THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBUfrS. if hob rule in PHILADELPHIA Scores Injured, Including Women and Police, and Cars Burned by Strike Rioters TRAFFIC TIE UP COMPLETE Like City In State of Siege a Mayor Summon 4,000 Extra Men to Help Regular Force Check Street Fight ing 237 Care Wrecked. OOOCODOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOD9 MAIN POINTS IN MAYOR'S O STRIKE PROCLAMATION. H Use the street! at little as Q possible, and for travel only, U and keep children from becom- Q Ing Involved in the disorders. C Make no unnecessary stops H thereon. O Do not loiter. y Do not collect In or join Q crowds. q Make no outcries and use no O Insulting language. q Peaceable citizen move on U about their business. H :ooocccccccco Philadelphia, Feb. 24. A proclama tion of Mayor John E. Reyburn, de claring the riot act in force against the street car strikers and their sym pathizers was issued in order to give the police more power in coping with the rioting mobs. Practically admitting their inability to cope with the situation except un der the most favorable circumstances, the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Com pany announced that no cars would be operated under prevailing condi tions In Philadelphia. There was a complete tieup of traffic. The strikers themselves were no where in evidence along the street car lines, nor have they been since the strike was declared. All the rioting has been on the part of sympathizing crowds and has been an expression of feeling against the Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company, which has been growing for the past five years. The service has been getting steadily worse during that period. Reports were current all over the city that blood Is running in the street and that armed clashes between the police and the strikers had occurred. Strikers, police and company officials issued statements denying this state of affairs, but all admitted that scores had been wounded. Six persons were dying In the hos pital as the result of the riots follow ing the first determined attempt of the company to run cars. More than 100 persons, including a number of wom en, were suffering from various in juries. More than thirty of the seriously wounded were taken to the hospitals, '.wo of them being women struck by "mllets, while 500 persons were arrest ed on charge of inciting riots. A statement Issued by the compan says that In all 2H7 cars were damaged luring the disorders, two cars were turned, and one partly burned, and -608 car windows were broken. Three thousand special policemen were held at City Hall ready for a -ush call to cope with the street car rioters. In addition 1.000 others were -tationed at the trouble centres where 00 persons were Injured and one lit ie girl seriously wounded by a pistol hot. These, with the regular police, ':ept everybody on the move and scat tered any attempted gathering. ft Is estimated that 200,000 persons valked to work. The rain added to the misery of the pedestrians. Various vehicles were pressed into ervlce, and prices of 25 and 50 cents charged for transporting persons to vork. Many used roller skates, the isphalt streets forming a good surface or rapid progress. The Central Labor Union decided 'o call out every one of the 76,000 nlon men in the city If the company ttempts to run its cars with strike breakers. The trouble began when the offl i ials of the company treated with the nembers of the Keystone Union, gainst the wishes of the members of he Amalgamated Association. The utter body made the request of the tapid Transit officials that no other nlon he recognized. The recognition I this union was one of the main roints at issue between the strikers nd the eompany. The rioting extended to all sections f the city, and the cars were attack ed by mobs of from five to ten thou and persons. There were half a doz n serious riots and innumerable small 'nes. DECIDE AGAINST PROHIBITION. Virginia Bill for Election to Settle Question Reported Unfavorably. Richmond, Va., Feb. 24. The My. rs bill, calling for a popular election i decide on the Question of State. -Ida prohibition, was reported unfav orably. This Is regarded as a blow to the rohibition movement. Kicked Eight Feet, but Lost Life. Alda, Neb., Feb. 22. George Har ett, nineteen, champion high kicker f the village, after winning a contest, iiade a wager that he could kick and ouch a mark eight feet above tho oor. He won, but In doing bo burst a Llood vessel and died of heramorrbage. GOV. HUGHES ORDERS BIBBBAFT INQUIRI Appoints Men to Investigate Purchase of New York Lands ty For est Commission. Albany, N. V.. Feb. 24. Cov. Hughes ordered a thorough investiga tion of the scandals alleged to have characterized the purchase and sa'.e of land in the Adirondack Park re gions. He designated Roger Clark and E. Leroy Austin to conduct the inquiry. It has teen current ruaior that thousands of doilprs have been pa'd out by the State Treasury for doubtful titles to grossly overvalued lauds, that tracts denuded of timber, purchased at tax sales or a few cents an acre, have been resold to the State for as high as $21 an acre and that politicians high In Republican councils have bhared in the transac tions. In the Conger-Allds Investigation before the Senate, Senator Conger ad mitted on the witness stand that one of the two other envelopes alleged to have been patscd by Moe was ad dressed to Jean I- Burnett, a former Assemblyman from Ontario County, now dead, and that he was "approach ed" In regard to the bridge bill by Louis Bedell, former member of the Assembly from Orange County and now living in New York. The Importance of the forest land investigation ordered by Gov. Hughes overshadows even the Conger disclos ures. The management of this vast enterprise of the State is Intrusted to the Department of Forests, Fish and Game, of which James S. Whipple, a Hughes appointee, is the Commission er, with a large and expensive staff of officials. The Governor, in announcing his determination to investigate the Adirondack scandal to the bottom, made It very plain to persons with whom he talked that the Investigation will be as thorough as he can direct it, and will follow every trail of dis honesty wherever It may finally rest. It is pretty well known that the Gov ernor Intends to assume the personal direction of the inquiry as far as his other public duties may permit. Clark and Austin are splendidly equipped for the task before them. They will first turn their attention to an investi gation of all the records of Adiron dack transactions between the State and private persons and through the agency of private counsel designated by the State during the last ten years. Some of the most prominent politi cians and capitalists who have either bought or sold State lands will then be summoned to explain some deals that according to general belief have resulted in the spoliation of the State's forest property and Its finances. MILITIA QUELL RIOT. Sheriff and His Deputies Kill One and Wound Four Would-Be-Lynchers. Cairo, 111.. Feb. 22. Three com panies of militia, commanded by Gen. Frank, S. Dickson, Adjutant-General of the State, guard the Jail which a mob of 500 attacked in an attempt to seize and lynch two negro prisoners. Sheriff Fred. D. Nellis and twelve of his twenty deputies, who were armed, fired on the mob. The Dead. HALLIDAY, ALEXANDER, thirty five, dairyman, son of the late Mayor Thomas W. Halliday. The Wo"unded. CREHAN, HORTON; wounded In ankle; had stopped to see what was the trouble. MALONEY, JOHN, brotherJn-law of Mrs. Rose Maloney, whose purse had been stolen by John Pratt, one of the negroes wanted by the mob; Blight wound In cheek. WALKER, GEORGE B., correspond ent of the Associated Press; wounded in the leg while gathering news. WESSINGER, SAMUEL, former po liceman; wounded in head and shoul der. The city is comparatively quiet to night, the riotous spirit is quelled, temporarily at least, by the presence of the militia, the saloons are closed, no one Is permitted to loiter on the street; If a group of threo or four men gather the soldiers disperse them. John Pratt and Lincoln Wilson are the negroes the mob sought. Pratt, who committed a crime in Clarke County, 111., broke his parole, escaped and snatched a pocketbook from Mrs. Rose Maloney In the street. She shot at him with a revolver, but be got away. When arrested he Implicated Lincoln Wilson, who was found guilt less of the theft. So if the mob bad caught Wilson an Innocent man would have been hanged. FRISCO GETS BIG FIGHT. Settled That Jeffries and Johnson Will Meet at Broadway A. C. San Francisco, Feb. 24. Supervisor John L. Marget (Young Mitchell) who is chairman of the committee of the Board of Supervisors who grant the fight permits, held a meeting here to night with Tex Rlckard. the principal promoter of the Jefforles-Johnson fight. It was decided that the big fight would be held here in San Francisco on July 4 before the Broadway Ath letic Club, one of the clubs favored by the new administration. Roosevelt on the Job. New Haven, Conn., Feb. 24. "Mr, Taft is tho head man, but Mr. Roose velt is coming back." This was the reply made In the United States Cir cuit Court here by an applicant for naturalization, when among other questions he was asked: "Who Is the head man of this country?" FBEEDOH THE SSU iii IN H6IITQH TRUSTS WickcriKcm, in p2cc!i, Says No Free Stale Can LV.Jure Ex utence cf Mcncpclies IMPERATIVE THAT THEY GO Industrial Slavery is the Alternative Attorney General's Words a Further Notice of Taft's Intention Indivl dual Ntust Ce Protected. Warhinfrton. Feb. 21. Further no tice as to the Intention of the Admin istration to enforce the Sherman anti trust law was given in nn impressive manner here thlj morning by Attor ney General WkUersham in the course of an address delivered at the Winter convocation of the George Washington University. Mr. Wick ershtim ppolce on "Tha Progress of the Law." He made a review of the law of Queen Elizabeth and discussing the development since. He contract ed sharply the j.o;n'!ar reaction in England that followed the granting of numerous monopolies by Queen Eliza beth with the ajritation against mono polies that arose In this county twenty years ago and which led to the enact ment of the Sherman law. "V.'e raw," he said. spcaVIng of the time Juet previous to the adoption of the anti trust statute, "the rapid con centration of power over our great In dustries in a few hands, a power which no free State can long suffer to endure; the power of fixing prices at will, determining the amount of pro duction, dictat'ng the terms on which thousands of our fellow-countrymen might pursue their means of liveli hood; the power to exclude or permit comretition; the elements cf those monopolies which t-o stirred tho gen eration of Englishmen from vl.osi the Pilgrim Fathers came." Thus in a single paragraph the At torney General reiterates the classi fication of the prac tirP3 on the part of corporations which the President re peatedly has denounced as "vicious," and which, in his special message of January 7, he declared "must be re strained and punished until ended." There are thote amor? tho repre sentatives of preat corporations who have visited Washington recently in the effort to ascertain Just whnt the Administration has'in mind regarding them, or to persuade the President to modify the vigor of hi3 proposed course, who have declared with great eir.phasis that the programme out lined by the President In his message and speeches and now again reiterat ed by Attorney General Wickersham is utopianism. It may bo asserted with complete authority that neither President Taft nor Mr. Wickersham ro regards it. The Administration firmly believes that it Is possible for "big business" to rid Itself of these "vicious prar tires" without doing any real or lasting damage to the business of the country. The fundamental principle guiding all successful civilization, Mr. Wicker sham said In conclusion, must be to preserve freedom of action by the In dividual in a:-, large a measure as is consistent with the welfare of the whole. PUBLICITY CLAUSE HELD UP. No Money to Enforce That Part of Corporation Tax. Washington, Feb. 21. The teeth have been drawn from President Taft's corporation tax law, at least until Congress acts. The President and his advisers have discovered that Congress has appropriated no money with which to index and display the returns from the corporations. The President intends until this condition of affairs can be rectified to treat the returns from corporations merely as internal revenue returns, and thus the business secrets extract ed from concerns all over, the country will be accessible only to the corpora tion or its attorney, or to such per sons as are authorized by the Presi dent. JUMP FROM CAR, BREAKS NECK. Two Killed When Car ct El Paso Is Set Afire. El Paso, Texas, Feb. 22. Two peo ple are dead, one Is seriously Injured, and several.are slightly hurt as a re sult of a street car accident, caused by the blowing out of a fuse Flames appeared and the people became panic stricken. A number Jumped from the swiftly moving car. The dead are A. V. Smith, 32 years old, and Mis3 Maggie Riley, of Cana da, both of whom broke their necks. MOTION PICTURES FOR INSANE. Asylum Superintendent Says They Soothe and Divert the Inmates. Lincoln, Neb., Feb. 24. The State Board of Public Lands and Build!ng3 will buy a moving picture machine for tho amusement of the Insane patients at the Norfolk asylum, flupt. J. P. Peril val Bays that tho pliturci roothe patlent3 and that they watch them without the exciting effects incident to other diversions. Couth Carolina for Income Tax. Columbia, 3. C, Feb. 22. Tho in con.n tax nmendmeut passei final reading ij the State Senate. It al ready has pasted the Houso tnd rati uti'tlors U now complete. WORLD NEWS OF THE WEEK. Carering Minor Happening From All Orer the Globe DOMESTIC. Senator Bcnn Conger, on the wit ness 6tand In the Alld Inquiry in Al bany, said that Assemblyman Burnett told him that Assemblyman Doughty, chairman of the Internal Affairs Com mittee, was to got part of the J 4.000 received by Burnett. In a speech at tho University Pay celebration of the University of IVtin f!ania Governor Hughes of New Yoik characterized the sale of govern mental power In legislative halls as sickening. White women of Cairo, 111., arn.cd themselves on the advice of Ihuir male relatives, who fear another clash with the ngeroes. The floor of a theatre in Pattern, Pa., fell Just, as the audience was leaving the building: twenty-five were hurt but none was killed. Shackled In pairs. Lupo and the seven counterfeiters sentenced with him to long terms In the Federal pris on at Atlanta started for the South under a heavy guard. Nearly 500 arrests were made In Philadelphia as a result of riots clue to the street-car strike, service was suspended at 5 p. m. and the Mayor has ordered the swearing In of 3.000 sjieclal policemen. Tho Public Service Commission and the Board of Estimate practically approved plans for new subways In New York City costing 5100,000.000, to be built with the city's money. President Rogers of the Milk Trust took the ground that the raising of prices by Borden's was the company's business and nobody else's. The Westerners probing the pur chase of Independent phone com panies by Morgan & Co. announced they had enojgh evidence to sustain their Cleveland suits. WASHINGTON. President Taft withdrew tho nomina tions for Judges cf the Court of Cus toms Appeals from the Senate. Grain men argued In favor of deal ings In futures before the House Com mittee on Agriculture. Rear Admiral Evans in a letter to Secretary Meyer, denies that he fav ors transferring the pilot chart work to the Weather Bureau. Mr. Cabell. Commissioner of Inter nal Revenues, issues an order to pro tect the business secrets of corpora tions disclosed to the Treasury Depart ment under the Corporation Tax law. Senator Lodge Is chairman of the eoaiir.ittee to Investigate high prices, nv.ced In accordance with Senator El kins' resolution. President Ta.'t Is to Issue proclama tiens extending the minimum tariff to practically all the South American co-.'r.'.rie3. President Taft attended the Friends' Church in Washington for the first time since he was elected Ch:ef Executive. Hepresentatlxe Parsons's bill to re place the crayon portraits of Speak- ers of the House, which now hang In the lobby of tho Capitol, with repro duction!; done In oils, was passed. Two Taft bills. Federal Incorpora tion and A!asl:au Government, were brown overboard to help the four platform pledges the President insists shall be redeemed by Congress. The Board of Food and Drugs In- spectlon of the Department of Agri culture adopted regulations strictly defining whiskeys of all kinds. FOREIGN. Trench aviators are indignant at the Wrights' Injunction proceedings and many declare they will not come o America for the Coupe Internation ale d'Aviation. Arthur Fraser Walter, chairman of .he board of directors of "The Lon ion Times," died at his home at Work-i-gUani. Oiflcials of the American Exhibition In Eerlln plan to have the athletes Abo will take part In the Olympic jaines at Athens this year compete In i great International meet at the Ger :iian capital. Advices from Blueflelds Bald that .be insurgents had driven General Vazquez from his position near San Vicente, the American scouts taking a leading part In the action. Mis3 Mabel Swenson, daughter of the American Minister to Switzerland, died from tuberculosis on board the steamer Amerika. It Is stated that the King of Greece proposes to abdicate In favor of the Crown Prince. Joseph Chamberlain appeared in Parliament to paralyzed and feeble that he had to be carried into the British House of Commons and prop ped up in bis seat. Further rioting, in which many per sons were wounded, occurred in Schleswlg-Holsteln and at Cassel, where demonstrations were made against the suffrage bill. Aimed at "Graveyard Circulation." Washington, Feb. 18. Tbe pend ing Post-Office Appropriation bill con tains a provision alined at "grave yard circulation." The bill directs postmasters to return any non-dollv--erable paper or periodical to the pub lisher, with postage due, at the third class rate of two ounces for 1 cent. Train Kills Man and Daughter. Lancaster, Ohio, Feb. 22. W. B. Henry, ex-County Clerk, 65 years old, and his daughter Ellen, aged 18, while driving, were killed by a Hocking Val ley passenger train at Willow Cross ing, west of this city, near their coun try home. Mr. Henry served two terms as Fairfield County Clerk. L UPO MD HIS GANG HEAVILY SENTENGED FVicn Terms of the Eight Italian Counterfeiters Aggregate 150 Years $7,600 IN FIXES ALSO SET Thirty Year Term for Leader of the Dand Fifteen Years' Imprisonment the Lowest Sentence Made Spurl cus Gills on Remote Farm. ODODOOODODOODOOOOOOOOODO: c ) O Sentences Imposed on q Counterfeiters' Band. 8 Ignozlo Lupo, thirty years at Q hard labor. h Giuseppe Morrello, twenty- five years and $1,00') fine. O Giuseppe Callachlo, seventeen Q years and 1 1,000 fine. O Nlcolo Sylvestra, fifteen years j and $1,000 fine. O Salvatore Cina, fifteen years i and $1,000 fine. O Vlncenzo Glglio, fifteen years O ind $1,000 fine. g Giuseppe Palermo, eighteen o years and $1,000 One. H O Antonio Cecala, fifteen years O and $1,000 fine. $ O Aggregate of sentences, 150 U 8 Kara. X coccccocxxcccccx:occcx:ccco New York. N. Y., Feb. 24. Proba bly the worst group of criminals that ever came to this country were dealt with here by a United States Court In a fashion that should strike terror to their kind. The punishment they got was the heaviest ever given for counterfeiting, so far as there Is any record in this country. Fo twenty-five days their counsel had battled for their liberty before Judge Ray and a Jury In the Criminal Branch of the United States Circuit Court- For the same period the coun sel for the government, Abel I. Smith, Assistant United Statc3 Attorney, had fought for their conviction. TUe cul mination came when the Jury, after a two hours' session, found a verdict of guilty. The same length of time wca spent in Imposing sentence, which was done amid sobs of the prisoners and one of their counsel, and the col lapse of Gluseppl Morello, who was said to be the leader of the whole band. The sentences follow; IGNAZIO LUPO, thirty years and $1,000 fine. GIUSEPPI MORELLO, twenty-five years and $1,000 fine. GIUSEPPI PALERMO, eighteen years and $1,000 fine. GIUSEPPI CALICCHO, seventeen years and $600 fine. IGNAZIO GIGLIO, fifteen years and $1,000 fine. SALVATORE CINA, fifteen years and $1,000 fine. NICOLO SYLVESTRO, fifteen years and $1,000 fine. ANTONIO CECALA, fifteen years and $1,000 fine. The crime for which tho eight men were convicted was the making, at Highland, N. Y of counterrelt bills and their circulation and sale to countrymen. The ihief of the Secret Service here, William J. Flynn, and his men worked on the case for nearly a year. The arrests were made last fall. It Is believed by those who have been working on the cas.e for the gov. eminent, and by Headquarters men, thU In Morello and Lupo, and the men who looked to them for leader ship, they have those responsible for the murder of Detective Petrosino in Palermo. Ignazio Lupo, "the Wolf," and his seven associates, the scum of tbe out casts of Sicily, who had baffled Chief Flynn's Secret Service men and the Central Office detectives for years, were taken to Atlanta to begin their terms in the Federal penitentiary. NO DRINKS FOR MIDDIES. Maryland House Passes Bill Making Liquor Sellers Criminally Responsible. Annapolis, Feb. 24. A bill making sellers of Intoxicants In Annapolis criminally responsible for sales made to midshipmen, St. John's students and minors generally, the need for which has been pointed out by Captain J. M. Bowyer, superintendent of the Naval Academy, has passed the Mary laad House of Delegates. Heretofore a provision that the owner is not re sponsible for sales made by employees baa made the law a farce. Texas Suicide After Triple Murder. Waco, Texas, Feb. 23. Charles Franks, a bartender, shot and killed Josle Donovan, fatally wounded Roy Anderson and Lulu Holt, and then killed himself in a rooming house here. Franks entered the building and saw Anderson talking to the Holt woman, and, mistaking him for an other man, opened fire. Fearing Blindness, Kills Herself. I os Angeles, Cal., Feb. 24. Fearing the approach of blindness. Miss Mae Callahan, thirty-two, manager of the Western Union Telegraph Company at San Bernardino, committed suicide by shooting. Washington, Feb. 22. The Ameri can woman is wearing more silk every year and more American-made silk. Last year the value of silk used by the country was 166,000,000, of which tRSjOOp.qoo was home-manufactured. BEEF TRUST INDICTED FORJFXINB PRICES Armours, Swifts, Morris, and Meeker Accused of Conspiracy by Hud. aon County (N.J.) Grand Jury. Jersey City, N. J., Feb. 24.-The National Packing Company of ChHaeo and New York, one of the late st ( on cerns doing a cold storage? bi''n,.(l this country, will be Indicted t,v ", Grand Jury In Hudson County, N. j on charges of conspiracy in rtr:int of trndo, according to Prosecutor (;ar. ven In Jersey City. Garven said the Grand Jury ordered him to draw the Indictment on recommendation that It do sci. nfl said he believed he could rk into court with the evidence he has and Bhow that tho corporation lm been acting directly to depress the market to raise the prices of food stuffs and maintain them at a high level. The National Packing Company, he said, Included in Its list of directors tnen who are the recognized heads of great packing and foe 1 Interests. Ap parently those concerns were working independently of one another, but there was evidence that the directors of tbe National Packing Company met and took formal action to raise the price of beef and to hold the surplus beef In cold Btorage until their prlre was met. The directors are J. Ogden Armour, Edwin Morris, K. F. Swift, E. M. Morris, Abraham Meeker. Edward Tllden, T. J. Connors, L. A. Carton, T. E. Wilson, C. H. Swift, L. H. Ileyman, Samuel L. C. Roberts, F. A. Fowler, A. W. Armour, L. F. Swift and Ken neth K. McLaren. The Indictment, Garven said, will be a blanket charge broad enough to cover every detail of the ca:;e in which he thinks the chances of a con viction possible. He said one of the best witnesses relative to the meet ing at which It was agreed to raise the price of beef consists of the minutes of the corporation. In speaking of the general Investi gation, Garven said he had positive evidence of where fowl had been kept In cold storage for seven years. The corporation has been under fire for Feveral weeks In Chicago, where it operates, ' and numerous witnesses have been summoned before the fed eral Grand Jury there. The prosecution of the Beef Trust In New Jersey Is ba.ed on testimony showing an arbitral y Increase of prices, which la made possible large ly through the warehouses which nro grouped about the Jersey City termi nals of the railroads and are being used by the trust in furthering its plan to artificially increase the cost of meats and other commodities. Thousands of tons of food are also cached against the day of higher prices in New York, and for that rea son the District Attorney of New York County will co-operate with the New Jersey authorities In further Investi gation. In New York County the Grand Jury decided to find Indictments against a dozen or more members of the milk combine. TILLMAN REGAINS SPEECH. Doctors to Whom He Talks Think Re covery of It Will Be Complete. Washington, Feb. 22. Until to-day Senator Tillman had spoken but two words since he was stricken last Thursday. When the family physician entered this afternoon his face bright ened and he said: "Hello, Doctor." A little later an other physician, whom he had seen but once, said to the Seuator, "I don't suppose you remember me?" "Yes, I do." replied Mr. Tillman, "you are Dr. White." The doctors consider this return of speech most favorable, and they en tertain no doubt now as to the pati ent's full recovery of his speech. Four Killed by Falling Wall. Frederlcktown. Mo., Feb. 22. Four men were Instantly killed and four others were seriously hurt when the brick wall of the burning Keyes Build ing fell upon them at 2 In the morn ing. The killed were Lee Brooks, a concrete contractor; William Hicks, Everett Cowden and Charles Joiner, colored. Tbe seriously Injured are Judge F. P. Parkin, Frank Kelley. John Egnery, Jr., and aJmes Blantes. NEW YORK MARKETS. Wholesale Prices of Farm Products Quoted for the Week. MILK Per quart, 4c. BUTTER Western extra, 28 29c; State dairy, 23024c. CHEESE State. Full cream, special, 17,&18c. EGGS State. Fair to choice, 25 27c; do, western firsts. 2830c. APPLES Baldwin, per bbl., $2.75 4.00. DRESSED POULTRY Chickens, per lb., 1521c; Cocks, per lb., 14c; Squabs, per dozon, $2.005.75. HAY Prime, per 100 lbs., $1.15. STRAW Long Rye, per 100 lbs.. 800 90c. ' POTATOES State, per bag, $1,304? 1.40. ONIONS White, per crate, 250500. FLOUR Winter patents. $5.600.10; Spring patents, $5.506.85. WHEAT No. 2, red. $1.21 8 130 k No. 1, Northern Duluth, $1.28 Vs. CORN No. 2, 71473c. OATS Natural white. 52(ff55c.; Clip ped white, 63 56c. BEEVES City Dressed, 810,4 CALVES City Dressed, 1016c. SHEEP Per 100 lbs.. 14.50. LAMBS Per 100 lbs., $8.65. HOGS Live, per 100 lbs., 0A0', Country Dressed, per lb.( llRa
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers