VA 6 THE COLUMBIAN, BLOOMSBURO, PA. TRfiK iiari h m smvil IIIIIIIIIILU II 1IIVUI Negro Who Escaped Burn ing Gasolene Taken to a Safe Place! VICTIM TELLS STORV Harrow Escape from a Lynching nt irnntlngton, L. I Mr. LouIm Gervnslnl 1 Too III After Terrible Kncc-untor To He Removed to Ilrr Ilomo Accused Splritfd Awn v. Huntington, L. I., Aug. 19., eorgo Washington, the negro wl was rescued by members of Troop C, f Brooklyn, from an angry crowd planning to burn him alive by Hood ing the small Jail with gasolene, waived examination on the charge ol baring attacked Mrs. Louisa Gerva elni. employed at the Chateau de Beaux-Arts, and was spirited away to the county Jail at Rlvcrhead. there to wait action by the Grand .Turv. His victim Is in a critical condition and the attending physician has for- waflen her removal to her home, a mile distant. wasmngton, who Is married, and wno served a sentence nf two year tor an attack on Miss Allen six rears o, and who less than a year ago was fined $25 for similar brutality toward a negro woman, owes his es cape from death more to the pres ence of another prisoner, James FIt.j geraM, than to the militia. Twentyiflve gallons of gurolcne bad been carried to the Jail, and the storming party Intended to burn the negro after they got him from his cell. When they battered through the outer door and were stopped nt i second tney determined to flood the small building and apply the match. This plan was abandoned, however, when they were told there was another prisoner In the place. Then they renewed the attack on the second door, when they were put to "iBi uy mo appearance of the rjOopB. Mrs. Gervasinl was attacked about 4 o'clock p. m., as she was on her way home with her little daughter .marguerite. Half a mile from the inateau she came upon two negroes, one of whom took no part In the agnt. "I was afraid," she said, "when I ?aw the bigger of the men come to ward me. When he grabbed me 1 cried out for help, but he got me by the throat and threw me to the tround. I fought him off and got o my feet, when he grabbed me gain, this time by the hair and throat, and again got me down. "I begged and pleaded with him to SO away and leave me, but he Jump ed on me and tore me about the ?ace and throat. All this time. I wan raylng for help. I got to my feet and then I saw my little girl and my containing one hundred dollar ta money were gone. "All this time we were getting; nearer to the Chateau, and when 1 3ot to Bustanoby's land I told him. Now you'll get yours,' and threw the swo dollar bill I had at him. He "crabbed It and made off. The next ihlng I knew friends came and tools toe to the Chateau. They had come -ooklng for me when my little Baby d reached the place. Soon after 'hey brought the negro to me to iden tify him. I was sorry I was not la y room at home. I have a revolver1 rhere and there would have been nri "nance for my friends to have tried vo lynch him later, , Washington was captured by mem from the Chateau, who, after finding1 .la victim, had started out in an au- omoDiie. At dinner time, when the emDloves M the Chateau were sure to be oc cupied, the Constable drove with the egro in a closed carriage to the rallj oad station. They took a round J snout route and arrived Just as the :raln for Riverhead pulled la. White 'anted tho rig over to one of his men "ho was waiting for him, and Jump si aboard the train with his man. "bey were well on their way to the1 ounty seat, before any one in the Mwn knew what was going on. WHEN DOCTOR DIES WOMEN ARE SEIZED 1 vro Prisoners, One n Spiritualist, round Praying Over Body of I.. Emerson Wheat Philadelphia. Aug. 18. L. Emer son Wheat, a physician 45 years old us ioima clean in his home at Nine teenth and Diamond streets In one or the most fashionable residence sec lions of the city, under most start'.ln urcumsiances. Beside the body, which lay upon a couch, two women were fonud praying for Wheat's res urrection and muttering strange In cantatlons, though physicians say the condition of the corpse indicated the man had been dead at least forty eight hours. Mrs. Fannie Soult. i proresHional Spiritualist, and Mlsa f iorence Beckman were the women. Both were arrested. or. Wheat, who was well knowa in mo northern section of the ritv had hunt. 1 1 . . I . . . . uwiig aione in n a noma during the absence of his family la me country for the summer. He last was seen alive on Saturday, when he called at a drug store In the noigh- oornooa. In consequence of his hav ing failed to make certain visits, the police were asked to investigate. They forced the door of the house; and found the physician's body half clothed, lying on a couch In his of fice. Lying prostrate on the Door, they say. they found Mrs. Soult and MIes Beckman, The police took the women to the station, where Mrs. Soult made a statement in which she said she had known Dr. Wheat for seven years, and that since last April she had been treating him by giving him what I- known as the magnetic treat ment. On Sunday last, she said, the nhv- iLian came to her house and asked ner lo go with him to his home, as ue reii as ir something was going to happen. When she went to his of fice Dr. Wheat was seriously ill. He could not say what he wanted. She worked over him until morning, when she got a message from her1 spiritual controller, Dr. Miller. At w.c iuiiip mme in sne was waiting for Miller to instruct her what she should do next In the case. Miss Beckman, she said, was sim ply a friend who had gone to the nouse with her. Mrs. Soult. accords lng to the police, has advertised aai a fortune teller and medium and la well known as a spiritualist. Dr.i Miller, whom she refers to as her, spiritual controller, died two yeara ago. iniifiisiifi Republican Nominee Por Vice-Pres. Says Real Is sue is Roosevelt. SAYS PEOPLE DO RULE Declares Paramount Issue Is Whether Roosevelt Adnilnlstrn. tlon Kluill He Approved, or People Will Trust (Government to "Expert. mental .Malcontent." WORLD NEWS OF THE WEEK. Covering Minor Happenings frcm all Over the Globe. 1ft FOUR DROWN IN LEAP OFF BURNING LAUNCH Father and Mother Die Ik-fore the Eyes of Their Children. W i ... iewaric, is. j., Aug. 18. To es cape a sheet of flame which envelop ed the launch In which they were re turning rrom a pleasure trip, fou persons Jumped into the Passaic Riv, er at the foot of Congress Street and were drowned. Others of the car. ty unable to help, stood op the pier. iu wmcn tney had scrambled or had Deen nrted. and watched those strug- bms in me water until the tide closed over their heads. Of those on tne pier were two young girls and boy who saw their parent die. Those drowned were: Mr. and Mrs. . Carl Pankops. of neiievine, N. J. Miss Catherine Ward, 19 years old, Waterbury, Conn. Haldon D. Davey, 20 years old, of nenevuie, Pi. J. HARVESTERS RIOTOUS. CAMPAIGN HALTS RATE CONFERENCE. Railroads Ilave Postponed Action Until After Election. Paul Smlth'8 N. Y., Aug. 19.--, fhat the railroads have decided to postpone their aggressive campaign' tor a readjustment of freight rates sntll attar the Presidential election ras asserted by William C. Brown, enlor vice president of the New r'ork Central linoi and chief spokes man for the railroads In the rate matter. Stores Looted and Women Insulted One Man Hanged. Winnipeg. Man., Aug. 20. About lo.ouo harvesters have arrived here from Eastern Canada in the last' tnree days, and special trains have been turned Into expeditions of loot Harvesters on the rst two or three trains have pillaged stores in small' towns, terrorizing the occupants with revolvers and bowle knives. Every woman coming in the way of these rowdies was insulted and at one place! a woman emptied a gun at the har vesters, wounding several. Every Being or section men which passed in daylight was shot at, and bottles and other missives were thrown. A cow was tied to a rear car and dragged to death. At a wayside station a man was hanged and narrowly escaped death, his companions lettin him' down after his feet were dangling in. air. Coal Receivership. Bcranton, Pa., Aug. 18. The '.'ennsylyania Coal and Coke Com pany, one of the largest mining con erns In the bltumlnous.fleld8 of '.Vestern Pennsylvania'.' went Into the lands of a receiver. The intrinsia talus of properties Is given as over vse.ooo.ooo. JProf. Upson a Suicide, Minnesota, -Minn., Aug. 20 Ar thur W. Upson, former .profossor at Ae University of Minnesota and n' oet of some note, drowned himself ad his 'body was found in tho riv- f t'Bemlddl, Minn. SHOTSON AND FATHER. Bloodthirsty Italian Then Kills Him self to Escape Mob. Westchester, Pa., Aug. 18. Ben jamin de Oildo. of Philadelphia, shot and killed Benjamin de Felix, fatally wounded Pasquale do Felix, father of tho murdered man here and then, to escape capture at the hands of an infuriated mob, committed suicide by shooting himself. The shooting is said to be the out growth of a feud that has existed be-i tween the Italians for a long time. I'ollMh.'AttreHM Killed Over Precipice, innejivuckV Austria, Aug. 20. j' As Lodntlne Homan, a Polish actress, and Posselt, the violinist 'were as rending the Gerlos peak they fell! over a precipice. The actress wad killed. Pofgelt was seriously Injur cC. Utlca. N. Y.. Aug. 25. Declaring mut wune a protectionist he favor ed an early revision of the tariff and that he approved most heartily the acts of the Roosevelt administration. James 8. faherman accepted the Re' publican nomination for vlce-presi aent, tnus ending the last formal ceremony attending the official launching of the Republican national ticket of 10S. In accepting the nomination Mr. bherman subscribed heartily to the declaration of principle adopted at the Chicago convention in June, to the every utterance of Secretary Taft fn his Cincinnati speech, and to tho policies or President Roosevelt Mr.. hherman asserted that the approval of the Roosevelt Administration was the real Issue of the campaign. The uryan question: "Shall the peo.ile rule?" was no Issue at nil. "Surelv the people shall rule," he said: surely they have ruled; surelv thev uO rule. Shame on tlm nnriiin who Insults the American people by uggestion or declaration that a mu jorlty of Its electorate Is venal. Air. snerman s speech was brief and he did not attempt to discuss In aetall any of the questions touched upon by Secretary Taft. saying he couia not hope to persuade any one not convinced by the Presidential candidate s presentation of the plat uiui nu me issues. He did enter into a brief discussion of the tariff and his declaration, "I am a protec tionist, brought a quick respi from his hearers. Mr. Sherman praised the record of tne .Republican party and In contrast mg it witn the Democratic organiza tion referred to the latter as an ag eregauon or experimental malcon tents and theorists whose onlv claim to a history is a party name they pll- ierea. Senator Julius Burrows of Mich lgan, Chairman of the N'otltlmtinn Committee, whose members gathered uere rrom the various States of the union, made tender of the nomina tion. In his speech he, too, resented' what he declared was a thinly veiled' accusation by Mr. Bryan that a Re publican administration did not rep resent tne rule of the people. Sec reiary or Mate Root, speaking as a, neighbor and lifelong friend of tho candidate, paid a glowing tribute td Mr. Sherman, politics having no) place In his brief but eloquent ad-i dress. President M. W. Stryker of) numiiton college, from which Mrj bherman was graduated, also paid a. vrrBimtu inDute to the eandldatej anu there were addresses of welcon to the visiting committeemen an Bigutseers rrom Mayor Thomas! Wheeler and Chairman Charles Sj Symonds, of the local Republican! Committee. At the close of the ceremonies at magnificent gold-lined loving cup, a! Rift from uls colleagues in the naJ tlonal House of Representatives, was: presented to Mr. Sherman. The cup stands nearly eighteen Inches! high and Is mounted on a base off ebony. The Inscription read: "Pre4 sented to James S. Sherman, M. C.J by his associates, August 18, 1908.' DOMESTIC. It was said In Boston that tho ml lltla might be called out to cope with. tne unprecedented wave of crime 1 the eastern part of Massachusetts. Henry Farman who left for Eng land on the New York, said ho tx pected to return to New York In the fall with a new aeroplane. ur. Peter Polls, a German sclen tist. arrived In New York with plan tor esiaoiisning a system of fore casting weather at sea. n - rranK u. Greer won the cham pionship single sculls at the Natlon-t i Amateur Regatta at Springfleldj Mass. The War Department officials pre-t parea ror a test of the Wright BrqthJ ers' aeroplane, the next device to be tried out at Fort Myer. Two masked men held up and rob " I'aim-i'onuneniai express train on, the Northern Pacific line neait opokane, Wash. . Charles S. Mellen. oresident of the Jew york and New Haven Railroad told the r-ublic Service Commission) that his company is anxious to build a subway into tho heart of NeW york city. The ow .er of the schooner Mena way said President Roosevelt nrom Ised to pay for the damage resulting from the collision between the May- tower and the lumberman. it Decame known that Mrs. E. Bi Strong, of Babylon, L. I., long deemJ ed childless by acquaintances, had Deen ror twenty years the mother of a daughter whom she drove rom hei' at the child'a birth. Magistrate Higsrlnbotham. of Brooklyn, accused by Mies Robinson, of attempting to hug and kiss her1 during a conference In his private room, denounced the woman defend-t ant in court and knocked down Howj ard Dinwiddle. Test of the Davis torpedo seamed! to show that the new type would nod be turned aside by a-net, but would pierce the hull of a battleship and ex plode its charge within the ship Dr. Vogel, Surgeon in the Marina Hospital Service, aaid before leaving San Juan for New York that Venezu-J elans were suppressing news of the1 plague, and that no organised effort, was being made to stamp out tthe disease. Wculd-Be Illinois Lynch ers Enrajjed When Ruse Saves llr.pist. CATLING GUN IS USED Sprliiflelt, In Hands of IllotcrM Hunt. Itit Negroes froln Town Tr.ke He. venso When ('heated of ('Inline to (Jet Possession of the Prisoner Two Men Shot I lend. CHAFIN ACCEPTS THE NOMINATIONj Says Sentence of Death Has beeni Pronounced on Liquor Traffic. nicago, in., Aug. 20. At Musi Hall in the presence of a large an entnusiaatlc audience. Enirene wi Chafln of Chicago, accepted the nomll nation for the Presidency of the ProJ hlbitlon Party. . The address formalJ ly notifying Mr. Chafln was made byf rrorossor Charles Scanlon of Pitts- burg on behalf of the Committee onl Notification appointed at the Nations al Convention In Columbus. Ohio.' Jury 16. Prolonged applaused greeted Mr. Chafln as he accepted the honor. Mr. Chafln said in part: "The attempt made by the Repub lican and Democratic Parties to cre ate a fictitious iiitiuo Is the most far cical in our history, in fuce of the fact that during the past four years the question of prohibition of the1 liquor trainc haB attracted wider at tention of the press and the people than all other public Issues com bined. The calm thought and com-' mon sense of the moral citizenship; have pronounced sentence of death) upon the liquor traffic, and the ony, thing that stays Its execution is thel protecting care of these two old po-i Utlcal parties, kept alive by blind political party prejudice." Warrants for a."50 Negroes. , Cincinnati, Ohio, Aug. 18. As the esult of a riot Btarted by several' hnn'lred negroes in Greenwood, a colovc.d settlement of the village of fll'.elund, warrants were issued foil u;-ut cf 250 nccroe. ' FOREIGN. The new government programme; in Turkey declares that all the law not compatible with the new regime1 will be amended, and army, navy! and all government departments wilt be reorganized. A decisive victory of Sultan Abd-I el-Aziz of Morocco over the troops of! the usurper. Mulai Ha tie cm on J nounced by a wireless dispatch tol Tangier. 1 The Brotherhood of Locomotive Firemen and Engineers in Toron-' to applied to the Canadian govern-1 ment for an arbitration board to de-l cide the Canadian Pacific strike quesj tlon. i At Rio Janeiro, Brazil. President! Penna opened a national exhibition of industry and liberal arta. Thirty thousand visitors attended the cere-i monies. I At San Juan, the four hundred! anniversary of the conquest of th' island of Porto Rico by Ponce d Leon is being celebrated. Variou relics of and documents referring t the explorer were transferred froml the Church of San Jose to the CatheJ dral. Six men were killed and eighteen! maimed and injured In a terrific gun explosion on the French school shlpl Couronne, caused by the decomposl-j lion of B powder. Sir Charles Hardlnge, Permanent Under Secretary to the British For-I elgn Office, and Baron von Aehren-i thai, the Austrian Foreign Minister, met at Ischl and agreed that Turkey must not be hampered in the attempt! to carry out reforms. POLITICAL. Richard Croker will come to Newl York from his home in Ireland la September to aid in the effort. to electl his friend William J. Bryan. William Yancey Carter was nomin nated for Governor of Georgia by thj Independence Party. Mr. Carter la1 a farmer. Before he goes to Cincinnati, Mr.i .Taft will spend a week as the guest) of the Middle Bans Club, which ownsl an Island in Lake Erie, near Put-ia Bay. Attorney-General Jackson of New ork, notified the leaders of the In dependent party that he would not' support us ticKet, but would remala a Democrat. Judge Taft notified Chairman Hitchcock that he must obey order an that 'Arthur 1. Vorys, of Ohio, will be the candidate's personal repJ rebentatlve in the campaign. September 14 and Saratoga were selected as the time and place for1 the New York Republican State Con vention, ' , fceftator Elklns appealed Sprlngfleld. III., Aug. IS. All the detachments, of militia here, includ ing Troop D, First Cavalry; Com pany C, Fifth Infantry, and the gat- Iing gun section of the Fifth Infan try with the fire department and the police v ere unable to quell a mob. that rushed about tho city threaten ing an attack upon the county Jail, hurling bricks at the mliltla and po lice and shouting for a lynching. Just before midnight there was a battle in Washington street between Sixth and Eighth streets, where there Is a row of negro resorts.' Hun dreds of shots were fired. It Is raid negroes fired upon the mob from rec- ond story windows. The dead are G. J. Scott an I t.eul Johnson. Among the serlouslv in jured are Albert Byerlhie. shot through left hip; George Stusi-e, shot through arm; Hairy O. I'r.rrlrig. member of Oetllng gun section. s!iot In the head; Angelo Allgarikiila. thot through arm; George Winter, shot In hip; Robert Dahlknnip, colored, b.-at- en by mob, condition critical. Stores conducted by negroes were v recked, guns were stole . from w in dows and plate glass windows smash ed. The rioting was precipitated bv a criminal assault by a negro who crept into the home of Mrs. Er.rl' hallam, dragged her from her lied1 nto her garcien, where he assaulted her and left her unconscious. Her husband, a street railway conductors was away from home at the time. Next day a negro named Georse Richardson was arrested and takem to the home of Mrs. Hallam. She1 said she believed he was her assallJ ant. Officers thoucht he una " man as ne tola a pretty straight tory. In a cell next to Richardson's was oo James, a negro, who a few weeks go entereu the home of Clerev A Ballard and attempted to assault his eighteen-year-old daughter, and in a, uRiit wiiu tne gin s rather stabbed! him to death. A mob assembled atl the Jail, crying for tho blood of both prisoners. The crowd became so menacing that Richardson was taken first tot the county Jail under a heavily arm-j ed guard, and later under cover of a spectacular run of the Are depart- ment ne was hurried into an autoJ mobile and with the negro charged, with a similar crime was placed In a northbound Chicago and Alton train 1 he destination was kept a Becret. Ttin ' ... . . uuiciuur oy teiegrann or uered out two companies of militlai ana one troop of cavalry from Peo ria, a troop of cavalry from Bloom ington and also one from Pekin. V t negroes in various parts of the town have been attacked by the mob An4 ( n , . ,u mu iimiances tne negroes nave turned with considerable ef uruu iucir nesuuants. in one mix-up a trooper attempted to sep arate the combatants and was near ly overwhelmed by the members of tne mob In pursuit of several ne groes. A call for help brought sev era! other cavalrymen to the cnA but they were all disarmed and their guns carried away by the rioters The fire companies were helpless iu ugni tne Diaze in the neero ouar. ters, the mob refusing to allow the apparatus to approach the burning uuuoes ana naving moreover cut the CAPTAIN MAINS KII Ls HIS WIPE'S FRIEND. Mrs .A n nix Shouts Warning to lMs. Irnnd Hailing fti Yacht Into letti Trap. Long Mand City, I,. t Aug. is Capt. Peter Conover Hulns, Jr ,)f the Forty-eighth Regiment. I'nVte.l States Coast Artillery, accomim,,.,... by-'iiis brother, T. Jenkins HRns t,, writer, went to the Bay Side Yacht Club on Uttln Neck liny and waltd an hour until William E. Annls member of the club, enmo In with i,s racing sloop. Then T. Jenkins Mains held tho crowd back with a revolver whllo Capt. Halns fired nine fu,u from a magazine pistol into the lv or Mr. Annis. Mrs. Annls who was present, tiled In vain to v. am ,r husband. The slayer used a magazine to volver of forty-five calibre, conti.in. lng fifteen shots, built to fire ; tinuously from the moment the trii-. ger was touched until another Piui r movement locked the hammer. "s mijni was tne lire mat the nine r'- to unaccustomed ears Bounded most like one. Halns shot Annls from u ii.lli;;!r, kneeling position, with his wea;m;i thrust under the bowed arm of Lewis Harway, whom the victim used u., shield. Harway attempted to fIh-i-ter Annls from the rain of slioir, Init the captain's army training l.ad'tlv en him quickness in handling fie arms that enabled him to cl.-cu-m nt both men. Capt. Halns, calm and self-posst ed. told Capt. ltuthenberg of tho ! lushing police, after giving hln s. if up. that he had committed thu mur der beause Annls hud broke n up hi home. Alter driving his wife from home he said, he leitrned that the liaison con tinued, and It preyed upon his mind until he determined to put Annls nut of the way. Annis was until the discovery of the Intrigue a warm friend of Capt. Halns. ("apt. Halns la thirty-six years old. His wife who was Claudia Llbby, was a high school girl of 1C, at Win throp, Mass., when he married her. They have three children. Annis, who was thirty-eight years old, hau been living for the last two months at his handsome villa at Vur ray Hill, near Bayside, with his wife a charming woman, and their two sons William, aged seven, an J Howard, aged five. Thornton Halns killed a nan ;it Fortress Monroe In 1891, who was, according to testimony in his trial us helpless to defend himself as the n n.n his brother shot. Thornton's victim, for the killing of whom he wan ac quitted on a self-defense plea, had both hands on oars, pulling away from a squall. Peter's victim was In a bathing suit, and consequently weaponless. The brothers were lodged in the Long Island City Jail, where they will remain until their trial. No Rain for Year In Hawaiian Island Honolulu, Hawaii. Aug. 19. The severest drought experienced In these Islands for a number of years Is be ing felt in the Nula region of Maul. This is a region devoted to small farming. There has been no rain there Tor nearly a year. Crops have failed and animals are dylnj; for want or water. Many of the in habitants have boen obliged to leuvu the region. KIIN Deaf Mute With Auto. Cincinnati, Ohio. Auir. is. li.-n.itj Wandrack, Ohio, a deaf mute, of this city, was run down and killed by John J. Ryan, the turf pluiitjur, la his racing automobile. Vxvi York Chh'jtvu .... rhlliidolplilu.M 44 BASE HALL. NATIONAL I,KA(il E. W. I,, p.o.l ,...M TO .(122 Clnolmmti.... ....M 4'J ..VJ' I IWwton .( 45 IlKMiklyn. w. l. rv ,! fti .4!" 4(1 M 4C ,iiH ttl ..SSI hose. Three members of the Gatllne eun squad were injured and the rioters tooK several guns from the soldiers. iat,,.u,cu guns were used to iiniBu wrecking a negro restaurant. Petrolt i'.i'mi St. l.ou( (M is Cleveland .' 0 4r Culcugo to 47 M1, J .mil Ill C7 AMERICAN LEA'Jl'E. i. r.t.. w. l. p.o. l'h!llelulllu.4S .VI .IT Hootnlt 4i ,V Vusl)ilivl()li...4l til Nhw York M (1.1 .61K .Mil .471 .4i: Mi XKW YORK MAKKirrS. RIOT DEATH LIST SIX. Wholesnle Prices of Furm Products Quoted for the Week. One More Victim of the Mob's pury fii wprlnftflcld. KnrlniflotH in a ,., Aifn- iv. one more victim was added to the death ..-v 4 iim uiguum nioos, when G W Scott succumbed to a gunahot wound in the lungs, sustained Friday night. Scot-t's death brings tho total fatali ties to six, and Is the fourth charge able to the disorder in the "Blade Beit," near 12th and Madison streets. It was there that tho hunted negroes made their stand, firing on the mob from windows and roofs. Red. $1.00 Northern Duluth, M to Mr Steuiner's Holler Explodes. Traverse City, Mich., Au?. 19 s. Isabel La Bonto of thl ,'(, was killed and a sore of passengers wore Injured by the explosion of the boiler or the passenger steamer Leelanau, bound from Leland to Kouch, on Carp Lako. In tha North ern Michigan resort district. Negro4)H Desert Town. Duncan, Okla., Aug.. 19. One hundred negroes were residents of Duncan last week, now there are Tart to help 'save Went Virginia from 1 A ' needed the warning from being won for, dlsfraVchlsement ol I ' ? Wh,te8' rder'"g thera to Jeav the blacks, niBtment o before aun-up on pain of losing their WHEAT No. 2 U.02. No. 1, J1.26 . CORN No. 2, 88,(5 K9. OATS Mixed, white, r5 OTi T.O. BUTTER Western lirsts. L'lffi-22. State Dairy. 1BU rn)2U. CHEESE State full cream. 124 13 '. MILK Per auart. So EGGS State and nearbv fancy. S!W27c; do., good to choice, 226 25c; do., good to choice, 22k 26c; western firsts 20 Si 21 K.c. BHEEP per 100 ihs.. 2 7r,&u no. BEEVES City Dressed. 810',e. CALVES City Dressed S r,i, 1 2 i. c. HOGS Live per 100 lbs., JCOOft J7.00. HAY Prime per 100 lbs.. 87 t hoc . STRAW Lone rve. Der 100 Ins.. 63 l70e. LIVE POULTRY Spring Chickens) u.. loo.; Turkeys per lu., 11c.; Ducks per lb ll812c.;' Eowls. per lb.. 14c. DRESSED POULTRY Turkeys pef iZBI7c; Fowls per lb.. 12 13 Vic.; Chickens, Phlla,, per lb., 2024c VEGETABLES Potatoes. Jersey, per sack 12.25 12. B0. UNIONS Yellow. Der basket. 75(3 11.00.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers