The Nebraska Independent -DECEMBER 13, 1908 1A ooooooooooooooooooooo Weekly Market Report ; LIVE STOCK MARKETS - South Omaha Doc. 12. Good to choice steers $5.506,30; fair to good cornfed steers, $5.005.50; goal ' to choice range steers, $4.755.40; com mon to fair range steers, $3.G04.OO; good to choice cows and heifers $3.50 84.00; fair to good cows and heifers o iTr:f?Q "Jft. vntnmnn tn fair enwa and heifers $1.602.75; good choice stack ers and feeders $4.254.80; . fair to good stockers and feeders $2.75 4.30: common to fair stockers $2.75 3.40; bulla, stags, etc., $2.0004.00; veal calves-$4.00 6.00. - 1-4 74 3-4. -No. 2 45 -1-4 ; No. 2 yellow red 74 . Corn 47 1-4. OatsNo. 2 34c; -No. 2 white 36 1-2; No. 3 whLe 33 3-4 36. Rye No. 2 64 1-2 65. Barley Fair to choice malting, 49 55c. Flax seed No. 1 $1.14 1-2; No. northwestern $1.22 1-2. Timothy seed Prime, $4.354.50 Clover Contract grades $13.75. I Kansas City Kansas. City, Dec. 12 Cattle Re ceipts 21,000; market steady to 10c lower.- Choice export and dressed beef steers $5.757.50; fair to good f$4.005.50; western- steers $3,40 5.50; stockers and feeders $2.50 4.50; native cows, $2.004.25; native -Kfra MT.Kfln- hulls $2.25 4.50: calves $3.006.50. Hogs Receipts 19,000; market 7 1-2 cents lower. Top $6.27; bulk of sales $6.206.27; heavy $6.256.27; pack ers $6.206.25; pigs and lights, $5.75 6.25. ' " . Sheep Receipts $6,500 head; mar ket stroma: to 10c lower. Lambs $6.0(f 7.65; ewes and yearlings $4.50 6.25. Kansas City . . , Kansas - City, . Dec. 12 WJieat-Jler ceirber 68 1-2; May 72 7-8; July, 7 J 1-2. Cash No. 2 hard 70 70 1-2; No, n fi l-2iP,9! No. 2 red 7073; No 3 67' 1-2 71. Corn December 37 1-4; May 39 3-8; directed to a toothpick which he held in his hand, and remarked: ' "' 'I scarcely, ever take a toothpick without being reminded of the time, when an acquaintance , of mine made $30,000, and it was a toothpick1 that did the trick.-! '.. i -, , , " You see," he continued, ."it hap pened in the spring of 1904, when on the day in question my Mend was taking luncheon at this hotel, and after he had finished and paid his check he directed his steps toward Broadway.. He had-proceeded scarce: ly half a block, however, when he found himself greatly annoyed by a particle of . food -. very firmly wedged between two of his teeth, and, find ing -himself without" a toothpick, ho retraced his steps' to the hotel to get one. - v i , - "On his way out of the hotel- he chaneed-to -pass a table at which were seated John W. Gates- and ' a friend, and just , as he reached the table he heard Mr. Catcs remark: . "'I feel very positive that you will see steel (common) selling at -10 be fore the end of the summer.' July "40c- Cash No. .2 mixed 38 39 -14; No, -3 -38; -No. 2 white 38 34. - -"Now, my friend did not happen to Chicago Chicago. Dec. 12. Cattle Receipts 5,500 head; "market steady,' but slow, Common to prime steers $3.85; bulls $1.752.15; common to prime calves, .$2.007.50; stockers and feeders $2.85 4.50. J Hogs Receipts 28,000 head; market 5 10c lower. Choice heavy $6.25 .35; light putcners $i.zdlio..w; cuuice -'light $6.256.30; light mixed $6.15 .25; packing $6.006.20; pigs $5.50 .20. . Sheep Receipts 18,000 head; mar ket for best, firm; others weak. Sheep $3.006.15; yearlings, $5.256.60 lambs $5.008.00. Oats-No. 2 white 34 l-434 1-2; No. 2 mixed, 3333 1-2. - Receipts of wheat 63 cars. WEAVING RARE GOBELINS make, a. regular busines sof trading in the1 market, but knowing it . was Mr. Gates who made the remark, and also the great weight his .word carried in such matters, he decided to take ad vantage of the tip and it did not take Hard Work and Small Pay for the him long to place his order with a Men Who Do It . broker to sell 1,000 shares ' of steel at 42. : ; : ; , The foreman of the weaving piani "Well, you all know what steeKdid stood by while the weavers were De- durmg the summer of 1904, going ing paid off. Some were paid 8 cents down below 9, but my friend ordered a yard, others 10, 11 and li, accord- nlg tra(je to De ci03ed around 10, and ing to the number of "picks" in the ne cieaned up a profit of $20,000, cloth, or threads to the square inch. which he never would have made had "There's a man who did 114 yards it not been for the little toothpick." of 60 picks ""at 12 cents a yard, he New York Press. . said, as the cashier paid over to the : weaver $13.68. . "That's a pretty good CATTLE BARONS FIND PARADIZE week's work. And yet there are . weavers who turn "out only one yard Ranchmen of. Old Mexico Now- Ship of stuff a year. They are the Gobe- pjng Feeders t0 Kansas ' lin tanstrv weavers, who work in tha faotnrv in Paris, which is owned Chihauhau, the new paradize of the acres. This will give us a total in closure of over two million acres. "At present it is strictly a cattla proposition, but-we decided to put in 1 large reservoir and arc. beginning to plan farming on a large scale. We have , 100,000 acres . of fine farming land and plenty of water. The project -includes the erection of a beet sugar factory, ; which" will operate the year round. We never have frosts down there to amount to anything. . "I brought back some samples, of , corn raised without irrigation. The corn grows : ten to fifteen feet high, withfirnv well rounded ears, two to: four ; ears - to the stalk. Trees 'set ut last year have grown twelve feet ',. n a single summer. We have, access to two railroads, : one, bordering' the property for 150 . jniles and the other-going through it or a short dis'rance. ; We have gov ernment telegraph service and;three- ;overirment gendarmerie posts : locat-; d on the ranch. "The entire zone traversed by Chi huahua has an elevation ranging from. 000 to 6,000 feet, not uncludin? the; mountain area. ,The country ' is re markably -. healthful. Wheat,. corn,- fruit and fig trees grow side by side.' "I believe that in the near future - Chihuahua 'and Sonora will be entire ly Americanized. Nine-tenths of the area of both states is now controlled and operated by American capital and talent. Don Luis Tarrazas may be! aptly called, the last of the Mexicans in . that art of the country. He is one of the largest individual land own ers and cattle raisers in the world. The Mormon colonists are devel oping the resources of the country with great pioneering. - "It is a wonderful -region and its possibilities are almost unlimited." Salt Lake Herald. " St. Joseph South St. Joseph, Mo., Dec. 12. aCttle Receipts 4,212 head; market steady. Natives $4.006.75; cows and heifers 2.004.50; stockers and feed ers $3.004.25. Hogs Receipts 11,313 heai; market 10c loweer. Top $6.30; bulk of sales 6.206.25. Sheep Receipts 5.515 head; market strong. - Lambs $7.60; ewes $5.35. GRAIN MARKETS Omaha, Dec. 12. Wheat No. 2 hard 6969 1-2; No. 3 hard 66 1-2 68 1-4"; No. 4 hard 6567; No. 3 spring 67 1-2 70c. Corn No. 3 3636 1-2; No. 4 35 1-2 35 3-4; No. 3 yellow tJG l-2 06 3-4; No. 3 white, 36 l-437. - Oats No. 3 mixed 31 1-2; Nx 3 white 32 1-2; No. 4 white 31 l-2 32 1-2. . ' : " Rye No. 2 63 1-2;, No. 3 62. Chicago Chicago, Dec. 12 Wheat No. spring 78S5; No. 3 74S4; No. by the French government. They aver- cattle barons, - its broad acres quiver ago in the year , only from one . to n With resources . its picturesque three yards of goodsaccording to toe beauty heightene(1 by the giint of nneness or me weave auu iue .mm- . . , , ... . n Mexican mountains, is vividly pic cacy of the pattern. "These weavers work at hand looms tured'by Frank J. Hagenbarth, gen- where thev nut In" the filling, or weft, eral manager of the Wood-Hagenbarth with a shuttle held in the left hand. Cattle company, The back of the tapestry is toward After a visit of inspecUon at tne them. A mirror shows them the othar company's immense property and an side. Baskets of wool in every shade .eventful trip homeward, Mr. Hgen-J or color surround them. They use barth arrived home recently. 1,400 tones in all. . Skillla as these Most of the time in Mexico was workingmen are, their pay is no big- spent in looking over the Wood- Hag ger than that of ; the. ordinary Ameri- enbarth ranch, consisting of two and can laborer. They get about $600 a a fourth million acres in Chihuahua year on an average, or about $12 a and a fourth million acres in Sonora. week. But then it must be remember- This is probably the largest individ- ed "that a dollar goes further in ual cattle ranch in the world. France than it does here. These "We have about 4,000 square miles," Gobelin tapestries, requiring years in Mr. Hagenbarth said quietly, as though the makine. are. of course, very ex- referring to a back yard potato patch, pensive. An offer of $30,000 wouldn't "and we found things in excellent fret some of them. shape, with an abundance of cattle, "New Gobelins you can't buy at all. water and grass, and . some of the fat- The French government has them test cattle ever seen on the range. made to give" away as presents to its Cows with calves by their sides were friends Deople of power and position, -fine and dandy, It was Gobelin tapestriy. you remem- "We shipped out about 1,200 calves ber, that France gave to Miss Alice to Kansas for an experiment in mak- l loose veil aa a weuuiug yiescuu 1 uu; ui. v ".u. Xgw York Press. These calves will be fed for ten ' j months on a diet of chopped corn, TOOTHPICK LED TO FO RTU N E cotton seed and alfalfa. If the ex periment is a success we shall dis- Charles M. Schwab's Story of Man pose of our entire output in this way Who Overheard a Tip We have about 25,000 head of cattle At tha Waldorf the othor nizht and are using high grade Durham A Mean Man As a ship was nearing the harbor of Athens a woman1 passenger ap-proached-the captain, and, . pointing to distant hills covered with snow, ask ed: "What is that, white stuff on the hills, captain?" "That is snow, madam," answered the captain. "Is it, really?" remarked the wo man. "I thought so; but a gentleman has just told me that it was Greece!" Ex. .. Charles M. Schwab was seated with a party of friends when he happened for the moment to have his attention bulls for breeding purposes. . "We decided to build an additional 100 miles of fence. Inclosing 600,000 NOTICE OF EXECUTOR'S SALE In the district court of Lancaster County, Nebraska. In the- matt r of the estate of Peter S. Sehamp, de Notice is hereby given that in pur suance or a license of Hon. Lincoln Frost, Judge of the District Court of Lancaster County, . Nebraska, made and issued on the 28th day of Novem ber A. D., 1906, for the sale of the real estate described as north eighty- two feet of lots one (1), two (2) and three (3), and 'all of lot four (4) in block four (4) of the village of Mal colm, Lancaster County, Nebraska, the undersigned, executor of the will of Peter S. Schamp will sell at the east door of the court house in Lincoln, Lancaster County, Nebraska, on the 24th day of December, 1906, at eleven o'clock in the forenoon of said day at public vendue the real estate abov described, such sale to be on the fol lowing terms, the highest bidder for cash, subject to all liens and incum brances. Said sale will remain open for on hour. Dated December 6, 1906. ASA P. SCHAMP. Executor of the will of Petef V Schamp, deceased. .. . 'v . '3l