The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, October 31, 1907, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURO, PA.
m m mi
j 1
III and Nearly Dying at
Viareggio, Correspon
dents Pursue Her.
WATCH HER WINDOWS
ad She Rem a Criminal, She Says,
She Couid Not Have liven Shad
owed More Assiduously. Her
House Bem-Ied by Self-Htylcd
Journalist. No Memoirs.
Vtarege'o. Oct. 31. Mile, de la
Ranee, better known to English
ayiaking i:"v.'l readers all the world
ver us Ouid.t, has been residing
bei e for i-"v:ral weeks past. Al
most li:iiii;''.l; ((:ly after her arrival
tn Vlares ;! M'le, do la Ramee fell
HI. " Indfe..-.!, ;-:li was ailing when she
arrived, Lining caught cold during
a drive by nlht of nine miles from
Xasharosa, uihl hliu hag been confin
ed to her room for days. She was at
death's door, but her health Is said
to have Improved very much.
It la, however, difficult to obtain
precise and trustworthy Information
concerning the celebrated novelist.
She has been bo much incensed by
the outrageous persecution to which
the has been subjected by the Eng
lish yellow Journals that Information
la denied to all Inquirers alike,
whether the inquiries are dictated
by genuine respectful solicitude or
by mere ciriosity.
It Is dir.? i!t to convey any idea
of the exttj: t to which this persecu
tion has been carried. Had Ouida
been a criminal she could not have
been shadowed more assiduously.
Her house in Msisparosa was besieged
by self-etyled Journalists and cor
respondent:; armed with cameras,
which were kept in readiness to pho
tograph any one entering or leaving
the house and snapshot any face that
might appear r.t the windows.
Taft Rides Over nnjrulo.
Bagulo, P. I., Oct. 29. Mounted
oa a largo army mule. Secretary
Taft rode over Ragulo. He Inspected
the site of post Joan Hay, ranged
ver the surrounding mountains and
visited the sites of proposed govern
ment building:" and extensions of the
military post. Both the Secretary
- v sZ
v . ' . gins' ,ri
WM. H. TAFT. .
and the ruulc stood the hard two
Hours' work well.
General Wood favors enlarging the
poet so at; to provide quarters for
two reglmerts. Making the term of
,ervice in the island three years, he
would use Bugulo as a recuperating
place and rotate all units here dur
ing tours.
Washington Htatlon Opens.
Washington, Oct. 29. The $4,
M0.000 Union Station and Terminal
la this city wui opened on Sunday,
when the I iusburg Express over the
Baltimore & Ohio pulled In.
The Union station, which directly
faces the Capitol and la within a
few mlnuteo walk of It, Is owned
Jointly by the Baltimore & Ohio and
the Pennsylvania Railroad. It will
be used by all the roads entering
Washington, including the Philadel
phia, Washington & Baltimore;
Southorn, Chesapeake & Ohio, Atlan
tic Const Line, Seaboard Air Line,
and the Richmond, Fredericksburg
it Potomac.
Meat to Be Cheaper.
-Omaha, Oct. 30. Because of the
financial flurry, food stuffs will drop
ia .price at once says Edward A. Cud
ahy of the Cuduhy Packing Com
pany. Already the Cudahy Company has
reduced the price of fresh meats 10
pet cent., and the) reduction should
be felt by the consumer immediately,
Mr. Cudahy alt predicts an imme
diate decline In prices of produce and
staple supplies The reduction in
meats will bo felt in Omaha and the
West immediately, and will reach
blew York In leas than a week,
i Liner Finlunri Disabled.
Dover, England, Oct. SO. The
Red Star Line steamer Finland, from
New York. Oct. 19, for Dover and
Antwerp, struck the western end of
the southern breakwater while en
tering thiH port. Rlie ruffercd ex
tensive .rinmnr-.e to he;' hows, which
will necessitate her remaining here
for a duy or two. No lives were lost.
ml
7
mill
mm
To Be a Vice Admiral. '
Washington, Oct. 31. The great
battleship fleet which Is to go to the
Pacific will probably be commanded
by a Vice Admiral, and that officer
is now Rear Admiral Robely D. Ev
ans. Congress will be asked by the
- v , tit ;''' tot
,. ,- yi v. .. , .. ! :
ADMIRAL "BOB" EVANS.
President to cpfnbliph thin r.mk In
the navy for this purpose.
Admiral Evans will sail In com
mand of the most powerful fleet ever
leathered under the American flag.
He commands more battleships of
modern type than any other naval
oiocr In the world. The only officer
wl'otip pennant floats over a more
ni!T!'.irout fleet of all kinds of war
!;!pe is Lor .1 Charles Bercsford.
.7i:d;r' Grosscnp Troubled.
Chicago, 111.. Oct. 31. Judge Pet
er S. Gto.-scup of the United States
Circuit Court Is very much affected
by Lis Indictment for manslaugh
ter by a Mattoon (111.) Grand Jury
ia connection with the fatal accident
on the Mattoon City Railway last
August.
Judge Grosscup was a heavy stock
bolder and a Director In the com
pany. It was asserted at Mattoon
that the Directors of the company
had not provided for an efficient
management of the road.
The friends of the Jurist are in
clined to treat the matter lightly.
Judge Grosscup looks upon It more
Eerlously. Upon being Informed of
the Grand Jury's action the Judge
said:
"Ah! this hurts. To say that I
do not care would be untrue. Like
any rightmlnded man, I do care. My
friends, I am sure now that I have
a teuder regard for human life and
suffering and a desire to deal justly
with all men.
Talc of a Hog and a Hear.
Manitou, Col., Oct. 29. There Is
a suspicion that a nature faker has
penetrated to the ranch of Grove
Brothers, near here, for a strange
tale has been brought from that place.
It is said that while a huge Arkansas
razorback hog battled for its life
with a big brown bear, three unarm
ed men watched.
The boar, so the story goes, sneak
ed upon the hog and was surprised
when it gave battle. The brutes
fought savagely for two hours, when
they fell exhausted. The bear had
enough, and after a brief rest crept
away, while the hog raised up on
his forefeet and glared at it. The
hog's wounds will probably prove
fatal.
Waldorf Guest Killed.
New York, Oct. 31. H. B. Potter,
Jr., of Philadelphia, agent for the
Michigan Commercial Insurance Co.
of Boylestown, Ponn., was found dead
In his room in tho Waldorf-Astoria.
Coronor Harburger, who examined
the body within an hour after It had
been found, asserted that the man
had been murdered.
"I do not think that murder was
committed In this hotel," said the
Coroner, "but I believe that the
man died as a result of a beating re
ceived at some one's hands, and in
which his skull was fractured."
Tuts Bryan In tlio Field.
Omaha. Oct. 30. "Certainly Mr.
Bryan vviil be candldnte for the Dem
ocratic nomination. He hasn't made
much of a secret of his intentions
along that line."
Thomas Allen of Loncoln, brother-in-law
of William Jennings Bryan
and Chairman of the Nebraskan
State Democratic Committee, mads
this announcement of Mr. Bryan's
candidacy. It is the first time a
member of Mr. Bryan's family has
Bbld unequivocally that he was a
candidate.
Iteceivers for Big Firms.
Pittsburg, Oct. 30. Temporary
receivers were named for three of
the big companies of the Westing
house interests, the Westlnghouse El
ectric and Manufacturing Company,
the Westlnghouse Machine Company
tv.i. the Securities Investment Com
pany, The business will go on undis
turbed, and Pittsburg received the
news calmly.
New Comet Nears the Earth.
Waphlnjrton, Oct. 80. Astrono
mers at tho United States Naval Ob
servatory have been making obser
vations for tho Inst two weeks on a
new comet, which has been named
tho Melliuh Comet, from tho fact
that itii discoverer was J. E. Mellish,
a farmer of Cottage Grove, near Mad-
tDOtl, Wl3.
Dili III
Covering Minor Happen
Ings from all Over
the Globe.
HOME AND FOREIGN
Compiled and Condensed for the
Busy Beiuler A Complete Record
of European Despatches and Im
portant Events from Everywhere
Boiled Down for Hasty PcrusaL.
Mrs. Mary Scott Hartje replied to
her husband's new accusations In
their divorce Bult with charges of
forgery and bribery.
Secretary Taft's promise to apk for
$200,000 appropriation for war bal
loons aroused military experts to
predict the construction of an aerial
fleet.
The leading newspapers of Cuba
unanimously praise Governor Ma
poon for his response to the appeals
of the agricultural interests.
Otto Kelsey, Superintendent of In
surance, was again on the witness
stand In the Investigation of his de
partment being conducted at Albany.
Wall Btreet reaped the benefits of
tho Clearing House loan certificate
plan and few calls came from cities
that have also adopted the scheme.
June was named as the approxi
mate date of the next international
balloon race, which will be started
at Berlin, Germany.
Appropriations amounting to $11,
825,000 were voted for by the Board
of Aldermen.
Three United States army oracers,
members of a commission thnt at
tended military manoeuvers in Eu
rope, returned to New York.
S. J. Small, deposed president of
the Telegraphers' National Union,
was hissed out of the meeting room
of the local strikers.
Dr. Houghton announced that
hereafter secret marriages would be
frowned upon at the "Little Church
Around tho Corner."
President Roosevelt requestod Sen
ator Bourne, of Oregon, In emphatic
terms to cease his third term pro
paganda in the West.
Secretary Taft cabled to the War
Department that the entire system
of Philippine defences must be re
vised. Editorial comments of leading Am
erican newspapers show widely vary
ing opinions of President Roosevelt's
relations to the financial situation.
The Buck Stove and Range Com
pany o" St. Louis applied to the Dis
trict of Columbia Supreme Court for
a temporary injunction against the
boycott Instituted by the American
Federation of Labor.
Members of the Agrarian League
refused to accept a government sal
ary for service on the new Agricul
tural Commission In Cuba.
Dr. Walter R. Gillette, once vice
president of the Mutual Life Insur
ance Company, was sentenced to
serve six months in the penitentiary
for perjury in New York.
At the International Aeronautical
Congress, which opened here, Gen
eral James announced that the
United States Army Is planning for a
fleet of air ships.
Frcdelick L. Eldrldge, vice presi
dent of the Knickerbocker Trust
Company, is gravely ill with nervous
breakdown and a fractured leg.
Charles H. Rogers was convicted
of murder in the first degree for
causing the death of Frederick R.
Olney, near Mlddletown, N. Y.
Brown's Station and Ashokan, In
the Adlrondacks, will be destroyed
by building New York's water sys
tem. Mrs. Samuel W. Peck, wife of a
wealthy wholesale clothing merchant,
and who is being sued for divorce,
was for two years owner of a racing
stable.
Measures were taken to protect
the gold and specie reserves of the
financial Institution of the United
States.
Briquette as a fuel for navy use
was tested by the torpedo boat Bid
die off Hampton Roads.
James Reddlck, chairman of the
Republican County Committee, in
Chicago, 111., was killed In an auto
mobile accident.
Westorn despatches said that In
dian lands in the West were being
filled by settlers from Iowa, Neb
raska and South Dakota.
Cardinal Gibbons, in a letter to
the secretary of the coming Internat
ional Congress on Tuberculosis in
Washington, expressed the belief that
science would succeed In stamping
out consumption.
Through efforts to obtain the re
lease of Oliver C. Perry it was learn
ed that the notorious train robber
has refused for four years to eat any
food.
When Argyle Maclay, a member of
the Christian Scientists, lay dying of
pneumonia, in New York, a physician
was called, but be arrived only a
short time before the patient's death.
The international balloon cup rac
ended with the German balloon Pora
rsern the winner, L'Isle de France
Bicond, and the Dusseldorf third.
Speakers before the National Civic
Federation In Chicago favored go-',
ernmental regulation of corporations.
Llucoln Boachy won the contest
for dirigible balloons In St. Iu1s, .
Mo., making a flight around the
three mile course in four minutes,
forty seconds.
Huge Whitney, a well known resi
dent of Boston, killed himself with
a revolver In his home following
a period of ill health.
Farmers mot In convention In
Syracuse, N. Y., to discuss methods
to reclaim abandoned farms In thH
State. . . . .
Teachers were forbidden to lobby
at Albany by an amendemnt to Its
bylaws adopted by the Board of Edu
cation. Mr. and Mrs. W. K. Vanderbllt
and Consuclo Duchess of Marlbor
ough arrived from Europe to attend
the wedding of Miss Gladys Vauddr
bilt. In a fight over the storing of in
automobile a resident of Harlem
killed an old time friend and partner
in business.
Three thousand firemen from flv
States were reviewed by Chief Croker
at a jubilee in Port Chester, N. Y.
FOREIGN NEWS-
The North German Lloyd steamer
Kaiser Wllhelm der Orosse reached
Plymouth and there reported the
loss of her rudder, as exclusively
told in special wireless despatches.
A special despatch stated that It
was believed that Princess Barbara
Loponkhin, who was rorted miss
ing In London, was mistaken for an
other person. The woman terrorist
who murdered General Maxlmarsky
was sentenced to be hanged. A new
plot against tho Tsar was revealed.
King Alfonso of Spain renched
London safely, after a narrow escape
from death or Injury In a wreck cf
his train near Cherbourg, France.
Count Adalbert Sternberg, Bohem
ian representative In the Relchsruth,
was driven from the Parliament by a
mob of Austrian socialist Deputies,
according to a special Vienna des
patch. Secretary of War Taft, visited a
mine In the Philippines, addressed
the miners and promised reforms.
Conservatives will rule in the
third Russian Duma, the elections
thus far Indicate, according to a spe
cial St. Petersburg despatch.
Great interest has been aroused in
Vienna in the progress of the Von
Moltke-Harden case in Berlin, ac
cording to a special despatch.
Archduke Ferdinand, Grand Duke
of Tuscany, is dying at Salabrrg, ac
cording to a special cable from Vien
na. A special cable from London gives
the details of the marriage of Miss
Leila Paget and Mr. Ralph Paget,
British Minister at Bangkok.
Slgnor Toselll gave an interesting
account of his courtship and his mar
riage to the Countess Montlgnoso,
formerly the Crown Princess of Sax
ony, According to a special Pairs des
patch, Mr, Farman made another
successful flight with his aeroplane
at Issy les Moullneaux.
In Berlin the trial was opened of
the libel action of General Count
Kuno von Moltke, nephew of the
great German Field Marshal, against
the editor of Die Zukunft, Herr Max
lmlllon Harden.
SPORTING NEWS.
"Alec" Campbell, of the home
club, with a score of 144, won the
Eastern golf championship on the
Country Club links at Brookllne,
Mass.
General G. M. Smith, at a lunch
eon to automobile show exhibitors,
advocated, shorter wheel bases for
cars.
Richard T. Wilson, Jr., won the
two principal races at Jamaica, with
Monfort and Adoration.
The Court of Appeals in the Dis
trict of Columbia has granted an
order for the continuance of a bet
ting case at its December term.
Thomas J. Gallagher led Oro
Mornlngstar in the second block of a
2,400 point handicap 18.2 billiard
match.
Harry C. Pullman stated at a
meeting of the National Association
of Professional Baseball Players that
the outlaw game would receive no
quarter.
Punic in Harlem Church.
New York, Oct. 31. While Borne
800 people, mostly women and child
ren were looking at stereoptlcon
views of the Holy Land in the audi
torium of the Harlem Baptist Church
at 215-219 East 123d. Street, some
thing about the picture-making ma
chinery set fire to some draperies
and there was a panic. ,
A screaming Jam of women and
children fought to get down two sets
of winding stairs. Women were
slammed against the side walls In
the semi-darkness and children were
trampled upon. Two little girls were
seriously injured.
Court Condemns Von Moltke.
Berlin, Oct. 81. The Court ren
dered Its decision in the defamation
suit of Count Kuno von Moltke
against Maximilian Harden, editor
of Zukunft, and acquitted Harden.
Count von Moltke was ordered to
bear the costs of the trial, which
amount to a large sum. . , ,
The Judgment was extremely pop
ular with the people of Berlin, who
were appalled by the disgusting reve
lations of the doings of the so-called
Knights of the Round Table, of
which Count von Moltke was a member.
ID
Weird Tale of Men Treated
as Beasts by Savages
on an Island.
MUST DRAQ PLOUGHS
Man Who Ewcoped From Captors
Stirs l'p AH Madrid Says Prison
ers Are Whipped and Furnished
Detestable Food Plight of An
other Escaped Prisoner.
Madrid, Oct. 30. A thrilling story,
related by a Spaniard who recently
arrived from Manila, Is nUructlii;; c
good deal of attention In the Madrid
papers. This man, who gives liis
name as Uulguera, declares he w as
on board the Spanish cruiser Rei:ia
Marie Cristlna when she was wreck
ed. He says that when the war s.ilp
foundered and her crew of 627 tiieu
wire thrown Into the water, tluui;li
more than 300 were drowned, mauy
wero saved.
The survivors, he declares, were
captured by Tagaios and taken to !
the Island of San Juan del Monte, '
In Bulaean province. Acording to '
lUilKiiera's story there are more tliau ,
four thousand Spanish prisoners on I
tllfit island. Thev nro fuiTHil. lie I
eas, by the natives t: drag their
ploughs and are whipped and treated
like beasts of burden, and the only
reward they get are scanty rations
of green corn.
One of Bulguera's companions has
also Just reached his homo, at Val
encia, where he found that not only
had he been presumed to be dead, but
his wife had married again.
Mathers 101st. P.li-f liday.
Jenklntown, Ta., Oct. 29. Isaac
Mather, the ' Grand Old Man of Chel
tou Hills," reached his 101st birth
day last Sunday and it was passed
without any formal observance, for
the aged man's condition Is such that
it was deemed far from advisable to
ISAAC MATHER,
subject him to any form of excite
ment. Last year, on his hundredth birth
day, his picturesque old home In
Washington lane, built by his grand
father, Isaac Mather, on land ceded
lo him by William Penn himself, and
in which Mather has lived for ninety
nine years, and thronged with friends
from the neighboring towns.
Made Gems by Radium.
Paris, Oct. 80. A paper wa read
before the Academy of Sciences on
Prof. Bordass's discoveries based on
the late Prof. Curie's observation
that glass In which radium is en
closed takes a magnificent azure
tint.
Prof. Bordass placed two francs
worth of corundum in contact with
radium for a month. He found that
uucolored corundum became as yel
low as a topaz, blue corudum became
emerald green, and violet corundum
sapphire blue.
Corundum is an aluminum oxide,
the colored varieties of which are
the sapphire, Oriental ruby, Oriental
topaz and Oriental amethyst.
Europe Buys Much Wheut.
Chicago, Oct. 31. The break in
the price of wheat brought large Eu
ropean orders for Immediate ship
ment. Six hundred thousand bush
els of red Winter wheat were sold
here for shipment East.
Chicago bankers regard this move
ment as significant of the powerful
aid which the West la bringing to
the financial situation. They say
that if the movement of the great
staple continues to grow, . the obli
gations of this country created
abroad will be so large that it will
be impossible for European banks to
retain their gold, even by fixing dis
count rates at the maximum.
Man Asleep for Six Weeks.
Peterson, N. J., Oct. 30 Suffer
ing from a malady that physicians
say sometimes affects men who work
in mines, and which resembles "Af
rican sleeping sickness," Joseph Koe
ljus has been in a comatose stat
in St. Joseph's Hospital for the las
six weeks, and thus far has utterly
failed to respond to treatment.
Killed In Mlntako for Deer.
Utlca, N. Y Oct. 81. John B.
Morgan, a member of the firm of
Williams & Morgan, leading furni
ture dealers of this city, waB shot
and Instantly killed at Kego Camp,'
Sheriff's Lake, in the Adlrondacks.
Mr. Morgan was mistaken for a deer.
He was one of the most prominent
buMneea men of this city.
SLAIN AXI ROBBED OF P3.000.
Rich Former Killed Near AtUntlo
City Ilody Thrown Into Water.
Atlantic City, Oct. 31. Murder,
with robbery as Its motive, Is the the
ory advanced by the police lu con
nection with the death of Absalom
Mageo, 60 years old a wealthy re
tired farmer of Weymouth, this
county, whoso body was found io
lieach Thoroughfare, a stream much
used by amateur yachtsmen of Chel
sea, by William L. Boye, a clerk,
who had started out In a launch for
a Ashing excursion.
The man's skull was fractured ami
marks upon his throat Indicated that
he had been trottled first and then
beaten over the head before his body
was trown Into the water. Ills pock
ets were turned Insldo out.
Cameron 1). Freas, a nephew of tlin
dend man, Informed the detectives
shortly after he was advised of bin
uncle's death that the farmer came
here yesterday afternoon with $0,
000 in his possession.
RUSSIAN Glltli STOLEN.
Daughter of a Police O.'Slelal IX sup.
pear in London.
London, Oct. 30. London is all
acog over the mysterious disappear
ance of a young Russian girl, Miss
Barbara Lapoukhine, whore mother
Is a Russian Prlneesa, and daughter
of Alexander Lapoukhine, who was
Director of the St. Petersburg pollco
under Plehve.
There are two theories of her dis
appearance. One Is that she was kid
napped by Russian Revolutionist.', out
of revenge for the acts of her father
while In his official position.
The other theory Is that her kid
nappers are not Revolutionists, bu:
members of the Black Hundred:!.
This theory seems tenable because
her father played a notable and very
honorable part In exposing the ma
chinery by which the pogroms cr
raids ngainst tho Jews have been or
ganized. Favors American Brides.
Oswego, N. Y., Oct. 30 William
J Bryan lectured hero before a
audience of 800 on "Tho Value of
an Ideal."
Mr. Bryan preceded his lecture by
alleging that President Roosevs't
was advocating certain of hla (Bry
an's) policies, saying, "I am willing
to lease to the President tho use of
my policies at a nominal rental, re
serving the right to use them myself
at any time."
Mr. Bryan denounced internation
al marriages where these are simply
contracts for the exchange of wealth
for title. He also Bpoke of the de
moralizing effect of the use of money
as a means for tho corruption of nat
ional political affairs, strongly advo
cating a higher ideal in politics.
Kills Friend for a near
Ogdensburg, N. Y., Oct. 30 News
has Just reached here of the shoot
ing and killing of R. F. Forbes, aged
28 years, of Northfleld by Both Mc
Calvin, aged 23, of the same place.
Farbes and McCalvIn were hunting,
and, becoming separated in the for
est, Forbes, after doing consider
able tramping and being very tired,
sat down under a tree to rest. M
Calvin, unaware of Forbes's where
abouts, came wandering along, and
the place being full of bear tracks,
McCalvIn saw a form which he
thought was a bear and fired. Tb
bullet struck Forbes In the back of
the head and killed him Instantly.
Put 2,000 .Men Out of Work.
Montreal, Oct. 30. It was report
ed that by the end of the month at
least two thousand men will be out
of work through the partly closing
down of the Angus shops, the manu
facturing department of tho Cana
dian Pacific Railway in this city, ft
is the first move in carrying out an
order of Sir Thomas Shaughnessy to
cut down expenses.
W. J. Payne Robbed of tjl t.OOO.
Washington, Oct. 30. The police
of this city received information that
William J. Payne of Richmond, Va.,
President of the Newport News Gas
Company, the Electric Company, and
connected with other largo enter
prises, while on his way from Wash
ington to New York City was robbed
of a leather grip containing $14,000
in bonds and stock certificates.
NEW YORK MARKETS.
Wholesale Prices of Farm Produce
Quoted for the Week.
Wheat No. 3 Rd, I1.13J,'. No. 1
Northern Dulnth, fl.20. No. 3
hard, Winter, f 1.13.
Corm No. 3, 7fto. No. 3 White, 77?io.
Oats. Mixud, 60a White, 02Xa71o.
Milk. Jo. per quart.
Buttbu. Western, extra, 88a2Bc.
. Firsts, SSaJQc. State dairy, nuost
- 87a8o.
Chbbsr. State, full cream, 15o.
Eaas. Nearby, Fancy, 84u86c. State,
Uood to choice, 89aS3c. Western,
Firsts, !18a!loo.
Bkbvks. City dressed, 8al0o.
Cai.vks City dressed, 8al4o. Country
dressed, per lb. 7al;ia.
Shkbk Per 100 lb., a.60aQ.35.
Hous. Live, per 100 lb., U.80a7.24.
Hay. Prime, 100 lbs., (l.OSal.10.
Straw. Long rye, 66a70o.
Livb POULTUY.-rFowls, Per lb. alOa
Chickens, Spring, per lb., alSo. Duckd,
' per lb., 12a 14a. Turkeys, al4o.
Dubsseo poultry. Turkeys, per lb.,
lOulOo. Fowls, per lb., 12ul8o.
Cbiokuus, Phila., per lb., i-ia.Ua.
VaaETABUts. Potatoes, L. I., per bbl,
3.00a$3.83. Onions? White, per bbl.,
l3.60aH.no. Ltttann, per basket,
S6eafl-8S. Tomatoes, per W, 86a76o,