1895 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
689 
CROP AND MARKET NOTES. 
The Japan rice crop is reported to be a good 
one this year. 
Arrivals of honey are quite moderate, and the 
demand good for choice. 
Lemons are again plentiful, and the lemon fam¬ 
ine is ended, temporarily, at least. 
Pure beeswax is quiet at 27 to 28 cents per 
pound, and the demand is moderate. 
Most dried fruits are extremely dull, and prices 
are low. Prime cherries are held firmly. 
Plums are still scarce, and sales of Reine 
Claude, Gage and Damson are reported as high 
as $1 per 10 -pound basket. 
The Armour Packing Co. were fined $100 in Jer¬ 
sey City for selling oleomargarine in packages 
not stamped oleomargarine. 
A rumor that the Mexican government contem¬ 
plated placing an export duty on cattle, caused 
a rush of cattle across the border into Texas. 
The bean crop of western New York is reported 
to be excellent, and the weather has been such 
that it has been secured in first-class condition. 
Apples of the common sort are dull and very 
slow of sale. European markets are reported 
somewhat improved, and there have been some 
exports. 
Italian prune growing is assuming consider¬ 
able proportions in Oregon and Washington, 
whose climate is just suited to the production of 
this fruit. 
France is now afflicted with a syndicate that is 
trying to corner the sugar market, with promise 
of success. It is comforting to know that it is 
not likely to affect the American market. 
June butter from cold storage Is going on the 
market; the supply is imported to be consider¬ 
ably larger than last year, but unless prices 
should advance, it is likely to work off fairly 
well. 
From information received at the Agricultural 
Department at Washington, it is thought that the 
experiment of shipping live cattle from the Aus¬ 
tralian colonies to England, is not likely to prove 
profitable under present conditions. 
It is reported that in some parts of Seneca 
County, N. Y., many grapes will not be harvested, 
as the price is so low. The expense of making 
wine is so great, and the price so low, that it is 
unprofitable to utilize them in this way. 
The chestnut crop is generally reported to be 
light this year in nearly all sections, and un¬ 
usually late. Receipts are increasing slowly, and 
the market continues high. The favorable change 
in the weather has stimulated trade very much. 
Grapes are arriving in very large quantities in 
trays, barrels and large packages, to be used in 
making wine, and with a very large demand from 
10 to 15 car-loads are being disposed of daily at 
rather high prices, considering what stock in 
other packages brings. 
A decree has been issued in Germany, that 
hereafter, no cattle or hogs shall be imported 
without being quarantined. It will have little 
effect on the trade from this country, as cattle 
and dressed beef are already excluded entirely, 
and exports of hogs are small. 
Excelsior is largely used as a packing material. 
It has recently become very scarce owing to the 
shutting down of the mills where it is manufac¬ 
tured, for lack of water. The price has accord¬ 
ingly advanced, and straw is more in demand, 
with a consequent increase in price. 
With the advent of cooler weather, the egg 
market is beginning to gain a little strength, and 
prices to advance slowly for best stock. Eggs 
from cold storage are now beginning to come on 
the market, so that much higher prices for ordi¬ 
nary stock are not likely for the present. 
On the whole, prices received for California 
fruits in London have not proved profitable. 
The agents complain that they have not re¬ 
ceived fair treatment, as buyers demand that the 
fruit shall keep several days after arrival, when 
English and French fruit is always sold at once. 
The orange crop of California last season 
amounted to about 8,000 car-loads, or, say, 2,400,- 
000 boxes. Most of the crop was marketed at 
fairly remunerative figures, and it is said that 
it would have been easy to market the whole of it 
save for the heavy importations after the Florida 
freeze, and for the general depression prevailing 
in all lines of business. 
Philadelphia is after the people who sell milk 
containing boracic acid, the first prosecution 
under a new law forbidding its use, having just 
occurred. The ground of opposition to the law, 
however, seems to be the amount of water used 
with the acid, and not the poisonous quality of 
the acid itself. Several dealers were prosecuted 
for having chunks of ice in their milk. 
An order has been issued by Secretary Morton 
under the law organizing the Bureau of Animal 
Industry, authorizing the free admission into the 
United States of cattle from Mexico for grazing 
and immediate slaughter from and after October 
22. The entry must be made at one of the ports 
of San Diego, Nogales, El Paso, Eagle Pass and 
Brownsville, or the sub-port of Laredo, but the 
cattle will be allowed to cross the boundary at 
such points as may be agreed upon by the Col¬ 
lector of Customs of the district and the inspector 
of this Department as proper and convenient for 
inspection. The importations will be subject to 
inspection and other restrictions generally pro¬ 
vided in such orders. Mexican cattle have been 
usually admitted in September, and Secretary 
Morton’s action in advancing the date this year 
to October, is said to be due to his purpose to de¬ 
feat, as far as possible, the cattle 'and dressed 
beef combine in its efforts artificially to maintain 
high prices. 
Complaint is still heard about the small barrels 
which some sweet potato shippers in Virginia in¬ 
sist on using. The barrels hold, probably, a half 
bushel less than the standard barrel and the rea¬ 
son that the difference in price has been so slight 
is the fact that the potatoes in these barrels are 
from sections which grow the finest potatoes, 
and some dealers are able to use them at a re¬ 
duction of about 25 cents per barrel from prices 
current for stock in full-sized barrels. 
The Bureau of the American Republics has ad¬ 
vices from the Argentine Republic that the acre¬ 
age of wheat sown for the coming crop is larger 
than that of last year; the maize and linseed 
crops are smaller. It is also learned that there 
were exported from the port of La Plata in the 
month of July, 23,000 sheep, 3,000 head of cattle, 
averaging respectively 143 and 1,500 pounds each. 
Of the 24 steamers employed in their transporta¬ 
tion, 20 cleared for British ports, two for Belgium, 
one for France and one for Brazil. 
A dispatch from Springfield, Ill., says that that 
city has been selected as the location of a big 
agricultural implement factory to be established 
by the Patrons’ Manufacturing Association, a 
corporation composed of members of the Patrons 
of Husbandry in 22 different States. The factory 
will be located at a new suburb to be called Mil¬ 
dred just south of the city, and will be in opera¬ 
tion by next spring. The corporation begins with 
a capital stock of $ 100 , 000 , which will be doubled 
next year. All the contracts and papers have 
been signed, and work will begin as soon as the 
plans can be drawn. 
The steamer New York this week took about 
500 barrels of apples for London, and the Teu¬ 
tonic also had a large quantity for Liver¬ 
pool. Advices report the European markets con¬ 
siderably improved of late, and it is thought by 
the end of of this month, there will be a wide out¬ 
let for American apples in Europe, as the native 
fruit will be largely exhausted by that time. 
Recent cables from Liverpool quote Kings $2.69 to 
$4.65; Baldwins from $1.96 to $3.67; Greenings, 
$1.71 to $2.33 per barrel. From Glasgow, Kings 
from $4.41 to $5.14 ; Baldwins from $3.82 to $4.41; 
Greenings from $2.69 to $3.18 ; Northern Spy from 
$3.16 to $3,92. 
The New York State Weekly Crop Bulletin, 
issued October 1, says that a fine rain on Sep¬ 
tember 26, went far towards removing the 
drought over the regions of Lake Ontario, the cen¬ 
tral lakes and the north, but in other counties of 
the southern tier and the Hudson Valley, the pre¬ 
cipitation was slight, and the drought continues 
severe and serious. Fall work is well advanced, 
except in the driest sections. Potato digging is 
well advanced, and, except in parts of Cayuga 
County, very little rot is reported. Picking grapes 
and fall and winter apples is progressing satis¬ 
factorily. In some localities, winter apples, it is 
feared, have ripened somewhat prematurely. 
California is coming to the front as a lemon 
growing State. The California Fruit Grower 
says that it is practically impossible to get exact 
data regarding the lemon crop, but one thing is 
certain, the crop is increasing very rapidly from 
year to year, and the time is certainly near by 
when California lemons will be felt as an import¬ 
ant factor in the market. During the crop year 
just closed, the Southern Pacific Railway Com¬ 
pany shipped overland 3,916,000 pounds of lemons 
and the Santa Fe lines 1,827,000 pounds, making 
a total of 5,743,000 pounds. Allowing 80 pounds 
to a box, the above would represent 71,787 boxes, 
and the amount carried along the coast by sea 
would probably bring the total up to nearly or 
quite 100,000 boxes for the crop. 
In regard to the prospects for exporting apples, 
Mr. Josiah Rich, the manager of Otto G. Mayer 
& Co., says that there will surely be a large ex¬ 
port trade, but it can hardly be expected to come 
anywhere near the volume of that of the season 
of 1894-’95, when the European crop was a fail¬ 
ure, and there were exported from the United 
States, Canada and Nova Scotia, 1,438,155 bar¬ 
rels, of which 900,392 barrels were shipped from 
New York, Boston and Portland. The transatlan¬ 
tic crop this year is heavy, but it consists of early 
apples, the stock of which will be exhausted by 
about the middle of November. European apples 
are inferior to American apples, both in flavor 
and appearances, and compete only with the 
commoner kinds of the latter. Smooth, high-col¬ 
ored American apples are always in good de¬ 
mand in European markets, so that large ex¬ 
ports are assured when the transatlantic crop 
shall have been consumed. 
According to the report of the Consul at Frank¬ 
fort, Germany, dealers have been required to put 
up a notice in a conspicuous place stating that 
the American meats offered for sale “had passed 
only a superficial and insufficient inspection, and 
that no guarantee of their purity could, therefore, 
be given.” Of course the dealers declined to put 
up any such condemnatory announcement, and 
the sale of American meats has, therefore, been 
practically stopped. The Consul-General says 
that most of the American exports consisted of 
beef pickled in brine and pressed dry in air-tight 
casks, each barrel being accompanied by a United 
States inspection certificate. The Germans used 
this wholesome, well-cured beef for making 
sausages; the trade with Freiburg alone amount¬ 
ing to 12,000 barrels a year. All this commerce 
has now been suspended by the restrictive action 
of the local authorities, undoubtedly under in¬ 
structions from the general government. 
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BEANS AND PEAS. 
Beans, Marrow, 1894, choice.1 5501 60 
Marrow, 1896, choice.1 70® — 
Medium, choice, 1894 .1 45@ — 
Medium, 1895. choice.1 55® — 
Pea. 1891. choice.140® — 
Pea, 1895, choice.1 50® — 
White Kidney, 1894, choice.1 90@1 96 
Red Kidney, 1894, choice.1 30® — 
Black Turtle soup, 1895.1 70®1 75 
Yellow Eye 1895, choice.1 90® — 
Lima. Cal., 1894 (60 lbs).3 00® — 
Medium, foreign, 1894.1 16@1 25 
Marrow, foreign.1 30@1 40 
Pea, foreign, 1894.1 20®! 30 
Green peas, bbl., per bushel. 95® — 
Bags, per bushel. 87J4@ 90 
Scotch, bags. 85® — 
BUTTER—NEW. 
Creamery, State and Penn., extras . 
Elgin and other Western, extras 
Western, firsts. 
Western, seconds. 
Western, thirds. 
State dairy, half tubs, fresh, extras. 
Firsts . 
Seconds. . 
Welsh tubs, firsts. 
Welsh tubs, seconds.. 
Tubs, thirds. 
Western imitation creamery, firsts. 
Seconds. 
Thirds. 
Western dairy, firsts. 
Seconds . 
Thirds. 
Factory, firkins, June. 
Firkins, current make. 
Tubs, June, extras. 
First. 
Current make, extras. 
Firsts . 
Seconds. 
fourths to thirds.. 
.22)4® 23 
.23 @— 
.19 @21 
,15)4@17)4 
.13 @14 
.20 @ 20)4 
.18 @19 
. 14 @16 
.17 @18)4 
.14 @15 
.12 @13 
.14 @16 
.11 @12 
. 9)4@10 
.12 @14 
.10)4@11 
. 9)4®10 
• 11)4@12)4 
■ 10)4@11)4 
• 11 ) 4@12 
.11 @11)4 
.— @— 
.10)4@ll 
.10 @— 
. 8 @ 9)4 
CHEESE—NEW. 
State, full cream, large, colored, fancy 
Large, white, fancy. 
Prime to choice. 
Fair to good. 
Common. 
Small, white, fancy. 
Small, colored, fancy. 
Small, good to choice. 
Small, common to fair. 
Part skims, Chen. Co., etc., best. 
Fair. 
Common. 
Full skims. 
8 @ 8)4 
8 @ 8)4 
7) 4® V-H 
7 @ 7*4 
6 ®— 
9J4@- 
9 )4@— 
8) 4® 9 
7 @ 8 
6)4® 7)4 
4)4® 5 
2)4® 3 
1)4® 2 
EGGS. 
New-laid, fancy (nearby). 20 @ 21 
N. Y. State, country marks. 19 @ 19)4 
Pennsylvania, country marks. 19 @ 19)4 
Northern Indiana and Ohio, choice. 18 @ — 
Western, northerly sections, choice.... 17 @ 17)4 
Western, central sections, choice. 17 @ 17)4 
Western, southerly sections, choice. l‘ ! )4@ 17 
Western, refrigerator, choice. 16 @ 16)4 
Southwestern, fair, 30-36 doz per case. ..3 60 @4 75 
Western culls, per iiO-doz case.2 50 @3 50 
Ungraded, ner 30-doz case.1 50 @2 70 
POTATOES. 
Long Island, in bulk, per bbl. 1 00@1 25 
State Rose and Hebron, per 180 lbs.1 00@1 12 
Burbank, etc., per 180 lbs. 90® 1 00 
Northern N. Y., per bbl... . . 90@1 10 
Jersey, prime, per bbl. 76® 1 00 
Seconds, per bbl. 50® 75 
Sweets. Jersey, yellow, per bbl. 2 00@2 25 
Virginia yellow, per barrel.1 75@2 00 
POULTRY—FRESH KILLED. 
Turkeys, old hens. 11 @ — 
Old toms. 10 @ — 
Spring, dry picked, 5 to 7 lbs each ... 9 @ 10 
Spring, scalded, 5 to 7 lbs each. 8 @ 9 
Inferior. 4 @ 7 
Chickens, Phila., large, per lb. 17 @ 18 
Phila., mixed weights, per lb. 14 @ 16 
Western scalded, per lb. 11 @ 12)4 
Western, dry-picked, per lb. 1!) @ 13 
Fowls, Western, scalded, choice. 11)4@ 12 
Dry picked, choice. 12 @ — 
Common to fair . 8)4@ 9)4 
Old roosters, per lb. 6)4® 7)4 
Ducks, L. I., spring, per lb. 16 @ 17 
Eastern spring, per lb. 16 @ — 
Western, fair to good. 6 @ 10 
Squabs, tame, white, per doz.2 25 @2 50 
Mixed lots, per doz.2 50 @ — 
Dark and poor, per doz.1 50 @1 75 
Geese, Eastern, per lb. 15 @ 16 
POULTRY—LIVE. 
Spring chickens, local, per lb. 10 @ 10)4 
Western, per lb. 10 @ — 
Southern, per lb. 10)4® 11 
Fowls, local, per lb. 10)4® 11 
Western, per lb. 10 @ 11 
Southern, per lb. 10 @ 10)4 
Roosters, per lb. 6 @ 6)4 
Turkeys, mixed, per lb. 10 @ — 
Ducks, local, per pair. 60 @ 90 
Western, per pair. 60 @ 75 
Southern, per pair. 50 @ 60 
Geese, fancy fattened, per pair.1 26 @1 75 • 
Western, per pair.1 25 @1 50 
Southern and S'western, per pair.1 00 @1 25 
Pigeons, per pair. 20 @ 25 
VEGETABLES. 
Cabbage, L. I. & Jersey, Flat Dutch, per 100.2 00@4 00 
Cauliflower, L. I and Jersey, per bbl. 75@2 50 
Celery. State and Western, per doz. 10@ 45 
Jersey, per doz roots. 10® 35 
Cucumbers, pickles, prime, per 1,000.1 60@2 00 
Common.. 50@1 00 
Egg plant. Jersey, per bbl. . 76@1 25 
Green corn, Jersey, per 1,000.5 00® 10 00 
Lima beans, Jersey flat, per bag.2 00@3 00 
Onions. L. 1. and Jersey, per bbi.1 00@1 25 
Per basket. 50@1 00 
Orange County, red, per bbl . 50@1 00 
Orange County, yellow, per bbl. 75® 1 00 
Eastern, white, per bbl.1 26@2 00 
Eastern, yellow, per bbl.1 25@ — 
Eastern, red, per bbl.. .1 00® — 
State and Western, yellow, per d. h. bbl.l 12@1 25 
Peppers, Jersey, per bbl. 60® 75 
Pumpkins, per bbl . 50® 75 
Squash, Marrow, per bbl. 40@ 60 
Hubbard, per bbl. 75@I 00 
Turnips, Jersey, Russia, per bbl. 50® 60 
Tomatoes, Jersey, per box. 30® 40 
MILK AND CREAM. 
The total daily supply has been 21,203 cans of milk, 
211 cans of condensed milk and 657 cans of cream. 
The averago price paid for the surplus on the plat¬ 
forms has been $1.45 a can of 40 quarts. 
FRUITS—DRIED. 
In writing to advertisers, please always mention 
Apples, evaporated, 1895, fancy. 6)4® 6)4 
Choice, 1895 . 6)4@ 6 
Prime, 1896. 5 @5)4 
Evaporated. 1894, fancy. 594@ 6)4 
Common, 1894 . 4 @4)4 
Sundried, sliced, 1895 . 2 @ 3)4 
Chopped, 1895, por lb. 154®— 
Cores and skins, 1894, per lb. %@ 1 
Apricots, Cal., 1894, boxes, per lb.— @— 
Bags, per lb..,. .— @— 
Peaches, Cal., unpeeled. 1894, per lh.— @— 
Georgia, sundried, 1895, per lb. 5 @ 6)4 
N. C., sundried, peeled, per lb. 6 @ 7*4 
Huckleberries, per lb. 7 @— 
Plums. State. 3)4® 4 
Cherries, 1895, per lb . 9 @ 9)4 
Blackberries, 1894, per lb. 4 @— 
Raspberries, evaporated. 1894 .17 @— 
Sundried.16 @— 
FRUITS—GREEN 
Apples, Gravenstein, per bbl.2 00@2 50 
Jonathan, per bbl.2 50® — 
Blush, per bbl. 1 25@1 50 
Codling, per bbl.1 25@1 60 
20 -oz., per bbl . 1 00@1 50 
Orange Pippin, per bbl.1 00@1 25 
Holland Pippin, per bbl.1 25@1 50 
Fall Pippin, per bbl.1 25@1 75 
King of Tompkins, per bbl.1 25@2 00 
Baldwin, per bbl.1 00@1 50 
Greening, per bbl.1 00@1 37 
Windfalls, per bbl. 40@ 60 
Cranberries. Cape Cod, per bbl.3 00@6 00 
Per crate.1 50@2 00 
Grapes, Up-River. Concord, per case. 50@ 70 
Up-River. Delaware, per case.1 25@1 50 
Up-River, Niagara, per case. 50® 75 
Wesfn N. Y., Delaware, per5-lb basket.. 10® 16 
Catawba, per 5-lb basket. 10® 12 
West’n N. Y.. Concord, per 10-lb basket. 13® 16 
Concord, per 5-lb basket. 8 ® 9 
Peaches, Del. and Md., average, per carrier . 50@2 09 
Jersey, extra, per basket. —@ — 
Prime, per basket. 80@1 00 
Jersey, plain, per basket. 50® 75 
Jersey, small and poor, per basket. 26® 40 
Pears, Bartlett, per bbl.2 00@4 00 
Bartlett, per keg.1 00@2 50 
Anjou, per bbl.1 50@2 25 
Bose, per bbl’.1 50@3 00 
Clairgeau, per bbl.1 50@2 50 
Louise Bonne, per bbl.1 25@2 00 
Sheldon, per bbl. .. .1 50@2 50 
Flemish Beauty, per bbl.1 60@3 00 
Lawrence, per bbl.1 50@2 25 
Near-by, common, per bbl. 75@1 25 
Seckel, per bbl.2 00@4 00 
Plums, Up-River, Damson, per 10-lb basket. 60® 80 
Gage, per 10-lb basket. 50® 75 
Common, per 10-lb basket. 25® 50 
Quinces, apple, per bbl.2 00@3 00 
Orange, per bbl.2 00@2 75 
GAME 
Woodcock, near-by, fresh, per pair.1 00@1 12 
Western, fresh, per pair.1 00@1 12 
Quail, frozen, per doz.2 00@2 25 
Partridges, near-by, fresh, per pair. 75@1 12 
Western, fresh, per pair. 60® 80 
Frozen, undrawn, per pair. 75® — 
Frozen, drawn, per pair. 50® 60 
Grouse, fresh, per pair.1 00@1 12 
English snipe, fresh, per doz.1 50@2 25 
Golden plover, fresh, per doz.1 00@2 25 
Grass plover, fresh, per doz.1 50@1 75 
Snipe, small, yellow leg, fresh, per doz. 75@ — 
Sand snipe, fresh, per doz. 30® 40 
Blackbirds, per doz. 15® 20 
Reed birds, per doz. 50® 75 
Wild ducks, mallards, per pair. 50® 75 
Canvas, per pair.2 00@3 (X) 
Blue wing, teal, per pair. 40® 50 
Green wing, teal and common, per pair . 25® 30 
Red heads, per pair.1 50@2 50 
Venison, saddles, fresh, per lb. 20® 22 
Fair to good, per lb. 15® 18 
Frozen, per lb. 16® 20 
MEATS—DRESSED. 
The Rural New-Yorker. 
Your Rutter, Eggs, 
Poultry,Veal, Keans, 
Potatoes, Hides, 
Pelts, Wool, Hay, 
_ _ Grain. Green anil 
Dried Fruits, or ANYTHING YOUMAY 
HAVE to us. Quick sales at tlie highest 
market price and prompt returns made. 
Write for prices or any Information you may want. 
SUMMERS, MORRISON & CO., SsssSSfi! 
174 South Water St., Chicago, III. 
Reference —Metropolitan National Bank, Chicago, 
DO YOU WANT TO SHIP YOUR 
BUTTER and EGGS 
to responsible parties who will get you highest market 
prices for tine goods ? Choice Creamery Butter and 
Fancy Leghorn Eggs a specialty. Apply to 
GARNER & CO., 33 Little 12th St., NewYork, 
before shipping elsewhere. Itof.: Gansovoort Bank 
PALMER & FROST, 
Successors to 
G. S. PALMER and PALMER. RIVENBURG & CO., 
Established 1869. 
POULTRY AND CALVES A SPECIALTY 
Also Butter, Eggs, Apples, Potatoes and Oranges. 
166 Reade Street, New York. 
Reference: Chatham National Bank. 
WILLIAM H. COHEM & CO., 
COMMISSION MERCHANTS. 
Our Specialties are 
GAME, FURS, GINSENG, POULTRY, NUTS, Etc. 
229 and 231 Washington Street, New York. 
Also Packers of First-class Canned Goods. 
JELlLIFFE, WRIGHT & CO.. 
Produce Commission Merchants, 
BUTTER, EGGS AND POULTRY, 
284 Washington Street. New York. 
Dressed Meats: 22, 24 and 26 Grace Avenue West 
Washington Market. Live 8 tock: Union Stock 
Yards, foot of West 60th Street. 
Refer to Irving National Rank. 
HIP 
ESTABLISHED IN 1876. 
SOMERS, BROTHER & CO. 
HEADQUARTERS for, 
Fruits and Produce 
Receive and sell, in car load lots and smaller 
quantities, all Products of the Orchard, Garden . 
Dairy, Hennery and Farm, ~ 
Market Keporu, Special Keferencen, Stencils, etc., furnished 
free on application. 
611 Liberty Street, PITTSBURGH, PA. 
dairies and Corre«Dond«nf»* Tnvited. 
Shippers and Producers 
of Fruit, Vegetables, and all kinds of Produce, desir¬ 
ing a good market to ship to, will do well to correspond 
with G. G. WETTERAU, General Commission Mer¬ 
chant, Hazleton. Pa. 
Veals, country dressed, prime . 11 @ — 
Fair to good, per lb. 9 @ 10)4 
Com. to med., per lb. 7)4@ 9)4 
Buttermilks, per lb. 6 @ 7 
Small, per lb. 5 @ 7 
Grassers, per lb. 5 @ 6 
Pork, country dressed, light, lean, per lb. 754® 8 
Medium, per lb. 6)4@ 7 
Heavy, prime, per lb. 50 @ 6)4 
Prize Chester Whites, Berkshires; 
\JlO Jersey Calves; pure Collies, Beagles; 
Fowls. 61st year. F. MORRIS, Norway, Pa. 
FOR SALE 
—Car-load early cut, well cured Clover- 
Mixed Hay; good feeding quality. 
:_ i C. O. NEWTON,fcHomer, N. Y. 
