THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBUfcVl CI idcho nicnn lu rillLli A TRIPLE KILLING Called to & Blaze in New York House Find Father Shot Two Sons and Himself A VICTIM OF MELANCHOLIA Herman H. Moritz, Real Estate Man, Corners, Clubs and Shoots His Two Boys Before Suicide Outbreak Climax of Melancholia. New Yoik, N. Y Mar. 17.--Her-ruin H. Moritz. a retired real estate dealer, whoso homo was in No. -210 Aqueduct avenue, Tlu- Dronx. sent his wife ami servant nway from homo, shot his two sons to death, set fire to tile house and then killod himself. Before ho sent a bullet Into bis own brain he H it the bouse, saw to It that a fire alarm was turned In and then returned to bis home and killed him self. The firemen were forced to push his body aside to get the front door open. The man bad been suffering from melancholia longer than a year, and bis condition bad become much Trorse in the last week. Nothing had been said by him up to the time of the shooting. The family was wealthy and each of the slain boys would have received from the estates of thcli mother and grandfather about $250,000. The victims were George, 17 years old, a student in the llordentown Military Academy, In New Jersey, who died in his school uniform after he had been shot three times as he crouched In a closet in a bedroom, and Walter, 12 years old, who was chased by the maniac from the second floor to the cellar and shot down near a coalbln behind which be had tried to screen himself. It was not until the firemen bad extinguished the blaze which the eracd man bad kindled that any one bad any idea Moritz bad murdered bis two sons. The body of George fell out of the closet when they opened the door to see if any traces of fire could be discovered there. Before Moritz did the shooting he took both hi;! boys out for a long walk, which they enjoyed exceedingly, having no idea their father in sending their stepmother and the servant away merely was clearing the way for murdering them and killing himself. Mrs. Anna Moritz, the wife, who had gone to F.nglewood, N. J at the request of her crazed husband, was informed there of the triple tragedy. She returned hurriedly to New York, and is prostrated in the home of friends in The Bronx. Borough Presi dent Miller of The Hronx, who was counsel for Moritz and guardian of his two boys, took charge of (he Moritz home. Moritz retired from the real estate business four or five years ago, after having prospered. He owned, among other properties, the three-story frame house In which the tragedy took place. WANT FULL ARBITRATION. Railroad Men Demand That All Ques tions of Difference Be Submitted. Chicago, Mar. 15. Representatives of 25,000 locomotive firemen and en ;lnemen on forty-nine railroad sys tems In the West demanded to-day that the managers assume the respon sibility. The managers assert that to arbi trate questions of discipline would de moralize the service and establish a precedent which they cannot afford ro have established. The controversy Involves practiciU 'y all the railroads west, northwest end southwest of Chicago extending to he Pacific coast. Four small systems re not represented, but in the erent "f a strike it is said their traffic is de pendent on the operation of the other ystems, so that should the firemen -o out It would cripple if not tie up he entire West. LIEUT. JANNEY KILLS HIMSELF. Wife of Infantry Officer in Manila Sees Him Do It. Manila, Mar. 15. Lieut. Clarence 'I. Janney of the Twelfth Infantry :llled himself with a pistol in the '.;ome of Lieut.-Col. Ames at Fort Mc- Cinley at a dinner party before a 'lance. There were present at the !me Mrs. Janney, Lieut.-Col. Ames iiid other officers. Lieut. Janney, it is said, left the dinner table, having become angry at something, and left the house. He 'turned in a short time and fired his istol into the air outside. Then he -..'entered the house, flourishing his ivolver- and shot himself, standing . oar the dinner table. Second Lieut. Janney enlisted in ':e regular army from Virginia in :.i03, when ho wus 22 years old. .MILLIONS FOR BETTER TEETH. roston Man Founds Dental Infirmary to Be Free to All Children. Doston, Mar. 15. Thomas A. For. yth, a wealthy resident of this city, 'ans to give $2,000,000 for the care ! the teeth of Boston school children. As a perpetual foundation by which very child In the city from birth to 'o arro of 16 years may receive the : .ost expert dental services free of 'large this donation will prove a boon i thousands of school children who c.l'crwise would never have this cure. O UIUUUVUI MORGAN PUNS BIG MOTOR CAR TRUST Combined Capital cf Companies Men tioned Is $31,000,000 and Year ly Output 70,000 Cars. New York, N. Y., Mar. 17. Wall street believes that J. P. Morgan is grooming the automobile manufactur ing trade preparatory to leading It into n mammoth corporation that shall ex ercise in the automobile Held nn tnbu ence as powerful as that exercised in the steel trade by his billion dollar Steel Trust, and as that to be exer cised In the copper markets (if the world by his proposed billion dollar copper merger. This was Indicated by the announce ment that J. P. Morgan & Co. bad pur chased the majority of the stock of the Kveritt-Metzger -Flanders, or T. M. V. automobile manufacturing company of Detroit, for the purpose of com bining It with the Studebaker com pany. The combination of these two com panies, it was pointed out, would, with the General Motors Company as the unit for the Middle West and thi United Motors Company as the unit for the East, lend Itself readily to any larger combination that might be con templated. It is in this way, Wall street re called, that Mr. Morgan forms all his great industrial combinations. First lie forms independent concerns into units and then amalgamates these units into one big entity. it is intimated that within a few years the automobile manufacturing business of the country will be as com pletely monopolized as the Standard Oil Company is, if not more so. These units were suggested ns like ly factors in n combination: Cieneral Motors Company, control ling about one dozen automobile manu facturing concerns, the principal be ing Rainier. Oldsmobile, Cadillac, Buick, Oakland and Rapid and Reli ance trucks; present capita, $00,000, 000. Estimated yearly output, 40,000 cars. I'nited Motors Company, controlling Maxwell -Briscoe. Columbia and Brush present capital, $lf..00l).000. Fstlmotcd yearly production, 15,000 cars. Studebaker Company, controlling the E. M. K., Studebaker and Flanders ears present combined capital" about ll.'i.llOO.OOO. Kstimnted yearly output, 15.000 cars. Total present capitalization, $91,- ooo.ooo. Kstimnted total output, 70,000 cars. Estimated output this year of all companies in the United States, 200, 000 cars. NATION WIDE STRIKE MAY BE. Pennsylvania Federation of Labor Passes Resolution. New Castle, Pa., Mar. 14. The ninth annual convention of the State Federation of Labor, In session here, unanimously passed a resolution ask ing that in the event of an arbitration of the Philadelphia strike question failing, the American Federation of Labor call a nation-wide strike of or ganized and unorganized workmen. The resolution passed wns present ed to the delegates by W. D. Mahon, President of the Amalgamated Asso ciation of Street and Electric Railway Employees. The permission was granted nnd Mr. Mahon in a stirring address ask ed for the motion to pass the resolu tion. The motion was forthcoming promptly and passed with a unani mous rising vote, the delegates cheer ing. The resolution was forwarded by wire to President Gonipers. LILLIS IS RECOVERING. But It Is Uncertain When He Can Ba Removed to His Home. Kansas City, Mo., Mar. 14. Jere F. Lillis, President of the Western Ex change Hank, who was assaulted Sun day morning by John P. Cudahy at the latter's residence, is reported to be steadily recovering. Attendants at St. Mary's Hospital said, however, that it was uncertain when Lillis would be removed from the hospital to his home. Asked if his injuries would be permanent, they said that would require some time to determine. The physicians say there now is no fear of blood poisoning, suggested by the fact that the kitchen knife used by Cudahy was said to have been rusty. GIVES BLOOD TO SAVE SON. But Lewis Hopkins's Sacrifice Falls, and Death Comes. Washington, Mar. 15. Francis Hop kins, 7-year-old son of Lewis Hopkins, grandnephew of Johns Hopkins, found er of the university that bears his name, died of meningitis. The boy had lain in Providence Hospital seven weeks, and after sub mitting to two operations the physi cians decided that a third, with the transfusion of blood, probably would save ills life. The father hurried here on a special train, and a quantity of his blood was transfused to his son, After the operation the boy rallied, but death resulted from exhaustion following his long illness. For New Agriculture School. Albany, N. V., Mar. 16. The estab llshment of another link in tho chain of State schools of agriculture and 0 niestic science, to be in Mlddletown, Is provided for in a bill introduced by Assemblyman Slivers of Orange. For the purchase of the Bite $50,000 is appropriated. ill Ml I ill! iiJ! Fumeus Hunter la Warmly Greeted as H?e Loct Sicama Into 111:.-. ileum 13 :.sco:.t:d tg the palace E:;-r ruLMcrt'j Wife nr.d Daughter Jci:i vi e Party Enthusiastic About Ufa Tr:,), Kcoievclt Sr.ys "It Wns Splendid." Klurioir.!!. Mar. 17. Looking the picture of lie;.!ih, and physical litncss showing in every line, Theodore Koom'VcU came ba k rrom the long trail river which he lrt spent nearly n year in the p::r.-uit of p.amo. Thoufc i):.i had gathered here to sec him, and they described from afnr (lie fa miliar form n:id smile, made so even to those who had never before ret ees cm the cx-Pre sident of the t'nited States by the many pictures of him wtiich have recently been published. Col. K.vu'vcll ai.J hid foil Kertuit, both leoli'Kg hard as nails, v.cro v. (ill:;;? khaki huniing suits. As he stepped ishore from the steamer that had bro'iph: him down the Nile it was rain r n bored expression as he re garded tl.e group of British olllcrrs th: t hud J'.l'cred t:i greet him. Their black roldieis who formed a guard presented arms as the former President stepped on land. The scene was perhaps an unpleasantly abrupt reminder of the abandonment of primi tive camp life for the; formalities and conventions of the modern world. The inc ident, however, had no last ing effec t. The Colonel soon was fair ly beaming with rood nature and smiled broadly r.s he heard a battery of can eras rVu-'.i around him. S!.; in Pasha, Inspector-General of the Sudan, and others received and escorted the Roosevolts, father nnd son. to the Palace of the Sirdar, where the introductions were made. An hour 1: ii r the two travellers crossed the Nib.' 1 ) meet Mrs. Roosevelt and Miss Ethel. A- the train pulled into the station Miss Ethel was looking out of a car window and Col. Roosevelt and Kermit were alenisldo beforo the train came to a halt. They ran Joyously along the plat form, shouting a greeting: and waving their hats frantically. Happy em braces and warm words of welcome' follinved. Yhen the party alighted all wero conduc ted back to the palace. In an interview Col. ltoosevelt spoke repeatedly with the utmost en thusiasm concerning the trip which Is di awing to a close. "1 believe after all," he raid, "that I nm glad to be back. It was splendid while it lasted but it lasted long enough." BEEF TRUST GETS BLOW. Must Produce Books In New Jersey or Forfeit Its Charter. Trenton, N. J., Mar. 1G The Beef Trust suffered nno.her severe blow In New Jersey when Supreme Court Jus tice Swaye, sitting at Trenton, decid ed that the minute books of the direc tors meetings must bo produced be fore the Hudson County Grand Jury. An order was signed directing the National Packing. Company, Morris & Co., Armour & Co. nnd Swift & Co. to produce the books desired by Prose tutor Pierre P. Garven, even though! they are kept outside the State. Fall' ure to do so will result in the Supreme Court nullifying the charters of the companies. TO END TRACTION STRIKE. President Kruger and W. D. Mahon Hold Conference. Philadelphia. Mar. 16. The first step taken by the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company toward settling the dispute with its striking employees, nnd Incidentally ending the sympathe tic strike which had then been in pro gress for ten days, was taken when President C. O. Kruger of the Hapld Transit Company conferred with W. 1). Mahon, President of the Amalga mated Association of Street nnd Elec tric Hallway Employees. The meet ing of the li'bor leader and the Hapld Transit official was the result of out side lntlm nces. REPRESENTATIVE PERKINS DEAD Had Been III In Washington Hospital for Several Weeks. Washington, Mar. 11 Representa tive James Wreck Perkins, of Roches ter, died here at (iariield Hospital, after un illness of several weeks. James B. Perkins was born at St. Croix Falls, Wis., Nov. 4, 1847. He was elected to tho Fifty-seventh Congress and re-elected to the Fifty eighth, Fifty-ninth, Sixtieth and Sixty first Congresses. Jertey Auto Visitors' Bill Dead. Trenton, N, J., .Mur. 17. The Sen ate to-day defeated; Assemblyman Edge's automobile bill, which permits non-resident automobiles to come into tho State lor three periods of five days er.iii without taking out. a license. F.ilN were passed appropriating .i'f0,fC0 for the erection in V;.i,h. iiih'ion o buildings for tho depart ments of K'.a'.e, Justice and Commerce up:;; UV.):-. ROIISEVELT ARRIVES FROM ffl HE WORLD NEWS OF THE WEEK. Covering Minor Happenings Frcos All Over the Globe DOMESTIC. The Governor of Georgia refit: ed to Irt reduce Commander Peary at a b -lure- to be held in Atlanta c"i the. rroitnd tlu.t he had not prowd t'ao trr.'ii of his polar arscr.ions. Peace negotiations were drib' red c.T by tin- commUtee of ten of Tie I i k deiphia Rapid Traiis't Company's ' i iking carmen. Justice lliivchbcrg, in tho Supreme C.i'.tf, appellate division, referred to fte New Yoi't.- Stock Exchange as "nn !.: oiiaticui of gamblers of Wall sl.-e.-t. ""lie Hamburg-American line tin i"unc c a a new service direct to New Orleans to carry Immigrants lino tho For'.hern States. A united Protestantism was ele maucUsI by Mil New York pastors rep re cniiiig all demominations. At their gathering they organised the Clerical Ceti.c :ence, which will meet regular ly. W. C. Maxwell nnd Frederick C. Frieser of the Wabash Railroad and 1. O. Ives, formerly of that road, lkru'ed "not guilty" In New York Ci'y to hidictr.entj charging them with r.T.:;ti'.'S rebates. Millet's painting "Shepherd and Flo. k." was stolen from the (io'den Gate Park Museum In San Francisco, beit'g eel fro-n its frame while many vkitors were in the place. President Tntt attended the funeral of his brother-in-law, Thomas K. I-augh!!n, in Pittsburg. Democrats of all sections are be coming Interested In Mayor (iaynor, of Nc w York, as possible nominee for the Presidency. Suffragist and nnt i-suffragist ora tors discussed for four hours at Albany the resolution to amend the State con stitution so as to permit women to oto. 1'irectors of the New York Central declare a quarterly dividend of 1 1-2 cent, placing the stock upen a ' per e e;r . ann::;'.i bai ls. Plot of fo t convicts to dynamite Pnr.nemora Prison w as disc cu e red soon after the escape of two convicts from Sing Sir.g. The annual report of the American Tobhiie co Cwtrpavy shows more than r.O per e c-iit. of dividend on $10,000,001 common stock outstanding. WASHINGTON. The Administration railway bill was taken up fen- consideration in tho Senate, bin in a half-hearted way. President Taft pent a special mes r.'ig.i to Congress, urging that the gov ernment talu control of the seal Isl a".ds i:i liering Sea. The legislative appropriation bill was passed by the House. President Taft makes dear that the tariff situation with Canada "has reached a critical stage. Orders are issued by the Navy Pe p:uii.:ent for the withdrawal of the Kcven hundred marines on board the Pe'l'talo at, Corinto, Nicaragua, to Pan ama. Major Henry S. Howe, United States Army, retired, died In his home in Washington. S years old. Detailed reports are called for by the I'liiled States navy on the use of oil as a fuel. The funeral of Representative Jas. !. Perkins was held at Washington; the bgdy was taken to Rochester. lty a practically unanimous vote the sub-committee of the House Naval Committee decided against bestowing any reward upon Commander Robert E. Peary until lie had furnished furth er proof that he had discovered the North Pole. FOREIGN. The French Chamber expresses confluence in the government's prom ise of full Investigation of the Church llcjuidation scandal. Mae. Ilreshkovskaya was sen tenced to exile in Siberia; she has re fused oners of friends to pay for spe cial privileges. Mr. Roosevelt and members of his family made a trip to the battlefield at Kerrerl, returning to Khartoum, where they were gnerts at a dinner at tho palace. 1 end Uoseberry moved in the up per house' that the peers resolve theai-seive-: in a committee of the whole to consider reforms and presented a reso lution that a peerage should not afford a i!(;ht to a seat. The Japanese press sees a presage of war in Mr. Jacob H. Sehiff's speech, snys a special cable despatch from Tol.io. Secretary I.aughlln of the American Embassy In Germany denied the re port that his brother Thomas McIC. Eaughlin, who committed suicide In Pittsburg, behaved erratically while in llerlin. Tho French .government will re open nil the nccounts connected with tho liquidation of Church property and hopes through cancellation of cer tain sales to recover tiome of tho loss.-s caused by defalcation. Great Ilrltain is aiming to check America's progress In the Orient. Timothy Harrington, M. p., former Lord Mayor of Dublin, is dead, Pritish naval estimate:! for 1010 shoived an lnerea.se of $".7,80.-),OOO over the preceding year's figures. China is sinccrre and successful in her fight against opium, accoiuiiig to llishop llashford, an American Metho. dist. Nicholas Tschalkowsky wan itc:jlt ted by a Russian court, but Mme ISreshkowskuya wus exiled for Vie. 115515 STANDARD OIL IS j HUGE Frank B. Kellogg Gives Govern, merit's Side to the Su preme Court CALLS ITS METHODS Rockefeller Corporation, He Says, If Let Alo::e, Would Control All Indus tries In Five Years Asserts It Has Waved the Elack Flag on Land. f O n o o n o o o n o o o o o o o n o o o 8 C) o H o n o 8 The Chances Are 4 to 3 Against Standard Oil. Plnro only eight members of 1 he Supreme Court are bearing the Standard Oil ease, owing to Jastii e Moody's absence, there pre seven possible divisions of the court three majority de cisions for or against the defend ant corporation and an erjual division, which would oinrm the decision of the lower court. The possible divisions are: For Standard Oil. 7 to 1. 0 to 2. D to 3. Against Standard Oil. 7 to 1. 0 to h to 3. 4 to 2. o o ccccccccccccccccccccccccco Washington, Mar. 17. -Holding up the Standard C i 1 Company of New .Te-rrcy as a danger to the country an 1 its organization a-c a commercial pr" cedent that must be eradicated from the business world, Frank M. Kellogg vigorously arraigned the corporation be fore the Supreme Court of the l'n'!- ed States. It was the Government's turn to be beard in the argument nt ti e subject of the dissolution of the "Standard Oil," as decreed by the Cir cuit Court of the I'nited Slates for the Eastern District of Missouri. "They have waved the black Mag over the land as others have dun-! over the ocean. Do 1 deny they have demonstrated their ability? No. They have competed wi:h an ability un equalled in this country. "With its ramifications, its Influ ence and its money powers, give it carte blanche, let it combine, as Mr. Watson suggests, and let it cut price, as Mr. Milburn speaks about, and I predict it will control every industry in this country in ten years yea. in five years, "What makes a great country? Not great corporations, it is the Indivi dual; the Independent proprietor with the star of hope that bus always been held out to man before him. Y'our Honors, it is but a step from combina tion to socialism, nnd but another from anarchy." With n quiet emphasis, more im pressive than mere noise or spectacu lar waving of the hand, Frank II. Kel logg, special counsel for the Govern ment, thus suggested reasons to the Supreme Court of the I'nited States why the Standard Oil Company should be dissolved. Following John G. Milburn. who concluded his argument for the Stand ard within a few minutes after court convened, Mr. Kellogg spoke for near ly four hours. "This company has been under search as no other concern has ever been." saW Mr. Milburn. In closing his argument. "The power of the Tim ed States Government as It exists has reached right Into the vitals of this organization. "We beg of this court, If we are found to be doing wrong enjoin us from doing that, but In the name of Justice do not destroy the organiza tion which has accomplished such re sults unless there is nothing else to do." ARTIST TOOK MILLET. Wanted to Make Copy of $10,000 Pic ture. San Francisco, Mur. 17. Declaring that he took the picture in order to make a copy of it, William Kunze, a young artist, was arrested while hold ing In his possession the $10,000 painting, "Shepherd and Flock," by Millet, which was stolen last Sunday from the Golden Gate Park Museum. Kune was arrested in his studio. After he was booked on a charge of grand larceny the prisoner sulci that be was led to take the picture by bin love of the beautiful and a desire to make an adequate copy. DEMOCRATS MAKE GAINS. Central New York Village Elections Show Change In Vote. Vtica, N. V.. Mar. 17.-Returns of the village elections throughout Cen tral New York Indicate that the Demo crats won in a majority of cases. In UouveiT.eur It Is said that many Re publicans voted the Democratic ticket. The same condition Is said to have prevailed In Onuastota. Herkimer and Dolgevillo have gone Democratic, the latter for the first time in live years. Volcanic Dust at Midday. New Orleans, March 1L The city wi's dark ut noon nnd the Government hydrographer suld it wus because vol canle dust from Mexico thickened thu cloud.:. TRENTON CAR IN WIN ALL DEMANDS Business Men Force Settlement After Day of Riot Ending In Prob able Double Murder, Trenton, N. J., Mar. 17. A douhlo shooting, as a result of which one milt, Will die, marked the ending of tho strike of employee of the Trenton Street Railway Company, the men g, i. ting practically nil their d. niaiul . At least fifteen men were Injured during the rioting. Three strike breakers are In hospitals, oiu Js sup posed to be drowned, having been thrown Into the Assanpink Creek by a mob. and the ate in Jail. Trenton business men brought, about a termination of the strike. The men get Increased pay twenty-three rents an hour- the abolition of an oh Jectionable "swing" system and the substitution of n ten hour day; the reinstatement of all employees dis charged for union activity and an agreement to arbitrate all future dis putes. This ends a two days' strike that has been the most serious in the city's history. The victory for the men Is due largely to the fact that public sentiment was universally behind them. Hardly any one rode In the fe-w cars that were operated dining the strike. STRIKE HARD ON MERCHANTS. Philadelphia Business Men Plead for Peace, Philadelphia. Mar. 11.- The United Huslness Men's Association, which Is composed of merchant whose trade has been hurt most by the general Strike, put several peace movements In motion this afternoon. They voted enthusiastically for every plan suggested from an appeal to President Taft to the threat e ' a receivership for the Philadelphia Rap id Transit Company. The big labor movement has result ed in the granting of certain conces sions to workmen In at least two of the big Industrial plants of the city. At Baldwin's Locomotive Works, where the sympathy striker:! succeed ed In bringing out 2. I'll men, neenrd Ing to the ccrnpuny's statements, the men have been granted a half holiday on Saturday. Cars are' now running In greater number than since the strlke began. Washington. Mar. 14.--President. Taft was appealed to to use his gcod officers to stop the general strike In Philadelphia. The appeal came in a telegram from K. K. Grecnwalelt, President of the State Federation of Labor of Pennsylvania. 2,000 IN PAPER TRUST STRIKE. Third Brigade and a Troop of Cavalry Under Orders. Albany, N. Y., Mar. 14. Gov. Hughes and Diig.-Gen. James II. Lloyd, commanding the Third Ilrigade, National Guard, conferred regarding the threatened situation caused by the strike of the employees of the Inter national Paper Company throughout the State. It Is understood that all or ganizations in Gen. Lloyd's brigade are practically under waiting orders, including the Second Itattalion, Tenth Infantry and Troop H (cavalry) of Al bany. J. T. Carey, President of the Inter national l(rotlierhood of Pulp and Paper Makers, said at Watertown that there were 2.UU0 employees of the? In ternational Paper Company on strike'. INSURANCE AND BALLOONING. Claims May Be Collected if Flights are Only a Diversion, Says Court. Denver, Col., Mar. 14. If ballooning Is Indulged In as a diversion, insur ance money may be collected In case of accident or death, according to a Supreme Court decision to-day in a case to recover $2,000 insurance upon the life of Frank Van Fleet, who was killed in a balloon accident at Grand Junction. Col. John I. Rogers Dies. Denver, Mar. iZ. Colonel John I. Rogers, a prominent attorney of Phila delphia, and for twenty years the big gest stockholder in the Philadelphia National League Baseball Club died here to-day of heart failure. NEW YORK MARKETS, Wholesale Prices of Farm Products Quoted for the Week. MILK Per quart, 3ic. DUTTKR Western extra, 32033c; State dairy, 24&27c. CHEESE State. Full cream, special, 17V4 018c. EGGS State. Fair to choice, 23 24c.; do, western firsts, 24025c. APPLES Paid win, per bbl., $2.75 4.25. DRESSED POULTRY Chickens, per lb., lo24e.; Cocks, per lb.. 14c; Squabs, per dozen, $2.0005.25. HAY Prime, per 100 lbs., $1.15. STRAW Long Rye, per 100 lbs., 70 80c. POTATOES-State, per bbl., $1,370 1.50. , ONIONS White, per crate, 40075c. FLOUR Winter patents. $5.GO06.1O; Spring patents, $5.(1007.05. WHEAT No. 2. red, $1.26 '4; No. I, Northern Duluth, $1.26 ii- CORN No. 2. 65 Vic OATS Natural white, 500 52c; Clip ped white, 50 Vt 0 3c. BEEVES City Dressed. 8011c. SHEEP Per 100 lb, $5.00(ji 6.00. CALVES City Dressed, 10016c. LAM IIS Per 100 Uih., $8,500 U.50. HOGS Live, per 100 lbs., - $'J.30'(P 10.40; Country Dressed, per lb., MP 13c. ..