The Meyersdale commercial. (Meyersdale, Pa.) 1878-19??, February 22, 1917, Image 6

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POOP POPPOOOOOEP HOSS
THE PURE BRED SIRE.
In 1889 a Lacrosse county (Ill)
farmer decided that his ordinary
beef and milk cows were not
paying, and so he purchased the
best pure bred sire he could get
of the breed desired and mated
him with his herd, which was of
mixed breeding. By keeping care-
ful records he found that the
cows resulting from the first
cross produced the first year, on
the average, 212 pounds of but-
ter fat. By continuing the use
of a pure bred sire of the same
breed he increased this amount
to a 268 pound average at the
end of the ninth year. In 1913
in his herd of twenty-five milk-
ing cows none produced less than
400 pounds of butter fat and sev-
eral produced 600 pounds
POPPPVPOPOPOVOPOPPVIVIPPOOPOOOOP®
PPPOPIPPVPPOOOO®OQ
SOY BEANS FOR THE SOUTH.
Belief That This Legume May Be
Profitably Rotated With Cotton.
The department of agriculture and
the various state experiment stations
are conducting wide experiments to
discover the various forage crops best
suited to conditions in the southern
states, says the Home and Farm: The
soy bean is now the subject of thor-
ough experiments in various sections.
While the bean may be grown
throughout the humid and semihumid
sections of the south and in the south-
ern portion of the corn belt, it thrives
especially well in the cotton growing
regions. For this reason it offers an
excellent opportunity to the cotton
planter for adjusting his farm plans to
offset the damage to cotton inflicted by
the boll weevil.
From the farmers’ point of view the
existence of the many oil mills in the
south and the probability that by fur-
nishing a demand for soy beans these
concerns will make the legume an im-
portant cash crop should greatly facili-
tate the introduction of the new prod-
net on a commercial scale. Soy beans
SOY BEAN PLANT.
should be of additional interest to
farmers since, as in the case of other
legumes, their culture improves the
soil.
As a pasturage crop this legume is
rich in protein and is particularly suit-
ed for pasturing hogs, especially so
when the beans are grown for soil im-
provement. When the plants are young
and tender the hogs will practically eat
the whole of the plant, but after they
become mature and hard and woody
they will not be eaten so readily. By
planting the same variety at different
dates or by using varieties with differ-
ent dates of maturity the grazing may
be extended over a considerable period.
Although this crop is chiefly used for’
pasturing hogs, all other kinds of live
stock may be pastured on it if desired
TAUGHT BY A WORM.
This Lowiy Creature Suggested ths
First Submarine Tunnel.
The first great under water tunnel
was built beneath the Thames at Lon-
don by Sir Mark Isambard Brunel.
Brunel was one of the most prolific in-
ventors of Lis time, and he was a pio-
neer in many lines, but the Thames
tunnel is his greatest memorial.
It was a worm which suggested to
Brunel the possibility of a tunnel un-
der the Thames. While passing through
a dockyard he noticed a piece of sh’
timber perforated by a destructive
worm—the Teredo Navalis. Brunel
studied the worm's mode of operation
in boring into the wood, and this sug-
gested to his mind the construction of
a cast iron shieid which should bore
like an auger by menus of strong hy-
draulic screws, and as rapidly as the
earth was cut away bricklayers shoull
be at hand to replace it with an arch.
Tle work on the Thames tunnel com
menced in 1925, and after ma ty vicis
situdes and .wccidents it was completed
in 1843. when Brunel was knighted by
Queen Victoria. Brunel was also the
first to make shoes by machinery. and
he devised machines for knitting, nail-
making. ruling paper and making
wooden boxes. In his youth Brunel
gpent several years in America, de-
gigned and built a theater in New York
and planned fortifications ‘for the city
St. Louis Post-Dispatch.
If you do not like a man, try to find
gut whether you are the reason or
whether he is.
‘A PEOPLE’ OF CONTRASTS.
| Italians, Like Their Land, Endowed
With Great Physical Charm.
a varying charm and the people differ
as widely as their surroundings. The
hot blooded southerner observes a dif-
ferent standard of morals and hygiene,
fires to anger or interest more quickly
and is generally less dependable and
industrious than his northern brother.
Both are gifted with the black eyes
and hair and the swacthy complexion
as a race that is a general characteris-
tic of the Latin peoples. But the Ital-
ian is, broadly speaking, like his coun-
try, endowed with a physical beauty
and charm beyond that of most of his
fellows.
In the north, however, there are ex-
ceptions—fair haired and reddish men
and women, who seem strangely out o
place among their dark neighbors.
Cool, temperate exotics they are among
the higher colored growths that some-
how seem so tropical, with their sultry
smiles and fathomless, mysterious eyes,
fn which forever broods the shadow of
the purple mountains that always and
everywhere dominates all Italy. even
to the delightful carabinieri, or rural
guards, those Napoleonic looking ofii-
cinls who parade always solemnly in
pairs, hangers at their sides. cockades
in their black beavers, the majesty of
the law in every line and footstep.—
National Geographic Magazine.
BUSINESS SIGNBOARDS.
They Were Used at First Only by the
inas and Taverns.
The first tradesmen to adopt the use
of signs were the innkeepers, and from
earliest times in England and on the
continent the taverns of town and
country were distinguished by sign-
boards bearing the names of the hos-
telries. It was not until the sixteenth
century that merchants dealing in oth-
er than liquid refreshments began to
erect signs over their doors.
Once started the custom spread rap-
idly, and the seventeenth century was
a period of prosperity for the sign
painters of England. Even in London
the houses aud shops were not num-
bered, so a tradesman’s place of busi-
ness could only be known by a sign.
The ingenuity of the merchants was
taxed in such a city as London to pro-
vide an original sign that would stick
in the memories of passersby.
A man starting in business consid.
ered a striking sign his most impor
tant investment. These signs, often
huge in size. were sometimes slung en-
tirely across the street. As they grew
old they occasionally fell and thus be-
ame a source of danger
were prohibited by parliament in the
year 1762. and after that merchants
had to be content with more modest
signs placed flat against the fronts of
their buildings.—New York World.
Such fans
Whistler Was a Dandy.
If taking infinite pains with his ap-
pearance means dandyism, then Whis-
tler was a dandy. The very word
pleased him, and he used it often, in
American fashion, to express perfec-
tion or charm or beauty. Never was
any man more particular about his per
son aud his dress. [.: was as caren
of his hair as a woman, though there
was no need of the curling tongs with
which he has been reproached: the dif-
ficulty was to restrain his curls and
keep them in order. The white lock
gave just the right touch. However
fashion changed. he always wore the
mustache and little imperial which
other West Point men of his genera-
tion retained through life. Even his
thick, bushy eyebrows were trained.
and they added to the humorous or
sardonic expression of the deep blue
eyes from which many shrank.—Pen-
nell’s “Life of Whistler.” i
Epitaph of a Cynic.
John Goodman of Sulton. Surrey
county. England. was a cynic. His
own will convicts him of so being He
directed in this document that no wom-
en be allowed in his funeral cortege.
And on his tombstone he bade that
the following verse be car ed:
Farewell, vain earth, I've nal enou.» of
thee,
And now am careless what thou say'st of
me.
Thy smiles I car'st not, nor thy frowns 1
fear.
My care is past, my head lies quiet here.
What faults you see in me take care to
shun
And look at home, enough is to be done.
Photographic Films.
The photographic film was developed
in the larger sense by the Rev. Han-
nibal Goodwin. This man made possi
ble moving pictures. Goodwin died
poor—poore: than if he had never in
vented anything--after a long fight in
the courts with a photographic com
pany that fought his right to obtain a
patent.
Curious Extinct Animal.
The Amblypoda was one of the most
curious of the extinct species of mam-
mal. They were the size of tbe ele-
phant and had tive toes on each foot
ending in hoofs instead of nails. Re-
mains of these have been found ip
England. but she best specimens have
come from North America.
A Domestic Sacrifice.
If hnsl mes angry on Mon-
day an! he can't buy a cer-
tain th woman knows she
niusi until Tuesday.-
Par AY clegram.
Quite a Resemblance.
“Didn't you have a brother in this
course last year?”
“No, sir; it was 1. I'm taking it over
again.’
“Pxtraordinary resemblance, though.
! Positively extraordinary 1” — Harvard
! Lampoon.
{ KEYSTONE PARAsiiar I>
» organ, piano and some cushions wer?
THE MS {ERSDALE COMI
rms came ms
a EE
After a lively session of several
Province by province Italy manifests | hours in Pittshurgh the tempera.uc
workers of the state organized the.r
forces into a federation to be krcwa
as the Pennsylvania Dry federation
with the main object of swinging
Pennsylvania into the dry column th.s
fall. It was not without much op-
position that the organization was
formed, however, for the officers of
the Anti-Saloon league were united in
their efforts to prevent the project.
The latter, however, finally consented
to co-operate with the federation. i
Reports from Harrisburg say it is
likely that the Sixth Pennsylvania
infantry, now returning to the state
from service on the Mexican border,
and the Sixteenth infantry, which re-
turned some time ago, will articipaiel
in the Wilson inaugural parade. The |
Sixth is composed of companies in
Philadelphia and vicinity and the Six#®
teenth comes from Erie, Venango and
other northwestern counties, with
headquarters at Oil City. The third
reg.ment to take part nas not been
selected.
While the funcral of Mrs. Elizabaih
Mason was bo..g held in the United
Presbyterian church in Hartstown,
near Meadville, th> building was dis
covered to be on fire. The casket wu:
removed to a place of safety and th:n
the mourners filed cut in order. Th
removed bo ore the building wa
burned to the ground, entailing a los
of several thousand dollars.
With three buildings entirely de:
stroyed and numerous others dam-
aged by smoke, fire and water, fire
men from Uniontown, Connellsville
and Brownsville fighting the flames,
which threatened to wipe out the bus:
ness section of Uniontown, succeeded
in getting the conflagration under c’.n-
trol. The total damage was estimated
at $250,000. e
Sixteen buildings in .Gerardville, in-:
cluding the telephone exchange and aj
fire engine house, were destroyed br |
fire at an estimated loss of $100,640 i
Fire depa.iiments from a half doze :
nearby towns sent aid and dynamite
was used to check the flames. Al
most an entire block was wiped out
before the fire was brought under con
trol.
Forty persons were made homeless
when fire broke out in a block in New
Castle occupied by several fam-
ilies of foreigners, and spread to the
frame residcice of James See, de-
stroyed both
timated at $15.000. Tin boxes, some
of them containing large sums of
money—the life savings of many of
the foreigners—were destroyed.
The Sproul resolution providing for
an investigation of the state admin-
istration was passed finally in the
house of representatives as it came
from the senate, and will go to the
governor for his action. The vote on
final pass~ge was 110 ayes to 80 noes.
1
The bN recnred 104. The LLL pus ed
Gil-8 fol oY 1 ra ecuun oun
second r~ € np hata 0M
Hnry Ward Molen, J fso
county yuu.., who a 7
Ha nes wis donvicoed ug. =n of
degrlce neti r fer the kilag of
lary Hans wou? of Evicst
may be granted a new tri 1]. Tha sto.
suprenie court authorized the court of
oyer and ternuner of Jefferson coun'y
“jn its discretion to grant a rule for
a new trial.”
Admitting a shortage in his ac-
counts to the extent of $19,000, Wii-
liam H. Redhun, aged ibirty-nine,
of Butler, until a few days ago paying
teller and assistant cashier in the
Merchants’ National bank of Butler,
surrendered himself to Deputy Unit
ed States Marshal Frank C. Beatty, to
whom a warrant had been issued for
his arrest.
Mrs. Catherine Hyland, seventy-nine
years old, a widow of Altoona, who
was stricken blind about six months
ago, walked through an open window
to the front porch roof of her home
and fell from there to the pavement.
a distance of twenty feet, dying of
her injuries an hour afterward.
Governor Brumbaugh has made re-
quisition upon the governor of Ari-
zona for the return to Maunch Chunk
of Martin Leskowsky, who broke out
of the Carbon county jail in the sum-
mer of 1909, while awaiting executicn
for murder. When I =skowsky comes
back he will be hanged.
Members of the Dubois Rifle club
have offered themselves as guards or
watchmen in case of hostilities with
Germany. The club numbers 100 mei
and is promoted by the national gov-
ernment.
Former Mayor Blankenburg Of
Philadelphia celebrated his seventy-
fourth birthday by issuing a statement
to all Philadelphians to stand back of
President Wilson in the internation-
al crisis.
Players in H. D. Henry’s pool room
at Milroy got into a free-for-all scrap,
locked the doors and went to it. Jerry
Aumiller is expected to die from in
juries.
Altoona is threatened with a bread
famine because of the freight tie-up.
Bakers report they have only a few
days’ supply of flour on hand.
Mrs. Elizabeth Detwiler Brown,
Blair county’s oldest woman, died at
her home in Hollidaysburg, aged 100
years, 2 months and § days.
nd entailing a loss es-|.
pial d LE PA
“What It Wdu'd Ce.
A teacher was ecudeavoring to ex-
plain the term “71 ini * to his ol
“Now,” he rcisarked to one stir i
youth, “what is your father's trade or
profession?”
“Iie's a lithographer,” was the reply.
“Very weil. Supposing a man came
to your father with a document which
he wanted reproducing in every partic-
ular, your father uzreed and the docu-
ment was faithiully copied, what
would it be?”
“Well,” replied the boy thoughtfully,
“it depends.”
“On what?’ asked the teacher.
“On the document.”
“How so?”
“Well, if it was a ten dollar bill, for
instance, the other would be a counter
feit. If the document was a check the
copy would be a forgery.”
“You don’t understand what I mean.”
“Oh, yes, I'm quite sure I do,” went
on the boy. “I'm just coming to it
now. In either case I reckon it would
be about ten years.”
* John-8mith and Pocahontas.
About a mile below Richmond, in
what is now the brickyard region,
there used to stand. the residence of
the Mayo family, a place known,as
Powhatan. This place has long been
pointed out as the scene of the saving
of Smith by the Indian girl. but late
research has proved that, though
Smith did come up the James to the
present site of Richmond, his capture
by the Indians did not occur here, bat
in the vicinity of Jamestown. The
Indians took him first to one of their
viilages en York river, near the pres-
ent site of West Point, Va., and thence
to a place on the same stream in the
county of Gloucester, where the pow-
hatan, or tribal chief, resided. Here,
on the west side of the river, some nine
miles from Williamsburg, the scene of
Smith's rescue by Pocahontas has been
located.—Julian Street in Collier's.
“Overhang” Houses.
By the year 1670 wooden chimneys
{and log houses of the Plymouth and
Bay colonies were replaced by more
sightly houses of two stories, which
were frequently built with the second
story jutting out a foot or two over
1 the first and sometimes with the at-
tic story still further extending over
the second story. This “overhang” is
popularly supposed to have been built
for the purpose of affording a con-
venient shooting place from which to
repel the Indians. This is, however,
a historic fable. The overhanging sec-
ond story was a common form of
building in England in the time of
Queen Elizabeth, and the Massachu-
setts and Rhode Island settlers sim-
ply and naturally copied their old
homes.
Wild Ducks.
Canvasback and redhead ducks,
which are very quick of movement,
after deep diving are capable of tak-
ing flight immediately upon coming to
the surface of the water. They do not
spring directly upward into the air,
but fly at first at an angle until they
reach the desired elevation. Surface
feeding wild fowl. like the black duck,
pintail and teal, dy directly upward
from the surface of the water if the
emergency demands it.
Truthful Excuse.
‘The sheriff caught his young as-
sistant writing love letters in business
hours today.”
“What did the young fellow say
when be was taxed with doing so?”
“Said he was not shirking his duty,
as they were all writs of attachment.”
— Baltimore American.
People of Sardinia.
Sardinians retain traces of the many
races which have occupied the island
through the centuries—Phoenicians,
Carthaginians, Romans, Saracens, Ital-
jans and Spaniards. Many dialects are
spoken, but Italian is now taught in
the schools.—Exchange.
Bostonese.
“When the Boston girl wishes her pet
dog to stand on his hind legs,” remark-
ed the observer of events and things,
“ghe requests him to assume a ram-
pant attitude.”—Yonkers Statesman.
Surnames. 5
Surnames were introduced into Eng-
land by the Normans and were adopt-
ed by the nobility in 1100.
oo oe de do Be oo do Be oe oe fe fe ole oe Bosh ood
&
& PRACTICAL HEALTH HINT.
& cae :
4 Headache and Sick Stomach.
4 This condition results from im-
perfect digestion. Whether it has
been caused by eating too much
food. which has disturbed diges-
tion. the treatment remains the
same, and this is to empty the
stomach. iMrmnking one tumbler-
ful of water a’ter another as rap-
idly as possible until six or eight
glasses are taken is the quick-
est way of washing offending
substances out of the stomach.
If this is done in ten minutes one
will have relief from the sick
feeling and headache and be
ready to go to sleep or to go
about again in comfort. This
method of treating a sick head-
ache is also good for attacks of
acute indigestion. Half an hour
after the stomach has become
comfortable it is well to take a
seidlitz powder or a dose of ci-
trate of magnesia. Either of
these remedies will bring up the
gas, sweeten the stomach and
give one a clean, pleasant taste
POPE IRL I ER RP RRP hl hb R bee d
L:3
&
&
in the mouth. &
&*
%
POPS P TROOP PRROED
i gta
[fq rtm, CONGRESS JOLTS
known Ney I' int,
were In the Bb ol iving th
-cars unattcude nu overed 1
meihods of new kind of practi ®
joker. new because Le wis practical.
It appears that almost every da;
some one would have trouble in ge
| ting his car started. After he hi
| tinkered for a few minutes an obligin
mechanic would stroll up. proffer his
aid and have the enzine running in n
time. Two actors happened to com:
pare notes one day and found that th’
incident had occurred to both of then
They immediately became suspicious
and on leaving the restaurant saw the
man working at a car a short distance
down the street.” By quick action one
of them pounced on him and caught
him. He was the obliging mechanic,
and after his arrest it developed that
he had deliberately disconnected por
tions of the cars’ electrical systems
i cuiside, 1
and then had collected substantial re-
wards from puzzled owners for serv-
ices rendered in starting the machines
—Motor Life.
How Wood Shrinks.
Students in the:colleze of forestry at
the University of Washington have
proved by expefiment that a cord of
full length wood when sawed and re
piled in the ordinary stack shrinks on
an average 21.76 per cent. As dealers
buy wood in full lengths and usually
measure it for delivery before sawing
it, they are often accused of giving
short measure.
A “cord” is the standard measure
ment of wood, and it is defined as 128
cubic feet of wood, measured by a pile
four feet high and eizht feet wide of
logs four feet long.
The discrepancy between the cord as
bought by the dealer and as delivered
to the customer, according to Professor
Hugo Winkenwerder, dean of the col-
lege, is not entirely explained by the
sawdust. When wood is piled up in
four foot lengths there are many spaces
between sticks, caused by knots and
curvatures. These spaces are elim-
inated when the wood is cut up small.
Ancestry of Modern Dogs.
According to Charles R. Eastman.
writing in the Museum Journal, our
modern dogs have a varied ancestry.
some being descended from Asiatic
and some from African species. The
spitz in all its varieties is a domesti-
cated jackal. The mastiff and St. Ber-
nard and their kind are descended
through the molossus of the Romans
from a huge, wolilike creattire that was
already domesticated by the Assyro-
Balylonians 3.000 years before our era.
The Russian borzoi and the Sicilian
hound had their origin in the Cretan
GRP PPR RRRRR RRR RRR RR RRR RO BRED
hound, which is still common in Crete,
and it and its cousin, the Ibaza hound
of the Balearic islands, came from the
ancient Ethiopian hound, which was a
domesticated wolf. The collie or shep-
herd dog seems to come down direct
from a small wild dog of the paleolith-
ic period.
Here's a Tip About Hotel Guests.
In the American Magazine a writer
says:
“Here's a funny thing, by the way
that I've noticed about hotel guest:
You leave a soiled towel in a Troon
and the guest will probably complain
but you can leave a bucket of paint
and a paper hanger’s scaffold in the
hallway and compel the guest to craw
under a stepladder to get to his room
and he will put up with it cheerfully.
because he knows you are painting or
papering by way of making an im
provement and he is in sympathy with
that. It doesn't cost much to make
over a carpet so that a bare spot in
front of the dresser will be eliminated,
but such little details are a vast help
in making a hotel prosper.”
The “Only Child.”
When parents have an ‘only child”
it seems to get as much attention as
six or eight children in a large family.
Some statistics show that out of a‘hun-
dred “only children” eighty-seven were
nervous, the girls suffering worse thai
the boys. And then the statisticians
say the only child lacks self reliance.
is precocious, vain and unsociable, is
often extremely timid, being afraid of
dark rooms and o* sleeping alone.—
Exchange.
It’s an lll Wind.
“Rejected you, did she, old man?”
“Yes.” '
“Poo bad! No doubt you had plan
ned to buy her a ring and all that?”
“Yes.”
“Had your money all saved up. eh?”
«1 should say so. Had $50 all ready.’
“1 say, old pian. you—er—couldn’f
lend me that $50 till you find some oth
er girl whe vill have you, could you?
-—Boston Transcript.
Worse Still.
“Does you father ever comment on
my staying so late at night?”
“No, Algernon.”
“That's ood.”
“But he sometimes makes sarcastic
remarks about your staying so early
in the morning.” — Birmingham Age-
Herald.
Cause and Effect.
She—8o0 you danced with Miss Light-
foot at the ball lust night? He—Tes
Did she tell you? She—Oh, no. But}
sav her going into a chiropodist’s this
morning.
Mosquito Netting.
Mosquito netting is an ancient Greek
if not Egyptian invention, even if it
does seem a Yankee idea.
It is easier for the generous to for
sive than for offense to ask it.—Thom-
son.
i
[IUGR TWICE
Drastic Measures Are Approved
In both Houses
DRY ADVOCATES ARE HAPPY
Amendment to Constitution—Senate
Aims Against Transportation.
Prohibition has taken a step forward
in both branches of congress.
In the senate drastic amendments
to the postal appropriation bill were
agreed to which would make criminal
the importation of liquor into. states
which prohibit its manufacture and
sale for beverage purposes, and which
from the mails in states which legis-
late against such advertising.
On the house side the national pro-
hibition constitutional amendment was
committee, with a prediction by Chair-
man Webb that i* would be passed
within a week. Champions of prohi-
bition greeted this announcement with
enthusiasm, in spite of their realizax
tion that passage in the house will
end action on the amendment insofar
as this session of congress in con-
cerned. There is no thought of ac-
tion by the senate. before March 4,
when the sixty-fourth congress dies.
The amendment to the postoffice
appropriation bill to make it a crime
to ship liquor into prohibition states,
was added by Senator Reed of Mis-
souri, to the Jones amendment bar-
ring newspapers or other publications
or letters and postal cards contain-
ing liquor advertisements from the
mails in states which have laws
against such advertising. It was
adopted after brief debate by a vote
of 45 to 11, by the senate, sitting as
committee of the whole.
The original Jones amendment to
bar newspapers and other liquor ad-
vertisements from the mails in states
having anti-liquor advertising laws at-
taches the same penalties as provided
in the Reed amendment. Under this
provision no newspaper, pamphlet, let-
ter, postal card, circular ‘or publica-
tion of any kind containing liquor ad-
vertisements could be mailed into the
dry states.
To prevent prosecution of innocent
persons the measure explicitly states
that “if the publisher of any newspa-
per or other publications, or the
agents of such publication or if any
dealer in such liquors or his agent
shall knowingly” cause liquor adver-
tisements to be mailed in violation
of the proposed law, he shall be guilty
of violating the law.
Collieries Shut Down.
The coal business in the Irwin-
Greensburg field is almost at a stand-
still on acccunt of the car shortage
and the inability of the railroads to
move empties to the mines and start
loaded cars to their destination. The
normal output of 25,000 tons daily has
been reduced to 10,000 tons.
LIVE STOCK AND GRAIN
Pittsburgh, Feb. 20.
Butter—Prints, 46@46l%c; tubs, 45
@46%c. Eggs—Fresh, 49c.
Cattle—Prime, $10.75@11.25; good,
$10@10.65; tidy butchers, $9.25@9.75:
fair, $8.50@9; common, $7@8; heif-
ers, $6.60@10; common to good fat
bulls, $6@9; common to good fat cows,
$4@8.50; fresh cows and springers,.
$40@385.
Sheep and Lambs—Prime wethers,
$11.50@12; good mixed, $10.50@11.25;
fair mixed, $9.26@10.25; culls and
common, $5@6.50; heavy ewes, $6.50@
9.50; spring lambs, $11@15.25; veal
calves, $14.50@15; heavy and thin
Hogs—Prime heavy, $12.86@12.90;
heavy mixed, $12.80@12.85; mediums:
Yorkers, . $11.50@12; pigs, -$10.75@
11.25; roughs, $11.60@12; stags, $10@
10.50.
Cleveland, Feb. 20.
Cattle — Choice fat steers, 1,100:
pounds and upward, $10.25@11; choice
fat steers, 1,000 pounds and upward,
steers, $9.25@9.60; fair to good butch-
steers, $6.560@7.26; choice heifers,
$8.25@8.50; light heifers, $7.26@8$;
good to choice butcher bulls, $7.50@:
8; bologna bulls, $6.75@7.50; good to-
choice cows, $7@8; fair to good cows,
$5.50@6.50; common cows, $4@5.
Calves—Good to choice, $14.50@15;
fair to good, $13.50@14.25; heavy and
common, $9@11.
Sheep and Lambs—Good to choice
lambs, $14.756@15; fair to good, $13@
13.76; culls and common, $9@10.50;
{ good to choice wethers, $10.50@11.50;
| 200d to choice ewes, $10.50@11.50;
| mixed ewes and wethers, $10@11;
culls, $7@8.
Hogs—Choice mediums, heavies..
mixed and Yorkers, $12.90; pigs,
$11.50; roughs, $12; stags, $11.
Chicago, Feb. 20.
Hogs—Bulk, $12.20@12.40; light,
$11.66@12.30; mixed, $12.06@12.45;
heavy, $12@12.50; roughs, $12@12.10;
pigs, $9.256@10.66.
Cattle—Native beef cattle, $7.75@
11.90; stockers and feeders, $6.15@
9.10; cows and heifers, $5.10@10.25;
calves, $9.75@13.75.
Sheep — Wethers,
lambs, $12.25@14.65.
Wheat—May, $1.763;. Corn—May,
$1.01%. Oats—May, §7%c.
$10.85@11.90;
House Committee Reports Prohibition
would’ exclude liquor ‘advertisements !
favorably reported from the judiciary
calves, $7.60@10. .
and heavy Yorkers, $12.75@12.80; light =
$9.76@9.8p;, 200d, to. chaice. butcher ..
er steers, $8.75@9; common to light
ews
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