'2 Discussed by President In His Boston Speech. HE WAXTS FEDERAL CONTROL. 5n That With I'rrarnl Intva t'ora porntloim ( nil not !) Di'iilt Kll n tlip Sltuiitlon UiMitn a tin Tlio) Snonlil III-. BOSTON. All;;. !(!. The wcrk's work for President Koiwvclt in lila trip tlirouuli Now KiiKlnntl Iickhii In curliest when liu ilepnrted from the bountiful summer homo of thu Junior enntor of Miissiiehuselts. lion. Henry Culiot Loilue, nt Niilmiit, iind iimlil the en Ihusliisin of tlwe Ki'eiitest tiunilier of penlile ho has fneed hIiico the I'lttn burif visit on .Inly 4 rode Into I.ynn under eiivnlry escort nnd spoki? from a lihilform nt city hull. Then he wiih tuken to Huston by specinl triiln and iin arrival went to Symphony hall, there addresslm; n urent nalherliiK of ltoptoti liusiiuss men. His speei h here was devoted almost entirely to n con sideration of llie trust question. From the hall the president went to Hotel Touralne,' where a little later In the evening he was the finest of Gov ernor Crane at dinner. This morning hrlulit iid early the presidential party started for Maine. Tlio president said In part: "Kverytlilnn has been revolutionized in the business world since the govern ment was founded, and the prom-ess of civilization from IicIiik a trickle has become a torrent. There was no par ticular thhiK at Hint time to'bothir as to whether the nation or the stale had control of the corporations. They were easy to control. Now. however, the exact reverse is the case, ami remem ber I say 'corporations.' I do not wiy merely trusts, merely combina tions of corporations or corporations under certain peculiar conditions. Tor Instance, sonic time lino thu attorney general took action against a certain trust. There has been considerable discussion as to whether the trust aimed at would not peek to get out from under the law by becoming u single corporation. Now, I want laws to enable us to deal with It no matter what shape. It takes. 1 want to hih the government to be able to get at it dcll nitely, so that the action of the govern ment cannot be evaded by any turn ing within or without federal or state statutes. "At present wo have really no etli clent control over a big corporation which does business in more than one (state, rreipiently the corporation has nothing whatever to do with the state in which It Is incorporated except to get Incorporated, and its actions may be taken In entirely different communi ties, communities which may object very much to the methods of incorpo ration in the state named. I do not think you can get action by any state, action by nil the states, that will give us satisfactory control of the trusts or ' big corporations, and the result Is at present that we have a greaj, power ful, artificial creation which has no creator to which It is responsible. "The creator creates It, and then it goes and operates somewhere else, and there Is no interest to the creator to deal witli it. It does not do anything : in that state. It operates outside en- I tlrely. of course it Is a mere truism that the corporation is the creature of the state, that the state is sovereign. Now, I M-ant to make a real and not a nominal sovereign, to have some one sovereign to which the corporation shall be really, lvally and not nominal ly, responsible. "The first thing we want is the pub licity, and I don't mean publicity as a favor by some corporations, 1 mean It as a right from all corporations af fected by the law. I want publicity as to the essential facts In which the pult lic has an Interest. 1 want the knowl edge given to the accredited repre sentatives of the people of facts on which those representatives can, If they see lit, base their actions later. The publicity itself would cure many evils. The light of day Is a great de terrent to wrongdoing. If the mere fact of being able to put out nakedly statements which would show the con dition of tilings to be wrong, it would go a long distance toward curing that wrong, and even where it did not cure It it would make the path evident by which to cure It, "We want to tie striving to see what Is good and what Is bad. to know what the facts are and to be able to shape our course accordingly. Some of these things I have said can be done now. A good deal Is being dune now. As far as the antitrust laws go they will be enforced. Now, no suit will be undertaken for the sake of seeming to undertake it. "Every suit that Is undertaken will be begun because the great lawyer and upright man whom we are so fortu nate as to have as attorney general, Mr. Knox, believes that there is a vio lation of the law which we can get at, and when thu suit Is undertaken it won't be eomprninlsed, excepting on the basis that the government wins. "Of course, gentlemen, no laws amount to anything unless they nre administered lniestly and fearlessly. You have got to have the administra tion before the law amounts to any thing. f "Then I believe, I am not going to say I am sure of it, but I believe It Is possible to frame national legislation which shall give us more power than we have now, at any rate over corpo rations doing an Interstate business. I cannot guarantee that, because In thu past it has more than once happened that we have got laws on the statute books which those who made them In tended to mean one thing and when they cume up for decision It was found that the Intention had not been sue cetMully put Into effect. Hut I bulitT4 that additional legislation can be hnd. I think we have got to make up our minds to the fact that If it proves on effort that we have not under the con stitution as It Is given the national ad ministration sulllcient power In deal ing with these great corporations then no matter what our reverence to the past may be our duty to the present and to the future will force us to see that more power Is conferred upon the national administration." GENERAL SICEL DEAD. Fniiintm Veti-rnli I'nniM'N Away After l.nnir lllnesM. NKW YOKK, Aug. Hl'.-Ocnornl Franz Sigel, the grizzled old warrior who fought against the government In the (ionium revolution of l.si.x-t'.i and valiantly battled for the Fnion through the civil war In the Fulled States, Is tlead. After a brief illness the beloved com mander passed away nt his home, !;i Mott avenue, In the Uronx. If the general had lived until Nov. TS, he would have been seventy-eight years old. For the last two months it has been realized that General Sigel might die GENEKAL SIGEL. at any moment, and yet his end wos somewhat unexpected. Around the deathbed were gathered three of General Sigel's sons, Kobert, Faul and Kudolph, and his daughter, Mrs. Leila Schehl, who has made her home with General Sigel since her hus bund's death. The general was quite conscious al most to the last and was able-to recog nize and converse with those gathered around him. When the final moments came, he sank Into a deep sleep. General Sigel was credited with do ing more than any other person to keep Missouri in the Union during the civil war. Conspicuous in the mili tary career of the dead general were his brilliant, masterly retreats when outnumbered by the enemy. Horn In Germany, General Sigel re ceived a military education there. He never returned to Germany after com ing to this country at the conclusion of the German revolution, although he was granted special amnesty in Still. He came to this country in 1S52, went to St. Louis and at the outbreak of the civil war organized a regiment of in fantry and a battery. The Germans flocked to him. He fought conspicu ously throughout the war, taking part In all the principal engagements. In 18U7 he came to this city, and In 1S71 he was appointed collector of In ternal revenue and later was elected register. He was pension agent under Cleveland in INlMi. Mr. Srlmnli NnllN. NEW YOKK, Aug. 2. Charles M. Schwab, president of the Fnlted States Steel corporation, has sailed for Eu rope in the Lorraine, looking strong and in Ills usual health. He was accompa nied to the steamship by Elbert H. Gary, chairman of the board of direct ors of the United States Steel corpo ration; George YV. IVrkins of Mr. Mor gan's olttce, Joseph H. Schwab, Max Fain, T. F. linker. S. A. 1'ope and CharlesSorck. Mr. Schwab was asked to confirm or deny the persistent rumor that he was to resign as president of the steel curporatlon and said emphat ically; "Not a word of truth In It. I ain going away on my vacation. I don't know how long I shall remain away, and that's all." Wreck On fit I.t-liUli Vnlloy. AUP.FKX. N. Y., Aug. iTi-There has been a wreck on the I.ehigh Valley railroad half a mile north of Ensenore. The baggage and smoking cars of a passcii-rer train left the rails and went down an embankment into Owasco lake, where they were overturned. The passengers escaped through tho windows. E. L. Leonard, Jay C. Weeks, Frank Greenfield and Henry Wagner, all of Auburn, were painfully though not seriously Injured. They were brought to this city. IOvniii f.nt'N tu Julian. WASHINGTON. Aug. 2ti.-The navy department has received a cablegram from Hear Admiral Evans, second In command on the Asiatic station, an nouncing his departure from Vladivo stok, bound for Hakodate, Japan, aboard his tiagshlp, the Kentucky. Drowned la the Yfllowatoiie. MILES CITY, Mont., Aug. 20. Ser geant Coon of Troop II, Thirteenth cav alry, has been drowned whlleatteniptliig to swim the Yellowstone river. Detach ments of soldiers from Fort Keough are actively euged In a search for his body. Iloera Sail Far Home. HAMILTON, Herinuda, Aug. 20. The Hrltlsh transport Staffordshire hus sailed for Cape Town with 1.0(H) Itoers who had been prisoners In the detention camps on these Islands. The, Shah la I'arla. PARIS, Aug. 20.-The shah of Ter jla has arrived here. lie received an ovation ut the station and was escorted to his hotel by a mounted, detachment of the Republican guard. THE COLUMBIAN, CONDENSED DISPATCHES. Kotahle Kvpntu nt the Week Itrlrfly ad Teraelr Tolil. The shah left England. The president accepted an Invitation to attend the convention of the Itroth crhood of Locomotive Firemen. General Mollneux claimed to have discovered tvldence that will free his pn Koland of the charge of poisoning Mrs. Kate J. Adams. M. P. Whitman and It. L. Doinrty won In the tennis singles from Kobert Huntington and Leo E. Ware respec tively at Newport. A special policeman of the Lehigh Valley Conl company was stabbed while rescuing his son from a mob of strikers at Hazleton, Fa. Attorney General Knox gave In structions for another attempt to se cure the extradition from Canada of Colonel Gaynor and Captain Greene. Minilii.v, A li it. 25. Clarence A. Flank, police Judge of Springfield, O., committed suicide. General ,T. J. IHckhftoii, one of tho most notable ex-Confederates, died at Ills home In Ocala, Flu., aged eighty three years. The new first ch iss battleship Maine on the Cape Ann trial course made an average of l.s.3 knots for four hours of continuous steaming Pan Fa tcli paced a mile In 2:(K)1,4 at Keadvllle, Mass., beating his own roc ;id half a second, but failing to lower Star Pointer's ligure of l:5!Vi. Kobby Walthour defeated Harry Elkes at Kevere. Mass., In a twenty--five mile motor paced race and estnb lished a new world's record from the first to tho twenty-fifth mile. The time for the twenty-live miles was ;t,"iin. 11 1 "is. The previous record was Jt.'m. 19 4-.r.H. Mntiirilny, Ann:. 2.'l. Land In South Africa left by Cecil Khodes to the Countess of Warwick was sold for $1,i)(Hi,(iiM). Sir Thomas Llpton and the sultan of Morocco met with automobile acci dents, but neither was hurt. The Hutler washery and Dodge col liery near Wilkosbarro, which have been operating, were closed by strik ers. The sultan promised Minister Leish nian to comply with demands of the Fnlted States and asked him to resume visits to the porte. Mayor Knight of F.uffalo suggested memorial services for McKInley in all local churches on the first uuniversary of his death, Sunday, Sept. 14. An aged F.altijnore woman was found dead of starvation and her daughter half crazed by hunger. They were too proud to make their need known. 1' rlil ny, Anu. it'J. Four whites and eight or ten negroes were killed in a race riot near Tupelo, Miss. What is said to be the largest green goods capture ever made was effected in Newark, N. .1., by postolllee Inspect ors. Former Corporal O'llrlen, indicted for perjury before the senate Philip pine committee, was committed for trial in Washington. Twenty-seven mines were In opera tion In the Kanawha and New Kiver fields of West Virginia, nnd the strike was apparently broken. Tliurmlny, Aim. 21. II. L. Doherly defeated Clarence ITo bart In the Newnort tennis tourna ment. Three Kentucky murderers made nn unsuccessful attempt to escape from the Frankfort penitentiary. It was reported that J. K. Richards, solooltor general, department of jus tice, expected fo resign lu autumn to become Abner McKlnley's law part ner. Bishop Potter returned home after a two months' vacation In Europe.' He said that he expects Senator Hanna and himself to Im asked to arbitrate the coal strike. Generals liothn, De Wet and Dela rey, accompanied by Dr. Leyds and Messrs. Fischer, "Weasels, Wolniarans, Reltz and others, arrived at I'trecht, Holland, from The Hague to visit for mer President Kruger and consult with htm on the South African situa tion. Wednesday, Aiitf, 20. Generals Hot ha, De Wet and Dela rey were warmly received at Rotter dam and The Hague. President Castro expelled from Ven ezuela the wife and children of for mer Prime Minister Rodriguez. Five people, two women and three children, were burned to death In an east side fire In New York city. Fire Chief Croker of New York city was "relieved from duty" by Commis sioner Sturgis. Croker said there was no ground for Ills suspension. Coal road presidents held a long con ference In New Y'ork city. It was re ported that they would order a whole sale attempt to break the strike. R. F. and 11. L. Doherty, the Eng lish tennis pair, defeated Collins and Waldner of Chicago in the first cham pionship round at Newport, II sets to 2. W. K. Vanderbilt, Jr., and wife, Con suelo, duchess of Marlborough, and Mr. and Mrs. O. II. P. Relmont returned from Europe on the Kronprlnz Wil u el in. Mllea' VUlt to the l'hlliiilneM. BOSTON, Aug. 20.-With reference to the statement that Lieutenant Gen oral Miles is going to the Philippine Islands Secretary Cortelyou said, "General Miles is going, to the Philip pine Islands with the permission of tho president to inspect army condi tions there." Oar 1'roiliM-tlou of I'rerloaa Metala, WASHINGTON, Aug. 20.-Tho total value of the precious metals produced by the United States In 1P0T amounted to $111,705,100, which was $1,1104,100, or 2 per' cent, less than the yield for 11)00. BLOOMSBURG, PA. PILLSDURYJAUCHT. tligginson's Fleet Surrounds Hostile Ships. EXD OF THE 5AYAL WAR CAME. After I'onr laya anil Mht of Sleep le.ta M nti liliiK White t omnmnitcr C'unlil Not lift ThroiiHh lllne' llefenne. ROCK PORT. Mass., Aug. 25,-The naval search problem on the New Eng land coast was terminated at an early hour by the signal "Surrender demand ed; unconditional," from Rear Admi ral Higglnson's flagship and the reply, "Accept surrender," from the fore truck of tin! Prairie, Commander Fills bury's flagship. The battle between the blue, or defending, squadron and the white, or attacking, squadron was thus quickly ended eight miles south of Thatcher's Island, The enemy had most signally failed to make a harbor having for its objective Salem. A pre ponderance of fighting strength, rela tively 04 points, represented by the battleships Kearsarge, Alabama and Massachusetts, Vcorplou and a torpedo boat, had overwhelmed the 45 points represented by the auxiliary cruisers Prairie, Panther and Supply. To speak from a theoretic standpoint the white squad,!n was entirely de stroyed by the guns of the defending battleships. Thus mi the fourth night the game of naval strategy was brought to an end, It having covered a period of unceasing toll, sleepless nights of anxious and wearing vigil nnd of grave uncertainty to its partici pants. The capture came at the end of a night filled with rumors as to the loca tion of the attacking squadron. At ll:.'!0 p. in. the three battleships of Hlg gitison got under way in a hurry and sailed to the eastward. The intention was to move on to Portland, and if that had been carried out Admiral Higglnson, as it later developed, would have unconsciously swung the balance of his fighting force to that end of tho coast line, as Pillsbury hail intended he should, but which was not done on ac count of heavy seas running outside Cape Elizabeth, lllgginson, however, deflected his course back to Gloucester after a swing seaward In response to a report that the enemy had not been Sighted when it was believed she had been, but In the last hours of the night Pillsbury sailed toward Cape Ann COMMANDER TILLSBURY. from the outside and, as it proved, right under the very guns of the de fending squadron. Commander Pills bury, when still out to sea, after ma neuvering, headed straight for Salem harbor, but the desired vantage point was never reached. At this time the olllcer on the deck of the Kearsarge was Lieutenant Ray Stone, with Midshipman William Dil worth Puleston as the Junior olllcer in command. In contrast to others the morning was clear and star bright. On the bridge u dozen Jackles stood on the lookout. One of these was Daniel Staohlo, an apprentice of the first class. Ho stood well forward, peering on the lee side. The flagship was Just falling down Into a trough when he notified the ensign nt his side that he could see the "enemy." The olllcer of the deck called Flag Lieutenant Evans and Flag Secretary Itistol, and it was but the work of a moment to inform Admiral Higgin son of the probability that the time for decisive action was at hand. It was real war then. General quar ters were sounded. There was a quick rush of many feet, the manning of a hundred posts, the clank of the an chor chain, the ringing of bells, the giving of orders and a general clear ing for action. Not many moments passed before the flagship was under way steaming at fourteen knots, with the Alabama and Massachusetts many lengths lu the rear. Some distance back was the Harney, rapidly over hauling the ships ahead. At o:40 a. m. the three battleships, aided by the converted yacht Scorpion, which had chased In from the south in time to be lu at the finish, and thu Barney, which had overtaken tho fleet, formed a horseshoe about the white squadron. The elation among tho men on board tho blue squadron ran high. There was something pathetic lu the picture when Commander Pillsbury, after he had signaled his surrender, passed in Ids barge from the Prairie, walked up the starboard gangway of the Kearsarge and offered his sword to Admiral Higglnson, "Keep your sword, sir," said the senior olllcer, his voice quavering a bit In spite of himself. "1 would not accept the sword from so gallant a foe." "And I, sir," responded Pillsbury, with dignity, "could not surrender to a nobler or better olllcer, sir." FIRST SURVEY OF PANAMA. It Wan Made -too Veara Abo, lint Snth. lav Waa llnne I Mil lie l.eaarp'a Day. How ninny Americans know that the first exploration for Hip route of the Pannmn canal was made by II. do la Serna us far back ns 1.-.27-2S? Many different explorations followed, nnd suggestions from various quarters, but nothing definite was done until Pe Lesscps formulated his famous scheme. This wns opposed by the United States. Americans then want ed the canal to go through Nicaragua, nnd this plan was favored by lien. Grant in 1 S7H. Hut nothing wns done. Snys Harper's Encyclopedia ff the United States: "In ls.4 the people of the United States nnd France Mih rcribed large sums toward a French company, headed by Count de T.csseps, of Suez canal fame, wheh announced Its intention of cuffing a canal through the isthmus of Panama." The subsequent financial catastrophe is well known. In is!)!i the Panama Canal Company of America was Incorporated with n capital of $:in.nn0.nno. It was then estimated that it would cost $11.". 000,000 to complete the cannl. Crealril a w Volcano. As n sequel to tlio recent enrth quakes in Sardinia nn enormous chasm has been opened in (Jie earth, while the surface has bulged into n hill of considerable elevation, from which stones and masses of earth are projected. There are also symp toms that the interior of the hill Is In an ebullient condition. Scientists Incline to the belief that the phe nomena observed nre volcanic. An other consequence of the earthquake is that Lake Santo, near Modena, which was about "i00 yards long and 100 wide, has completely disappeared. Atnioaphpre Tnhlolda. Py a French chemist is claimed the Invention, of a method of compressing sen nir into tabloids. Those, therefore, who wish for a change of air will in future only have to go to the nearest chemist's and buy a bottle of Margate tabloids or half a dozen Riviera pas tilles. So long ns the drugs are prop erly dispensed the invention will be welcome. It, would be unpleasant, to ask for Bournemouth pastilles 'and to receive insteail the Cologne (not the eau de Cologne) variety. The latter form has 7!) distinct smells. ' Shlnloai! of Tulllim. Four thousand collins for the bodies of soldiers in the Philippines that are awaiting shipment to the I'nited States, is a portion of the queer cargo the transport KilpatiicU started with lately. An Arliltrnrr Utile, Mr. Kupop Why isn't little Robert out with his nurse? Perhaps the nurse I sent you from the employment agency didn't come. Mrs. Nupop Oli! yes, she came, but she didn't suit at all; She had nothing but blue dresses to wenr, nnd you know blue is only for girl babies; pink's for boys. Philadelphia Press. Impertinence. "When I go to weddings," she said, "I always feel like getting married again myself." "Let's see," he answered, making a liasty oount of her divorces, "you must have attended a lot of them in your time, haven't you?" Chicago Record-Herald. OtDtennial Envelopes- The envelopes ordered by the Cen tennial committee have arrived and orders for them may be left at this office. The prices are as follows: 1000, $3 50; 500, $1.80; 250, $1.00. This includes printing business card in the corner. tf. CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH f ENNYROYAL PILLS W -r""V Original and Only Urnulnn. Q Uk'At tti'l ult met L lie bout, MJc4 with Mi ribbon. Tuko no other. ll-ruM 1 llinnrout HuhalltutJnna sud Jmltit Hon. Hujr of your DrufKiat, or wtvl 4c. ta uioi for I'artloulurm TiwttmouUlt ftud " Itfllff fur l,uillt'mMin Jeifr, by rtw turn Mull. IO. (Hit) Tvatimoniftli. Sohl tv kll nrilffUtl I klalia.tiia ('k.,n.ll iiemlon Uiis paper. M tali oil 1, 1-till at., a- V 1 ALEXANDER BROTHERS & CO. DEALERS IN Cigars, Tolncco Candies, Fruits ana Nuts SOLE AGENTS FOR Henry Mail lard's Fine Candies. Frebh Every Week. iPjE.tTsr-a Goods ji. Specialty, SOLE AGENTS FOR F. F.( Adams & Co's Fine Cut Chewing Tobacco Sole agents for the following brands of Clgarr Henry Clay, Londros, Ncnr.al, Indian Princess, Samson, Silver At Bloomsburg Pa, IF YOU ARE IN NEED OF CAllPET, 1ATTIG, or OIL CLOTH, YOU WILL FIND A NICE LINE AT W. H. BMOWEI'S Pooig aboe U irt 'llou.j A large lot of Window Curtains in stock. Reduced Kates to Grangers' Pionio at Wil liams' Grove, via Pennsylvania Sailroad. For the Twenty-ninth Annual Inter-Stale Grange Picnic Exhibition, to be held at Williams' drove, Pa., August 25 to 30, the Pennsylvania K.ulroatl Company will Bell excursion tickets from August 25 to 30, inclu sive, good to return on date of issue only, at rate of one larc for the round trip, from principal stations between Altoona and I3ryn Mawr; vn the Northern Central Railway, between Sunbury and Lutherville, inclusive, and on the Philadelphia and F.rie Railroad Division cast of and includ ing Renovo. There will be an elaborate display of farm machinery in actual operation during the exhibition, and addresses will be delivered by well known agri- cultural speakers. ! For information in regard to train rervice and specific rates application ' should be made to ticket agents, at. Womkn Who Wkar Wf.i.I.. It is aston idling how gient a change n few years of ninri't-il life will mile in 1 In- nppeatance nnd deposition of ninny women. The fresh Hi ss, the i-linini, the brilliance vanish like the I. loom from n- peach which is rudely handled. The matron is only a dun kImiIow, a faint rtlio of the charming maiden. There nre two ic.ison for this change, ignotance nnd ih'hIi-cI. Few young women appreciate llie shock 10 the sysicm through the change which comes with nmriiagc. M.tny neidcct to ileal with the unpleasant drums winch are ofieii cons(iiielit on man iage anil mother hood, not 11111 lei sRi ml injj tli.it tins secret dram is robbing the cheek of its destines and the form of its fairness. As surely as the p,eneial health siidcis when there is de raneni'Mit of the liealih of llie delicate womanly organs, so sillily when these organs are i-siahlislied in healih llie f.ne and form al once wiiness to llie fact in lencwed comeliness. Half n million women and more have found health and happiness in the use of Ir. i icrce's iavoiiie I'lcsciiplion. It makes weak wo.nen sirmg aai sick women well. Leases, 3c each, 30c a dozen. Notices to quit, 10c a dozen. For sale at this office. tf. Tr-.N CKN1S WIM. HIT V trial size of lily's Cream Palm; enough 10 convince )ou that it is die greatest of remedies for nasal ca lanh cr cold in the head. lull size 50 eenis. All di ugnists. We mid it. Ll.V l'.KOS., 50 Warren M., New York. :5J Second Street, Albany, N. V. Mkssfs Ij.Y likos.: I sufTeicd greatly with calarih and tried diflereiit remedies without effect. Aficr using one bottle of 01.r Cream Palm I fouud relief and I can not praise ti o highlv such a remedy. Sept. 27, 1899. Miss Cdka Wll.LMU). The Markets. UI.OOMSBURG MARKETS. COKItr.CIE!) WEEKLY, RETAIL I K ICRS $ 24 20 IS 16 6 to 8 1 00 60 60 4 40 1400 So 4 06 12 13 S 07 3i 05 80 75 9 3 35 1 3 flutter, per pound Kggs, er dozen I.ard, per pound Ham, per pound Heef (quarter), per pound .. Wheat, per bushel Oats, do Kye, do Hour per 1)1)1 . Hay, per ton I'otatoes, (new), per bushel, Turnips, do Tallow, per pound Shoulder, do Side meat, do Vinegar, per qt llried apples, per pound Cow hides, do Sieer do do Calf skin Sheep pelts Shelled corn, per bushel Corn meal, cwt Iiran, cwt Chop, cwt Middlings, cwt Chickens, per pound, new.., 'o do old... Turkeys do 1 60 1 40 I2J 10 X2 13 08 3 5 4 45 3 o 4 S Geese, do Ducks, do COAL. Number 6, deliveied do 4 and 5 delivered,.. do 6, at yard du 4 and 5, at yard.... J
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers