HIBBEN INAUGURATED AS THE PRESIDENT OF PRINCETON UNIVERSITY President Talt, Chief Justice White and Representatives from the World's Institutions ol Learning Assist at Impressive Installation. Princeton, N. J. —Standing on the i steps beneath the hjied walls of Nas- I san Hall, with the President of the ! United States upon his right and on his left the Chief Justice of the United States, John Grier Hibben took the oath of otlice and received ilie yellow- ' PRESIDENT HIBBEN. Ed charter and keys that are symbols of that the Presidency of Princeton University. In a great circle about the steps ! were thousands of guests who had I journeyed from every quarter of the land to share in the celebration of the | inauguration. To quote the salutation of Mr. Tal't, stretched as far as one Inaugural procession marching across the campus—President Taft, Chief Justice White and President ' Hibben. could see across the sunlit green of the i campus, were "men of Princeton, rep- • resentatives of all the learning of the j United States, ladies and gentlemen." ' In the company were eighty-two Presi- ' dents of colleges and universities. I As Dr. Hibbeu swore to perform all the duties of his new office to the best ! of his ability, there lay upon the lec- ! turn beneath his hand the parchment j on which was inscribed the charter | granted in the days of George 11. of i England He stood ;;t the threshold ] of Old North, the dormitory of earlier I days, the building in which George Washington received the acknowledg ments by the Continental Congress of , his service in establishing the free- | doin of the United States, the bi.ilding which, for a part of the year 175.!, was i the Capitol of the young Republic, the building in which Jefferson, Madison | and Hamilton sat in counsel. Rich as . Princeton herself in the associations of the past was the inauguration of j the man who succeeds to the left I vacant by Woodrow Wilson. Conservatism the Dominant .Note. About the inauguration of President Hibben the forces of conservatism played—the forces of the conservative in education and of the conservative in politics. The day, serene and unin terrupted, wiis the day of the conser- j vative in Princeton, and the conserva tive in the affairs of the Nation. Throughout all the ceremonies and functions of the day, radicalism did not show its head. Chief Justice White, who with Presi dent Taft received the degree of LL D„ spoke as one greatly stirred. His few wordH in acceptance of the degree constituted the first public speech he has made siuce his elevation to the Chief Justiceship of the Supreme Court of the Uuited States. | Taft's Praise for the Clevelands. There was no one at the inaugura- | ' tion toward whom more eyes turned with greater interest than Mrs. Cleve- | land. Gowned in black, with a band of white in her hat, she seemed in per- \ feet health, and she had her part to piay in the celebration. At Westland, j she was hostess to Justice White. She j : attended the inauguration, and she sat ! in the gallery of the gymnasium dur- | ing the luncheon which followed. The name of Grover Cleveland was tlie first name to stir the assembly to j i applause. It was mentioned many | ' times by many speakers. President | : Taft paid his tribute to the memory of Grover Cleveland, and he paid his j tribute to Mrs. Cleveland. In speaking of his pleasure in being at Princeton and at being able, since j the conferring of the degree, to call ! himself a Princeton man, Chief Jus tice White said: "It rests, and it is founded, upon personal relation with President, who. I however people may have differed with him in public opinion, yielded to 110 man that ever tilled that great of ' fice in high purpose, in great devotion to duty, in the simplicity of American life, and the enduring and everlasting I purpose to maintain undiminished all I the rights and liberties of the Ameri can people. I mean Mr. Cleveland." I It was with the arrival of President Taft's car at dawn that the day began, tie breakfasted at Prospect, the Presi dential mansion., with President Had ley of Yale and Mrs. Hadley, Presi dent I,owel J of Harvard and Mrs. Low ell, and with other guests of the Hib ben household. Chief Justice White J ; had breakfast at the Cleveland home. There was color everywhere, these- I vere black of many robes of much | learning relieved and brightened with every variety of academic insignia. | The campus was rich with the greens ! and purples and yellows of sliolastic distinction wth here and there the ■ flaming gowns of Oxford men. | The band was playing with all its j might as the long procession wound [ its way around the campus toward the j i . gathering place in front of old Nassau. |' ' Hanked around the cannon were ' i -ndergraduates, the seniors with their I mortar boards waving in the air and i i all of them roaring forth the affection- ! ! ate strains of "Hibben, Jack Hibbeu," : j as the procession passed by. j This took form from various points jof formation. In the tlrst division ! ( marched Dr. Hibben, John A. Stewart, ' the senior Trustee, who served as ; President pro tem iu the interval be- ( j lore Dr. Ilibben's appointment; Presi dent Patton of Princeton Theological j Seminary, and Dr. Wilson's predeces- j sor in ollice; Dr. Henry van Dyke, i I Chairman M. Taylor Pyne of the lnau \ guration Committee, Dean West of the Graduate School; Major Rhodes, ! President Taft, Justice White, Justice | Mahlon Pitney, Edwin Stevens Lines, i Bishop of Newark, Charles D. llilles ■ and Secretary McAlpin of the univer- J | sity. The second division was made ; up of the Trustees of the university. | The third division was made up of the delegates to the inauguration. ; They were 171 in all, representing 134 colleges, eight learned societies and ! i ten professional schools. The Presi- | | dents of colleges and universities j j alone numbered eighty-two. The delegates from universities, col- i leges, antl learned societies marched in the order of the seniority of the : clrirters under which their institutions confer degrees. The fourth division was made up of j special guests of Princeton. They were j Chief Justice Gummere of New Jersey, | Justice Francis J. Swayze, Prof. Jo- ! soph D. Bryant, Beilevue Hospital < Medical College; Calvin N Kendall, Commissioner of Education for New j Jersey; Kendric C. Babcock, specialise j in higher education. Bureau of Edu cation; Congressman Ira W. Wood, 1 and the Kevs. Walter T. Leahy, Al fred H. Baker, David B. Tomkins, and W. W. Moffett. Then came the faculties, a goodly ! number of men in gowns, uud then the Graduate Council of the university. | The seventh division was made up of the members of the Inauguration Com- | mittee, a list containing such names ; as Adrian H. Joline, William B. I loin blower, Francis G. Landon, Job E. ! Hedges, Rodman Wanamaker, C. Led- ; yard Blair , Jesse Lynch Williams, j Commissioner Edwards, (.who did not ; wear a gown.) and Commissioner l*cs- I ! dick. The eighth division was a com- I ; pany of nineteen classmates of, Presi- j I dent iiibben a men ui liie class ut | ; 18S2. It was to the strains of Mendels- ] ! solin's march from "Alitalia" that the i distinguished company finally filed in- j j to the inclosure around Nassau Hall j at 11 o'clock and then the inaugura- i tion choir, Princeton men all. sang the ! "Veni Creator Spiritus" that was sung j when President Patton w as inaugural- J ed in ISSB and when Woodrow Wilson j took the oath of office in 1902. After the reading of Scripture and ; the prayer led by Henry van Dyke, ! Justice Pitney administered the oath j I of otlice. Then the charter and the keys were j delivered by Senior Trustee Stewart, j ami the new President of Princeton i j made his inaugural address —an hour's | discourse on the "Essentials of a Lib- j eral Education." Then came the conferring of the honorary degrees upon president Taft and Chief Justice White. It was Dean West, in the scarlet and gray of his honorary Oxford degree, who made the speeches of presentation. Justice White brought his audieftce | to a great pitch of enthusiasm, and : then they settled back, with many an j interrupting "Tiger" to hear the greet ings which Dr. Lowell, Dr. lludley, Dr. Butler, and Dr. Schurman brought ; from the sister universities of the Fast. Dr. liibben himself spoke last, j It was all finished in time for Presi dent Hibben's reception and the "sen ior sing" on the campus at night. Dr. Hadley played gracefully and with huge success upon the old rival ry between Yale and Princeton, which j latter institution, he seemed inclined j 1 to think, was rather one of the best i things Yale had ever done, a senti- j ment which he backed up stanchly by J referring to flip part that Yale men | played in the early history of the New ! Jersey college. President Schurtnan ! said that of course the Cornell men, j after the luncheon, would do their i MAHLON PITNEY j wk ■ ******* ■) il , HE^H9hm^B%^Hߣ^9 HHHH iXtMlfm Supreme Court Justice wlio aununis tercd the oath of office to President Hibben. best to down Princeton in baseball, but if they should fail, they would do ■ so with the best of grace, a willing ; sacrifice to make a "Priaceton Uoll day." FESTIVE WEEK ! AT NORRISTOWN I _____ National Guard. Spanish and Civil War Veterans in Pageant. THOUSANDS ON THE STREETS The Last Parade Was Witnessed by . 35,000 Persons—Estimated that 250,- 000 Visitors Were in the City Dur ing the Centennial Fete. Norristown. —The centennial cele i bratiou closed with a military parade, | composed largely ot the National i Guard. It was the last of six big j parades which featured the week's j ! festivities, and brought hundreds of i J thousands of strangers into the town. At least 35,000 persons witnessed the j ' parade, and it is estimated that 200,- 000 persons visited the town during j the week. The parade was seven miles j i long. Surgeon General Joseph K. j Weaver, of Norristown, was chief j j marshal. Following in an automobile j i were Adjutant General Thomas J. I Stewart, former Governor Penny- j packer. Gen. John W. Schall and Col. ; C. T. O'Neill. In other automobiles j j were members of Governor Teller's I staff: Frank G. Sweeney, H. S. Wil liams. H. L. llaldeman, Thomas E. Murphy, John It. Wigins, J. Warren ; llutchius and Fred T. Pusey. Others in automobiles which led the first di- ; vision were James B. Coryell and staff and William G. Price and staff. Then i followed the Sixth Regiment, includ- I ing Battery ('., N. G. P., of Phoenix ville; Troop 8.. Second City Troop, ; and Philadelphia Cavalry, Captain Charles Welsh Edmunds commanding. : | Judge 11. Iv. Weand, A. 11. Buchanan, j Dr. D. It. Beaver, Fred 1. Naile and I Major Joseph Corson, members of the I Loyal Legion, led the second division in automobiles. Following in automo- i biles were Gen. James W. Latta, Col. i O. S. Bosbyshall and Col. R. B Beath, C F. Gramlich, William J. Wells, Hen ry I. Yolin, Grand Army department of- • I ticers aud Samuel Hartranft't, Charles ! Rennyson, Theodore Lane Bean, liar- j jry Rennyson and Dr. Alfred Read, i i Sons of Veterans. Following the au- ! ; tomobiles was a marching camp of j | Sons of Veterans of Norristown. and j then nearly 50 automobiles containing ; members of Zook Post, of Norristown, I and members of other Grand Army I posts from all over the county and i j Spanish-American veterans and ! J nurses in the Spanish-American War. i j In the second division there rode in an | , automobile with her family the widow i i of former Governor John F. Hartranft, of Norristown, who is buried in Mont- 1 gonxery Cemetery near the illustrious I Hancock. Child Helping Conrerence. Mauch Chunk. More than 30n dele sates attended the third annual con- i j vention of the Child-helping Confer- j | ence of the Lehigh Valley, held here, j The object of the conference, the only ; | one of the kind in Pennsylvania, is the I uplifting of the weak, the fallen and i | the neglected. Among those who par- ; | ticipated were Mrs. M. P. Falconer, 1 1 superintendent of the girls' depart | ment. Glen Mills Schools; Charles F. ! Chute, of Philadelphia, executive sec- , i retary of the Pennsylvania Child La- I | bor Association, and E. D. Solen- j ! berger, of Philadelphia, general seciv j tary of the Children's Aid Society of Pennsylvania. Will Led to Tragedy. | Beaver. The fact that his wife had j recently made a will in which, it is de ! clared, she left the bulk of her estate | to her own children and none to her j : stepchildren, coupled with his de- j i lusion that his wife was not giving ! his daughter Bertha proper attention, j | is given as a probable cause for the | i tragedy, when Fred Attle, a prosper- ; | ous farmer, killed his wife and at | tempted suicide by slashing his own j ! throat. The tragedy so shocked Ber- I tha, a sufferer from typhoid fever, that she was removed in a dying con- j dition to a hospital in Pittsburgh. Mrs. ! : Attle was the owner of 15H fertile ' acres and other property. Attle and ! j his wife have had numerous quar- j rels. Found Guilty of Murder. Pottsville. Bolich Kenensky was ! | the only man convicted out of seven j defendants, who were charged with : ; the murder of Charles Sweldaw, at ; Minersville, two months ago In | quarrel following an argument about ! j religiili. The six others, all foreign- ! ers. were acquitted. Sweldaw was slain ! with an axe. "The jury convicted the . only man who tried to save human j life," declared Lawyer Whitehouse, as he moved for a new trial for Kenen sky. Blind Girls as Athletes. Pittsburgh.—An athletic contest for blind girls, under the auspices of the National Athletic Association, was held at the campus of the Western Pennsylvania Institute for the Blind here. The baseball throwing contest for seniors was won by S. lva Begh ley, her throw being 99 feet 9 inches; second. Rose Rearich; third, Corda VFlight. In the 35-yard dash for sen iors Clara Yochen was first; second, Mary Smith; third, Frankie Carlisle. Time, 4 3-5 seconds. The time made in this race was 2-5 second faster. i SNAPSHOTS AT STATE NEWS All Pennsylvania Gleaned for Items of Interest. REPORTS ABOUT CROPS GOOD j | Farmers Busy in Every Locality— Churches Raising Funds for Many Worthy Objects—ltems of Busi ness and Pleasure that Interest. After Mrs. Anna Houck, of Reading, had made six attempts at suicide a 1 commission found her Insane. Authorities in Pottstown are com : pelling citizens to have six-foot pave ments in front of tlveir premises. Dr. Sparks, president of State Col- t | t'ege, near Bellefonte, is traveling in Palestine with his family. They ex i pect to return next month. Five-year-old Grace Steis, of Ridg | way township, Elk county, lost her' ; right hand in the knives of a feed-cut ! ter. Joseph Darron and Thomas Keelter, over-zealous Pottsville trout fisher men, were arrested for catching sev- j eral trout but two inches long. Miss Arietta Stilwell, of Ardtnore, a teacher in the second grade of the Lower Merion schools, lias declined reappointment l'<*v 1912-1913. The Reading Railway Company is | sending 100 empty coal cars from its | j Schuylkill divisions to the soft coal | fields daily. Northumberland electors by a large j majority indorsed a $25,000 loan for j !an additional school building iu Steel's subdivision. Centre county people are looking { eagerly for the establishment of a i I State forest reservation iu that coun i ty - Raphael Nies, of Hamburg, has been appointed a field agent tor the Penu- j sylvauia Chestnut Tree Blight Coiu j mission. Toying with a revolver, Miss May ] Davis, aged 20 years, of Park View, | Carbon county, was accidentally shot, : and died a short time afterward. David A. Reed, of Pittsburgh, chair- j j niau of the Industrial Accidents Com | mission, conferred with Governor Tener about the work of the comiuis \ sion. Mrs. J. I>. Pickering, chief proba tion officer of Philadelphia, has been ! appointed delegate from this State to j the National Conference on Charities and Correction at Cleveland. Manufacturers of York held their ! liixth annual outing, going in the after- ; noon by special train to I'equea, Lan- j caster county, where a planked shad ! dinner was served. Among the matters considered at the State convention of the Knights of Columbus is the establishing of a J chapel for Catholic services at State ! College, at a cost of $20,000. Chester has authoried bonds to the extent of SBOO,OOO, increasing the in debtedness of the school district to j provide ample funds for contemplated i improvements. Select Councilman Joseph E. Mc- ' Aleir, of Altoona, has declared in lav-j or of the fire department lof that city. lie wants the horse draw. I apparatus putin the junk pile. For empyting '.lis mill dam during i the n.ght to catch (isli, Wilson Ger ] hart, of Meckville, had Frank Douinoy- I er, Peter Peiffer and Pierce and El- ' | iner tipittler arrested. Ofti-er Ennis, of Reading, found three babies fast asleep inside of au ! qld boiler. They had wandered away i I from their homes, and were unable to j find tl.eir way back. Madeline Bray, a pupil oft lie Lar ! kin Gnmmar School, Chester, has | been given a certificate of honor by j the Pennsylvania Society of Colonial j Datnes of America for an essay she I prepared on "Historic Old St. Paul's , Church." F. M. Guilder, L. F. Warner and R. | G. Pollock, of West Scranton, returned | Irotu a trip to Three Lakes, Susque- j hanna county, bringing with them ' about 75 pounds of ihe finest bull heads ever seen in those parts. They i caught til in all. egch weighing from j a pound to a pound and a half. The graduating class of the Clear- Held llrgh School, which will hold its commencement exercises June 5, has ;1G members. Commander Harold Hayes, arrived at Lewisburg to visit his father, Al fred Hayes, who is iu an enfeebled condition. Mr. Hayes up until several months ago was stationed on the Paci fic coast, and recently the fleet of war vessels was transferred to the Atlan tic side. He was in charge of the squadron in its trip around Cap* Horn. OLD AND NEW WORLD BRIEFS FOR THE BUSY Cyrus McC'ormick, a member of tha Board of Trustees of Princeton Uni versity, and lather of ('. McCormick, 'l2, of last fall's football team, has j presented $25,000 to the football elev en to construct a memorial lor win | ning the J 911 championship. Governors of many States, Mayors j of several big cities and other promi | nent men of the country telegraphed I that they favor Presidential term six J years and prohibit re-election. A few | favored a continuance of the present I system. Alienists made a thorough examina i tion of Clarence V. T. Richeson.; he tailed to betray nervousness as a re ! suit of the long ordeal. Lieutenant Depersis, an Italian | army aviator, was- instanty killed when he made a bad landing in the ; Pordenome at Rome. Emperor Wilhelm lost a suit against one of his tenants on the Cadinen es tate near Danzig. The Kaiser de | tnanded that the tenant share the cost ' of construction of a house suitable to j the royal estate. Harry A. Whitney testified at the 1 trial in Now York of the suit to dis solve the Steel Trust that Vice-Presi i ilent Baackes Assistant General Sales Agent Cragin of the American Steel and Wire Company tried to get , liini to change the testimony he bad i given before the Federal Grand Jury | as to the burning of evidence needed by the prosecution. The Supreme Court of New Ramp i shire declared that the residuary : i-lause of tiie will of Mrs. Mary Baker G. Eddy, bequeathing $2,000,000 to the I First Church of Christ, Scientist, ia j Boston, was a "valid trust." THE MARKETS. (New York Wholesale Prices.) MILK. —The wholesale price is 3 per ; quart in the 26c zon* or sl.»i 1 per 4u- I quart can delivered in New York. Butter. | Creamery, specials 30 (a.. i'„\l 32 ' j 'f/ . . Firsts 31V?'{/ 3 2 Seconds 2ft { 1 Thirds 27 29 Stale, dairy, f?!Vest 32 (<£)Vl Vfc Good to prime 2'J ®3l Common to lair 24 (&2S Eggs. State, Pa., and nearuy, hennery white, fancy, new laid 22 1 ,£@23 State, l'a., and nearby, selected white, fair t«» good 21 ®22 Brown, hennery, fancy 21 Qp'i\ x k Gathered brown, mixed colors.. 1920 Western gathered, white ... .20Vii@21^ Extra 22 . . I Duck eggs, Baltimore 24 <&26 i Duck eggs, western 19 (a 22 I Duck eggs. Southern 18 (a 21 Goose eggs 25 (&30 Live Poultry. j Fowls via express 15 fa).. ! Fowls, via freight, per lb (ft 15 s Roosters, per lb (uilO J Turkeys, mixed hens and toms / per lb 9]r 4 * I Ducks, per lb ftj)A 2 ; Geese, per lb 8 <'<k Guinea, per pair (s>6o i'igeons, per pair "0)30 Vegetables. j Asparagus, dozen bunches 1.00®3.00 ! Artichokes, per drum 2.00&r3.0<) Beans- Georgia, per basket 1.00^12.75 Florida, per basket 1 oo'd 12."» Beets, S. per 100 bunches . .1.0ft®4.00 Beets, old. per barrel I.oo® 1.50 N. »>., per barrel 1.00fu3.00 Carrots— S. C., per 100 bunches 1 00(6)4.00 New Orleans, per 100 bunches. 1.00(f) 3.ft') Old, per barrel or bag 3.00®3.50 Cabbages— Va.. per barrel 1.50(8 2.00 N. per crate 1.25® 1.75 S. <. new. per erate I.ftft®2.ao S. new. pei* basket 75®1.ft0 Fla., new, per crate 1.00^)2.00 Fla., new, per basket 75® 1.00 Fla., new, red, per erate .... 1.50 fa 2.50 Fla.. new, red, per basket .... 75® 1.00 Cucumbers, Fla., per basket .... 50(6J1.12 Kggplants, Fla.. per box or bskt.2 oo®3.<>o j Ksearol. N. «>.. per barrel 1.00®3.ft0 S. C.. per basket 2.ftft®3.oo , Horseradish, per 10ft lbs 5.00(£^6.00 Kale, per barrel 65 (a 75 Kohlrabi, N i >., per 10ft bclis . .3.00®5.00 Lettuce. per basket . 25® 1.25 Lima beans, Fla., per basket.... unions— Bermuda, per crate 1.20(01.80 Texas, per crate 1.25®2.ft0 j Okra, per carrier 1.00(6)2.50 Peas, per basket 75®3.00 Parsley, N. <».. plain per barrel. .3.00®5.00 | N. 0., curly, per barrel 1.50® 2.50 Peppers, bbls., boxes or carriers. 1.00®2.50 ; Parsnips, per bbl 2.50®3.00 Romaine, per basket 50(^1.25 Per barrel 2.oft® 3.00 1 »er box 1•00 ® 1.50 : Radishes, per barrel 75® 1.25 Per basket 4ft® 1.25 I Rhubarb, Iftft bunches 75® 1.50 I Shallots per 1«>0 bunches 1.ft0®1.50 » Per barrel 3.00® 4.00 Squash— Fla., white, per box sft® 1.00 Per basket 25® 50 Yellow, crooked-neck, per box. 1.50 fa'2.so Per basket l.()0®2.00 ; Turnips, Rutabaga, per bbl .... 2.00® 3.oft ; Tomatoes, Fla., per carrier ... Watercress per lftft bunches ..1.5002.00 Hothouse. ' Cucumbers, No. 1, per box ... .3.50@4.00 No. 2, per box 2.00^)3.00 Culls, per box 1.00(^1.50 i Lettuee, per dozen 4® j Mushrooms, 4-lb basket *o<a 1.50 Buttons, 4-lb basket sft® 7D i Mint, per dozen bunches 20® 4ft ! Tomatoes per lb 10(0) 20 Potatoes. 1 Bermuda, new. No. 1, per barre1.6.00®6.25 Bermuda, new. No 2, per barrel. 4.50 ©)5.00 Fla., new. white. No. 1. per bbl. .5.25®6.ft0 Fla . new. reel, No. 1, per bbl. .. 5.00(Ji 5.50 ! Fla., new. No. 2. per barrel ... .3.sftfa 4.50 Fla. new. No. 2, per barrel ....3.sft® 4.50 Fla!, culls, per barrel 2.ftft®3.ftO I State, per IKft lbs 3.50(ft 4.00 State, per bag 3.50(fr'4.00 Maine, per 18ft lbs 4.ftftfa 4.50 Maine, per bag 4.00® 4.25 JOuropean. per 168-lb. bag 1.50® 2.50 Sweets, Jersey, No. 1, per bskt. Sweets, southern, per bbl ... .2.50^3.00 Yams, southern, per bbl 2.00(g>2.50 Live Stock. HKKVKS Medium to prime steers sold .«t *7 Q8 60 pet 100 11m ; bulls at 6.65; cows at $2.«"5®5.80. Dressed beef at per 11» for native sides. CALYKS I'ommon to prime veals sold ' at sti.sft£f 8.50 per lftft lbs ; culls at ss®6. Dressed ealves easy at 10lj»a<14c. for city I dressed veals. Hfal2e. for country dressed. SHKKP AND LAMBS.—Common to good clipped sheep sold at ss®6 _per_ lftO lbs ; bucks part clipped, at $4.50®5.50; inferior to fair clipped lambs at s6.3os£ 7.75; t nils al $5; common to fair wooleil ; lambs at s7® 8.50; spring lambs at s!».so®> I lft. Dressed mutton at 9® 12c. per lb.; 112 dressed lambs it 14®. 17c.: country dress [ ed hothouse lambs at $3.50®. per car* | 1 'Thais -Market at $7.50® 8 per 100 lbs.; i pigs ai $7.25® V.50. Country dressed hogs at 7® 10c. per lb. HAY AND STRAW.— Hav, timothy, prime, larsre bales, lftft lbs. sl.6«>; No. 3 to No. 1. >1.40® 1.60; oat, Tsf. Spot Markets at a Glance. Wheat. No. J I«d. elev I 'IMI Gats standanl Flour, spring patent, barrel Corn steamer, yellow nom. Litrd prime, lftft lbs 1135 Tallow, city, hhds .06 Pork mess, bbl 20. r* Coffee Rio No. 7, lb 14 Tea, Formosa, lb r '\l' Sugar, tine, gran., lb 5.2»»c Butter, creamery 33 'heese. specials Hlsgs. extra firsts 2ft '4 'otton 11.90 Tobacco — Havana K D 5.> Jonn. wrapper ••
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers