The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, November 21, 1907, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURO. PA.
1 1. ffllL I
Ex-President of Knicker
bocker Trust Co. Shoots
Himself in His Home.
DIED UNDER KNIFE
It Was Ills Sudden Retirement That
Led to ttio Series of flunk Runs
and lYiiipiiitu-d the Recent Panic
Wound in the Abdomen. Acri
'dent fS.ijs Family Physician.
New York, Nov. 21. Charles T.
Barney, whose resignation from the
presidency of the Knickerbocker
Trust Company on October 21 was
followed by the suspension of that
company nnd the general panic )n
which several other banks were ob
liged to close their doors, shot him
self at 10 o'clock on Thursday morn
ing at his horn?, 67 Park avenue. He
died four Lour r after an un
successful effort had been made by
surgeons to remove the bullet.
Mr. Barney was conscious for some
time after the shooting and he made
the statement that it was an acci
dent. Coroner Harburger, who ex
amined all thi persons who were In
the house at the time and the doc
tors who attended the wounded man,
rave It as his opinion that It was
uicide, and so reported it to the
Coroner's office. Coroner's Physi
cian Philip F. O'Hanlon and Assist
ant District Attornpy Manley, who
also visited the Harney house, said
that they believed the shot was acci
dental. The Assistant Patriot Attorney
and Dr. O'Hanlon based their opin
ions chiefly on the character of the
wour.d. It was In the upper left part
of the abdomen and the bullet took
an upward cour:-e until It lodged
near the left nhouldur blade in the
back, not f ir from the base of the
neck. Dr. O'Hanlon said that he did
not believe any man would attempt
uicide by shooting himself in that
way.
Mr. Barney Lad been bard pressed
by his creditors ever since the Knick
erbocker closed Its doors. His friends
aald after the shooting that tie
had not beeu himself since hia
retirement from the presidency.
Hia lawyers had been working
Cor two weeks on a plan wh'ci
they hoped would save Mr.
Barney from making an assign
ment and give him a chance to work
ut the long line of slow assets which
he had. On the preceedlng Saturda7
the accountauts had completed an
examination of Mr. Barney's condi
tion and had. so his lawyers said,
assured him that he had an equity
of at least $2.2f.O,O00.
After shooting himself, Mr. Bar
ney conferred with his lawyers, Mas
ten & Nichols of 4 9 Wall Street, and
besides directing the drawing up of
a new will,, gave directions about
other important business affairs con
nected with the thirty-four corpora
tions with which he was connected.
Having straightened out the most im
portant of his business affairs, he
was put under au anaesthetic and was
operated upou. Then he died.
SHOT TWO CHICKEN THIEVES.
Owner of Coop Trapped Bobbers by
Rigging up an Alarm SlgnnL
New York, Nov. 20. An electrii
alarm, rigged up in the chicken coop
of Benjamin Van Tassel on his place,
5,700 Broadway, near the southern
limits of Van Cortlandt Park, sound
ed at 1.30 on Sunday morning.
Lyman L. King, who works on tho
place, took his revolver and went
out to the coop. Within a few mln
ntes he had taken snap shots nt two
Italian, one of whom It was after
wards found had three chickens in
a bag.
The first Italian, Nicholas La
tosa of Klngsbrldge was sh.it
through the head find died shortly
after reaching Fordham Hospital.
The other niads off, leaving a trail
of, blood behind. At 10 in the morn
ing a wounded Italian was found In
the Van Cordlaudt Park Station of
the Putnam Division of the New
fork Central. He was Bruna Pe
dulla of 4 5 Palisade Avenue, Yon
kers. He, too, died in Fordham
Hospital, later m the afternoon.
The police and King are satisfied
that Pedullu was the second chtck
ea thief. King was held by Magis
trate Crane '.n the .Morislana Court
ia $5,000 bail to uwuit tiie Coro
ner's liujue; t.
Nine-ycar-uM u Hero.
New York, Nov. lit. There were
JO men around when ten-year-old
Florence Hartmnn of 349 East 14!th
street lost her balance an 1 fell Into
Cromwell Creek on Sundoy after
noon. But Jacob Schorer, 9 years old,
if the same address as Florence, ran
(own the embankment Into the wa
ar and caught hold of her dress as
.ae was being carried out lata tho
itream.
Jacob pulled and tugged und fin
ely got Florence close to the em
bankment, where he held her head
ibove water until she could recover
ter breath. Then ho called to hev
ral other little boys and girls for
elp and by their united effort the
'.ttle Hartman girl was pulled out
.if the water. Last night she was
i-ld' to bo none the worse for her
exuerlni. .
POPE ON AMERICAN YOCTIt.
Have Excessive Liberty, He Snys, In
Discussing Maloney disc.
Home, Nov. 20. "The excessive
liberty granted to young people In
America may lead to unpleasant re
sults." This opinion was expressed by
Pope Plus X. In conversation with
Cardinal Vincenzo Vaunutelll about
POPE PIUS X.
the ense of Mrs. Helen Maloney Os
borne, daughter of Martin Maloney
of Philadelphia.
Because of the prominence of the
Maloneys nt the Vatican Court, there
has been much interest In the details
that have been printed here of the
trip to Europe Miss Maloney took
with Clarkson and her previous mar
riage to Osborne. The Pope was deep
ly pained when the matter came to
his attention.
Hit VAX SAYS HE'LL RUN.
Won't Ho Headed Off by Pnrty Lend
ers or Newspapers.
Lincoln, Neb., Nov. IS. The first
positive declaration by Mr. Bryan
on the subject of his attitude to-"
ward the Democratic Presidential
nomination of 1908 appears in the
latest Issue of the Commoner. In a
prominent editorial place, under the
heading "Mr. Bryan's Position," Mr.
Bryan makes the subjoined state
ment. It Is a guarded announce
ment that ho Is a candidate, and
while he makes it plain that he would
not accept the nomination except on
a platform to his liking, he Is not to
be considered as personally seeking
the nomination, but Is willing to take
it if the rank and file of the party
ask him and desire him to make the
race A paragraph In the statement
reads:
Mr. Bryan will not ask for or sso.k
a nomination, and he will not assume
to decide the question of his avail
Iblllty. The only question that ougnt
to weigh with the party la whether
the -party ran be strengthened and
aided more by his nomination than
by the nomination of some one else.
, Old Friends Greet Weston.
Erie, Pa., Nov. 19. Edward Pay
son Weston arrived here on Friday
evening nt 7:30 o'clock and went to
the National Hotel, where he stopp
ed on his former visit to Erie, forty
years ago. As soon as h.o had eaten
supper Weston started for the Casino
and it was with difficulty that the jio
lice forced their way through the
doors when the pedestrian entered,
udn it was with difficulty that the po
lice forced their way trhough the
crowd and made a passage for Wes
ton. He was greeted with prolonged
cheers and for about ten minutes
held the attention of tho audience,
telling them of his trip nnd his for
mer visit to tills city.
First Woman Editor Dead.
N.nv York, Nov. 18. The flrrt wi
man editor of a woman's magazine In
the United States Is dead nt her liome
in this city nt the nge of '.:,. ;?!ie
is Mrs. Harriet Farley Don'.evy. Biid
died on Tuesday.
As Harriet Farley, years nso. Mrs.
Donievy ed'.ted The Lowell Offering,
a magazine the contributors to which
were for the mi.st part operatives fn
the cotton mills of Lowell, Mass. Her
brother, the late Judge Massilon Far
ley, wns a friend of Sam Hourton,
and was Identified with the early his
tory of Texas.
Mrs. Donievy was a friend of the
poet Whlttlor and other prominent
llten;ry figures of many years ago.
Prison for Mrs. IUtmiidk:!.
Chicago, Nov. 10. Mrs. Evelyn
Romudka. who is the wife of a weal
thy merchant of Milwaukee, and who
waa recently Indicted for burglary
and larceny, was sentenced on Fri
day to tho penitentiary for from ona
to twenty years by Judge Brentano.
Her counsel declared In court that
she was being "railroaded" to prison
for the purpose of shielding other
persons. The trial lasted eleven minutes.
V V;
r ,
V . 1 ' a i rjirf ""if r
' -J iv - . i ,f
Covering Minor Happen
ings from ail Over
the Globe.
HOME AND FOREIGN
Compiled and Condensed for tJiO
Busy Reader A Complete Record
of European Despatches and Im
portant Events from Everywhere
Boiled Down for Hasty Porusnl.
The doparturo of the battleship
fleet for the Pacific wilt cause eBM
thousand workman In Eastern nnvy
yards to be thrown out of employ
ment. Mrs. Annlo M. Bradley told at her
trial In Washington of her life aud
Brown.
Secretary Taft left Vladivostok
for St. Petersburg on a special train
provided by the Tsar.
Tentative plans for the President's
review of the fleet at Hampton
Roads embrace a personal Inspection
of the larger vessels.
The American Federntlon cf
Labor voted for the exclusion of nil
Asiatic labor from the United
States.
Washington despatches assert that
President Roosevelt would make his
coming message to Congress calm In
tone.
More federal aid In fighting the
plague was asked by the San Fran
cisco municipal authorities.
Alexander Graham Bell launched
his new air ship, which he believes
will solve the problem of aerial navi
gation. Mrs. Reese, wife of a wealthy resi
dent of Altoona, Pa., was rescued In
Pittsburg from a Chinaman who had
drugged and kidnapped her.
Charges that the new Eastern rate
on lumber, fixed by the Hill and
Harriman roads, as excessive, were
made to the Interstate Commerce
Commission.
Michael McCabe, a miner, was res
cued after spending eighty-seven
hours buried hundreds of feet below
the surface In a mine.
President Roosevelt addrecsed the
delegates of the Central American
Peace Conference.
Friends of Senator Foraker, of
Ohio, declared that he will announce
his candidacy for the republican
Presidential nomination following
the report on the Brownsville affair.
Anthony N. Brady's sale of a
"paper" railroad to the Metropolitan
Securities Company was Investigated
by the Grand Jury.
More traffic squad experts again
placed the blame for street car block
ades squarely up to the street rail
way companies.
FOREIGX NEWS-
Charles Dickens revealed the se
cret that the Fifth Duke of Port
land and Thomas Charles Druce wero
Identical to Miss Robinson, the sec
retary of Thomas Charles Druce, in
Hyde Park, she testified in court, ac
cording to a special London de
spatch. The Mauretania made good tlnio
despite a strong gale at sea and rode
the waves steadily, says a special
wireless despatch.
A special Paris despatch announ
ces the death of Baronne Adolphe de
Rothschild at her chateau near Ge
neva. A special despatch told of a dally
financial paper which was started
In Paris this morning.
A special dispatch from Paris
gives a French view of the monetary
crisis In America from the Figaro.
Within an ace of winning the
Deutsch-Archdeacon prize of DO.OnOf.
with his aeroplane, Mr. Henry Farn
man finally lost It after ten nights,
according to a special Farig de
spatch. Robert Caldwell again testified in
the Druce case and Mlss .Auna Rob
inson told of her meeting with
Charles Dickens, says a special ca
ble despatch from Ixindon.
Four conspirators were slain in
a pltohed battle between the Rus
sian police and a band of revolution
ists, says a cable despatch from St.
Petersburg.
German bankers decided to refuse
any loan to Japan, according to a
special cable despatch front a cor
respondent in Berlin.
A special Paris despatch gives de
tails of the activity of the aeronauti
cal world In France nnd of the rival
ry of the heavier than air and lighter
than air schools.
Mr. James B. Reynolds, Assistant
Secretary of the Treasury; Mr. Mar
lon de Vries and Mr, Byron S. Walte,
who served as a special commlssU.n
to study tariff problems abroad and
who are about to roturn to the
United States, report that their work
was quite satisfactory, according to a
special despatch.
The prospects of cotton growing In
German East Africa, which the Ger
man Colonial Secterary, Herr. Deri
burg, considered good, are not now
regarded In the same favorable light.
A special despatch from St. Peters
burg announces the opening of the
Duma.
A special London despatch says
that the Earl of Crawford Is taking
I
Mr. Allison V. Armour, on a five
months' cruise In his yacht to the
East.
A special Paris despatch liays that
fifty tourists bound for home by the
Barbarossa are delayed at Cherbourg
by the non-arrival of the liner there
on account of the fog.
M. Santos-Dumont, says a special
Paris despatch, has built a new aero
plane, with which he will attempt to
regain the laurels which he has lost
to Mr. Farman.
Little enthusiasm marked the re
ception of Emperor William In Lon
don, where he was welcomed at the
Guild Hall.
The Gorman Emperor has decorat
ed Professor Robert Koch, who hits
done so much to find relief for the
vnst numbers In Africa afflicted with
the "sleeping sickness."
SPORTIXO NEWS.
The British Lawn Tennis Associa
tion Is considering a change in the
rules whereby players shall keep
both feet firmly on the ground In
serving the ball.
The total number of qualified
marksmen at Creedmoor Is 1 12,027.
greater than the phenomenal record
of last year.
A red fox led the Tippah hounds
n lively chase over the Long Island
course.
A run of losing favorites was
checked nt Pfennings when Tim
Squire defeated Barrister in the
third race.
The American Athletic Union of
the United States hus passed a new
rule governing college athletics.
Bitten by a .Moirie and May Die.
Taunton, Mass., Nov. 19. Michael
Mullon. a mill operative, while at
work saw a mouse run across tile al
ley. He caught It by the tall. He
hold it aloft so that the girls could
see and salt', when they screamed,
"Why. that poor little thing couldn't
hurt a flea." He pinched the mouse's
tall to hear It squeal. The mouse
turned on him and bit the index lin
ger of his right hand. Blood poison
has now set In and the bitten finger
was amputated on Friday last. Phy
sicians say the poison has so worked
through his system that death may
ensue.
Shoots 18 KabbiN with His Teeth.
Hanover, Pa., Nov. 19. Although
he has no hands Abraham B. Meyers
broke this season's record for the
most successful one day's hunt In
York County, when he brought home
on Friday twenty-three rabbits, eigh
teen of which he had killed himself,
while his companion, possessed of
both arms, shot only five. Meyers
holds his gun by a ring under the
ttock large enough to admit the
stump of his left arm. while to the
trigger a snap is attached the end
of which he grips In his teeth.
To Hold Delegates
Washington, Nov. 21. Presllent
Roosevelt, It has become known, Is
determined that, so far as he Is con
cerned, there shall be no repetition
of the Minneapolis Convention of
1892, when the 400-odd Federal office-holding
delegates forced tho
nomination of President Harrison.
To that end he has passed the word
that no Federal office holder snail
go to the Republican National Con
vention next year as a delegate in
structed for him.
Priests 12 Cents n Day.
Madrid, Nov. '20. There was a
lively debite In the Chamber of
Deputies on the motion of Deputy
Salavary to Increase the salary of
the priests resident In the country
vhich now average only 12 cents a
day. ;
The motion was defeated by 116
votes to 14.
Jersey Paymaster Held Up.
Passaic, N. J., Nov. 18. Four
armed Italians at 2 o'clock on Fri
day afternoon held up William
Knapp, paymaster of the Worthen
end Aldrich Company, bleachers, of
Delawanna, and robbed him of $7,
503. The robbery was committed at
a lonely spot oa the river drive, on
the outskirts of Passaic.
Xo Ijiick of Cas!i in Cuba.
Havnna, Nov. 19. The bankers
are not taking the loan of J5, 000, 000
offered by Gov. Magoon. This cir
cumstance Is taken to show that the
country has plenty of money.
The sugar crop this year will prob
ably be one-fifth less than it was
last year owing to the drought.
Thread Profit $13,280,(12,1.
Pawtucket, R. I. Nov. 19. The
profits of the J. & P Coats Company,
Limited, manufacturers of thread,
for the year ending June 30 last, are
announced as 115,280,625. It was
the most successful year In the his
tory of the concern.
$10,000 Tip from Kuiser.
London, Nov. 20. Before leaving
Windsor Castle Monday for High
cliffe Castle Kaiser Wllhelm left no
less a sura than $10,000 to be di
vided as tips among the servants at
the castle, the gamekeepers and
the stable attendants.
Kalvlnl Is Seriously 111.
Florence, Nov. 21. Thomas Sal
vlni, the actor, la seriously 111 of un
affliction of the heart.
In view of his advanced age much
anxiety is felt concerning the outcome.
BE lllll EBilS,
i
Episcopal Churchmen Vote
To Restore "In God
We Trust."
PASSED RESOLUTION
Meanwhile President Roosevelt At
Washington Made Public n Letter
Giving His Reasons for Abolishing
the Phrase on Money. Snys It
Provokes to Jest nnd Ridicule.
New York, Nov. 21. While Presi
dent Ri.osfveli, in Washington, was
publicly avowing responsibility for
the order that banishes the old-time
motto, "In God We Trust," from the
new gold currency the annual con
vention of the Protestant Episcopal
Diocese of New York, in session at
St. John's Cathedral, on Mornlngslde
Heights, wi:s putting on record a vote
of protest.
It was not a unanimous protest,
however, and the debate that pre
ceded the vote wns one of the most
acrimonious In the convention's his
tory. But by 131 to 81 the cham
pions of the motto carried the reuo
lution that the motto should be re
stored. Washington, Nov 21. In nr.sver
to numerous protects President
Rooi evelt hns written a signed let
ter which he made public. The let
tel follows In part:
"When the question of the new
coinage came up we looked Into the
law nnd found there wns no warrant
therein for putting 'In God We Trust'
on the coins. As the custom, al
though without legal warrant, had
grown up, however, I might have felt
at liberty to keep tho Inscription had
I approved of Its being on the coin
ago. But as I did not approve of It,
I did not direct thnt It should ngaln
be put on. Of course the matter of
the law Is absolutely In the hands of
Congress, and any direction of Con
gress In the matter will be imme
diately obeyed. At present, as I have
Bald, there Is no warrant In lnw for
the Inscription.
"My own feeling In the matter Is
due to my very firm conviction that
to put such a motto on coins, or to
use It In any kindred manner, not
only does no good but does positive
harm, and is in effect Irreverence,
which comes dangerously close to
sacrilege.
Crazed Girl on Roof.
New York. Nov. 20. The specta
cle of a young woman skipping and
dancing on a stone ledge little more
than three feet wide and only ten
feet beneath the roof of the Revere
arpartment house, at 14 2d Street
and Seventh Avenue, which It com
pletely encircles, caused a frightened
and wondering crowd to collect in
Seventh Avenue and 14 2d Street on
Monday morning. She was rescued
from her perilous position by lire
men. Later she was taken to Beile
vue for examination as to her san
ity. '
Demand for Federal Notes.
Washington, Nov. 20. Imme
diate and approving response has
been received from all over the coun
try to the action of the President
and Secretary Cortelyou in announc
ing the sale of $50,000,000 of Pana
ma Canal bonds and the Issue of
1100,000.000 of treasury notes as
means of restoring public confidence
and putting an ned to the money
stringency.
Elevated Ruilroad Wreck.
New York, Nov. 18. A score of
persons were seriously hurt and one
was fatally injured on Saturday
when an empty Interborough Rapid
Transit Third avenue train, backed
from the yards at One Hundred nnd
Seventy-ninth street, crashed into a
northbound train loaded with pas
sengers, catapulting upon the for
ward car Just as it was leaving the
Tremont station.
Panther Eats a Woman.
Columbia, La., Nov. 19. While on
her way to visit a neighbor on Fri
day In a wild region ten miles west
of here, Mrs. Annie Valentine, wife
of u farmer, was killed and devoured
by a panther.
Her husband, alarmed nt the wo
man's prolonged absence. Instituted
search and found his wife's head and
her skeleton, picked bare of the llosb,
in a clump of bushes.
For it Chair of Forestry.
New Haven, Ct., Nov. 20. At tho
November meeting of the Yale Cor
poration on Monday It was announ
ced that a gift of $00,000 had been
received from Frederick C. Weyer
hauser of St. Paul. He represents
the National Lumber Manufacturers'
Association and the gift wil go to
the support of a Chair of Applied
Forestry and "Practical Lumbering
In the Y'alo Forestry School.
Banker's Hon Kidnapped.
Hackettstown, N. J., Nov, 20.
Under threat of being shot to death
If he made an outcry, Harry Welsh,
a son of Mathlas T Welsh, tt banker
of this town, was captured by kid
nappers Saturday night and carried
two miles Into the niouutaius. There
he broke away from his captors nnd,
knowing the rough and wooded
country better than they, succeeded
in making his way home,
niLL OX HUSIXERS CRF.IMT.
Great Northern Head CondeiiiiH ,t.
tack on Railroads.
Kansas City, Mo., Nov. 21.-
clarlng that attacks on the buRimi
systems of the country must ee;is-,
i that the "malice of disturbers" in'
I misrepresenting the condition of fie
' country's railroads must be over
come and thnt the American rnKuuy
man hns everything to be proud of
In having built lines costing half an
much as other eountrios, charnin
Vf7
V?1
w -.wi.v j' - V'- . .
v-V(ft..-''s:
JAMES J. HILL.
rates one-third to one-half r.r, r.
nnd yet carrylii;; nearly dfiMi
business and paying double
wages, Janus J. Iiiii, at tho v..
banquet of the Commercial Cl,s,
Tuesday spoke plainly eu th.' t.
clal and business outlook of
country. His subject waa the "t
mercial Di velopim nt of the M .
n',.1
sippl Valley," nnd the Great X
em's hend was listened to with i
attention nnd Interest.
:' .i-
SI-Yeiir-oId Boy Smoke.
Boston, Nov. 21. Past-engerr. n.n
the Red Star line Marquette, wli ra
arrived from Antwerp on Tue iay,
were greatly amused durlny the .;.
ago by a three-year-old boy who tvui-
tlnually puffed a long German ,i .
Master Tralan Laczl is a Rouman
ian who Is on his way to Pltts'iurj;
with his mother to join hh; fa.li-;.
'Won't It interfere with his growth?"
asked an anxious mother of one i f
the deck stewards.
"No; he was weaned on It," -aii
the steward.
"Does his mother know he
smokes?" asked another.
"She ought to. She Oils his pipe
for him with tobacco that looks Iikvt
cabbage leaves Roumanian tobacco,
I Btippose."
Has un Ethiopian .Soul..
Chicago, Nov. 20. Mrs. EvehT
Romadke. wife of the Milwaukee mil
lionaire, awaiting trial here on fivs
Indictments for burglary, has an Eth
iopian soul, Dr. Alex Gustafson says
The doctor is the alienist who hai
treated the young woman In Jail.
"I nm sure," said the alienist,
"that this woman Is possessed by an
Ethiopian spirit, which has absolute
control over her actions. She Is ab
solutely Innocent of wrongdoing, ex
cept when this spirit overpowers her
will and forces her to do Its bidding."
Roosevelt nt Madison's Old Home.
Washington, Nov. 21. President
Roosevelt wil spend Thanksgiving at
President Madison's old home, t.t
Montpelier, Va. He will start in ths
morning and return before dark. His
custom of late has been to g' to
Pine Knot on Thanksgiving i.v.i
shoot. His visit this time to Mont
pelier Is his desire to see the h.m o
of one one of his famous prcdivos
Bors. Women Write P.nd Books.
Baltimore, Md., Nov. 18.
Baptlst Congress on Thursday
cussed "The Ethics of Preuent
d!f
D.i.r Fiction." Tho Rev. Dr. A. G. I
son of New York declared that
V.M-
men are chiefly rcsponsibl for n
:tu :i
the
r.t ..
that is bad in tho literature of
day; that they write most of wh
bad, and that they read u good
of it.
NEW YORK MARKETS.
Wholesale Prices of Farm Prodacu
Quoted for tin Week.
Wheat. No. 2 IH, $1.01 No. 1
Northern Dnlnth, 1.0.'5'8'. No. i
hard, Winter. 91.01.
Cokn No. 2. Hfi'fo. No. 2 White, CT'Jc
Oats. Mixed, 62n. White, BS'hROc.
Milk. 4c. er quart.
Butter. Westeru, extra, 2Sa2S'ge.
Firsts, !i8aL'"o. Stute dairy, finest
24a7u.
Cmrksb. State, full cream, Iflu.
Ecms. Nearby, Funcy, 45u50e. Stats,
Clood to choice, 8a43o. Western,
- Firsts, H0h3 .'o. '
Ekkvbs. City dremed, 8al0?o.
Calves City dressed, SaUo. Country
. dressed, per lb. 7al2a
Siikkp. Per 100 lb., $U.50a6.00. '
Hoas. Live, per 100 lb., fi.40a5.73.
Hat. Prime, 100 lbs., fl.10al.12.
Straw. Long rye. (15a80o.
Litb poultry. Fowls, Per lb. altkj.
Chickens, bpriug, per lb., alSa Ducks,
per lb., lia.Uo. Turkeys, alio.
Dkbsnbd poultbt. Turkeys, per lb.,
UtalHo. Fowls, per lb., Bal5o.
Chioktuis, Philn., per lb., 22a83o.
Vboktaiilbs. Potatoes, L. I., per bbl.,
2.0ta$i.2S. Onions, White, per bbl.,
ta.60a3.50.