THE COLUMBIAN. BLOOMSBUfeA ti sv GENERAL STRIKE OF 125,000 VOTED All Philadelphia Un'on Men Ordered Out After a Turbulent Day FIGHTS IN ALL PARTS CF CITY Police and State Constables Unable to Cover Broad Zone of Disorder Cars Derailed and Smashed by Mob P. R. T. Firm. Philadelphia, March 3. The gen eral strike, the probabilities of which has been worrying Philadelphia for the past week and causing uneasiness over the entire country, was ordered at the meeting of the Central Labor Union. The walk-out of the 140 un ions numbering fu'.ly 125.000 men will take place within a week, unless the irrievances of the striking street car men, who have caused all the turmoil, are arbitrated. The Philadelphia Rapid Transit Company, as an expression of Its su preme disregard of the result of the meeting, and confidence In the result of lis efforts to run cars, has ordered almost the entire rolling stock Into operation. The danger lies in this, that the striking carmen will have the active help of perhaps 90,000 Idle men, a rest less, dissatisfied force that may pro duce far more disorder than the city has yet seen. The decision of the union bosses followed a day of almost continuous rioting, In which a boy was killed and sixty persons were hurt. The trouble spread over the south eastern section of the city and flared up generally wherever police protec tion was Inadequate. It was one of the worst days Philadelphia has suf fered since the employees of the P. R. T. went out. The rioters congregated at the cor ner of Fifth and Jackson streets soon after the labor meeting adjourned and carefully prepared for the trouble that followed. Some of them first blocked open a switch with a piece of wood, while others began to harass several approaching cars with bricks and stones. As the mob grew, the conductor of the first car became terrified at the attack and drove his car at full speed over the open switch. Careening and bounding, It zig-zaeged across the street to the sidewalk, crushing those who were in ttR way against the brick wall of a building which crumbled as though made of paper. A man and a boy are dead and four other boys were seriously hurt as the result. M'KENN'A, Charles, aged fourteen years; died in the Methodist Hospi tal from a fractured Bkull. FREDERICK, John E., aged forty-five years, crushed head, leg and Inter nally Injured; died shortly after ward. The Injured are: EVERETT, William, aged fourteen years, leg and arm crushed and In ternally Injured. SHINSKIG, Abram, aged twelve years, general contusions, TRAINOR, Raymond, aged ten years, general injuries. MOORE, Edward, aged fifteen years, crushed head. SIX LIVE ON GARBAGE. Startling Disclosures Made on Ver mont Farm. Burlington, Vt., Mar. 1 Disdaining to ak for town aid and too proud to beg, x family of six persons, three of them children, for three years have been living on a tiny farm in the outskirts jf this city on garbage which the fath er of the family, seventy years old, has tally collected from yards In the city, ostensibly to feed his "pigs." This was the startling fact revealed to-day when the local authorities were called in to take charge of two Insane, uiddle aged women, both widows; heir aged father and three children, i boy and two girls, four, seven and 'ourteen years old, respectively. To he unspeakable diet upon which the women, Mrs. Mattie Sipples and Mrs. Ornery Leavitt, have subsisted for the last thirty-six months. Is attributed heir present insanity. Doth will be -ent to the State Asylum for the In rane. The authorities found revolting conditions of squalor and disorder present in the battered farmhouse 'hat the family occupied In a some what Isolated section. 2ION CITY'S END. Corporation Will Probably Pay 29 Cents on the Dollar, Chicago, Mar. 1. The wind-up of he ZIon City receivership was fore iadowed to-day, when Receiver C. D. 'nomas issued a report which he stat d would probably be his last. Practl Uly all of the secured claims against je estate formerly controlled by John Mexander Dowie have been settled, r.d there remains property sufficient pay the unsecured creditors about . ) cents on the dollar. Many Drownings in New England. Boston, Mar. 1. The United States Volunteer Life Saving Corps reports vat from May to September last, 604 arsons were drowned hi the New ngland States. Of the dead 272 were illdren. In Massachusetts alone 286 ,e.son3 were drowned. OB. C. W. ELIOT HIT BK President Emeritus of Harvard Liable as 6harchQi(W In Cambridge Inst'tutlon. Boston, Mnr. 3. Acting on a war rant sworn out by National Hank Ex aminer Kills II. Pepper, the Boston police began a country-wide search for George V. Coleman, mlrslr.g book keeper of the City National Hank of Cambridge. A shortage of $14 1,000 discovered In the accounts of the bank, disclosing a loss of nearly half the Institution's entire resources, led to the closing of the bank. Ex Gov. John L. Date3 was appointed receiver. Coleman, n young man who lived at No. 13t5 Magazine street. Cam bridge, disappeared Friday and was later heard from In Kansas City, when he said he would return. In the mean time his absence caused an Investiga tion, with the result that the short age was uncovered. It was found nec essary to dose the bank upon vote of the directors approved by the Comp troller of the Currency nt Washing ton. Hank Examiner Ellis Pepper took charge to-day. Edwin S. Dresser, President of the wrecked bank, said: "Coleman's sal ary was $12 a week. He is not sup posed to have had access to one cent of the bank's funds. He never acted as paying or receilvng teller, and if tlw? other men did their duty he nev er handled the funds In any way. How he ever got away with the money Is a mystery we are trying to solve now. I don't know whether it was by for gery by checks or how." Among the stockholders is Charles W. Eliot, president emerttus of Har vard. Under the national banking laws the stockholders are liable to assess ment If the nssets are not sufficient to pay the creditors In full. As Dr. Eliot holds ten of the 1.000 shares, he is lia ble for a part of the defalcation. DEFENCE OF ALLDS. Littleton Says New York Senator Act ed at Piatt's Behest. Albany, N. Y., Feb. 2S. With an impassioned outburst of oratory In which he denounced the bridge com panies and Senator Henn Conger as their representative as the most un speakable band of thieves and organ ized corruptionists that ever befouled a commonwealth, Martin W. Littleton opened the defence of Senator Jotham P. Allds, nccused of having demanded and received a $1,000 bribe. Seem ingly the defence Is to follow two lines: First That the bridge companies were not blackmailed and held up, but were seeking victims on whom to press their bribes. Second That Jotham P. Allds, the implacable foe of these corruptionists on every occasion, save when he help ed them kill their bill in 1901, was acting then at the direct behest of Senator Thomas C. Piatt. Counsel Littleton announced that Senator Allds had filed with the Clerk of the Senate his resignation as Presi dent pro tern. MRS. BENJ. FLAGER KILLED. Her Automobile Struck by a Railroad Train Near Niagara Falls. Niagara Falls, N. Y., Feb. 28. A New York Central passenger train go ing at sixty miles an hour over a grade crossing in Gratwick, half way be tween Niagara Falls and Buffalo, at 1. 30 o'clock p. in., killed Mrs. Martha Flagler, widow of Benjamin Flagler, and so badly Injured Mrs. Morris Cohn and Mrs. George F. Nye that If one or both do not die they may never fully recover from the effects of the frightful collision between Mrs. Flag ler's automobile and the train. Miss Katherlne Nye, 15 years old, was only slightly hurt. Chauffeur William Mc Phoe escaped in a similar manner, be ing only slightly cut. RIOTERS CLOSE STEEL PLANT. Bethlehem Works Shut Down Because Its Workmen Are Not Protected. Bethlehem, Pa., Feb. 28. The Beth lehem Steel Company closed down to night, and, It Is said, will remain closed until the local police authori ties are able to give protection to the men who have remained loyal to the company. This step was taken because of serious rioting early this morning, when a mob of 500 foreign ers attacked the steel company em ployees as they were going to work, and to-night, when the same crowd made' a second attack while the men were leaving the plant. The strike has been going on for some time, but the rioting became serious to-day for the first time. MIDGET STOCKMAN DEAD. Man Three Feet Five Inches Tall Dlea Worth a Million. St. Joseph, Mo., Feb. 28. Stephen Remington, financially one of the big gest but physically the smallest farm er and live stock man in Missouri, died here. He was &8 years old and his fortune was estimated at $1,000, 000. He weighed seventy-five pounds and was three feet five Inches tall. Upholds $133,378 Inheritance Tax. Trenton, N. J., Mar. 2. Justice Reed in an opinion filed in the Su preme Court to-day sustained a col lateral inheritance tax of $138,378 levied by the Secretary of State upon the estate of the late Wesley H. Til ford, who died in New York last March, leaving a personal estate val ued at $11,626,987. of which $7,601,062 was In shares of stocks of corporations chartered In New Jersey. BOATS PATROLING HERKIMER STREETS Electric Tlant Flooded, 150 Houses Deserted, Shops and Schools Arc Closed VILLAGE OF G.CCO IN DARKNESS Only 24 Henri Supply cf Drinking Water Dynamite Being Used to Destroy les Ja:ns in Mohawk Val ley The Hudson Rising. Albany, . Y March 3. The vil lage of Herkimer, the seat of Herki mer County, la In darkness, 150 houses have been vacated and armed guards in boats are patrolling the canals that lately were. streeU:, lest those sleep ing on second story floors be drowned In their beds. The electric lighting plant has been flooded and all the lights are out; the fires under the hollers of the pumping stations have been quenched, and there is only twenty-four hours of drinking water in sight for 8,noo peo ple. All manufacturing plants have suspended and two schools are closed. Many fled to higher land during the day. The village In menaced on the west by the Mohawk River and on the ncrth and east by West Canada Crtek, n confluent. On one side only Is there escape. The creek has thus far risen more rapidly than the river because of an ice Jam at the p(.int where the two Join. Ice Jams west of Fort Plain have caused the streets in P.ion nnd Frank fort to be inundated and dynamite Is being used to break them up. When that happens it is feared the rush of water and ice will cause havoc, for the Mohawk River i: almost solidly clogced from Fort Plain to Canajo hnrie. At Port Plain the Mohawk rose 10 feet 1 Inch from 3.30 p. m. yesterday to 3.::o p. m. to-day. otsquago Creek, an Important feeder of the river, sud denly ro-.-e many feet and caused great damage all a'.org its route. AH that section of Hornell Eouth of Cedar street Is inundated. Water Is pouring through many houses, the oc cupants of which were removed to places of sr.fety diirlr.s the night. For four miles below Hornell the valley is full cf water from hill to hill and the river Is rising every hour. The Krie Railroad reports that the Canisteo Riv er is spread out over the valley for a distance of thirty miles and that its tracks arc under water in many places. The worst flood in ten years is working its way down the Genesee Valley from Croveland. On the Dans vilie and Mount Morris Railway water reached high up on the engine wheels, which threatened to flood the fire boxes. People living on the flats about Groveland have been forced to move into the second stories of their homes. With the streams tributary to the Hudson River swollen by heavy rains and melting snow-into torrents, and with the river rising at the rate of about eight inches an hour, one of the worst floods in recent years is predict ed in Albany. IDAHO SNOWSLIDES. Mace and Burke, Buried to a Depth of Fifty Feet. Spokane, Wash.. Mar. 2. Twenty four persons are known to-night to be dead as the result of snowslides In the mining region of Northern Idaho. To the nineteen persons who perished in the avalanches at Mace and Burke, Idaho, are added three who died in a similar accident when the camp of the Carbonate Hill Mining Company at Mullan, Idaho, was destroyed and two killed at Doi-Fey, Idaho, to-day. The fight against time and cold at Mace and at Burke has been waged bravely and persistently by the little army of men who hope to find under the heaps of ruins some who have es caped death. The rescuers have dug frantically for many hours. Every available man nnd boy has been pressed into service. TRADE GONE, SUICIDE. Boycotted Butcher Dies on Wedding Anniversary. St. Louis, Mar. 2. Loss of trade due to the meat boycott caused Alex ander Bindebeutel, a butcher, to kill himself. His body was found in the Ice box of his shop. Bindebeutel ended his life on thti eighth anniversary of his wedding. His wife said her husband had spent many hours working on his books to discover a way to evade conditions which were costing him his trade. PISA'S TOWER IN DANGER. Scientists Investigating Flow of Wa ter at Its Bate. Pisa, Italy, Mar. 2. A committee of scientists is investigating the stability of the Leaning Tower, from the foun dation of which water has been spring ing for a long time. Tula has resulted, It Is feared, in weakening the under structure of the historic tower. Quits the Minstry to Raise Poultry. Verona, N. J., Mar. 2. The Rev. Cliarlei Little, pastor of the Verona Methodist Episcopal Church, has do tided to retire at the coming Newark Conference and will devote his time to i o'llti y raislcg oa his farm near t'c;l.:r Ciove. WORLD NEWS. OF THE WEEK. CoTCring Minor Hnppcnine From AH Over the Clobe DOMESTIC. Mrs. Annie Gill strangely disap peared from her home at Atlan.ic Highlands. N. .)., where she lived ulono in tlie dilapidated i annuel' hotel built by he.r husband, who died four you ago. Groat floods in the Mohawk valley caused much damage to property. Governor Hughes at Albany enter tained Governor Fred. M. Warner, of Mi. liirjan. Chancellor MacCracV.eti of the New York Vnive: shy announced that he would re.-ign on Sept. 25. Assembly Toonilu Introduced a resolution calling for a special Investi gation by n legislative committee of nil stock and produce exchanges In New York State and their methods. General quiet prevailed In Bethle hem. Pn., where a strike Is in pro gress; it was stated that Charles M. Schwab, president of the steel plant, would not employ strike breakers. The Now York State Board of Char ities asks more than $0,000,000 for maintenance and extension of its work. The State Constabulary, two hun dred strong, was ordered to Philadel phia to assist the local authorities in coping v Ith the disorder Incident to ihe car strike. President Taft, speaking in New ark, N. J., predicted that the coinmls Fion that Is to revise the bitslncss methods of the government would ef fect a saving of $100,000,000 a year. Subpoenas by the Hudson County (N. J.) Grand Jury demanding the production of records of the National Packing Company, the Beef Trust, were Ignored, and Prosecutor Garven said he would ask dissolution of tho corporation. WASHINGTON. Plans were laid at a White House conference to curb any attempt by in surgents to obstruct President Taft's legislative programme. Secretary Wilson and Gifford Pin chol c lashed on the stand over wheth er Pint Lot had permission from his the n. pupe: ior to t end the letter to Sen: tor Dolliver criticising President Taft. Secretary Meyer plans to make his request for a 32,000 ton battle ship in nest year's recommendations. President Taft talked to 350 editors of foreign newspapers in the United States on immigration. If Wado Ellis manages the Ohio campaign successfully it is said to bo the intention of President Taft to have lilm made Chairman of the Republican National Committee. Senator Brown delivered a speech on the Income tax and Senator Bev erldgo dlscusrcd the mineral wealth of Alaska. There is talk In Washington of an Inqc.iry into conditions at the Mare Island Navy Yard, where leading offi cers, including the commandant, are suspected of Insubordination to Secretary of the Navy. FOREIGN. African fever Is following the the Roosevelt party; a medical missionary who lunched with Its members on Monday Is dying. Suspicion that three Powers are contemplating unfriendly action against China over Thibet causes anxiety at Pekin. Col. Roosevelt practically ended his African hunt, having bagged about 500 of the larger mammals. Premier Asquith announced in the British Commons that the Lords' veto question will take precedence of all other business except pressing finan cial matters, the general budget being laid aside. Diplomats In St. Petersburg are un able to understand Russia's alleged fear of Chinese military aggression, which is given as the reason for the new proposal for a Mongolian rail way. Mr. Roosevelt declined to express his opinions on politics and public af fairs generally, saying that he needed time to get in touch with the outside world. Mrs. Roosevelt reached Naples on her way to Egypt to meet her hus band. President Madriz reports a victory over the Nicaraguan insurgents in two battles, in which the dead and wound ed number 1,500. AVALANCHE BURIED 75. Twenty-five Families Overwhelmed In Wallace, Idaho. Spokane. Mar. 1. A telephone mes sage from Wallace, Idaho, says twenty-five, families, probably seventy-five persons in all, were burled under an avalanche last night. A special train left at midnight for Wallace, carrying rescuers. Measles In Northern New York. Malone, N. Y Mar. 1. There is an epidemic of measles in Northern New York. At Gouverneur there are more than 300 cases, making it necessary to close the public schools there. Here tho disease la subsiding. Three chil dren of Alvln Booth of Ellenburg De pot died within twenty-four hours of each other and were burled In the same grave. Net National Debt Now $1,068,728,154. Washington, Mar. 3 The public debt of the United States according to a stntement issued to-day by the Treasury Department increased $2, 007,41)8; during the month of Febru ary. The debt less cash In the treas ury on February 28 was fl.0C8.728 151. EXPRESS BURIED III SNOW SLIDE Great Northern Passenger Train Swept frcm Track Near Cascade Tunnel TWEN1Y BODIES WERE RECOVERED Many Women Among the Fifty-One Passengers Relief Trains Rushed from Everett, Wash., Unable to Get Within Eight Miles of Scene. Everett, Wash., Mar. 3. Twenty time lives are believed to have been lost In an avalanche which buried the Spokane express on the Great North ern near here. The train, with fi.ly one passengers, has been stalled In the snow neyr tho su, limit of the Cas cade Mountains for a week. The private car of Mr. O'Neill, sup erintendent of the division, was at tached to tin1 train nnd was complete ly burled. Mr. iVNelll escaped In jury, as did the greater part of the train crew. Two passengers who escaped tho snowsl'de walked ten miles through the drifts nnd driving snow and sum moned help. Relief trains have been sent out from here, but are unable to get within eight miles of the scene of disaster. Wires are down and ex act information is Impossible to ob tain. It is reported that a work train, fix locomotives and a rotary snow plow which were working to relieve the stalled train, as well as a water tank at Wellington, were also burled. Among the passengers are many women and children. The express was standing nbout two miles west of the western entrance to the Cascade Tun nel when the snowslide occurred. Later advices state that a Great Northern transcontinental mall and express train carrying no passengers and four electric motors used to pull the trains through the Cascade tunnel were aleo swept from the tracks and carried a hundred feet by the avalan che. Mail nnd express trains had been stalled for several days. It is thought that no one was on hoard. According to reports, there nre eighteen feet of snow at the east end of the Cascade tunnel nnd fifteen feet nt the west end. General J. N. Gurber and W. B. Scott, general superintendent of the Great Northern, arc stalled by snow at Essex, Mont. Everett, Wash., Mar. 3. Twenty bodies have been recovered, twenty five persons are missing, and fifteen or twenty nre Injured In the avalanche at Wellington. The avalanche swept down the mountainside Just before sunrise. It was a half mile long. The cars and locomotives were buried deep and it was six hours before rescuers could reach them. TAFT MEASURES TO BE PASSED. President and the Congress Leaders Arrange It. Washington, Mar. 3. A definite ngreenient has been reached between President Taft and the responsible leaders in Congress as a result of which, unless the Insurgents develop unexpected strength, the Administra tion bills will have the right of way nnd will be passed. This agreement was reached at a White House conference in which President Taft, Senator Aldrich, Speaker Cannon and Senator Crane of Massachusetts took part. It was de cided that every effort should be made first to pass the postal savings bank bill in the Senate without delay; sec ond, that the House should put through tho Government appropriation bills before turning its attention to the President's measures. TAFT URGING INCOME TAX. Appeals to Ohio Legislators Through Arthur I. Vorys. Washington, Mar. 3. President Taft intends to use his personal influ ence to secure the adoption by the state legislatures of the income tax amendment to the constitution. It was made known to White House vis itors to-night that the President has written to Arthur I. Vorys, of Ohio, former campaign manager for Mr. Taft in that state, urging the adoption by the Ohio Legislature of the income tax amendment. The President, It was said, hesitat ed about writing to the legislators themselves, but decided that he would communicate with them through Mr. Vorys. WOMAN SUFFRAGISTS LOSE. Maryland Legislature Refuses to Grant Them Votes In Baltimore. Annapolis, Md., Mar. 3. The bill permitting women to vote at municl pal elections In Baltimore, was killed for this session of tho Legislature at least, when the House, by a vote ol 6V to 21, -decided to postpone Indefi nitely further consideration of the measure. Cuthrie, Oklu., Mar. 3,-The move mei.t for a laobr party in the next state election is strong among labor leaders and Farmers' Union inert. A conference was held here with that end in view, attended by G. S. Zelgler ami J. L. Langston, president and sec relury respectively of the State Fed eration of Labor, and numerous rep resentatives of the Farmers" L'uion BIG MEAT PACKERS INDIGTEOJJEW JERSEY 6ix Corporations and Their Twenty. One Individual Heads Accuied of Conspiracy. Jersey City. N. j., :.I;ir lieavlest blow yet ntn,k the t,.,. Trust, by way of punishment for rM' trarlly raising the price of ,.,,.,, . . poultry, came in Jersey City whrn'ti,,. Grand Jury of Hudson County nc, a blanket Indictment charging a crlini. nal conspiracy in restraint or trad,. Six corporations, Including n,0 xa. tlonal Pncklng Company, nit;,., "th' ltoef Trust, nnd its twenty one ,iro(.. tors as Individuals, were In, It, t,.,i the charge of unlawfully conspiring "with force nnd arms" to Increase tlm prices of meats nnd poultry. The corporations accused arc th National Packing Company, Morris it Co., Swift & Co., Armour & (., n,,, Hammond Packing Company, ami G. H. Hammond Company. The n. dlvldunls nre J. Ogden Armour, a Watson Armour, Arthur Meeker ward Tllden, L. A. Carton, Thomas K. Wilson. Thomas J. Connors, p. Fowler, Charles H. Swift, L. If. u,,y. man, James K. Bathgate," Jr., Genrjto H. Edwnrds, F. V. Cooper, 1). F. Hart well, Ira N. Morris, Henry P. Darling ton. Lemuel H. Patterson, and A. A Fuller. Their Indictment expressed In tho terms of tho old lCngll.sh common law, which are still employed in New Jer sey, Is probably the most picturesque and pungent philippic ever Issued from an American court. It places the culprits on the grill of the lnw, turns them over and lam basts them for the sins of two years back In a way that leaves no kind of denunciation untried. ' That Pierre P. Garven, the County Prosecutor, means to follow words with deeds was demonstrated within Just one minute after the true hill was delivered when a deputy sheriff wns sent with a capias after Lemuel O. I'atterson. of Chicago, one of the directors, who had been seen in the corridors of the Court House. Mr. Patterson had caught Just one glimpse of the bulky document and then 6ought the friendly tube beneath the river. Warrants for the arrest of all per sons concerned, wherever they may be. nre expected. The conviction of the persons con. rerned would carry with In the pos sibility of three years In prison. Mr. Garven, known to Northern New Jersey as "the trust buster of Bayonne," was the innn who brought the Standard Oil Trurt to terms and added millions to Its taxes, and he has brought to book several of the railroad companies and a political machine. WORST BLIZZARD IN YEARS. Ninety-three Inches of Snow in New York by Measuring this Season. Albany, N. Y.. Feb. 28. The worst blibzard cf years prevailed along the line of tjje Rome, Watertown and Ogdensburg division of the New York Central last night, a fifty-six mile galo piling the snow In huge drifts, In many places twelve feet deep. Snow ploughs are in use on all rail roads nnd trains generally are run ning from one to three hours late. At Oswego the schools were closed and business was partly suspended. Prof. W. G. Miller, head of the geo logical department of Hamilton Col lege, who has recorded the fall of snow thus far this season, states that from actual measurements the fall has been 93 inches. This is phenomenal for Central New York. BANK PRESIDENT ARRESTED. Says Irregularlt es Are the Result of Absconding Nephew's Shortage. Kansas City, Feb. 28. Alleged ir regularities of nearly $100,000 lu the books of the Bank of Holyrood, at Holyrood, Kan., resulted in the arrest here of Byron E. Church, for twenty years the bank's president. Church came to Kansas City three days ago and was found at the Orient Hotel. Ray Church, 26 years old, a son of the ex-bank president, was arrested with him, but was released. Maxwell Church, another son, who served as caahler of the bank. Is wanted. NEW YORK MARKETS. Wholesale Prices of Farm Products Quoted for the Week. MILK Per quart, 4c. BUTTER Western extra. 31 32c; CHEESE State. Full cream, special, 17 18c. EGGS State. Fair to choice, 29 33c; do, western firsts, 31 34c APPLES Baldwin, per bbl., 12.7a 4.25. DRESSED POULTRY Chickens, per lb., 1624c; Cocks, per lb., Sauabs. Der dozen. $2.0005.75. HAY Prime, per 100 lbs.. $1.13. STRAW Long Rye, per 100 lbs., SO 85c. POTATOES State, per bag, $1.30 1.40. ONIONS White, per crate, 35o. 1 AA FLOUR Winter patents. $5.6006.10, Spring patents, $5.6O0Ca. WHEAT No. 2, red, $1.30; No. h Northern Duluth, $1.28. CORN No. 2, 70 lc. OATS Natural white. 520. "5c.; Clipped white, 63 Vt 056 VtC. BEEVES City l)rsed, 801O,ic. Por Iftll lha S4 Ml(Jf6.oO. CALVES City Dressed, 11016V.-C. LA Mils Per 100 lbs., $S.4U(jj u.eu. HOGS-LIve, per 100 lbs., $965 y.so; country uresseu, pur i; 13c. .
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers