Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, January 30, 1893, Page 6

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8 ELECTRICAL PROGRESS 1y 02'] A Notable Record of Advance in the Vari- ous Electric Arts. IN THE MOTOR LINE RAPID STRIDES te Tel hy distance T Electrie M \ing Apparatus, Marked in Telep! Improveme nis- of the ¢ distance means of high rents has added L, anew stim- current ranum- | The marked cperi- mental test in Germany of long power transmission by tension alternating says the Electrical Rev ulus to in alternatin motors, and during the past yes ber of types have some of which aim at the solution of the problem of distribution of delm‘m" currents by producing a motor de 1o work with a simple rent, and others of which are of a poly phase chare civenit a in the progress been brought out, | alternating cur- | ctor, provided with a elosed seoms alter mature, such were Frankfort form as plant. It of efficient it motor Is of long distances. transmission, as the barred, owing to danger to wtion and commutators if high used, and is barred by the st of the conducting mains if velied upon, In the ¢ in Germany an efficieney of 7 i the uxle of the and the motor was realized. Thi ever, did not take into conside losses in the motor. "' ter, how ever, w efficient, tho 1 1% \“"‘:' ably did not high an efticieney as {5 possible with synehronous motc The losses in the " transformers w very slight, and the line only 6 per cent for distance 110 miles, hese favorable cirenmstanc marked ont the alternating current the ney par excellence for distri tion at long distances. One of the types of motor developed during the past year was the Stanley-Kelly motor, Which is designed to b operated by a single phase alternating current, the due to self-inductiof being taken out of the field magnet by means of condensers, which have the property of giving a lead, and thus the lag created by self-induc- tion in the field magnet is counteracted, These motors have not yet gone into practical but if the promises made by their promoters are vealized they will doubtiess meot with a large shave of Other types of alternating cur- rent motors have been developed duvir the t year by Bradley and other who wei 1y at work in this field. M. Bradley is one of the pioneers in the art of triphase transmission, which was the type of system adopted in Germany. The Tn is probable that the polyphase sys- tem of transmission and some form of polyphase motor will be adopted in the lant now in course of construction at Niagara Falls. Whether the system will be based upon inventions developed in this country or upon those which have been exploited abroad it is impos- sible at the present writing to say. The gigantic character of the undertaking at Niagara falls lends great interest that enterprise. The turbines on American side will be capable of d ing 125,000. effective horse power by water passing through a tunnel 6,700 feet in length. It is expected that water power will be furnished at this plant about the end of March, 1803, The rates announced for power are $10 per horse power for 5,000 horse power or over: $10.50 for 4.500 horse power; $11 for 4,000 horse power, and so on to for 300 horse power, all for twenty-four hour power if wanted, the costof or- dinary steam power for a ten-hour day ranging from $25 to %40. It is proph- esied that all this power will be uded up in local manufacturing establishments. Plans are also afoot to erect a plant on the Canadian side of the ntL and to utilize it in the operation of a number of railways extending for a distance of twenty-five to sixty miles, the towns and cities in the neighborhood being lighted by the system. The Canadian plant is intended to be operated on the poly phase plan with 25,000 volts. Electric Lighting. One of thg chief events of interest in electric lighting during the past year | was the decision reached in the ‘pro- tracted legal controversy over the basic patent on the incandescent lamp. The suit was based upon patent No. 223,898, issued to Thomas A, ison in 1880, The efforts of others in the art prior to Edison’s advent, notably Dr. Adams, who made experimental lamps, Crookes, who made radiometers and other devices inclosed in high vacua, Star, berts, Woodward, Farmer and -others, it was contended, rendered the Edison patent invalid, but this contention was met by those arguing in favor of the Edison patent, who successfully urged that | ¥rim- to the construction of the dison lamp no filament of carbon properly so considered had been used n an all-glass globe from which the air had been thoroughly exhausted, and it was urged that Edison’s efforts had v sulted in success, whereas all the priot efforts to produce an incandescent lamp had led to failure. The cowrt, in makin, its decision, sustained the views of thos advocating the validity of the patent, and gave the patent a broad construe- tion, covering substantially a carbon filament, in an all-glass vacuous globe provided with conductors leading through the glass. Although the patent has but a few years to run in this coun- try, in view of foreign patents which weve taken out, it will probably lead to strenuous efforts to develop” other types of incandescent lamps, One has alveady been brought forward by the Westinghouse company, comprising u jointed structure in which a glass stopper carrying the filament is accurately fitted to the stem of the bulb, the joint being sealed with some sort of paste. It is claimed that this lamp will yield good service and is cheaper to construct than the kind generally used, and is much cheape in u by reason of the fact that when its' filament wears out it can readily be rvepaired by reason of the ability to take out the stopp Several interesting improvements in lightning arvesters have been made, one especially worthy of note, by reason of a newly discovered property involved in its operntion, is that invented by Mr. Alexander Wurts. Mr, Wurts discov- ered that zine, antimony, bismuth and their compounds, have a peculiar prop- erty of blowing out anare, or rather pre- venting the formation of an ave. If two oylinders of any of these metals are | placed about a sixty-fourth of an inch apart the passage of the lightning dis- charge is permitted, but no are will form. If they are put further apart the phenomenon of preventing the are does not take place. The apparatus in- tended to be of serviee in protecting dy- | namos against damaging effects of light- ning, being used in combination with an ordinary lightning arrester, and pre- venting an arc from forming across the neces- when Divect now ization of power transmitted over current stands, i the insu tension e cossive ¢ Tow t periments per cent hetwee art ion I turhine 5, how ation 15 very 083 W 180, SUCCess, Ningara Plant the iver- is | upon sy's | a capacity of 4,000-horse power, | of leather: two in Portugal | all the electric | particularly two plates of the latter and ground for the dynamo. The development in most branches of the art has been rather of a commercial 1of an inventive character during past year A large number of patents have, of . been taken out, but t} mmll\ to improvements s which had titelr birth ut an carlior period. One ing application recently made *with rvicity is in the treatmentof iron and steel castings. An arc is used in a freshly poured casting to retavd solidi- ficution, giving the metal a cliance to chill slowly and to become densc i homogeneous, and affording an oppor- tunity for all gases pe by reason of the slow cooling mining machinery. Mining apparatus has made rupid commerdial strides during the past year, al interesting inventions have on brought out for the operation of drills and coal-cutting machinery A number of very pretty inventions have been made by Marvin, in which two dif- ferontial phase alternating currents are utilized to veciprocate a drill. These currents ave passed through two coils, placed one above the ¢ and a_vibra- tory movement of the polar line is « ated by means of the fluctuation of the consequent pole, due to the changing values of the alternating current. A device similar to an electrie drill in its neral tion is a =culptor's tool used for ehipping marble or other stones ) has a reciprocating plunger, magnetically actuated fro, and controlled by a Electric causing o to esc to Railways. Flectric railroads have continued their rapid advance during the year. The trolley system still leads, for the veason that it is the cheapest to con- sty and the most successful in eration. The senseless objection against the alleged inartistic effect of trolley wires is fading away. Conduit systems have not made any commereial headway and the storag ttery has b nm fined to a limited number of plants, where, however, it is said to glve wood satisfuction The develop- ment of the stora; hattery in this country has been handicapped by the vigorous litigation in reference to the controlling patents, and now that the question has been settled by a de- cision of the highest court, awardin priority to Brush and sustaining his broad patents, doubtless stor I tevies will cover a wider field of useful- In England they ave lavgely ap- plicd us anxiliaries to dynamo machines in central station work, and there is no -eason why they should not find & simi- field of uscfulness in this country. By October 1 of this year there were in is its op- Ness. | operation or under contract 469 electric 7,769 trolley — cars, involving over 5,.446° miles track and cavrying annually 1.000,000.000 of passe It “is dent that the electr ailroad has tostay. The roads alveady under con- tract * involve a capital stock of about 206,000,000, Large cities are vapidly uling into line, St. Louis, Baltimore, Minuneapolis, St. Paul, Buffalo, Roches- ter, Boston and Brooklyn being alveady equipped, with New York and Philadel- phia looming up close in the foreground. We have now several types of motors for operating elect The old double reduetion style is largely giving way to the single reduction, involving simply two gear wheels and to a newer ty: led the “‘gearless” motor, in which the armature is mounted upon a sleeve loosely surrounding the axle and operat- ing divectly upon the axle or the wheel. The gearless motors ave generally of a multi-polar type so as to develop a high counter electro-motor force at low speed. Undergronnd railways ave meeting with favor. London, as is well known, has one in practical and suceessful oper- ation. Another is contemplated, and has been aunthorized by Parliament, which will cost $6,000,000, be three miles long and have two tunnels sixty feet be- low the surface. One has been in pro- ress in Paris, estimated to cost about 4,000,000 franes. It will be six and one- tenth miles in length, the whole system being underground except a short streteh at the Bassin de I'Arsenal. The tunnel is to be 1.5 metc below the level of the street on an average. The power station will be centrally located and have water v from a canal furnishing a part of ity Ui moto and of over evi- come roads, with equipped and 0 pow! this cap: erground Trausit. Berlin is also on the cards for an derground railway, havir terseeting at right angles, covering the city, and tied together by two circular belt lines, all underground. It will be construeted on the Greathead system of oval tubes 113x10 feet, twenty-five feet below the surface. The trains will run at three-minute intervals. The cost of the road will be about $3,000,000, w York city, as is commonly known, is also likely to have an underground road. The conditions of the franchise have already been published. The road must be operated by electricity or some other power not requiring combustion in the tunnet, and must be completed between City Hall and the Harlem river within four years. The eicctrical exhibition held Crystal Palace, London, was a SUCCesS, Great preparations have been making for a fine display of electrical industries at the World's fair to be held in Chi- cugo. retrie elevators for are coming into use with a favorable reception. he price of aluminum gradually de- clines as electricity is brought to wid in its reduction. A basic patient in this art was issued to Charles S. Bradley during the year, covering the fusion of aluminum ore and its electrolytic decom- position by means of an electric current. Electricity is meeting with a liberal application in tanning. A tannery in France has un output of 1,002,000 pounds yield 1,400,- me in Brazil has 140,000,000 pounds. It is claimed that as good a grade of leather can be made in four days by the electric process as required ten and twelve months by the old process, and yet the machinery outfit for 4,500,000 pounds of leather per annum does not exceed 38,000, “Pelephony. un- i two lines in- at the decided use in and iden meeting 000 pounds of leathe a capacity of telegraphy, and, indeed arts, have increased tho limits of their activity during the year A great boom was given long distance telephony by the successful operation of the line hetween New York and Chicago, alength of 1000 miles. This line is now in operation and conversations can be had at the rate of ) per five minutes. 2 e Tt Was a Kemarkable Leo Caye, One of the greatest curiosities in the Mississippi valley is a natural ice cave which is located in the bluffs of the lowa river within less than a mile of Decorah, the county seat of Winnesheik county. T'his uniqie curiosity is indeed a natural ice house—a cavern in which great ieicles may be found at any season of the year, being especially fine in summer, when the weatler is hot and dry outside. The bluff in which the cave is located is between 200 and 400 feet in height, it being necessary to climb about seventy-five feet up the side of the bluff to reach the mouth of the cave. The entrance i a fissure about ten feet in width and between fifteen and twenty feet in height, from which a con- | mixed in their dates. THE OMAHA DAILY BEEL MONDAY, JANUARY 30, 1893, stant current of cold alr issos, Thirty | feot from the mouth of the cave the pas- sage turns to the loft and downwards, townrds the river bed. The slope is gradual, however, and the walls and vof ave within casy reach all the while After you bave reached a spot 100 feet from the opening you enteved it is no- ticed that the walls and roof are covered with frost. ‘Twenty feet further a thin coating of ice is noticed, which increases in thickness as you go into the bluff. - KING KEL ON THE STAGE. Amusing Deseription of Iis Recent Debut in New York. Mike Kelly, th at base by ‘wwm his metropolitan carcer as an Cactor' last we and the New York World gives an elaborate account of the event, Kelly hit one or two staceato notes, it said, and hit them so hard that he drove them through the sky- light. Mike does not know a staccato from a stack of reds, but he hits them just the same. The bleach up in the gallery shouted and howled until they grew " red in the face. The cohorts down in the and stand planded until the Imperial welkin rang. The welkin virs, too. All this tumult caused Mike to walk out to the home plate und bow his. acknowledg- ments, In the meantime the umpire down in the orehestra waved his baton frantically called Kelly Otherwise he might not have been saf Mike was not a thing of beanty, but he made the hit of season, Of cour Mike has not the voice of Tamagn cither has magno the make-up of Kelly, There- fore it is hoss and hoss, I'rom the time the orchestea piy opening overture the aud began — to ow impatient. v sir that to bat was plauded and every acrobat that out la at It long game, full of exciting plays. Kelly came up in the sixteenth inning, There was @ twang and o whang of fiddles, a shriek of cornets and whatnots, and out came Kelly on a slide to the plate. He looked at the umpire and the um- pire looked at him. Bothsmiled. Mike came without his hat. You know Kelly always loses his hat when running bases, Somebody threw it to him from the wings and the game proceeded. There was another man on deck and he helped Mike sing. He could not sing half as 11 as Kelly, but the audience did not know it, because the audience could not hear Mike sing. Both players had rolls of music in their hands for' bats. This iswhy they got on to the orehestra’s einrves, Kelly was dressed in high-water tennis trousers, with legs li -trumpets and several marks of Cain on their brow. His shirt was cut from a section of red-striped sunset and the buttons of his blue frock coat werc One of the bleach- his emaciated straw hat Brown the wheats!” Then reproachfully over toward il player downs! and safe the no dup vy ap- struck vas on the came a was ors looked at and yelled: Mike looked third base. The shortstop was a slim girl, who kept both her eyes right on the game. The fielders stood in the background be- hind the brass raili After regarding his field for a moment Kelly hitched up his trousers, looked down at the pitcher with the little fiddle and said sternly “Play ball!” The first ball of musi an inshoot. Kelly cut the air witha lun tone swipe and stavted for first with his companion, singing neck andneck, The first effort was called My Sweetheart's the Man in the Tombs.” Oceasionally Kelly would variegate the piece by asserting that his sweetheart was the man in the saloor but the andience did not mind it. Then he would turn the music and look for a fresh note, but he could not find any. The audience did not mind that either. ‘\u\lhmu'v)m\ Kelly did was all right. Finally Mike got kittenish and began to act rightout. He cast an eye up at the first base girl, but she fumbled it. Then he threw a note or two at the short stop, who blushed and looked shy. Mike and his pacemaker ranted avound the bases and then retired to the bench in the wings. In a little while Kelly came to the bat again. He looked around the diamond and said: “Well, I see you ave all there yet.” Then with his hands behind his back and a palpable frog in his throat Kelly began to recite **Casey at the Bat.” All the efforts of De Wolf Hopver wer never in it. De Wolf would have rent his hair in envious anguish and Edwin Booth would not have been “one, two, three.” The short stop turned pale at the tragic recital and the first base givl applied herself industriously toher bottle After Mike finished and” the umpire called *"Time,” Kelly stepped to the plate and said. “Ladies and gentlemen: T thank you all for this very kind reception, becane [ think they put this gang onto me and [ don't know what I'm doir They dressed me up in this new suit of clothe and it rattled me. Come around to- morrow night and I'll do better,” St Skl R A Railroad Built on Ice, The communications between the two shores of the St. Lawrence river at Mon- treal are made, as is known, by means of the Victoria tubular bridg mstructed thirty-five yearsago. which is the lon in the world, the metallic span 6,500 feet long. But from this point to the for a distance of 1,000 miles, other bridge and all the T lished on both sides of the St. have necessarily to cross it. puny of the Grand Trunk which built it, levies a right toll of $10 per car and eight pussenger. To avoid payment of these moneys the S, 1. railroad” company had the idea, some ten years ago, of constructing in winter a communication between the two shores by means of a vailvoad established on the ice. Every winter the work is done over again and it amply pays for the outlay. The length of this ice road is anout twe miles, between Hoche and Longueil, Atlantic, there is no ds estab- Lawrence The com- vailroad, of way cents per Worthy the Omaha Fake-Factory. “The Frances Cleveland Influence club, about which so much was said at one time, and which brought out the Cleveland utterance about the sacred- ness of home and the sanctity of awife's name, never had any existence, It wa a fake, pure and simple,” said George Wittmore of New York to a St. Louis reporter. “It never had any existence outside of the brain of the reporter who conceived the story, and who worked it very nicely for considerable space at 88 a column in veral of the New York daili The reporter had some sort of a license from Mrs. Ormsby, who was styled the president of the club, to use hér name in the papers, and he not only made her responsible for the elub, but he wrote the letter to Mr. Cleveland which had her name signed to it, and which elicited the courteous refusal of the democratic candidate to allow his wife's name to figure in the campaign T'he letter did not end the existence of the influence club, as you may know; the veporter kept it alive as long as the newsp made its existence worth prolonging at $8 a columnn vate. Then {t slipped gently ot of the public ming, and the reporier went fuking in unother dirvection. Oh, there are some wonder- ful young men filling the newspapers of New York with delightful fictions that masquerade as facts,” pers | s | Corn, bu.... | Rye — 1,000 sncks; [ reached nearly 120,000 shares, as the par [ what higher plane than & week ago. Even with i1t stendy value of the stock 1s LU u reduced shipping demand the loeal b 2,00 Rallrond shares woro almost without feature | guirements Fictent to ndvance pri falrto fancy, ¥ winter wh except for the realization in the Conlers, ine "Iy hogs at present are running abous | duced by the high prices, but substantial re thirty 1’\:1.1‘1 than n ye 0 coverles were iade from the lowest figures veruge welght so far th onth b K and the final changes are insignificunt Mun 242 1bs,, against 271 Ihs r January hattan sold lower and closed off 4 per cent. | The larger proport ot Hght and The Itu»'-(vvwr( did not mnke so good n ¢ e mark Alons of 1onts hd deposits shows that the fow | ally. good. DEINE Rin entirely burrow of money (o that center has been un I-l while with the heavy hogs the revorse Is the 5190 wn o kigs.: oxports, 7,204 6,800 phigs.; heat, low grad bbls A b CONNERCIAL AND FWANCIAL |2 e ’lu\l “{i $3.75404.20 {\"Hvllv;n‘vl\( cle 8.60; Minnesc ralghts, $3.60604.00 Wheat Went Up To Oents Yesterday Amid | sots patgnts, *Yoilow Great Bxcitoment. FOLLOWED | About TR0 iedinm 1 evory 4.0 Hull western, RYE-Nowinal; western, 95 BARLEY-Dull, firm: westorn, 60800 BARLEY MALT - Quiet, steady: woste + city mude, Cannda, §1.0091.05, WHEAT - Receipts, 16,500 b ; exports, 62,819 bu.i sales 0,000 b, futures, 8,000 hu spot. Spat 1 and lower, closing N ro und elevator b, 709 @81 ipard, ®ayg 41,01 IT WAS BY REACTION now heen n se fatton of Oniio has 1 for two duvs, but the Hock inz Valley roud states that they have not se ured coritrol of the Fations, and there Is 10 hope of aceonpl the plan of agreement us to rallway fuel. There s consider dis g, | satistaction the other S us to the | show a defielency of de- | action of the Hocking Valley and fte operne | 000 pounds in gross wolght of hogs, 1 presen - |t The rallrond 1ist closed with fiem i Ut 500,000,000 pounds of product less inie | undertone at rogulie changes today than last year, or'a de of 85 per cent fairly The Post says: The w t speculation in [ The indicitions also ars that the winter packs 80, | industeials dominated the entire market and | ing in the west will bo smaller than for corr most of the day’s trad absorbed by the | sponding months for a perisd of sixieen years, movenients i’ Sugar o and Distillers' ©and that tho deerease: compared with th pe gortiticates, The tradingin both Sugar and | ceding year will be without' precedent in the Distillors wis nfined chietly (o the + history of the industry nian floma Of the bl ¢liques, Bt there Pl irket odiy Wis Wit selling of Sugar by outside holde v good nickel the movement (o reals | were moderate 1us of a shippiig do gouiter the | hogs sold ut Pl to sold Tury eding 1 thi | that th " I indications nre thyt Cligue Brokers Doy a Take Al the G Were | Tmmediately suaded to Hold Th Tendeney to intorestin ¢ Current suys the winter season will Ately 700,000 n Offered and Sell- | No ' f % 1 northe No. 2 northeri, 813 No. 8 spri TN S Options opened heavy and clined 1@ 1%c with the westand on local fzing, advanced on covering, ¢ steady at %@ e under yesterday and active trad 2 ped, March, 70% closing at 79%c; May, 814,@82¢, closing at 8l |y|l\ K24 830, closing at 820, Cons- Reeoipts, A0H00 i oxports, 30,628 b sales, 480,000 bu. futures, 115,000 bu, spot Spots firn No. 2 in eclevator, 5 | wffoat: ungraded mived, S6e. Ontions déclin Wb I wheat and fhe west, raljied on covering and closed strong and was changed to e up. with trading liht closing ut OATs - Reeelpts, 123,000 bu; ot | b sales, 10,000 bu, futures Spots dull but fiemer._Options vy and qulet | l-hn ary 4~4 May, 80%¢; spot No. white, short | No. 2 Chleago, 394 No. 8, 37 Kie: No | white, 40 mixed western 040 white Western. 40745 g0 1A Y- Quiet; shipping, G Hors Moderately 1inEs Fafrly netive, steady: wet New Orleuns Selected. 45 10 60 1bs Cor Mears-Dull; plekded ol pickled shoulders, 10c¢; plekled hiths, 140 o5 TtddIes, quiet, visy s short elear, $0.50 1, duil, casior; westorn stennm closed $11.50 250 tlerces at 11803 options.ales none Fsupply. Cricaco, 1L, Jan sitashake out or sell out?’ was the question on the Board of Trade today. The wheat market at the start was exciting and wild on rumors that the big Cud y faction ihout amp its big holdings, This rumor hud 1ts orfgin in the story that Cudahy's brokers had bought from 7,000,000 00 puts the curb st night and the conclusion was jumped at that the clique’s wheat would be for sale to ay and t the puts were to Hmit the losses Everybody seemed to have wheat for the tap of the bell. Longs made haste load the bottom went out and sellers were frantic to get out short lines be- fore the great break was on In the excitement t from th last night having been very thorough and the panting stopped to take breath, and the sellers were congratulating one another on having gottenout of their way But their self-complaisance got a sudden | shock when nearly w dozen well known brok- ers of the elique j ped into the pit and began totake all the wheat that was offered. The #11.75, nominal; May. $11.75, nomi- revalsion In sentimgent was Instantaneous. n pork, stew old mess, #1490 19.00 Men looked at each other in bewildermentand | U priwe, pawindl, tricked a rushed to buy oack | western creamery, 94 what they had so_recklessly sold out few 236 24¢; F ns, 4 1330 minntes before There was another of Cneess o Fuirly tive wild confusion and rally of 11 7100, The tumult continued thronzhout the day Eaas sentiment fluctuating with rumors, and at the | fresh. 54 close th owd was still in doubt whether Rice had b the vietim of a “sell out™ or « L 3 out.” Some doclare that it w curvy the part of the eligue to panic and nable it 1o buy another b TN it had sold out the er part of its holdings on yesterduy’s bul A fanciful story w £ Wis 1'6hine i ors ¢ A% wetlve and generally than 1'rid Receiprs < enstern market wires 1ot roquire the stimu i 10 mike local houses sl buteher and hoavy S0, with a $7.90 top and mived Nogs i 8770, with $7.60 | Owlig to the slump in the prov de the murket broke about tho middle of the forenoon, and on some of Uhe Lo hogs tho early morning's advance was state | commlet 1. Fvery thing, however, finally changoed b $7.0507.75 a8 AZRN ) o5 oo 1 nionth wnd $4.20 ok New York Money Mucket 18 MONEY 0N ¢ last doan, 2 per cent Proiste MERCANTILE PAvER 4 SEERLING EXCIANGE actual business in_ | sixty duys and £4.8715 for ¢ GOVERNMENT BONDS — Dull Phe elosing quotat Tan ALl per Vasy 3 cent exports 2,405 | P 53,000 b, Spot 16 por cont Quiot but steady with s Dills at $4.56. for wid. 0 steady o un- and wurket went off good 1o choles when lquidation therd halt Pacific cost, 21 S 4s coul was rocelved W was The but dealers i they were not I'he ind | Wl and prices aro tably steady. Fair 1o natives, 5003 fafr 10 good wester Vb 00} non and stock sheep, $2.2 kood 10 cholee 40 to 100-10. Tanib: e tin of uislana at'y now sot Tenn. new sot Cannila Con. Pacit traders Mo re pretty good 11 ary Erie MK AT 202 MK & T Gen. oy Northern Pac. Ists Receipts and Disposition of Stock, Offielal receipts and disposition of stoel as swi by the hooks of the Union Stock Yardy omprny for the twenty-four hours, ending ats welock p.m. January 28, 1893 it ex- | shouting n seene firn part skims, 4% s St Louls Lovts, M the CATTL [ Mining Jan quotations on the Stendy; At e R St fulr to extru W ey e e = s L T fmecs. b it [ Noepty, 0 0 et fdlawels 6 graat Mining xehange | S0 VG Tend|Cars. | ltend Cars tead SOLASSES i nomial open kettle, good (o' cholee fivm at 207340, SCGAR- Raw, i, dull:falerefining, 3 1-10 centrifugals, 96 test, 3iacs vofined, frm and fairly actives off A, 4%ci mold A, 4 016 @51y standird A, 4 11-1010 450 conteetioners S OB e OMAIN LIVE STOCK predmonin and having & large. wmount of | uged, 4 L1o16abes cubos, 4 11600 — wheat, he protected it by put Todoy he felt | P1a Ieox Quict; American, $12.75% 15,50, wde Braces Up Considerably betteeand his bull instincis are now upper- [ Copprie Dull, steady: ke, $12 Advance Shuarply most. Tnothe lust hourof trading Pardildge | Lyan- Firms domestic, $3.90. oty Ll took the lead and offered wheat in such enorm- | Frs—Firm, quiet: Steaits, $20.45 kBt U ) Sty ous quantivs thit the spirit of the crowd wis R somewhat Tightor than st week, and exeopt SRR DL TR s to cattle Tightor than i year Oficinl ular toward the close. Leaving oft e | HuEesting asToMONE the tom or Ly under the price Hend| Cars, Now [ 1|, fuirly Anked. < ARKCO, $1.00 §1.1 l i [ DISPOSITION 600 RN CATTLE.| OGS, Omiaba Packing Co The G- H, Hammond (o Swift& Co The Cidahy Packing Co shdb BB & D ) s and Feouors < current purporting to explain the whold secret. Cudahy got back from Cincinatl yesterduy with i very bad | A4 cold, according (6 this tale, o was feartul of Mat Hogs LI Chie Ive Stock M Crcaco, DL, Jan. 25, Sped Tie BEe. ] The very small nun affered found ready buyers at stron Sales were on a basis of from #1.50 to $6,10 for 681ge; May Receipts last woek J3I686 30,078 5171 | POOF to extraor at from $1.50 to §3.75 for poor CORN —13 sh closed | Same week last ye 10,405 4 4,544 | Lo holee cows and bulls !hw’m 200 10, 4.10 higher at 391c ¥ 431 s 3 S R v stockers and feeders, and at from $ QAT Unehinniged; s 92 usked; May | Recelpts i 1L TADiga Aot - 10 for drossed becEand shipping steers a2 HAAHA 40, = hog market averaged e Increnso 23,864 SR e BUTTER - Lower; creamery, Decreasc previous day's prices, but the difcrenc did 18@26c 3 The general cattle market this’ week has ' not amount appreciable advan 2GS —Firm, 25¢ been rather “sway backed.” Monday and y Quotat 10 87,580 for poo PROVISIONS - Pork, Tiesay's (FA08. Wes PALIIGR UrIsIE and femors | prime 1 from #7.50 to $8.15 for poo; ard, highe £11.60, Wednesday and Thursday prices went off | extran heavy ights e RECETPTS. Ilour, 7,000 Lhls 63,000 o on all but the very best grades, | 8,000 of quatations wis fror bu.: corn, 182,000 bi.; outs, iday and Saturday the trade braced | 10 $5.85 for poor 1o choice sheep, and from was done by those who were willing to ) none: barley, none. good shure of the decline was 1 £4.00 to #86.00° for lambs of ~corresponding T done oy thosearho wero willing Lo koshort | S ibakNTA - Hi0ur, 11,000 bbls.; wheat giined, Thore have een o Coticeablo | gtalit The feeling was firm. - Recelpts, the serews were put on again, The shorts | 000 bu.i corn, 63000 "bu.; outs, 5,000 bu ;l'w‘g»“ AU L sty --;‘H“wf jule tle | 1,000 were qulekly forced to cover. May pork-ad- | 1Y€ 8,000 bu.i burley, 2.000'hu o i e Tecent break wis only e vageed stranght (o ) and due (o e surplus of infoior "he h receipts for e other market cc rs. 116,000 ago 219,000 last week, The clos i oy wasactive and stronger from which was” at the top figures, showed a guin | LTI Lor LA (GRIBNS AROLATTY. WORS Anbltls i "”m\"f T G LS for | puting and with favorable castern advices and LR G UL Raounhom (Orieoveralinys n improved demand fr S| uintors, sh paast was the heaviest buyer of pork and opin- Dors and for tho A< time bl month 1§ good O isyqivided SO Ry atior i, purchisos | exportdeniand trade was Tively and all decent A e ? | toppy beeves were not here, but - the gencral 100 head S 3 | quality of the cattic weighin 100 Ths, and The lending upwards was above the averagze, Good 1,200 £ 10 1L,400-1h, bheeves sold at from $4.40 up to ARTICLES. 5.00 with fair to good 1,000 to 1,150-1h, steers Wheat No 2 January rket Al Telegram to her of cattle price St. Louis Markets, S1. Lovis, Mo, Jan. 28 FrLoun Unchanged WHEAT 1@ 11¢ under yo day; cush, Cattle 18,637 Hous, Sheep. Receipts this week 36055 4,100 aild oats wve A BATTOW TN spective closing v d strong, but quiet, d wound up fye under Tues on I'riduy. | | | 5 1o ovistons, after an early decline, started up be: and closed strong, May pork veaching the ser- Sational price of 20 4 birrel That May pork would touch the record breaking figure | Was not expeetad at the close yesterday. Bt the general trade got thrown off the k by | an ensior market this morntog: Although (he | Logs at the yards fell short of 10,000, prices | for some asons were not marked up at the | yards, This started a great mu 51»".!\ 1o Taling profiN: T A LAquA Farmounu ol EoL e firm. T heavy 26@30¢; dalry, oy froni firm; $19.00 for old wheat, I'he ran 0 19,000 bu; rye, ( up —_— e > PUT TO FLIGHT —all the peculiar troubles that beset a wo- man. The only guaranteed vemedy for them is Dr. Picrce's Favorite Prescripfion. ~For women suffering {rom any chronic “ female complaint” or weakness; for women who are run-down and overworked; for women ex- pecting to become mothers, and for motbers who are nursing and exhausted: at the change from girlhoad to womanhood: and Iater, at the critical “ change of life” — it is a medicine that safely and certainly builds up, strengthens, regulates, and cures. it Tt it doesu't, if it even fails to benefit or t'from cure, you have your money back, rigely at from R = St Trom 2170 o Koo e W Edd sk | What you are sure of, if you ufe Dr. demand for rough stock and the extreme age's Catarrh Remedy, is cither a per- 1ge of prices wi A.ni.u‘n ‘{ll!n £4.20. Com- | fect and permanent cure for your Ca- fee veut calves sold at firmer prices |4, 1o matter how bad your case may be, or $500 in cash. The proprietors of the medicine promise to pay you the money, if they can't cure you. Ol Market, New York, Jan, 2 Perrorevs Certifi- cates were ' little more wctive toc 1 5,000 bbls, changed hands at the Consolldated bourd at from 53¢ to hdrge, clost it the lat- ter price bid. “At the Stock exchange 4,000 bbls, were sold at 52%¢. Dullness and steadi- ness still mark trading TaLLOW- Fi sity (#2.00 for plgs.) COTTON SEEL Searce and higher B0 bid; yellow, H7e. RosIN-Dull but 1o zood, $1.3561.40), Tonvixtize Dull bt ste \DON, Jun. 28 |n! e ANTWERP n and sellers. Corn t £ in January A4Sty ¥obruary.| | Ao & « "w’a i Ma gan Oats Xo. January x| at 0% Fevruary.| bl Bid| g May...o. M@y 851 '3eAS Me Pork | | | January e | May, 1 42 Lard Al January.. n 1 | May. . 1 i l the week were but DO 7e bid crude, firmer; futures ranged as follows strained, common or LOW. |CLOSE. ¥ ly at 3314340 OO S Lon CALCUTTA LINSEED oy Fatomuan good healthy trade 1 and the forenoon’s trading about exl offer I'r y londs on lmost cn- 625 PETROLEUM 124¢ paid Wi sold strong to MiLwAUKEE, Wis, Jan. 28.- WHEAT Fusy; There were only | b S S o s Basyi | Gafe, and although the dem: CORN-—Quiet N tirely local, it wus good enough to res hy White, 84 No 3 white, | sorbthe me rorings. A buw o ¢ ¥ s g’ , but 2 1010 fair 10 good stufl sold 17 11 60 1 62k 10 321 ik — $2.40 to Kangas City Live Stock Market, KANsA8 Crry, Mo, Jan. 25 CATTLE ceipts, 4,000 head? Shipments, 1500 head good steers opened aetive and steady tostrong, closed dull,” 10%15¢ lower; oths 10@15¢ | from ¥2, | lower; cows and feeders, steady Hipping Busing sers, $3.10@5.50; stockers and feeders, $3.55 | feeder 6 untry the fresh off Re- Short fibs Janua rquiet in the stocker _May iere no very peculitors took 0od strong prices. uture fat Cash quotations were as follow FLOUR—Somewhat unsettled und dull; ter patents, ¥8.60@4.00; #3.2003.60; spring puients, straights, @3.00; bk WHEAT spring, 723405 61@07c; N d Cony OATS 05@31¢; )3 white, ve-No. 2, Iluu'.n\' No. 4,500 head: shipments, 900 15 good hog: e, 10¢ higher; all grades, 00@7.90; bulls, §7.6067.70, Keceipts, 1,000 head ; murket unchunged; - ipts, o \ul:l‘ Hu4.10; spring <, 1,700 i No.3 cattle market Is nowhe in the unusu; acvive den ing cattle. o selling prices that fat eattle values will prove very materially before alize o profit Hoas—During the early part of the week II|:> 1O 1 200 tendency of the hog market was downward OAra—Ioak 5 mixed, 200291 I rket for nu.' mlu, closed the BUTTER nand and dull iy ;':‘. ‘.\v shoulde Pa00; Galys 210 sldes (boxed), #10.60 |l ripTs— Wheat, 84,000 bu.; bu.: oats, none. SnipMENTS ~Wheat, good fecd at such b © 1o im- teeders can re- shipments, 400 nuttons, $4.00@4.40. S()l,’l‘ll OMAIIL \. Shring, Kansas City Markets, . Jan. 28— WHEA |3 and’ soft e lower; Uulon Stock Yards Company, South Omaha. Ho No. 2 white, Hard o No. 2 Tinorny Sk PoRK-—Moss, per 100 1bs, £10.80210.40; dry salted #9.8714@10.00; short cl @l 0 HISKY Aty est Cattle 1 Shioep markot 15 tho wost veamery, | o ehunge in the situatic Best Cattle Ho aud Shoes for both hogs and provisions BUND WANIE COMPANIES, ST.R.R.COMPANIES.ctc Correspondence solicited. N.W.HARRIS & COMPANY,Bankers, 63-165 Dearborn Street, CHICACO. 15 'Wall Street, NEW YORK. 70 State 5t.. BOSTCN. OMAHA ufacturers’ and Jobbers’ Directory HARDWARE. Rector & Wilhelmy | Lobeck& Linu; COMPANY, | Dentors 1n hardware and wechaulos tooly 1408 Douglas 8t. corn, 17,000 EDNMISSIDN M)I.!Sis Wood Brothers. Live Stock Commission Merchunts, South Omaha—Telephone 1157 Chicago JOIN D. DADISMAN, | i WALTER K. Woob,' | Manusers ortullyt Distillers’ finished goods, per gal., loaf, 107,000 bu.; corn, 18,000 JaUaane=Unchanged: ent granulated, ble: standard The following were the rec ments for today: Articics % Cotton Market. NEW ORLEANS, Li, ). 28, Quiet middling, w3 low middling, 8%e: good ordi- nary, Buc net recelpts, 4,500 b ross 491 hales; expor'ts o ¢ Brit- bhales coustwise, 1,230 bales; ipts and ship- Tie | Shipments Flour. bbls Vhieat. bu 16,000| srts by mall and wire 164, um‘ Market T ) nished upos 156,000 o Onts, bu . Jan 28 bu Barley, bu On the Produce exchange to n juiet; crenme b Sugs, easler; “utures 5,00 Rt L Man iy $0: 53: M 4009.51. trictly Louis Live Stock Market, « St i Mo., Jan. 28, CATTLE ) The week closed with n celpts of puanta, o8 dys ) L all Kinds of produce. The arket wits 04400 fed Texas £3.2004.40; not very aetive, hut with I X048 Bloors, about everything was cleaned up close. Asio prices, there was not ve Ehanze, i e general sntion Ts about e sane as previously i g8 continue to attract a ood deal of attention, and the niar- ket is rather firmer than 1t was'on the day be- the ts, 2,300, S eipts r 1o good natives wo oice muttons, $5.0065.25. none 3.5014.7 _ _AWNINDS AND TENTS Omaha Tent-Awning COMPANY. Liverpool Markets. LIVERPOOL, WHEAT Steady mand. fair; - holders offer moderatelys Wostern, spring, Os 8d@os 44 per cental red, winter, bs 10dahs 11d Cory—1lrm;: demand fair; 4= Kd per cental for old BACON- Lo and shor Laup--Prine wester PLES—St0cks are to chold 4 BANANAS-Quoted 4 BEANS - Cholee nay Burren- Tl CrLERY-Per dos 8 (NIA CABBAGE-Owing to which cabbuge Is being hel ern California the arrivals here Drumiheid, 24, CrANBERRIES- Bell und_ cherry £10,00; Jersey Cape Cod, $9.8 Gs - There is not very much 0 say the market, as the situation r unchanged held at #3.50@4.00 for de- red No. 2 $2.0022.00 per bunch. HORSE COVERS, 1113 Farnam S¢ Corner 10th and Jackson e wots. mixed n2<percwt, | _BABS AND TWINES- SO B0 e . Bamis Omaha Bag | M. 0. Daxon, COMPANY Irreg- d man . frs. | Bleyeles sold on monthly ulnrat b ooints down to 10 points up, clos iria Sopps e ol ing steady ath to 16 points up: sales, 87,500 | twine | payments 120N .1 W little firmer, but there continues to be | bags, incliding January, #17.250 17.45; March, | — quite o wide raned o prices. While some sales | $16.75@16.85; April, $16.60@16.70; May, #16.45 BOOTS \ND 8403, sloves. mitian |1 shEtiore s 81 A " Tt 14t and Jneknon. made at 24¢, the more” general price was | @16.55; June, #1645 ~v»rnmluv *16.250 = 674, Morse-Coe Shoe Company, R U T Some dealers who expect to see prices go | 16.35; Decentber, #16.2016.30. Spot Rio ve holding their eggs at 26¢, but | firmer, dull; No. 7, #17 e— Howard Strest LUMBER. AND BONDS, AL = toadd that the sales at the top — e i o .o baros.o John A. Wakeleld,| Charles R. Les, not yery who STOUKS Lmported, Amerleanort | 1lardwood lnmbor, wood > L oW asking whea the Tand coment, Milwan earpoLs an parg 1ot koo comont and Quin. o oring. Hand-Sewed | “""* | o and Dojkise ARTIENN W DL 8 R SR fiopber N LIQUORS. MILLINERY, 1001106 Harney 8t == | Pk & )} L 0eilhe &%) COAL, 0O(E | COANIJE fmporier anl Jo0 OmahaC')al Coke & Eagle Cornice Work; e | Maorrpa s Mall 0rtars peo . 2212 3. 1ith | LIME O, hard and alvanizel fron coal, 8 1 cor. 16th " Window oap . 2 Douglns Sts perlights, e PAPER. 0ILS. the high western in south- light. BICYOLES. e —— ey HATS, ETC, W.A.L. Gibbon & C0. | omaha Safe and Iron Wholesalo WORKS aps. straw good s, | Sates vaults, jall work Ittens, 2th | iron shutters and fire Coffee Market, bout | NEW YORK, Jan. 28.-Options opene were p hand, & iLys 4go: ure advaice will siop. GAME- Sl rabl 503 Jacks, $1.50. the ra ontinuinig at 86000650, HAY—The reccipty have kept up so larg that the expected Tegietion in the market has not materialized. “Fhe supply Is large and prices remaln at prexious quotations, that is | 36.0020.50), s dliwEs=No 1salfell e No. 2, 8ie; Bint | joani bl 1HoxEY- Cholee to' fancy white clover, 18@ | entire list :‘Q; fair to good. Ilul\n‘ = industrinls, The exports of gold today ALAGA URAPES TAtendy, $8.00009.00 and the assurance of further lurge ship: Nurs-Largehickary, #1.05; black walnuts, | o next week had a decided restraining in #1000 LENONS- Cholce to fancy [ flucnce upon the general list. Manhattan L ORANGES—The 1 showed o oping tendency which resulted piorin e I ST 24:500:4.70; 14 | were only slightly ehinged from those of last OYSTERS —There | evening. The general expression wis that situation at Baltinore | Dhere would be no move ugainst the shorts in weather his been milder, ' today und during the fiest hour of bust at should 1t continue tstock wis quiet with small fluctua bor will admit of bhoats arri Later, however, It became the only Prices remain ubout steady Atock and moved up fron 128% to 1827, whilt per cun | 1V White was offering to loan it at ig per cent per iy, In the Tast few minutes iCwis sup plied herally and - fell 1984, 61 por | Blablng goods, G260 — ONIoNs - Home growi, per bushel e C | Pt Tawor than 1t was Inst evening. " Distil = PRODYSE COMMISSID, fors’ was inolined to move I symputhy with | S - extreme range was only 13 per cent, elosing ~ e h Omaha Upholstering| Basb: & Ruayan | Braach & Go, ""“S A L.l“” & "“‘* O, but Mock of that hnd s very scavee. Tho ereat bulk of the arrivals 1s mude up of large groat bulicof ¢ " Ut A7, with a loss of 'y per cent for the duy The great feature of the diy was the sudder of al FURNITURE CO poultey wnd gaue, Kinds, aystors. 317 & 1h =t fowls, many of them rough, and the top on e b i R AL BT fht activity in American To though like Distillers it failed to fluctuate over o W r o e —————————p STOVE REPAIRS. SASH, DOORS trade does not want lurg wlis, but either oliheens o fox ParoEs se than 'y per cent, though it d at ity P GROCERIES. DRUGS, ETD, & D. M. Steele & Co., Blake, Bruce & Co., { Omaha Stove Rapair tl A"D.h)F.)‘.V“(’Q‘C) about steady zewne wnd ducks 5o PoTATORS Only <wall lots moving from store, | Western Nebraski sto d the commnion wnd 1L wis pub the the pust fow been ut ent u and Haroey St anid water attachments | G00rs blinde sad adope s o any Kind of st0¥a | monldings. branch of made, 1207 Douglas 56 | 1o, 12th andizard, AATRS ; which Iy very saleable il with me Securitics Were Rather Slow Yestesday and Sates Quite Small, Nel York, L The could on the whole scarcely be ca today, although the total trans newrly 330,000 OF this amount nearly 260,000 5 mopolized by the three 2 only 65,000 for the and the rest of the led tions were kirkendall, Jones & | Amer, STHOE CO., hoots shon s A rubber goods, 143 ) Haroey St hares. COMPANY mfrs. ago Whole Bos:on | & hares were R |8 radlroad IN Whol 1001 Farnam St 3.7 5 well supplicd iwith TH@H.00; russets put up in half gerines, #3.00 1110-1112 Dodge _________————- d DRY 600DS, o M. E. Smith & Co., Kilpatrick-Koch Dry GOODS (O yns. wents’ farnish tnwgonds, eor. 1t aad Harn y Sta Standard 0l Co., Wefined and lubricatiag Carpenter Paper (o, | Carry & full atock of printing, weaj writing | pap vaper, ote. in the oyst ping that it is predicted nother week the har- | ing and leaving here at 2004 Whinge goods, ©)rner away to Produce, fruits upholstered furn| 112 1104 Nicholas Wholesale only and 14th Sts — nerei pu stlon of the tiutions wre npany £ 1l 80e: Utah and Colorado, 90 che native, 768 SWEET There ure in the 1 indi murket whivh are selling at #4.50 A i for AL -Cholee veul calves, 8@ A PNy eV pearly coneludg practical contr country. The not 50 larg: large I wiil glve ol the tobiceo trade stivity, however, Wi e faaleatdd vy the Sules, Which L. 12011205 Jones St New York Markets, New Yous, Jau Froun—Receipts, uaha. Qmaba ©

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