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; tion. THE TRIBUNE Butered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, Ni | D. ‘as Becond Clase Matters” | 188UED EVERY DAY EXCEPT SUNDAY | SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN. ADVANCE Daily, by carrier, per month... 80} pA mail, per year. = 4.00 by mail, per year. 1.50 | ‘Audit Bureau of Circulation | THD STATE'S OLDEST NEWSPAPER | (Established. 1878) { S—- — LOCAL WEATHER BULLETIN. | For the 24 hours ending at 12 noon, January 18, 1917: | Temperature at 7 a, m. Highest yesterday .. Lowest last nigbt Precipitation Highest wind velocity ........ 26-NW Forecast. i For North Dakota: Fair tonight | and Friday; rising temperature Friday | and south and east portion Friday .. | Temperature i Calgary ... 10 ! Chicago .... . 20 | Kansas City 4 | Moorhead . “ Pierre .... Prince Albert | St. Paul .. | Winnipeg . St Louis .. : | San Francisco vegere 88 ORRIS W. ROBERTS, Meteorologist. | 9999S HDHHSEH FOS! ‘To punish a man because we | e o © infer from the nature of some @ doctrine which he holds, or @ from the conduct of other per- sons who hold the same doc- © trine with him, that he will © commit a crime, is persecution @ and is, in’every case, foolish @ atid wicked “Machilay. : OO BES HSS GES OSD PSPSPS Ios LAW ENFORCEMENT. . House Bill 37, providing for one and not more than three special law en- forcement officers, has “pork” written | in every line, The measure hardly deserves serious consideration. Two years ago the senate buried House Bill 71, which was drawn, along the same lines. ; | All the arguments advanced then| hold good now. Prohibition is not the issue involved in House Bill No. 37. The Tribune's position on this legis- lation has often been challenged on the ground that it is a foe of prohibi- Of course, the charge is untrue and puerile. Ever since the fram- ers of the constitution wrote the dry plank into the organic law, the Trib- tune has been,an adyocate and sup- porter of prohibition. It is even more firmly convinced than ever that pro- hibition is a good thing for the state and is unalterably opposed to any- thing but a strict enforcement of the liquor laws. But. the cause of prohibition is not involved in House Bill No. 37, Friends of thik! bill_seem to ctoud the issue by putting, the anti-liquor label upon it. Many well intentioned men are thereby misled. This bill provides for one or three special law enforcement officers. It shifts the burden of responsibility from the offices of states attorney, at- torney general, sheriff, and every ad- ministrative official now charged with the enforcement of our laws. This legislation lets down the bars and makes it possible for dishonest Officials to shift the burden and make brats law enforcement officials ‘we. aald two years ago,,when a sim#ar; measure was ‘up for consider- atid," ‘ “Most emphatically this act is not in the interests of law. enforcement, but will. operate directly to the bene fit of the blindpiggers and bootleg: gers.” But within the last few days, the necessity for such fool legislation has | been completely eliminated. The United States supreme court has de-} elared the Webb-Kenyon law constt. tutional. Any state that wants to go on a bone dry basis can do so. Charles Edward Russell, in a recent article in these columns, explained the air-tight, nature of this law. I any possible reasons existed for spe- cial officers they have been wiped away by this decision. It is unfortunate that the good men be = “and women lobbying for this measure fail to see that they are affording an alibi for every weak-kneed states at- torney in North Dakota, in addition to piling up the costs of law enforce- ment. Every lawyer in the house and sen ate knows this to be tme. What is everybody's business is no- ‘body's business. The theory of this ‘dill carried into the administration of all departments of state government ‘would produce confusion twice con- founded. Because a faction of the prohibition forces is clamoring for its passage is BO reason why the legislators should ‘dispense with reason and pass a bill clearly foreign to the spirit of all law enforcement. ‘We are attempting more and more to fix responsibility in-our state gov- ermment. There is considerable de- mand for fewer officials, as evidenced ittthe agitation for a shorter ballot. House Bill 37 is contrary to the spirit of the times. ‘Thousands of friends of nr-hidition than strengthen the enforcement of our laws there can be no doubt. What will Congress do after it finds | that all Lawson said was true?” A GOOD MOVE. : Some real good may come of a! short recess to allow the members to} go back home and explain the issues} before this session, Vital matters are | under consideration, involving the fu-| ture welfare of the state. Many sen-/ ators plan on holding meetings over their district to ascertain the desires | of their constitutents upon constitu tional revision. Probably when they al] get back on| atmosphere will: Now for a series by Flo Ziegfeld on | “How to Walk the Floor With Baby! ate ears aera { SISAL MONOPOLY. Millions of dollars are being exact- ed from the farmers of United States | annually by the sisal monopoly. The latest advance jn price cost the men engaged in agriculture for twine alone some $19,060,000. The only remedy is ‘to encourage the growth of fibre products in the; United States. No time should be lost in experimenting for the purpose of finding a substitute for sisal. Congress has been investigating the situation through the committee on agriculture and forestry, of which Senator Gronna of North Dakota is a member. The henequen plant, which pro- duces fibre highly suitable for twine, is grown almost exclusively for the American markets in Yucatan, part of the Mexican federation The “Comision Reguladora” handles the output and directs a monopoly most perfect in its} operation. It maintains an agency in New York and is completely be-| yond the reach of our anti-trust laws. North Dakota farmers are vitally in- terested in this movement to aid in the production of fibre plants. Our| own department of agriculture and| labor can well enlist in the move- ment. There is a leak here which if stop-) ped means much to our farmers, who each year find the overhead cost’ in- creased by the advancing prices ‘of twine. ‘Now we'll see whether the army :s/ any better at finding lost -aviators than at finding Villa. DEWEY |S DEAD. Few warriors ‘gained the poplar fa- vor that Dewey did. The nation wor- shiped Grant as the savior of the Union following the Civil war and with an enthusiasm, if not as great, certainly as sincere, heaped laurels upon the hero of Manila Bay. -His death reduces the few naval of- ficers who fought under Farragut in the Civil war. During his years of service, he typified the best traditions and ideals of the American navy. The nation owes him a debt of grat- itude. His entrance into (Manila Bay shortened the Spanish war and show- ed the enemy how futile it was to con- tinue the struggle. Since his retirement from active to strengthening the coast defenses of the nation. His advice has been of great value in shaping the great na- val program now under way. There was - nothing spectacular about him. He avoided the limelight, content with laurels earned in his own special field. Politics never Jur. ed him, although his friends tried to force him to seek an elective office. A great and good American has passed ‘away at a ripe old age. His- tory has already given him an import- ant place in the annals of the Repub- lic. Big Business is said to be engineor- ing a nation-wide boycott of Griffith's film play, “Intolerance.” The idea seems to be, “If you can’t censor, boy- cott!” HOUSE BILL 6 PLACES LOT OF POWER IN HANDS: OF THE SUPREME COURT (House Bill No. 6, introduced by Fra- | ser and providing for the calling in of another trial judge when the district | judge sitting is held to be disqualified. | places altogether too much power in the hands of the supreme court, in the opinion of members of the senate judiciary committee, which now has the measure under consideration. The ‘Dill provides that whenever a district judge shall be held to be disqualified, the supreme court shall have power to designate the trial judge. This may be done in amy instance where an af- fidavit of prejudice is filed, and this makes way for a wide lattitude of ac. tion which might permanently clog the wheels of justice. It is doubtful whether the committee will report the bill out for passage. The committee on judiciary also now has under consideration the bill providing for blacksmiths’ liens. Expert Phonography and Typewriting ‘all orations gver house bill 37, pro-: \tion trom Representatice Lathrop of jread that the officers “shall work un- |Anthony Walton, “we are not getting service, he has been devoting himself} With the Legislature TOUR : BISMARCK DAILY TRIBUNE : decent br dlhsa be THURSDAY, JAN. 18, 1917. jthere would be no people to arrest, that it would make the position of the attorney general.ridiculous and that the white people should have special AIR TEMPERANCE BILL IN HOUSE Anthony Walton, Presiding Over) Committee of Whole, Finds Self in Sea of Motions — STAALE HENDRICKSON GOES TO THE RESCUE! BILL SET BACK, House Bill No. 37 was re-refer- red to the temperance committee at the session late this afternoon. Entertaining motions and free-for- viding the governor with power to “ap- point not to exceed three citizens to be special officers” for the enforce- ment of the state laws—designed es- pecially to hit the liquor jolations+~ played to such an extent on the nerves of Anthony Walton, presiding over the committee of the whole late yesterday afternoon, that he throttled Represent- ative Patterson of Renville, before the; legislator had spoken more than a dozen words on the measure. “Stop, don’t go any farther!” shout- ed th hairman. “We.are going too far, as it is, If we speak further on, this matter we are going tg get all the more mixed up. .Stop! I am get- ting in deep water and I want to get out.” And Dozen or More Had Spoken. A dozen or more had spoken for and against the bill under considera- tion when Representative M, A. Hog- haug of Devils Lake, made a motion that the bill be laid on the table. Rep- resentative IL. D. Wiley of Morton county, had previously made the mo- tion that action be indefinitely post- poned, which was followed by a mo- Steele, that the bill be amended to der the direction of the attorney gen- eral.” “We are badly mixed up,” voiced| Representative Church of Benson county. “I don't doubt it a bit,” replied anywhere.” Recalling that a vote had been taken on the Wiley motion to indefinitely postpone action, Representative Peter- son of Towner, one of the floor leaders declared “it's already been voted on. voted,” replied Walton. 5; ._._ Hendrickson Saves the Day. - Representative Staale Hendrickson’s executive, ability was attested. represemtative from Coteau, seated in fotth in} ffs’chair. It was great com- edy. for gy. + “I make a motion that the committee of the whole ris sentative, which is synonymous to dis- solving. Seconds swept the house. Fate: of Ho BIL 37. The fate of house bill 37, What is it? After all the orations, it's passage. cannot be predicted; neither can its defeat. Anyway, it bobbed up again today for reconsideration and will be either back to the temperance committee with the recommendation that it be amended. “Your committee has had under con- sideration house bill No. 37,” read Speaker Wood after the Minot repre- sentative had left the chair. Walton then moved the adoption of the report of the committee of the whole and it prevailed. The curtain dropped. A Few of the Highlights. Whether me governor should be empowered to make the appointments, whether the officers should be under direct supervision of the attorney gen- eral, that the state’s attorneys are neglectful in enforcing the laws in their home towns, that if the legisla- The! recommended to pass or will be sent} officers as the federal government pro- vides for the Red man, weré just a few of the highlights brought out. Representative C. P. Peterson of ‘Towner county, believed bill No. 37 was a good measure and should be discussed. Attorney B. G. Tenneson of Fargo, said the bill carried merit in it and LL. L. Stair, Democrat, Bottineau county, declared the people had elected a good man as attorney general and believed that William Langer would see to the enforcement of the laws. He said if more offices were created and added to the police, there would goon be no people to arrest. Representa- live Stair said the people want to: put the duty on some one else and for that reason he opposed the measure. £. A. Bowman I[s Heard. E. A. Bowman of Kulm, candidate for speaker of the house early in the assembling of the legislators, said the state laws are not enforced counties, that Iowa has a and that it is an economical way of enforcing the state laws. He read a letter from the attorney general in which the latter expressed himself in favor of such a law, Representative Church of Benson, said “lam in favor of the law.” Representative Tenneson of Fargo, asked “why three. members?” and it was explained thé bill calls for “one, two or three officers not to exceed three citizens.” Mees Opposed to Measure. “If we are to have law enforcement it must come from the office of the attorney general whom we placed in office for that purpose, averred F. W. Mees of Morton county. “If the at- torney general hasn’t assistance and power to bring about law enforcement, 1 am in favor of enacting legislation which will invest him with such.” “I agree with Representative Mees,” said Representative Stinger of the 49th district, “and if the attorney general has not the power to bring about en- forcement, lets give him such at this session. If he needs assistance, let him make his selection and then we will have the duties under one roof.” Voice From Mountrail County. Walter J. Maddock, one of the young members of the house stated the bill would make the position of the attor- ney general ridiculous, but believed the legislature should give him auth- ority to carry out his power. Representative Hanson of Grand Forks, said “I think we need some- body to look after the enforcement of the laws and anbdther thing we don’t like‘to get at them at home. . If the federal government needs officers for Indians, I think we need them in North Dakota to enforce the laws for those who are suffering.” Hagan Speaks His Piece. “J don't believe it is good legislation for us to pass laws for work which we are paying elected officers to do,” “Yes, but we could not tell, whojsaid Representative A. M. Hagan. Representative,J. C. Miller of Bot- tineau, argued that the citizens can’t enforce the Jaws and that he was in favor of the bill. “How much would you have to pay the back of the house, rocked back and: toward the expense of these three .ap- ‘pointed officers?” asked Miller. “You wouldn’t need to pay more than five ,cents and you would pay your share »” declared the repre- of the cost of law enforcement for the There are. lots of laws running te state, wild ‘aver the st: that we neéed thi If Langer knows ‘special officers are ‘you going to tie his hands? I say emphatically no!’? Moen of Hettinger. “I know as a mattef of fact the laws in the-counties can be enforced under our present statutes,” said Representa- tive Henry Moen of Hettinger. “I per- sonally had occasion to enforce them in my own county, and I know the laws were absolutely enforced in respect to liquor. The fact remains that if you appoint one, two or three officers you are only duplicating or throwing the responsibility from one man to another, It would, therefore, be my opinion that the proper pro- cedure is to give assistance to the at- torney general and the state’s attor- neys throughout the’ state and let the attorney general have the supreme power. Lathrop Would Amend Bill. Representative Lathrop would have the bill amended to make the work under the direction of the attorney general. tures created many more public offices Representative Sidney Smith of Steele, declared it was a good bill and that he was in favor of it. Representative Harris of Mercer county, stated as a member of the) committee to which the bill was re- ferred, he heartily approves and that the men talking on it were “talking | ” @ son Is Halted. Representative Patterson of Ren-} ville, embarked on a flow of oratory} but was halted by Anthony Walton, | who was “getting in deep water.” WOULD PROVIDE FUNDS — FOR ROAD IMPROVEMENT FROM OVERDUE TAES Good roads fans will be interested in a bill which is to be introduced in the house by Representative Cole of| Fargo providing that the penalty and} interest on unpaid taxes shall be di-| verted to a special road fund, to be; returneg to the township in which the Jand is taxed, to provide for general highway improvement. A consider- able amount, it is said, will be realized in this way, and the man who pays the bill will have the satisfaction of seeing his money expended on his own roads, The bill also will carry a provision for the semi-annual payment of taxes, as recommended by Governor Frazier. BOARD TO" REGOMMEND THAT STATE PURCHASE WORE LANDS FOR PEA That the state purchase at a cost of $45,519 an additional tract of 655 acres for the North Dakota peniten- tiary will be one of the important re- commendations made by the budget; board to the general assembly next | week, The state now farms about 1,000 acres of leased land. For the penitentiary the budgeters will ask a total of $202,360 for the en- suing biennium, as against $205,260 asked by the board of control. Of this amount, $21,125 is asked for improve- ments and repair; $16,200 for new buildings; $15,300 for equipment, and $57,519 for miscellaneous purposes, in- cluding the purchase of the lands re- ferred to. WEBB-KENVON LAN BEING ENFORCED 10 THE LIMIT IN ONE-TIME WET. STARK The Webb-Kenyon law, prohibiting interstate shipments of intoxicants in- to dry territory, is already being -en-| forced in at least one North Dakota county, Good old Stark, once the easiest place in the state in. which to nego- tiate a neighborly nip, is being made under the operations of the. Webb- Kenyon law the most arid spot in the state, State’s Attorney H. A. Burgeson is seizing every shipment of liquor which’ he can lay his hands on, without re- gard to size or destination tvithin the county, Then he is requiring the con- signee, if he’ wants the stuff badly enough, to make an affidavit that the liquor is for his own personal use. Otherwise the contraband remains in the’ possession of the state’s attorney. Shipments have been seized in this way in several Stark county: towns during the last week and no effort has been made to resist the state’s attor- ney’s action to date. MEASURE CUTTING DOWN COSTS TO BE PRESENTED FOR HOUSE CONSIDERATION ‘A bill providing that in the transfer of actions from county to district courtg:'the costs assessed shal be! those of the higher court is to.be in- troduced in the house. Under. the present system, in transferring a case from @ county to a district court, the costs of the lower court are assessed. OH MAMMA, SEE THE CUTE LiTTLe THERE ARE’ Six YZ VZZ A BACK WHERE Y AA ov Gor gem THEM — 1 WONT HAVE: KITTIES we Founp! «. The Great American Hom <= You Take Those CATS RIGHT STRAIGHT ZB iy, "EM AROUND HERE For A minute! ef. 4 PERE Te Ly | These are somewhat higher than those Ui ‘day afternoon. Board of Regents Had No Part in Preparing Report On Higher Institutions Editor's Note: This is another of a series of articles upon the re- port on North Dakota’s education Institution prepared under the di- rection of P. P, Claxton, federal commissioner of education. In order to correct a misapprehen- sion as to the nature of the report on the higher educational institutions of North Dakota, it seems advisable to state that the board of regents merely ordered the survey under the condi- tions provided in the act creating the board. - It took no part in preparing the re- port. .The regents merely called in these experts and their finding em- bodied in the report are now before the board of regents for consideration, In some quarters it was thought that the conclusions of this report were) conclusions of the board. The report has been made under the direction of P. P. Claxton, federal commissioner of ; education, assisted by Dr. Edwin B.j Craighead, educational commissioner, and others. The report then is not official in the sense that its findings have been ap- proved by the regents, Doubtless the members of that board will find much to criticize and much to praize and gradually act upon the -best sugges: tions. It should be said in this connection that the present board of regents is striving in a disinterested way to bet- ter the institutions, but as a matter of wisdom they are moving slowly. On the board are men of wide business training as well as experience in edu- cational matters. With these points in mind, there is no danger in misconstruing the recom- mendations of the report with any pos- sible action the regents might or might not take, The report merely embodies the findings of the educational experts. ‘There 18 no obligation or compulaion to adopt any of them. of district courts, and the increased burden on the respond®nt often is con- siderable. This {s particularly true, it it said, in the case of actions brought in county courts of Cass or some other eastern counties by commercial col- lection agencies and then transferred to a dfstrict court in some county where no county court exists. Such agencies, it is said, have not been at all careful about piling up excessive costs, A matter of this nature was brought to the attention of the supreme court this week, and the measure above re- ferred to was drawn at the suggestion of one of the associate justices. BILL PROVIDING FOR ROTATION OF GROPS KILLED BY FARMERS Farmer members of the senate were almost a unit yesterday in voting to oblivion Senator McLean’s bill pro- viding for a compulsory rotation of crops, requiring that no grain crop be grown more than two years in succes- sion on the same piece of gound and that every sixth year the soil be treat- ed to.a season of summer fallow or some grass crop, There..was much argument for and against the measure. The opposition came principally from those who thought the bill impracti- cable; that North Dakota was not ready for such an advanced step, that the law could, not be enforced, and; that it simply would become another dead letter on our statute books, The bill, was up. for a, third reading when a motion to indefinitely pospone ac- tion was carried by 28 to 18. Sena- tor Hamilton proposed that a cam- paign of education be carried. on through the distribution by the de- partment of. agriculture of bulletins advancing the advisability of crop ro- tation. LEAKE. AND KIRKEIOE IN EXCITING DEBATE. IN NEN LOBBY A midnight debate staged in the McKenzie lobby between William Lemke of Fargo, chairman of the Re- publican state. central committee dur- ing the recent campaign, and Senator A. K. Kirkeide of Benson attracted a crowd of about 200 people last even- now being considered, namely House Bill No. 44, a concurrent resolution re- vising the constitution of the state of North Dakota, the most important leg- islation ever introduced in the North Dakota legislature, ‘and. Whereas, It is our judgment that the interests of the state would. be best served by the members of the senate consulting with their constitu- ents in regard to the pending legisla- tion; now, therefore, “Be It Resolved, That when the senate adjourns today, it stands ad- journed for a period of three days.” Every outward bound senator was armed with at least ten copies of House Bill No. 44, as well as copies of the constitution under which the state has done business since 1889. RETURNS FRQM HEARING, Railroad Commissioners Aandahl, Johnson and Bleick and Secretary short ballot with a vengeance. Action on Senate Bill 25, reducing the number of members in both hous- es, was indefinitely postponed. Cushing returned yesterday from New Rockford, where a hearing was held Tuesday on several local questions, which the commission took under ad- visement. ! GRAIN MARKE' 3 o—___. MINNEAPOLIS . 1 Hard .. seees 200% @202% . 1 Northern ........'193%@196% . 1 Northern Choice,. 200%. Nor, Choice to arr 199% . 2 Northern ........ 190% @196% No. 3 Wheat ... + 180% @192%. No, 2 Mont. Hard ....... 192% @195% No. 2 Mont. Hard to arr 192% @194% No. 1 Durum ........... 206% No, 1 Durum: Choice’: . ...° 218% No. 1 Durum to arr 202% No. 1 Dur. Choice to arr 213% No: 2 Durum ........... 196% @209% No. 3 Yellow Corn ,..... 97 @ 98 No. 8 Yellow Corh‘to atti O21 i<* Other, Grades Corn...» ? @ % No. 4 Yellow Corn to arr* 95. No. 2 Mont. White . @ 64 No, 3 White Oats @ 56%) No. 2 White Oats No. 4 White Qats 54@ 55% Barley ....\.... » @114 Barley Choice Close 1:42 p. m. DULUTH vee 192 No. 1 Hara on tri .. No, 1 Northern on tr! + 195 +. 194 ing and proved, while it lasted, one of No. 2: Northern on trk,... 189-;.@192 the most’ exciting events of the ses- sion to date, The argument began over a ques: tion as, to the league's object in con- cealing from the people until the eleventh hour the fact that it intended to ask for a new constitution, when, Senator Kirkeide charged,’ the league hag its plans for ripping up the con- stitution formulated early last sum- mer. The debate wound up with an offer from Senator Kirkeide to take Lemke ‘into Benson county and give him every possible opportunity to im- press the voters with the value of the league program. Kirkeide, who is said to have petitions signed by 400 home- folk, asking him to stand pat with the conservative ‘majority, intimated that he did not fear anything the league might succeed.in “doing to him” in his own district. “You threaten to ‘sting me’—go ahead, and -do, it,” said the senator from Benson. The argument furnished diversion for a large number of folk who were compelled to sit up late to wait for No. 2, which went through about 1:00 this morning. SENATE PROBABLY WILL NOT RESUME GRIND TILL NEXT TUESDAY AFTERROON It is probable that the senate will not resume its grind until next Tues- Following yesterday's adjournment, there was a general ex- ‘| odus of, statesmen, bound for home and words of advice and counsel— hoping, perhaps, that some appruba- tion might be mixed in for seasoning. It is doubtful’ whether a majority will have returned by Monday ‘afternoon, in which event the senators present will adjourn until the following after- noon, for lack ‘of a quorum. A fair percentage of the senators, too far from home to make the trip worth while, or feeling that they will meet more of their constituents at the big conventions now on in Fargo, left on No. 2 last evening for the Gate City. Senator (McGray’s resolution neatly expresses the“object of the: majority in taking three days off: ow e taxpayers that are No, 3 Northern on trk .. 182 ° @189 No. 1 Northern to arr .. 194°! No. 2 Mont; Hard on tre 190 .No. 2 Mont, Hard to arr. 390 2 207M @211% . 201% @204% ++ 199%! + 199% No.1 Spot Durum .. No, 2 Spot Durum No. 1 Durum to arr. May . fee July. + 197% Oats on trk and to arr.. 56%@ 57%, Rye on trk and to arr.. 140 @141 Barley on trk . 84 119 Flax on trk and to arr.. 290 Choice Flax on trk ..... 292 Choice Flax to arr ..... 292 1 ST. PAUL. HOGS—Receipts, 7,800. Market, 5 to 10c lower. Range, $10.25 to $10.70; bulk, $10.55 to $10.60. CATTLE—Receipts, 16,000. Killers, steady and 15 to 25c higher than for the week. Steers, $4.25 to $10.25; cows and heifers, $4.75 to $7.50; calves, 25e Joma, at $4.50 to $13.00; stockers and feéders, steady, at $3.5 bene i oa /HEEP—Receipts, 50. Market, steady. Lambs, $7.50 to $13.25; weth- ers, $6.00 to $9.50 ewes, $5.50 to $9.50. CHICAGO. HOGS—Receipts, 52,000. Market, slow. Bulk, $10.80 to $11.05; light, $10.45 to $11.00; mixed, $10.65 to $11.10; heavy, $10.70 to $11.10; rough, $10.70 to $10.80; pigs, $8.00 to 10.10. CATTLE—Receipts, 9,000. Market, steady. Nativé beef steers, $8.00 to $11.80; western steers, $7.70 to $10.10; stockers and feeders, $5.75 to $8.85; cows and heifers, $4.75 to $10.10; calves, $10.00 to $14.50. SHEEP—Receipts, 11,000. Market, steady. Wethers, $9.65 to $10.70; lambs, $11.60 to $14.25. “BINGO” Absolutely Removes Corns and _Calluses Completely as, There..are..mattera of ts, All Drug Stores, In- Cowaa’s Drag- Store. , . 1 Nor. Ref. to arr... 192% @194% are w