accidental
or intentional.
—Mrs. Edward Burton, of Carroll-
ton, Mich., was fatally burned by some
melted pitch taking fire on the stove
and communicating to her clothing.
The children were melting pitch to
make gum.
—Henry Rienne, a shoemaker resid-
ing at Crothersville, Jackson County,
Ind., hung himself in his barn while
----------------------------- laboring under temporary aberration of
The new Church Property Tax biil, i the mind, supposed to have been the
passed by the Legislature of Maine, ex
empts from taxation church and par-
sonage property worth not more than
result of financial troubles.
—Thomas Mittam, Chairman of the
Town of Poygan, Winnebago County,
$5,000. Mich., while laboring under insanity,
—Methodist Sunday-school congress- went behind his barn and cut his throat
es will beheld this jeai in Chicago, vyjth a razor, causing instant death.
Indianapolis, St. Louis, and other cities Whitehall. Mich.. aSw
At Whitehall, Mich., a Swede
named John Anderson cut his throat
of the West. The Rev. Dr. J. II. Vin
cent 1b the organize1. from ear to ear with a jack-knife,
—The Northern Methodist Confer-
ence of Mississippi has passed resolu-
tions approving the basis of fraternity
with the Church South. It reports
H V/Ui J - — 7
jumped out of a two-story window, ran
around the house to a well about 50 feet
away and jumped in. He is supposed
witn tne emurun ouuui. ji. lepuns - . *
25,441 members, 4,200 baptisms, 246 ito , “ w v lt
ChUThke"rv mrday-8?°0lr ■ l.imerirSrf”;Lt K
coming of Christ, a topic suggested by
Mr. Moody’s sermon delivered before
leaving Chicago. Opposite sides were
fell into it and was literally roasted.
She is supposed to have been seized
with an epileptic fit and unable to assist
o . »* ___, I herself Her husband committed sui-
“CMr’yBw°cb?r! W'”m ' cidc in the same room two jam. ago.
—The missionaries in the North of! -As M. I). McKilligan, an employee
China report the famine there to be ' in a tobacco store at Omaha, was cut-
terrible In manv partsof the country i ting plug tobacco with a machine which
both crops have failed, and the people he had placed on the floor, his revolver
are living upon tree bark and roots. It' slipped from his coat pocket, and,
is feared that some districts will be en-1 striking the floor, was discharged,
tirely depopulated.
—Money is wanted by the Protestant
Episcopal Church for its missionary
work. The missionary treasury is
about $75,000 in debt. A special effort
sending a bullet through his left breast,
killing him almost instantly.
Foreign Notea.
Prince William of Prussia, in the
s being made to wipe out this debt,and Order of the Gurter, h» received the
* B _____rn,ha.rmtmn«r.f highest honor which lt 13 in the power
has thus far resulted in subscriptions of
about one-third of the amount
highest honor which it is in the power
of Queen Victoria to confer on a for-
„ , , . i- ; eign Prince—an honor, too, which is
—Prof. Comstock, o < '' sometimes coveted in vain by reigning
rersity, lb planning a gating school of , soverd,ns_
natural history for this summer. A
iteamer is to make a six weeks’ trip
dong Lakes Erie, Huron and Superior
imi up the larger rivers; lectures are to
,e given by specialists and specimens
ibtained, and the cost will be about
'3^Thed highest percentage of illiter-
tes in the South is in South Carolina,
—It will doubtless surprise some
people to learn from the London Court
Circular that among the royal person-
ages who died in 187G must be number-
ed Lai la Rookh—and also that she died
as “Ex-Queen of Tasmania.”
—The Czar of Russia is said to live
in great intimacy with a few chosen
associates, and is rather inclined to
dislike any other business than that
which reaches him in the form of news.
He is affectionate and faithful in his
friendships, having been on brotherly
terms all his life with most of his habit-
ual companions. Politics is a tabooed
subject among them.
—The young Napoleon was drafted
for the French army lately, bnt plead-
ed that he was the only son ana sole
support of his widowed mother, En-
gen e, and was let off. The ex-Empress
has a vast property, and it is funny to
think how the young Prince must have
to scratch around and sell papers and
black boots and sweep out offices and
drop corn at 25c per day to support
her.
Oddi and End*.
—Mr. Moody says heaven is as real
a place as Boston, and he intimates that
it is rather more moral and interesting.
And the average Bostonian buttoned
up his coat and turned on his heel with
ill-concealed disgust.'
—“ Man thinks of the sorrow,” ob-
served the lamented Bulwer Lytton,
“ woman of the consolation. ” After a
domestic unpleasantness it is always
she who does him up in liniment or
rubs him down with arnica.
—A three-year-old little girl at
Rochester, N. Y., was taught to close
her evening prayer during the tempo-
rary absence of her father with “and
please watch over my papa.” It sound-
ed very sweet, but the mother’s amuse-
ment may be imagined when she add-
ed: “ And you’d better keep an eye on
mamma, too!”
—When trade grew slack and notes
fell due, the merchants face grew long
and blue; his dreams were troubled
through the night with sheriff’s bailiffs
all in sight. At last his wife unto him
said, “ Rise up at once—get out of bed;
and get your paper, ink and pen, and
say these words unto all men: ‘ My
goods I wish to sell to you, and to your
wives and daughters, too; my prices
are so very low that all will buy before
they go.’” He did as by his wife ad-
vised, and in the papers advertised.
Crowds came and bought off all he had;
his notes were paid, his dreams were
glad; and he will tell you to this day
how well did printer’s ink repay. He
told us, with a knowing wink, how he
was saved by printer’s ink.
—The other day one of the clerks in
a Philadelphia store found the porter
jammed among the boxes down the cel-
lar, witli pen, ink, and paper before
him. “ Writing a letter, eh?” queried
the clerk. “ Yes, writing to the old
man in Buffalo.” He handed up the
half-written letter for inspection, and
presently the clerk remarked: “ I see
you spell jug ‘gug;’ that isn’t right.”
“Of course not,” replied the porter,
“but you see 1 iin writing to the old
man, and he always spells it that way.
If I put another ‘ g’ to it he would think
I was putting on style over him and for-
getting that I was his son. He’s good-
hearted, and I don’t want to hurt his
feelings.” The letter went with only
one “ g” at the end of “gug.”
Looking for Simpson.
She was a tall, gaunt woman, from
the country, for she carried a large cot-
ton umbrella in one hand, and a well
worn, bulky carpet-bag in the other.
She was marching in and out and
around the Erie depot at Long Dock in
a way that caused Officer Biggs to won-
der who or what she was looking for.
“ Were you looking for someone?”
he asked.
“ It’s none of your affairs, mister,
who I’m looking for. Who be you,
that you must know other folks’ bus!
ness?”
“ I’m an officer of the Erie Road,
ma’am.”
“Oh, you be. Well, then. I’m from
Parsippany, in Morris County, and I’ve
come down here just to put my hands
onto a man by the name of Simpson.
Do you know Simpson? He’s sick-
looking, and talks the nicest you ever
heard. He was a Baptist up there; as
like as not he ain’t nothing down here.
Do you know Simpson?”
“No, ma’am, I don’t know any such
man.”
“ That’s just what I expected to hear.
The next thing will be that he is a mar-
ried man, or mebbe that he ain’t Simp-
son at all. But if I get my hands onto
that Simpson once, I’ll Simpson him.”
“ What’s he been doing?”
“ He’s been doing lots that’s mean
for a man to do. He pretended like ho
wanted to marry me, and kept it up till
every thing was ready, and then at the
last minute Simpson wa’n’t ready. I’m
mad, mister, and if I had him I’d Simp-
son him.”
“ Do you think he is here at this de-
pot?”
“That’s what I’d like to know, foy
he’s a man that travels. If 1 lay mr
hands onto him he’ll travel back to
Parsippany, or I’ll know the reason
why.”
“ Find him, mister? I’m obloegcd to
find him. Didn’t I sell a cow and calf,
and the only decent shoaton the place,
just to buy a nice dress and button-
shoes, so f could look as line as any
woman in York when she’s agoing to be
married? Do you think I’m going back
homo now without him—me a widder—
and everv body laughing? No, sir; I’m
agoing to find that Sirlipson.” And
she marched on through the depot, giv-
ing every convenient plank in tho floor
a sharp punch with her umbrella as she
muttered, “That Simpson!”—Jersey
City Journal.
—If a door does not shut without a
slam put a drop of sweet oil on tho
catch; if it creaks put oil on the hinges.
Soap will do, but not so well.
A Living from Ten Acres*
In the cultivation of the soil it is not
always that the profits are to be meas-
ured by the extent of the land culti-
vated. The more skill that is brought
to bear in the business the greater the
yield from a small tractof land. Thus
there are men who produce from one
acre as great a value as others do from
100. The crops of market gardeners
and small fauit-growers frequently
amount in value to over $1,000 per
acre, and there are farmers who have
100 acres who do not produce so much
from the whole farm as $1,000 in one
year. Now at the present time, under
the present unfortunate condition of
many industries, there are hundreds of
skilled mechanics, who fail to make a
comfortable living, or who can not
make a living at all; yet whose techni-
cal skill, intelligence, and capacity for
work are superior to what is usually
found with many cultivators of the soil
who are able to enjoy all the comforts
and many of the luxuries of life with-
out dependence upon the will, favor, or
fortune of any person. If these arti-
sans could by any means turn their
trained and intelligent skill to the cul-
tivation of the soil, and procure the
certain possession of a homestead, they
would oe relieved from uncertain-
ty if not from actual distress.
An inquiry from a correspond-
ent, given elsewhere, furnishes a
clew to the problem very seriously dis-
cussed in many anxious homes just now.
The writer fortunately possesses some
of the special knowledge required for
immediate success: but success is not
dillicult for any intelligent, industrious
man who is not above asking for infor-
mation, or who roads newspapers and
books. As a help to such inquirers as
our correspondent, we outline a plan
for the management of a garden farm
of 10 acres.
This may be divided into four plots,
upon one of which are the house, out-
buildings, poultry yard, stable, and or-
chard. lu place of shade-trees about
the house there should bo fruit trees,
plums and cherries being planted about
the poultry yard, and pears and apples
about the house and stables. Thus
ground that is generally wasted useless-
ly, so fiir as salable product is concern-
ed, would lie utilized. A llock of 100
chickens could easily be kept from
which a profit of $100 could be realized,
lu addition, their service in preventing
damage by the curculis to the plums
and cherries will be worth as much
more. From the remainder of the two
and a half acres should be realized $ 00
for one acre of pears, one acre of ap-
ples, and the plnms and cherries about
the half acre of yards. This lot should
be fenced with a picket fence, and only
eight Brahma fowls, which will not go
over a 3-foot fence, should be kept.
One other plot should be planted
with small fruit—grapes, currants,
strawberries, blackberries, and rasp
berries being the most profitable. With
hill culture fine strawberries can be
grown which will bring from 20 to 25
cents a quart, or about $1,000 an acre.
An acre of Kittatinny blackberries
should bo good for $300. We know of
one acre of red currants from which
were sold last year 6,000 pounds; these
should bring, at only five cents a pound,
$300. An acre of raspberries should
do as well. At the worst, then, this 24
acres ought to produce from $750 to
$1,600. Another plot may be planted
in vegetables, the standard ones, such
i as lettuce, cabbages, peas, potatoes,
onions, tomatoes, beets, or turnips,
being most salable and profitable. By|
into agricultural pursuits. That this
effect is already at work is very evi-
dent to those who are in a position to
overlook the field, and to see what is
occurring in it. While we would en-
courage the change as being of advan-
tage both to those who cliange and
those who remain, yet we would not
have any person become over-sanguine,
nor entertain a desire for a change in
his condition without carefully count-
ing the cost and studying the matter in
every bearing.—I etw York Tunes.
A Wambling Principality.
At Monaco gambling is not only in
fashion; it is at once the life and the
occasion of life in the plaoe. I or it,
and in its name, were reared those
handsome halls, mirrored and cande-
labra’d, velvet furnished and polished
exceedingly as to floors anu walls,
which adjoin the Hotel de Baris and
stand at the top of the enchanted gar-
den. In its service are enrolled those
gaily dressed bondsmen who discourse
suen elegant music, those plush-
breeched, green-coated servitors, who
stand so jam tor-like at the doors and
about tho rooms, ready to bow obedi-
enoe to the moneyed habitue, or to col-
lar and eject the “ souspect ” and the
“welcher.” In its service manifestly
have been educated those somber,
leaden-eyed men, pale of lacoaud du ty
of sUirt-coiiar, who sit on either side the
center of the table, and with ceaseless
monotony spin the wheel of roulette,
while comrades rake up or shovel out
the consequences of the game. There
they sit, day after day, hour after hour,
at the gambling tables, their only vari-
ation being from roulette to treute-et-
quarante or rouge-et-noir. Une misses
at Monaco the iioilow-toned exhorta-
tion, “ Failes vos jctix, messieurs, J'aites
vox jeuxand its natural accompani-
ment, “ Lejue esl fait," which used to
be heard at Spa and Baden in old days.
Silence is ihe rule of Monaco, broken
only by the click of the roller as it fails
into one of the wheel spaces, and by
the judicial declaration of the result,
deliveredsolto voce by the chief croupier.
But, apart from this, there is exactly
the same arrangement; thejjsame scru-
pulous fairness on the part of the
bank; the same perfect trust in the ul-
timate advantage of that institution;
the same reliance without touting on
the natural attractions of play to allure
poor humanity into the swing, that
characterized the German and Belgian
play places.
The only advertisement resorted to
by the proprietor is in the shape of
those charming gardens which beautify
the place, those balls at which the
beauty and ugliness of Nice delight to
congregate, those Tirs aux Pigeons,
where a thousand pounds represents
the Grand Prix de Monaco, those mag-
nificent concerts from which, out of
purely local and personal considera-
tions, the music of “Orphee aux En-
iers” should be forever excluded. The
reward of M. Le Blanc, the provider of
all these things, the owner of this beau-
tiful “hell,” is ample, after its kind.
In spite of the occasional visits of “ por-
tents,” like the Maltese Bugeija who, by
wisdom or strange luck, found his way
to win vast rouleaux from the bank; in
spite of the raids which other mediums
of the Bugeija stamp make upon his re-
sources, the proprietor is, in the long
run, justified in his ghastly joke,,
ltJouez sur rouge ou noir, c'csl Lc Banc
que gaejne." That he does gain is not
only matter of notoriety, it is evident
from the facts vve have recited, from
the apparently unremunerative expend-
iture lie is able to make so freely, from
good management two crops could be j ail hour’s observation of the crowds who
grown in one season one early and j throng the roulette tables. All the
one late—thus doubling the produce of WOrld, men and women too, of every
; nation, come to pour their wealth into
the lap of this Croesus.—London Society
the 24 acres, which in all should be
worth from $200 to $400 an acre at tho
least. The remaining plot may lie
kept as a meadow and pasture for the
cow and horse, and a run for the chick-
ens. The produce from this is, there-
fore, not counted. The total yield is
$1,810 at the lowest estimate here made,
and out of this comes only the cost of
fertilizers, extra labor, picking crops
and marketing—perhaps $850 in all—
the boxes for marketing being made at
home in the winter months. There is
no charge for rent; no milk, no butter,
eggs, poultry, vegetables, fruit, or use
of horse to be paid for—no out-go, but
for clothing, taxes, groceries, books,
and other necessaries of this sort. It
is certain that all this can not be re d-
ized the first year; but at least half of
it can; for while the small fruits are
coming into bearing—which they would
do the second year—vegetables can l>
grown between the rows; and while the
orchard is reaching maturity, small
fruits or vegetables can be grown
among the trees. By growing fodder
crops a cow and a horse can be kept
the year round on two and one-half
ivres; and there would be sufficient
waste from t he vegetables, such as pea-
vines, turnip-tops, defective cabbages,
to keep an extra cow. It is impossible to
go into such details as would meet every
ease; but,from the outline here sketch-
ed it is not difficult to fill up a plan by
which a family of six or eight persons
could be supported in comfort on one
acre for each person. The larger the
family the less ouilay for extra help
would be necessary, as much of the
help needed is the lightest kind of labor.
It certainly seems that a change in our
popular Habits is inevitable, that ex-
penditures must be retrenched, that tho
cost of living must be reduced, that
fewer luxuries or useless things can be
afforded by a great portion of the pop
ulation. This must necessarily result
in a lesse ed demand for manuiacture
articles, and consequently less employ-
ment for skilled mechanics, or what is
equivalent to that in reduced eainiiurs.
The effect will be to force many men
Magazine.
THE MARKUS,
BSEVES—Native Steers..
NEW YORK. March 7, 18*7.
$9.25 ® $ 12 oo
J i ir.P—Common to Choico
5.12
8 25
HOGS—Live..................
5,h7^a fa)
6.00
i.sj’PlO..'—Middling..........
M.u: u—Good to Choice...,.
,
(a)
1’X
6.75
(Si
5.85
WHEAT—No. 2 Chicago.....
1.39)4®
1.40
COHN—Western Mixed......
ft;*)* fa)
56
>A is—Western Mixed.......
38
(a
62
r'Oflr’— New Moss....... .
l5.:.o
fa)
16.00
ST. LOUIS.
U< iTi’ON—Middling..........
UKKK CATTLE—Choice.....
5’.25
fa)
fa)
UH
6.00
Wood t« Prime....
4.90
fa)
6.16
Cows and Hcilcrs.
2.35
id
4.00
Corn-tod Texans .
2.25
fa)
4.50
HOH8--Shipping.............
J! i tEP—Common to Fancy..
5.25
fa)
5.75
2.50
fa)
5.25
FLOUR—Choice Country....
(! 66
fa)
6.75
XXX................
6.33
6.60
WHEAT lied No. 2.........
1 4-’
.fa)
1.41
“ No. 3.........
1.39
®
1.40
COHN—No. 2 Mixed.........
3 %®
36
OATS—No. 2..................
33
fa)
34>*
RYE—No. 2.................
I’lMOTHY SEED—Prime____
62
l.ftl
fa)
fa)
62 a
1 65
TOBACCO—Planters’ Lugo..
3.011
fa)
6.60
Dark Shipping Leaf....
HAY—Choice Timothy......
4. OU
10. on
Ll
fa)
7.5( tt
10.7t '
BUTTER-Choice Dairy.....
.3
fa)
251:
KUOS—Fresh.................
fa)
11
PORE—Standard Mess —
15.00
fa)
15 24
L V tD—Prime Steam.. ....
09% »
09K
■VOOL—'Tub washed, Choice
37
9
36
Un washed Combing.
24
(a)
26
CHICAGO.
BEEVES- Common to Choice
3.55
fa)
5.12!,
HOGS-Common to Choice..
5 4 /
fa)
6.00
GIF El' -Common toChoiec..
3 75
fa)
4.75
tr !,< 1UIt— Choice Winter......
7.75
fa)
8.50
Choice Bprhift Extra
6.60
fa)
7.00
WHEAT—Spring No. 2.......
1.21!,®
1 23i-
No, 3.......
1.12'
fa)
1.13
CORN—No. 2 Mixed..........
39,q®
39%
CATS—No. S................
33
fa)
' 3%
RYE—No. 2.............
62
fa)
63
ROUK-New Mess ............
(L55
fa)
11 50
IiABO—For owt ..........
fa)
9.0.)
KANSAS dll.
5.00
. ICS VKS— Native Hteeru......
3.25
fa)
Cows......
9. to
(d
3 0
HOGS.........................
3 75
(d
5.00
MEMPHIS.
COTTON—Middling..........
....
fa)
11%
FLOUR—Choloe..............
8.i 0
fa.’
8.2 >
CORN—Mixed ...............
62
fa)
55
>ATS—White................
.'i0
fa)
55
NEW ORLEANS
8.75
FLOUR—Cnoioa Family.....
8.25
fa)
ii
fa)
54
• ATS—St Loo.s........
45
fa
47
H A Y—Prime................
16.011
fa)
'6. >0
PORK—Now Mess.....
16.00
fa
18 25
BACON. .. ......
GOTTI >N—MJrltllifur..........
> i (d)
(d)
09%
11A
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Denison Daily News. (Denison, Tex.), Vol. 5, No. 16, Ed. 1 Sunday, March 11, 1877, newspaper, March 11, 1877; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth722306/m1/2/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; crediting Grayson County Frontier Village.