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About Lane County leader. (Cottage Grove, Lane County, Or.) 1903-1905 | View Entire Issue (June 17, 1904)
UOOO LANE COUNTY LEADER ---- A F ew Sim ple R u le « ^ h c h W o u ld O u r H iK b w iy t. A . CLIFFORD Q A O e . Editar A Pub. C O T T A G E GROVE OREGON W EEK ’S DOINGS Ramis h u called oat more resreves. Many deported anion miner« are ar riving at Denver. The Russian forces at Ping, south of N ia Chwsng have been forced to evacu ate. Russia w ill not heed the protest of Britain against declaring foodstuffs con traband. An attempt has been made to kidnap the Italian consul at Tangier, Morocco, by bandits. A ll Russian warships at Port Arthur are expected to be ready for service within a fortnight. The tenth semiannual reunion of Scottish Rite Masons of Oregon is in session at Portland. Congressman Metcalf, of California, is slated to succeed Cortelyou as secre tary of commerce and labor. The national heads of the Rathbone Bisters and Pythian Bisters, at a con ference, have prepared a plan for the consolidation of the two orders. A cloudburst on the tableland adja cent to Sterling, Colorado, caused a sheet of water 10 to 18 inches deep to cover the lower portion of the town. Much damage was done to growing crops in that section. The land offl-e at Oregon City may be moved to Protland. Abner McKinley, brother of the late President McKinley, is dead. The Colorado train robbers have again eluded the posse and are further into the bills. The man who attempted to k ill the Spanish premier has been sent to pris on for 17 years. The wife of Mayor Ballinger, of Seat tle, has been warned of a plot against her husband’s life. Chinese report that a battle was fought June 9 within seven miles of the inner forts of Port Arthur. The Panama commissioners are sure a currency system acceptable to the United States will be adopted by Pana ma. More union mineis aie being deport ed from Colorado and the work w ill be kept up until all are taken out of the state. The Japanese are constructing a rail road from Feng Wang Cheng to Bhak- dedai, 30 miles to the southeast, near the mouth of the Yaln river. Roosevelt desires Ambassador Choate to succeed Knox as attorney general. John W . Minto has been apointed postmastei at Portland, to take charge July 1. WOADS- Help Among the elements and forces of nature there are several enemies of good roads, but the greatest of them is water. I t washes away the material of the road. It soaks into the road and softens it so that the wagon wheels cut into the surface making ruts and holes. It permeates and softens the foundation so that the surface of the road sinks or breaks up. In the winter the water that is in the road freezes, expands, and loosens and disintegrates the road material. The most important thing in the building of rose la is to lessen or prevent the ravages ot water; yet no feature of the work is so neglected as this. Many local road supervisors seem to give no consideration to the question of drain age, and the result is a regular mud blockage during several weeks or months of the year. The following are a few simple rules the observance of which would go far toward bettering the roads of this coun try: First. The road should be so located and constructed as to avoid steep grades down which the water rushes during heavy rains tearing up and washing away the road material. Second. The foundation of the road should tie thoroughly drained by open side ditches which w ill carry off the water and where necessary tile drains should be laid in the foundation itself. Third. The surface of the road should be hard and smooth and have suflicieot slope toward the sides to shed the surface water. Fourth. Ruts and holes on the sur face of the finished road should be filled as fast as made so that no water can lie on the surface to be worked up into mud. These rules are simple and easy to follow, and any one who gives any seri ous thought to the matter can see the wisdom of following them. Stilt they are almost universady ignored as the condition of our roads abundantly proves. What this country needs is a radical change, a new era in road building. The people have been moving in ruts in more senses than one, and if each local community is left to work out the road problem alone, they w ill continue to move in the same ruts, and every year millions of dollars will be thrown into the mud, to say nothing of the losses resulting from the use of bad roads. lectures on road improvement seem to do very little good. Books and bulletins on road building appear to have very little effect. What the local communities need is practical object lessons and actual as sistance, and these ran come only from the state governments and the federal government. I t is for this reason that road reformers everywhere are turning toward state and national aid as the only soluton of the road problem. The bad roads of the United States are a blight, a curse, a disgrace and all patriotic, progressive citizens should make a grand united effort to wipe them out and put our nation on a level with the advanced nations of Kurope in the matter of roads. Pestilen ce In S iberia. Paris, June 15. — Letters received Perdicaris, the American held by from correspondents who have investi Moroccan bandits, w ill soon be re- gated the conditions prevailing in 81- lea seil. lieria show that the natives are suffer The Japanese have dislodged Russian ing severely as a result of the war. An forces in a number of towns along the epidemic has broken out among the Liao Yang. laborers who live around Lake Baikal, A waterspout in Oklahoma was the and it is feared the disease, the exact cause ol three deaths and washed away natuie of which has not yet been as certained, will affect the troops who many houses. are passing through on the way to Man Kansas objects to being made the churia. The unfortunates affected by dumping ground for the objectionable the disease usually die within forty- Colorado unionists. eight hours altei being first attacked, Many nnion miners are being de and so tar all known lemedies have ported from the Victor, Colorado, proven useless. mining district every day. V isits the B a n d it's Cam p. Cripple Creek alliance has dacided Tangier, June 15.— J. W. 8 . Langer- it will not try to break up the print- man, commissioner of the Moroccan era’ union, fearing that the papers will section at the 8t. Louis exposition, ar suspend. rived here today from the camp of Rai- Four hundred school children were suli, the bandit. In an interview giv thrown in a mass at Ban Joee, Cal., by en to the Associated Press, Mr. I .anger- the hieaking down of a platform in a man said; “ I met Raisnli and his theater. None were seriously Injured. band fully armed and suspicious of the visit. For a few mintes the situation The secretary of the Mineowners' as aas critical, but all passed off well. sociation says the desire to make all Inn Perdicaris is much better and in join the union and not the eight hour good spirits over the preepect of bis day is the real issue in the Colorado speedy release.” trouble. Postmaster Bancroft, of Portland, i)SS r e s ig n e d . The American Medical association w ill meet in Portland in 1905. The alleged leader in the Victor, Colorado, riots has been raptured. In a battle between Colorado ranch- era and train robbers ons of the latter was killed. Russia is not negotiating with Tur key tor the passage of the Baltic fleet through the Dradanellee. (lenersl Kuroki’ s movements are a pursle to the Russians and they do not know what to expect next. The mother of lew is Etzel, the American correspondent killed by Chi nese, has filed a claim for $2t),04M with China. Attorney General Knox has been chosen to succeed the late Benator Quay. An attempt was made naer Grants Pass to wreck a passenger train on the Southern Pacific. Ties placed on a enrve were discovers.I by the engineer in time to prevent serious results. (Ia n s D ro v e Back T rain Tokio, June 15— Rear Admiral Togo reports that Tuesday a part of the fleet bombarded the west coast of the Liao Tung peninsula, near Kaichan, and drove bark a military train that was approaching southward. No trains have fieen seen since. The enemy wss moving in troops and erecting works evidently expecting a landing of the Japanese at that point and making all preparations to prevent it. Small gun boats sent in close by Rear Admiral Togo bombarded tbs Russians at work. P o rt A rth u r Lett to F a ts Bt. Petersburg, June 15.— Relief is felt in m ilitry circles at the removal of dissension in m ilitary circles. It is understood that the sole responsibility devolved upon General Knropatkin, and that no serious attempt w ill be made to relieve Port Arthur. It is re ported that the Vladivostok squadron now consists of three cmisers and fou- ironclads. It is therefore presumed that the squadron has effected a junc tion with Port Arthur vessels. R ussian P riso n e r* In Japan. Tokio, June 15.— The Russian pris No trace has been found of the Victor oners in the hospitals in Japan number 548, including 19 officers. Of these 38 assassins. men and 10 officers are wounded while General Knropatkin. with his main the others are suffering from sickness of various soits. force is at Liao Yang. ARMY IN A TRAP FORCE W IP E D OUT. Two Bataillon s of J a p a n * »« OREGON NEWS OF INTEREST Am bushed on F eng W n n * C h an g Rond. Haicheng, Manchuria, June 14.— A Japanese Force Fools Russians by flanking movement of the Japanese around the Russian left from Feng a False Retreat. D EC ISIO N ON S W A M P L A N D . 2 0 0 ,0 0 0 POUNDS OF Wang Cheng, June 8, was tepuleed with a loss of two whole battalions. From the U o la n -ls a a c s L ive s to c k EIGHT HUNDRED MEN ARE KILLED A large Japanese force moved out in Governor Receives the Text poses o l Im m en se CHp. Interior D epartm ent. the morning along the Feng Wang Pendleton— Tw o hundred Salem— Govern 01 Chamberlain has Cheng and Haicheng road. The Rus- D efeated Troopa Than Fall Back o a Kal sians had a force strongly posted in a reteived the full text of the decision of pounds of wool have !«e n su!4 ch oe —C z a r's M en Show Indications ravine 30 miles southeast of Haicheng. „,.,'retary of the interior rejecting Gwinn-lBuacs livestock com The Japanese were preceded by two i ( jie 0iainl Qf the state of Oregon to the which J. H. Gwinn, secretary of a L o n g , Forced M arch . battalions, who walked into the Rue- aw anlp lands within the Klamath In- Oregon Woolgrowera’ associat' aian ambuscade. dian reservation. Briefly stated, the resident of Pendleton, ia a Bt. Petersburg, Jane 15.— I . is re They received a murderous rifle and j lit,(.|eiUD quotes the swamp land act of Tne Gwinn-Iaaacs company is ported that s naval battle between the artillery fire at close range and were jtttiO. which specifically provides that ed an Idaho sheep firm, | grant to the state shall “ include large portion of ita animals fleets of the Japanese on the one side wiped out, only one or two escaping. The main Japanese force, which was any lan(j g w|)ich the government may summer in the western spur of and the Russian fleet and shore bat mountains in Grant county, teries on the other side occurred off greatly superior to the Russian force, j,ave reeerVed, Bold or disposed of (in tried to outflank the Russians who pursuance of any law heretofore enact pany is one of the largest s' Port Arthur on Jane 10 The naval drew off without losing a man. The ed) prior to the confirmation of title to cerns operating in the North’- battle was accompanied by the advance Japanese, closing in, found the ravine be made under the authority of the Late as it is, some of ths Isaacs bands are not yet even of the Japanese troopa to the rear of the vacant, save for their own dead. ■aid act." The treaty creating the Klamath res Eight bands were trailed into Pott Arthur defense. The Russian R U S S IA N A R ftV S W E L L IN G . ervation was not made until 1864, but range in Grant county front tig forces within the fortress were in com the ileciaion bold* that the right or river country in Malheur mand of General Btoessel, who, it is Exultation O ver Victory oo the Feng title of occupancy of the Indiana ex Here the company has over 50, reported, is wounded. I t was neces W a n g C b c o g Road. isted prior to that time, as recognized leased from the old Dalles land company which secured sary to amputate his leg at the knee. Liao Y’ ang, June 14.— The army here by the act of 1848, establishing the ter an immense area in Grant and is increasing rapidly, a fresh squadron ritorial government of Oregon, wherein two other counties for cutting Nia Chwsng, Jane 15.— Information it was provided: arriving daily. “ That nothing in this act contained through the interior in the t has been received here through beieto- There is no fresh news from Port fors reliable channels that part of the Arthur, nor has any confirmation of shall be construed to impair the rights and the Gwinn-Isaac people of person or property now pertaining to sections on a long lease. Ai Japanese force left at Pu Lan Tien to serious events having occurred there the Indians in said territory, so long as ment sections alternate with checkmate tne Russians’ southward been received. On the contrary, ac such rights shall remain unextin tion granted to the m ilitary cording to the best information, every movement to teileve Port Arthur wss thing is going well. guished by treaty between the United pany, the sheepmen have an attacked southeast of Bhung Mao yes- The officers and men here are very States ami such Indians, or to affect the territory available. In spite tetday. After slight fighting the Jap enthusiastic over the driving back of authoiity of the government of the normally overciowded condit’ United States to make any regulation Grant range, no trouble ia exr anese made a false retreat, the Russians the Japanese on the road between Feng respecting such Indians, their lands, with settlers by the Gwinn-I- Wang Cheng and Haicheng June 9. hotly following them, when the Japan Only a comparatively short distance property or other rights, by treaty, law ple, partly because their lands ese made a flark movement, catchiqg separates the Japanese anil Russian j or otherwise, which it would have been and partly because there are the Russians in a trap. The Russian armies and the soldiers are all anxious | competent to the government to make settlers in the district theyoi addition to this, their sheep if this act had never passed.” losses are placed at 800 men. They for active operations to begin. The secretary of the interior holds through sparsely settled and then fell back on Kaichon and began that this provision recognizes the title country. to retreat along the Baimatgu-Tsai K U R O P A T K IN R E S T S L IT T L E . The remaining five bands or right of occupancy of the Indiana Chon road. About 3,000 Russian infantry from H ow F am ous Russian G eneral Directs to all the country occupied by them, company are in the Wood river and that the treaty of 1864 operateti in Idaho. Kaichou passed through Niu Chwsng H is Cam paign. merely to cede to the United States the yesterday, accompanied by a large sup Liao Y’ ang, June 14.— The entire Rus rights the Indains held in lands other ply and hospital train. Several carts A sk s for Receiver. sian plan of campaign is directed from than those set apart as a place of resi contained bandaged men. The troops Eugene— R. McMurphy, a railway caniage here, in which Gen dence— the Klamath reservation. In stockholder of the Wiliams' appeared to be fagged oat, and shewed every indication of a long, forced eral Kuiopatkin works, eats and sleeps other words, the treaty of 1864 but re- Woolen Manufacturing com- The car is divided into a saloon, > i . ... . , .. __________ march. The officers refused to furnish . , , , , , duted the extent of the possession ot begun suit foi sequestration , _ J:___ _____ :_ k * __:__ any information, bat a noncommis study ami a bedroom. Thecommander \ the Indians, whose right existed prior Eugene woo.en m ill property sioned officer told a correspondent of in chief passes the most of his time in to the swamp land act of 1860 and still pointment of a receiver. T’ the study at work, surrounded by his the Associated Press that all the troops exists. is the result of too small capi' Although small of stature, were retreating from Tsai Chou. Be aides. gin with and mistakes in bur M IL L IO N S H E E P EN R O UTE. fore he could say anything further, he Kuropatkin is at once distinguishable mill, so that by the time the among hia entourage, however brilliant was reprimanded by a captain. Strag the Blue M oun tain s lo r the in condition to become prod" glers are closely watched by noncom may be their unifotina, by his deter (Join profitable the capital and He j Sum m er R ange. missioned officers to prevent them mined gestures and sturdy figure. were so nearly exhausted that' has the reputation of being just and from talking. The Russians have Pendleton— Tens of thousands ed for operating money. Tha abandoned the ground mines eight his word ia law. Hia officers repos; sheep are en route to summer range the m ill to be unprodcutive. the fullest confidence in him and he ia miles south of here. the Blue mountains acioss various A native messenger jnst in from the the idol of ths common soldiers, and parts of Umatilla county. Between B ig Insane A sy lu m Holla Russian camp west of here reports that the foreign attaches find him most 20,000 and 30,000 traveled last week pleasant. He takes little or no rest ex Salem— The monthly report there are many wounded men there. up the Walla Walla river road through cept a half hour’s siesta after lunch, Freewater and Milton, numerous bands state insane asylum for May when the heat ia excessive, and he oc R E V O L T A T P R IS O N . went up the Umatilla, and flocks are of the largest monthly i- casionally indulges in the distraction moving southward up Birch and simil enrollment in the history of th Dispatches F ou r Condem ned M en In O hio P en ite n ti of reading literary works. ar creeks into Southern Umatilla tution. The total number of from- the scene of operations are a ry A tte m p t to Escape. Tne mountaian range of this county, ia now the highest it has brought to him at any hour of the day Columbns, O., June 15.— An attempt or night. The general eats well, of and portions of Union and Grant coun The report shows: Numberoi April 30, 1,238; received dorni was made by four of the nine con simple dishes, but he seldom remains ties, are the ultimate destinations. The annual protest is also beginning 43; escapes returned, 3; disc' demned men at the penitentiary to es at the table more than a half hour. to go from water users in the irrigated died, 9; eloped, 5; nomber cape at 1 o'clock this morning by over He drinks wine, smokes a cigar or.two sections, who are afraid that the flow June 1, 1,350. The total exr after breakfast and seta an example of powering the guard. The guard was of their vaiious streams will be lessened were $14,245. abstemiousness to his officers. He badly beaten, but two guards from the rises at 7 o’clock and retires at mid through sheep eating out underbrush W o o l Bella a t H igh PrXi at the headwaters of these streams. hall came to his assistance and the pris night. Pendleton— Practically all Whether the increasing deficiency in oners were forced back into their cells flow during the dry seasons is due to maining wool of Umatilla S Q U AD R O N W I L L B E R E A D Y . and locked up. extra demands made by the constantly disposed of at the second growing number of irrigators, or to the under the auspices of the Stitt The prisoners in the plot to escape Am erica Can Send M o re Ships to T an Eleven disappearance of mountain shrubbery growers’ association. were Moses Johnson, of Scioto county; g ie r If E m e rge n c y Arises. and consequent lack of anything to >e- disposed of clips, aggregating Philip Nagle, of Wyandotte connty; Paris, June 14.— Information has tain the snowfall is a disputed issue pounds. The cljp of Isaac Lewis Harmon, of Franklin connty; been received from Lisbon concerning between sheepmen and water users, an Pilot Rock, consisting of 16,91 and Ben Wade, of I.ncas county. Guard Richards, of W illiams county, the plane of the American battleship issue which brings up the old conten topped the market at 15J£ cenk was in charge of the prisoners. He squadron. Rear Admiral Baiker ex tion about whether eheepheidera burn average price was 14 cents. was unarmed, no weapons being al pects to leave Lisbon June 16 for Gib- out the undergrowth to help grass for lowed in the annex. The prisoners laltar, where the squadron will remain the next season or not. PORTLAND MARKETS. lieat him down with their fists, and nntil the Moroecan incident is settled. Meanwhile, the bands whose aggre secured the key to the cage in the an On the arrival there of the Illinois and gate will fill the Blue mountains of W heat—Walla Walla, 70c;“ nex, but failed to find the key to the Missouri, the squadron w ill consist of three counties mentioned with nearly 78c; valley, 79c. six of the most modern battleships, be 1,000,000 sheep are pouring in, and outer door. Bariev— Feed, $23 per ton; Guard Richards made such an outcry sides the two squadrons of cruisers and can be encountered on any mountain $24.50« 25. that two guards in an adjoining hall gunboats now at Tangier. Although highway. Flour— Valley, $3.90@4.05 were attracted, and they came to hia Admiral Barker does not expect that rel; hard wheat straights, rescue. The prisoners were overpow the necessity will arise of taking the Hay Crop Is Short. cleats, $3.85«4.10; hard w ered and locked up. Guard Richards battleships to Tangier, yet he will re Hillsboro— The Washington connty was badly beaten, bat his condition is main at Gibraltar for the purpose of hay crop will not be more than a half enta, $4.40«4.70; graham, whole wheat, $ 4 «4 .2 5 ; rye fl meeting any possible contingency. not considered serious. yield this season, owing to the extreme Oats— No. 1 white, $1.25; When the American squadron leaves dry weather during the month of May. It was evidently the purpoee of the prisonere to get out of the door of the Gibraltar it will not go to Villefranche, In the lowlands along the Tualatin and per ton. Millstuffs— Bran, $19(320 annex which leads into the prison yard as st first intended, hot will go to Pie- other small streams the timothy is and scale the walls. They had no raus and cruise through the Grecian much better than on the plains, where middlings, $25.50@27; shortz weapons, but expected to secure them archipelago. Later, the squadron will in many places there is not a thiru of 21; chop, $18; linseed, dairy“ Hay— Tim othy, $ 1 6 « 16 p* from the guatd. I t is not believed go to Corfu and Treste. a yield. The way things look, Wash clover, $ 8 « 9; grain, $11<312; that the five other men in the annex ington connty. which has always sent $ 11 « 12 . O f O reat S tra te g ic a l Importance. were a party to the plot to escape. out thousands of tons of timothy each Vegetables— Turnips. $ 1.25 Tokio, June 14.— The town of Sin- season for Philippine shipment, will W h lp p tn g -P o st R egim e Revived. ven, now occupied by the Japanese not be able to enter the markets to any carrots, $1.50; beets, $1.25; 2 «2 )y c ; lettuce, head, 25«4<k Lexington, K y., June 15.— Police army, is of great strategical import appreciable extent. cauliflower, $ 1 .7 5 «2 per dns; Judge John J. Riley today revived the ance, being situated about 40 miles 75‘u90c per d oz.; cucumbers, old whipping poet regime when he sen east by south of Kaiking and 45 miles Oood S traw berry Crop. 1.60 per doz; asparagus, 50c; tenced Simon Scearce, a 15-year-old southeast of Haicheng. It commands Salem— The strawbeiry harvest is per pound; rhubarb, 3c per negro lad to be whipped in the public perfectly the roadstead of both places. square. Bcearce had struck a white Baimatsa is also an important point, as now in full swing in this vicinity and beans, green, 12)£c; squash, boy. The court decreed that the boy’s it controls the roads to Liao Vang and one of the largest crops ever seen is box; green corn, 60c per do«. Honey— $3(<g3.50 per esse. mother take the boy to the public Mukden. By following this route, the being gathered. The bulk of the crop ________ _______ j . , ___ Potatoes— Fancy, 7 5 c«$ l y equate and give him 20 lashes with a Mao Tien Lin pass, a strongly fortified is going to the Salem fruit cannery, buggy whip. The mother, in the pres and almost imp egnahle Russian strong where about 150 persons are employed new potatoes, $ 1 .7 5 «2 per err,» Fruits— Strawberries, Ore( ence of a large crowd, administered the hold will be avoided on the advance of pac king the fruit. The berries are ex- ceptionally good this season. They are I>er pound; cherries, 50c«$l P* puniehment as directed. This is the the Japanese army northsard. now coming to the cannery at the rate gooseberries. 6c per pound; first time such an incident has been of 12,000 pounds per day, and a uni- fancy Baldwins and 8[ witnessed since the C ivil war. Robbers are Beaten Off. Johnstown, Pa., June 14.— A desper form price of 3 '4 cents per pound is $1.50«2.50 per box; choice, [cooking, 7 5 c « $ l; cantelonps, B eliev e B ig Ships a re Held. ate attempt wss made this afternoon p ,ld ' No ~ crate; apricots, $2.25 per boi. Chicago, June 15.— A special to the t>y four masked men to rob Superin N . WOC4 Of Laud Office Chau,,. B n tte r-F .n c y creamery, 1?. Daily New» fromChefoosays: Accord tendent W. H. C. Ramsey snd Secre C ,tT ~ R,9,’ t* r A. S. Dresser, store, 13c per pound, ing to the captain of one of the ahips tary Frank Howard, of the Johnstown . Eggs— Oregon ranch, 18«H comprising the Japanese blockading water company, of about $8,000 in of the Oregon City land office, in reply fleet, the cruiser Novik has been out of cash, which the) were conveying to to an inqniry concerning the proposed ! dozen, removal of the local land “ the harbor on several occasiona hunting the new Dalton Run dam, near this Oregon c it P ° ffire ,rom ! Poultry— Chickens, mixed, Japanese destroyer*. The captain city, to pay of! the 400 men employed received nothin* J ? '? ,h* had P °n“ d : Bm» n . 8Pri"?’ The «.L * a plucky from Washington ... , . ** as official nature hens, 12«12)% c; turkeys, live* thought the obstructions at the month mouth there. there The two two men men m made of the harbor prevented the exit of the run for it and escaped, bnt not until change. hington as to the proposed per pound; dressed, is«2#t larger Russian vessels. Ths Rnssitns two horses had been killed. 1 —IZ T 1 . A.®0?!* of City aie sur $7«,8 per dox; geese, live, prised at the proposed c h a n g e 'in 'l«a - ponnd. have three submarine boats which have Russians Killed Num ber 700. ! '° n f*nd office, and will strive been put together at Paya. Cl.eese— Full cream, t* stock, 12H @ 13c; old it « 1. Tokio, Jnne 1 4 .-T h e military com- “ “ “ office h r n - D ow te C om ing Hom s. Young America, 14c. mission assigned to bury the Russian Union County Seat Fl.ht London, June 16.— It is announced dead m the hattl# of Nanshan hill at Hops— 1903 crop, 2 3 « Me p*. La Grande 7 Seat Fight. that John Alexander Dowie has decided Kinchon May 26, presented its final ië" in ^ T .'T r""* Tll? complete election re- Wool— Valley, 19«20i V" to return to the Unite*! Statea by the Eastern Oregon, 1 1 « 15c; mo**1 (list steamer. In stmngly-wonied de per pound for choice. nunciatory Beef— Dressed, 5 « 7 4 c pet papers this Mntton— Dressed, 4« be pet satisfaction lambs, 8c. part u re Veal— Dressed, f l * « 7 ( pc' J i P ork — Dressed, 6 « 7c pat