The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, January 15, 1917, Page 4

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| * + who THE TRIBUNE rb. an eared Glad attr ISSUED EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE Daily, by carrier, per month +8 0 by mail, per year. 4.00 Weekly, by mati, per year, 2 1.50 Member Audit Bureau of Circulation THE STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Batablished 1873) LOCAL WEATHER BULLETIN. For the 24 hours ending at 12 noon, January 15, 1917: Temperature at 7 a.m. . ‘Temperature at 12 noon . Highest yesterday .. Lowest last night .... Precipitation ...... Highest wind velocity Forecast: For North Dakota: Generally fair and continued cold tonight and Tues: | day. | Temperature Calgary . e Chicago .. 2 Kansas City . 20 Moorhead . “32 | Pierre . a ( Prince A . “38 | St. Paul ....+ . 22 | ‘Williston . a -20 ‘Winnipeg . ieee “32 ORRIS W. ROBERTS, i Meteorologist. ) i OOSSSHETSEODFOOOOD 4 A statesman makes the oc- 4) @ casion, but the occasion & & makes te politician --Hillard, % OCTETS STESSEESEO OOS BEER SHOULD EXPLAIN. P..B. ‘MeCurdy-had a, strenuous time in thé Isham: Hal} ¢ase. Three times | justices ‘of’ the’ peace have dismissed him. Twice Anton Beer turned him| loose and once Justice Varney was} forced to dismiss the action while it was in its preliminary stage. Bismarck has suffered long under conditions created by these minor courts, who take their rulings too se riously The police magistrate or the Justices of peace do not have to bv convinced of the guilt of a prisoner. | If reasonable evidence is produced. | the plain duty is to bind persons ‘brought ‘before them to the district court, -where they will receive all the protection’ of the law, including a fa’ ‘jury trial. The Hall case is a public scandal. Three times he was dismissed and a fourth time ‘Mr. McCurdy rearrested him in hope of finding a committing magistrate who would make it possi dle to get the-case, before.a jury.} Then, presto! Mr. Halt pleads gull- ty. “Has Mr. Hall the complete protec. %y, tton'of the justice courts? "OWT MF. Bebr explain to’ this corr munity why he released a man twice fterwards pleaded guilty? Itipjyhe to get rid of such jus- tices. The legislature should give the © county courts increased jurisdi¢tion and -wipe out. police magistrates, jus- - tices of the peace in cities of the first. class. Now is the time to eliminate from our system these kangaroo courts. They are a menace to law and order. Intense excitement in Nicaragua: ‘A new president took office, and there wasn't any riot! ft IN ECUADOR. Phere is one Ametican country that has a real, ater-tight” eight-hour law, No, it isn’t Canada, or Mexico, or the Argentine Republic. It is Ecuador, that tiny triangular country, squeezed in between Peru and Colombia, that looks as if it were sliding off the steep sides of the An- des straight into the Pacific. Ecuador is the only nation in the world with an eight-hour law that includes every employe in the country and pays time and a quarter or bet- ter for overtime. The whole meat of law, which has just been put into effect is in three short, simple articles: (1) Every laborer, workingman, clerk in store, office, or industrial es- tablishment, and in general, every em- ploye of any kind shall not be forced to work more than eight hours daily, six days a week, and is exempt from work on Sundays’ and legal holidays. (2) No employer can evade the accomplishment of this decree by any stipulation with the employe or labor- er. (3) If the laborer, workman, clerk, etc., be requested to work longer than eight hours he shall be paid 25 per cent overtime for the extra work done during the day, 50 per cent overtime from six in the evening to midnight, and 100 per cent after that hour. LET UNCLE DO IT. It is the newspaper publishers’ ~ turn and, being in a position to know, we have no hesitation in saying that there's going to be a loud howl. After months of promiscuous kick- ing and cussing, after months of care- fu) thinking by investigating commit- ©) tees, the trade commission has decid- ed that prosecution under the Sher- “man anti-trust law is the only re- Attorney General Gregory some suits. 25 pet cont of the smail- | mate publications, | en to the other city offices, se BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE of publications will be reduced and the larger publisherg will “pass the buck” to the usual goat, the ultimate consumer, meaning the subscriber, in the shape of a raise in prices. {ditch known as Sherman anti-trus legislation, the country has a laugh | and a sneer coming to it. Consumers of paper will make three of a kind, when added to consumers of oil and | tobacco, The time has come for Uncle Sam to get out his lancet and let the p: out of the paper trust. It used to be Uncle Sam's policy to do all he could to encourage legiti- ticular respects to a free press in his constitution. All right, let’s see if he is honest! ‘His legislation, like the Sherman act, is a joke. Nobody knows this bet than publishers. WASTE, BUT, NATION PAYS. Both houses of Congress have given an exhibition of genuine assininity, and if they keep at it, an extra ses- sion will surely be necessary. | The senate has raised a first-class racket over the President's peace! note, which was none of its business, | and the House has frittered away en- ergy and time over Tom Lawson's mouthings. ‘The session seems likely | to be devoted to putt g and pork. | BIG ODDS ON HER. You have to admire the thorough- ness of Mayor ‘Mrs. Laura Starcher, who defeated her husband in the last election and, by the election of wom. ized the) government of Umatilla, Ore. | Laura's inaugural address was de-| voted to what she knew about gov- ernment and what she would do as! mayor, wasn't it? No, H it was not.; She just roasted mere man after a, fashion that must have made poor| ple. marshal, Then she appointed committees, with not a man on one of them, that's radically different. EDUCATIONAL SURVEY. Copies of the long delayed educa- hweceived-trom the federal printing o! fice. The Tribune proposes: in a se: ries of articles to discuss its variou: features, so that the chief points may be boiled down for busy readers. We have only dipped into the re- port, nibbled at it, as it were. | In the first chapter we regret to find the climate dismissed in this rather empiric statement: “The win- ters are long and the summers short.” Of course, the statement is non-essen- tial,“merely introductory, but why in a resort that is to have a general cir- culation seek to picture North Dakota as f{rlgli. Winters here are no long- er’ than in the wide zone about ‘us; no longer than those of Minnesota, Wisconsin, Michigan, parts of Illinois, Maine, lowa and other states that could be named. This preface is rather a chilly in- troduction. ‘We do not want to dis- count the merit of the report by an undue empha! but will someone get up in “meetin'” and tell us why peo- ple who know better should continue to libel the state and picture it as a threshold to the Arctic regions. The primer-like reference: “The winters are long and the summers| short,” evidenly dodged the editor, | if the report had one. The survey follows up this climnat- ical designation by saying that the long winters and short summers lim- it” the range of profitable farming to hardy cereals, grasses fruits, vegeta | bles and root crops and to livestock | |srowing. Who is responsible for this inaccuracy doth not appear. Probably this portion of the first | chapter can be explained on the! |srounds that the authors are experts! ‘on educational subjects rather than! on soil and climate. i In future editions some kind and | discreet hand should expunge these portions. They will give a false im- pression of the state and, to say the least, are poor advertising. Of course, the references to the} natural resources are not essential to! the success of the report, but in con-| veying impressions to the stranger) they are of considerable importance. | | | i | i} } Oklahoma man gets a divorce, al-| leging short skirts. If this becomes | a precedent, what an unscrambling | there’ll be! ‘An Indiana woman is backing a bill | to abolish corsets. We'd like to pro-| hibit wives from selecting husbands’ | neckties. With censorship of the newspapers the movies on the way to success, how soon before the Sons of Dark-! ness will be censoring the Bible? viding that it can be brought in for personal use. SHIRTS CUSTOM-MADE. We take measures for one of the When an jssue between honest deal- ing and gougery gets into that last; He even pays par-! Editor's note: This is the first of a series of articles discussing | the merits, demerits and general | features of the report recently | made on the higher educational in- stitutions of the state under the board of regents, After stumbling over the rather un- fortunate introduction to the report on North Dakota’s higher educational ; institutions just submitted by the {board of regents, there is found a sympathetic treatment of state statis- tics as they have a bearing upon the educationa] problems of the state. | The point is nicely established that | North Dakota has been fortunate in | the character of her immigration, of | the sturdy stock that turned her raw | prairies into productive farms, | More than 70 per cent of the popu- j lation is foreign born or of immediate foreign descent, Foreign elements, | however, are of the most desirable | i | types as is plainly evidenced by the small percentage of illiteracy in this countries in Europe supplying immi- grants for settlement in this state have for the mogt:part compulsory ed- ucation. Only"t¢per cent of the popu- lation of all classes between the ages of 10 and 20 were reported as illiter- ate in 1910. Doubtless the per centage has decreased since the last federal istribution of population plain- ly directs the features of our educa- tional system that must be developed. In 1910 more than 90 per cent of the population between the ages of 10 and 20 was rural. Conditions have changed little in six years. This proves graphically as the re- port wisely indicates that the popula- tion is far more likely to be interest- ed in scientific and practical agricul- tural education than the tenant class- es found in some other states. FRAZIER SEEKS. SCALPS OF ALL CONTROL BOAR | | Will Nominate Successors on, Grounds That Confirmation Preceded Legislation REGENTS WOULD BE LEFT IN COLD BY EXECUTIVE Starcher shake as a horrible exam-) jn lopping official hea Then she abolished the town|of regents has already fallen—or will i er | ‘ He governor's contention, based upon an | Word went out today that the board She says she’s going to have a town | of control i lthat the governor | confirmation the names of three new .tignal,survey of the state have been | i By 56 to 32 the Senate votes sa-| loons out of the District of Columbia. | But the Senate saves its booze by pro-| Governor Frazier is losing little time The board ‘all if the supreme court upholds the opinion from Attorney General Langer. s in the same boat and will send in for men. I The present members of the board of control were confirmed by the sen- ate March 9, 1915, according to the record of the secretary of state’s office. | ¢ ‘The act extending the terms of board of control members to six years, un- ler which Governor Hanna made his jappointments, was passed March 11, |1915. Thereafter, it is claimed, the board of control was confirmed by the senate a second time, to make the pro- ceedure strictly legal. The members appointed under Sec. 236, Chapt. 230 of the session laws of 1915, were R. S. Lewis, to serve until July 1, 1921; F. O. Brewster, to serve until July 1, 1919, and J. W. Jackson, jto serve to July 1, 1917. Brewster's terfiy was-vacated by his death about a yeat tio, and Jackson’s by his resignation, and Trustees Brown and Olson were made members of the board by finterim appointment. The league has. contended trom the first that the governor had a right to con- sider these two memberships vacant and to name his own men for the jobs. Now the contention is that none of the appointments was legally made in the first place; that the governor will de- clare all of the three memberships va- ant and will send in a complete new | slate. i New Board of Regents. ; The governor's proposed slate for ; the board of regents stands about as !much chance of confirmation at the ihands of the senate as did the proverb- ! {ial tallow-legged bow-wow in a cer- j tain sultry spot. “But it makes no dif- | ference whether the senate confirms confirmed or not. If the supreme court upholds Attorney General Langers’ opinion, the chief executive, immediately after ad- journment, can declare these offices vacant and make his interim appoint- ments without regard to the senate’s feelings in the matter. The governor’s nominees for regents of the state educational institutions are: Dr. W. G, Brown of Fargo, for six years; Robert Muir of Sarles and Rev, C. E. Vermilya of Valley City, for four years; George Totten of Bow- man and Roscoe Deague of Sawyer, for two years. Attorney General Langer holds that the present members hold office illeg- ally for the reason that they were named before the act creating the state board of regents was passed by the Fourteenth assembly. Governor Hanna is claimed to have sent his ap- pointments in to the senate March 2, 1915, while the law was not passed until March 4. The appointments were farch 5, The same proceedure held true of the appointment of members of the state board of control for the extend- ed term provided for assembly. were made before legal authority was given, but the final confirmation did not take place until after the acts had by the Fifteenth In both cases appointments been passed. Packard’s Name In, It was expected that the name of Frank E. Packard, nominated to suc- ceed himself ag.g- member of the state tax commissiongwould go to the sen- ate this afternoon. BOWLERS 10. NUMBER OF 100 "GATHER AT ~ JAMESTOWN TOURNEY Sum of $250 Offered in Prizes for High Scores—Big Meet Op- ened This Morning - (United Press) Jamestown, N. D,. Jan. 15.—More than 100 bowlers will participate in the event of the Third Annual tourna- ment of the Notthwest Bowling asso- ciation opening here today. Bismarck, Valley City, Rogers, Coop- erstown, Binford, McHenry and Lis- bon are represented with from five to 15 men from each city, Thirty-five lo- cal men have entered. About $250 is offered in prizes and a bowling ball with the sunken gold letters “Jamestown 1917” will be given to the man who has the highest aver- age for the week. Fargo, | ‘ment today. North Dakota Has Splendid RIDGE BOARD | Foundation Upon Which to WOULD TIE UP | Rear Educational Structure OUR CAR LINE state. This is due to the fact that} wij) Recommend Operation of Capitol Street Railway by State Be Discontinued LOSING PROPOSITION IS If recommendations of the budget board are carried out by the general assembly, the state, before embark- ing in the ownership of new public utilities, will discontinue the opera- tion of the only state-owned utility of which North Dakota now boasts— the Capitol Street Railway line. Losing Proposition. Chairman Lewis of the board of control never has been very friendly to the Capitol street railway. Tread- well Twichell of the budget board joins with him in the belief that the state would save about $5000 per an- num by permitting its employes to walk to and from the capitol, or pay the fee exacted by taxi men. The franchise, says Mr. Twichell, prevents the state from increasing its fare to the capitol to 10 or 15 cents, which would make the street. car line pay. Mr. Twichell estimates the cost of surface improvements which would be necessitated by the paving of Fourth street at $30,000, Senator Paul Kretschmar, chairman of the senate appropriations committee, and also a member of the budget board, has received from Second Assistant States Attorney Brennan an opinion, holding that the state has no right to engage in the street car business in the first place; no right to appropri- ate further money for improvements to the car line in the second place, and that in the third place the state cannot violate its franchise with the city of Bismarck for the reason that no franchise has legally existed. On the same grounds, Governor Burke during his administration ve- toed a bill providing for the extension of the line to the: penitentiary, hold- ing the property to be an “internal improvement” in ‘which the state had no right to engage without the vote of two-thirds of its people. Assist- ant Attorney General Brennan in his opinion expresses the belief that an attempt to compel the state to pave, as required by its franchise, would result in a court order to sell the property. SOGIMLIST GETS FOUR YEARS FOR MILITARY TREASON (Associated Press) London, Jan. Dr. Karl Lieb- knecht, the German ‘sécfalist leader, has received an additional sentence of four and one-half years at hard Jabor and expulsion from the Berlin bar, according to a Central News dispatch from Amsterdam, today, A court martial at Berlin last year sentenced Dr, Liebknecht to four years imprisonment for military treason. He appealed to the imperial military tri- bunal which gave a decision on Nov. 5, last, rejecting the appeal. ENTIRE SQUADRON. (United Press) Washington, Jan. 15.—An_ entire {squadron of army aviators will be sent into Mexico to seek aviators Bishop and Robertson, according to a mes- sage from Gen, Bell to the war depart- No trace of the missing men had been found, Bell said. “Did Anybody Say Peace?”’ es “WOULD ‘YOU PLEASE HOLD THIS CHILD FORA - Few MINUTES 2 best shirt houses in the country. Big to fit: $2.00" and up. $2. up. | selection, made to fit KLEIN, TAILOR CLAIM OF APPROPRIATORS MEAT FOR LIDGERWOOD The Lidgerwood Meat Co., incorpor- ated for $15,000, by Andrew Ercinck, Frank Jahoda and ‘Charles Prokop, received a charter from the secretary of state last week. VISITS KILDEER FOLK Dr. M. Christenson, who has been practicing chiropractic at Dav- enport, la., called on friends in Bis- marck last week enroute to Killdeer for a visit with home folk. STEADING IN MONTANA Henry Olson, who is homesteading a fine piece of land near Miles City paid Bismarck a brief visit last week while enroute from his home at Mon- ango to the Montana ranch. IN SUPREME COURT Herbert C. DePuy of Grafton, states attorney for Walst county, and At- torney F. B. Feetham, of Grand Forks, spent last week in Bismarck,’on op- posite sides of a case which was ar- gued before the supreme court. NEW WHOLESALE HOUSE Mandan has a new wholesale groc- ery house in the Svihovec Grocery Co., incorporated for $25,000 by Jas. 'T. Svihovec, Joseph G. Barron and J. L. Ferderer, The company’s charter enables it to wholesale and retail gro- ceries and handle live stock. NEW FOREIGN CORPORATIONS New foreign corporations admitted to North Dakota during the last week are the Farm Mortgage Loan Co., of Albert Lea, Minn., with state head- quarters at Wimbledon, where reside two locai members of the corporation, A. E. Dennstadt and C. A. Dennstadt and the Continental Land Co., of Mil- bank, Minn. BIG LOAN COMPANY TO OPERATE FROM MANDAN Capitalized at $100,000, the Security Cattle Loan Company of Mandan, was added Saturday to Mortan county’s list of important financial institutions. The incorporators are L. A. Tavis, superintendent of the Associated Banks, Joseph P. Hess, J. H. Newton and George W. Janda. IMPORTANT ADDITION TO COUNTY’S PHONE LINES The Sibley Rural Telephone Co., with home offices at McKenzie, and which plans to construct 100 miles of telephone line running from that village into a rich and populous farm- ing territory, received charter from the secretary of state last week. The company expects to invest about $7,500 in its physical equip- ment, and it is capitalized at $10,000. The first board of directors consists of A. Madland, C. W. Malmquist, E.. A, Bloomquist, S. R. Day and P. P. Bliss, all of McKenzie. CHANCE FOR TRIO TO TAKE NICE TRIP AT OWN COSTS Governor Frazier has made it pos- sible for W, E. Holbein, ‘secretary of the Minot Commercial Club, C.:R. Pettes of Lakota, and R. A. Johnson of Alkabo, prominent highway boost- ers, to take a nice trip to Boston as representatives ‘from North Dakota to the American Road Builders’ con- vention, which holds forth there Jan- uary 5 to 9, The governor advised them of their appointment Saturday, in a very nice liitle letter which wound up with the information that no appropriation had been made ta defray the expenses of the. state’s re- presentatives to this important meet- ing. INTERESTING POINT IN CA NOW BEFORE COURT When the school directors of Ken- mare set about building a new school house they became so_ enthusiastic that apparently they forgot all about such a thing as bonded debt limit. In any event they exceeded that limit came around to collect, the tax pay- ers advised them to get their money from the directors. The contractors were insistant, and the school district brought suit against the directors for the amount in excess. The action was argued in supreme court last week, and the decision of that tribun- al is awaited with much interest, as this is the first time the point has been raised just in this way. RANCHING GOES WELL P. W. Knecht of Alexander, McKen- zie county, dropped in at the capitol to see how his former fellow towns- man, N. A. Mason, now private secre- tary to the governor, fits in the ex- ecutive chambers. Mr. Knecht, who has spent the holidays with home- folk at Wimbledon, is a prosperous young rancher of McKenzie county, where he reports every one prosper- ing. The winter to date, he states, has not greatly harmed live stock, cold, there has been comparatively [iittte snow. The cattle and horses haye fed well and have been able to witMytand nipping weather. SKIR HING FOR THE WHEREWITHAL FOR CASH State Auditor Kositzky is a man of many cares. He is facing a lot of unpaid bills without the wherewithal to'meet them. January 20, which is the last day of the present week, should be payday for the legislators. The legislators have worked ‘hard, their daily ses- sions having occupied all the way from fifteen minutes to a full two hours, and the state auditor and ev- eryone else feels they should not be asked to wait for their wages when they fall due. The first legislative de- mand: on the state treasury cannot be appeased by less than thirty thous- and dollars, and then ten days later, there will be the regular monthly pay day of the capitol forces, which means another $25,000. On top of this, the auditor has unpaid bills ag- eregating $50,000, and taxes are not coming in so freely as they did a year ago, the impressioh“seeming to be current that the state was to oper- ate after January 1, 1917, without call- ing on the dear people for any ex- pense money. >": One wisp of silver lining to the general cloud effect is the manner in which county auditors are respond- ing-to the state auditor’s appeal for the prompt remittance of inheritance tax moneys in their hands. Cass county,Ras led.the list with a contri- bution: Of $1,132.39; Griggs county's 3 562.51, and other counties aes ited- well are Pem- cae ickey, $644.83; Mc- $15,900 will“ be received ~this source, and proceeds. from With the Legislature MONDAY, JAN. 15, 1917. are coming in, if But ‘Mr. Kositzky doing considerable December tax ‘sales somewhat slowly. nevertheless, is figuring. SOVEREIGN CITIZEN WHO WORKS ’EM OUT MUST WORK ‘The sovereign citizen who has made a practice of working out his road tax—if he has had any tax to work out—is aimed at in Senate Bill No. 50, introduced by Nelson of Grand Forks, which provides that said worker must deliver the goods and must. do his work when, and how the highway ov- erseer of his district directs. It has been a practice in_ other states, and maybe in North Dakota, for the property holder who has a few dollars road tax to pay to drag a defunct Christmas tree up and down the highway in front of his place a few times and then put in a bill for road work which just equals the amount of his taxes. The roads have been “worked” right in many in- stances, and Senator Nelson’s meas- ure would do away with this particu- lar brand of working. THINKS FARMERS SHOULD JUDGE FARMERS’ STATUTES Senator Martin of Morton, would have farmers judge farmers’ statutes. When asked to defend his bill provid- ing that at least three of the five members of the supreme court shall be bonafide farmers, Senator Martin last Saturday made an eloquent ap- peal for justice for the submerged four-fifths—the agriculturists of North Dakota. “In this state,” said Martin of Morton, “99'% per cent of the peo- ple are not lawyers; 83 per cent of them are farmers and I believe it is the theory of every republic that the majority should rule. We have sent lawyers to our legislatures until we have laws that none but lawyers can interpret. Then we send more law- yers to our supreme court.” In spite of Senator Martin’s elo- quence it became apparent when a by $30,000, and when the contractors M as, while there has been plenty of|M: vote was taken to give his pet meas- sure a decent burial in the committee on’ judiciary that ‘a majority of his fellow-farmer members in the Senate were content to grant continued life liberty and the pursuit of shekels to the lawyers, for Mr. Martin was the only one who voted no. New Church, The Scandinavian-Evangelical Free Church of Fargo, incorporated Satur- day, with Charles Westberg, Gustav Anderson and Christoper Olson ap- pearing as incorporators. 0 pe 0 ‘ GRAIN MARKETS | 0 MINNEAPOLIS. No. 1 Hard ... 196%4@198%) No. 1 Northern 18914@192%) No. 1 Northern Choice ., 196% No..1.Northern to arr .. 18814@1901%, No. - Nor. Choice to arr 195%4' No. 2 Northern .. 186%4@ 192% No. 3 Wheat ....- 176% @18816 No, 2 Mont. Hard . 188% No. 2 Mont, Hard to arr 188% No. 1 Durum ........... 201% No. 1 Durum Choicé .... 208% No. 1 Durum to arr ..., 107% No. 1 Dur. Choice to arr 208% No. 2 Durum .. 191% Ga No. 3 Yellow Corn ...... 93%4@ 94 No. 3 Yellow Corn to arr 9344 Other Grades Corn .... 84 @93 No.4 Yellow Corn to arr ‘91% No, 2 Mont. White Oats 61 @ 62 No. 3 White Oats .... .. 58%@ 64%! No. 3 White Oats to arr 53% No. 4 White Oats .. 52 @ 53 Barley ........ 85 @110 Barley Choice 110 @119 Rye .......05 . 140 @141 Rye to arr . 140 @141 @292 @292 Flax ..... Flax to arr Close 1:40 p. m. DULUTH May . ++ 188% July . . 191% No. 1 Hard on trk 191% No. 1 Northern on trk .. 196% No. 2 Northern.on trk .. 185% @187%; No. 3 Northern ‘on trk .. 176% @183% No. 1 Northern to arr .. 190% No, 2 Mont. Hard on trk 186% No, 2 Mont. Hard to arr 186% No. 1 Spot Durum ...... 199% @201% No. 2 Spot Durum . 197%@196% No. 1 Durum to arr. 197%, 194% 191 53%@ 55% Rye on trk and to arr... 139 @140 Barley on trk ........... 83 @118 Flax on trk and to arr., 288 Choice Flax on trk. 291 Choice Flax to arr. 291 292 iZ 293%! y ao. 189%! Close 1:45 p. m. {CATTLE MARKETS ST. PAUL. HOGS—Receipts, 6,500. _ Market, steady to 5c higher. Range, $10.00 to $10.45; bulk, $10.20 to $10.30. CATTLE—Receipts, 2,000. Killers, stronger. Steers, $425 to $10.25: cows and heifers, $4.75 to $7.50; calves, steady, at $3.50 to $8.00; stock- ers and feeders, steady, at $3.50 to $8.00. SHEEP—Receipts, 150. Market, steady. Lambs, $7.50 to $13.00; weth- ers, $6.00 to $9.50; ewes, $5.50 to 9.25. CHICAGO. ‘HOGS—Receipts, 68,000. ‘Market, strong, at 5c above Saturday’s aver- age. Bulk, $10.60 to $10.80; heavy, $10.50 to $10. Tough, $10.50 to $10.60 pigs, $7.85 to $9.75. CATTLE—Receipts, 24,000. Firm. Native beef steers, $7.75 to $11.80; western steers, $7.50 to $10.00; stock- ers and feeders, $5.50 to $8.85; cows and heifers, $4.45 to $10.00; calves, $9.75 to $14.25. SHEPP—Receipts, 13,000. Market, firm. Wethers, $9.60 to $10.70; lambs, $11.60 to $14.15. Expert Phonography and Typewriting Pho

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