THE FRONTIER. VtTBLlSHKD EVERY THURSDAY BY Thb Frontier Printing Co. O’NEILL. NEBRASKA. OYER THE STATE. There were fourteen graduates from the Osceola high school. Tine Salem Chautauqua will not be held until some time in August The loss of tho Street Car company of Nebraska City by lira was about to,000. Thk city council of Tecumsch has declared war on nickel-ln-tlie-slot ma chines. Thk boycott inaugurated against •ome of the Omaha breweries has been declared off. Citizens of l’lattsmouth have raised a good sum for celebration of the Fourth of July. J. W. Buck of Iloldrege shipped 10, 000 pounds of butter designed for the English market Nebraska City reports her cherry crop much larger than anticipated and prices very good. C. H. Wai.kkh, living one mile north of Surprise, lost a horse, it having been bitten by a rattlesnake. James Fox, an old citizen of Omaha, was run over and killed last week. His head was entirely severed from his body. Craki claims to have done a better freight business this year for the month of May than It did last year by over •1.000. • The Ainsworth Lumber company has secured the government contract for furnishing its milling products to the Indians. Tim Lancaster county teachers' insti tute will be held at the state university, beginning Monday, June 18, and clos ing June 30. The Star says that hay is a very scarce article in. Dorchester, and from present indications it may be more so in the future. Tub Ancient Order of Hibernians will hold a state convention at Tecum seh, June 20th. State officers will be elected at the meeting. Saline county land is assessed at an average price of 83.19 per acre. No one can complain that the assessment is unreasonably high. Fon the month of April the total •mount of milk received at the Lyons creamery was 248,143 pounds, and total gross receipts 81,973.07. Diebs & Day, general merchants of Surprise, closed their store preparatory to moving their stock to Fullerton, Day having sold his interest to Diers Bros. Mrs. Rudiger, on trial at Omaha the second time for the killing of Henry Reiser some months ago, was declared not guilty. The former jury disagreed. The Round Grove postoffice in Cus ter county has been discontinued after having been established fourteen years Mail for that place now goes to Mason City. An effort is being made to locate a business college in Nebraska City. It is understood that the promoters have fair assurance of success in their under taking. Gonkbnor Crounse and Congressman Bryan have been chosen as orators for the Fourth of July celebration at Ne braska.city, and each has accepted the invitation. The county supervisors of Antelope county met and declared the election • court house tax carried. The board is now considering plans and specifica tions for a 813,000 building. Norfolk’s new hotel and opera house is assured. L. J. Reno has secured the necessary capital to put up a 830,000 building. Citizens will be invited to make up 85,000 of the amount. Lou Carroll was convicted at Hast ings of larceny of 830 from the person of T. C. Archer, a farmer, while both were upon a spree. The amount is •uffleient to. send him to the peniten tiary. w iiL Carper s barn at Petersburg, together with his team and two horses belonging to other parties, were burn ed while he was eating breakfast. The origin of the fire is not known. Carper had his team insured. Mr and Mrs. Edward Pheasant, highly esteemed residents of western Gage county, celebrated their golden wedding anniversary last week. A large number of Beatrice friends were present on the occasion. Manly HorrER, the 12-year-old son of M. D. Hopper of Petersburg, was thrown,out of a wagon by a runaway team, and when picked up was uncon acioua No serious damage was done to either the boy or team. E. Werner came to Nebraska City oome time ago and has been employed as an agent for the Singer Sewing Ma chine company, lie left town suddenly the other day, and several creditors are anxiously awaiting his return. Fire destroyed the Nebraska City Street Car company house, together with eighteen head of horses and one h, car. The barn of John Walker, adjoin ing southwest, was also totally de stroyed. The loss is not given. Michael Kepdisgton, a well-to-do property owner and a pioneer citizen of Omaha, aged 05 years, suicided last week by shooting himself in the head while in a lit of despondency. He was troubled over financial matters. The contest over the county seat • question which has existed between Oakdale and Neligh for some time, has •virtually been settled by the voting of a 10 mill tax for the building of a court house at Neligh, the present county . seat. Frank A. Lunda, who deserted from l, ■'* the Sixth United States cavalry at Fort >. Niobrara in March last, was arrested by Chief of Police Heed at Beatrice Md is being held, awaiting instruc tions from the regular army authori ties. The county seat election for Deuel county has been called for Saturday, iJuue 23, with three towns in the race for honors, viz: Chappell, Big Springs and Froid. At the election held in that county some five years ago Big Springs polled over 5,000 votes for county seat. Georoe Carpenter, aged 59, and Mr: Catherine E. Nelson, aged 48, were mai vied last week in Nebraska City b County Judge Eaton. The fact i worthy of mention because this make Ahe groom's fourth and the bride’s thir . ybuture upon the uncertain sea of mai —my. S), . H • Titk special attraction at Humboldt for the Fourth of July will be bioycle, trotting1, pacing and running races, for which purses are offered aggregating StO, Fire destroyed the Moffit livery barn in O’Neill, The building was unoccu pied at tho time. The residence of E. M. Moflitt, which was adjacent to the barn, was destroyed. Thk house of 8. Doty of Urafton was entered by burglars and $33 in cash taken, besides valuable papers. The family had ail retired except Mr. and Mrs. l)oty. They were in the kitchen. The burglars entered a distant room by removing the screens and waising the window. Frank Rower was arrested at Scrib ner by Sheriff Ackerman of Stanton county on the charge of larceny. He is charged with the theft of 335 bush els of corn in the southern part ol Stanton county of which Henry Pelli tier was the* owner. He pleaded guilty. Tmc people of Falls City are work ing had to have the Missouri Pacific division headquarters removed from Hiawatha, Kas., to tneir town. A com mittee has been appointed to confer with the officials and they are now in St Louis endeavoring to persuade them to make the change. S. K. Sutherland, a farmer nearly 60 years of age, was coining to Elmwood with a load of hogs. His team became frightened and ran away, upsetting the wagon and load of hogs on him, breaking his arm and bruising him up severely. A large hog weighing about 000 pounds was killed. The committee appointed at a recent meeting of the Arlington school board to check up the accounts of the treas urer found a shortage of $401.30. The town treasurer's books show tho money to have been turned over to District Treasurer VV. D. liadger, but no credit appears on the district books. Lars Ciinistianson, a well-to-do far mer living six miles south and two miles west from Holdrege, shot his wife twice and then turned the revol ver on himself and pulled the trigger, lie died almost instantly. The woman was living at last reports. Domestic troubles seemed to be the cause of the deed. 1 me annual meeting of the Richard son County Farmers’ Mutual Fire and Lightning insurance company was held last week. About 150 farmers were present. The company was organized in 1887, and now has 445 members,with risks in force amounting to $050,000. The total loss of the company in these seven years has only been $55.25. L. II. Amherst was arrested in the postofiiee at Omaha by Deputy Marshal lioehme, charged with using the mails for fraudulent purposes. lie advertised in several papers for papers for help and requested the enclosure of a 75 eent postal note to insure answer. It is estimated that he made a neat sum in this manner. The general merchandise store of E. S. Sears at North Loup was entered by thieves last week and the safe blown open and $30 or $40 in cash obtained, and the books and valuable papers taken. The books were found in a hidden place later in the day. The work is supposed to have been done by two suspicious looking characters that were seen about town. The Shelton Clipper tells of a farmer living near Wood river who raised two acres of peanuts last year, harvesting a yield of forty-tivo bushels per acre. He sold the crop at $1.50 per bushel. The expense was $30 per acre, leaving a net profit of $37.50 per acre. In addition to this he found that the vines of the crop were worth fully as much as the best hay for feeding. In reporting the number of pounds of butter turned out of the creamery last week, says the Falls City Journal, we stated that 4,500 pounds were turn ed out in the month of May, when it should have been 4,500 pounds a week, as 17,300 pounds were turned out dur ing the month. There are thirty-two cream routes and cream comes from a number of points in Kansas. Rsi.iAni.E information has reached Lincoln that of the thirteen Duffers that abandoned the Industrial army in that city to accept work with that railroad corgmration in Montana, only two reached the scene of operations and actually began work. One of these quit after holding down his job a little more than two weeks. Nobody knows where the deserters went. The Missouri Pacific depot at Elm ! wood was. broken into by burglars re cently. An entrance was effected by cutting out a pane of glass in the north window. All of the express matter and some of the freight was opened up, but nothing of value taken. Charles Kroft, the station agent, is the greatest loser, as his trunk was opened and his watch and an $8 revolver taken. A jury in the district court of Hall county, found A. J. McGee guilty of bastardy. The complainant is Miss Emma Gideon, a prominent young lady of Doniphan, in which city the defend ant also resides. The trial occupied two days, and thirty witnesses wqre summoned for the parties in the bas tardy case. Miss Gideon is the daugh ter of Doniphan's former postmaster. Care Ream of Dakota City went un invited to a park in the Wildwood where a few people were holding a pri vate wake over numerous kegs of “the foaming.” He returned a half hour later with his countenance horribly disfigured, and played even the next day by smashing a man who proved to be entirely innocent of having helped to bring him to grief. The court will adjudicate the matter. t. i*j. larger, an old and prominent citizen of Edgar, died last week. He bad been ailing for several years past with chronic inflammation of the stom ach and had become greatly emaciated before taking to his bed nine weeks ago. The interesting and wonderful feature of this case is that notwith standing his great emaciation he lived forty days without food, being unable to retain anything on his stomach ex cept a little water. The latest crop bulletin says: “The reports, while much more encour aging than those of the preceding two weeks, are not quite as favorable as it was hoped they would be. This is due, no doubt, to the fact that most of our correspondents forward their reports before the beneficial effects of the rains on Friday night had become very no ticeable. Nearly all localities in the state have been visited by refreshing showers, and that they have been of incalculable benefit to all crops except, possibly in some sections, oats and winter wheat there can be no question. BOLDLY OWNS UP TO HAVING BOUGHT TRUST STOCK. HE SAYS HE WOULD DO SO AGAIN. ■ j Senator Kannom'i Son Alto Dealt In the Stock—A Lari;© Number of Senators Called Before the Investigating Coin ink tec—Other Late Wash ington News of General Interest. Washington, June IS.—Senator Quay was before the sugar trust com mittee just before 3 o'clock. He boldly told the committee that ho had bought sugar stock for specula tion and that he would do so again. When Senator Ransom appeared be fore the senate sugar trust investiga tion committee to-day, he was asked, as were other senators who had been before the committee, the following question by Senator Lodge: “Has any member of your family or any person in your employ or any clerk employed under the laws of the United States in your service, been to your knowledge, interested in any of the ways indicated in any of tile preced ing questious in any transactions in sugar stocks or certificates during the period mentioned?" Mr. Ransom said that Thursday night he had been visited at his home by Mr. Howland, correspondent of the New York Press, who asked him substantially the same question as had been put to him by the commit tee. lie had made an explicit denial, whereupon Mr. Howland informed him that a brokerage firm in this city —Silsbee & Co.—had an entry in their books which indicated that the sena tor had speculated in sugar stocks during the period of the tariff debate. • “Mr. Howland,” continued Mr. Ransom, “asked me if I knew any other person by the name of Ransom in the city. I told him I knew of but one person in the city by the name of Ransom and that was my son George who was my clerk, ile asked me where he was and I said he was in the parlor and I would step in and bring him in. I was perhaps more cautious than the occasion required and I said to Mr. Howland that I would thank him to come with me to the door so that he could see no com munication should take place between me and my son. I went to the parlor door where George was and beckoned him to come in. I did not speak to him or see him between the parlor and my room, and when he got in my room I asked the gentlemen to state their business to him. and told my son whatever the matter was to tell the truth about it.” “My son,” Mr. Ransom went on, “stated that he had bought some sugar stock on the 17th or 18th of April. He put up a margin of $10 which he paid the broker on sugar stock. He said on the same day he put up a margin of $35 on cotton. He said he lost on cotton and made $10 on the sugar and that after that he repeated the same bet on sugar, but not on cotton, and I think he lost the second. He then stated that he and Captain Barnes, a messenger here at the commerce committee room, after that on two occasions bought $10 worth of sugar stock. They went in together. I asked the correspondent to examine my son as fully as he pleased and examine Captain Barnes, too.” Mr. Rasom proceeded to relate that about two weeks ago Captain Barn es had come to him to tell him that a friend had informed him that he (the senator) had been speculating in sugar. The senator denied the story and sent Barnes to investigate it The latter returned with the assur ance that there was no basis for the assertion. The senator had told the corre spondent Howland about this incident withholding the name of Barnes’ in formant which had been communi cated to him in confidence. Senator Ransom advised the com mittee to examine Mr. Barnes and see if his story did not correspond with what had Just been stated to the committee. The senators examined up to this morning were Messrs. Lodge, Gray, Alien, Lindsay and Davis, members of the investigating committee, and Al drich, Allison, Bate, Berry, Black burn, Blanchard, Brice, Call, Camden, Carey, Chandler, Cockrell, Coke, Cul lom, Daniel, Davis, Dixon, Dolph, Du bois, Faulkner, Frye, Gallinger, George, Gibson, Hale, Hansbrough, Harris, Hawley, Higgins, Hill, Hoar and llunton. All denied having had any dealings in sugar stocks of any knowledge of such deals. A NEW RECORD BY CONGRESS. Only Eighty-Five 1’ubllc and Eighteen Private Bills So Far Passed. Washington, June 18.—Up to to-day only eighty-five public measures have been enacted into law and the private laws are limited to the unprecedented ly small number of eighteen. The whole number of bills intro duced in the house is 7,453—far below the average. Of these 1.086 have been reported—also far below the usual number at this date. The falling off of bills, reports, etc., has been so great that it has been one of the main causes of the recent wholesale reduc tion of force in the government print ing office. It is said that the former fiublic printer, Mr. Palmer, establ ished his force with the expectation that the amount of work to be done by this congress would keep pace with that of former congresses, and that this in part accounts for the large surplus of help Public Printer Benedict found when he recently as sumed charge. The large falling off in general legislation is attributed to the cen tering of interest in the tariff and to the depleted condition of the treasury. Senators and members have known that it was useless to press bills for public buildings and other appropria tions in view of the stringency at the treasury and have refrained from urging private measures. Owing to delays and objections of various kinds only two private pension bills have pot through the lious: and become laws. As a rule the private pension acts are so numerous that the total of private bills is. very large. The house calendar up to date is clear of all appropriation bills except the deficiency, but there are 130 im portant general bills awaiting a hear ing and eighty-six bills of a general character Dot carrying an appropria tion. Among these arc bills to admit New Mexico and Oklahoma to state hood, to send a congressional commis sion to examine the Nicaragua canal route, to finally adjudicate swamp land grahts, to permit pen sions to non-residents, to establish consular inspection of immigrants, to investigate the effect of machinery on labor, to investigate the wages of women and children, to construct canals from Lake Superior to the Mississippi river and from Lake Erie to the Ohio river, to prohibit dealings in options, to promote the efficiency of the naval militia, to establish a uniform bankruptcy system and to aid the Southern Cotton exposition. Quite a number of these will get a hearing, but the number to be interrupted by adjournment will be exceptionally large. _ WORKING ON WOOL CLAUSES. The Senate Begin* Active Consideration of the Schedule—Vest on Shoddy. Washington, Juno 18.—After the close vote in the senate yesterday afternoon on the Peffer amendment to put low duties on wool, Mr. Sher man offered an amendment, which was defeated, 2!) to 34, and Mr. Peffer one to place all woolen manufactures on the free list. This was taken up when the senate met to-day and at once voted upon. It was defeated—3 to 46. The three Populists, Allen, Kyle and Peffer, alone voting in favor of it. Mr. Hansbrough an nounced that he would have voted “aye” had he not been paired. The senate then plunged into the actual consideration of the woolen schedule. The first paragraph (278) placed a duty of 15 per cent on wool and hair in the form of stubbing, waste, mungo shoddy, corded waste, carbonized noils and wool in the form of roving, roping or tops in the follow ing paragraphs dutiable at 15 per cent. Mr. Vest explained that the finance committee had been moved to place a duty on shoddy and waste in order to exclude them from the country. One of the purposes of placing wool on the free list was to discourage the manu facture of shoddy. Under the McKin ley act the manufacture of shoddy had doubled. Last year it had reached 890,000,000. THE NEW EIGHTH CIRCUIT. Martin of Kansas Scliumlng bat I'liUlps or Thayer More Likely. Washington, June 18.—The bill pro viding for an additional United States circuit judge in the Eighth circuit has already passed the senate and the favorable report made on it yesterday by Mr. Terry of the house judiciary committee is accepted as conclusively indicative of its unopposed passage to the statute books. The eighth judicial circuit is made up of the districts of Minnesota, Morthern and Southern Iowa, Eastern and Western Missouri, Eastern and Western Arkansas, Nebraska, Colo rado, Kansas, North and South Da kota, Wyoming, New Mexico, Okla homa and Utah. Circuit Judge Cald well was appointed from Arkansas and Circuit Judge Sanborn from Min nesota, so these two states are thrown out by the gossipers to start with. Senator Martin of Kansas is ambi tious to fill the new bench, but it is beileved that Judges Phillips and Thayer stand a better show than he does of getting there. PROBABLY A MURDER. The Body of Henry Uhlinger of St. Joseph Found In the River* St. Joseph, Mo., June 18.—The body of Henry Uhlinger,' who dis appeared from this city several weeks ago, was dragged from the Missouri river at Atchison this morn ing. The body had a wound presum ably made by a bullet, and Uhlinger was probably murdered and his body thrown in the river. When he disap peared he bad 8600 in his possession, none of which was found on the body to-day. OVERPOWERED BY COXEY1TES. North Dakota Officers Attacked and Re lieved of Weapons—Four Wounded. Jamestown, N. D., June 18.—The I Coxeyites who stole a train at Dawson and who were surrounded by the marshal’s posse a short distance west of here are again headed for this city afoot, having at tacked the deputies pt a given signal, relieved them of their weapons and departed. In the skirmish four depu ties were shot, how seriously is not known. A BraYe Tonne Farmer. Richmond, Ky., June 18.—Six young ladies were capsized at Flint in the Kentucky river last night. Jack Sewell, a young farmer, saw the mis hap and leaping into the river rescued one. Then he returned and swam to shore with two and finally he saved two more. The sixth sank before he could reach her, but he recovered the body. Xo In It 11 V^raiim for Chicago. Washington, June 18.—Chicago lost the Indian supply house in the house to-day. Mr. O’Neill of Massachusetts, in the chair, on motion of Mr. Strauss of New York ruling that the proposed removal of the warehouse from New York to Chicago was new legislation and on its face did not reduce appro priations. The Anti-Options Bill Next. Washington, June 18.—Mr. Hatch of Missouri announced to-day that he would call up the anti-options bill Monday. He expressed confidence that it would receive prompt atten tion and that it would pass by a large majority. Westers Imprisoned at n Fort. Omaha, Neb., June 18.—Judge Dundy has decided that the 250 com monwealers captured at Ogalla shall be taken to Fort Sidney, recently abondoned, and kept until tried ana, if convicted, compelled to serve sen tence there. SENSATIONAL EXPOSE. THE CORRUPTION OF THE NEV YORK POLITICIANS. Blackmail of the Police Shown Up Three Thousand Six Hundred Men Divide Over 918,000,000 Each Year— Disreputables Forced to Pay Enor mously for “Protection" — Merchants and Others Levied Upon for Special Privileges. New York’* Corruption* New York, Juno 15.—A New York paper, which has heretofore been re garded as friendly to Tammany, printed to-day over a column under the head of “Police Revenue,” show ing the amount of illegitimate reven ue received by the police of New York annually, based upon the testi mony thus far taken before the Lexow senatorial investigation committee. The number of men employed on the police force, which is 3,600, and the amount appropriated by the board of estimates in the budget of 1894 was $5,139,147. This amount is en tered up as the legitimate sum re ceived by the police force for its main tenance. The paper then continues: “The testimony brought out by the Lexow investigating committee shows that the police, in addition to their sala ries from the city, have had an addi tional income contributed by the keepers of disorderly houses, saloons, gambling houses, merchants and push cart peddlers. This extra income is called ‘paying for protection’ by those who pay. By the public it is sometimes called blackmail. The _ police probably call it ‘perquisites.’ If the testimony is true the police were very vigilant in lo cating all persons who could be forced to contribute to this extra fund for their benefit. While an extra estimate of the income of the police from these sources is impossible at this stage of the 'investigation, enough facts have been made public to show that it was enormous, and approximately correct figures can be made.” - The fact is cited chat there are 7,000 saloons in the city of New York, and the paper reckons that the alleged police charges for protection for side doors open on Sunday is 810 a week for each saloon. Allowing that only half of the saloons paid these charges, the total of one year is 81,820,000. The paper quotes an official of the police department who estimates the number of degraded women in the city to be 45,000. Upon the basis of the last census an estimate of five persons to a house is made, and upon this basis it is stated that the 45,000 immoral women in New York are quar tered in 9,000 disorderly houses. Ac cording to the alleged police schedule of prices for opening disorderly houses, the income of the police from this one source is estimated by the paper to be 83,600,000. After the opening of these immoral houses, ac cording to the evidence before the Lexow committee, the keepers of the houses are required to pay from 850 to 8100 per month and the paper reckons that from this source the police re ceive an annual income of 88,100,000. Four hundred and fifty thousand dollars a year is estimated as the amount of the alleged extra charges for special favors and protection from the police. The estimated income from gambling houses and, policy shops is 8165,000 a year. There are reckoned to be other special rates levied upon merchants for the privilege of putting boxes upon their sidewalks, merchants who want to keep open on Sunday, and push cart peddlers who want to evade the city ordinance that prohibits them from standing more than five minutes in one place. . The paper states that 200 new po licemen are placed upon the force each year and estimates upon the basis of the alleged rate of 8300 to get on the force, that the income from this source is SGO.OOO a year. The grand total, made upon the 1 basis of the testimony presented ' before the Lexow committee, includ ing the legitimate appropriation made by the state to maintain the police and the other items abort referred to, aggregate 815,354,147. The following arc the items which enter into this total: From the city, 85.139,147.G4; disorderly houses, 88,120,000; saloons, 81.820,000; gambling houses, 8165,000; merchants and peddlers, 850,000; new members of the force, 860,000; grand total income. 815,354,147.64. TO MARK A FAMOUS SPOT. Tne ronndatloa or tha Dobbs Ferry Monument Laid With Ceremonies. New York, June 15.—The New York society of the Sons of the American Revolution laid the foundation stone to-day of a monument at Dobbs Ferry, designed to mark the spot where Washington had his headquarters in 1771 aDd planned the decisive cam paign against Cornwallis. The mon ument will stand in front of the old Livingstone house. It will be of gray granite and will stand in the center of a semi-circular wall. A statue of Count de Rochambeau will ultimately surmount it. June 14 was chosen for the celebra tion of the laying of the base stone, because it is the anniversary of the date when the stars and stripes were first selected as the official standard of the United States. The steamboat Howard Carroll left West Forty-fourth street at 10 o'clock this morning for Dobbs’ Ferry with about 1,000 persons on board, members of the Sons of the Revolution and their guests. Among the latter were Vice president Stev enson and family, Secretary Herbert, Assisstant Secretary McAdoo, Ad miral Oherardi, Admiral Benhara, General W. A. Stryker, Postmaster Dayton, General Fitz John Porter and many other well known men. Pres ident Cleveland, Sir Julian I’auncefote tile British ambassador, and M. Pat renotre the French ambassador, sent their regrets, as did also Governor Flower and Mavor Gilrov. Santa Fa Shop Hands’ Time Cut. Topeka, Kan., June 15.—The Santa Fe shop hands in Topeka, commencing to-morrow, will hereafter work only j thirty-two hours a week instead of j forty as heretofore. Lack of business ' necessitates the reduction. j M.n, Public Men W„hlnCto» 0.u. that He Is. P“* Washington June l5.~Som9 ». , ago the influential Democrat' LrmtirPPr°Priati0n3 com®itt»e t formally agreed that when tk! I ficiency appropriations billshould brought in. VV. C P , . I(* W ; Kentucky, should be relieved^? •°I ; management on the floor As cl man of the sub-committee s* deficiency items were referred, Bre^ inridge would, if parliamentarV u^' I were followed, control the bifl ww 5 under consideration, and be in quence for the time the leader of "it Democratic side. Chairman . _ .'> J ruuiu jr—viu ot-uo pv. -. n Chickens-Spring per doz.* " Lemons. S Is Oranges—Florida. " „ l lneapples-Per doz. i J2 Potatoes—New... -. 1 19 14 9* 10 6 2 00 Beans—Navy. ■ J Done_!»*>*• It 11 ... 1 51 @3 00 St 400 @ 3 75 ,77. 2 00 @120 @2 11 (Cl 60 ,r/ 1 60 Peas—Per bu.• . < w M „ Beans-VV ax, per bu.. ■ • • i ™ @ 3 50 Onions—New Southern per bbl. 3 00 49 s llogs—Mixed packing. ^ llogs—Heavy weights. 4 63 Beeves—Prime steers ........ ™ * . Beeves—Stockers and Feeders i so Mnorc—VAir f/) ITOOd..,,.. * Steers—Fair to good. - „ Steers—Westerns. J Sheep—Lambs... a nn sheep—Choice "aUves-.^-- 3 00 0 „ - 70 @ 3 40 @ 4 30 @ 4 OO @ 4 50 US 4 15 Wheat—No. 2, red winter., Corn—No. 2., s—Mixed western. 63 ^ 46 @ ffl 63’i Pork.. Vi Lard.CHIC AGO." Wheat^-No. 2 »prlng. J5 Corn—Per bu @ 4eH @13 75 @ 7 20 56* 40 Is 41 Oats—Per bu...,,«{ @12 12 P°rH.». 6 65 44 6 67!i Lard....a «5 @4.» hogs—Packers and mixed.-.. J ^ ® 4 90 _t’.nm. steers 10 extra... * ™ M . *«» 3 90 Cattle—Com. steers to extra. Sheep-Lamb...--.--j. Wheat-No. 2 red. cash. jH Corn-Per bu. So Oats—Per bu... .22 Hogs—Mixed packing. J JK t attle—Native steers. « «« Sheep Natives-3 00 W heat—No. 2 red, cash. ” Corn—No. f Oats—No. 2. Cattle—Stockers and feeders.. Logs—Mixed packers @ 65* @ 38J* @ 4 95 <# 4 W © 4 40 64 © 36 (ft 3"» 39 @ 30la 2 76 © J 80 — @ 4 #» 4 60