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DOINGS AMONG BEMIDJI'S GOUNTRY NEIGHBORS Live Correspondents of the Pioneer Write the News from Their Localities. Cunningham. March 7. Carl Berggren of Brainerd is visiting his sister, Mrs. Bert Wood. Rev. Astwood will hold religi- ous services in the school house next Sunday at 11 o’clock a. m. Clarence Attix of Bemidji Sun- dayed at the home of his sister, Mrs. Wallace Cunningham of this place. Several new incubators have purchased by our neighbors, who contemplate poultry raising as an industry. Much hauling of pine logs, pulp wood and cedar poles and posts has been done this season from Island Lake to Orth, from which place it has been shipped to vari- ous markets. Clementson. March 8. Edward Farder and brother, Olaf, left for Baudette Monday, to transact business. Henry ]. McClernan returned to Clementson Sunday from a short visit at Baudette and Pitt. A commodious hotel is under construction, which, when finished, will give Clementson much better accomodation to travelers, ‘Walter D. Colburn, the enter- prising timber buyer and scaler transacted business in this vicin- ity last week, He was accom- panied by his assistants and tally men, The Rapid River Debating and Literary Society will meet Satur- day night in the Farder building. There will be a program and debate and a large attendence is desired. The ladies of Clementson and vicinity met last Monday at the home of Mrs. E. Farder, where they organized a Ladies Sewing Society. The society will meet at the home of Mrs. Helic Clement- son, March 18. Redby. March g. J. Workman is on the sick list. W. R. McKinnon lett for Ash- land, Wis., Saturday. E. W. Cheney is having his house sided. E. ]. Steberg is doing the work, Mrs. Dickinson and little son arrived here Monday for a visit with friends in Redby and vicinity, A. J. Anderson passed through here the first of the week, Mr. Anderson was on his way to Red Lake agency and points north. Louis Workman left Tuesday morning for Turtle River Wiscon- sin where he hopes to secure relief from his old enemy, rheuma- tism. Olaf Oleson has rented the store building owned by Smith and Hebert, and will put in a stock of candies and novelties in the near future. Work is going forward rapidly on the store building of D. W, Carter and son. The owners hope to put in a part of theif stock the first of the week. W. Hays has sold his stock to J. N. Fairbanks. Mr. Fairbanks will have the goods removed to his building on Fourth street about the 12th of the monith. Mr. Fair- banks hopes to be ready for cus- tom not later than the zoth, Spooner and Baudette. March 8. Ered Blodget of Warroad, spent Saturday in town. Deputy Sheriff J. W. Sischo trans- acted business at Williams on Friday. P. 1. Holen made a business trip to Roosevelt the last of the week. Attorney Geo. E. Erickson made Roosevelt a professional visit on Friday. A. D. Grignon of Pitt, was a west- bound passenger to Duluth on Fri- day evening. The paperhangers and painters have completed decorating the inter- ior of Eagen’s store. The special school election which was held at Spooner last Saturday, had a good turn out, The Busy Bees held one of their regular meetings at the home of Mrs. F. N. Lakeson Saturday. Rev. T. W. Howard visited at Pitt on Friday. Mr. Howard holds regu- lar services at that place. }V{:rchant Joseph Maloney of Williams transacted business here the larer part of the week. Hon. Albert Berg returned on Sat- urday morning from the state capi- tol, after a weeks’ absence. Attorney Alex. Fossmark of War- road assisted Hon. Albert Berg in taking final proofs Saturday. D. B. Scott of Williams arrived here Friday evening to attend to business matters here on Saturday. Mrs. William Harper of Baudette left on Friday for Williams on a | Minn. Jonas Erickcon of Clementson took final proof before United States Commissioner Albert Berg,on March 6th. The funeral of Mrs. Joseph Gooler will be conducted by Rev. Father Bane, of the Catholic church of Bau- dette, Mondey forenoon. J. C. Lee, who has been spending the winter in Georgia, returned last week to again assume his duties on his homestead up the river. J. C. Comlins of Graceton, the popular merchant of that place arrived here on Friday evening to attend to business matters. Mrs. Gooler, wife of Joe Gooler, of Baudette succumbed to tubercolusis, at her home in Baudette. The de- ceased is survived by a husband and three children, P. I. Helen who has been spend- ing the week at Baudette in the in- terest of the First State Bank at that place, also visiting former friends, departed Monday morning, via Thief River Falls, for Argyle, Another death occurred here Sat- urday morning. A young man by name of James Kelley, died of typhoid pneumonia at the Collins hotel. His parents live at Boston, Mass. Young Kelley was 22 years of age. Mrs. Tooms of the Lake of the Woods arrived here Saturday morn- ing to nurse her son, George, who was lying critically ill at Cross- ‘ e \.»‘ ] =!vr< <! S -»E’ CAPTAIN DOCKERY MADE Army Officer, Once Looated at Duluth ‘and Well Known Here, Was Very Brave.3 — Almost every resident of Bemidji became acquainted with Captain O, H. Dockery, a member of the regu- lar army who was for several years stationed at Duluth, and who had charge of the Bemidji recruiting station, and will be interested in the following, taken from a recent issue of the Duluth Evening Herald, indicating that the captain is a hero, of the thirty-third degree. Says the Evening Herald: “Capt. Oliver H. Dockery of the twenty-fifth regular infantry and very well known in Duluth, through his long connection with the local army recruiting office, figured hero- ically in a sailboat accident off Naples, Fla,, in the Gulf of Mexico. “Three men in the party were drowned and it was only owing to Capt. Dockery’s rerservance and Dodds Lumber company’s offices. Mr. Tooms did not get here until atter the death of his son which occurred about four o’clock Saturday afternoon. Little Arlo, the 9-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Thompson of Roosevelt, was accidently killed by being thrown out of a bobsleigh which he had caught. The horses ran away and the little fellow was thrown upon a pile of poles, a splinter penetrating his skull, caus- ing instant death. The Spooner school district, 112, held a special election Saturday after- noon for the purpose of voting bonds in the sum of $25,000 for the erec- tion of a school building this spring. A sufficient number of votes were cast in favor of the proposition, and Spooner will have a school building that will be a pride to this north- country. A lodge of Modern Brotherhood was organized here Friday evening and forty members were admitted into the order. The initiatory exer- cises were conducted at the §. T. & L. society’s hall, and were superin- tended by disirict Manager J. E. Leighton. The following officers were elected: President, John Swed- berg; vice president, Mae E. Corri- gan; William Steffes, secretary and treasurer; Mary M. Jenson, chaplin; Olof Jenson, conductor; Julius Eng- broten, watchman; Harold Hanson, sentry; J. E. Corrigan, physician. OMINOUS QUIET AT GASS LAKE WAS RESPONSIBLE Ludvig Buckmier of Blackduck Lost His Reason When He Discovered Where He Was. ThatDivine Providence is arrayed against the Village of Cass Lake and her people in their fight for the proposed new normal school the Pioneer is loath to believe, but an occurrence yesterday, wherein a respected citizen of Blackduck lost his mind, after going to Cass Lake, strikes one as smacking of the super- natural., M. A. Clark, judge of probate of Beltrami county, received word today that one Ludwig Buckmier, who went to Cass Lake Wednesday, had -tbecome so overpowered by the om- inous quiet and inactivity of that village that his equilibrium had became unsteady and his mind wandered; and the chief of police of Cass Lake requested the judge to send for Ludvig and have his rea- soning powers looked into, since going to Cass Lake. The sheriff sent a deputy to Cass Lake this noon to bring back the unfortunate Blackduck resident, who was not accustomed to the ways of a quiet and restful com munity. Notice. Notice is hereby given that the plant, suscription list and all per- sonal property belonging to and con- stituting the Beltrami County News, as described in a certain bill of sale filed in the office of the city clerk in the city of Bemidji, Minnesota, is the property of Chas. H. Miles, now a resident of Minneapolis, Min- nesota, and that any parties paving any monevs due said Beltrami Coun- ty News to any other party except the undersigned without authoriza- tion from said undersigned, into whose hand said property was deliv- ered on March 11, 1909, by the sheriff of Beltrami county, Minne- sota, will be held liable, and made defendant in action of recovery by said owner and his agents, C. Christenson, Publisher of Beltrami County News visit with relatives at that place. and agent for C, H, Miles. pluck that he and Dr. Herbert Cald- well of Louisville were saved. Dr. Caldwell owes his life to the army officer. “Charles G. Wicker, William Phil- lips and Ray Hackney of Chicago, Dr. Caldwell and Capt. Dockery formed the party. The sailboat overturned in a stiff gale and Hack- ney offered to swim ashore for help, with the aid of a broken spar. He was carried out to sea and drowned, however. “The others clung tenaciously to the overturned boat. Finally Phil- lips lost his grip and fell in, to drown. Wicker became exhausted and Capt. Dockery courageously lashed the unconscious man to his own body. A huge wave carried Wicker over to his death, however. “Capt. Dockery, with a single oar, tried to paddle the overturned boat to the shore. He and Dr. Caldwell were picked up by a mail boat twenty-four hours after the accident happened.” Lumberjack Escaped from ‘‘Bum” Cass Lake Jail. Cass Lake, March 12.—(Special to Pioneer.)—Oscar Meade, the lumberjack who was arrested - here the first of the week for robbing a fellow lumberjack of seventy dollars, broke jail last night and made his escape. ' The sheriff arrived here from Walker last evening to take the prisoner to the county jail at Walker, but when he got to the jail he found his bird had flown.. Meade suc- ceeded, in some unknown manner, in removing a strip of the door cas- ing. When this was off there was little trouble in getting out. The authorities along the line have been notified and the outlaw may be captured before he gets far away. (The Cass Lake villagé jail is a ““joke,” for the most part, and any well-regulated “crook” could easily make his escape from the “bastile” used over there for the incarceration purposes. - The jail has been con- demned by the state authorities; and whenever an attehpt has been made to build a new village hall and jail, there has been such a “kilkenny cat” row that injunctions bave been brought into play, and our neighbors have been compelled to go along with a jail that would disgrace any place of any ‘‘pumpkins.” Many prisoners have escaped, which ap- pears to be a very easy matter.) Dissnlution of Partnership. Notice is hereby given that the partnership heretofore existing be- tween Hugh Dickie and Peter Cleve, has this day been dissolved by mutual consent. All bills owing the firm may be paid to Hugh Dickie, who will have charge of the business. All outstanding indebtedness will be paid by Mr. Dickie. Dated this 9th day of March 1909. HEROI FIGHT FOR LIFE| o e Pure it —Hugh Dickie, —P. Cleve. . Notice. The board of supervisors of Town of Frohn, County of Bel- trand, State of Minn. will meet on the 2oth day of March, A, D 1909, at the residence of Gust Berg on section 15 in said town for the purpose of selling a con- tract to the lowest bidder to repair the bridge crossing the Mississippi river on the county road between sections 14 and 23, All material and pile driver will be furnished by the town, for plans and speci (@ £ ALUME ] the can o fications inquire of Gust Berg on section 15 meeting will open at 10 o’clock in the, forenoon and bids will be sold at 2 o’clock in the afternoon the right to reject any or all bids is hereby reserved. Dated this 10th day of March, A. D, 1909. z —NELS WILLETT, Town Clerk. Probate Court. March 4. Estate of Mary A. Carter. Affidavit of no debts filed and order issued appointing John N. Bailey and Audrew Johnson, apprais- ers. March 5. Estate of Minnie Major. Final account of Chatrles Major as special administrator filed and order allowing and approving said account issued. . March 8. Estate of Oline Grande. Hearing on petition for determina- tion of heirs had, and degree issued showing: the findings of the court. March 10. Estate of George E. Beere. Report of W. L. Brooks and George H. Rhea, as appraisers, filed and accepted. Dissolution of Partnership. Notice is hereby given that the partnership heretofore existing between Harry Waldo and John A, Sandin, known as the Bemidji Tea Store, has this day been dissolved by mutual consent. All debts con- tracted by said firm will be assumed by John A. Sandin and all~ bills due said firm are now payable to John A. Sandin. Dated at Bemidji, Minn., 12th day of March, 1909. —TJohn Sandin, —Harry Waldo. this Foresters Meeting. A meeting of the United Order of Foresters will be held at the home of Mrs. J. W. McCawley,1013 Dewey avenue, Friday evening March 13, at 8 o'clock. All members and visiting members are invited to be present. Mrs. J. W. McCawley. Get your “Sunkist” ~oranges at McCuaig’s on Saturday, 65 cents per peck. ANOTHER JOB FOR PURDY Minnesota Man Not Likely to Con- tinue on Bench. ‘Washington, March 12.—From the Mhite House comes a statement that o decision has been reached by Pres- ident Taft as to the’future of Judse Milton D. Purdy of Minneapolis and it now appears to be certain thab Judge Purdy will not continue on the bench. If he is so disposed he may return to the government service. Secretary of State Knox, who is a friend of Judge Purdy, belleves he would be a good man to assist in the reorganiza- tion of the department of justice. A suggestion was made that Judge Purdy would eventually be appeinted to a position of responsibility in the state department. Hopkins Gets Increased Vote. Springfield, Iil, March 11.—The vote for Senator Hopkins on the forty- second ballot shot up to 76, as com- pared with the 61 which he received Feb. 25, the last day on which there was a quorum present. Only two' pairs were noted, while there were twelve on the last ballot when a quo- rum was present. Turkish General Ends Life. Constantinople, March 11.—General Soifullah Pasha, who was Turkish chief of staff during the Turco-Greek war, in which he distinguistied him- self, committed suicide here by shoot- ing with ‘'a revolver. The motive for the act is not kuown. Seeks a Match With Jeffries. New York, March 11.—James J. Jef- fries has received an invitation from Jack Johnson to meet him in the office of Johnson's attorney in this clty to arrange a fight. The invita- tion was handed to Jeffries by an-at- torney for Johnson. Highest Score of Tournament. Pittsburg, March 11.—In the bowl- ing tournament here Breuggerman of Sioux ‘City, Ia, rolled 881. This is the highest score of the tournament and but eight points less than the ‘world’s record. SRR " Twa Killed in Street Duel. Emporia, Va., March 1|—In a street duel here J. Thomas Brantley, a ‘police sergeant, was shot and in- stantly ‘killed and P. B. Sheffield, a ‘cotton mill operator, was so badl wounded that he died later. i WOULD LOCATE NORMAL SCHDOL Senate Objects fo Board: Se- lecting -the Site, CASS LAKE TAKES THE LEAD Monure‘Loca’tlng the 8chool in That City Placed on the Galendar, While the Bemidji Bill Is 8till on General Orders—St. Paul People Present Big Petition Protesting Against Lo- eating Packing Plant at New Brighton. St. Paul, March 11~The senate does not want the new normal school located by the state normal board, the body which has control of the schools. This was settled after a legislative ¢ombat lasting balf & day. At the end, the Cass Lake bill as drewn, was on the calendar, and the Bemidjl bt is still on genmeral orders. Phe result is gure, but tha way Cass Lake was pushed ahead of Bemidjl ‘was ohe of the cleverest pigees of leg- {slative legerdemain seen ia the sen- ste this season. Tuesday in commit- tee of the whole by a close vote the Chss Lake bill was amended into & general bill, giving the location to the normal board. This action by the tommittee. of the whole was not ac- gepted by the senate, and on & motion to adopt this report of the committee of the whole Senator George P. Lay- bourn of Duluth asked for a call of the senate and refuged all efforts at & truce until sll the senators were I theli seats to be counted on this propo- sition. = The senate waited nearly two hours, but Senators Cooke, McGowan and Gunderson failed to appear. The call -|was raised and the roll eall on the motion to adopt the amended bill was lost, 36 to 24. The chair had already ruled that the rejection opn the motion to adopt the report of the committee would strip the bill of all amendments. On Sena- tor Laybourn’s motion to place the bill on the calendar that motion car- ried 35 to 25, and Cass Lake was ahead of Bemidji in the fight. Big Petition Presented. In the presence of at least 5,000 cltizens of St. Paul the mammoth pe- tition in favor of the Rowe bill and against the location of the Armour packing plant near New Brighton was presented to the legislature of Minne- gota. The petition coptained 26,112 slgnatures and was 10558 feet in length. 2 Mayor Daniel Willlam Lawler pre- sented the petition as chairman of the geueral citizens’ committee to Speaker A. J. Rockne of the house of represen- tatives. 'The speaker received it with- out reply, excepting to assure the:| mayor that it would be placed before the house in regular course. The house adopted a resolution ap- pointing a commission of fifteen, to take the Rowe bill under considera- tion and report after a full hearing. The appointment of the commission is a great victory for St. Paul. fThe house rejected the report of the temperance committee, which recom- mended killing the Adams bill giving eities of less than 10,000 local option. The house railroad committee had a hearing on the J. N. Johnson bill pro- viding for the regulation by the state of the issues of stocks and bonds by railroads. A second hearing will be held rext Monday afternoon on the bill. It is similar to the one which A. J. Rockne introduced at the last session, which the house killed. Favored by Attorney General. The bill was favored by former At- torney General H. T. Young, who had previously tried and fafled to regu-. jate an issue of stock by the Great Northern. Mr. Young was present and talked or the bill. He sald that in making rates {he railroads were -entitled to a just percentage on their valuation and the more stocks and bonds they had the greater would be their valua- tion. Therefore these issues of securi- ties should be regulated by the rail- road commission. ‘W. R. Begs, general coungel for the Great Northern, said that the bill would apply only to the Great North- ern and the Soo line and would com- pel them to advertise to the world sixty days before, when they were contemplating building new lines. The committee also heard argu- ments on the caboose bill. A number of trainmen were present and favored the bill, saylng that the so-called “dinkey” cabooses were unsafe be- eause they jump the track. The bill ealls for a caboose of a certain length with two trucks. The bill would af- fect very few except the ore roads. The law permitting the state to lease its mineral lands, which was repealed by the 1907 legislature, is re-enacted in a bill introduced by C. M. Bendixen of Morgan, but the roy- alties are much higher. Formerly they were only 25 cents a ton, but in this bill they are from 25 to 90 cents a ton, according to the quality of the ore mined. The senate adopted a resolution ask- ing the Minnesota delegation to work against any federal inheritance law, because Minnesota already has such a law in operation, and a double tax Wwould be inequitable, B S T e T = TO PLAY FOR ALLEY TiTLE g Winner of ‘Mateh Will Be Hailed as Country's Gréatest Bowler, Cleveland, March 12.—The winner of tonight's bowling gemes, t& be gjlefl by. Louls Frang, ehmtgfon of is city, and Jimmy Smith, the best bowler of Greater New York, will be hailed as the kingpin of American #an away from Franz, taking fourteen of the fifteen games rolled. The re- sult made the Cleveland man’s back- ers shy about boosting their man, but thoy declare themselves confident that he will make a botter showing to- ht, The match is for §1,000 a side, e entire amount going to Phe man winnipg the majority ef the thirty The result in Brooklyn gave Sniith a big lead for the mohey. HEAVY RAIN GAUSES FLOOD = SRS Five, Persons Drowned in River at Montgomery, Ala. Montgomery,+Ala,, March 1/.—Five persons were drowned in the Alabama ;lver here in the rising waters which ollowed a severe storm. Three whites and & negro were drowned from a ferry and Willlam Dillard, a white boy, playing near the river bank, fell in and was drowned. The rain storm wes the heaviest bere in twenty years. Five and a half inches fell in a little more than five hours, STIRLING FREE FROM HIS AMERIGAN WIFE Decree in- Sensational Divorce Gase at Edinburgh, Cold Filled, Adjustable, Signet Center, Any Letter Engraved. LATEST FADS in Ping, Cuff Links, Stick Pins, Hat Pins, Ete. Best Equipped Workshop Northern Minnesota. We make 2 Specialty of Manufacturing and Jobbing. GEO. T. BAKER & G0, City Drug Store * Near the_Lake WANIS ONE CENT A WORD. Edinburgh, March 1.—The sensa- tional Stirling ‘divorce suits were de- olded by Lord Guthrie, who granted the husband’s petition, awarded him the custody of his-children and denied the cross petition of Mrs. Stirling. John Alexander Stirling, laird of Kippondaire, was married three years ago to Olara Elizabeth Taylor, an American show girl, who came from New Jersey. Last fall cross suits for 'HELP WANTED. AN AN A SALESMAN WANTED—No house to house canvassing. Call on business men, professional men and others at their place of busi- ness. You can make $50 a week. Experience - not necessary. We equip you fully with sample and . samplecase. Fine, pleasant work. Your own boss. Work when you please and go where you please. You deal with the best class of people only. When your days work is done you have your money in your pocket. Be independent. Investigate this. Entirely new proposition. ~ Address, M. C. Young, Mgr, 162 Ohio St. Chiag WANTED AT ONCE—Experienced lunch counter girl. Inquire at Armstrong’s. WANTED—Chambermaid., at Brinkman hotel. Inquire U FOR SALE. e FOR SALE—Two lots, new cottage, nice location near Bemidji Lake. $650. Half cash, easy terms. H. A. Bliler, 1217 Bixby avenue. FOR SALE—Rubber stamps. The Pioneer will procure any kind of a rubper stamp for you an short notice. FOR SALE—My shares of stock in the Record Pub. Co. Address E. J. Taylor, Blackduck. . ; FOR RENT. DS eV S SN FOR RENT—Furnished reoms, with or without board, 921 Minnesota avenue. HOUSE FOR RENT—Inquire of Frank Lane. A T TR > MRS. JOHN_A. STIRLING. divorce were filed, Mr. Stirling naming Lord Northland and Mrs. Stirling naming Mrs. Atherton as co-respond- ents. In giving his judgment Lord Guthrie said the case had no legal interest and that it should not have any public in- terest. Most of the evidence had been taken up with the petty questidns of selfish and idle lives, which contained little or nothing romantic and' little thal” was 'even mock heroic. Mr. Stir- ling, he' said, in meeting Mrs. Ather- ton had welcomed an introduction he should have shunned. Continuing, Lord Guthrie discredited the idea of a plot to get rid of Mrs. Stirling by fore- ing her to a guilty affection for North- land, but he thought ker letters to Lord Northland were Indicative of guilty relations. Lord Northland’s counsel immedi- ately ‘gave notice of an appeal. Both Lord Northland and Mrs. Stirling were present in court when the.decision wage rendered. MISCELLANEOUS. PUBLIC LIBRARY—Open Tues days, Thursdays and - Saturdays 2:30to 6 p. m., and Saturday. eve}ing 7:30 to 9 p. m. also. Library in basement of Court House. Mrs. Donald, librarian. N T WANTED—To rent April 1st, good five-room house, with yard, easy walking distance from P. O. Good WANTED—Position as housekeeper in widower’s or a small family. Neat and good housekeeper. Call at 615 Second street. A e S e Every Stationer, Should Investigate ! - __ Kilis”Her Son and Herself. Rushville, Ind,~ March 12.—Mrs. Eew Orist of Chicago, who wap visit- ing the family ef B. W, Rildy- here, shot and killed her fourteen-year-old boy and then killed herself. GRAIN AND PROVISION PRICES Minneapolis Wheat. Minneapolis, March 11.—Wheat— May, $1.126%@142%; July, $1.18%@ 113%. On tratk—No. 1 hard, $1.15 @1.15%; No. 1 Nerthern, $1.14@ 1.14%; No. 2 Northern, Sl,sz 1.12%) No. 3 Northern, $1.08% @1. 93. 8t. Paul Union Steck Yards. St. Paul, March 11.—Qattle—Good to 9holce steers, $6.00@6.25; fair to g00d, $4.50@5.00; good to choice aows angd heifers, $4.0095.00; veals, $6.76@ €6.50. Hogy—$6.30@6.60. Sheep—Woth- ers, ’6.00@5.’15: yearlings, $6.00@6.85; lanibs, $7.00@7.50. < Buluth Wheat and Flax. Duluth, March 11.—Wheat—To ar- rive and on track—No. 1 hard, $i- 14%4 No. 1 Northern, $1.13%; No. 2 Northern, $1.11%3 May, $1.12%; July, $1.13%. Flax—To arrive and on track, $1.64%; May, $1.63%; July, $1.62%; Bept., $1.42%; Oct., $1.38. 4 g Retall PEERLESS MOISTENER.CO. For Sale at THE PIONEER OFFICE Chlicago Grain and Provisions. ”clelcl;’o, March 11.—Wheat—May, i L18; July, $1.08%@1.03%; Sept, . < 7 D 97%8%; Dec, 98%c. Corn—March, Ebe P lONEER 6b%cs May, 68@083%0; July, 673%c! : iy g Spt., 69%c. Oats—May, 65%@85%c; LR : July, 49%c; Sept, 4lc. Pork—May, : e i $17.9734 ; July, $17.95. Butter—Cream- & eries, 22@28%c; dairigs, 20@25c. Bggs—18@19c. Poultry—Turkeys, 17¢; chickens, 14c; springs, 15c. Delivered to your ddoor every evening Ghicago Union Stock Yard Chicago, March 11, —Cattle—Beeves, $4.60@7.30; Texas steers, $4.50@5.4 Western steers, $4.10@6.60; stockers and fooders, $3.8005.60; cows and |ONIY 40c per Month helfers, $1.90@5.76; calves, $6.00@ ; SR o fionE bowlers. Tonight's matoh be the second half of the n;:om'fll goge‘ 9 first. series rolled by the two men, L Sy having been: decided in. Brookiph onl Feb, 22.- ae e On_ Washington’s _bisthday Smith o 8.80. Hogs—Light, $6.35@6.76; mixed, | . $6.45@6.85; - heavy, $6.50@9.90; roush, e $6.80@6.65; good to cholce heavy, TS = ;g‘:ggz.;g; plas, $5.35@6,10, Shesp, .30@5.70; - 40P @8.00;| - T > & \ i ! B i [ H