1 1 ! Ill Says He Took No Action in the Cadet Hazing Cases. NO DECISION AS YET Contrary Report Erroneous As serts He Neither Reinstated noij Approved Report for Their I)ls HiIsmiI Died! til Follows Secretary Wright': Statement. Oyster Hay, Auk. 6. Whether the dismissal from the Went Point Military Academy of the eight ca dets found guilty of hazing Is to be made permanent or the young men reinstated through action of Con tress or Executive clemency, Is still nndetermlned. The attitude of the government Is set forth in an official statement Issued by President Roose Tlt through Rudolph Foster, assist ant secretary to the President, who la the acting private secretary in the absence of Secretary Loeb, who la on Ms vacation. The President characterizes as er roneous contrary announcements made tarjier by Secretary Iyoeb and Secretary of War Luke E. Wrlpiit. Ine statement explains that the President has not yet heard finally from the Secretary of War as to tl.o latter's recommendations In-the mct torand that therefore thenationnl Ex eeutlve has reached no final dec. foil. By Secretary Loeb the President I: a I boen represented as approving tin dismissal of the cadets. Subsequent, ly, and following a conference wltli Jfr. Roosevelt, Secretary Wright tod to newspaper men that a decision t. reinstate the offending cadets hud Men reached. THE PRESIDENT'S STATEMENT. The statement Issued by the Pres ident is as follows: No action whatever has been taken ijy the President in the cases of thi cadets, the statements that they were, originally ordered dismissed and that r.fcy had been ordered kept belns equally erroneous. An appeal was originally made to the President to interfere. He de dlned to take any action or to inter rwro in any way until the Secretary it War had expressed his opinion, in view of the department then be ng, seemingly, that the cadeta should TO turned out, but the Secretary not laving come to any final decision. Tne Secretary then notified the Presl 4nt that Instead of making any rev jort he would like to discuss the mat jot with the President in person. He accordingly came, and this discussion raa held, but no final decision was ached, the Secretary stating that ho was not able to make a final and defi nite recommendation as to all the wes, and prefererd to make nono as :agards any until he could do it as .regards all. 2DITOR FIGHTS FAIR. Column of Space a Day to Opposition Candidate. Milwaukee, Wis., Aug. 5. Melvia V Hoyt, editor of the Dally News an nounced his candidacy for the Demo saUc nomination for United States enator. Mr. Hoyt after stating his 'voeltlon on the issues of the day, ay he will run if the Democracy rants him as he stands, but not oth rwlse. Neal Brown is Hoyt's opponent, i ad In order to have a fair fight for he nomination, he says Mr. Brown an have one column of space in the ally News every night to show the oters why Hoyt should not and why rown should be nominated. 31,5000,000 FIRE LOSS. .levators, Freight Houses and Their Contents Destroyed. Chicago, Aug. 6. Eire which parted In th eout freight house of the Turlington Railroad, at Sixteenth .'reet and the river shortly before 1 . M., destroyed $1, 600,000 worth of ?operty and gave the fire depart lent one of the greatest battles it hs had since the great fire of 1871. ito big grain elevators, freight sheds eight cars and bulldln;-'-. were swept ay. Stored in the elevators were .'indreds of thousands of bushels of rain. Kditor Mofl'ctt Dies in Surf. Norniandle -by-tho-Sca, N. J., Aug. , Samuel K. Moffet aged 4S, .fcphew of Mark Twain, an editor of volHer's Weekly and before that a oil-known magazine writer, wan ken from the surf here (load Threw Ayslclans who tried to resuscitate Moffett decided that death had jen due to apoplexy superinduced 7 fright and overexertion and not to rownlng. His struggles In tlie va ,r and death were witnessed by his jnozlzed wife. ir.nnagun Breaks WorhV.i Record. Dublin, Ireland, Aug. 5. In the :Uce sports here, John Flannaean of .(e Irish-American Athletic Club, :.at, the world's record, for hammer rowing, covering 173 fext 11 Inrh'a cm a nine foot circle. ' Cluifln to Im Notified in Chit-asp. Chicago, Aug. 4. It hnu bet a (U !ed to hold the meeting for tin V-ot-xtioa of E. W. Chnttn. Prjhibi n, candidate for President, oa .-aJay, Aug, 18. 2 BANKERS CONFESS; STOLE $48,000. Col. Edward E. Ilrlttnn and Frcder Ick K. II. Schroeder Arrested! In Brooklyn for Theft. Brooklyn. N. Y., Aug. 3. Col. Edward Enrle Brltton, who had a good deal to do with drafting the Dick law and is regarded as one of the best posted men on military fa falrs In the country, and Frederick H. Schroeder, a Republican politician of Brooklyn and Quarantine Commis sioner, were arreBted for stealing neany $48,000 from the Eagle Sav ings and Loan Company at 186 Rem sen street, Brooklyn, of which they were respectively president and sec ond vice president. The Kings County Grand Jury, on evidence presenterl by Assistant Dis trict Attorney Elder and Banking Superintendent J. Clarkson Williams, found four Joint Indictment, against Col. Brltton and Mr. Schroeder, the indictments covering four of the thir ty worthless checks deposited by the officers of the savings Institution when they took cash out of the till. County Judge Norman 8. Dike held them In $10,000 ball apiece for grand larceny and they were released late In the afternoon when Alderman John Dlemer and other political friends went security for them. Col. Brltton and Schroeder confers that they got into trouble through their connection with a gold mining property In the Black Hills of South Dakota, the Homestake South Ex tension Mining Company, which owns a claim that adjoins the famous Hearst Homestake mine. They got a lot of their friends Interested in the mine, Timothy L. Woodruff and Congressman Waldo among others, and expected to clean up millions within a few years. But the goid panned out slowly. Development ex penses pinched hard. Olsen, their mine superintendent, had a habit of making sight drafts on them for ex penses. Whenever this happened or there was machinery to be bought they reached in the cash drawer of the Eagle Savings and lxan Com pany, abstracted enough to meet the draft or pay the bill and drew checks on imaginary accounts, which they put in the drawer and ordered Jos eph Wood, the treasurer, to carry as cash. Altogether in a year's time they milked the cash drawer of $47,980 .31. Schroeder signing checks for $38,004.69 or this amount, and Col. Brltton giving checks for $9,981.72. CORN AND WHEAT JUMP UPWARD. Excitement Caused by Reports That Crops Are "Burning Vt." Chicago, Aug. 5. Scorching hot weather throughout the corn belt threw the Board of Trade into wild excitement and sent the prices of wheat and corn soaring skyward. The former grain advanced nearly three cents a bushel and the latter showed an equal sharp bulge in price. 'Bull ish sentiment In wheat which has been developing recently as the result of "black rust" reports from the North west, broke out with Intense vigor upon the receipt of a despatch from Minneapolis that the black rust is worse than in 1904, and that the crop is simply burning up with the heat. The advance in corn was help ed along by a despatch which stated that the corn crop in Central Illi nois hod begun to "fire ' owing to the excessively high temperatures. At one time the May wheat option sold ai $1.01. December at the same time touched 97 c. and September 94 Tic Corn for May delivery mounted to 65V4c. and December to 65 c. a gain of 2Yc. in each care. September corn sold up to 76'jic STATEMENT OF DEBT. Amount July 31 Was $or8,K0,8:;L an Increase for Month. Washington, Aug. 5. The month ly statement of the public debt shows that at the close of business July 21. 1908, the debt, less cash In the Treasury, amounted to $958,800,823, which Is an Increase for the mouth of $20,677,414. Tha aebt Is recapitu lated as follows: Interert bearing debt, $897,603,990; deb on whlcb. Interest has ceased since maturity, $IVJ43,745: debt bearing no interest, $410,990,200; total, $1,312,437,996. Q. A. PETTiBONE DEAD. Former Lender of Western Federa tion Succumbs to an Operation. Denver, Col., Aug. 5. George A. Pettibone, for years prominent In tha councils of tho Western Federation of .Miners and charge-! wit.. President Mover and termer Secretary Hay wood with complicity In tho murder of former Governor Steunenberg of Idaho, dlen hpre from tho effects of an operation for cancer. Gyp -.ies Find Man Slain HinKhamton, N. Y., Aug. 4. The dead, body of Floyd Tiffany, forty years old,, was found by some gypsies lu the grand stand of the Fair Grountis at Sydney. Wounds on the head and body Indicate that the man was murdered. Lynched for Approving Murder. HiiH xllvilie, Ky., Aug. 4. Four ru-iru. a, Vlrgi', Tom and Robert' Jur.er, and "Joe" Riley, were taken ffa:n Jiiil here and banged to a tree on t!.? cdta of the town. They, were ly)::),eij bec&une they gloated over a' T.lii'.c nian'a death. ...J THE COLUMBIAN, Washington Business Man Found in Street with Sticky Covering. HUSBANDS SET A TRAP 1 K. ISIIks Jr., Man Who Wm Flog, jjed nnd Then Coated With Tar, Trying to Shield a Wotunn In the Cuso Assailants Tell Why They Attacked Him. Washington, D. C, Aug. 6. F. E. Bliss., Jr., a member of the con tracting firm of Bliss & Albrecht. paper rulers, Is coated from head to foot with hardened tar and under the treatment of several physicians Henry C. Cole, Charley Mathison and james L. White, prominent as brokers and business men, who admit applying the tar and regret they did not make a better Job of it, were ar retted after news of the affair came out through one of Bliss's physicians. The 'three men were released $500 bond. A statement given out by E. F. Collady, attorney for the three men who gave Bliss a drubbing and then tarred him, declare that recently Bliss met Mr. and Mrs. Mathtson at a social function and was later enter tained at their home. Bliss subse quently became acquainted with Hen ry C. Cole and his wife, who live near near the Mathlsons. At these two homes Bliss was a frequent visitor. He is about thirty five years old, suave, handsome, a fine conversationalist, and boasts of his powers as a hypnotist He often was entertained at dinner parties and really got the lion's shara o. feminine admiration. On several occasions Blls and Mrs. Mathison have been seen together at the theatre and other public place. Mathison saw them together and a quarrel ith his wife followed. Mrs. Mathison said she had been under Bliss's hypnotic influence for some time and was unable to control herself when he was near. She said she got Instructions from him by mental sympathy. Bliss called Mrs. Mathison over tha telephone. Mrs. Mathison talked over the 'phone with her husband nearby offering suggestions. He told her to have Bliss call at their home about nine o'clock and enter through the basement. A sound thrashing was administer ed first to Bliss, and later the bucket of tar which had been carefully warm, ed for the occasion, was brought forth. Bliss was stripped and every square inch of his fody was covered. His face was fairly bathed in the tar, some of it getting In his eyes. After their task was done the hus bands turned Bliss loose. and he fled across town in search of a physician. In the efTort to remove the tar from the victims face most of the skin was pulled off and rather than disturb him the physician will allow the tan to wear away. WIFE GONE, KILLS i SELF AND CHILDREN Leonard Hendricks and Two Daughi ters Found Overcome by Gax. Cranston, R. I., Aug. 6. Leonard Hendricks, thirty-one years old, in the absence of his wife in Hartford, Conn., killed himself and his two little daughters, Ann, five years, and Lillle three years, by means of gas. The bodies of all three were found after a locked room had been broken into. A note left for Mrs. Hendrlcki said "Goodby," and expressed hope that she would "find a better hus band." BOY KILLS HIS SISTER. Was Playing With Shotgun Wlieu II Accidentally Went Off. Albany, N. Y., Aug. 4. A fifteen year-old son of Frank Burdick acci dentally shot and Killed his nineteen-year-old sister at the home of their parents. The boy was playing with the shot gun when he suddenly pulled tho trig ger, the contents lodging in his sis ter's neck. She died almost instant- AUTO HIT BY TRAIN, Passenger Engine Ci'ashe Into I';t'tj at Bogota, X. J. Paterson, N. J., Aul. 4. S;it-r.ir:4 along In the darkness, a largt.' to.ii' ing car containing six men wu m : :a. John llounes, u l:v.-yc;- .l X' 1 ..... . 1. (tlrt r. .-.,1 i erFQii, N. J.; James Shaw, chaunt iu j W. H. Turner, Paterson, N. J.; lUr ry Fernback. I'lviicher'K Wife Sues Widow. Spring City, Pa., Aug. 5. Mr-, Martha Sanu:o:i, wife of Ui? liv.. Matuieo Sanuion, j.aotor of the F n I Reformed Cburch, lius eutcrid bv I i.r,ai:iit Mrs. Mary E. Ke'-ley, lot 500,000, alleging alienation .iiet luiLil.'und's u fractions. ".f ;.T fS-iH I;Jn Miner. P-muT, Cel., ,'. us. C Charles II. M'.ji.r v,-i's re-elected Pn-.t!ei;.t i I V1. p We Kern Federation of Mtaor u..- tho co:r e:it'o;; hi thU c'.ly. BLOOMSBURO. PA SARATOGA LID DOWN; GAMING DENS DARK. Local I'ollrc Clcwe Gambling llnee. Including All the Larger Estab lishments. Saratoga,' N. Y., Aug. 6. The lid Is on, nailed fast, and will not be pried up again this summer. Every clubhouse in the village is dark and the gambling tables have been re moved. Not a roulette wheel Is turning and every faro dealer Is out of work for the season. The village Is as quiet as an October evening. Early In the day the proprietors re ceived the tip that they should close. District Attorney McKnlght, who has been III for several days, was In the village and told the officials of tho village that if the reports that have been printed regarding gambling here were true the clubhouses must close. The lid was found In a hurry. The sudden termination of gamb ling activities is generally accredited to the announcement of the reported intention of Governor Hughes to make an investigation into the stor ies of gambling In Saratoga. The District Attorney would not say If he had received a communica tion from the Governor catting his at tention to the stories of gambling here. It is said that detectives em ployed by Governor Hughes have been In the village for the last day or two. The action of the county officials In closing the gambling houses will not affect the betting on the race track, it Is said, sheriff Bradley will continue to act under the advice of ejo-State Senator Brackett and will permit verbal wagers. He has no intention to resign, he said, and any attempt to remove him will be fought.' Should Gov. Hughes make any at tempt to have the Sheriff removed for permitting betting it is said he would probably find as his legal antagonist ex-Senator Brackett, who, It is re ported, would not be adverse to fight ing out the legality of the removal in the courts. The closing of the clubhouses hail dampened the spirit of the racegoer and many are leaving for New York. SENATOR ALLISON DEAD IN IOWA HOME, He Spent More Than Half His Life in Nations Service. Dubuque, Iowa, Aug. 6. Senator William Boyd Allison, '"father of the Senate," died during the afternoon in the home In which he had lived al most forty years. The Immediate cause of his death waa heart failure. The end came as the result of a se rious sinking spell due to a prostrate enlargement complicated with kidney diseases and during a period of un consciousness. Senator Allison was 79 years old last month and had broken all rec ords for continuous service in tho Senate, having served since 1873, or five years longer than Thomas H. Benton. Senator Allison had been elected to the oenate six times, gen erally with but a shade of opposition. MAN ROASTED ALIVE IN AUTO WRECK. G. Wlnthrop Sands, W. K. Vander blit, Sr.'s Stepson the Victim. Paris, Aug. 6. Wlnthrop Sands a stepson of William K. Vanderbllt, sr., was fatally hurt and burned in an automobile accident and died an hour and a half later. His chauffeur was seriously Injured. In his haste to reach his wife's side Sands opened wide the throttle of the machine, and he was going at the rate of seventy-five miles an hour when suddenly a tire flew off and the automobile crashed against a tree. It turned over and Sands was pinned underneath. The gasolene tank exploded and for twenty min utes the injured man lay under the burning car groaning and begging to be rescued. To get him out peas ants who had seen the accident were compelled to tear one of his legs off. The suffering which Sands underwent did .not cause him to lose conscious ness, and be was aware of his sur roundings when he was carried Into the house. There he died after an hour's suffering. MEN STONE CAPTAIN. Pennsylvania Guardsmen Klot He cause He didn't Pay Them. Pittsburg, Pa., Aug. 4. A fight starting primarily because members of the company did not receive their pay as soldiers in the recent State en campment at Gettysburg, ended In a serious riot at the barrack: of Com pany F, Eighteenth Hegiment N. G. P. Capt. Rutherford Bingham ' of the company was roughly handled bj his ine.i, besides being stoned to his home, some distance away. The po. lice were called out to quell the an gry soldiers. Wet anil Dry Votes a Tie. Lexington, Ky., .August 6. The canvassing board threw cut ono vote registered lu favor of t-aloons in Georgetown, leaving the vote tied and as a result, another election will havo to be held. Tho wets won by ona vote on the count. V.'ci'.uin Sentenced to Dea'h. Ottawa, Kan., Aug. 5. District J;!;1fcH Smart sentenced Mrs Molllti i evi:rt to death for tho murder oj lis. Jano Sdiueck and her two chlU dien. WORLD NEWS OF THE WEEK. j Covering Minor Happening from all Over the Globe. DOMESTIC. The young nnd pretty wife of nr. O. W. Wood of Magnolia, N. bs arrested In Phllnde'phia In n ro.:i)i-ins-honse with her negro chauffeur. John Zett. a fnrmer of Vernon, Conn., murdered his wife nnd grand child and tried to murder his son. Charles Weuestefeld, a young clrk In tho Produce rJxehange Bnnk, New York City, went to the vault and committed suicide when It was nbout to be discovered that he had cashed two checks on the Institution, In which he had no nccount. Bronson Howard, the playwright, died at the Avon Inn., Avon By-t'.ie-Sea, N. J., of heart trouble. Death followed a long illness Ills a;;e whs 66. Eight thousand shopmen on ti n Canadian Pacific system were order ed out on strike. It was announced at Boston that President Roosevelt has signified his Intention of nttendlng the national encampment of Spanish War Veter ans to be held in that city the lart week of August. George J. Gould bus not been eimi nnted from but is a member of the Wheeling and Lake Erie $S, COO. OHO refunding scheme, said President De lano of the abash. Omaha despatches stated the man agers of the Western railways expect g'.eat noisiness revival this fall. Naval authorities declared test of new net to guard battle shlpe from torpedoes were successful. . The State Charities Aid Association arranged to install movlug picture ex. hlblts showing the ravages of tuber culosis at thlrty-slx couaty fairs in New York. The report of Labor Commissioner Williams shows that the percentage, of idle workers in New York State Is greater than ever before recorded. EOUEIGX. Chiefs of the Young Turks party in Paris Bala they put little fuith in the Sultan, but believed he would be forced to grant the reforms demand ed. Prime Minister Asqulth declared free trade an economic necessity for Great Britain nt the Free Trade Con gress dinner, at which John DeWitt Warner was one of the speakers. The Cuban budget for 1908-'09 hag been announced. The estimated ex penditures are $24,265,313, and (he eatlmated receipts, $29,415,013, giv ing a surplus of $5,129,860. The difference between President Castro and the Government of the Netherlands will probably turn out to oe less serious than they seemed at first. All talk of an armed conflict Is regarded as absurd In Venezuela. The battle ship fleet passed Pago Pago, Samoa, and was enthusiasti cally cheered by American and na tives at Tutulla. In the manoeuvres of the German army this fall 896, 588 troops of all arms will take part, including alo more than 260,000 men from the re serves. President Castro has cancelled the exequaturs of the Dutch consuls and vice consuls in all Venezuela ports and Is now asking satisfaction from Holland for alleged insults to the Venezuelan Consulate at Curacao. The release of 950 common crimi nals on orders from the palace has excited alarm in Constantinople, where it Is feared that reactionaries are organizing a "Black Band." A report was sent out by way of Berlin that the ruler of Turkey would drop the title of Sultan and declare himself Emperor of the Moslems. The Turkish Imperial Hatt, or diet, read before the Sublime Porte, declares the equality of all Ottomans without distinction of ruce or rails Ion. The Sultan of Turkey In the pres ence If the Sheik-ul Islam, took oath on the Koran to maintain the constitution. The Prince of Wales on his depar ture for home from Quebec, express ed great regret at his inability ta visit the United States. The Government of Holland an nounced that the report of an Inten tion to hombarc Venezuelan porta was premature. POLITICAL. New York State leuuers were con founded by the ultimatum of Presi dent Roosevelt, Mr. Taft and Mr; Hitchcock, which requested thti tu agree to a programme and produce a candidute for Governor who v.oitld bo us strong as Mr. Hughes. Mr. Bryan in criticising Mr. Tnft's speech of acceptance, said It shoved the Republican candidute was dlvai lslied with and had tried to amend his party platform. W. H. Hearst wan elected chair man of the national committee of the Independence party. Mr. Hearst will havo charge .of the camplugn, In cluding tho raising of funds. William II. Taft told a gathering of Ohio State candidates una committee-men that organization Is essen tial to party success in tuat State. Tho Independence party held a state convenilon at Chicago and named a ticket headed by George W. McAskiin, of Rock Island, for Uover nor. ONE HUNDRED DIE IN FOREST FIRE." Flames In the Hush Sweep Over Kd,,. tenay District in Canadi;. Town Wiped Cut. Winnipeg, Manitoba, Aug. R..M. most 100 lives have been simnvd out In 100 square miles of territory by bush fires that, raging for twenty four, hours, blotted Ferule, It, c'., a town f S.U00 population, off the map and then visited Michel, fourteen miles nwny, as well as Hosmer, oIh. and Spnrwood, towns between thus., points. It is more .han likely the death list will be two or three tl:m! as long before the lire dies out. for many of the victims undoubtedly have oeen lumbermen and prospec tors scattered all over the blazing region and it will be days before tll: tale of destruction is fully told. Sly thousand refugees from Ferule and thousands more from Michel mul nth. er towns are camped on a muull pral. rle three miles from the ilrst named place. They did not take to the hills as fugitives from forest (Ires ordi narily might do, bernusi the llanien were raclnj over the mountains. There Is no question the damage to property will will run to many mil. lions. It is said to be $2.rno.n.ii in Fernle alone, while tho general es timate for the whole territory Is $io, 000,000. In addition to the five fnrcgoinK places, towns in the path of t!io flames Included Coal Creek, Morrisry Elko. McGilvary, BarC.ey and Cokato! All the eleven towns were verlously damaged and the total of homeies persons in consequence of the fires has been greatly Increased. Not. only will those driven from their homea have nothing In the way of comforts until they can begin life incv, but most of them will find It difficult to get to places where they can make that beginning. Bridges and rolling stock of tne Canadian Pacific and Great Northern Railways have been burned, and it seems probable trnns portatlon will bo cut off for many days. Thousands of women and chil dren will have to walk hundreds of miles to get aid. That many of them will perish with hunger or be killed by wild animals is more than possi ble. Seventy-four lives were lost In Per. nle alone. The number of persons .kr.oVn to have died in that town nnd Michel is 85, with reports fron. small er places carrying the total beyond The conflagration is admitted to he the wor ; in Canada's history. Men, women and children, scantily clad without food and without water, have fled to the tops of tho hills, and with whatever material they could find, branches of trees, rags or blank, cts have made crude, uncomforta ble camps, froid which they viewed the fire which is consuming the rich est mining district in British Colum bia the Kootenay Valley and the Elko Valley. The towns partly destroyed with their populations are as follows: Fernle. 6,000; Michel. 1.500; Coal Creek, 1,600; Sparwood, 2.0UO; Elko, 400; Olsen, 130; Morrlsey, 320; Hoemer, 400; McGllvray, 100. FOUR DEAD IN SMASH. Woman nnd Three Children Killed When Big Machine Turns Turtle. San Francisco, Aug. 6. A big motor car was upset In Burllngame near the Crocker country home. Four persons were killed and one was Injured. The dead are Mrs. T. A. McCormick and her four-year-old daughter and two children of Mrs. O'Brien. Mrs. McCormick's dauph ter, Mrs. O'Brien, was so badly lu Jured that she will probably die. ilO.OOO Men Are Needed. Winnipeg, Manitoba, August 5. The Manitoban Government announ ced that 30,000 men are needed to harvest the wheat crop i:. Western Canada. IJASE BALL. NATIONAL LKAUl'K. W. L. P.f:. W. I.. n .611 Clnriunatl s ! ...S7 iff .Ki Hoiion 42 S3 . M ;h ,&m Brooklyn :' I Itlsbure.. New York . (Diicntni rliiludttlph .499 .44 JlS .33 pn. .4-4 AM M l.4 41 .644 St. l.oiil ;i. ttl AMKRICAN LKAUl'K. W. L. V.C W. L. .4f 4" ,4.ri fit .Stl !1 .oi 62 fiKtrolt t-t. LouL..., i'hicMgo Cleroluiid , .....vj :w ,6-Ji ....57 s jm ..M 4 AM' .....f2 43 Pltllallphl Boston Wanhinfton,. New York NEW YORK MARKETS. Wholesale Prices of I'arin Product! Quoted for the Week. WHEAT No. 2, Red, 97V4(f9U No, 1, Northern Duluth,' $1.21 Vi CORN No. 2. 83 J & 84. OATS Mixed, white, 6062. BUTTER Western firsts 21 21 Vj ; State Dairy, 20 Vi--CHEESE State," full ctvam, 12'.i OiViVz. MILK Per quart, 214c. EGGS State and nearby fancy, 22 QP 24c; do., good to choice, 22fyi 24c; vcHtern firsts 20 ft 21c SHEEP Per 100 lbu., $3.25 ff!' 4.50. BEEVES City Dressed, 8 If 1 1 s e CALVES City Dressed, 8i (' I2U-C HOGS Live per 100 lbs., $(i.G0y $7.05. HAY Prime per 100 lbJ.. ST'af. STRAW Long rye, per 100 lbs., CD 70 c. LIVE POl'I.TRY Spring Chicken per lb., 16c; Turkeys per lu.. He.; Ducks per 11)., 1 1 6C 12c.;- Fowls, per lb., 14c DUK.SSiiiD POULTRY Turkeys per lb., 12C; 17c; FowU per lb.. 12 14'ac;- Chlckaii!), Phila., pi;' 1- $2.'.Ktf 53.25. VEGETABLES Potatoes, ler hi)!.. $2.75 L' $3.23.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers