Jasper Weekly Courier, Volume 53, Number 30, Jasper, Dubois County, 5 May 1911 — Page 7

BIG FIRE AT BANGOR

CHINESE REBELS SLAY

THE TAO TAI OF CANTON

FLAMES SWEEP DUSINESS AND RESIDENTIAL DISTRICTS OF MAINE CITY.

$6,000,000 IS THE LOSS

Firemen Arc Almost Helpless Before Gale-Fanned Blaze Dynamite Re-

sorted to to Stop Conflagration-

Hundreds Are Made Homeless.

i ,t,L.nr. Mo.. May 1. Firo, starting

,,r, tiruud Btruot, near Union, closo b$

tiu junction of tho l'enohHcot river

,,i the KenüUBKeng Hiruiuii, incu

U Ut-s tho city, swept northwnrd, f, .! bv a stiff southerly breeze,

,1 out nractically all of tho bus!

i . as district and public buildings and

. nrce nortlon of tho best residential

, v.rlrt on tho northern side, renderti.niiHinulB homclesB. Tho Iobb is

I mated at $0,000,000. Fire Fighters Inadequate.

The efforts of the Uro department fn -ti tho tlmo tho lire Btarted were -wlutoly f utile. Tho flames Bwept

Ü rth along Ilroad Btroot from Union ..n lumned the Kenduskeag Btreain

r, t r.ine alone on the western bank

----t, H. ist Exchnngo street.

The Smith and Strickland blocks at junction of Hammond and Central 8'reets and tho Kenduskeag Btreath . . dynamited, in a vain attempt to

tho flames from leaping tne

1

Loyalty of Troops Doubted U.

Gunboat Is on Way Gates of City Are Closed.

8.

an.

Alter the first rush of tho fire to the i tho h.ink wind set un by the

itself fanned the flames toward

south, threatening that part of tho

. that at first seemed ßafo.

Post Office Is Wiped Out.

,ir1y in tho advanco of tho flames i j.oBt ofllco fell before tho onf f;ht of the flames. Tho Maine Conrailroad was obliged to vacate its ..'., the retreating olllco force and . seeing the building engulfed nlr hi fore they were out of danger, v the start all communication oxby the Postal Telegraph company - - at off. The Western Union and t u lephono ofllco went early. City Hall Is Saved. F .r a long time tho city hall, at the r f Main street, was Bavod by a f t shift of the wind. The Hainesblock, tho Hodgklns block, t . Fiske building, tho Fairbanks & i plant, the Morse Oliver block, tho . fi i b of tho llangor & Aroostook rail- ..!!. tho ofllces of tho Bangor News, t... Windsor hotel and the public 11f r 'v were destroyed with many oth-

Hongkong. China, May 1. Li, tho

taotai of Canton, has boon assassinated

by tho robots, who are again Btroug. !

Tho gates of tho city havo boon closed.

Tho loyalty of tho troops is doubted, and this fear has caused much excitcment among tho peaceful Inhabitants

of Canton.

Two llrltiHh torpedo boat dostroyers

havo boon sent from Ui!h city to Can

ton. It is stated that tho movement

was fomented by nntwnanchurlaiis from Hongkong and Macao.

Orders were lssuod to suspend nav

Igation on tho river after Thursday's

outbreak, but tho Hrltish consul luslBt

ed that tho vessels at Canton bo per

mitted to tako away tourists there

This request was granted, and the ves

sels wore packed with persona desiring to lleo tho city, whilo others crowd ! ed Shamlen, the foreign concession on

tho point abovo Canton. Brigadier General Chung died of wounds received In lighting with the revolutionists. Tho rebels sustained a heavy Iobb In a battle with thu troops at tho Cbonguyon bridge. Trouble In Canton has been anticipated for days. Tho leader of tho disturbers was arrested and his followers attacked the yamen. They sot fire to tho building, but while the flames were raging tho viceroy escaped by tearing down a rear wall. Tho documents In tho yamen wcro saved. Washington, April 30. Tho United States gunboat Wilmington sailed from Hongkong for Canton to render any assistance necessary to American citizens on account of the disturbed situation at tho latter place.

HOUSECLEANING TIME!

n t- Yrram-

RPi -; 111 I 'fijPSCSj EZ " 1 fVTHEtt1 " ' '1 ATTER K WRtV ftflCAKPA&T ' riNDS K tMtrrV SCC IJH1CH to BwC. RtfeP& TH& SPQWT DOPC

3f" tST tT wiTnoa oTMtR.fHtKS that tCRCi

TAFT THANKS HOUSE

TILDEN IS ARRESTED

SENATE WARRANTS IN CONTEMPT CASE ARE SERVED ON CHICAGO PACKER AND AIDS.

WRIT TO FREE THEM SECURED

Habeas Corpus Petition Attacking Right to Demand Financial Records Then Is Filed Before Judge and Order Issued.

PRESIDENT URGES SPEEDY RE

CIPROCITY ACTION IN NEW YORK SPEECH.

ROADS LOSE IN CEMENT CASE

SAYS ANNEXATION TALK BOSH

f r as prominent buildings. Tti tho residential district the people fnrtfd to movo out early, lighting for (ineyance8 on which to pile their cfff's The people were panic stricken Running wildly, carrying all sorts ' useless articles, snatched up In

t'eir frenzv. they noured out of the

:m toward Old Town. One Man Is Killed.

one fatality is known, a man named

S dbner of Brewer having been bur.. r! under tho fallinK walls of the

v, -fv Oliver building and it is report

ti hat several other persons have

i : slird.

Neighboring cities were appealed to

Commerce Commission Refuses to Per

mit Carriers to Advance Rates in West. Washington. April 2S. Refusal of tho Interstate commerco commission to permit the principal railways of tho west to advanco their rates on

tho transportation of cement for tho reason that tho carriers are alleged to neod additional rovenuo Is tho fea-

turo of a decision banded down In tho

important Portland cement caso.

General advances of half a cent to

5 cents a hundred pounds in rates on

cement were proposed by tho carriers

In trana-Mlssouri territory, to becomo

effective September 1. 1910, and affect ed territory which produces approxl

mutely two-thirds of tho Portland ce

ment made in tho United States. Co

ment is a commodity of comparative

ly low grade in transportation, but In

commercial bulk Is exceeded only oy

coal, iron oro and grain. Tho ad

vances proposed were attacked by

producers and shippers and pending

an investigation the commission sus

pended them, flrst until November 1,

1910, and subsequently until July 1911.

Compact With Canada Must Be Taken

Up Now or Never Says Chief Executive In Address Before Newspaper Men.

1,

HOUSE GAINS 42 MEMBERS

n.mnortlonment Bill Passes Lower

Body of Congress ny Mrict Party Vote 178 to 99.

Now York. April 28. President

Taft openly thanked the Democratic houso of representatives for tho stand

it has taken on tho question of Canadian reciprocity when ho Bpoko at the annual banquet of the Associated

Press and the American Newspaper Publishers' association at tho Waldorf-Astoria last night.

'All this talk about annexation is

bosh," he said, raising his volco to its highest pitch, "and we ought to make

It one of the Jokes of tho platform.

Praises House Action. "I deslro to express my high appre

ciation of the manner in which the present house of representatives has

treated the reciprocity agreement. It has not played politics. It has taken

the statesmanlike course In regard to lt. I am very hopeful that the Benate will treat tho agreement In the same

way."

Tho president urged all the newspa

per men present to mnko It clear to j the public that the time Is now ripe for a real trade agreement between

tho United States and Canada and thnt unless something Is done now to make suro of tho project the tlmo to accomplish It will b gono forever.

Ho pointed out that already enemies

of reciprocity both in this country and

In Canada aro doing all they can to prevent it.

Canadians Entered Objections. Ho said that tho proposed agree

ment Is not liked by some becausethey say tho farmers are not well

cared for In that meats and flour aro left out of tho agreement The truth about this is, ho said, that this coun

try offered to put all commodities of both countries on the free trade list, but the Canadian commissioners would not accept among other things

meats and flour for tho slraplo reason

that they felt the American raisers of meats and flour would bo able to undersell tho Canadian producers In

Canada. This, he urged, Bhows clearly that since Americans could undersell Canadians In Canada, Canadians would not bo able to affect the American market In such a way as to reduce tho prices of these articles for American consumers. Consequently, he pointed out, there was no reason why Americans should want such Items on the free trade llsL Denies Farmer Badly Treated. President Taft objected vigorously to the proposition that is being mado to gratuitously put these Items on the

cut tho wires, attached Instru- ou8 penal institutions a sum aw iigtua flaiu imu u ul ,..-

.s and clicked oft the messages. finry for their caro nu nui we nusm,

Tho stato was to appropriate xu.uuu tlons clause in many 01 our imuum-

tlnrnv, , . r-.nl nrU nnnunllV Tho ROVCmor BQIU WO con- QllBl HgrCCmeniS, mm uuiftl-Mra uiuHURRY CALL FOR EARL GREY JJ111 the stnte treasury did not Ling free trade with tho entire world

If we put them in me uanauian ircau. Ho denied that the American farm-

N Y POLICE or uauiy uuiuvu iu

"If any objection can bo made to

WOMEN TEACHERS PERISH IN WRECK; CARS BURN Excursion Train Goes Into Ditch Near Easton, Pa. Eleven Dead; Fifty Injured. Knston, Pa., May 1. Eleven persons lost their lives when a school teachers' special excursion train was derailed and burned on the Pennsylvania railroad at Martin's Croek. Three of tho dead havo been Identified. Tho bodies of six others are in

the morgue and two male passengers are missing. It Is expected that their bones will be found in the debris. Three of the ten injured in the Easton hospital will probably die. More than fifty persons were hurt. Cars Burn Like Tinder.

Tho train was traveling at a rate of

50 miles an hour and when the loco

motlvo struck a sharp curve, where

men had been repairing the tracks, It Jumped and ran along n hillside, carrying four of tho live cars with 1L All of the cars took fire and burned like

tinder. Not a splinter la left.

PhvRlrlnns were called from this

city and every town within a radius of ten miles. An hour after the accident thero were a Bcore of physicians on the ground. They did everything pos

sible to relieve the Injured and maae them ready for the trip to the Easton hospital. Every farmhouse in the vicinity, which is sparsely settled, was quickly transformed into an improvised hospital and farmers' wagons were

pressed Into service aB ambulances.

. - 3 rWn Washington. April 2S.-Dy a strict ;.!.'!".. m,e"' u.,nA,ntr. Lartv vote of ITS to 99. tho house

....,K u, UU.U .. 7"" d lth0 representation reapportion- . m.mI are tho Tnrratlne club, First passed no r

s'iPt. Unlversallst and Advent

mhos, Jewish synagogue, post of-

f and custom house. Central fire

""ii, forty to fifty business struc-

- and upwards of 100 dwolllng

s'i' Hires, all of tho better class.

ment bill increasing tho houso mom

hershln from 391 to ms.

Tho new apportionment is nasea on

the nopulatlon ns shown by the re

cent census and tne rauo oi represen

tation is one member lor eacn sii.uuu inhnbltants. Former Speaker Cannon

t 11.. , I r. nil rAII n AO

my ai.u.(H.u.B 7i Rcnrescntatlve Crumpncker of !n :iKht having been cut off and the and "-Pr.eseiu" ... n . , .

nest confusion prevailed, tho en

dlnna led an unsuccessful fight to re

strict tho houso memuersnip in tne iu turo to 430.

Under tho bill no state win ioso a mnresontatlve. whilo 1C states will

gain one member each; five will gain two; two will gain three; Pennsylvania will gain 4 and New York G.

KILLS CONVICT FAMILY BILL

Governor Vetoes Measure Designed to

Support Persons uepenaeni on Men in Prison.

T nnRlnK. Mich.. April 28. Governor

n-i,nrn vetoed the Jerome bill, which

,v' New England Telephone and Tele- provides that tho state pay tho wives p"lh company, who climbed tho and families of convicts In tho van-

population being In tho streets

' tdy it is dllllcult to obtain food.

iv restaurants wcro burned, to

"r with one larso and several

ill hotels. Mllltla Is Called Out.

i e fire was visible for 25 miles itkI and thousands of people aro i Tilling In from surrounding towns.

militia was called out by Mayor

v Mm to aid tho police in preserving

ii.r

As the fire spread many deeds of if" ism were enacted. Tho first calls f r :!d to Augusta, Portland and

1 Alston wore made bv wire chiefs of

FAILS

TO GIVE UP BONDS

Mrs. Armour May Withdraw Clemency Toward Her Young Companion and Arrest Follow.

Kansas City. Mo.. May 1. It is reported that the clemency which Mrs. S. 13. Armour extended to the young woman who took $150,000 worth of bonds from Mrs. Armour's safety deposit box will be withdrawn and that the young woman will be arrested. This report comes as tho result of disclosures that the young woman has failed to return ?5O,000 worth of bonds. It also became known that the brother of the young woman, who was supposed to be a wealthy South American, and was expected to make

good whatover bonds could not be recovered, in reality is financially unable to do so.

The woman, who was a closo companion of Mrs. Armour and a member of her household, will contest in the courts against the recovery of the missing bonds. Sho has engaged counsel to look, after her ond of the legal battle.

Chicago. April 29. Edward Tilden.

nresident of tho National Packing

company and for the last few weeks one of tho central figures lu the Lori-

mor olnetlon lnaulrv. was arrested

for contempt of the stato senate. Tho arrest of Mr. Tilden, however,

did not tako place until a writ of habeas corpus had already been granted by Judge Adelor J. Petit, which wa3 returned in court shortly after Mr. Tllden's arrest. The writ was granted by Judge Petit about one-half hour before Assistant Sergeant-at-Arms E. H. Hatfield of tho state senate actually arrested Mr. Tilden In the offices of the National Packing company.

Released on $5,000 Bond. Immediately after ho had served tho

warrant on Mr. Tilden. Hatfield himself was served with the writ of habeas corpus by Deputy Sheriff

Lenke. Thereupon Hatfield took Mr.

Tilden to Judge Petit's courtroom in

the county building. There he was released under bonds of $5.000. fur

nished by the United States Fidelity

and Guarantee company.

George M. Benedict, cashier of the Droverß' Deposit National bank, and William C. Cummlngs, cashier of the

Drovers' Trust and Savings bank, fared exactly as did Mr. Tilden. It

was announced that the ruling that Judge Petit will make after hearing

arguments on the petition for the re

lease of Mr. Tilden will affect them

equally with tho banker. Ruling to Be All Important.

This ruling will decide whether Mr.

Tilden will be sustained in his refusal

to produce his books and those of his banks before the Held committee of the senate, which In Investigating charges that the election of Lorimer was obtained through bribery. If Judge Petit orders his rtlease the senate will be obliged to abandon its efforts to find out whether tho books contain any entries which would

throw light upon the sourco of the Lorimer election fund. On the other hand. If Judge Petit refuses to grant tho . petition for Mr. Tilden's release it means that he must appear before the senate and either reconsider bis refusal to produce his books or be punished for contempt, probably by imprisonment The petition for the habeas corpus writ as filed gave several reasons for the release of the three men. It alleged that the subpoena duces tecum with which they were served to produce their books before the senate did not particularly describe the books they were to produce, that It was not

supported by oath or affirmation and that it was not signed by the president of the senate. It is also alleged that the powers of the Helm committee are Inadequate.

SPARKS FROM LIVE WIRES

Ten perBons wero hurt, two probably fatally, in a collision of two trolley

cars in the shadow ot a viaauci bl Buffalo, N. Y.

A check for $130.000 from John D. Ilockcfollcr has been received by Treasurer Charles W. Perkins of th American Baptist Missionary union In Boaton. Mrs. J. H. Nunn and seven children, ranging in age from adults to an infant, wero burned to death in a firo which dostroyed their home in southwest Hoanoke, Va. Surrounded by a scoro of dogs ot many breeds which sho had found homeless and had befriended, Mrs. Ella Burt, fifty-eight years old, died at her home at Newport, It. I. Hundreds of persons at Dixon, Mo., saw an infuriated circus elephant hurl ltB trainer Into tho air and, after crushing him with its weight, repeat

edly pierce the body with Its tusks.

That tho late Tom 1. Johnson of

Cleveland left no will Is established by

an application of his widow before the surrogate in New York for appoint

ment as administratrix of the estate.

Certain papers of Berlin, Germany,

criticised American diplomatic meth

ods and said the overbearing attitude of tho country was responsible for

tho resignation of Ambassador D. J.

Hill. Assertion Is made by tho Vienna correspondent of tho Medical Record of New York that several cases of paresis, a supposedly Incurable disease, have been cured by Injections o Koch's tuberculin. At the Invitation of Mrs. Taft 100 members of the Mozart society, a New York musical organization, will go to Washington to participate in tho May garden party on the Wblto House lawn on Friday, May 12. Members of the American Newspaper Publishers' association at their meeting in New York elected Bruco Haldeman of the Louisville CourierJournal president of the association, to succeed Herman Rldder. Representative Harris of Massachusetts has Introduced a bill in tho house for a retired list in tho lifo saving service of tho United States. A similar measure waB defeated in tho

last congress after a spirited flghL

Four mysterious attempts within a

month to burn the new high school

building at Niagara Falls. N. Y led the board of education to ask tho police for protection from the Incendiary, and three policemen will guard the

school. Justice Newburger, in tho New York supreme court, signed the final Judgment annulling the marriage of Julia Kuttner and Ferdinand Pinney Earle, the artist, whose matrimonial experiences added the word "affinity" to English slang. Representative John H. Small of North Carolina has Introduced in tho house at Washington a bill prohibiting the use of the common drinking cup in public places at the capital and urged the enforcement of similar legislation In all other parts of tho country.

LONDON TO AID PEACE PLAN

FIND MILLION IN SHANTY

Summoned From Winnipeg to Capital

Because of Critical Canadian Reciprocity Situation.

warrant such expenditure.

JURORS HIT

V Innlpog, Man,. May 1. The crlt

'1 situation at Ottawa has resulted

'he suddon recall of Earl Grey to

apltal from Winnipeg.

. tie governor general has canceled

; 'lis engagements for next week and

' Ith his suite for Ottawa.

Tb determination of the opposition ' r'lit reciprocity with the United

le

Crime Wave Investigators Assert That üjp treaty on tno ground that a par-

Immediate Reforms re ncccs- Ucular ciagg derived less grollt from

BarySltuatlon Serious.

vew York. April 29. Tho grand Jury

which Is Investigating Magistrate Corrigan's charges that a demoralized poHco forco has permitted crime and

vlco to thrive in tms city nnnueu up u

teH nil mimmnr if nn.,.' no L.-ncntitmcnt declaring thnt the sltua

J'ltaPd by Leader Borden, thus pro- Hon in and the condition of the police

vmtillB sir winfrld Laurler from at- force is a matter oi gravo puouc con-

corn and thnt immediate reiorniauou is required.

'ma tho Imperial conference and

''llilllfjli linn fnnaml n nrlafa In nrv

il't nl circles.

State Wipes Out Bonded Debt.

Npknno, Wash., May 1. By taking $700,000 worth of outstanding ''"nds, Stato Treasurer T.tuvla hnn

tj" d out tho remainder of the stato'n

' iificd debt and today Washington fr'f ho first tlmo In its hlßtory will bo J"1' "n a cash basis with no outstnnd-bonds.

Woman Suffocates In Memphis Fire. McmphlH. Tenn.. April 29.-Ono woman was suffocntcd, half a dozen other persons wero overcome by smoke and several were Injured In a firo that wrecked tho lower floor of the Waldran block, n four-story buildlng tho three upper floors being occupied by tho Palmer hotel, a lodging bouss.

It than other classes, then it is tho manufacturer of the country who ought to object, because the treaty In Its nature will not enlarge his market as much as It will that of tho farmer." College Boy Drops Dead. Iloopeaton, 111., April 29. John H. Garland, nged twenty-eight, a student at Greer college, dropped dead following u practice run on tho race track nt tho college Heart trouble, duo to overexertion, was tho cause assigned by a coroaer's jury. His homo was ra Michigan. Harry Whitney, Explorer, III. New Haven, Conn., May 1. Word has beon received by relatives of Harry Whitney, sportsman and arctic explorer, that ho is Buffering from blood poisoning In a fishing camp at Knights Beach, Fla.

Securities Belonging to Daring Woman Speculator, Now In Asylum, Found In Her Home.

New York. May 1. In a dilapidated

shanty at No. 452 Prospect avenue,

Brooklyn, agents of tho state lunacy

commission found stocks, bonds and

! mortgages valued at nearly a million

dollars and scattered about like su

much waste paper.

The wealth belongs to Miss Janes

Perkins Williams, "the woman enigma of Wall street," who, since 1S75, tins been a daring but wise speculator in

stocks. Miss Williams, now in her

seventy-fifth year, has been removed

to tho Long Island Stnte hospital for tho Insane for observation. Her ac

tions, always eccentric, became so

strange recently that friends caused

her removal to the Institution.

A special agent of the lunacy com

mission Is on guard at the rickety shanty, where tho woman had lived

for twenty years in tho depths of

squalor.

Killed In Fight on a Scaffold. Leavenworth, Kan., April 29. In

flat fight on a scaffold at the military prison at Fort Leavenworth John Schramm of St. Louis struck John

Clevonger of Watson, Mo., and knock

ed him off the structure to tho ground. 15 feet below. Clevenger's skull was fractured and he died In the prison hospital.

Taft's Proposed Arbitration Treaty Is

Ratified by Big Gathering In Guildhall. London, April 29. President Taft's

proposed Anglo-American arbitration treaty was unanimously ratified in a

long-continued burst of cheers at one

of tho most remarkable gatherings In

the history of Guildhall.

Every political party and all of the

religious communities were represent

ed on tho platform by their most prominont leaders, and the vast audience comprised persons of eminence In every walk of life. Distinguished

Tories and Liberals vied with one an

other in lauding tho cause of arbitra

tion between the two great Englishspeaking nations of the world, and the fcopo was repeatedly expressed, and as often cheered, that the treaty, though

It did not actually mean disarmament.

would dismiss any future possibility

of war not only between America and

Great Britain, but among any of the

great powers of the earth.

SONS OF REVOLUTION MEET National Society Convenes in Louisville, Its Hosts Being the Members Who Live In Kentucky. Louisville, Ky., May 1. After In-

i formal meetings and religious serv

ices Sunday, the delegates of the semiannual congress of the National So

ciety of the Sons of tho American Revolution held their flrst formal session today In the free Ibrnry.

The national society is meeting In

Louisville at the Invitation of the Kentucky society, the members of which have planned an elaborate program

of social avents for the delegates and the ladles who accompany them. One of the important business propositions

that occupied tho attention of the congress is the proper marking ot tho graves of the signers of the Declaration of Independence. Another is tho

establishment of the Delaware National park near Trenton, to commemorate the famous crossing of the Delaware by "Washington.

WOMAN IS SLAIN WITH CLUB

Wife of Employe on George Gould's

Estate Found Murdered After Two-Day Search.

THE MARKETS.

New York. April 23. t T-r- STOCK Steers $5 45 f 6 60

Ho 6 40 It C, 70

Sheep 3 50 FLOUR-Wlntur Stralsrht.. 4 15 WHEAT May M rnnv-Miiv J

OATS-No. 2 S?H3

RYE No. 2 western z RUTTER Creamen l&Ht

T.-rjriR i

CHEESE 9V4

CHICAOO.

ß 4 75 ft 4 5 ft

3)

t 32 i 23

W 24

r is

05M

Lakewood. N. J., April 29. Mrs.

Charles Turner, a pretty brunette of

middle age, was found murdered in the woods behind a studio building on

Fulton street. The woman's face had

beon beaten In by a big club which lay-near-by stained with blood. The body was found by Arnold Turner, a nephew, who was searching for his aunt who had been missing. Her husband, who is an employe on the estate of George Gould, had hunt ed In vain for her for two days. Young Arnold camo upon the body lying In a pool of blood, lndlcatlnn that she had been killed where she was found.

Canton Rebels Fight. Hongkong. China, April 29. A serious revolutionary outbreak took place In Canton, attended by the firing of tho viceroy's palace and a battle In the streets In which several persons wero killed. Only offlclal messages arc being received from the scene of the uprising. These are of a disquieting character.

ft 5 70 w 5 75 Ö5M Ö 6 124 6 20 $ 24V4 it 16 Iff 134 a 55

rATTI.E Fancy Steers $1 45

Fair Steers 4 W Good Stcor 52

Cows and lleirers J w Calv8 3 CO HOGS Heavy Packers .... 5 SO Hutcher Hors 95 tic 6 00

BUTTER Creamery 16 Dalrv 12 LIVE POULTRY 10 Kr.oa l TrT TdVC nor till. 50

KI.OUR Sprlnjj Wltnat. Sp'I 5 40 g E 55 nnitVVlil Mnv SOViW 3l

Corn. May Hg Oats. May 31HO 31H MILWAUKF.K. GRAIN-Wheat. No. 1 Nor'n $1 4 1 03H Mav w 1? Corn. May Kansas crrr.

GRAIN Wheat, No. 2 Hard J No. 5 Hl Com. No. 2 White n,n Vn 2 White

Hye " ST. LOUIS. CATTLE Native Stecra 5 75 fit fi 23 Texas Steers JM g 6 50 HOGB-Packcrs 6W JffllO Butchers 6 15 grt2S SHEEP Natives 3 75 4 25 OMAHA. CATTLE Native 8teers $5 00 ft J 10 Stockers and Feeder.... 3 . j ? 5 Cows and Helfer 3 00 g 4 M HOOS-HeavV 5 CS g 5 SHEEP Wether 4 W O 4 50

SSHg 45145 34 O