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tf gE ‘THE TRIBUNE “of the Wilson type, and associated ’ FOUR BISMARCK DAILY. TRIBUNE Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class Matter. ISSUED EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY SUPSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Dally, by carrier, per month.. Daily, by mail, per year... Weekly, by mall, per year... Member Audit Bureau of Circulation THE “BTATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) t LOCAL WEATHER BULLETIN. For the hours ending at 12 noon, December 12, 1916: Temperature at 7 a. m. Temperature at 12 noon Highest yesterday .... Lowest this forenoon .. Precipitation ...... Highest wind veloci Forecast: For North Dakota: 277) 2oNw Generally fair; tonight and Wednesday; colder to- night. | ‘Temperature Boise . suee 26 Calga sae Chicago Galveston Havre Helena Kansas Miles Ci Pierre . Prince A St. Paul ... San Francisco Swift Current . Williston Winnipeg .. a s ORRIS W.ROBERTS, Meteorologist. REMAINETH FOREVER REMORSE. ‘A score of reasons, causes or @X- cuses for the defeat of John burke for United States Senator have been advanced in the past few weeks, in political circles over the state. Pos- sibly this has been occasioned by the rumor that Burke is mentioned as a candidate for a position on the fed- eral bench, and the fact of his defeat is pointed to, by his friends, as his martyrdom for Democracy, and by his enemies as showing that he is a much over-estimated man. Somewhere Kipling has written these lines, which seem to us to be applicable to the situation: “If we fall.in the rac wih, the hoofsiidé: the course, “Thosgh Allah and Earth pardan sin, remaineth forever ‘—Remorse.” ‘Our friend Burke having not only had the misfortiine to ‘tall iti’tte, race, added to that misfortune a failure to win, his. must be a condition of dou- We remorse. It is evident to the most unsopliis- ticated that Burke fell in the’ race: The “hoof-slide is still too plainly ev- ident on the “céurse”>to’ pefmit of denial or refutation. He returned to the state from his cosy;berth as Unit- ed States treasurer and entered the Face for United States Senator. In doing so he repudiated ‘the progres- sive wing of his own :party, ignored the ticket of his own party, accepted the ‘benefits, without protest, that seemed likely to accrue to him from the insults and humiliations heaped upon his old friends and supporters, surrounded himself with the patron age wing of his own party and thus alienating the support of progressives in both old parties, pretends to search for the cause of his defeat and his re- morse. Unbeaten before, as a progressive, he has been humbled by P. J. Me- Cumber, who has never lacked the courage of his convictions to declare himself a conservative. How could it happen that Eurke, once the {dob of though we scarred.on the state, and the state itself pro- pressive, can be defeated by over 16,000 plurality? : The lack of three things in this campaign defeated him. ‘These were: Courage, fair dealing and sincerity. He feared to offend the Non-partisan league, hence he ignored and refused to mention the Democratic state tick- et in any of his campaign speeches. In that he convicted himself in the! eyes of the voters of lack of courage. He proclaimed himself a progressive himself with Democrats in the state who were the anti-type of that, thus proclaiming his lack of fair dealing. He spoke as a progressive, as an un-! doer of wrongs, and yet preserved a grim silence when his own old-time | friends and supporters were being gib- beted before his eyes: and refused to lift a finger to repair the wrong done them. Who could believe his sincer ity after that? ‘ These things Burke must know. He May never acknowledge them to men, ‘but within him there must exist a con- sciousness of his fall. The hoof-| slide on the course will not be wiped, away by many summers’ rain or win- ters’ snow. He may strive to hide ii from himself, but the progressives o!| North Dakota know it and talk of it.| He may reinstate himself in their con- fidence some day, for “Allah and Earth. pardon sin,” yet for him “Re | majneth forever Remorse.” =— Admitting that members of our! trade are seldom blessed with an ex-| cess Of worldly goods, we still deplore the tragic dejection with which the St. Louis Post-Dispatch captions the Picture of a recent bride: Married a Newspaper Man.” , Anyhow, old Carranza can capture | logue as “Everywoman,” {the vernacular of the street. jter than most imitations. “| vestigating. GRAND OPERA, Cities of 8,000 seldom enjoy the | privileges of Grand Opera. It is a jherculean task to organize for such an event in a city ten times the size of Bismarck. But Bismarck has a reputation from coast to coast of being one of the best show towns on the circuit. There is no reason why grand opera should not receive the same response as oth er attractions. How a city supports such a tions is a measure of its appr of the better things in art. Bismarck is to hear the same company that wil! play‘at Washington, D. C., during in augural week, The program which has been ar- vanged is varied enoughsto suit the most exacting. “Lucia,” “Aida” and the double bill for the matinee, “Cav- alleria Rusticana” and “Pagliacci” are favorites the world over. Bismarck and vicinity should give these attractions their hearty support and make possible the presentation ‘here of three or four’ musical attrac- | tions each year. “Experience,” produced, at the Aud- itorium last evening, is a morality dose nicely divided into ten capsules. Most of them, however, are sugar- coated. While not as subtle, in dia- it has the punch of melodrama and is written in It is bet- Purishkevich, Patrick Henry of the Duma, roasted the government brown and is still alive. This is significant, but the biggest sign of Russian prog- ress is the fact that Russian editors | who published his speech are not yet on the way to Siberia. Lord Northcliffe is press ageat ex- traordinary to the British Empire. His interview on what Lloyd George's appointment means to the United States is a subtle appeal to national prejudices. Secretary Lane recommends with- drawal from entry of 131,000 acres of supposed oil lands in Utah and Colo- rade. Fine conservation, ‘Hranktin, but it’s no excuse for that California grab. Lloyd-George took a chill after re- ‘organizing’ the-‘¢abinet. -4But: the. de- velopments of the last few days would put gooseflesh on the back of the bravest Briton. Feininfsm has so Sripped Alaska that an Alaska. gent may ;not beat his wife ofteney than efght timés daily without running serious risk of di vorce. A World reporter has interviewed Villa? ‘President. Wilson should or. genize a squad of lynx-eyed journal: ists to get the bandit. ed This raise of gasoline prices sim- ply results from fool editors advising old Rockefeller to do his Christmas shopping early. The mayor of Tacoma busted the bread extortion by threatening to es tablish a municipal bread counter in the city hall. Dr. Robertson, who fed a diet squad on forty cents a day, is needed in the war zone at once. His system beats food . tickets. — Congress is never happy unless in It keeps the. members busy and is the least damaging of all legislative activities, Cheer up, England! Washington naval experts say that Germany can’t starve you, but they never get any- thing right. Villa has carried off 40 of Chihua- hua’s most beautiful society girls.” The man's gone plumb crazy. Corncob pipes are going up in price. They're eating corncobs somewhere, probably. —X____ There are a lot of married men who swear off smoking just before Christ- mas. HIS COSTUME INCOMPLETE. The patriarchal beard and_ long, hoary, hair of Justice-clect J. E. Rob- inson make’him a conspicuous figure wherever he goes. There was some excuse, therefore. for the mistake made yesterday when the little daugh- ter of @ prominent Bismarck business woman ran up-to the jurist in the dining room of the Grand Pacific ko- tel and cried: ~ “Oh Santa Claus, what have oo done wiv your red suit?” WHERE [S THE MOTHER WHERE a child who is rundown, has pale cheeks or thin blood, who will hesitate togive that child the verythingitneeds to start it growing and keep it going? liquid-food in Scott's Emulsion has | “Girl Who | been changing thinness to plumpness | —changing poor blood to rich blood. | _ There is nothing better for growing ‘children—whether they are weak or well—than Scott’s Emulsion, but see towns after Villa. has cleaned. them out, SC RMATIREY BOA SI AT ANE Se ELSE that you get tl the Renuine Soutt'es Bowne, Bloomfield, 16-90 re nee es CEAQUE MAY LET EQUITY SHARE IN :: TTS STATE PLANT \Peace Declared at Joint Meeting of Battle Chiefs in Fargo Yesterday PURCHASE OF GATE CITY SITE HELD UP FOR TIME Fargo, N. D., Dec, 12.—Peace was made at a joint meeting of the Equi- | ty Packing Plant company and Non- partisan league chiefs here last even- ing, which may result in the abandon- ment of the Eyuity’s plans for a pack- ing plant here, in return for which favor the league will let the Equity in on its proposed state-owned packing plant, to be located at some central point convenient to the stock-raising regions of the state. Yesterday's conference resulted in the appointment of a joint committee, which will endeavor to work out the problems now confronting the league {and the Equity, whose harmonious re- lations have been considerably jarred by the packing plant incident. It is announced in local Non-partisan cir- Ices that this committee probably will confer with members of the Fifteenth legislative assembly and the new ad- ministration with a view to devising some plan whereby the Equity can have a look-in on the state plant. Purchase of Site Dropped. The proposed purchase of a site for the Equity packing plant in Fargo has-been dropped, for the present at least. The Commercial club commit- tee, which had in charge the negotia- tions for a 200-acre tract on the Shey- enne river, agreed after.a conference. with the League-Equity chiefs yester- day that it would be well to defer any action in the present unsettled state of affairs. What to Do With the Fund. What to do with the funds received in exchange for Equity packing plant stock another puzzle. The aggre- gate was said, a week or so ago, to be | in the neighborhood of $200,000. Pres- ident Casey of the Equity Packing Plant company suggests that “the funds pledged to the Equity plant can be utilized.in such a way that the operation will be under the supervi- sion of the state and that its opera- tion later can be taken-over by the state when the legislature and the people of the state so decide.” | 24 -#- To Laok-Over Sites... It is anticipated that before )thé legislature convenes, the: joint com- mittee.on,a. state-owned packing plant will look over sites which have been under consideration for some time at ‘Minot, Maidan, -Bismarck' and other central points. ADDITION TO POLGE FORGE Baby Born to Chief of Police and Mrs. Charles Downing: Last Sunday Morning. An addition;to the Bismarck police department ‘was reported. ‘Sunday morning. As yet no “beat” has been assigned. Word from the Bismarck hospital announces the.birth. ofa baby boy to Mr. and Mrs. Charles Downing. Mr. Downing is chief of police. REPORT SEEING TWO LIONS Two Beasts Said to be Terrorizing Deer in Timber Region Four Miles South of City. Two mountain lions have been seen in the timber four miles south of Bis- marck and have been terrorizing deer in that vicinity, according to reports brought to this city today, It is be- lieved that the animals came into the state from Montana. One deer was found dead in that part of the valley rencently and it is believed that it was the prey of the lions, = 1S IMPROVING. Mrs. Thomas Cunningham, mother of Mrs. Frank Ryan of Fourth street, who has been ill for several weeks, is slowly improving. POISONED BY THOUSANDS! (By L, H. Smith, M. D.) The victims of auto-intoxication are many thousands every day. By rea- “| son of the toxins, or ppisons, bred in the intestines, these poisonous bac. teria are sent all through the blood channels and the victim feels tired, sleepy and headachy, or the brain doesn’t work as usual. The best treat- ment for this is to drink hot water before breakfast—plenty of water all day and procure a supply of Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets, made of (May-apple, leaves of aloes, etc., with no calomel, entirely vegetable, which can be obtained at* drug stores for 25 | cents, Equally important is it to cleanse kidneys and bladder, and drinking plentifully of pure water will cleanse them to a certain extent. Then ob- tain at the drug store a little Anuric, which was first discovered by Dr. Pierce of Surgical Institute in Buffalo. Anuric should be taken before meals. |It is many times more potent than jlithia in throwing off the poisonous accumulations of uric acid. Dr. Weir Mitchell once said: “What we call diseases are only symp- toms of conditions. Allow the man’s vitality to be reduced to a certain point, and he is ripe for any of these weaknesses, or certain conditions which we call disease.” Through failure of kidneys to act, For overforty yearstheconcentrated | through congestion, inflammation, any person's condition is ripe for disease to fasten its hold upon the system. Anuric has been tested for the past few years for kidney, bladder, uric acid troubles, rheumatism, gout, and such ailments as follow, and so many cases, both acute and stubborn, have yielded to this wonderful-remedy. that I do not hesitate to recommend it. . . ey BURTON SAYS PACKERS HAVE MARKET CORNER {Contumued! from nage one) 2 i as the case may’ prove. Create “Pie” A. E. de Ricales, one of the leading live stock producers of the country, in a statement before the congres- sional committee, says that it is pos- sible for the packers to create “pie” mainly through their ownership of the stock yards, not {to mention their ownership or domination of refrigerat- ing plant, refrigerator cars, railway terminals themselves! He states: “The first, thing that one meets in looking into’ this subject is the fact that the ownership of practically all the stockyard. companies, all the big packing houses, the cattle-loan companies, stockyard banks, render- ing works, and similar institutions found at stockyards: are owned and controlled by four or five individuals; and, as these stockyards. are what es- tablish the price of live stock in the United States, it follows quite natur- ally that these -few individuals who own these institutions are in position to control. For a. number of years these individugis—Armour, Swift, Morris, Cudahy— were satisfied with the packing house ‘business and limit- ed their operations to slaughtering and selling meat animals and their products; however, within the past dozen years they have been acquiring the stockyard companies, establishing cattle-loan companies, and other mar- ket enterprises. that, as a matter of fact, are distinct’ and separate from the slaughtering business. They own stockyards at Kansas City, South Om- aha, East St. Louis, St. Joseph, Sioux: City, St. Paul,'Oklahoma, Fort Worth, Portland and. Denvet. “It seems reasonable that the com- pany buying your product on the open market should not be the owner of the facilities you use to prepare the same for its purchase; or that the man who teils your product shoud not be in- gdetted and under obligations to the man who buys it, or that a stockman who borrows money should not bor- row money for feeding from the man he must sell to, for the commission merchant must be on good terms with the people who buy from him, and he fears if he is not friendly with them that they may discriminate against him. So he hesitates to object when things do not go just as they should, and is therefore not such a good’sales- man for his customer.” ——___— BURLEIGH COUNTY BAR _ASSOCHATION 0 Mt satus} peat ‘and Fletion| of Officers! To Be Held Tomor- row Evening The annual band\et and election of officers of the Burleigh County Bar as- sociation’ will be held at the Grand Pa- cific hotel at 7:30 Wednesday évé- ning.’ F. H, Register, president of the association, is in charge of the pro- gram and other arrangements: The Burleigh County Bar associa- tion has 25 Members, of whom all but one are residents of Bismarck. The single exception is a.'Driscoll) barris- ter. DEER ABUNDANT; STRAY FAR FROM HOME AND GET TWO MEN INTO TROUBLE “Deer are becoming generally abu». dant in the Missouri river bottoms and west of the river,” announces William Reko, chief game warden for the Second district, who is in Bis: marck, attending a meeting of the state fish and game commission, “We have just had two convictions for attempts to bag deer as far over as Medina. How the deer ever. got that far from home we cannot dis- cover. - They escaped from the hunt- ers, and we hope are back in the bot- toms, where there is some protection for them. Deer have been seen fre- quently this fall not far from Man- dan. They seem to be thriving under protection.” RED TRAIL MAN HERE. Fred Turner of Dickinson, one of the fathers of the Red Trail and first president of the National Parks Trans- continental Highway association, came to Bismarck to join the Over- land limited here.* Mr. Turner while in the. east hopes to do some effective boosting for the Red Trail, which he believes, with a bridge across the Missoyri, will leave the. Yellowstone trail so far in the shade that there will be no comparison. Liberettos for the operas now on sale at Hoskins. K. of P.’s Attention ! You and your ladies are in- vited to attend a lecture in the K. of P. hall. Wednesday Ever Dec. |3 “‘Fraternalism and Pythian Knighthood’”’ by Mr. Fred 8. Attwood Special Musical Program No Admission Charge jsripped. Such settings as EXPERIENCE PLEASES LARGE CROWD Morality Play Well Staged and Company More Than Ad- - equate From “the land where dreams. be- gin” to the seemingly distant past in “the land where the dreamer awak- ens,” Youth walked and tottered last night in a strong and stirring exposi- tion of trials and tribulations to vivi- fy the eternal lesson in a potent man- ner that the wages of sin are misery and degradation. “Experience” came to Bismarck as the opening: théatrical attraction for winter season. All Bismarck and a g0od share of the surrounding com- munity saw it. The theater was pack- ed. |The play depicts Youth, leaving his home and Love, witnesses a young life torn down through “the primrose path,” “the corridors of chance” and “the house of last resort,” only to be saved. by a chance miracle—a moth- er’s miracle—from the grips of crime, poverty and disillusion. Youth’s steps began to totter when he met Pleasure in “the street of vac- cillation,” when he felt Ambition and Opportunity for “the primrose path,’.’ but they remembered how to march in “the street of forgotten days” where the dreamer awakens” to learn that Ambition “never dies but only lies sleeping.” Experience” is an allegory and to show this It was necessary, of course to'first make the public easily imagine the illimitable “ocean” ahead of youth when he set out with Experience and Ambition to find “fame and fortune.” Falling Out With Destiny. “It happened that by some “falling out” with destiny that Youth “shook” Opportunity for Pleasure, forsook Ambition and chose “the primrose path” with Beauty, Pleasure, Wealth, Intoxication as his bowers. He play- ed a great game but lost to Chance. The golden cabaret was only a glamor and a glitter. to the roulette scene in and blue spots, duces the pain and eases the sore negs. \ ra WILL HAVE ONE OR TWO DEFICITS IN PLAGE OF USUAL DOZEN State in Best Condition Finan- RHEUMATISM MAKES ‘YOU FEEL OLD Pains and Aches Yield to Sloan's Lin- iment, The Family Friend. When your joints become stiff, your cigculation poor, and your suffering niakes you irritable, an application of Sloan's'Liniment gives you quick re- lief—kilis pain, starts up a good cir culation, relieves congestion. easier and cleaner to use than mussy plasters or ointments, acts and does not ‘clog the pores. not ‘stain the skin. You don't need to rub—it It does pene- trates. Certainly fine for rheumatism, stiff neck, scfatica, lame back, toothache, ete. For sprains, strains, bruises, black Sloan’s Liniment re- Its use is so universal that you'll consider ‘Sloan's Liniment a friend of the whole family. Your druggist sells it in 25¢,°50c and $1.00 bottles, & HILLS PAIIY cially in History of North . Dakota The Fifteenth Legislative assembly, in place of deficits in all the way from which Despair shot himself, followed pe ae ree ve by the exclamation from Experience, remedy vacuums in not more than “Come Youth, Despair has made his last bet and Death wins as usual.” three, at the most, and probably in but one fund: The last assembly “Experience” as produced last eve-|racoq deficits in 13 state funds, and ning had plenty of action. Its episodes | ryat was low in comparison with for- “the gold- en cabaret” and “the corridors of chance” were realistic, especially in the former when Youth chose Intoxi- of the two evils, and again in the lat- ii ter, whenhe played his “roll.” tions where the consumption of’ pro-|- i tvisions is high, and where the in- Kerease of. 50 to 200 per cent’ in'the The ‘scenery. and the costuming of ;; the women was not of the gorgeous kind = which. charactezized.,,.“‘Every: woman.” Some of the settings brought out uncanny creatures, such as pov- t mer years, when they frequently ran as high 25, The deficits now existing, and they fans are, small, can be attributed directly cation instead of Passion as the lesser lig ine high cost of living. They ex- st in funds provided for state institu- ost of eatables could not -be fore- pseen, ‘The state’ hospital for ‘the insane, It is quickly erty, crime ,and ‘Bismarck enjoyed The company was strong and capable. disillusion. “Experience. Yor instance, feeds 1,200 people daily. Butter, which the hospital bought for 20 cents two years ago, now costs 35; flour, which could be had for $5.50 to $6.00 the’hundred, ‘how costs $10, and flour is a considerable item in an in- rad Nagel; Love as Experience as Edmund ie; Beu- *Talk about light, fluffy, tempting and wholesome Jelly Rolls, Cakes, Biscuitsandother good things! My! but CALUMET BAKING POWDER certainly beats the band, for sure results — for purity, economy and wholesome bakings. Tell your mother to try Calumet Baking Pow- der on the money-back guarantee. Nees: Cooh Esch From 1 tod See Blip in Pound Cons - Pa ° WB + een ene ne - 4 eo res stot Ce oe nee ere +, AAAS ep ge fgirl” ‘did not. materialize, ation as Alice Palmer; Passion as Louise Ger- ard, played‘the prominent roles in the pilgrimage of | Youth. Seat sale fc for ti the operas now on at [} Finney’s. Vi 4 IRYSH WANTS GERMAN . GIRL WHO IS NEUTRAL The, secret is out. Willington Irysh announces in a public interview that he is willing to capitulate. to Dan Cupid, providing there exists for him in Chicago a Ger- man girl who's neutral. “Deutschland uber alles,” says Irygh in an interview with the Chica- go Tribune. “If there's any nice, un- attached German girl in Chicago, I'm there.” Irysh’s classic features adorned a group ‘of “Agrarian Lochinvars” feat- hred by the Chicago Tribune in a big four-column cut. He was in Chicago in charge of the North Dakota exhibit}. at they International Live Stock expo- sition. The exhibit, he writes, was an excellent one, and was viewed’ by 75,- 000. people daily. In view of the fac that the depty commissioner of agri- culture and labor is now enroute home, unaccompanied, it is presumed that the “nice, unattached German Liberettos for the operas now on sale at Hoskins. ‘stitution where are required to thicken the. gravy for ‘one meal. —————————— ————_— 50 pounds of flour “The White Flour Pinch”—have you felt it? “With, the advancing price of wheat “the five-cent loaf is doomed,” say, the bakers. In its place we have the six-cent loaf—in many cities only the ten- cent loaf. A loaf of white flour bread is not a complete ration. However whole- some and pure, it does not supply all the proteids the human body needs. In Shredded Wheat Biscuit you have all the body-build- ing nutriment in the whole wheat grain prepared in a digestible form. Itis always the same price, always the same high quality. Eat it for breakfast with ‘milk or cream or with fruits. Made at Niagara Falls, N. Y. SCENG FROM “ THOS. H. INCE'S CIVILIZATION AUDITORIUM, JANUARY-1:4ND-2° ° SPECIAL SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA AND SOLOISTS” GRAIN MARKETS MINNEAPOLIS, No. 1 Hard ...... + 1T4YW@178Y% No. 1 Northern .. a ee 174% No. t Nor, Choice . Regular to.arr . . 1oke1734 ‘ 5 Choice to arr « 175%! No. 2 Northern wees 166% @172% No. 3 Wheat .. . 1464@169% No. 2 Mont. Hard ...... 166%@1694% No. 2 Mont. Hard to arr 166%: No. 1 Durum . - 172 Choice 176 No. 1 Durum to arr .... 171 * Choice to arr .... No. 2 Durum .... No. 3 Yellow Corn . No. 3 Yellow Corn to arr 84 ; Other Gratfs . . B @83 No. 4 Yellow Corn to arr .82 No. 2 W| Mont. we 51 @58 No. 3 Whites Oats +» 46%@ 46% No. 3 White Oats to arr peg No. 4 Wht Qats(: yh % ? Barley ....... 101 Barley Choice 3. d0P @111 133 @184 279 @284 + 279 @284 December W1% e » May . + 174% July . + 170% Close 1:38 p. m. DULUTH. December is 174 ™ . 1 Hard on trk . . 1 Northern on trk... 2 Mont. Hard on trk 164% @169% . 8 Northern on trk.. 144%@164% . 1 Northern to arr... 172% . 2 font, Hard on trk 169%: No. 2 Mont. Hard to arr te No. 1 Spot Durum . No. 2 Spot Durum No. 2 Spot Durum No.: 1 Durum to arr December May os... Oats on trk and ‘to arr. 4%@ 46%. Rye on trk and to arr... 134 , @135 Barley on trk . - 73 @0 Flax on trk and to arr.. 283 Choice on trk ... » 28314 December 280% + 285 ' oon tenes —7 . CATTLE MARKETS UNION STOCK YARDS. HOGS—Receipts 49,000; market, i slow and weak; mixed and butchers $9.45@$10.20; good heavy $9.60@ 3 $10.05; rough heavy $9.60@$9.75; light $9.00@$9.20; pigs $6.80@$8.80. CATTLE—Receipts 7,000; market, weak: beeves $7.00@$12.60; cows and if heifers $3.85@$10.25; stockers and j feeders $4.60@$7.85; Texans $7.85@ g $9.30; calves $9.50@$12.75. | SHEEP—Receipts 16,000; market, |steady; natives $8.70@$9.25: ee $8.75@$9.60; lambs, natives, $10.50 4 $12.30; western $10.25@$13.20. SOUTH § ST. F PAUL. CATTLE—Receipts 34,000; beet steers $5.50@$8.25; butcher cows and heifers - $5.00@$7. 00; butcher bulls $5.50@87.00; veal $4.50@$77.75. lseneee 13,500; top $9. 40@ 4, SHBEP—Reocinte 400; “top. $6300 . ry - 162 @167