St. Paul daily globe (Saint Paul, Minn.) 1894-05-14 [p 6]€¦ · 6 . THE SAINT PAUL DAILY*;GLOBE:...

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  • 6 . THE SAINT PAUL DAILY*;GLOBE: .MONDAY-.MORNING. MAY 14, J834.

    SAWED THEIR WAY OUTWITH SAWS PURCHASED BY AN AC-

    COMPLICE.

    THE L-.TTBB IN TROUBLE.

    He la Indicted by the Sioux FallsGrand Jury lor Assisting Pris-oners to Kscape— Several Men

    Arrested for Stealing FromCars at Crookston

    —Elopers

    Caught nt Austin.

    From the Suuday Globe.1Special to ibe Glo.e.

    Sioux Falls. S. D., May 12.-DaveJones, the sou of very respectable par-'cits ana brother of a prominent busi-ness man, was today indicted by thegrand jury on a charge of assistingprisoners to .escape from the countyjail. He was at once arrested and placedunder $300 bonds. The penalty ivcaseof conviction is not to exceed ten yearsin the penitentiary. Last NovemberJones was put in jailtoserve a sentenceof five days for petty larceny, and whenreleased Frank Randall and JamesBurke, the tsvo Estelline postoffice rob-bers who are being held for trial, ravehim $5, and a few days after he passeda dozen pack saws to them through awindow. Randall and Burke sawedtheir way out, and three other prisonerswent with them. The three others werecaptured, but Randall and Burke werenot recaptured. Frank Williams andJames Moore, the Orientpostofnce rob-bers, now serving a two years' sentence,an.l WilliamThomas, injailon a chargeof picking Dockets, testified to the factsbefore the grand jury.

    PICKLKS AND CHEESE

    Stolen From Cars by a Band ofThieves. SLM

    Special to the Globe.Cr.ooKsrox. Minn.. May 12.—About

    three weeks ago.while the Great North-ern strike was on. three freight carswere h-oted to quite an amount ofgoods,mostly groceries and canned goods. Mr.Noble, the Great Northern detective,has been here several days working outhe case. This morning Chief of PoliceGonyea called at the house of JamesWaring during the latter's absence. Hewas armed with a search warrant, andin the cellar found a lot of canned

    ff\"Itmade meV^\lHands thot

    A(i]/L Sor/•,/»Vri-**/ /couldn'ts| V \ slape ;an if.

    k V- nr j itzvas thotvl^yN^Iharrd on. me/^*>«^ \\J hands, how

    Y^(--i\t harrd itmust"*V be xva registered trade mark of_» Shield, accept no worthless nostrum, iusistouEre» thegenuine,atallDruggists. SeiuMccutsforKJJ Woman. Safe Unard and receive them*~\u25a0.-.•-:'..»; ilco.*.Specific to.i*l»it»,l*a.

    Lost Manhood Si'Scoccle. nightly emissions, atrophy, etc.. surelycured by IMIAI'O.the great Hindoo Remedy,v.'ith written guarantee to cure. Sold by W.A.FROST

    _. Short Ribs -Sides(loose), 56.37»£@6.40. Shoulders— Drysalted (boxed), $5.75@6. Sides—clear -(boxed), *?6.87>_@7.12>_. Whisky—Distillers' finished goods, per gal,$1.15. Sugars unchanged. ...Receipts-Flour. 9.000 bbls; wheat, 11,000 bu; corn,121,000 bu;oats, 333,000 bu:rye.3,000 bu;barley, 19.000 bu. Shipments— Flour,21.000 bbls; wheat, 9.000 hu:corn. 161,---000 hu; oats, 257,000 bu; rye.4,000 bu;barley, 4,000 bu. On the produce ex-change today the butter- market wasfirm; creamery, dairy, B(_c.

    Duluth Wheat.DuLUTH.Minn..Maj 12.— Wheat closed

    steady, 36; declined, except for wheatto arrive, which was firm; %c advanced.Cash wheat to arrive was in good de.mand at a premium of 2c over July, themills taking 50.000 bushels at that.Close: No.1northern, cash, May,s9%c;to arrive, G2c; July, 00c; September,5S%c. Receipts— Wheat, 29,155; oats,722; rye, 711. Shipments— Wheat, 46,---441; oats, 722. Cars wheat inspected in,32; year ago, 61.

    Hew York Pro-lmc.New Yokk, May 12. Flour

    —Re-

    ceipts. 31,500 bbls; exports. 24,300 bbls;sales, 2, t00 pkgs; market dull and un-settled; to sell, concessions would haveto be made; some export business wasdone at a decline today; city mill pat-ents. :54.05(_.4.30; winter patents. $3.25@3.35: city mill clears. 53.55@3.60;winter straights, $2.60@3.95; Minnesotapatents, 53.40(gi3.85; winter extra, ?2(Vi2.50; Minnesota bakers', $2.10@3.40;winter, low grades. $1.60@2.05; spring,low grades, §1.6:.(c*!.80; spring, extras,51.80@2.30. Rye flour firm; superfine,*?2.70(«i2.55; fancy, $2.85^c. Pork dull'but steady; new mess, $14; extra prime,

    $13. 13.50: family. $15(«)15.50; .short 'clear. $14. 50@10. ;Cottonseed oil dullnnd nominal. Butter steady; Westerndairy, «JJ^@l2c: do creamery, 13@17c;do factory. 8*_(i"*llc; Elgins, 17c; statedairy, 12(_(_' lower;* holiday Monday;Havre dull; sales, 4,000 bags; prices %franc lower; holiday Monday. Sugars-Raw firm; fair..refining 2 7-16@2}_c:centrifugals, 96-test, 2%c; refinedsteady ;No. 6, BX@3 13-16c; No.7, 3J-_@3 7-16c; JNo. 8, 3 7-10@3%c; No. 9, 3j*£@3 916c;No. 10, 35-16@3>_c;No. 11, 3 3-16@3%c; No. 12. 3**@3 5-.Gc; No.13. 2%c;mould A, 4,^(554 7-lGc; standard A.3%@4 l-16c; confectioners' • A, *3K@3 1-I6c;cut loaf, 4%@4 15-16 c; crushed, 4%is4 15-16c: powdered, 43^(a)-*7-16c; granu-lated. 4@4 3-16c; cubes. i@A 1-16C.

    Butter and Ejisrs. !~

    Chicago. May 12."— Butter firm;creamery, 12(_, and Morris &Essex, 2per cent.

    The bond, market was strong in toneon a fairly active business.' Mobile &Onto 4's recorded an advance of 1)4; St.Louis &San Francisco seconds, ClassB, -\u25a0*#; St. Louis &San Francisco sec-onds. Class I, and Colorado Midland4-s.IK. .

    Declines—

    Louisville & Nashville, !New Orleans & M. seconds, 2; OhioISouthern firsts, 1%. aud Knoxville &Ohio firsts, 1 per cent. The more im-portant changes on the week are:

    Advances— Toledo, Ann Arbor GrandTrunk firsts, 6; do Minneapolis 6s, 4;Southern California firsts receipts, 4JC. B. rf@s per cent. Sterling exchangesteady, with actual business in bank-ers' bills at ?4.88>.@4.t'8">-i for demand,and at "*4.87*-^@4.s7>_ for sixty days.Posted rates, >f4.8-J-_c; No.1hard, f. o. b., 1 car, 64c; No. 1 hard, 1car, 63c; No. 1northern, 24 ears, GlJ^e;No.1northern, 10 cars, 62c; No.1 north-ern, f. o- b., 1car, 63c: No. 1 northern,to arrive,* 9 cars. Ol^c;No.1northern,thin. 2 cars. 01>_c; No- 2 northern, 3cars, Glc; No. 2 northern, 5 cars, 60*_c;No. 2 northern, 4 cars. 60c; No. 3 wheat.2 cars, 59c; No. 3 wheat, elevator, 1car,5Sc; rejected wheat, 1lb off, 1car, 59c;rejected wheat, Ilboff. smutty, 2 ears,

    *59c;*no grade oats, 2 cars, 33c; No. 3oats, 2 cars, 33*4c.

    Si, Receipts and Shipments— Received-Wheat. 91,740 bu: corn, 7.830 bu; oats,12,610 bu; barley. 720 bu; flour. 300 bbls;Lay, 60 tons; fruit,83.400 lbs: merchan-

    dise, 1,451,200 lbs; lumber, 30cars:posts..4 cars; barrel stock, 4 cars; machinery,235,000 lbs: coal. 324 tons; wood, 39cords: brick, 34,000: lime, 2 cars; ce-ment, 100 bbls; household goods, 40,000Ins; ties, 1 car; stone, 2 cars; dressedmeats. 77,925 lbs; hides, 34,000 lbs; rail-road materials, 10 cars; sundries, 17cars; car lots, 417.-

    Shipped— Wheat, 6.700 bu; corn,l7,GSoput' flax. .500 bu; flour, 30,430 bbls; mill-

    .tuffs 902 tons; merchandise, 1,677.810lbs; lumber, 09 curs; barrel stock, 1car;machinery, 123,900 lbs; coal. 40 tons;bides. 54,200 tons; tallow. 05,100 lbs;wool, 10.000 lbs; railroad materials, 1car: sundries. 7 cars; car lots, 534.

    -Cliicago.Chicago. May 12.— Cattle— Receipts.

    S,oou; shipments, 500; no business ofnote; unchanged ;prime to extra nativesteers, $4.40@4.45: medium. $4(_*4.30;others, $3.75@3.95. "-.Texans, none here.. Hogs

    —Receipts, 10,000; shipments,

    0,000: active, unchanged; rough neavy,f4.40@4.80; packers and and butchers'weight5, 55.10(3:5.25; assorted light. $5.10(55.15. V. •

    Sheep and Lambs— Receipts. 5,000;one-half exception track lots; top lambs,§4.75C_j5.25: unchanged. •

    x [.._:Petroleum.New Yokk. May 12.

    —Petroleum

    steady;- Pennsylvania oil:- sales, none;June option sales, none; closed at S^cbid. :Lima oil sales, none. .

    FITCH BROS. &CO.LIVE STOCK COMMISSION.

    sou Hi \u25a0*>•*. Paul.Reference: Union Stock Yards Bank

    1.1VI-:STOCK.

    Union Stockyards.Receipts

    —1.200 hogs, 13 cattle, 2

    calves.Hogs— Steady. The quality was bet

    ter than-

    yesterday. Yards clearedearly to packers at about yesterday'sprices.

    Representative Sales-No. Wt. Dkge. P'ce No. Wt. Dkge. KceIstag. sßo .. 12 75 80.. .....255 8j 4 l»7l*151ag.460 .. 276 75.. 223 .. 4 -*7V»

    14......158 .. 465 t.fl 252 180 4 97*.00 -a- 160 4 -7% 76. 251 80 4 «'*,.2......125 ..4 03 M.......2W .. 4 07%

    "8 226 HO 400 U3, ...... 23 .. 4 07%46.......18-. 0 495 tta...... .296 .. 4 07%21 131.. 405 58. 233 80 50068 230... '4 0.-. .8........00 40 50041 575 .. 495 6. 138 .. SUO43... 206 40 495 34 266 .. 500C0......328 200 4 97% 34.. 252 ..5 0071 .....138 . 4 irtVi :

    Cattle— Steady, but quiet. But a fewhead offered and not much businesscould be done. The demand is fair forbutcher stuff, at good prices. The busystocker season is neariug tne close, butthe demand is still eood at fair prices,and goods runs uext week can be read-ilydisposed of.

    Quotations— Prime steers. "*3.25@3.75;good steers, **3@3.25; prime cows, $2.50(S3; good cows, ?2@2.50; common tofair cows, *1.23@2; light veal calves,

    •*-3(_*4; heavy calves, $2©3; stockers,51.75@2.40; feeders, 82.25(313; bulls,*1.50@2.25.

    Representative Sales-Representative Sales-

    No. Weight Price Xo.: Weight. Price1 stocker . 76J $'. 00 1 feeder ...s7O S3 6*27 feeders.. 732 2 80 1calf 100 2 751feeder. .. 760 250 1calf ...12J 3 50

    31 feeders .. 707 25j 1 feeder 880 2901cow .. 1,160 2 75 2 feeder s....; 890 -2 65lcow .....],OIO 3 0. 3 steers 976 3 201 feeder.. ..910 2 Of .' feeders 810 2 80'Sheep— Quiet and easy. No demandfor anything but good muttons andlambs.

    .fl|__3p I_l^i7lI\u25a0*^~

    Mm S-rvW-fl-T^lI3a11Ihn art_OC _S VHt J _La h14_Uh_B

    _______ASBSV^C 11R 1J m

    **^i-i---s^--u^ oj™\u2666DAILY. lEX. SUN. LV ST. PAUL AR ST. PAUL

    Chicago— Day Express.... •8.00 am +10:10 pinChicago— Express +6:25 pin M.l:ssamChicago— .-W. Limited.. «8:10 pm «7:50 amSu City, Omaha, Kan. City f«:40 am t6:10Su City, Omaha, Kan. City *7:55 «7:40 amDuluth and Ashland. tlo:ssam ts:oopmDuluth and Superiors »11:00 pm «6:50 amMankato and Tracy 15:06 pm fIO:4S am

    Ticket Office.159 East ThirdStreet.

    St. Pan! & White BearR. R. CO.

    TIMETABLE.InEffect May 12-.li, 1894.

    For North St. Panl-6:40 a. m., 7:40 a.m., 8:15 a. m., 9 a. ru.. and even* half• hour until 11 p. m., then 11:45 p. m.-.For Wildwood— 6:4o a m.. 9a. in., and. every half hour until 9:30 p. m.For CTahtomedi— 6:4oa. m., 10 a. m.,1:33 m., 2 p.m., 5:30 p. ____\u0084 7:30 pm., 9 p.m. -..

    Notice— 6:4o a. in.. 7:40 n. m. trips not runon Sunday. On Sunday the 8:15 m. carruns to Wildwoodouly.

    NORTHERN PACIFIC!The Dining Car Line to Fargo. Winnipeg.

    Helena. Butte and the Pacific Northwest.Dining Cars on Winnipeg and

    '\u25a0 Pacific Coast Trains. _,v. Ar_i'acibc Alan (daily) ior i-Hrgo.

    '

    Jamestown. Livingston,Helena,Unite, Missoula, Spokane. Ta- 4:15 T-.1lcoma, Seattle and Portland. ... p. m. a. m.akota and Manitoba Express(doily) forFergus Palls, Wahpe-ton. Crookston, Grand Forks,'Grafton. Winnipeg; Moorhead, 6:00 7:31Fargo and Jamestown p. m. _.__.

    Fargo local (daily except Sunday, ,for St. Cloud, Brainerd and -Oil 6:1)Fargo .u

    Chicago '•Atlantic" express *-BJp ml*l.:lipnChicago 'Fast Mall" ...... *ti:ri6p m *2:«^ :aChlcngo "Vestibule Lim... **8:10p m •7:5U i aChicago Tla Dubuque. ____. (4:10p m111 1:50 imDubuque viaLaCrosse j*""'a in ill).41 pinbt. Louis and Kansas City.. *£:.T5 am **>::»pinMilbauk nnd Aberdeen. _. i.jam M>.-3up.aMilbank and Aberdec i

    -rs-li i» m •-,' *', iin

    *D'ly. 'Ex. fun. ;F.jt. Bnt. . \ Ex.Mou. Fordetail in ortuutlo.t call at ticket oflice.

    aBnBBHBaa|___ Leaves Uniou Depot fo

    itiM-iTitilHliiia*m* Arrives fr°m cht-\u25a0Leaves Union Depot to

    down-river points, 7:30a. m. Arrives from Chi-cago 2:3.) p. m. Daily.

    f&B!_Tnl^ffi!Leaves Union Depot forChicago and St. Louis,7:4up. m. Arrives fromsame points . :_o a. v.DaUy.

    POPULAR WANTS.\u25a0n*T-h_l-ail7l-f*TrTr*-T iirfi,-a'¥iaiiil*til*Tff^rilri»_iwa«_iii.ii. i-Li.t, .i-_r

    SOMETHING

    One m Globe's Great Offers

    THE "HOHE QUEEN"WORLD'S FAIR

    1-SDUVEWfI. CnDKBBfIK"Is handsomely bound in White Leather, with Embossed Cover,and contains 608 pages. The Book is only sold by subscrip-tion, the retail price being* $2.50 per copy.

    BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENTTHE GLOBE

    Has obtained the Exclusive Newspaper Right in the North-west, and makes the following

    GREAT OFFER!Any person who willsend Two Dollars in payment of one

    month's subscription in advance for the Dailyand SundayGlobe willreceive the paper by mail or carrier for one monthand the "Home Queen" Cook Book, express or postage paid.

    With the Weekly Globe.Anyone sending Two Dollars will receive the "Weekly

    Globe one year and the "Home Queen" Cook Book, express orpostage paid.

    ITIS A TREATISE ON

    COOKERY, DOMESTIC ECONOMY,Table Etiquette, Hygiene of the Home, Etc.

    INDOR.3SD *B*2"

    LADY MANAGERS OF THE WORLD !S m

    HOW INDORSED.Jfore than 130 of tbem have contributed directly to the Recipe de-

    partment, these contributions having been secured for this book lromevery State and lerritory in the Union, Alaska not excepted.

    More Than 200 Contributors.Many of the wives of Governors of the different; Stat-?, and more

    than sixty other ladies ofposition and influence have also sent in theircontributions of choice . and well-tried recipes. Cominz as these havefrom every part of the country, lrom Alaska to Florida and from MainetoCalifornia, they represent every style and phase of cookery of, everylocalityand section of America. Vie claim without tear o;' contradictionthat we present in the "Home Queen" the grandest aggregation andvariety of tried recipes introduced into any cook book extant.

    AUTOGRAPH SIGNATURES.The autograph signatures of the contributors, with their address

    and official position, will,in nearly every instance, be found attached tothe recipes, which not only attest their genuineness, but add immenselyto the taking features of the book. These signatures have been pro-cured, engraved aud introduced into the book at considerable labor andexpense.

    PORTRAITS.Fine half-tone portraits of nearly one hundred of the Lady Managers

    of the World's Fair, together with portraits ofthe wives of the Governorsand others occupying leading position., have bean secured, and willaddno little to the interest and intrinsic value of the '"Home C_ue_a."

    MISS JULIET CORSON,

    the founder of the Cooking Schools of America, and who has been ap-pointed, by the advice of Mrs. Potter Palmer, to take charge of the Cook-ing School and Department ofCookery in the New York Exhibit at thaWorld's Fair, has also consented to contribute to our Recipe depart-ment, antl her portrait willalso appear in this book. Miss Corson wasormerly connected with the Minnesota State University.

    Two Thousand Choice Recipes

    OTHER DEPARTMENTS.Aside from the Recipes the following topics are carefully

    treated:

    Food and Health. How to Carve.Foo;ls in General. How to Select Meats.Table Etiquette. Hints to Housekeepers.The Morning Meal. 7 Diseased and Adulterated Food.The Mid-Day Meal. • Warming and Ventilation.The Evening Meal. Drainage and Sewerage.Party Suppers. 7***" Poisoning, Drowning andAccidentTable Napk'us— How toFold Them. | Disinfectants.

    •m: Tsrxjs.Willbe found grouped under the following headings

    Ilrcnul. Ice Creams and Ice* •Uiseuits, Rolls and Muffin* Jellies and Jams.GriddleCakes, Waffles, Etc. Meats.Unleavened Bread. Sauces for Meats.

    ; Grains anil Mushes. .;.'• TO **;nd Pies...„,,„ Puddings and Sauces.*La,'c' Prtsrt-ves.Layer Cak