ICEBERG TORE TITANIC'S SIDE Sank as Band Played "Nearer. My God. to Thee/' Carrying to the Bottom of the Atlantic 1595 Souls 745 SURVIVORS ENTER PORT New York. —After 4 days of agoni zing suspense the t'arpathia arrived at this port bearing all that remains mor tal of the thousands of souls who sail ed upon the Titanic. Still dazed and half stunned from the shock of that appalling night, amid all their grief the survivors in senten ces interrupted by sobs and ejacula- : ; -w, - ■ ■ , . ' r; . ■ ■ . ■ ... m. •. , ._ , ■ ■ "■ •■, ><• ■ ■ 4 . - THE LOST TITANIC. lions told of brief momenta of their experience thai had to be ;>ieced to gether to make a coherent narrative. Titanic Was Running at Full Speed. The ocean was calm as a mill-pond •when the Titanic crushed into the ice berg. It was a quarter of an hour be lore midnight. Most of the passengers •were in their cabins. Then came the shock of collision — not so violent a crash as had been de picted, for there were many who were not even awakened by it —but enough to disquiet all who felt it. There was a general and orderly exodus to the decks. Sailors were scurrying hither and thither crying: "NOTHING TO BE AFRAID OF! THERE'S NO DANGER!" Some of the passengers even return ed to their rooms and prepared to re tire. But gradually the cessation of the engines' vibration caused uneasi ness and (he groups on (he decks grew greater and greater. Still the sailors announced that there was nothing to be feared. Then, with perceptible suddenness, the ph'p began to list. "All passengers on deck with life belts," was shouted. Tlion lor the first time the gravity of the situation dawn «d upon the passengers. The sailors, working silently and without excitement, yet fast as their bands could move, removed the tar paulins from the lifeboats and -terse ly, without excitement —came the or der, repeated upon every side: "Women and children in the life boats! " The sailors helped the nearest wo men and children into the boats. And —it was the beginning of excitement —other sailors began to lower the boats. Men Laughed as Boats Filled. Thus far the men, standing idly by, failing entirely to grasp the signifi cance of the moment, had helped the Bailors. Many of the passengers re port that the men were laughing. "We'll be safer here on Ihe ship than in that cockleshell!" one man cried to his wife as she was helped over the rail. But the Titanic settled deeper in the ocean and it was difficult for the men to remain on their feet. Then it was that the appalling nature of it dawned upon these nien. And then, also it was, that the officers of the ship drew their revolvers. "Stand back!" they cried. "Only women and children go into the boats." Some of the men leaned against the rail and looked down over the tower ing sides of the ship. Others slowly paced the deck as if they were wait ing. Three Steerage Men Shot. The ship sank lower and lower. Three revolver shots were heard. Three passengers in the steerage had attempted to force their way past the sailors and had been ruthlessly shot down. By this time the passengers on the deck who remained in possession of their faculties observed the huge masses of ice which the Titanic had "DEGENERATE LUXURIES." Titanic's Very Size Denegerate, Says Stanley Bowdle. Columbus, Ohio. Stanley Bowdie, marine engineer, a member of the Con stitutional Convention, characterizes ) lie loss or 1,500 iiv«-g on tile steam ship Titanic as a sacrifice to degen erate luxury. Mr. Bowdle advocates international legislation 10 comp '1 all ocean ships to slow down lo half speed when in the ice belt, iu I'og. or uu dork aightß. rent from the berg with which It had collided. Of the scene in the bow, where over a hundred and fifty feet of the ship's length had been crushed in, there were no witnesses until an hour afterward, when the lifeboats were all in the water. Heroism Asserts Itself. The ship bad now listed to a terrible angle. Men, in the throes of panic, attempted to reach the boats and were pushed back. And in that moment the heroism of hundreds asserted it self. it.was the passengers who push ed back these panic-stricken few and not the sailors. Of the individual deeds of heroism only a few have as yet been told. But those few are the fore-runners of thousands. Soon most of the boats had been lowered and still a full realizing sense of the extent of the disaster had not dawned upon all that mass of men. But, finally, all the boats had been lowered. Then, the sailors, seeing wo men standing and running about, cried: "All women to the lower deck!" There began a rush to the lower deck, and there it was that the nearest semblance to a panic began. Some of he women were seized by sailors and deliberately thrown over the rail into \ the boats. «*ll) The weaker men, by scores, began ;o jump overboard. The lifeboats be san to draw away from the ship. As they drew away those who were floating among the cakes of ice in the sea cried aloud piteously for help. Those who could seized the sides of the lifeboats. In many cases they were pulled aboard. One Lifeboat Capsizes. In many cases the sailors who man ned the boats rowed deliberately on, heedless of all supplications, for their boats were full. One boat was observ ed to overturn. What capsized it is not yet known—probably a number of men in the sea struggling to board her. Several more pistol shots were heard on board the ship. And then, suddenly, above the murmur of the sea and the crunching of the ice floes there rose a steadily increasing cry from the doomed ship—a cry in which hundreds upou hundreds of voices mingled. Among the innumerable deeds of heroism of that, hour there was one attested by many witnesses. The sail ors attempted to pull Mrs. lsador Straus from her husband's side, but she clung to his arm, smiling. She had decided to remain with him She sank with him. Women Row Lifeboat. In the hurry of embarking, one of the lifeboats had been lowered without a single sailor in it. Three men had been picked up by this boat, but the women were rowing. And the women between the thwarts were screaming to their loved ones in agony. Then, suddenly, above all the wail ing of that desolate scene there arose the strains of the ship's orchestra playing "Nearer, My tlod, to Thee!" And for the first time those in the lifeboats realized that those who were left behind knew that they were doom ed. A few voices rose in accompani ment to the melody. The chorus swell ed louder and louder. The lights sunk lower and lower. The lifeboats were pulling from the scene as fast as they could. But while they were still within sight of the ship the lights began togo out with start ling swiftness. The screams and shouts of those on board still resounded through the air. The last light went out and the music ceased. The peerless Titanic had sunk be neath the waves. HYSTERICAL SCENES WHEN FRIENDS MEET SURVIVORS Slowly the Carpathia, ambulance ship of the ocean, made her way up the bay in the gloom of the evening, through lanes of silent vessels, and warped into her dock at Pier 54, North River. From her descended the saved of the Titanic, all that remained of CAPITAL IS IN GRIEF. Loss of Titanic Causes Postponement of Many Functions. Washington.—Because of the Titan ic disaster social life is practically sus pended in Washington society, for many leaders numbered close friends among thos<j who were drowned. The sadness at the White House has changed what was intended for a week of pleasure for young friends of Miss Taft and Robert Taft, now there, into one of iiuiet. 362 souls, a semi-hysterical band numbering 745. All the figures that had drifted in through the air were wrong, and when the truth came it was merely to increase the terrible roll to 1595. The scenes that were enacted on the Cur.ard Pier, and outside as the survivors were being hurried away to homes and hotels, will live a lifetime in the memory of those who wit nessed them. Men in hysterics, women fainting, and children almost crushed in the arms of those welcoming them, were the rule, not the exception. Men fell down to kiss the knees of their re turning womenfolk. Women shriek ed, wept, dashed in madness from one group of friends to another, and final ly collapsed in the arms of those who had come to meet them. The Scenes Repeated. Outside, as they were led or carried to waiting automobiles, the same scenes were repeated. The sight of a street seemed to fill some of the re turned ones with awe, to others it was a cause for emotional joy that could only find relief in extravagant ecstasy. The precautious taken for the pro tection of the survivors proved en tirely adequate, and, fortunately, all the ambulances and relief corps that had been gathered at the pier were not necessary. The number of badly injured on the Carpalhia was not nearly as large as had been imagined, and cases re quiring hospital relief were merciful ly few. It was a joyous occasion for many— a terrible day for some. To the last there had been hope in many breasts that their loved ones would be aboard and at the last those hopes were blasted with the icy breath of the news the living brought. How the Titanic sank, what hap pened when she sank, was told in as many different ways as there were people to tell it. Hut they agreed on one thing—that Capt. Smith and his officers showed the greatest bravery throughout the terrible ordeal, and that, except in isolated cases the men aboard, from tlie saloon to the steer age, showed a heroism worthy of the sea. When the Ship Went Down. Men were playing cards in the smoking room when the great ship struck the iceberg whose propinquity was well known to all aboard, for a bulletin of it had been posted in the saloon, and when the ship went down, most accounts agree, the band was playing "Nearer, My God, to Thee," while the lifeboats were pulling away. But it was dillicult to get a connect ed story from any survivor. Mrs. John Jacob Astor, outwardly none the worse for her awful experi ence. was among the first to be whisk ed away to her home, ller stepson, Vincent Astor, and Craig Biddle had come to meet her and the greeting be tween them was affecting. She went direct to tlie home of her father, Wil liam H. Force, but stayed there only a few moments THRILLING ACCOUNTS OF HEROISM AND SACRIFICE BY TITANIC SURVIVORS. Tales of horror were told by the survivors of the Titanic wreck when they landed from the steamship Car pat hia. Men and women related in detail how the bis? ship had crushed agair«t the iceberg, but how the jar was so slight that no one was excited until the ship's officers and crew began low ering the lifeboats and rafts and or dering passengers into them. The Titanic's boilers exploded when water rushed in upon them, and it was the opinion of some of the survivors Magnificent Grand Staircase in the Main Salon of the 111-Fated Titanic. that many who had been left on the sinking Titanic were killed by the ex plosions and not drowned. Most graphic was the story told by Mrs. Paul Schabert, of Derby, Conn. After telling of how Mr. and Mrs. lsa dor Straus perished together, because Mrs. Straus would not leave her hus band, Mrs. Schabert said "It was a terrible experience, but worth going through. I was awaken- ISMAY'S ESCAPE A SCANDAL. Clubmen Wonder Whether He Was Forced Into Boat by Employes. London. —The only comment made by the London papers on tiie escape of J. Bruce Ismay, appears in the Daily Herald, the new labor paper. One of the chief subjects ot discus sion in the hotels and clubs is Mr. ls may's escape, there being much won der as to whether he was forced into a boat with the women and children by his employes. Ed by the shock of the collision, and went on deck. There svas no great ex citement, and persons were coming out of their rooms and asking what had happened. Wouldn't Leave Brother. "Suddenly from tiie bridge or from some ot' the officers came the cry, 'Ladies first.' This was the first inn ling that we had that the ship was in danger. We went to the state rooms and dressed. Then came the horrifying order that women must leave their husbands and brothers and that no man was togo in the lifeboats. "I refused to leave my brother, and remained on deck until the next to the last boat was leaving. They looked around and saw that I was the only woman, i tc.ld them that 1 would not go without my brother and then they took him also. Thus I saved my bro ther. "We left the ship about twenty-five minutes before it sank. She sank at about 1:50 o'clock Monday morning. At C o'clock the same morning the Carpp.thia putin an appearance and wj we-e picked up. We were proba bly one mile away from the ship when she went down, and the steward that had given me the first warning that the ship might sink went down with all the others. Lights Burning, Band Playing. "As we left the ship it was the most remarkable and brilliant sight I had ever witnessed on the water. All the lights were burning and the band was playing as if at a concert." Mrs. Schabert was asked in regard to a rumor that Major Butt, military aide to President Taft, had shot eight men to keep them from upsetting life boats by crowding into them. Mrs. Schabert answered that she was unable to either confirm or deny this. She said she had seen no such thing, but that the confusion was such she might not have seen it, even if it had happened. Col. Astor Died a Brave Man. Dramatic stories of the death of Colonel Astor were told on the pier by survivors. "Mrs. Astor was sent away in the tenth boat," said John Kuiile, of Ne braska. "Just as she was about to be placed within the boat, Colonel Astor embraced her. Helped to Force Wife Into Boat. "Astor tiien freed himself from his wife's embrace and, after helping to force her into the boat, turned away and stood upon the deck." Colonel Archibald Gracie, U. S. A., declared Colonel Astor's conduct was deserving of the highest praise Col onel Astor, said Gracie, devoted all his energies to saving his young bride, who was in delicate health. "Colonel Astor helped us in our ef forts to get her in the boat," said Colonel (Iracie. "I lifted her into the boat. Colonel Astor then inquired the number of the boat which was being lowered and turned to the work of clearing the other boats and in reas suring the frightened and nervous women." Col. Astor Joined Mr. and Mrs. Straus. "John Jacob Astor escorted his wile to one of the lifeboats, kissed her quietly and then went up to deck B and joined Mr and Mrs. lsador Straus," said Robert \\. Daniel, of Philadelphia "1 was almost alongside of them, but not close enough to dis tinguish anything they said to eacii other. When the water reached deck B, 1 jumped into the sea Neither Colonel Astor nor Mr. and Mrs. St 'aus made any effort to save themselves. They seemed to realize that 'twas hopeless. I am convinced that Col onel Astor could have saved himself had he jumped into the water. "None of us were worried aft°r the crash. Many of the passengers, my- self included, went to bed. 1 did not rise from my bed until I h<arJ the sound of pistol .shots. Then i pulled on a bathrobe and went out on i!»ck. Some of the officers nearest me were shooting into the air- for the purpose, 1 suppose, of awakening ail the pas sengers who had retired. 1 did not once catch sight of the which had ripped our portside from stern to stern." BLAMES BRITISH OFFICIALS. Inadequacy of Lifeboats on Titanic Stupid and Criminal. Landon Allan H. Burgoyne, M. P., editor of the Naval Annual, says; Amid a horde ol horrors, aftendent on the Titanic disaster, one vital, central fact emerges. This fact is nothing less than the woeful inadequacy of lifeboat accommodations, due to the ridiculously antiquated regulations laid down by Hie British Board cj Trade. ROOSEVELT GETS TWO STATES Ex-President Wins in Nebraska and Oregon Primaries. CLARK HAS BRYAN'S STATE Results in Many States —Clark the Democratic Choice in Nebraska and Wilson in Oregon—La Follette's Good Showing in Oregon. Washington. Theodore Iloosevelt ' won a sweeping victory in West Vir ginia, according to information receiv ed at the Roosevelt, headquarters. In twenty-four counties in which primar ies were held Col. Koosevelt, accord ing to their count, got 273 delegates, against 75 for Mr. Taft, to the State Convention. According to a telegram from Gov. Glasscock, this insures Col. Roose velt's control of the convention, which will name six delegates at large to the National Convention. The Roosevelt victories in Nebraska and Oregon brought out the following statement from Senator Dixon, his campaign manager: "These victories clinch Roosevelt's nomination by the Republican Nation al Convention at Chicago. Six great Republican States have now expressed themselves by Presidential preference primary and every one of them has gone overwhelmingly against Mr. Taft. These six Republican States cast an aggregate of 9S votes in the Electoral College. Without them no Republican candidate can hope to be elected." Omaha, Neb. —-Col. Roosevelt car ried Nebraska by a big majority in the Presidential preference primary and it is believed that Champ Clark was the Democratic choice. Returns received show: Republicans—Roosevelt, 21,151; La Follette, 8,392; Taft. 8,039. Democrats ("lark, 8,949; Harmon, 6.451; Wilson, 6,435. Victor Rosewater, acting Chairman of the National Republican Committee, said he believed Uoosevelt had polled two to two and a half times the votes of either La Follette or Taft. Harmon supporters abandoned hope that he might carry the State. Shallenberger appears to be the Democratic nominee for United States Senator. Norris and Brown ran a close race for the Republican nomina tion. Portland, Ore. —Theodore Roosevelt is the preference of the Republican Party in Oregon, and Woodrow Wilson is the Democratic, preference. Gen. Selling of Portland is the Republican nominee for the Senatorial candidacy. Senator Robert M. La Follette car ried Multnomah County where one fourth of the population of the State is located. President Taft carried but ten of the State's thirty-four counties. It was in the "cow counties" that Roosevelt made his strongest ruu, with I.a Follette second. Through the thickly populated Willamette Valley district Roosevelt also led. STANDING OF CANDIDATES. Taft Claims 388. Roosevelt 39, Clark 146 and Wilson 113. Washington.—The standing of the Presidential candidates according to the latest information received at the respective headquarters was as fol lows: REPUBLICANS. Delegates in convention 1,076 Necessary to choice 540 Claimed for Taft 388 Instructed for Taft 372 Claimed for Roosevelt 239 Instructed for Roosevelt 206 Instructed for La Follette 36 Instructed for Cummins 6 DEMOCRATS. Delegates in convention 1.092 Necessary to choice 728 Instructed for Clark 146 Instructed for Wilson 118 Instructed for Marshall 30 Instructed for Burke 10 Instructed for Underwood 24 FLEE FROM FLOODS. Fifty Towns and Villages Suffer from Swollen Mississippi. New Orleans.—News from the flood ed area of the Mississippi Valley in Arkansas. Mississippi and Louisiana continued to be increasingly grave. Thousands of those who were compell ed to flee to higher places when the yellow flood invaded their homes have been cared for, but there are still many more who are in imperative need of aid. It is estimated that fifty towns and villages have so far felt the effects of the flood. Some places are from un der two to fifteen feet of water, with little prospect of an early recession. Reports as to the loss of life differ. The known dead totals ten. 40 DEAD IN TORNADO. Great Storm Sweeps Destructively Over the Middle West. Chicago. Forty lives were lost and more than a hundred persons were in jured, many of them fatally, ;:i a tor nado which swept over the Middle West. Illinois and Indiana were the greatest sufferers, but other States were badl> hit. Hundreds of wires are down. At least twenty of tite Injured will die. Damage done probably will amount to many thousands of dollars. OLD AND NEW WORLD BRIEFS FOR THE BUSY Nine persons were robbed of money or valuables, or both, by three masked hold-up men who went through a sleeper on the westbound Golden State Limited at Sheffield, 111. In a speech at Omaha, Col. Roose velt charged that President Tat't was "helplessly acquiescing' in the dirty work oi his managers, who were rely ing on the bosses or success in win ning renomination. The Mexican Minister of Foreign Affairs notified Assistant Secretary of State Wilson that the Mexican Gov ernment refuses to recognize the right ot the American Government to in struct it on its duties in the obser vance o: international law. General Carrasco has been relieved ot his Spanish command, owing to the failure of the recent actions in the Kin country in Morocco. J. P. Alexander, a former member of the Parliament from Manchester, England, dropped dead at Boissevain! Man., when told of the Titanic disas ter. The baseball season opened with a roar that could be heard from coast to coast. The sport appears to have a stronger and firmer hold than ever, "ltd its popularity is little short ot amazing. the markets. (New York Wholesale Prices.) !.uarriT'7he W 2 h "• •luart can. delivered' in "sYw Yot'k. Butter. Creamery specials . Kxtras C, V ■ • Firsts ] wr3o'.j Seconds ' - 30 Thirds . 5- State, dairy, finest W, t.ood to prime - i-uiinnon to fair ] Eggs. St \vr.'iiC a -f an '' hennerv u, . fancy, new laid .. ' ivi.'iti a 'f ? ml near, »y .selected" ~ V, ~Ue' f ;i "' to B ood 211, ' I ,nlx ed c010r5..2» ~ r«"\ it hennery. r,,ne.v .... si'itlj' ' Kx'tra"" 1 Ralhf,rc ' 1 ' w ''i te ....21 "4 22 puck Duck eggs, l<y.. and Tenn'" !! ITs ' it far souther,, 20 (ii,2l I'iKk euRM, western rt ,si <ioose eggs ~ Live Poultry. I* «»wls. via ox press 15'.4/ rowls, via freight per 11» ~4/.!5i." llt Misters, per lb tfrioC I urke.vs, mixed hens and toms, per lb i- Ducks, per lb tints Geese, per lt> Ui,. Yd 10 uuinea, per pair I lgeons, per pair Vegetables. Asparagus. dozen bunches .... I.oof/4.00 Artichokes, per drum 5 ootfrt; 00 Hrussels, sprouts, per quart.... 2.0Q4> Heans. Florida, per basket 754/1.5 a Beets, S. C., fancy, per 100 beh5.4.00(&5.00 Beets, old, per barrel 1 2.">6/ 1 7". Bermuda, per crate 7547 1 50 N. <».. per barrel l.oofrgjjo < arrots— S. per 100 bunches 2.004/3.00 New Orleans, per luo bunches.2.oo(fi;,{.oo per barrel <»r bag 1 .fio4/ 2.5 a Cucumbers, Fla., per basket. .2.«•) < abbages— S. C., new. per irate 12.501v3.RQ old red, per ton 25.00't/30 o«> Ked, per bbl 1.50 00 Old Danish seed, per ton ..50.0Q4rtio.nQ old Danish, per bbl .'1.004x3."0 Fla., new, per crate •.&«!> Fla.. new. per basket OQ Fla.. new, red, per crate ....2 00 <<?7o I''la., new, red, per basket ....! • "i 5 Chicory, per barrel 1.00^3.50 .Per basket .'S.Oorf/ 4 Kggplants. Fla.. per box or b5kt.2.004/3.5<» Kscarol. X. 0., p»»r barrel 1.004/ 3.25 S. C., per basket 3.004/ 3 Horseradish, per 100 lbs 3.oo<fr 4.50 Kale, per barrel 7-, Kohlrabi, X. 0., per 10 behs. .. . 3.004/ 4.0»> Lettuce, per basket 754/2.0 a Leeks. X. 0., per 100 bundles .3.0a4/5aM Lima beans, Ma., per basket ..2.004/3 na onions— Bermuda per crate 3,254?> Texas per crate 3.■)•)<#/■ 3 is Domestic, old. crate i r bug!! LsQ{f- -|'Eo okra. per carrier 1 •»«)•j.-•> oyster plant, per 100 bunches . .3.004? s.'»m IV Florida, per basket 2.004/t.oo Parley, X. 0., plain per barrel. 2 r>o4r.Vi#o X. o , curly, per bbl 2.oo'fj) Peppers, bbls., boxes or f, arr'er-» l.*>o£j;i 00 Parsnips, per bbl 2!504/3.0a Uomaine. per basket 1 i;t)4i I..">•* Per barrel 2.504/ 3.5 a Per box 1.001 M.50 K'dishes, per basket 754/ laO Rhubarb. 100 bunches 2.00tf?2.50 Scald .ns, pe • r«'- • Shallots, per barrel 3.004/ \ '••• Spinacii. Va., per basKt t 75', 1 r<|lU y\ Fla.. new white, per box 2.00f//2.50 Turnips. Katabnga, per bb1.... I.oos/1 »;o Old. white, per barrel LOO 4/1.'.0 Tomatoes. Fla . per carrier. ... 1(004/.;.2"» Watercress, per 100 bchs 2.004/ vr.a Hothouse. P»eet tops, per box 7"»4» * 00 Cucumbers, Xo. 1, per lozen .. 1.00 ,r ;.i' . Xo 2, per box 4.00 v.-." fulls, per box 2.504/3.mm Lettuce, per strap I.oo^/1.75 Musbrooins. 4-lb. basket 754/1.25 Buttons, t-ib. basket 40(8 .60 Mmt. per <in/..-ri bunches 50 lladishes, per 100 bunches 1.504/2 25 Rhubarb, per 100 bunches 3.00 i Rhubarb, per dozen bunches .. .s'»;, 7:, Tomatoes, per lb 10f{/ : .25 Potatoes. P.ermuda, new, Xo. 1, per bbl . . 7.004/7 ;,o Bermuda, new. Xo. 2. per bbl . .G.004/ti .'o Florida, new, Xo. 1, per bbl ....(».504/7.50 Florida, new. No. 2. per bbl ....5.004/ti.oo Long Island, per bag 4.254Y4.75 State per 180 lbs 4.004/ 4.25 State, per bag 4 O0(T/)4.15 Maine, per 180 lbs 4.004/ 4.50 Maine, per bag ..4.004/M J.*, European, No. 1, per L68.-lb JOuropean. undergrades. per ItiS lb. bag 1.504/2 25 Sweets. Jersey. Xo. I. per bskt. 1.254/ 2.0n Sweets, southern, per bbl 2 504/ ; 00 Yams, southern, per bbl 2.005/2.50 Live Stock. BEEVKS.—Steers at per 1 «»o lbs . bulls at s4s; 6.90, cows at $2,254/ 5 75. Dressed beef at 104/ CALVKS.—('ommon ti» choice veals, -t $5,504/ 5.75 per 100 lbs. Culls at $54/'5.25. at $4,504/ 5. City dresse<i veals at 104/ I4c. Country dressed at Ma I0»»c. Slli\KP AXD LA.MHS.— Good to prime unshorn sheep at $5.504/ti per U»o lbs , fairly god clipped do, at $4.50, poor to fair unshorn lambs at sti.so4/8.25. com mon to incflium dipped do. at $5.50®ti.50. Dressed mutton steady at 104/12 c. Per lb., dressed lambs at 12'.i 14c., hog dressed at 15c. UOOS.—Live hogs sold at $N4z V25 per 100 lbs., good pigs at $7.50; country divss i ed hogs easier at 74/ N loc per lb MAY AXD ST 15AW ally, large bales, timothy, prime, 1 00 lbs., $1.12 1 .■_»'•/ 1.1 Xo. 3 to No. 1. $1.2041'140; shipping. $1.10; clover, mixed, light. $1,254/ 1 30. heavy, $1,104/ 1.25 ; pure. $1.054/J.20. Slr.tw, long rve, 554/ 05( ; at. ti;»'</ «ot-. Spot Markets at a Glance. Wheat. No. 2 red. elev 1.12 «»ats standard '• t Flour, spring patent, bbl 5 C. Corn, steamer, yellow nom_ Lard, prime. 100 lbs 10 «»5 Tallow, city, hhds .0»»%c I *ork, mess, bbl lfj Cottonseed oil. ll> ioc Coffee, Rio No lh 14 I |C Tea. Formosa, lb _ He Sugar, tine gran., lb 5 _>< Sugar, raw. lb 4.of>c Butter, creamery 31 Cheese, specials ' * Kggs, tlrsts 2'J l^ Cotton 4.D- : 4 j Tobacco — Havana. 15. D. 55 Conn, wrapper M
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers