The Columbian. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1866-1910, April 09, 1908, Page 6, Image 6

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    THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURG, PA.
MS 10 h m
SAYS JAPAN W PREPARING.
TAKE OUT MAN'S HEART,
Naval and Military Expc
dition To Be Mobilized in
Venezuelan Waters.
BATTLESHIPS TO LEAD
DemoiiNtrtitioH Will lie Mmlo As
Boon tin ConjiiTMS Gives the Word
-Direct leiiw Given Arc Hclng Guard
ed Closely mill Trunmnlttod Ver
bally from Bureau to Bureau.
Washington, April 9. rians are
being elaborated In detail for the
mobilization of a Joint military and
naval force In Venezuelan waters as
soon as possible after President
Roosevelt obtains Congressional
sanction to resort to force against
Castro. It may not be deemed nec
Msary by the administration to make
tttls martial demonstration, but the
War and Navy Departments are both
mapping out a tentative military
movement.
The President cannot constitution
ally declare war Against Venezuela.
Legislative authority would be re
quired for a such a campaign, and
the present preparation of plans la
understood to be mefely In accord
tilth the policy of mapping out cam
paigns for possible emergencies. The
directions given In the present In
stance are, however, the most ex
plicit made since the army and r.rivy
ware ordered to prepare for part'ei
patlon In the International relief
1 li
PRESIDENT CA3TRO.
solumn against Pckln during the
3oxer troubles, and are being guard
d closely and transmitted verbally
rom bureau to bureau.
If the mobilization now under con
jideratlon is ordered into effect the
'jid battleships Indiana and Iowa,
vhich have been in reserve at League
inland and Norfolk, would have to
39 placed in commission, but they
'-ould be made available on several
ays' niotice. The principal vessels
la be counted upon would be the new
battleships Idaho, Mississippi and
Aw Hampshire, which are soon to
ie commissioned
W. G. Smith a Sulcldo.
Waverly.N. V., April 8. Walter O.
jjmlth, ex-Captain of the Seventy-i-Mirth
regiment of Buffalo and later
'.ashler of the Marie Antoinette Ho
."al of New York, committed suicide
'.ere by shooting himself In the brain,
i'he body was fouud by two flsher
.aen. It was lying face downward
A the mud and underbnuih four
liles from here, on the banks of the
tasquehanua River. It was at first
alleved that Smith had been mur
' tered, but the Cororer and medical
rxaminers say tho case is one of sul
ide. Capt. Smith disappeared from
ew York last January. Ho was
Teasurer and Secretary for the pro
Tletors of tho Marie Antoinette IIo-
Magistrate Held as Thief.
Waterlniry, Conn., April 9. Ker-
ill Klmberly, 35, of Goshen, who
..ir years lias enjoyed tho confldenre
his fullow-iowiismen as a Bt;:il
-.id solid citien, has been arrested
i a bench warrunt, charging h:m
'!th ninny burglaries. The- m:.u
as confessed to having stolen from
y dozen p!ace3 and has turned over
; largo amount of plunder. Ho Fays:
. felt an IrrcslKtlblo impulse to ste;il,
'gainst which my mind was a feeble
vombatant. It's all over, it's a cr
r 1
ad off and I am j;lad." He was a
,rand Jury Justice, and strong In
:iie graxiges and In tho Church and
-ioclally.
ftomen Seize and Destroy Whiskey.
Nashville, Tenn., April 9. At Lt x
Sftgton, Tenn., members of the Wont
in's ChilsU'in Temperance Union,
ieetroyed about forty, gallons of
hiskey belonging to a saloon keeper
ho had recently removed to that
lace from Jackson, a "dry" town,
ttie women reimbursed the owner
the whiskey destroyed.
Emma Goldman Gets Back.
Winnipeg, Man., April 9. Emma
Soldman, who it was believed would
e barred from the United States by
he Immigration authorities has
roBsed the border without lnterfer
noe. She came to Winnipeg to loc
are on Soelnllsm and addressed tho
treet car men, advising them to
i trike unless eranted au eight-hour
tlay. , .
; - 4 . '
r s
,: jATIS
police cun anarchists.
Gathering of Agitators In Printing
Oltlrc Is Quickly Broken fp.
Pnterson, N. J., April 9. Pr.rrcl
by the order of IMayor MeBiido
from holding an advertised meeting
In Turner Hall, Patcrson, N. J., the
local "reds," with Luodvlco CamlniU
and "La Question Soclalo" group t
their head, retreated to the office of
that publication, at 73 Prospect
street, Tnterson, and attempted to
hold the meeting In deflanco of the
municipal authorities.
Bsforo the meeting wag fifteen
minutes old, Captain Tnylor, at tho
head of a special detail of fifty po
licemen, rushed the printing oCTcc,
ordered Camlnlta to disperse tho
crowd, and when he demurred,
brought In bis men and clubbed tho
anarchists into the street and of!
the streets.
While the anarchists offered no
physical resistance they left the hall
in a sullen and vengeful mood and It
was the opinion of those familiar
with the situation that the suppress
ive measures may resort In violence
before the anarchists are driven out
of Pat rson.
To Fight Aldrlrlt I till.
Chicago, April 9. A combined at
tack uron the Aldrlch currency bill
by some of the most powerful finan
cial interests In tha country will be
the outcome of an important con
ference of the National Bank Presi
dents held in Chicago.
The meeting was attended by near
ly every President of a National
Dank in Chicago. Without a dis
senting voice the bankers declared
that tho following provisions in the
measure should be vigorously op
posed. Increasing tho amount of
cash reserves banks must keep In
their vaults and prohibiting banks
loaning money to concerns In which
their officers or directors are Inter
ested. More Gould Troubles.
New York, April 8. Howard
Gould's answer to the application of
his wife, Katherlne Clemnions Gould,
for a separation for alleged abandon
ment, cruelty, and non-support, has
beeh filed in the Supreme Court. It
covers twenty-eight typewritten
pages, sets forth many alleged short
comings of Mrs. Gould, among them
intoxication and misbehavior at va
rious times and places, and names
William F. Cody (Buffalo Bill) as
one whose relations with Mrs. Gould
were illegal, and also Durtln Far
num, the actor, as a person with
whom Mrs. Gould was infatuated,
and who, according to the affidavit,
met Mrs. Gould in many cities.
Aged Politician Kills Girl.
Pittsburg, Pa., April 8. Dorothy
Yost, a Beventeen-year-old girl, mem
ber of the choir of the First Presby
terian Church of McKee'u Rocks, a
Pittsburg suburb, was murdered "by
Samuel L. Gardner, aged fifty-seven
years, one of the leading citizens,
formerly City Engineer and a lead
er In politics. Gardner then turned
the. revolver, chootlng himself
through the body and mouth, falling
unconscious over the dead body of
Miss Yost. He died two hours later
in the hospital. The death of Miss
Yost, however, was instantaneous, as
he shot her through the heart three
times.
Julia Mnrlowe Named In Divorce Suit,
Boston, April 9. Miss Julia Mar
lowe, the actress, and Miss Maud
Thorbura Backus, are named in an
action for divorce brought by Miss
Clara Louise von Herrmann against
her husband Karl Stephen von Herr
mann. The suit waj brought in
Salem, Essex County, and the alle
gation Is made that the husband of
the plaintiff and the two women men
tioned have been together in twenty
different places In this country and
abroad. Von Herrmann the defend
ant, la a former newspaper man end
magazine writer.
Dynamiter Kills Officer la Court.
Terro Haute, Ind., April 9. Just
after a jury had returned a verdict
finding Henry F. McDonald guilty of
dynamiting a church and two stores
at Kanford. tha convicted man drew a
pistol and opened fire. He killed
Chief of Detectives William E. Dwy
er and weum'.rd five others. McDcm
r.ld h'm.'ielf fell in the courtroom bat
tle that followed wounded by a doz
en bullets (rem tho officers' pistols,
but stl'.l Is living.
Wants Hymns Whistled.
Plttsburc, April 8. The Rev. J. R.
ITomminer, an evangelist, who lias
recently coi'io to tho lie'devuo teih
odist Episcopal Church from Car
Halo, I'eun., to conduct a revival, lin.i
crcatel much Interest by Instating
Vint his congregation whlstlo tho
hymn tunes as well aa s;n,i tliein.
In this way, he. asserts, tin, men w ho
cannot sing, or do not sing, will pick
up the tunes and whlstlo them out
side, which will do much good.
Oust Mrs. Thaw and Thomas.
New York, April S. Evelyn Nss
bit Thaw and Edward R. Thomas
were asked to leave the grill of tho
Hotel Knickerbocker in Tim to
Square the other night, owing to the
desire of tho hotel to avoid notoriety,
according to the management
Pilot Ifielnds Restored.
Memphis, Tenn., April 9. Having
served six months' sentence or sus
pension by special order of President
Roosevelt, Clarence Nichols, the old
time River pilot, wan restored to
t.ood standing by local uteaciboat of
ficials, ,
HI B win
Covering Minor Happen
ings from all Over
the Globe.
HOME AND FOREIQN
Compiled ond Condensed for the
lluay Render A Complete Record
f European Despatches and Im
portant Events from Everywhere
Dolled Down for Hanty Pcrimal.
At a meeting of the Ethlcal-Sorlal
Lecgue, at which it was said there
were two hundred thousand unem
ployed persons In New York, begin
ning of public works was urged as
one method of dealing with the un
employed situation.
The United States Senate, alarmed
by the prospects of a treasury defic
iency, will call a halt on legislation
railing for big expenditures.
Charles M. Schwab has announced
that a new and Important Iron ore
deposit In Cuba has been acquired
by the Bethlehem Steel Company.
Senator Hale criticised Secretary
Taft for favoring a larger army and
tnade a bitter attack on militarism.
It has been decided by the New
York Conference to suggest to the
highest body of the Methodist Epis
copal Church that the sect lor. forbid
ding dancing and other amusements
bo repealed.
Joseph Lasalla a convict In Sing
Slr.g, dropped out of line, hid all day
In a shop, climbed the wall at night
and escaped.
The United States Supreme Court
bas decreed that ownership cf stock
passes the moment a sale lc made on
margin.
Girls of the BInghairton (N. Y.)
High School by an artful device cap
tured the boys of Colgate Univer
sity's Musical Clubs and spoiled a re
ception arranged by girls of the Lady
Jane Grey School.
S. S. McClure has bought from
Harold Roberts the ctock which the
latter owned in the S. S. McClure
Company and in the McClure Com
pany. Ellery Sedgwick and others
have almost completed negotiations
for the purchase of the Atlantic
Monthly.
Armed with a revolver for fear of
the Black Hand society, the Rev. Vin
cent Sorrento dedicated the Church
of Our Lady of the Loretto in
Brooklyn, N. Y.
E. H. Harriman Is said to be at
work to present the parsage of the
bill to abolish stock gambling.
Albany despatches report a plan
to force Governor Hughes to take the
nomination for the Vice Pesldency.
Arrangements have been made to
open Gray headquarters at Washing
ton. The Populist National Convention
after the Bryan delegates from
Nebraska and Minnesota had bolted,
nominated Thomas E. Watson of
Georgia for President, and Samuel
Williams of Indiana for Vice Presi
dent. The revised itinerary of the battle
ships' homeward cruise from San
Francisco, has been announced, pro
viding for target practice at Manila
and for arrival at Hampton Roads
on February 22, 1909.
It la charged that five men in con
trol of the New York Metropolitan
Street Railway Company contributed
$500,000 to the national campaign
of 1900 and were reimbursed from
the company's treasury.
FOREIGN.
A despatch from Rome says a fam
ily conference was held there regard
ing the arrangement of a marriage
engagement between the Duke of the
AbruzzI and Miss Elklns, at which
the Duke Is said to have confirmed
his reported engagement.
In a special despatch from Shang
hai it is stated that Pekin is now
greatly alarmed by the return of the
anti-dynaatic students from Japan,
and precautions are being taken at
all the legations.
Rioting In Lisbon after tho polls
closed was only put down 'after
troops had fired on the mobs, killing
or wounding an unknown number of
persons.
Count and Countess Rzechenyl
wero so annoyed by tho curious and
tho beggars that they wero glad to
leave Budapest for tho Count's home
at Ormezoe.
It Is stated in a despatch from
Paris that Dr. Hill was cordially
greeted by tho German ambassador
to Franco at a reception he! 1 by tho
American Anilmador and was as
sured of a warm welco'uo in Berlin.
Tho Japanese decision tlrcgallng
the extra territorial functions of for
eign consuls in the Liao-Tung penin
sula is considered, says a Epeclal de
spatch from Shanghai a serious in
fringement of tho rights of foreign
ers. Castro's answer to Root's demand
that certain claims against Venezu
ela be arbitrated is an Insinuation
that the American Congress will not
approve tho Washington Administra
tion's position.
A British torpedc-boat destroyer
was sunk by a cruistr with the loss
of thirty-six men at Plymouth, Eng.
1 According to a special Madrid de
spatch, an English detective who has
uoen assisting the Barcelona police
In discovering the authors of the ter-
! rorlst campaign there, hao exposed
. the whole anarchist plot and will
soon make sensational disclosures la
1 the foreign. arM
Hobn Declares that We Should R
Ready for Any Emergency.
Washington, April 9. Pointing
out what he declared to be the pre
carious condition of the N'Rtional de
fence of the United States both in tho
Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, Mr. Hob
son of Alabama, in a speech on the
Naval bill, made a plea for two bat
tleships of 25,000 tons displacement,
In addition to the two authorized by
the Naval Appropriation bill.
The possibility of a conflict with
Japan was discussed at length by Mr.
Hobson, "It is true that America
only asks a fair chance and no favor
simply the open door policy In
China but this policy goes contrary
to Japanese ambitions."
Pursuing his analysis of the con
ditions in the Pacific, Mr. Hobson de
clared that "we cannot Ignore the
fact that Japan has undertaken stu
pendous war preparations which has
doubled the national debt of Japan
since the war with Russia ended. It
Is estimated that she 'bag between
800,000 and 400,000 men under
arms yet there is no menace from the
armies of Siberia or the armies of
China or the armies of Europe. No
nation since the world began has
ever maintained such an army under
such conditions, except as a prep
aration for an early campaign of aggression.'
Wheels Are Turning.
Buffalo, N. i., April 8. After
four months of Idleness, the rail mill
of the Lackawanna steel plant and
the furnaces that feed It have gone
back to work. As a consequence two
thousand steel workers and laborers
have been added to the working force
lncreaslnglt from twenty-five hundred
to forty-five hundred men. The full
force is seven thousand men.
Pittsburg, Pa., April 8. About six
hundred additions men were put to
work when the open hearth furnaces
and the shaping and structural mills
of the Homestead steel works re
sumed. Notices were posted an
nouncing that several departments In
the Howard Axle Works would re
sume work at once.
New London, Conn., April 8. The
Nlantlc Manufacturing Company, of
East Lynne, is running overtime to
fill orders. The mill employs about
1C0 men.
Okuina On Our Great Fleet.
Toklo, April 7. Count Okuma re
ceived lately a delegation of Japan
ese residing In Sacramento, Cal., and
Japanese newspaper men of San
Francisco, who wished to get his
views on the emigration problem.
The Count Is reported to have said:
"It is very difficult to find out the
object of sending the American bat
tleship fleet to the Pacific at this time
A good deal has been made of the
movement by the European press, and
it is looked upon there as an occur
rence of unusual significance. But
Japan has received the assurance of
the United States Government that it
is not intended as a menace to Japan
but is merely undertaken to train of
ficers and men.
Bill to End Watering Stocks.
Trenton, April 9. New Jersey,
which has been called the "Mother of
Trusts," went on record In the lower
house as the first State In the Union
to pass a measure protecting the
American investor from the stock
watering sharks of Wall street. By
a unanimous vote the bill Introduced
Into the Assembly here by the Dem
ocratic leader, Mark A. Sullivan, was
approved on Its third reading and
sent on Its way to the Senate for the
concurrence of that body.
Fugitive Caught In Mountain Cave.
New York, April 9. After a five
months' search Daniel R. Delancy,
who lived at 94 Hamilton Place, was
arrested and brought to New York
by Detectives Gegan and Wilbur on
a charge of grand larceny. They
caught him in Gee Cave at the sum
mit of a mountain near Mountain
dalo, Sullivan County, N. Y. For
three weeks Delaney had been living
In the cave. He had two blood
hounds, three bird dogs, and four
other dogs with him, betides guns
and ammunition.
Evaim's Gunners Shatter Records.
Fan Diego, Cal., April 9. Every
ship in tho Ceet at Magdalena Bay
has broken her gunnery record with
points to spc.ro, and the announce
ment may be expected that somo of
them individually and tho fleet as a
whole hung up world's records. This
news has been brought hero by Lieu
tenant Commander O, II. Bradshaw,
and Lieutenant R. D. Whlto, v.ho
were assigned from Washington to
report on tho target practlco held at
Magdalena Bay.
Britain Premier Gives Up Office.
London, April 7. Sir Henry
Campbell-Bannerrnan has resigned
the Premiership of Great Britain and
his reslgnaton has been accepted. II
is understaood that Herbert S. As
qtilth, the Chancollor of the Ex
chequer will succeed Sir Henry. Tha
King has summoned him to Biarl-itz.
Owen Must Puy $10,000 Fee.
Washington, April 9. United
States Senator Robert L. Owen of
Oklahoma, must pay the local law
firm of Dudley & Mlchner f 10,000
for services In connection with an al
lowance of the $5,000,000 claim of
tho Cherokee Indians, granted by tha
last Congress, according to a decslon
by Justice Robb of the District Court
of -Appeals. The decision says that
Senator Owen received as an attor
Bey'g fee o 87BQ.PO0. . . .
K ID
Ill '
Papers for Absolute Div
orce Served on Her
Husband.
HE SAILS FOR EUROPE
She Wn Miss Ellen French General
ly Known ns "Elsie"-Pnlr Separ
ated Only Recently, but the Trou
ble Between Them is of Long
Standing,
New York, April 9. Reports cur
rent for a week of the differences
between Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Owynno
Vanderbllt were confirmed by the fil
ing of a suit ngalnst Mr. Vanderbllt
by his wife. So closely were the de
tails of the proceeding guarded by
the principals and their attorney
that no intimation was given by
them as to the exact character of the
action, whether for separation or
absolute divorce, but a deputy In the
County Clerk's office, through whose
hands the papers passed, said they
were marked "for absoluto divorce."
From the most authentic source It
was learned that the sympathies of
tho Vanderbllt family are with the
pallntlff In the suit. It was said,
however, that there would be no se
rious defence entered.
Coincident with the filing of the
suit Alfred G. Vanderbllt departed
for England on the Mauretania. He
has engaged a London house for ten
days.
For some months past rumor hns
bpen busy with the' domestic affairs
of tho Alfred Gwyne Vanderbllts, but
It was not until recently that the rup
lf . iiS
tag
'i stCSfivr ' .
A. C. VANDERBILT.
ture between the young pair became
so strained that Mrs. Vanderbllt left
her home in Newport, taking her be
longings, while Mr. Vanderbllt an
nounced his intention of going to
Europe.
Mrs. Vanderbllt was Miss Ellen
French, though Bhe was generally
known as "Elsie." She Is a daugh
ter of the late Francis Ormond
French. She married Mr. Vander
bllt on Jan. 11, 1901. at St. John's
Church, Newport, and there Is one
child, William Henry Vanderbllt.
who was born Nov. 24, 1901.
Alfred Vanderbllt has latterly
spent much of his timo away from
his wife, who hns lived chiefly at
their farm nt Portsmouth, near New
port. They have never had n town
house, always living In hotels or
apartments. Since the opening of
the Plaza Hotel, Mr. Vanderbllt has
found a home there when In the city.
Senate Against Hotting.
Albany, N. Y., April 8. After a
bitter debate the Senate advanced to
the order of third reading without
opposition the Agnew-Hart bills em
bodying the Governor's recommenda
tion for the suppression of race track
gambling. This action was taken af
ter a proposition to postpone the tak
ing effect of the proponed laws until
Sept. 1 had been voted down. Tho
voto on this proposition, 20 to 23,
may be a fair test cf how tho vote
will stand on final passago.
Heflin Hcdd fr Trial.
Washington, D. C, April 9.
Representative Helliu of Al:i
bi'ir.a, in police court after
a plea of not guilty, gave bond
of $3,000 for appearance for triul on
two charges cf assault with a danger
ous weppon. Bond was immediale-J
ly furnished by O. G. Staples, pro
prietor of tho hotel where tho Ala
bama Congressman ta stopping.
2,000 Steel Men Resume V.'oi!:.
Buffalo, April ! , The Lackawan
na Steel Company has put 2,000 men
to work. Half of them are skilled
steelmakers and tho remainder lub
orors. Tho company have a totil
force of 4,500 men at 1 week with
prospects of continuing for Boverul
months.
Kills Herself for Her Dog.
Mlllvlllo, N. J., April 9. Brooding
ever the death of a pet dog, Mrs.
Hannah Willis threw herself Into the
Richmond Mill Pond near her home
and was drowned.
Tillman in a Sanitarium.
Atlanta, April 9. Senator Tillman
has arrived here and went Immedi
ately to a sanitarium, where he will
remain for several weeks. His con
jltlon la said to be satisfactory.
Surgeon Pcrfi.i'tu Operation on .(h.
lete Stabbed In Slreet Affray.
New York. April t. With thrc
stUchcn In his heart, twelve stltchd
In the pericardium, the bag which
Incloses the heart, and two of his
ribs removed, Robert Inglls, 23 yean
old, of No. 99 Palisaclo Avenue, Yon
kers. Is making a fight for life in st.
Joseph's Hospital in that city. jn
an altercntlon In the street with a
Pole, Inglls was stabbed In the heart
with a knife. The vitality of tho
young man was so remarkable that
he called out for tho police to ahl
him and to arrest his assailant, Iden
tified his assailant after ho had bo tt
arrested and then underwent trans
fer of two blocks to the hospital,
where ho was under ether two hours
while the surgeons operated on him.
He Is still alive and the surgeon
say they believe he will survive tin
injury and the operation.
Snys Protestantism Is Doomed.
New Haven, Conn., April i. Ths
Rev. Dr. Newman Smyth has written
a pungent book, which asserts that
Protestantism has passed Into decttr
and Is to be succeeded by modernized
Catholicism. As he is pastor of Cen
ter Congregational Church, the old
est Church in Connecticut, and Is a
member of the Yale Corporation, ths
university governing the body, his
book has mnde a great stir. Whlla
he sees the beginning of the end of
the Protestant movement, Dr. Smyth,
when It comes to the future of Cath
bllclsm by no .neans tekes ground
with the representative of the Rom
an Catholic faith. The disintegration
which 1p at work in Protestantism Is,
accordlrg to Dr. Smyth, appearing In
another form in Catholicism that of
modernism.
Oil Gusher to SupMtrt Church.
Butler, Pa., April 7. No services
could be held In tho Reformed
church at Petersvillo, tho "Cabbana
Patch" oil district of this county, be
cause the congregation having gone
Into oil prospecting, struck a gusher
on the church lot, fifty feet from th
building. The flow came In so strontj
that a large force had to be kept at
work to caro for tho oil. The lucky
strike Is a godsend to the congrega
tion, which Is In debt for Its proertr
and owes Is pastor back salary. The
well. It is believed will pay off all
debts and provide a teat sum besides
for future expenses.
Baby Weighs 23 Ounces.
Scranton', Pa., April 7. The small
est mite of humanity that has ever
seen the light In Lackawanna County
hns been born to Mr. and Mrs. Georifr
Dlehl, of the Boulevard Hotel. Tl
little stranger weighs twenty-thru;
ounces and is physically perfect 1
shape and form. The attending doc
tor says that the baby will live.
Election Without Use of Money.
Catsklll, N. Y., April 8. At ths
charter election the Democrats elect
ed one Trustee and the Collector, and
the Republicans one Trustee and ths
Treasurer. Not one cent of money
was used by either Bide, for the flrttt
time in years.
To Stump in an Airship.
Chicago, April 7. Sherble Beck
er, the "boy mayor of Milwaukee,"
announced in Chicago last night that
he had purchased a balloon in SL
LouIb, and that if he runs for Gov
ernor of Wisconsin this fall, as he
may, he will use the balloon for
stump speaking.
Gutes Fights Stanuurd.
Austin, Tex., April 9. The John
W. Gates Refining Company has cut
tha price of kerosene to 5 cents
gallon and gasolene to 10 cents per
gallon In its competition with the
Waters-Pierce branch of the Stand
ard Oil Company lu Texas.
Prominent cattlo growers declare
that many healthy uittle have been
destroyed by tho New York Statu
Health Department through errors 'a
tho bovine tuberculosis tests.
Ex-Judgo W. M. Rogers, of Np
London, Conn., wKo declared his life
to have been a failure killed his wife
and himself.
NEW YORK MARKETS.
Wholesale Prices of Farm Products
Quoted for tho Week.
WHEAT No. 2, Red, 99iC
No. 1 Northern Dululii, $l.HTi
CORN No. 2, 70fj74ic.
OTT3 Mixed, white 56c.
MILK 3',ie. per quart.
BUTTER Western firsts, 26 0 27c.
St:to Dairy 24 Q 26c.
CHEESE State, full cream. 15
1 U Vl c
EG'.S- -Stato and nearby, fancy.
19?j20e; Jo., good to cholco
nailSVa; western Arista 15Vi 'J
16 Vic
BEEVES City Dressed 9 Virile
CALVES City Dressed, 8 13c.
Country dressed 7 lie.
SHEEP per 100 lbs., $6.00.
HOGS Live per 100 lbs..$6.00CJ
S6.80.
HAY Prime per 100 lbs., 97
STRAW Long Rye, 60 70c.
LIVE POULTRY Chickens per lb..
1214o.; Turkeys per lb., 14&S
Duks per lb., 16c; Fov. Is per lb..
140.
DRESSED POULTRY Turkeys nor
lb. 12 17c; Fowls per lb., 12
15c; Chickens, Phlla., per lb.
3 5 40c.
ONIONS White per bbl., $4,000
$4.60.
iVKGETABLES Potatoes. L, I.. P
j bbl., $2.60$2.76.