The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, January 22, 1892, Image 6

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    Highest of all in Leavening Tower. Latest U. S. Gov't Report.
ABSOLUTELY PURE
:nu coiAJMiiiArsi.
Entered at the I'imt. onlep Ht. llloninsburK
8 ntl class mutter, March 1. isss.
IJ iX)OMSl)WOrA.
FRttu. J A .SUA R Yia",i
TO SUBSCRIBERS OUT OF THE
COUNTY.
Notice is hereby giv
en to all subscribers re
siding outside of the
county, that owing to
the fact that we have to
pay postage on their pa
pers, the price will be
$1.25 a year strictly in
advance, from and af
ter January 1st, 1892.
1-1-4.
You cant afford to miss Wendlings
famous lecture, "Is death the end," a
reply to Col. Robert Ingersol that all
should hear. He sure to get tickets at
Dentler s or Brooke s.
The Woman's Christian Temper
ance Union will hold their next meet
ing at Mrs. Frymire's on Tues. Jan,
26, at three o clock. A full attend
ance is desired.
15v Order ok Committk.e.
Carbolic acid taken from the house
hold medical closet in the dark by
mistake has caused another death.
This time Police Justice Loan, of
Baltimore, is the victim. When will
the public learn that deadly drugs and
poisons cannot be left about the house
with impunity ? This is the third
death of this character within a few
weeks.
Pointer For Advt-rt'.sars-
M. M. Gillam, the advertising man
ager for John Wanamaker gives the
following advice to advertiscis in
1'rintera1 Ink of January 6; "Whether
big or little, the advertisement should
be persistent. Every day is the right
rule for a general business and chang
ed every day. Hold up one phase or
-another of it all the time. Make the
readers look to your announcements
as they look to news. Don't expect
them to always carefully read what you
say. They skip half the locals and
elegrams, maybe - all but the head
lines. You can be sure of a glance,
at least if you deserve it. Fill the
advertisement so full of hooks that the
glancer is likely to get caught. And
work for the women. That's the secret
01 tne greatest possible success
general merchandising "
in
LIGHT3TREET.
Rev. A. H. Irvin, Presiding F.lder
of Lewisburg District Evangelical
Church, held quarterly meeting serv
ices here Saturday and Sunday last,
staying till Wednesday.
Among the people xho attended
the funeral of Geo. Pugh we noticed
his father from Lewistown, Mr Thos.
Scott and lady of Tyrone, Mr. Scott
and Mrs. Mitchell of Johnston.
S. A. White, agent for the B. &. S.
R. R. Co. at Jamison City, came
home sick one day last week, and is
now confined to his bed.
Mrs. Martha Brown died at the
residence of her son-in law, R. Buck
waiter, on Thursday of last week,
aged 86 years.
J. M. Shew has so far recovered
from an attack of La Grippe as to be
out again.
Mrs. Chas. Rink and Mrs Jos.
Wardin, are lying very ill at present
writing.
Mrs. J. J. Keller is 011 the sick list.
The colored minstrel show of home
talent on Saturday niijht was quite a
success, gotten up by the P. (). S. of
A., proceeds to be used in furnishing
the hall.
Rev. Meudenhall preached in the
M E. Church on Monday evening,
having been called here by the death
cf his sister, Mrs, Martha Brown.
Quite a number of people in town
are having symptoms of La Grippe.
Mr. ami Mrs. Wesley Betz lost
their -baby through an attack of
Grippe.
Mrs. Will Jacoby of Scranton visit
visited her husband's parents Tuesday.
Mrs. J. Shollenberger of Almedia
visited Mrs. A. F. Terwilliger on Tues
day. Mr. and Mr. Mendenhall of llughes
ville visited Mr. and Mrs. E A.
Brown Monday.
Children Cry fop Pitcher's Castorla.
When Baby u tick, w er her Caatorla,
When aha wu a Child, she cried (or Cm tori,
Whw sha tMotmt KJm, the clunf to Oattorte,
WMth had QUldrib rare tbemCaatorla.
Pomler
J. If. Njaize has moved his law and
insurance offices to Lockards building,
corner Main and Centre streets, sec
ond floor. 1 15-4W.
The New York Novelty Store is
closing out all woolen goods, such as
ladies and mens underwear; ladies,
mens' and misses' wool hose, mens'
heavy gloves ; blankets and comforts.
These eoods must all hi sold this
month, at cost and below. x-i5-2t.
Three Stops to a Ecaffold.
I Printed lit the re piesl of the W. C T. t
...i . .
1 nree 01 my neighbors lay dead on
Dec 3rd, which was a strange and
rare coincidence in more ways than
one. I'he first case was a member of
a church, who had been a Sunday
School teacher for more than twenty
years, lie was an exemplary citizen,
and voted the Republican ticket
The second neighbor was Jacob Vall
mer, a saloon keeper. I Ie kepi about
as orderly a tavern as any other It
eenaed saloonkeeper, when alive,
and did a thriving business and was
rapidly gelling rich. His house was a
great resort, and pitchers and buck
ets filled with beer could be seen coin
mg and going, in tne nanus 01 men
and women from dawn to midnight.
I he business was so important that it
is alleged that one of his neighbors, a
clerk in one of the courts, used his in
side influence to hive the license
transferred to the widow a few hours
after the owner's death. The third
neighbor to leave the world was John
McManus, who was hung that morn-
: r,. 1 i 1 i -w-
ing lor murder. Bad thoutm Mc
Manus was, he was the natural out
come of the saloon traffic. He was
born in the slums where the '.army of
taill. never gees. He knew nothin
but vice; it was all around him, and
he grew up with it. The licensed
saloon stared him in the face from
every side, and it was as easy for him
to tan into their open doors as it is
for a young man raised on Walnut
street to enter the doors of the most
refined society. As he walked to the
scaffold, carrying the uplifted crucifix
in his hand, the emblem of a Cruci
fied Redeemer who dieJ for John Ale
Mantis, as well as for the Rev. Theo
(lore Cuyler, D. I)., he protested at
every step of that awful march, from
the cell down to the gallows, that he
was drunk when he committed th
crime. He was drunk, men and
women of the land, and he got drunk
in a licensed saloon, licensed the
vote of members of Christian
churches. These were my three
neighbors who lay dead in one day.
neither of them over two hundred
yards from me. Here lay the church
man who voted the licensed ticket
Here lay the saloon keeper who took
advantage ot the license, which was
granted because the churchman voted
that it should be granted. Las ly,
there was John McManus, the victim
of the licensed saloon, who, while
crazed with licensed rum, committed
a murder and then in turn was legally
murdered by the State. And there
was another strange thing about it
r.acn one ol them had reliyrious cere
monies over their ashes. What think
you of my three neighbors? Does
not the church member, the saloon
keeper, and the victim stand in close
relation in this peculiar instance ?
Have we not here the licensed voter,
the licensed saloon-keeper and the
licensed saloon victim ?
You've tried Dr. Tierce's Favorite
Prescription have you and you're dis
appointed. The results are not im
mediate. And did you expect the disease of
years to disappear in a week Put a
pinch of time in every dose. You
I would not call the mil!; poor because
the cream doesn't rise in an lnur?
I If there's no water in it the cream is
; sure to rise. If there's a possible cure,
1 Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription is
sure to effect it, if given a fair trial.
You get the one dollar it costs back
again it it don t benefit or cure you.
We wish we could give you the makers'
confidence. They show it by giving
the money back again, in all cases not
benefited, and it'd surprise you to know
now lew dollars are needed to Keep
the refund.
up
Mild, gentle, soothing and healing is
Dr. Sage's Catarrh Remedy. Cures
the worst cases permanently. No ex
perimenting. It's 1 Old Reliable."
Twenty-five years of success.
Send in your orders now for town
ship election tickets. We will send
them by mail to any address in the
county, not less than 100 to be order
ed. Cash must accompany the order
j in every case Stamps will be re
, ceived. Names of candidates printed
in at 50 cents a hundred. With blanks
to write names in, 25 cents per 100. tf.
KOTIOE.
The members of the Democratic
Standing Committee of the townships
(if Blcomsburg, Siolt, Greenwood and
Sugarloaf, complying "The Bloom
Poor District," are requested to meet
at the Court House, in the Town of
Uloomsburg, on Saturday, January 23,
1 Sf)2, nt 2 ociokP. M., lor the pur
po::C ol placing in nomination two
persons as Poor Directors of said dis
trict. Jno. R. Townsknd,
I. II. Mkrckk, Secy. Co. Chairman.
Wanted. Two good pants maker?.
Steady work. Apply at I.owenbcrgV,
Bloomsbuig, Pa.
The firm of Allen& Armstrong has
been dissolved. Mr. Allen retiring.
John Armstrong will continue the busi
ness at the old stand.
Because of the absence of Rev.
William T. Auman there will be no
preaching in the Reformed church
next Lord s day.
Catarrh is not a local but a consti
tutional disease, and requires a consti
tutional remedy like Hood's Sarsap
arilla to effect a cure.
Mrs. Dr. Kirby(Kuhn) of Mauch
Chunk, on Saturday, January 16, gave
birth to twin children, both girls, the
two weighing about eleven pounds.
The family is all doing well.
Mrs. Kate Sheep, had an attack of
La Grippe which kept her housed
about two weeks. Wednesday she had
a tooth drawn from which she took
cold and La Grippe again made its
appearance. She is confined to her
bed.
The Prohibitionists of Columbia
county will hold a convention in Har
man's Hall, Orangeville, Saturday
Jan. 23, at 10 o'cloc k a. m. State
Chairman, II. I). Patton will be pres
ent. Members of the W. C. T. U
and ail friends of temperance and pro
hibition are invited to be present.
W. A. Pitts,
County Chairman.
I'he Berwick F nr Association h
their annual meeting last week Tuesday
...... r .. i-
and elected tne touowtng directors
I. C. Sponenberj;, A. E. Shuman, G
L. Regan, J. W. Evans, Daniel Reedy
S. K. Heller, M. 11. Rittenhouse, O
F. Ferris, J. H. Eck, J. H. Davenport
In the meeting of the Board Dr,
Reagan was elected president ; C). I
Ferris, vice president ; J. W. Evans,
secretary : Daniel Reedy, treasurer,
The F'air is in good hands for the
coming year and it is hoped they will
make it a success.
For burns and wounds we would re
comend Salvation Oil. All dealers
sell it at 25 cents.
Many cases have come under our
notice where a single bottle of Dr.
Bull's Cough Syrup relieved a sufferer
from a severe cough, which had been
treated for months by competent
physicians. 25 c.
Hon. George R Wendling will give
his world renowned lecture, 'Is death
the end", at the Opera House next
Tuesday evening January 26th. Don't
fail to hear him. Note what the lead
ing newspapers say of him :
Chicago Tribune. "An orator of
great power."
Chicago Inter Ocean. "Able, elo
quent and telling."
Chicago Times. "Gifts of high
order."
Cincinnati Gazelle. "Height of
genuine eloquence."
Cleveland Ledger. "Rare elo
quence."
Jjtroit Free I'rts "Tin iilin
eloquence,
at Dentler's
Lofty thought."
Only 50 cts
Tickets
Y.M- C A U0TS3-
Prayer, Praise and Promise meeting.
next Sunday afternoon at 2:50 in Y,
M. C. A., Rooms. A hearty Invita
tion is extended to you to be present
A Business Men s Prayer meeting
every day at noon, for thirty minutes.
Come.
uibie class every I iuirsday evening
at S o'clock. You are invited to join.
A meeting for coiueciation and
Prayer every Saturday niiiht at S
o c:oc.;.
Don t forget the noonday Prayer
meeting lor Business Men, every day
at: 1 2 o cioct in the Y .M. C. A. Hall.
Attention! liusiness men, every
day at 12 o'clock noon-d.iy Prayer
meeting tor you, in V. M. L. A.
Rooms. Come.
t'NION llini.E CLASS
Rev. D. M. Stearns, the noted Bible
reader, of Scranton, Pa., will meet
tho-e desiring the formation of a Un
ion Bible clas, next Friday, January
22nd at 4 p. m , iu the Y. I. C, A.
Rooms. The securing of Mr; Stearns
permanently will depend largely
the attendance at this meeting.
upon
FOB SALE-
A good established butcher busi
ness and all fixtures, including good
convenient slaughter house, and hog
pen, also fine large cooling room, just
new.
Mrs. C. W. Brown,
Blojmsburg, Pa.
Children Cry for
Pitcher's Castorla.
Tho Oouutry Nwnpapcr 1 As it Was, end
As It Is,
Dr. Chapin said, more than a gene
ration ago, that any man who could
cross Broadwav at Fulton street had
brains enough for the making of a
country editor. This was not so se
vere a disparagement of the country
editor as it seems on the face of the
allegation to be. For it really did re
quire, and does require now, no small
amount of gray cerebral matter to per
form the feat mentioned. And when
one remembers that Dr. Chapin was
more than a little myopic, and from
detective vision could not be sure
some truck or express wagon shouldn't
hit him before he touched the oppo
site curbstone, it is easy to under
stand that,the gravamen of the com
parison was not meant to rest heavily
upon the editor.
I am reminded of this humorous
and forcible hyperbole when I con
template for a moment the changes
which have come over rural journal
ism in but little more than a genera
tion of time.
The newspaper of the early boy
hood of some men still living was al
most always issued at the county scat,
where there were usually two one
representative of each of the two
great parties. It was always a weekly,
and such copies as were not sent out
by the mail stage were dispatched by
a horseback rider, or by a market
and freight wagon often that ran, per
haps, twenty-five or thirty miles over
the country to and from the chief
town or county seat. It was a great
event in those days when the paper
arrived in the back town, for it gave
the bucolic world its hebdomadal peep
into the larger world, whose affairs
were henceforth to go to sleep again
from run! notice until the next week's
issue renewed the history. Without 1
telegraph, without the railway even
with exchanges equally as destitute of
stirring topics as his own sheet must
perforce be, the country editor real
iy needed 110 little wit to print so.
readable a sneet as he often did
What he hail to depend on mainly
was, 01 course, selected "miscellany
It he wielded the scissors well, and
could adapt and quote from the writ
' f nit. i
my ui umers wiiu propriety, he was
sure of no little local fame, and often
received a generous support. Im
inmani court uoings, marriages and
deaths, and an occasional hanging,
maoe up me local news; and
steamer arrival from Europe, casuali-
ties and crimes, occasional election
returns, and the proceedings of Cong-
gress and 111c state Legislature, with
me rresicient s and uovernor s mess-
sages, afforded the topics of general
interest. Over the foreign news was
usually put the picture of a sailing
vessel ; and over a few stickfuls of any
specially new and important such as
the latest election returns, for instance
might be noticed the galloping horse
and rider, with a long scroll bearing
some legend, and a numbered mile
post, near, supposed to be Hying rear
ward.
I here was an occasional traveler's
letter, to be sure, whose writer was
taking a stage journey, perhaps, of
fifty or seventy-five miles, and who
reported the small incidents theteof
with as much seriousness and wonder
as now accompany Stanley's accounts
of African exploration or Stevens' bi
cycle trip around the world. From
some little town or post-oflice hamlet
there were occasional biief letters
signed "Justitia," "Vindex," "lunius ,"
or "Spectator," not giving any special
local news, but discussing some
governmental affair of the nation,
State or county in highly roundsd
classical or Addisonian periods. Quite
often these letters were full of Jeffer
soman or Federal sentiments, with
quotations from the leaders of these
two currents of thought ; and not sel
dom they were forcibly and gracefully
written.
liiuanoteo place in the country
11 . .41 . 1
weekly 01 long ago was the Poet s Lorn
er, or "The Muse" as it was sometimes
termed. Only the other day I was
looking over a number of bound vol
times of two or three country weeklies
from fifty to seventy-five years old, and
was surprised at the brightness of some
of this verse. It was both original and
selected the latter invariably eood.
and the former occasionally ol extreme
or notable merit. Why shouldn't it
havebjen? Here Whittier first es
sayed to sing, and here Bryant, I lolmes,
Longfellow and others who have
achieved fame tried their maiden
flights. Whittier was a blushing boy
when the postman or paper rider threw
the paper containing his first effusion
over the fence, where he was at work
with his father, but he did not dare to
say that he had left the farm or the
furrow momentarily out of thought for
so frivolous a business as t'.is. Few
readers imagined that that week's issue
of a country paper bore to them the
eginmng of a great and endeared
reputation.
1 he improvement of the printing
press and the extension of the railroad,
with the telegraph soon to follow.
transformed many things the conntry
newspaper along with the rest. The
consequent multiplicity of events com
pelled conciseness and evolved the
paragraphist. The editor could no
onger enlighten his little town and vic
inage by editorials a column long ; he
was now also obliged, unless the ca-e
was extraor dinary, to cudgel the vil
lainous editor of the scurvy paper un
the stieet, in paragraphs only. So
much news came that cither must be
boiled down or omitted that whole col
umns of itenu, making fiom one or
two lines only, to not more than eight
or ten, were a weekly necessity. This
involved work, and developed tact and
taste. I don't think the small para
graph, as aii institution, was observa
ble in country papers much over forty
years ago; but Tiow well it has grown
since everybody sees. It has played
its part admirably and represents the
American spirit as few things do s for
in the pres of no other country do ge
nius aud wit coruscate and puncture
as they do here. Of course, it is not
in the country paper alone that such
brevity and sententiotisness are com
mon; but it has helped along and prof
ted by these traits.
George I). Prentice, the famous
Kentucky editor, was an adept and
pioneer in making short paragraphs.
I think a book of them was once pub
lished from his paper. When his neigh
bor across the street said, in a political
squib, that "Our party knows how the
land lies on this question."
'Yes,' said Prentice, "and the land
knows how your party lien on this
question."
Whether in repartee or in direct hu
mor, he said some of the most notably
smart things that have ever appeared
in newspapers. But to quote further
from them would lead us too far.
Next to the short paragraph the
most distinctive trait of the modern
country paper is its omnium gatherum
of local news. It now has hardly less,
and often more, than a single page of
township and adjacent village corres
pondence. It is true, some of this is
trivial, but many of the writers of it
live merely on a country cross road,
and perhaps the paper they receive can
boast for its centre little more than a
double cross-road hamlet. Yet from
every source the readers get what they
want. The are told all that happens
and what everyone is doing ; that Far-
mer Jones has put up a new horse-
oiock, and Merchant smith has paint -
ed his door yard fence and repaired
the front gate. No fish are too small
for the local net, and the facility with
which little tidbits of gossip are served
up is really quite attractive.
The old country paper was more
serious and solemn. It rarely printed
the most of people's names more than Queen Victoria's excessive prostra
twice when they married and when tion at the death of her favorite grand
they died. To-day nobody's name is son, Prince Albert Victor, is said by
too obscure to escape mention at no , London gossip, to be largely due to
inconsiderable intervals. The harm-: the fact that the heir to the throne
less gossip which thus goes about is and Princess May desired hei sanction
not only what everyone wishes to read, , to their engagement and early marriage
uui 11 is macic necessaiy uy me inva-1 uiree or iour years ago, wnicn sne re
sion of the metropolitan weekly, which fused to give at the time. If the con-
is sold at half the country papers
price. The local field the local paper
can hold, and its prominence is there
fore justified.
I do not believe the average country
paper now is really so much better
than the average one fifty years ago.
It is different because it must be. It
is made to fit a different environment,
and to cater to different needs. Once
the rural reader took or.ly one paper.
Now he takes several a daily paper
and specialized ones, and the maga
zines besides. You can leave many
tlvngs out of the country paper to-day,
and they will not be missed. But the
ancient editor had a good deal of the j
magazine's function as well as that cf I
the metropolitan daily's to fulfill. The !
nest ot tne country papers that our
fathers read were prime forces in their
day, and the editor then was a great
man, and identified with his sheet as
no editor can be now. He was a good
giver and taker of blows, and they
were not of velvet. His weekly argu
ment with the other editor near at
hand was writing of the utmost life
and vascularity. 'l'was the condi
ment for the weekly feast, and though
the editorial debate exists to day. to
what dimensions it has shrunk as a
field of human interest. To see how
good the old time papers were, look in
any well-selected scrap-book of the
period in which they existed. Th
country paper, tnen at its best, as it is
now, was one of the pleasantest ex
pressions of the human mind. Joel
Jienton in Printers' Ink.
All who are troubled with consump
tion will find a safe, sure, and speedy
relief in Ayers Pills. Unlike most
other cathartics, these pills strengthen
the stomach, liver, and bowels, and re
store the organs to normal and regular
action.
NOTICE-
Notice is hereby given that I have
purchased from J. N. Stephens, of
lienton township, Columbia county,
Pa., the following personal property,
to-wit : 2 gray horses, a cows, 3 young
heifers, 3 harnesses, 1 spring wagon.
big wagon, 2 plows, 2 harrows, 1
cultivator, 1 hay rake, 1 mower, 1
sheep, two pigs, all the grain in the
granary, corn in cribs, grain in the
ground, and hay. I have left the
same in the possession of the said J.
N. Stephens during my pleasure, and
persons are cautioned against inter
fering with them in any way.
J. M. Comstock,
iw. Central, Pa.
Good and Reliable-
A good and Teliable family medicine
is Sulphur Bitters. Kvery Spring for
six years I have been troubled with
boils. Since I began using Sulphur 1
Hitters, I have not had a single one.
You can rely on Sulphur Hitters every-time.-iiior
Weekly New. i-jj-2t.
99 Pure.
THE BEST FOR EVERY PURPOSE.
A HEAVY PORKER
RhorMcIIenry & Son, butchered
3t fat hogs at their distillery last Tues
day. One of the lot weighed 617s.
It was of the Chester white stock 2
years old, raised by Mr. Hugh Fair
man of Greenwood.
Best iodides and vegetable altera
tives make Ayer's Sarsaparilla the best
blood medicine.
Rich Costumes-
The costumes worn by the O'Flynn
in Mexico Company are said to have
cost over two thousand dollars. They
are gorgeous. This great company
will appear at the Bloomsburg Opera
House on Monday, Jan. 25th. Tick
ets now on sale at Dentler's Boot anc".
Shoe store.
For Collector of Greenwood.
As the undersigned is not able to
get out, he desires to say to the
people that he will be candidate lor
collector of taxes at the coming elec-
: non.
D. S. Patterson.
"Master, your best horse won't eat
anything." "Give him at once three
tablespoonfulls of Bull's Head Horse
and Cattle Powder in a warm mask
sent had not been withheld the
Princess would have something
left to console her at the deathbed
ook's Cottoa M
COMPOUND.
A repent discovery by an 0M
physician. xuotr.ifnllv if
monthly by tlujumntls of la
ate, la the only peifoeMv
Hare and reliable mitllelae
dlSl'OVurpll. Hpwnm nf un
principled UrUClTlStS Who Offer InfMi-lnr molU-
i lnes In p'.ace ot this. AhIc for Cook s Cotton
Hoot i on pound, tak no substitute, or lndiwe
1 and S cents In postage In letter, and we will
(tend, sealed, by return mall. Full sealed par
ticulars In plain envelope, to ladles onlyTs
stumps. Address Poni Lilt company,
- . . . N.?: 8 F's'iPr Block, Detmlt, Mien.
tP-Sold In Hlooiniburg by Voyer Bros., .1. B.
Mercer, c. A. Klelm, (. A. McKelvy and aU re
sponsible druggists everywhere.
BUSINESS LOCALS.
Suits for men, suits for boys,
and pretty little suits for child
ren at D. Lowenberg's.
AUAIlIAN I ilAYEH.
"0 Lord, lekind to the sick and poor; than
luut done enovijh for the tiik and luul.'hj, and
the havity do md need thve.'
The Vuliuy do not nets! Cactus ninoUCiirc, but
those who ore suffering from i-IruiikiiIsiii, t -lit,
IhiIIs. carbuncles, ulcers, and tho thousand ills 1 7
scrofula and Hjieeillc disease, need the kindness of
lToviilenoe to help ihem bear their troubles, aud
Cactus Wood Cure to cure their diseases.
Hold by
U. A. McKelvy, Dugrgtst, Bloomsburs 10.
OFFICE TO BENT-
A room on second floor of Colum
bian building, steam heat, water on
same floor, electric light if desired.
Apply to Geo. II. Elwell. tf.
Highest cash prices paid for Hides
and tallow at A. Solleder's Leather
store.
i2-n-2m.
Glasses fitted free of charge at J. G.
Wells.' All work guaranteed.
A lanre stock of over coats
for men, boys and
D. Lowenberg's,
children at
THE MARKETS.
1SI.OOMSHURG MARKETS.
COKHEfTED WEEKLY. HKTAIL PHICES.
Mutter per lb f .v
Rpg per dozen . .VI
Lard per lb .10
Ham per pound 14
Pork, whole, per pound 05 to .tts
Beef, quarter, per pound 08 to .08
Wheat per bushel
1.10
.58
St
8.M
6.00
15.00
.B0
8 00
.10
l.TS
.01
.10
UK
oats " "
Iiye "
Buckwheat flour per 100.
Wheat Hour per bbl
1 1 ay per ton
Potatoes per bushel
Shelled coi'D per bushel
Corn meal
cwt..
lb....
cwt.,
lb...
lb..
lb..
Hide meat
Chop
Tallow
Culclcons
Turkey
Coil pjr ton, Nj. 0..