The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, December 28, 1916, Page 4

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

’ FOUR THE TRIBUNE BISMARCK DAILY "TRIBUNE D., as Second Class Matter. {ISSUED EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY | the present commission will , Bismarck, N. pork hunting proclivities. Of course, the budget drawn up by be re- SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN| vised and overhauled by the legisla- ADVANCE Daily, by carrier, per mi Daily, by mail, per year. Weekly, by mail, per ¥‘ “Member Audit Bureau of Circulation THD STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | been gained ‘Established 1873) LOCAL WEATHER BULLETIN. For the 24 hours ending at 12:0 noon, Dec. 28, 1916: ‘Temperature at ‘Temperature at Highest yesterday . Lowest last night . Precipitation Highest wind velocity . Forecast. Dakota: For North night. 00 am. wo. cll Fair tonight | and Friday; colder in east portion 4: | go | ture and the new department heads 0; Who assume office next Tuesday, but 0 even if the system alone is success- {fully inaugurated much will have over the former hit }and miss procedure. ; Senator Kretschmar, a member of | the commission, is a holdover in the j senate, and probably by virtue of his (0, ; membership on the budget commis- | sion will be assigned to the appro- priations committee. At least, he hould be a member of the commit- tee if Lieutenant Governor Kraabel .01) desires to expedite business. . 20—NW The rapid increase in the amount and importance of state expenditures is a potent argument in favor of the | budget system. | Mlinois found that her expenditures Temperature | rose from $16,000,000 in 1905 to $46,- | 000,000 in 1915. ‘New York’s prelim- | inary estimates of next year’s expend- itures are placed at $80,000,000 or | $22,000,000 more than this year's. Under North ‘Dakota's law, the state time for constructive legislation un- ° marred by the usual log-rolling andj His Playth , aK Calgary 12 Chicago 16 Galveston 56 Havre —34 Helena . —12 Kansas Ci 22 | Moorhead = | Pierre ..... —18 | Prince Albert —20 | St. Paul . —8 Williston . No report Winnipeg .. - i Swift Current . +. —20 | ORRIS W. ROBERTS, { Meteorologist. | SOSEE ESET YS! ° Imagination is the eye of the & % soul—Joubert. *| OO ee el ——— | FIRE LADDIES. _ | Special mention is due the city fire; department for the efficient manner in which they fought the flames that threatened the east portion of the, city Wednesday morning. The conditions under which the fire | “laddies” worked were unusual and! auditor must have ready five days after the opening of the session a |tentative budget and a statement of every source of income for the next two years, This is a decided improvement, but | it remains to be seen how well the system will work. Doubtless the law can be strengthened and made more effective. See Looks as if our diplomacy needs lancing! \, LANSING’S BLUNDER. William Jennings Bryan's idle chat- ter to Dumba about the significance | to be placed upon Wilson's notes, was not as damaging as Lansing’s recent indiscretion, The nation was hardly | severe in the extreme. But they were| prepared for the warning that it was! up at the tap of the gong and on| the job before the fire gained great headway. Everyone knows the odds the fire) fighters had to combat. The loss was | insignificant when it is considered | that the flames were fanned by a} wind, blowing thirty-eight to forty| miles an hour. This, coupled with) sub-zero temperature and a blinding snow storm, increased the obstacles. It_was the most severe test the! partment has ever had. They deserve special . recognition } for their fidelity to service. Hats off to the “fire laddies!” | eas Catching up with your work is an-| other way of saying, “being behind.” ! VANGUARD ARRIVING. . Bismarck is prepared to handle this session’ of the legislature better than any since statehood. | The prime necessity at a time like| . this is hotel facilities. No city in the state can surpass the capital in this respect. Three more hotels have been added to the list of hostelries since the iast session. They are: The Annex, The Van Horn and The \Northwest. Be- sides, there is the addition to tie Bis- marck hotel. The McKenzie is build- ing an extension to the west that will eventually enlarge the capacity of the hotel materially. These increased facilities, together with the Grand Pacific, The Bismarck and The Soo, should be adequate to care for the crowds that will attend this. session, probably the most unique in the history of the state. (‘Bismarck welcomes the legislature. Every civic agency is at the disposal of the lawmakers and visitors who come to watch the legislature in ac- tion. | This city desires to make the stay of the legislators and other guests as pleasant as possible. No special fes- tivities will mark the opening of the session, but the city should leave nothing undone to assist the new-| comers in-getting accommodations. | Minneapolis, St. Paul & Sault near the verge of war. Probably no| secretary of state with Surope at; white heat over war has ever made such a statement in absence of any facts to substantiate it. President Wilson, of course, insist ed upon a prompt retraction, which must have been mortifying to the sec retary of state. The effect was most unfortunate both at home and abroad. Lansing has shown considerable judg- | ment and has stood the test fairly | well, but this blunder hardly augurs' Well for the future. It has injured the nation’s confidence in Wilson’s chief adviser, The antics of Bryan and Lansing in the secretary of gtate’s office merely accentuate our lack of a constructive foreign policy. ‘Wilson is unfortunate in not having a man at his elbow that measures up to Root or Knox. The old-fashioned wall of China Mexican border. At least President Wilson's has made peace, for the time being, | The Lady Next Door spotted Mark Twain's “Pudd'’n’-head Wilson” on our living-room table. “Huh!” said she. “Doesn't he like Wilson?” ly silent since his “on the verge of war” interview. It would seem that the administration is afflicted with too many spokesmen. FROM RAMSEY COUNTY. Gram Construction Company, a C6r- poration, Plaintiff and Respondent, vs, Ste. Marie Ry. Co., a Foreign Corpora- tion, Defendant and Appellant. Syllabus: (1) Complaint examin- ed and held sufficient to justify a re- covery for damages for the deprecia- tion in the value of premises occa- |sioned by the construction of a spur The Commercial club, without de-|track of a railway company upon a lay, should establish an information | Public street. bureau at the Northern Pacific and} Soo depots, where strangers can be| directed to the various hotels, given a map of the city and such directions (2) In North Dakota an abutting lot owner owns the fee to one-half of the street. In North Dakota the constitution does not merely provide that property shall not be taken for as may be necessary. ja public use without just compensa- Already the vanguard is arriving and within a few hours the prelimi-| naries will be on in full swing. Wednesday's fire was a complete test of the new booster pumps install- ed recently to increase the water tion, but that it shall not be taken or damaged. . (3)° Where the fee in a public street. is owned by the adjacent lot owner, and the constitution provides that no property shall be taken or damaged for a public use without just compensation, the spur track of a pressure in case of fire. A man is|tude upon the interests of the lot) district, who arrived in the ci s stationed at the pumps and the pres-|owner, and damages may be recover-|terday and is making the McKenzie railway company is a burden or servi- | drifted in, last night excited the cur- wouldn't be so bad if moved to the| ; note! a more talked of topic than war. | Secretary Lansing has been strange- | o——_—_—_———— SUPREME COURT || i i 1 —= =. ra ut MH well \\ ing for Another Year? Grin, \ i 1K iin ht ik ey 1 Judgment for plaintiff, Defendant appeals, « Affirmed. Bruce, J. Brennan & Brennan, of Devils Lake, (Theo. Koffel, of Bismarck, of coun- sel on appeal), attorneys for plaintiff and respondent. Flynn & Traynor, of Devils Lake, with A. H. Bright and John L, Erdall, of Minneapolis, Minn., of counsel, at- torneys for defendant and appellant. TRITT HARRIS FOUND FROZEN TO DEATH IN CABIN ON SOUTH SIDE Thought: To Have Perished in the Storm of Tuesday—Found Lying on His Bed Opinion of the court by An open door in a little log cabin on Eighth street south, with snow iosity ‘of Mrs. Walter Cater, resident of-that''part of the city, who, upon glancing in, saw the body of a man lying on top of a bed. Notifying Chief of Police Downing, who called Deputy Sheriff Welch, an gation disclosed the frozen body ritt Harris, colored, for more than rs a resident of Bismarck, and ar figure on the streets. He had eviedntly been dead 24 hours pre- ceding the discovery of the body, per- ishing some time Tuesday. ion of Coroner Anton was ordered removed to the Wel undertaking establish- ment to be prepared for burial, An inquest was not necessary. Harris, about 80 years of age, was a county charge. At the direc Beer, the body HAGAN'S GHIEF DEPUTY FORMER SUPERINTENDENT STARK COUNTY SCHOOLS Lloyd Rader of Dickinson, Took Deep Interest in Agricultur- al Lines—Purchased Farm (Special to the Tridune.) Dickinson, N. D., Dec, 28.—Lloyd Rader, chief deputy to J..M. Hagan, commissioner of agriculture and la- bor, goes to Bismarck well equipped for his new duties. He came from 'Stark county 15 years ago, having been engaged as principal af the Tay- lor school. \ He was very; successful as an in- structor and was subsequently elect- ed county superintendent of schools, serving. acceptably! for two terms, During this time he took a deep in- terest in agriculture and saw great possibilities in the farming business, became the owner of a large tract of land just north of this city, and start- ed a milk dairy some years ago, supplying a large number of custom- ers here. is farm is well equipped for dai ing a silo and other modern appliances, A competent man will be left in ‘charge of the farm. Tr, ‘Rader left for Bismarck Thurs- day and as soon as possible will get a house, His wife, daughter and son will join him at the Capital City. Sheriff Craig of Lisbon, Recently Op- erated on at ‘Rochester, Convalescing Here. Sheriff Craig of Lisbon, one of the best known sheriffs in the state, re- cently operated on at Rochester, WKAG REACHES CITY Enforcement League Will Meet With | Few Favors, -He Says—Langer Enforcement Agent. The North Dakota Enforcement j league will find few favors from the | Fifteenth Legislative assembly, in the opinion of Ray McKaig, prominent in 'Non-partisan affairs of the state and ‘a recent arrival in the Capital City, | who stated last night that the new ; administration will not look to the ;Enforcement.league to enforce the | prohibition JawS-of the ‘state, with {such a man ‘a8 William Langer as-at- jtorney general. |, The purchase of the Public Opin- jion here last week, reported to have | been a Non-partisan league invest- | ment, was not a league movement, ac- | cording to McKaig. Several members of the Non-partisan league may have ; figured in the deal, but it’s an indi- | vidual transaction and not one by the | league. WOOD ARRIVES IN ClTY | Deering Representative Says Legisla- tors From Northwestern Part of State Not Coming Strangers. Legislators from the northwestern Part of the state are not coming to Bismarck strangers, according to H. | R. Wood of Deering. one of the four representatives of the Twenty-ninth sure was adequate before the hose /ed for the depreciation in the value his headquarters until the Nortitwest was “hooked up.” STATE BUDGET. Arguments in favor of a state bud- Get are many. North Dakota is just inaugurating the system and the leg- islature to assemble next week Will be the first one to receive orderly in- formation as to the neecs of the vari- ous state departments from a budget board. Much time will be saved. The leg- islative committees instead of wast- ing many days in hearing the various institutions and departments will have all these estimates before them. \of the lot, even though the plaintiff |does not seek specifically to recover damages for the value of his interest in the street. | (4) Where damages are sought to jbe recovered for the depreciation in ithe value of a lot occasioned by the jconstruction of a railway track, it | Will be continued, and in estimating damages, the jury may take into con- | sideration all of the surrounding cir- |cumstances, the nature of the track, |the difficulty of access, if any, the lo- |cation of the property of the plaintiff, its connection with the outside world, and its reasonable and probable use, jand even specific cases of annoyances jand inconveniences in the past. Action to recover damages for in- | opens. | Representative Wood, who has been |a resident of Ward county about 15. | Years, farming near Deering, stated jlast evening that legislators to the number of 65 from the northwestern | part of the state met at Minot a week |ago Tuesday and held a “get-acquaint~| |ed” meeting. The senators and rep- |resentatives from that part of the state, he says, should reach Bismarck |this afternoon, over the Soo. | In the opinion of the representative |from Deering, the office of state mar- shal is just a political gift and should |be abolished. Mr. Wood would like | to see legislation that will work ef- |fectively for the preservation of the | wild game of the state. |_ Mr. Wood is a son of Edward B. There is no reason why the appropri- juries occasioned by the construction) Wood, vice president of the Non-par- ation bills cannot be gotten out ef the ‘way early in the session, leaving more! Ramsey county. Hon. C. W. Buttz, J.! with his of a spur track in a public street. Appeal from the district court of tisan league, and arrived in Bismarck from. Fargo, having spent Christmas parents, Minn., for an acute case of appendi- citis, arrived in the city the first of the week and is a guest at the ‘Mc- Kenzie hotel. Sheriff Craig is a son of Rev. 'R. H. Craig of Dickinson, who was formerly chaplain in the state senate, and will probably return to Lisbon the latter part of this week. NAADAN DEPOT DRENCHED Fire Broke Out at 12:30 This Noon In Telegraph Office— Damage About $100 (Speelal to The Tribune.) Mandan, N. D., Dec. 28—Fire caused by an,over-heated radiator, broke out in the telegraph office at the passen- ger station at 30 o’clock this noon, causing about $100 damage. The sta- tion was heavily drenched. Montanan Who Shot Pat Savage and Wife Is Believed to Haye Made For the Canadian Line, Crosby, N. D., Dec. 28—William Hamilion, who shot Mr. and Mrs. Pat Savage, his neighbors, Monday night, at Culbertson, Mont., has succeeded to date in thwarting arrest. Montana officials believe he has made for the Canadian line. | Without any, provocation, as far as officials can learn, Hamilton entered [the Savage yard and fired at Mrs. i Savage, the shot striking her face. |Several penetrated the left eye-ball and will result in the loss of sight in’ that eye. P Runinng to the relief of his wife, Savage received the second shot from the gun in the neck. He escaped death almost by a miracle. . The last seen gf, Hamilton was on horse-back, headed directly for. the Canadian line. He has a wife and children. ' STEELE MAN TO SUCCEED Governor Hanna today announced the resignation of J.P. Purcell of ; Fargo from the secretaryship of the state game and fish commission and the appointment of George M. Hogue | of Steele to succeed him. Mr. Purcell jisat ling salesman whose duties take him from home so frequently that RETURNS AFTER OPERATION HAMILTON 1S AT LARGE PURCELL ON GAME BOARD) e did not feel justified in retaining the post in which he had served so accept- ably. Mr. Hogue is an enthusiastic partisan of game and fish development and is expected to make a capable official. ; NIGHT AND DAY SERVICE Man Stationed at Booster Pump House Ready at a Second’s Not- ice to Serve the City. George Doorley, superintendent of the Bismarck Water Supply company, has a man stationed at the booster |pump station day and night, ‘ready to put the pumps in operation on a sec- ond's notice, Before firemen reached scen of Wed- nesday’s $50,000 fire on Seventh street and Main, the man in the station had the pumps working, ready to supply high pressure to combat the flames. TRAIN SERVICE IMPROVES Passenger service over the North- ern Pacific and the Soo got down to normal conditions today, trains Nos. 7 and 8 over the Northern Pacific ar- riving on time. No, + putted ‘into Bis- marck at 2:30 o'clock and No. 4 at 4 o'clock. Soo train No. from the east, due at 3:40 o'clock, was reported an hour late at noon. Train No. 260, due at r from Minot, is reported several hours late. Freight traffic, temporarily halted over the Yellowstone division of the Northern Pacific since late Tuesday afternoon, started moving last eve- ning. AVALANCHE WIPES. QUT ALPE TOWN (Astociated Press) Berné, Dec. 28.—The destruction: of the village of Champerry, a tourist re- sort in the.Canton Vallais, is threat- ened by the sudden onset of a num- ber of avalanches, coupled with a landslide. Several houses have been crushed, and the whole population has evacuated the village. An avalanche has swept away many Alpine huts near Simplon pass, kill- ing two men, and many cattle. POOR CROPS. (Associated, Prss) Washington, Dec. 28—Argentine’s grain harvest this year will be one of the poorest the country ever has seen, due to injury by drouth and lo- cust. ‘Cereal prices in the Republic are the highest ever known. SEE |) .__onry News i HERE FROM GARRISON. Theodore F. Schauer of Garrison, arrived in the city last night and is making the Grand Pacific his head- quarters. ee SHERIFF SMITH IN CITY, Sheriff Smith of Beach, was an ar- rival in the city yesterday and is making his headquarters at the Van Horn. He returns to Beach tonight on No. 1. sae STREET CAR TOMORROW. Governor Hanna announced today that an effort will be made to shovel Tow. In the meantime sleighs will continue to be popular modes of con- veyance. eee KOSITZKY RESIGNS. Karl R. Kositzky has resigned his post as secretary of the tax commis- sion to become effective January 1 when he becomes state auditor. Miss Fannie K. Slattery, senior clerk in the commission office, has been ap- pointed secreta: eee ON WAY TO MOTT. Attorney J.. K. Murray, Sheriff Dewey, County Auditor Roberts and other Hettinger county officials who attend- the bearmg &t Dickine «a yesterday on the ousted commissicu- tion restraiming the enforcement. of Governor Hanna’s ouster-order, were in Bismarck today en route home. out the capitol street car line tomor- ; ers’ petition for a permanent injunc- | " MHURSDAY, DEC. 28, 1916. What Will Be Scenes in Peace Drama Prof. Shepherd, Famous Historian Tells Probable Steps if Na- tions Get Together URGES RESTORATION OF POLAND AS BUFFER International Court of Arbitra- tion To Settle Disputes Be- tween World Powers By KENNETH W. PAYNE. New York, Dec. 28.—What will be the probable synopsis of scenes in the Breat drama of the world’s march to- ward peace which now seems to be un- rolling before our eyes? Will a conference of the belligerents be held? Will Uncle Sam sit in on such a con- ference? What are the probable steps before and after the conference in question? These were the questions of vital in- terest to every spectator of contenr porary world history which I took to one of the real authorities in this country on the methods and history of international conferences. An Authority. Prof. William R. Shepherd, head of the department of history in Columbia university, has himself been a dele- gate to several important internation- al conferences and has been one of the most clear spoken and impartial critics in America of the international complications arising from the Euro- pean war. A student of hstory in Ber- lin and Madrid, an honorary professor in the University of Chile, Prof. Shep- herd was secretary of the United States delegation to the fourth inter- national conference of American states. I asked Prof. Shepherd whether the proceedings of this historic peace con- ference were likely to be secret. “There would probably be greater publicity about its action than in the case of any preceding conference,” was his answer. “Let me say the greatest use of this war has been a tremendous advertisement of the evils and utter futility of war. All the agen-| cies of communication and publicity’ have made known the detailed hor- Tors. of war. in every corner, of the world, The minds of all, people have been so deeply stirred by, this that, they will demand. just as great public- ity in the peace. discussions. “It is hard to say how long the peace conference will last. Within the last century no conference has lasted long- er than a year and usually matters have been determined within six months,: avinn , : “Qf the necessary steps toward peace,” said Prof. Shepherd, “three have already been taken. Germany j;has proposed peace and Great Britain has replied in a manner less truculent at heart than a superficial reading .of Lloyd George’s speech indicates. Both these efforts were directly, made to en- list the sympathy and support of the United States and now President Wil- son has responded. Exchange of Notes. “Evidently Wilson is requesting the nations to make some statement of \their terms. These statements could, I think, be made more advantageous- ly in peace conference than elsewhere. I should not be surprised to see a long interchange of notes however before a conference is arranged. I think though Germany will reply to Lloyd George in a mild way, thus permitting further negotiations, culminating in the conference perhaps after several months. “A few of the more important things which should be done at the confer- ence are, in my opinion, the follow- ing: “Belgium should be restored and compensated for her losses, the amount of such compensation to be ad- judicated by neutral nations. “All occupied territories in Europe and Africa should be evacuated and Poland erected as a buffer state. “The conference should re-establish the Balkan states but along more pre- cise boundaries determined by ethic and economic lines. Equality of Opportunity. “Germany should be granted equal- ity of opportunity in the economic development of the Ottoman empire. “A method of abolishing the so- called spheres of influence should be agreed upon; the struggle for posse? sion of these areas inhabited by peo- ple not of European stock having been a fruitful source of international con- flict. “Finally, on the subject of enforc- ing future peace, the conference should determine how <9 create an jinternational court to which disputes would be submitted; each nation to furnish a part of its army and navy to enforce the decrees of the court.” Since both the German and British appeals have in fact been made to the United States, I think the United States will be invited to take part in {the conference when it’ is arranged. I think the United States ought to be invited, too, because questions of the future guarantéés of world peace will be discussed. The American representative would {mot necessarily preside or be moder- ator of the meetings, but I think his {viewpoint would be harkened to very jreadily. If it came to a vote in the | conference, each nation represented | would probably have one vote, no mat- |ter. how many delegates were sent. But the probabilities are that all the | matters. before the conference would |be.settled by discussion and suasion, leach delegate having full powers, of | course, to speak for and represent his ‘mation. Each decision of the confer- ence would be subject to the ratifica- \tion of the legislative bodies of the various nations. “An armastice would almost cer- tain occur very shortly after such a conference was in session and there-| after the problems which the war so! for -has, utterly failed to solve would be. fopght out. with argument while the soldiers rested on their rifles.” COUSIN JACK TO. SERVE IN SENATE Thomas Pendray, Senator From 23rd District, Was Born in : Cornwall The Fifteenth Legislative assembly will be composed of all races and one Cousin Jack. And aforesaid Cousin Jack, one Thomas Pendray of Jamestown, is a legion unto himself. A Cousin Jack, be it known,"is a native of Cornwall, second cousin to Lloyd George's people, and distant cousin to the world, wherefore the soubriquet which has accompanied them into every mining camp on the globe. This particular Cousin Jack also is a full cousin to Tom Hall, secretary of state: They were raised together, and lowered together, in Keeweenaw county, Mich., where cop- per farming is done all the way to a mile underground. Senator Pendray was 7 years old when he left his birthplace at Cam- berne, Cornwall, ‘and accompanied his parents to Central Mine, Mich. There he grew to manhood and after the fashion of generations of ancestors became a crackerjack miner. In 1880 Johnson Pendray, father of the pres- ent statesman, migrated with many other ‘Michigan Copper Country Cor- nishmen to Stutsman county, and the elder iPendray settled upon the home- stead where Senator Pendary still lives, Thomas Pendray, when the hard times came in 1889, returned to Mich- igan and resumed his trade as a min- er, laboring throughout the winter in the Tamarack mine, more than a mile deep—the biggest hole for depth in the world. His earnings were sent back to the Stutsman county home- stead, where they served to keep fam- ine at bay. “ Believing in neutrality, when the time came to wed, Senator Pendray chose a German bride, and his lusty boys, he says, are true Triple Entente Allies, the only absolute neutrals in the present conflict. The senator now has a splendid farm southwest of Jamestown; he has a fine family of six children, and the hardships of te early days are forgotten. Phys!- cally, ‘they have made no impression upon Senator Pendray, who is a fine chunk of a man, who, could he be in- duced to slip into the jackets, no doubt could put up a real exhibition of Cornish wrestling. Come with us to Sunny Southern Texas Jan. 1 on No. 2 for a 15-day trip from the Ywin Cities. Fare from’ Bismarck and_ return, with meals‘ and berths, $57.50 single jtickets, or for man and wife, $°6.50. Come and: make your reservations this week. D. T. OWENS & ‘CO. Bismarck, N. D. ——___—-—§ | GRAIN MARKETS | ———$_——_—_Q) MINNEAPOLIS No. 1 Hard ++ 178% @183% No. 1 Northern . ++ 1T5@1BY No. 1 Northern Choice 181% Regular to arr ...... ++ 174%@177% No. 1 Nor. Choice to arr 179% No. 2 Northern . 11% @176% No, 3 Wheat ... 163% @173% . @ Mont, Hard ..... No. 2 Mont. Hard to arr 170% @172% 170% No. 1 Durum .......... 178% No. 1-Durum Choice ... 183 No. 1 Durum to arr ...¢ 177% No. 1 Dur, Choice to arr 185 No, 2 Durum .......... 172% @1784, No. 3 Yellow Corn ..... 87 @ 87% No. 3 Yellow Corn to arr 87 Other Grades Corn .... 77 @ 86 No. 4 Yellow Corn to arr 85 No. 2 White Mont. 52 @ 54 No. 3 White Oats ...... 49%@ 49% No. 3 White Oats to arr 49% No. 4 White Oats ...... 48 @ 48% Barley ....... 77 @101 Barley Choice 101 @110 Rye ....... . 130 @131 Rye to arr. seeeees 130 @131 Flax .... 283%4@287 Flax to arr . 283% @287 December + 115% May .... - 13%@ % July .. vee 171% Close 1:40 p. m. “DULUTH No. 1 Hard on trk’..... 179% No. 1 Northern on trk .. 177% @178%! No. 2 Northern on trk .. 168%@178% No. 3 Northern on trk .. 148% @163% No. 1 Northern to arr.. 1773 @178%' No. 2 Mont. Hard on trk 171% No. 2 Mont. Hard to arr 171% No. 1 Spot Durum ..... 180%@182%! No. 2 Spot Durum . 172% @177: No. 1 Spot Durum . ja olente December . 189 May + 182%) Oats on trk and to arr.. 475%@ 4839: Rye on trk and to arr .. 181 @182 Barley on trk - 1% @108 Flax on trk and arr 286% Choice Flax on trk * December .. May . July . December May July Close p.m. CATTLE MARKETS ST. PAUL. HOGS—Receipts 3,500; steady to! strong; range $9.50@$10.10; bulk $9.80@$9.95. , CATTLE—Receipts 1,100; killers, strong; steers $4.25@$10.25; cows and heifers $4.75@$7.50; calves, 25¢ higher, $4.50@$11.25; stockers and feeders, steady, $3.50@$7.75. SHEEP—Receipts 400; steady; lambs $7.00@$12.50; wethers $6.00@ $9.00; ewes $5.50@$8.50. CHICAGO, HOGS—Receipts 48,000; firm, 5c above yesterday’s average; bulk $10.25@$10.60; light $9.75@$10.50; store eee oe heavy $10.200@ + rou, 10.20@ $10.35; $7.75@49.35. ee CATTLE—Receipts 12,000; weak; Native beef steers $7.20@$11.50; west- ern steers $7.25@$10.00; stockers and feeders $5.20@$8.15; cows and heif- ers $4.20@$10.00; calves $8.50@$12.25 SHEEP—Receipts 10,000; strong; wethers $9:70@310.25; lambs $11.25@ ‘1$13.50, ale

Other pages from this issue: