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About Valentine Democrat. (Valentine, Neb.) 1900-1930 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 23, 1909)
'Jr . The Valentine Democrat VALENTINE , NEB. L 1\ [ . RICE , - - - - Publisher - . ; r. , ; . . OMAHA GAE STBI1 . . . . , , - TWO NONUXIOXIEX HANDLED " " - ' " IN ROUGH MANNER. ' , ; rr . .r1 ; , . ' . ' : , ' Violence Shown at Bluffs - Street Car : Derailed and Windows Smashcc " Company Brings in Workers from Chicago. , Sunday was the second day of the 1 ( Strike of the conductors and motor- 5men on the Omaha and Council Bluffs Srteet railway and brought the first I . serious disturbances and furnished the 1 first indication that the strike might > result in violence. Two non-union motormen were caught by strike sym- pathizers ! during the afternoon and subjected to rough treatment , and fivc arrests resulted. A hurry call was re- ceived from a southside car barn eurly in the evening , but when a patrol load ? " , of policemen arrived all was quiet. . In anticipation of serious trouble 'jduring the stay in Omaha Monday I afternoon of President Taft 250 mem- : bers of the Omaha business men's as- sociation : held a meeting Sunday after- < ioon to effect some plan by which to insure the safety of the chief execu- I tive , and prevent or minimize any dis- jturbance while the president is the , Ii' , city's guest. Those present pledg their assistance to this end and in- i i jdorsed the action of the street rail- 'Way officials in refusing to accede to | the demands of the strikers. t The arrival of a large number ot men from Chicago to tako the plac ( ' ! ' of strikers and the promised arrival pf 400 more Monday morning caused : uneasiness among the ranks of the -strikers , but their leaders declare that everything will be done to prevent vio- ' { ence. The first violence in the strike at . Council Bluffs came Sunday afternoi wehn a car on the interurban line wa : -derailed and the windows smashed. PETITION UNCLE SAM. : . Oklahoma Indians Protest Again Treatment They Received. Protesting against the treatment : they are receiving at the hands of the state and county officials of Oklaho- ma , 16,000 Oklahoma Indians , com- prising Creeks , Cherokees Chickasaws and Choctaws , have caused a petition to be'sent to Washington seeking re- , iief. iief.While While Commissioner of Indian Af- fairs Valen acknowledged in an ad- -dress before the meeting of the In- -dian Protective league that there was just ground for complaint , he asid the " , Indian officers were powerless to offer , relief without congressional action. NURSE BURNS TO DEATH. .Katron Seriously Injured in Rcadinj ! Cal. . Hospital Fire. Mrs. J. E. Harding , a nurse , was 'burned to death and Miss Constantine Rainsbarry , the matron was seriously injured in a fire that destroyed the : St. Caroline hospital in Reading , Cal. Seven patients were rescued by the matron and her assistant , Miss Ber- 'tha Lampkin. Miss Rainsbarry : , who in an effort ' to find Mrs. : Harding returned to the building after the patients ha.d been -carried out , was compelled to jump ] .from a second story window. GASOLINE LAUNCH BURNS. -One Student Drowns and Many Sen- ; iors Have Narrow Escape. Theodore Englender , junior , aged 18 years , son of the pastor of a Ger- man Lutheran church , was drowned ; Hay DeKay and Ray Grosbeck were badly burned about the hands , and _ twenty-two seniors of the Mt. Clem- ens , Mich. , high school , many of them girls : , had a narrow escape from death Sunday when the party was returning Tfrom a picnic at Tashmoo pai'k , burn- ed to the water's edge in the mouth of the Clinton river. " Injunction is Denied. Judge B. S. Rodey has denied the Injunction sought by the United States to restrain Gov. Post and the treasurer and auditor of Porto Rico from dis . bursing insular funds in accordance with the Olmstead act. Gotxl Roads Congress. 'Go , , ' . Harmon has invited the gov - ernors of nil the states and territories . of the Uniiod States to attend with delegations the national good roads congress to be : held in Columbus , O. October 26 to29. . Sioux City Live Stock Market. : , Saturday's quotations on the Sioux . City live stock market follow : choice feeders , $4.50&5.25. Top hogs , S.05. Gcoi. Funston Injured. . Brig. Gen. Frederick Funston , com- ' , . tnandant of the army service schools , . . Buffered a severe fracture of the right shoulder Sunday at Leavenworth , } Kan. He stumbled or fell on an un- " jeven concrete walk. He will be confin : , . ! , ed to his quarters for several days. . . . . . Montana , Town Burning. - A report received from Beach , 45 : " iles east of Glendive , Mont. , states : "Files J\ : \jthat \ the town was burned Sunday. . - I . h ' . . - . S S . . r ' : " a " . ' ' . r . JOHNSON VERY LOW. Physicians Hope On , But a Crisis Is Imminent. After a day of apparent Improve- ment , Gov. Johnson Friday night , at Rochester , Minn. , was at death's door and no encouragement was given by his physicians that would last through the night. Up to 3 o'clock In the af- ternoon the doctors were very opti- mistic concerning the condition of their patient , but shortly after that time a sudden relapse occurred and Mrs. Johnson was hastily summoned to the sick room. For some hours no information could be obtained as to Mr. Johnson's condition , but about 7 o'clock a bulletin was issued stating that the governor had had a relapse and was In a critical condition. Dr. William J. Mayo : admitted that the patient's condition was extremely serious and intimated that the worst might be expected. While the doctors did not abandon hope , they refused to hold out any encouragement of a suc- cessful termination of Gov. Johnson's illness , even should he survive i the night. night.With With his wife at his bedside and his physicians in constant attendance Gov. Johnson was swaying between life and death Saturday morning. In the last official statement given out the sur- geon said : "I do not think Gov. Johnson will die tonight. If he" survives Saturday he will have an even chance for his Mfe. " RIVAL BIDS SUBMITTED. Great Northern and Milwaukee Roods Want Mail Contract. Rival propositions to carry the mails from Chicago to Seattle in fifty- ; ix hours have , been submitted by the Great Northern Railway company and by the Chicago , Milwaukee and St. Paul railroad. Such an accomplish- ment as is proposed would clip six- teen hours : off the present schedule for the 2,200 miles. The threatened speed war has for its reward the four- year contract for carrying the overland mail from Chicago for the Puget sound country , Alaska and trans-Pacific ports , and from Chicago to St. Paul , and Minneapolis. It means nearly $7,000,000 addition- al revenue to the successful road dur- ; ing the four years following next Feb- ruray , when the contract is due to be awarded. . FRAUDS UPON WOMEN. \merican Given Three-Year Term in . a London Bastile. James Egan , who , according to the Jvidence of the police , once served a long term of imprisonment in New York for burglary and larceny , was ; , sentenced ; in London , England , Friday ' ; to three years' penal servitude , after having been found guilty of a series of frauds upon women. Egan's method of > operation was to represent himself as a detective who had come to s , r- ' est the woman's husband , and from the wife he would obtain money to : avert the threatened apprehension. DOUBLE INDIANA TRAGEDY. 5odies of Missing Mother and Babe Are Found. The bodies of Mrs. Joseph Polly and her baby were found on the edge of a cornfield near Bloomfield , Ind. , Fri- day. day.The The woman was hanging to a tree ' rith her little babe at her feet. They 'had been missing since September S. ! It t is believed the woman strangled her 'baby and then hanged herself. Her husband , Joseph Polly , is 53 id to be in Baxter City , Ore. , on business. Long Island Man : : Slain. Mrs. Irving J. Nelson , wife of the nffolk county , N. Y. , political leader , who was found dead , shot through the back , near his home at Central Islip , Long Island , Friday , was subjected to a severe examination by the authori- ties regarding several points connect- ed I with the mysterious murder of her husband. Kentucky : Bank Suspends. The First National bank , of Burn- side , Ky. , closed its doors Friday. The bank has $25,000 capital stock. Over- loans and some unfortunate business deals : are given as the cause of the failure. Shot by . a Negro. Police Officer Ellis Countryman was , fatalIy shot in the head at Burlington , , Ia. , Friday by an unknown negro when he was accosted in the lower Burlington railroad yards. The negro escaped. . Two Negroes Killed. : ; Two unknown negroes were killed ! by posses in tho man hunt near Sandy Point , Tex. , Friday. The negro. Steve Hayes , slayer of Armour Mun.son. is surrounded ih the lowlands and cap- ture or death is certain. i&rence English , of Omaha , and "Jimmie" Gardner , of Boston , fought ten rounds at Omaha Wednesday , Gardner having a distinct advantage oughout. No decision was an- nounced. Patrick Files Another Appeal. Albert T. Patrick , who is serving a life sentence in Sing Sing prison for the murder William Marsh Rice in New York in 1900 , has filed with the clerk of the court of appeals notice of an appeal. It was announced Friday at Omaha that Louisville had a clear lead over its nearest competitor , St. Louis , as next year's meeting place of the Ea- gles . - ' . i..M , ' " DARING WORK OF BANDITS. Attempt to Rob a Rio Grande EQrcS9 Car. A daring : attempt by five bandits o rob the second section ot the Denver and Rio Grande passenger train wa3 made about' 11 o'clock Thursday night about four miles west of Malta , a small station near Leadville , Colo. The ex- press car was dynamited. According to the trainmen no booty was secur' d. It is believed the robbers crawled on the two engines of the train at Malta. The train had proceeded but a short dis ance when two men cra\ - ed over the tender and compelled the engineers and firemen to march back to the express car. Engineer Smith , of the first engine , was told to hammer on the door and order the express messenger to open it. The latter refused and a charge of dynamite was placod under it and the door blown open. Three of the robbe ; rushed in , covering the express mes- senger with revolvers. Several charges of dynamite were placed un- der the safe but without result except to wreck the inner part of the car. After firing a volley the robbers fled in the darkness. One of the trainmen in the meantime had reached malta and Sheriff Campbell with a posse at once started in pursuit. It is said the safe contained a large sum of money. The train was known as the Chicago and San Francisco ex # press. . . WHOLE FORTUNE TO WIFE. Harriman's AVcalth All Goes to IIi Widow. All of Edward H. Harriman's prop- ; erty , real and personal , is bequeathed without restrictions to the widow , Mary W. Harriman. The r/ill was filed at Goshen , N. Y. , Thursday afternoon. It is an extremely brief document , dated June 8 , 1903. Mr. Peabdoy , who made the will ; public , declined to make any estimate as to the value of11' : . Harriman's estate. According to a Wall street public tion it can be stated on the highest authority that Mr. Harriman's prop- erty amounted to between $75,000,00 and $100,000,000. CALIFORNIA : FOREST FIRES. One Life Lost and a Hundred Head of ) 1 . Cattle Burned. One life lost , 100 head of cattle and 12 to fifteen miles of mountain _ land burned over are the net results of the forest and brush fires which raged Friday and Saturday in as many dif- ferent paits of San Diego county , Cal- ifornia. With 200 men Forest Superintend- ent Marshall fought the flames ; ill night. He reports that the fire is un der control. . . To Restrain a Merger. By ' two orders signed Friday by Chancellor Pitney at Newark , N. J. , the United States Leather company ; Dnd > the Central Leather company are iiiocted to sho.w cause on October 4 why an order should not be issued re- itiajning ! the third attempt to mergi he two companies. . . Mexico's : Anniversary. The ninety-ninth anniversary of the independence of Mexico was celebrat- ed : throughout the republic Thursday with much enthusiasm. In the capital the day was ushered in by salvos of : artillery , and later a great military parade , in which President Diaz par- ticipated , was held. Shot by Assassin. George W. Summerville , a promi- nent Minnesota lawyer and politician , , was shot and perhaps fatally wounded while sitting in his law office at Sleepy Eye ! , Minn. , Wednesdc- by a man who says his name is John Hayner. _ Hay ner was arrested. Banker : Gets Seven Years. In the federal court at Marquette : , Mich. [ , Friday , E. T. Larson , former cashier of the defunct Ironwood Na- tional bank , was sentenced by Judge Knappen to seven years in the Detroit house of correction. - . Peru and Bolivia Agree. Minister of Foreign Affairs Busta- mente and the Peruvian minister to Boliva Friday signed a protocol for the settlement of the differences that long have existed between Peru and Bolivia over the boundary question. Wisconsin Postoffice Robbed. Burglars early Friday broke into the Neenah , Wis. , postoffIce , blew open the vaults and secured about $4,000 in stamps and money. There is no clew. Gardner Defeats English. The crew of the battleship Minneso- ta , by : defeating the crew of the Ver- mont Thursday , won the champion- ship of the Atlantic fleet for cutter iving.v Bishop McClosky is 111. Rt. Rev. William George McClosky , bishop of Louisville and the oldest liv- ing Catholic prelate in the United States , is seriously ill in Louisville , Ky. He is 86 years old. Glavis is Dismissed. L. H. Glavis , chief of the field divi- sion of the general land office , with headquarters at Seattle , Wash. , Fri- day was dimissed from the service by Secretary of the Interior Ballinger. Fight Called Off. The fight between Stanley Ketchel and I Samuel Langfo d , scheduled to " be held before the Fairmont Athletic club in New York Friday night was de- , elared off by the directors of the club. , - , ' . : . ' " ' . - . - - - , , . * t9i t/i . r ? . r ? ! ? ! ? r ? r ? * ' U t ? * G * _ _ tti $ _ _ _ 4 _ _ _ _ : _ . tti _ _ L'- , t9 * tt ? t9ttif _ , _ I. 1 v. . v.NEBRASKA i STATE NEWS $ v.h' { 3 fl' j ' h' , ' V 'c i : News of the Week = = F ; : - 1 in Concise Form 47 i \ 1. ' * " 71 71 7. . 7. . 7. . 7i 7l t * * Cie ' t1i E3it 7l 7i 71 7 7. . . 1 METHODISTS : : IN CONFERENCE. I Bishop Nuelsen Presides and Bishop I AVarren Delivers Address. The Nebraska conference of the 1 Mtehodist Episcopal church met : for its forty-ninth session at St. Paul's , church in Lincoln Wednesday , with Bishop John N. Nuelsen , of Omaha , presiding. The conference was organized by the election of O. T. Moore , of Lincoln. secretary , with E. M. Furman , of He- bron , and E. B. Maxey , of Palmyra : , assistants. The Rev. A. S. Buell , of Humboldt , was elected statistical sec- retary with a large force of assistai who wilt be expected to compile the statistics of the last year's work. The Rev. A. C. Crosthwaite was elected I treasurer. The bishop announced the transfer of Rev. W. P. Slocum from the Dako conference , Rev. E. - S. Grimes from the , Missouri conference , and Rev. G. W. Snyder from north Nebraska con- ference. He also announced the ] transfer of M. C. McVey and Charles C. Gorst from this conference to the north Nebraska conference. MUST HAVE PIE. t Omaha School Children Disregard Or- ders of School Authorities. You can't keep a kid from eating pie when he really has the taste and the pri : e. The Omaha high school authorities thought they could by simply laying down the law so that no pie should be kept for sale in the school restaurant. But they now have another large , deep thought due them. Pass along Twentieth street , be- tween Farnam and Harney , and you are likely to observe a pile of these ; thin pasteboard pie plates , sometimes as many as fifty in a pile. At the corner of Twentieth and Farnam is a grocer who keeps pies , and at noon it is only a short walk from the high . school to this store. Apparently , instead of shutting pie off the menu , the school authorities , have driven the youths to eat nothing but pie. Lilly Case is Appealed. The Modern Woodmen of America has appealed from the decision of the Lancaster county district court , whic gave Mrs. Margaret Lena Lilly a ver- dict for the amount of money repre- sented in a life .insurance policy on 2iie life of her husband , for whose death she was sentenced to the peni tentiary for life Gov. Mickey par- ' doned Mrs. Lilly and she at one . brought suit for the insurance on her' ' husband's life. Can't Find a Wife. George Leeper. a young man 20 years of age arrived in Beatrice from Diller in search of a wife. He had advertised for a bride in a Beatrice paper and , receiving several answen , went there to investigate. It devel- oped that the epistles were written by ; parties who wanted to play a joke on the young man. At last reports he was on his way home without the much sought for wife. Delegates to Waterways Convention. The following delegates have been named to the Lakes to the Gulf and < Deep waterways convention at Nev Orleans , October 30 to November 2 : Hal McCord , Omaha ; H. T. Clarke , S ) ' . , Omaha ; H. T. Hanks , Nebraska 31 ly ; Judge H. D. Travis , Plattsmouth ; P. B. Gordon , Decatur ; Col. M. A. Bates , Plattsmouth ; John Flynn , ! south Omaha. Board Appointments. . E. Ratnour , of Weeping Water , has been reappointed a member of the ( board of embalmers , and Dr. E. A. Thomas , of Red Cloud , has been ap- - pointed a member of the board of secretaries ; of the state dental board , to succeed W. T. Smith , of Geneva. These appointments were made by the state board. Some Notaries Are Minors. It has just been discovered that no- tary commissions have been issued in some instances to persons who are not of age. It was reported to the gov- ernor's office that out in one town a girl 17 years old has a notary com- mission. Hereafter the governor will sign no notary commission unless the applicant is of age. Bankers Quick \vith Record. The Nebraska Banker's association held its annual convention in Omaha September 8 and 9 , and September 13 , the complete minutes of the conven- tion are published and in the hands of the bankers. These minutes are copiled in book form and the volume consists of some 200 pages. Opium Joint Raided. Mayor Schuff personally directed a raid on a Chinese restaurant at Grand ilandand found the proprietor hitting tthe opium pipe. Lung charged < $ 1 per ' noke. Lung was arrested and is be- Ing held under a $200 cash bond. Clothing Store Robbed. The clothing store of Roseel & Sons was robbed at McCook to the extent of nearly $1,000 , presumably by a gang , of : tramps. 1 . - , - t ' r HEBRON FIRE. Blaze Gains Headway and for Timf Threatens Town. The worst fire Hebron has had fo. many years raged Saturday , and fOI [ a time it looked as though the entirt place was doomed , but owing to thE plentiful supply of water and the ef- fort of the fire boys the fire was g)1 under control. The fire started in Myers' : livery sta- ble and in a short time that building had burned to the , ground. It soon spread to the lumber yard of the J. H. Yost company. The air was thick with smoke and flying embers and several residences were on fire. 1\11' Myers lost all his buildings , together ] with ten head of horses , buggies and other truck , the loss being estimated at upwards of $4,500 , with an insur- ance of $2,200. The lumber yarel' loss was about $30,000 , with an insur- ance of $20,000. J. G. Writh , hardware merchant , lost 360 kegs of nails uponr which there was no insurance. Milton Myers , the owner of the barn was smothered in the fire and nearly lost his life , but is now on the road te , I recovery. ADMITS STARTING THE FIRE. Manager of Omaha Factory Arrest on Charge of Arson. Guy Anderso'n , manager of the X : ( ' - braska cotton glove factory Omaha that Saturday night was damaged by fire to the extent of $10,000 , con fessed to having robbed the safe an ( then applying the match to the build ir. g. The police in going over the ruin discovered the safe unlocked. Th I . Anderson was sent for on the pretense that his assistance was needed. Upor his arrival at the scene he was a1' rested and accused of arson. He alse made a full confession , but would not say how much money he had taken though he admitted that he had beer robbing the business for more thaI ; a year. He said that Saturday he : secured a quantity of fuse and laid i' in a manner so that it would requi several hours for it to do its work. The he applied the match and locking the : building took the books and start home , hiding them in a lumber yard where they were found later. WORK FOR SUPRF.3IE COURT. Question of Liquor Selling in Linco Will Be Settled. The supreme court will meet Sep- ; tember 21 and at that time it is very probable the court will pass on tht ' motion of the state oil inspector for a rehearing in the non-partisan judi- cialy : , case. Among the cases of great impo tance to the city of Lincoln , which now serves its people with all the liq- uor they desire through the medium of clubs , though the town is dry , fig- uratively speaking , is that in which the right of a club to sell or serve booze in a dry town is to be tried out. When the town first went dry the ; clubs at once stocked up heavily and then when there were rumors that the : police were going to interfere they promptly got out injunctions to com- pel > the people to let them'alone. So the supreme court is to pass upon thG legality of that injunction. Peculiar Accident to Farmer. J. i ' r. Maher , one of the best know farmers near Fremont , slipped while oiling a windmill on his farm , onE hand caught in the gearing , and hE was suspended sixty feet in the air for some time until his calls for help brought men to the rescue. Missing Man Found. The stranger who jumped from car window Friday night about two miles from Dorchester , wanderei about eight miles northeast , and is ai the home of Wickerkamp. . He gives his name as Frank Burns , and lives in Farnam. Got Off Easy. Jos. Brabek , the Barneston farm er who it is charged , drove his child- ren from home and then attempted t ( < ' burn his barn , has been sentenced to serve thirty days in the county jail. He was tried on a charge of drunl and disorderly conduct. State Fair : Finances. The total receipts for the state fai ; 'were $55,858.34 ; balance on hand from last year , $24.235.82 , making a total of $80,094.16 available for use ol the : board in paying expenses of thf fair this year. Young Man Dies Suddenly. Ross Lerch , the 18-year-old son o. H. H. Lerch , of Kearney , died sudden- ly from what appears to be the ' same thing that doctors have been calling spinal meningitis. Eagles Open for Business. The grand aerie of the "Fraterna. Order of Eagles opened Monday : in Omaha at the Auditorium with more than 1,000 delegates present. George F. West , president of the local aerie , presided at the opening session , which was public. The addresses of wel- come by Mayor J. C. Dahlman and President J. J. Ryder , of the Nebraska state aerie , were responded to by Grand Worthy President Monaghan , and other grand officers. . . - - : IAL i-.JAL . ; - CHICAGO. R. G. Dun & Co.'s Weekly Review of Chicago Trade says : "The growth In banking power reflected by the official statements this week adds further tes timony to the improved commercial position. Loans are seen to have In- creased considerably over this time last year and there are developments In ( progress which foreshadow a stronger . demand for money in the near future. The discount rate , con- sequently , gathers firmness. It is for- tunate that credit operate smoothly and make financing easier for the needs [ of tho industries and transporta- tion : Interests now entering upon a pe- riod of greater activity. "Trading defaults again make : an encouraging exhibit. Movements of commodities make a favorable db . parison with a year ago. Increasing production is noted in Iron , wood , brass and leather manufactures. No abatement yet appears In heavy con- tracts for railway equipment , rails , structural steel and pig iron. "Machinery makers report wider re mand fo rnew outfits , especially for mining purposes , and the improvement is ( well sustained in electric lines , heavy hardware and furniture. "Despite poor export requirements the dealings in grain and flour remain targe. Mail and road orders are ex ceptionally good , and aggregate book- ings make a high total for dry goods , footwear and food products. "Bank clearings for five days , $231- 500,334 , exceed those of the corre- sponding period last year by 18.3 per cent , and compare with $242,951,602 I for : six days in 1907. . "Failures reported in the Chicago district number twenty-one , against twenty-five last week , and twenty- three ; in 190 ' . Those with liabilities over $5,000 number five , against four last week , six in 1908 and five in t907. " NEW YORK. Operations in industrial lines an still expanding , and in some branches of the iron and steel trade record t. ' puts are the rule. In fact , manufactu ing is in the forefront as regards ac- ivity. Jobbing trade is good , and at some centers , particularly where fall festivals are held , purchases of dry goods , groceries and staple lines in general have really increased. The earlier gathered crops , such as ! wheat , cotton and oats , are being aoved to market quite freely , and tha good ; prices being realized from the sale of these products will make for easier collections and growth in trade. Business failures in the United States for the week ending , Sept. 9 were 191 , against 1GG last week , 191 fn the same week of 1908 , 172 in 1907 , 164 in 1906 and 188 in 1905. Failure , in Canada for the week number 2o , - rhich compares with 33 last week a 34 in the same week of 1908.-Bud. street's. ; f Chicago-Cattle , common to prime $4.00 to $8.40 ; hogs , prime heaY - , $ ,1.50 to $8.55 ; sheep , fair to choice , $4.25 to $4.75 ; wheat , No. 2 , $1.05 to $1.07 ; corn , No. 2 , 67c to 6Sc ; oats , standard , ' s 39c ) to 40c ; rye , No. 2 , 70c to 72c ; hay , timothy , $8.00 to $14.50 ; prairie , $8.00 to $11.00 ; butter , choice creamery , 25c to i 29c ; eggs , fresh , 18c to 2fc ; pota- toes , per bushel , 55c to 65c. Indianapolis-Cattle , shipping , $3.00 to ) $6.00 ; hogs , good to choice heavy , $3.50 ! to $8.50 ; sheep , good to choice , $2.50 to $4.75 ; wheat , No. 2 , $1.08 to $1.10 ; corn No. 2 white , 71c to 73c ; oats , No. 2 white , 3Sc to 39c. St. Louis - Cattle , $4.00 to $7.50 ; hogs , $4.00 to $8.40 ; sheep , $3.00 to $4.60 ; wheat , No. 2 , $1.08 to $1.r ; corn , No.2 , 67c to 6Sc ; oats , No. 2 , Me to 39c ; rye , No. 2 , 72c to 73c. Detroit-Cattle , $4.00 to $5.50 ; hogs , $4.00 to $8.00 ; sheep , $2.50 to $4.50 ; wheat , No. 2 , $1.10 to $1.11 ; corn , No. 2 yellow , 72c to 74c ; oats , utandard , - 39'c to 40c ; rye , No. 1 , 68c to 69c. Milwaukee-Wheat , No. 2 northern , $1.00 to $1.03 ; corn , No. 3 , 59 to 60 ; oats , standard , 37c to 39c ; rye , No. 1 , 70c to 71c ; barley , standard , 6Gc to 67c ; pork , mess , $23.20. Buffalo - Cattle. choice shipping st 2ers , $4.00 to $7.00 ; hogs , fair to choice. $4.00 to $8.SO ; sheep , common to good mixed , $4.00 to $5.50 ; lambs , fall' to choice , $5.00 : ; to $8.00. Toledo - Wheat , No. 2 mixed $1.10 to $1.12 ; corn , No. 2 mixed , 69c to 73c ; oats , No. 2 mixed , 3Sc to 40c ; rye , No.2 , 68c to 70c ; clover seed $7.85. Cincinnati-Cattle , $4.00 to $6.25 ; hogs , $4.00 to $8.50 ; sheep , $3.00 to $4.35 ; wheat , No. 2 , $1.09 to $1.11 ; corn , No. 2 mixed , 71c to 72c ; oats , N < ) . 2 mixed , 37c to 3Sc ; rye , No. 2 71c to 73c. New York - Cattle , $4.00 to $7.00 ; hogs , $4.00 to $8,60 ; sheep , $3.00 fo $4.50 ; wheat , No. 2 red , $1.06 to $1.07 ; corn , No. 2 , 77c to 79c ; oats , natural white , 40c to 43c ; butter , creamery 27c to 32c ; eggs , western , 22c t * 26c. , . , . , . , . - .