The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, April 04, 1907, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBUk, kV.
mm i is. it
dives Deed for All She
Owns Except Her Home
and 2 Tenements.
EXECUTED MARCH 6th
Truttn Appear In Court and) Ask to
Be Substituted fur Mrs. Eddy's He.
teUves in Their Suits m Her Next
Friends Against Men Who Have
Managed Her Attain.
Concord. N. H., April 4. Mary
Baker O. Eddy has turned over to
three trustees all of her estate except
har horns, Pleasant-view, and the
control of two tenements In Boston
that she owns.
The deed of trust was executed by
Mrs. Eddy on March 6 last after suit
had been brought by three of her
relatives, as her next friends, for an
accounting; against those who had
surrounded her and who had mana
ged her affairs.
In the Superior Court for Merri
mack county attorneys representing
these trustees replying to the suit of
the "next friends" moved for "leavo
to tntevene and be substituted as
plaintiffs In place of said next
Mends", Qeorge V. Glover, Mary
Baker Glover and George W. Baker,
ha their suit against Calvin A. Frye,
Alfred Fallow, Irving C. Tomllnson,
Ira O. Knapp, William B. Johnson,
Stephen A. Kimball, Hermann S.
Bering and LewU C. Strang.
Gen. Frank S Streeter, who has
een counsel for Mrs. Eddy, repre
lented the trustees. They are Henry
M. Baker of Bow. X. H.; Josinh E.
Fernald of Concord president of the
National State Capital Bank, and
Archibald McLellnn of Boston.
The reason offered In support of
tfie substitution of these trustees for
Krs. Eddy's son, George W. Glovei,
aer niece, Mary Baker Glover, and
her nephew, George W. Baker, Is
that Mrs. Eddy on March 6 last "ap
pointed the said Fernuld. McLellan
ind Baker sole trustees of her entire
state of every description, which
trusteeship has been duly accepted by
the appoitees and bond of $500,000
liven for the faithful execution of
Uie trusteeship."
In the trust deed Mrs. Eddy trans
fers "all her interest of every kind
and description in and to any real
state wherever situated; also her
tote rest of every description in and
to any estate, personal or r ixed, in
cluding Btocks, bonds, lnt rests In
copyrights contracts, actljns and
tauses of action at law or in equity
against any person."
In the deed Mrs. Eddy reserves
the right of occupancy of her home
stead, Pleasant View, her household
furniture, library, horses, carriages,
too's and other articles of use or for
adornment, and also reserves the
rlgjit to occupy to rent for her own
bereflt her two houses, 385 and 387
Commonwealth avenue, Boston.
2K
PI
Jockey Miller,
whoRo successful riding in the West
Is attracting attention.
Panama Iring Plant Pestrojcd.
Colon, April 3. Tho cold storage
jstab:lshment at Mount Hope, one
of the lurgc-Ht and most valuable on
the Isthmus, was almost completely
destroyed by fire. The loss is placed
at several hundred thousand dollars.
The building was filled with a larg9
variety of foodstuffs and other pro
perty. Yule Accepts Rockefeller (Jift.
Xew Haven, Conn., April 3. Sec
retary Stokes, of Vale, to-day said
the gift of $300,000 to tho univer
sity from the Rockefeller fund, con
ditional upon tho raising of $1,300,
000 adltlonal, would be accepted,
and the university would make every
effort to fulfil the conditions.
Slated for Manager.
Fort Wayne. Ind., April 2. Jake
R. Stahl, formerly manager for
Washington, left Fort Wayne yester
day for Chicago in company with
John I. Taylor, owner of the Bost
on American team. It Is said that
Btahl la slatd for the managership of
the Bostons.
JF4 fM'-n'Mf: 11
VALUE OF SPECULATION.
Mental Process That Dees Much Ta
ward Mitigating Life'a Weea.
We are all somewhat in the habit
of divorcing the idea of speculative
thought from that of usefulness, and
of considering It a dreamer's va
gary without which the world would
progress along Its accustomed and
predestined route. It Is particularly
the habit of set and elderly persoaa
to speak with scorn of schools of
thought, methods of careful prepara
tion for life, and of abstract con
sideration of values. They insist
that the world was better off when
peoplp did things and thought less
about them.
The difficulty In leaving ourselves
to act without preparatory thought
Is, that It finds us prepared only for
such events as have taken place be
fore within our experience or within
the experience of those we have
talked with or read of; whereas we
are likely to be plunged at any mo
ment Into a new set of circumstances
or given a new lot of conditions and
motives which alter the most appar
ently similar cases. Then, Indeed,
for lack of the habit of speculative
thought, of weighing motives and
rallies, we are apt to drown In our
own absurdities or worse, commit
hideous Injustice.
Odd as It may seem, the end of spe
culation Is practice, says Harper's
Weekly. The process may seem
wasteful and futile, but the results,
If one examine them, are worth tho
energy spent; and the lives we see
about us, lived without the directing
of abstract thought, ure warnings ac
cepting the cheap and easy ways of
life.
To turn back to the value of specu
lative thought, Its first use Is to teach
the body Its place In the trlunlty,
which is a human being. It looks at
life with new eyes and weighs values;
It undertakes to find out what Is truly
the heart's desire wine, laughter,
lust, longing, prayer, hope or peace.
Once we know what object we are
pursuing, once we have turned spe
culative thought free upon the uni
verse, and made up our winds what
Is worth while, then, with our sense
of values fixed, we know where to
direct effort; what makes for the end
Is worth while, and what gives mere
momentary ease is negligible.
This search for the real aim, this
close examination Into the trend of
our thoughts, this speculative atti
tude toward proportionate values do
much toward mitigating the woes of
life, for they open the doors to love
and wisdom, the doniinators of des
tiny. Love and wisdom annihilate
melodrama, avert tragedy, soften
grief, rob joy of selfish and aggressive
noise; they regulate conduct so that
it ceases to be self-seeking and in
jurious; they widen The mental hor
izon, and Infuse tolerance and Justice.
And when love and wisdom stand
upon the threshold, letting their light
shine in upon the little turmoil of life,
how small and silly see mour cower
ing fears, our greed and cruelty and
selfwlll as they lurk In the corners,
eager to escape the light.
Speaking Through the Nose.
The offenslveness of the present
defect could not be exaggerated, per
haps, but it is best to guard against
exaggeration in dealing with it,
writes William Dean Howells, in Har
per's Bazaar. Not long ago we talked
with an observant Englishman, who
was hardly the most willing of wit
nesses, but a just as well as a gentle
spirit, and we asked him if he had
been much struck by our far-famed
nasality since coming among us.
No, he said, not half so much as he
had expected; but what he, had no
ticed was that we spoke drawllngly,
draggingly, In tones that weakly and
tardily did their office.
It seemed to use, when we thought
the matter over, that there was a
great deal of truth in what he said,
and we now commend his remark, to
gether with our own less lenient ac
cusations, to the attention of the
American Woman's Speech Reform
ers. What they want to get at is the
average offense, and not to err as to
lis precise nature.
There Is no doubt that certain of
our women twang, and whine, and
whiffle, and whinny, but possibly
close Inquiry might develop the fact
that, after all, it may bo lazy and
careless mismanagement of the voice
in the sort suggested which is most
to be corrected.
Crescent Shaped Viennese Bread.
The origin of that Viennese bread
shaped like a crescent, which Is found
In most places on tho continent,
dates back to 1G83. At that time the
Austrian capital was being besieged
by the Turks under the terrible Grand
Vizier Kara Mustapha, and as they
failed to take the city by assault they
doe'ded to dig a passage under tho
walls, anl so penetrate Into the town.
In the daytime tho noise of the
slege made the sound of the tunnel
lino; Inaudible and at night time the
defenders of the place were asleep,
all but the sentries and the bakers.
It was the bakers who, as they baked
the bread for the garrison, heard tho
p!ckr.xs of the miners coming neurer
and nearer and gave the alarm. Tn
the fighting of the Bilkers' Association
took their shure with the utmost
bravery, and na a reward for their
services the emperor gave them per
mission to mako a Fnerlal cake shaped
like tho Turkish crescent.
Ivy does not mako a house damp;
cvi the contrary, Its small roots cx
tnict every part'ele of moisture- from
(be brick or stone to which It cliugs,
IK 20 IBS 0
Ultra Modern Idea Not New
After All.
OLD TIME SIMPLICITY.
Woman's Reply to Charges That
Wedded Life Is a "Failure" Still
Holds Good Idleness Is Fatal.
Carelessness of Partners Horns
Lifs Dying Out.
Persons who profess the Christian
religion must keep in their hearts a
green spot wherein the sanctity of
marriage is preserved as a natural
law from which there Is no receding.
Marriage has been from the begin
ning, and must last Indisputably until
the very end, and let us hope that It
Is not In all cases a "failure," says
Theresa Corletta in San Francisco
News Letter Dec. 15, 1888.
It Is we, the Inhabitants of this
world, who are failures, not the Insti
tution, which is the only one out of
which law and order can spring.
There are two sides of the question
to be discussed.
In the past we may remember that
marriage was looked upon as a holy
alliance; one to be entered Into after
mature deliberation and only under
fortuitous circumstances. A man
would as soon have thought of puteing
his head in the fire as asking a wo
man to he his wife unless he had a
comfortable home to take her to.
Husbands found pleasure in hoine
life long ago, and when tired, after
the professional or business employ
ments of the day, would ask no
greater happiness than to pass their
long, happy evenings with their
wives; or when little voices and pat
tering feet echoed through hall or
cottage, to gather the children around
the winter fire and gambol with them
on flower-scented lawn or grass-carpeted
fields. .
lxing ago, the thought of which
conies to us who have seen it like
the reflection of a bright dream, wife
and children looked eagerly for the
coming of the beloved parent, whose
image held sway In each heart dur
ing absence, and each married woman
felt happy In her wifehood, glorying
In the Joy of her home.
Men did not startle the world with
the theory they promulgate today,
that they "won't be owned." They
were happy to be owned by good and
faithful wives, and even the youngest
men were not satisfied until they
had their own firesides. Families
went to church together and brought
up the little ones In the right way,
and no one was ever heard to discuss
the possibility of marriages being a
failure."
Things are different today. Just
as soon as a girl leaves school she
is on the outlook for a "man with
money," no matter how old the gen
tleman may be, if he can give her
diamonds and those other accessories
for which the woman of today seems
solely to live. ,
The woman who marries a man In
medium circumstances only would
scorn to "keep house." No, indeed;
she wants a "good time." She boards,
and here hef first troubles commence.
To be boxed up day by day with one
person, with only the one room, or
even suite, except meal hours, to cafl
their own, would lead the most dv
voted couple to the brink of suicide.
Caged up in this way, every little
foible and fault stands out In bold
relief, and man and woman both
grow weary and arrive at the con
clusion to each "go their own way."
It Is not the marriage tie that Is in
any way a failure. Why should it be
more so now, In the enlightened nine
teenth century, than it was in the
days of darkness and superstition?
There can be no reason, except that
possibly we are growing too much
enlightened, educated too much, and
yet too little.
It is "the people of the people" who
are slipping back, who are satiated
with the wine of pleasure, the people
who do not grow from Infancy to
youth slowly, and from youth to age,
In temperate pleasure, but who are
born babies only to be thrust by their
silly parents Into the caps and gowns
of womanhood ere their second teeth
are cut.
While men and women live in a
round of pleasure, over-sensual, over
bearing, having no religion or sense
of decorum, hew can wedded love live.
In such an atmosphere? If husbands
and wives do not lovo deeply enough
to live for each other, renouncing tho
frlvoltles of life for the serene Joys
of home, why marry at all until they
have sobered down and feel the need
of rest. ,
There Is nothing the matter with
marriage, It Is today as it has ever
been, but the peoplo are different,
different in their Ideas, In their af
fections, In everything, and, forget
ting their own shortcomings, tlry lay
their grievance on the shoulders of
marriage, and by their own incom
petence make it a "failure." But
woe to us when marriage is wiped
out. ,
Bible Society Reports.
The annual report of the American
Bible Society gives encouraging Indi
cations relative to tho religious life of
the Philippines. The Bchool enroll
ment has doubled, now being 500,000.
Swedish drill has been started for
women prisoners under thirty-five
years of age at two prisons, Hollo
way and Manchester.
MISSION WORK IN HAWAII.
Educational 8yttem Results of th
Labor of the Missionaries.
Most Americans will admit that It
was fortunate for the predominance
of American civilization In Hawaii
that the American Missionaries were
the first on the ground and were
thoroughly established there in "
ranee of any competing religiou, says
the Honolulu Advertiser. They
brought the rugged old tenets of
their Puritan ancestors. They taught
them with Intense conviction and
flaming zeal. They soon established
complete ascendancy over the mind
Of chiefs and people. In 25 years
their labors had converted the social
system of Hawaii from barbarism to
civilization; its political, from despot
ism to constitutional liberty.
Hawaii thus became a welcoming
home for civilized enterprise and free
American activity In time for the new
California era In the Pacific. The
numerous minion families with their
churches and schools formed a fav
oring nucleus for the establishment
of a growing white community of h
high social order, the parent of the
delightful social status now found on
all the Islands.
Conspicuous among the leading
fruits of missionary labor Is our
splendid system of education which
reaches every child of whatever race,
guiding him Into familiarity with Eng
lish, and upward toward free educa
tion In the high school. And here It
Is simply due to recognize the effici
ent cooperation of the Roman Cath
olic mission. Although of French
race,, those good men and women
have applied themselves with zval
and ability to the promotion of Eng
lish education. To attest this Is the
great St. Louis College, in which a
corps of highly trained Americas
brothers for many years have educat
ed many hundreds of successful pu
pils. Also the Convent of the Sacred
Heart, where the sisters have given
pure and graceful culture to many
hundreds of Hawaiian girls.
The mission also supplies a most
wholesome supervising and parental
Influence In our large Portuguese com
munity, whose orderly and Industri
ous character Indispensably needs
such supervlslno and nurture. In
this and other ways the strong police
power of the Catholic pastors be
comes of high public value.
The Protestant churches make the
claim of upholding a higher standard
of domestic, and social life, after th
New England rather than the French
patterns. As an example It was
claimed during the epidemic of chol
era 10 years ago In Honolulu that
owing to their superior Intelligence
and more sanitary home life no case
of cholera appeared In any household
of the Protestant church members.
But we believe that every Protestant
worker would readily admit that th
competition of the Catholic religion
has been to them a wholesome stimu
lus to pastoral activity and antidote
to sluggish proclivities. The two
types of the Christian religion are
evidently destined to a long continu
ance in Hawaii.
Raising Blue Foxes In Alaska.
But one litter Is born each year,
and that In May, says Forest and
Stream. The number of cubs ranges
from four to as high as eleven. The
average number that reach maturity
is about two or three to the female.
The fox lives and brings forth Its
young in a burrow or den about like
that of a red fox, except that the blue
fox Is very fond of digging under the
buildings on the Islands. If there Is
a floor they are sure to have one or
two dens under it if permitted to do
so. They will also den under suitable
piles of old lumber, logs or trash of
any kind that will keep the water
off.
They are very suspicious of any
person or thing coming near thetr
burrows. If they are at all disturbed
while their pups are young, they are
said to move their young to another
burrow. This is one reason why it
is a bad plan to keep cattle on the
same Island with or on that part of
the island frequented by the foxes
and used for burrows. They nre not
quarrelsome or vicious like other
foxes. In close confinement they will
kill and eat one of their own kind
that Is Injured or weak and I sup
pose if starved to it would eat each
other.
It Is difficult to learn very much
about their habits where they are
running loose on an island. They now
and then have "scraps." Let a fox
go where he does not belong and you
wll soon hear a great racket. You
will think a fox was being killed and
if in sight will soon see one getting
away as fast as possible, yclplnj
like a whipped dog.
Colors That Cure Consumption.
The value of light as an agent !:j
curing diseases is becoming increas
ingly recognized. The latrst develop
ment of tho idea is the assertion of
a medical man that the clothes worn
by consumptives should he of a color
which will allow the light to pene
trate he body. White materials, it
Is found, are best for this purpose,
and consumptives are consequently
advised to clothe themselves in
snowy raiment, either of linen, velvet,
cotton, or cloth. Silk, however, la
barred. Next In curative value comes
blue, but It Is far Inferior to white.
Materials of black, red, yellow, or
green are said to be useless, as they
prevent the passage of the germicidal
rays. London Exchange.
Times are dull for the reformers
when they are good fur every one else,
the wonderful career of Napoleon.
Speedy Coasting.
The finest coasting hill lu the world
Is at Kt. Morlt., In SwIt.orlniid. The
hill Is a tulle long, and to const down
It lakes, on an average, sixty-seven
seconds. The Cresta course, as It In
called, Is Iced and runs between snow
banks. Its turns are dangerous, and
only skilled coasters venture on It
They use the American flat toboggan,
lying on the stomach, and steering itol
with the feet, but with lift nnd Jerk
of the body. A few seconds from the
start on this course the coaster Is go
ing at a speed of twenty miles an hour.
This speed soon Increases to forty
miles. Faster and faster he files,
swooping doTn the precipitous Church
leap at the speed of uu express train,
and then on to the long, straight Shut
tlecock run. To fifty, to sixty, to sev
enty, to eighty miles an hour the pace
grows till It Is like the flight of th
swiftest bird through a blinding blur
of snow. Yet tho speed still Increases,
nnd at the end of the Shuttlecock
eighty-seven miles an hour Is register
ed. These Cresta course speeds are
not problematical; they are the accu
rate timings of an electric clock.
Don't Know Right From Left.
"The tiling that surprised me most
when I began to teach," said the In
structor of a class of adults in manual
training, "was the number of people
who can tell Instinctively the right
hund from the left Fully a third of
my pupils hesitated a moment before
obeying Instructions to do this tiling or
that thing with the right hand or the
left. Tho thing that fixes the proper
band In their minds flimlly Is some In
cident In which that iRind lias figured.
By recalling that story they know
which hand to use. One of the bright
est women I know lu this town de
Clares that the only way she can tell
oue hand from the other Is to remem
ber the time when, ns nhlld, she tried
to milk a cow nnd was sent flying
heels over head. She approached the
animal from the wrong side, and the
picture of tho position of her right
hand then Is so vivid that it enables
ber to distinguish that member to this
lay." Xew York Tress.
Old Style Europesn Elevators.
The old stylo elevntors In continental
hotels are attached to solid steel shafts
which move to and fro In hollow cyl
inders like pistons. These "lifts" are
operated by hydraulic pressure nnd,
though slow, nre absolutely safe. They
are Intended to carry passengers only
npward, the presumption being that
guests can easily descend the stair
cases. A guest therefore enters tho
car on the ground floor, telling the at
tendant which story Is his destination.
On arrival the car stops, the doors
elide open, and an Iron gate also opens,
giving access to that floor, tho several
movements being automatic. The pas
senger closes the Iron gate, which sig
nals the operator below, who reverses
tho movement of tho "lift," whereby It
returns to the ground floor. The newer
hotels have elevators like ours that
carry passengers both ways with ra
pidity. Travel Magaziue.
The Grindstone.
A grindstone should bo true on Its
face. If It Is not so, broad, flat tools
are liable to be spoiled. The remedy
for a grindstone that has lost Its even
ness is to place a Hat Iron bar with n
sharp edge on the supporting beam In
such a manner that It will strike th,,
uneven part of the sioi.e at every revo
lution tiutll the desired form Is ngiiu
regained. It Is uecessary that a stun.;
should be kept wet when In use or It
would draw the temper of the tool
ofter a few revolutions, but It in not a
good plan to allow the lower portiuu to
rest in water wbeu idle. The water
soaks that portion and softens It, ami
It soou gets "out of true," and thu
commences a course of troubles which
Is pretty hard to either remedy or stay.
Shot For Interrupting Suicide.
Memphis, Tenn., March 25. Inter
rupted In an evident attempt to com
mit suicide, Charles Wallace, a sa:
loonlst, shot and seriously wtfinded
his brother-in-law, J. E. Rouslp, and,
firing two bullets into bis own brain,
ended his life. According to the state
ment of Rouslp, he dlscvered Wallace
alone with two revolvers when he en
tered the room, and when he ques
tioned him as to why he was so armed,
Wallace fired on him, Inflicting three
wounds. Wallace then turned the
weapon upon himself.
No More Plodding,
Superficiality Is tho bane of the day,
and, backed up, as it so often Is, by
colossal uelf esteem and forwardness,
It adds a formidable contingent to the
must-get-on classes of people. No one
wants to plod nowadays; the getting
on must be rapid, and In trying to at
tain money without having to work for
It falsehood, dishonesty and 'unfeeling
heartlessness creep in. London T. P.'s
Weekly.
Planting a Garden,
God Almighty lirst planted a pnrden.
And, Indeed, It Is the purest of hiunnu
pleasures. It Is the greatest refresh
ment to the spirits of man, without
which buildings and palaces are but
gross handiworks, and a man shall
ever see that when ages grow to civil
ity nnd elegance men come to build
stately soouer thnu to garden finely, ns
If gardeulng were the greater perfec
tion. Lord Bacon.
Sealing Wax.
Sealing wax lu the present form was
first noted In London In the middle of
tho sixteenth century. A sort of earth
was used by the ancient Egyptians In
sealing papers and documents. The
Egyptians placed such earth on tho
horns of cattle, and upon It was stamp
ed the seal of tho priest. Thus wero
Identified the cattle to be used in tho
various 6-aci-lflct's. London Saturday
Kuvluw.
MOLNTAIN81DE HAS AWAY
nounded Over Precipice and Fell la
a Heap on Wagon Road.
Port Jerrls, N. Y., April I. With
a roar and shaking of the earth that
awakened everybody In the neighbor
hood, an avalanche of rock and earth
slid from a cliff two miles south of
Mllford, Pa. blocking the highway
between Mllford and DIngman, Pa.
The avalanche started from the
top of the mountain, four hundred
feet from the roadway. Its path
was about one hud red and fifty feet
wide, and sixty feet of the cliff came
with It, Trees were torn up by the
roots or snapped off and great fur
rows were ploughed Id the moun
tainside. The spring thaw Is supposed to be
the cause of the landslide. The cliff
Is a picturesque feature of the sceno
ry along the Delaware River.
Nec Brother Swept Into Sea
Hearing too late the warning cry
of Captain F. H. Wadsworth. on tfce
bridge of the Anchor liner Columhla,
that a big wave was about to boar!
tho steamship, Alexander McLeod.
a seaman, was washed overboard
from tho side of his brother w'to
the ship was two days out from
Olasgow.
From start to finish the passage
was stormy. McLeod was swept
overboard, while his brother aud
four other men had narrow escapes.
Tho ship was stopped and a boit
lowered, but nfter three hours the
quest was abandoned.
Dog's Body Stiijs in Cemetery.
Louisville, Ky., April 2. Judge
Shackelford Miller handed down aa
opinion In the case of Henry Hertler
against Alice Riddle, In which he
decides that the court will not inter
fere to enforce the removal of a dog
burled in her lot In Cave Hill Ceme
tery, because tho plaintiff regards
such an Interment as a nuisance and
dislikes the idea of some day being
burled near tho dog.
Farmer Dies of a Strange Malnily.
Kokomo, Ind., April 2. Nathan
Brunk, a farmer, who lived near tiiii
city, died recently from a ve.-y
strange malady. Two years ago He
whs kicked by a cow and a little later
bolls began to appear on his body.
Increasing In numbers until tln-r
fairly covered him and finally caused
his death.
3 Omuls of Whiskey Dead.
Waterbury, Conn., April 3. A
longslde tho dead body of James Oar
In Hotchklssvile, were found throe
large bottles which ten hours bcfoiu
had contained whiskey.
Clay had been on a spree and de
termined to finish tho three, but ho
was advised by friends not to attempt
It. He persisted and succeeded ia
killing himself.
Stops Stock Watering,
Des Moines, Iowa, April 3. By the
passage of the Peterson bill In th-i
House it became a law In Iowa thsl
no corporation can water stock. (I
stock must be fully paid up In cash.
FINANCIAL.
Charles M. Schwab, chairman of
tho Bethlehem Steel Company, said
tho company lost $1,721,000 on its
war ship contracts and would build
no more.
In the annual meeting of the Nip
Isslng Mines Company New Yorifc
men controlled and voted to reduce
the capital stock from $12,000,000.
to $6,000,000.
Tho Southern Pacific Compaay
Issued a statement defending iu
policy, as a result of the suit brought
to prevent dividend payments.
NEW YORK MARKET!.
Wholesale Prices of Farm Produce
Quoted! for tho Week.
The Milk Exchange price for stan
dard quality is 3 V4 per qt.
Butter.
Creamrey, extra 29H3t
Firsts 27tf2
State dairy, fancy 27 28
Cheese.
Fancy 14Htli
Small 14 M, 0Ui.
Part Skims 1 9
Eggs.
State and Penn 21 &'i
Western Firsts 1 7 f 1 8
Duck '...25 ip2K
. Live Poultry.
Chickens, per lb 12 11
Fowls, per lb 17
Dressed Poultry.
Turkeys, per tb 10 16
Chickens, Pblla. lb.... 11 4f)l$
Geese, spring, lb 8 10
Ducklings, per tb 8 (pll
Fruits Fresh.
Apples Greenings
per bbl $1 50$3 75
King, bbl 3 00 & 4 00
Ben davis, per bbl. . . . 1 60 S 25
Vegetables.
Potatoes, L. L, bbl...$l 85 $2 00
Cabbages, per 100.... 1 00 I 00
Onions, white,
per bbl 2 25 3 iS
Beets, per bbl 1 00 16
Hay and Straw.
Hay. prime, cwt. $1 00$1 15
No. 1, per cwt. SO 1 10
No. 2, per cwt 65 75
Straw, laug rye. 60 65
Grain, Etc.
Flour, Win. pats. $3 00 $8 85
spring puts 4 20 6 00
Wheat No. 1. . oiVt
No. 2, red 84V6 86
Oats, mixed 4 8
Clipped white 52 55
Live Stock.
Beeves, city drs'd. 7
Calves, city drs'd. 8 (ft
Country drs'd. 7 Va ? 1 1 '
Sheep, per cwt. 4 50 c 6 00
1 11