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NEWS DEPARTMEiVT. 
ROCHESTER, N. Y., JULY 21, i860. 
Affair* In Waahlnatou. 
There are nearly forty members of both 
Houses of Congress notv absent. 
The Senate has postponed the Tariff bill (which 
passed the House) till the December session. 
A bill to repeal the act. of July 9 # 3 * 40 , retro¬ 
ceding the city and county of Alexandria to 
Virginia, has been defeated in the Senate. 
Mr. Guthrie, from the Senate Finance Com¬ 
mittee, reported a bill on the Kith, to indemnify 
the States for expenses in the late rebellion. 
A joint-resolution has passed the Senate, 
granting the use of tents, hospital furniture and 
clothing to the sufferers by the Portland fire. 
A joint-resolution giviDg the right of way 
through the Military Reservation to the Union 
Pacific Railroad, passed the Senate on the 13th. 
The Republican members of Congress held 
a caucus on the 14th met., and agreed to an ad¬ 
journment of Congress for the session on the 23d. 
A resolution is before the Senate requesting 
the President to interpose the good offices of the 
U nited States to secure the release of the Fenian 
prisoners In Canada and elsewhere. 
A joint-resolution has passed the House to 
extend the time for the collection of internal rev¬ 
enue in the burnt district of Portland, Mo,, to 
the elo?e of the next session of Congress. 
The Secretary of the Treasury has ordered 
another installment of bonds (1320,000) to be 
issued to the Pacific Railroad, (Eastern Division,) 
and ?G40,000 to the Central Pacific Railroad 
Compatty of California. 
Post-Master General Dennison sent his resig¬ 
nation to the President on the 11th. It was 
accepted on the 14th, aud A. Vf. Randall, First 
Assistant Post-Master General, nominated to 
the Senate to fill the vacancy. 
The Senate has so amended the Niagara Ship 
Canal Rill that $2,000,000 instead of .8800,000, 
shall Lave been expended by the Company be¬ 
fore receiving the Treasury bonds. Toll must 
not exceed that on the Welland Canal, and 20 
per cent, iustead of 10 , shall be given towards 
the payment of loans by the Government. 
The President vetoed the new Freedmcn’s 
Bureau Bill on the 16th inst. 
who are able to get along without assistance 
from the Freedmen’s Bureau, have organized 
mutual relief associations for their own benefit, 
aud to protect and assist the needy of their own 
' color. They are also organized into fire compa¬ 
nies in some of the larger towns, and in Colum¬ 
bus have been uniformed by the white citizens. 
The cities of Galveston and Houston, Texas, 
have Increased in population very rapidly 6 incc 
the war. The former city had, before the war, 
a population of about 5,000; now, according to 
a recent enumeration, Galveston has nearly 30,- 
000. Houston, a small city of between 5,000 and 
6,000 inhabitants, now numbers upwards of 16,- 
000. The trade of the south-western cities is 
said to be equal to that of New Orleans, popula¬ 
tion considered. 
In consequence of rumors that negroes had 
been kidnapped In Florida and taken to Cuba, a 
United States gunboat has been cruising recently 
in the vicinity of Fernandina to prevent the 
repetition of njcb outrages. There seems to be 
no doubt but at least one schooner load of 
negroes were enticed on board the vessel to 
serve as sailors, and then taken to Cnba and sold. 
Gen. Sickles, commanding the Department of 
the Carolina*, having ordered the district com¬ 
mander of the Freedmen’s Bureau to report to 
him on affairs touching the Bureau as well as on 
military affairs, the commander appealed from 
this supervision. Generals Grant and Howard 
sustained his appeal, thus establishing the fact 
of the Bureau being a separate and independent 
organization. _ 
The Cattle Plague. 
Tiie following is the effleial statement of 
the ravages of the cattle plague in Great Brittain 
during the year ending the 22 d of June: 
“The cattle plague has how completed the 
fifty-second week of i^s prevalence, and during 
the year nearly a quarter of a million (248,965) 
of attacks have been officially reported; SO,597 
cattle are stated to have been killed, 1'24,lb7 to 
have died, 32,989 to Lave recovered, and In 11,- 
192 cases the results have not been specified. In 
addition to the foregoing, 51,843 cattle exposed 
to risk have been slaughtered while free from 
disease. 
In the aggregate, more than 50 ( 50.5) in ev¬ 
ery 1,000 of the ordinary stock of cattle in Great 
Britain have been attacked, and to every 1,000 
attacks, whose results have been reported, near¬ 
ly 900 (861.3) animals perished. 
The epidemic has also extended to a consid¬ 
erable number of sheep, and since the com¬ 
mencement, 4,403 are officially reported to have 
been attacked; of these, 4,002 died, or were 
killed, and 461 recovered, or were unaccounted 
for.” 
Maximilian had ordered the sum of $600,000 
as one-half of the dividend of the English debt, 
to be sent to England ty 6 teamer on the first 
of July. To raise this sum the Custom House 
at Vera Cruz had to discount the paper of the 
merchants which it held, at ruinous rates. 
A letter frem President Juarez to Consul Go- 
dey, confirms the statement that the Liberal 
Government is about to be re-established at 
Chihuahua, and adds that “No French or trai¬ 
tor forces are nearer there than Durango, and 
no apprehension is felt of the.return of the Im¬ 
perialists,” 
FOREIGN NEWS. 
Markets, Commerce, &c. 
The steamer Persia, from Liverpool the 30th 
frit., arrived at New York the 12th inst. The 
war news is ver_, contradictory, both the Aus- Tnz market, for produce generally, Is quiet and trans- 
trians and Prussians claiming victories on the actions quite limited, The general tendency ol prices is 
same battle fields. downward. Flour Is a shade lower, as will be seen by 
Berlin dispatches of June 29th sav the Aus- ‘‘notation*. 6 how» a corresponding downward 
^ , ... .-l tendency with very lUtle offering. The foreign news, 
’ " e<1 ,rl 11 ~' ^ al! ^ -‘'th. near., uiough of an exciting character politically, acted soda- 
Rural New-Yorker Office, ) 
Rochester, July, 17, 1886. ( 
Nacbod, by the first army corps, and on the 29th) 
at Trantenan, by the corps of Life Guards, and 
at Munchengrantz by Prince Frederic Charles. 
At Trantenan the Austrians are said to have 
The Austrians recently captured at Comaruo '^ ree f° nr thousand killed and wounded. 
X B I T'L, ~ T>_• * I _ a a _ A -l » % _ 
have been set free and scattered in Texas. They 
say they will not be returned to the Imperial¬ 
ists. They all went over to the Liberals, ex¬ 
pecting to be sent to Texas. 
The Indian Council.— The N. Y. Tribune’s 
special from Leavenworth, Kansas, last week, 
6 ays the Indian Council at Fort Laramie has 
broken up. It wa 6 a complete farce, the Indians 
refusing to make peace except upon their own 
terms, which are the withdrawal of all troops 
and travel from their hunting grounds north of j 
the Plfttte River. The council has been an enor¬ 
mous expense to the Government, with no very 
beneficial results. [A dispatch from Leavenworth 
of July 13, represents that there are 10,000 Indians 
on the overland route; that apprehensions are 
entertained of very serious trouble; that bands of 
Sioux and Cheyennes have already killed several 
The Prussians lost 1,000 at Munchengrantz. The 
Austrian losses are stated at 2 .O 0 S. The Prus¬ 
sians claim to have captured about 8,000 prison¬ 
ers, numerous trophies, guns, dec. There was 
great rejoicing at Berlin. The inhabitants pre¬ 
sented an address to and serenaded the King. 
The Crown Prince of Prussia reports that in his 
engagement he had 22 battalions opposed to 26 
battalions of Austrians. 
The Hanoverian army on the 29th surrendered 
at discretion to the Prussians. The officers re¬ 
tained their side arms. The men were dismissed 
to their homes. 
The whole Federal army at and near Frankfort 
wa* on the march, and a battle was anticipated. 
The Italians have changed their plan of opera¬ 
tions. There have been no further collisions in 
Italy. Garibaldi was at Lake Idro. 
Fatker Gavazzl has been made chief of the hos- 
whites on the plains, and that along tkefrontier, cor P B Hai ibaldi's department. 
settlers have been murdered, their houses burned 
and their cattle and horses “ run off.” The fail¬ 
ure of the treaty is fatal to the prospects of many 
of the pioneers, and they are abandoning their 
homes and Hying from danger.] 
NEW8 PARAGRAPHS. 
Southern Item*. 
The Western Texas returns of the late elec¬ 
tion, repudiate negro suffrage strongly. 
Reports continue to be received of murders 
and robberies by negro traders on the Red River. 
A warehouse in Mobile was burned on the 
10th inst. A thousand bales of cotton were 
consumed. Loss, $150,000. 
An Austrian officer who recently arrived at 
Memphis, is offering ex - Confederate officers 
commissions in the Austrian army, and a good 
many are accepting them. 
The official vote of Western Virginia for the 
Constitutional Amendment disfranchising per¬ 
sons engaged in the late rebellion, was counted 
at Wheeling on the 11th, and the Amendment 
was declared adopted by 0,922 majority. 
The gold fields of Georgia are beginning to 
attract attention. A letter from Dalton states 
that one company took out In a single day 
over $ 10 , 000 . 
A duel was fought on the 12th inst. near 
Memphis, between Alonzo Greenlow aud A. H. 
Taylor. Mr. Taylor was killed at the first lire. 
He belonged in Memphis. 
The Montgomery Mail advises the Alabama 
Legislature to maintain a state of “masterly 
inactivity” on the Constitutional Amendment, 
if it is not thought prudent to vote squarely for 
its rejection. 
A party of children, while playing about 
three miles from Augusta, Ga., recently, discov¬ 
ered a large lump of gold in a ravine. The 
specimen found weighed eleven ounces. Prepa¬ 
rations are being made to prospect the ravine. 
Several smaller lumps of gold were picked up in 
the vicinity. 
Canadian Affairs, 
The N. Y. Herald’s Ottawa dispatch says 
there was ar^ excited session of the Canadian 
Parliament on the 9th inst. The opposition 
assailed the Government with great force and 
effect, and the project of annexation to the 
United States seems to gain favor. 
An Ottawa dispatch of July 13, says: —“This 
morning a vote was taken on Mr. McGiveren’s 
motion of waut of confidence the financial 
and commercial policy of the Government, and 
the result was—l'or the Government, S3; against 
it, 28. Majority for the Ministry, 55. 
The debate on this motion has lasted three 
days, some members, such as Brown, Galt, Rose 
and McGee, speaking for hours. 
This is the last session of the present Parlia¬ 
ment. It will close in about two weeks.” 
Subscriptions for the relief of those rendered 
destitute by the late Portland fire, are being 
made in Montreal. Considerable sums have been 
contributed and forwarded to the sufferers. 
From South America. 
Rio Janeiro advices of June 8 th, say the 
allies gained a fresh victory over the Paraguay¬ 
ans on the 24th of May. The Paraguayans fell 
upon the center and fianks of tbe allies with 
extraordinary bravery, bringing eight battalions 
of infantry and eight of cavalry upon the center, 
the same number on the left, and about.half that 
number on the right flank. The battle along 
the whole line became general at once, and 
although the allied artillery poured a murderous 
fire on the Paraguayans, they did not falter, hut 
pressed on to break the lines of the allies, until 
they came to a hand-to-hand encounter,— their 
cavalry rushing up to the mouths of the cannon. 
Alter four hours’ hard fighting, the Paraguay¬ 
ans were forced to withdraw to their fortifica¬ 
tions, losing 7,000 men in killed, wounded and 
prisoners. The allies lost 300 killed and 600 
wounded and missing. 
The Republics of Chill, Peru, Bolivia and 
Ecuador are said to have formed a league to free 
Cuba from Spain. Columbia and Venezuela 
were invited to join the alliance. 
» 
From Mexico. 
The N. Y. Herald’s Brownsville correspon¬ 
dent ot June 20th, says the greatest consterna¬ 
tion prevails among the Imperialists on the 
Mexican side of the Rio Grande. The Liberals 
are exultant, and it is universally conceded that 
the power of the Empire is broken in Northern 
Mexico. 
Bagdad, the now famous city at the mouth of 
The Twenty-Ninth Annual Convention of the 
Episcopal Diocese of Western New York, will be 
held at St. Paul’s Church, Syracuse, on the 15th 
day of August. 
An Italian journal says that a Miss Grant, a 
relation of the American General of that name, 
has given Garibaldi 1,000 francs for the relief of 
necessitous volunteers. 
The counsel for Jeff, Davis has. finally aban¬ 
doned all attempts to procure hi 6 release from 
prison on parole. The prisoner does not com¬ 
plain of bis treatment. 
The Wayne County Democratic Pres 6 states 
that a number of hogs have recently died in 
Sodas of hog cholera. A number of others were 
affected by the same disease. 
It Is reported that a marked change in the 
Horse Shoe Falls at Niagara has occurred within 
a few days past, large portions of rock having 
been detached in the center. 
The call for a Convention of Unionists, to be 
held at Independence Hall in the city of Phila¬ 
delphia, ou the fourteenth of August, is pub¬ 
lished in the Southern States. 
Roberts, President of the Fenian Brother¬ 
hood, has been indicted by the grand jury in 
New York, for a violation of the neutrality laws, 
and gave bail in five thousand dollars. 
A machine SHOP for the Reading Railroad 
has just been completed at that place one hun¬ 
dred feet wide by nine hundred feet long. Four 
hundred mechanic^ are employed in it. 
Dr. F. N. Burke of Cincinnati, has just 
returned from a visit to Ireland, his native 
country, and reports that Fcnianism there is 
regarded as a l'aree by all Intelligent people. 
A great fire occurred in Frankfort, Pa., on 
the 12 th in 6 t. Among the buildings destroyed 
was the Taeony Print Works of Aaron S. Lip- 
plucott. Loss by the conflagration, -$2,000,000. 
An American watch factory at Elgin, I1L, 
with $250,000 capital, will he ready to make sixty 
watches per day by September. Most of the stock¬ 
holders were formerly workmen at Waltham. 
Mr. E. P. Russell of Manlins, N. Y., has 
invented and received a patent for a machine 
which rakes, binds and sets out of the way of the 
next round of the UMichine, any grain cut down 
in the harvest field. 
The present force of the Amerftan navy in 
European waters amounts to twelve vessels car¬ 
rying 141 guns. It is thought that should the 
“ War in Europe” continue long, this force will 
be largely increased. 
A marked peculiarity of the present war in 
Europe is the presence of crowned heads with 
their armies. The Emperor of Austria, the 
Kings of Prussia, Italy, Saxony and Hanover 
have all taken the fleltL 
Gen. Grant is of the opinion that there 
should be at least one full regiment of cavalry 
in each Southern State, in order to prevent out¬ 
rages and to give proper protection to loyal 
citizens, white and black. 
A genuine case of “trichina,” it is reported, 
has recently occurred in New York city. The 
case has been examined by the Cooper Scientific 
Association, and the man placed under the treat¬ 
ment of two experienced physicians. 
Sixteen thousand, four hundred and 
thirty-two acres were entered by actual 
A white man in Nashville, Tenn t , was recently the Rio Grande, was evacuated by the Imperial ^tiers, ^ UDL ‘> *’ je Winnebago City Land 
married by a miuiater of the colored Baptist troops on the 18th, and a portion of Cortinas’ ^® ce > Minnesota, The survey of the Minne- 
Chureh, to a negro woman, but that kind of men are now in possession. 60ta YaUe >’ RaUroad ^as been completed. 
“ civil rights ” uot being permitted by the laws Matamoras has been evacuated by Gen. Me- Senator James H. Lane, of Kansas, who 
of the State, the bride and bridegroom were jia, who reached Vera-Cruz with his forces on 6li °t himself a week or two since, died of his 
sent to jah and the minister bailed to appear for the first of July, in a bad condition for supplies wounds at Leavenworth, (Kansas,) on the 
trial before the court. ^ and clothing. The Liberal troops which had llth iast - Tbe fnneral took place at Lawrence 
The new Constitution ot North Carolina will occupied Matamoras, behaved splendidly. Car- ou the 13th. All business was suspended. 
Office, Minnesota, The survey of the Minne¬ 
sota Valley Railroad has been completed. 
Senator James H. Lane, of Kansas, who 
shot himself a week or two since, died of his 
wounds at Leavenworth, (Kansas,) on the 
11th inst. The funeral took place at Lawrence 
on the 18th. All business was suspended. 
The Queen has accepted the resignations of 
’ several members of the Cabinet, The English 
Parliament had adjourned till July 5th at the re¬ 
quest of Earl Derby, who is forming a new 
Cabinet. He sought to obtain the support of 
tbe leading Whigs and Liberals who have acted 
against Russell’s Government, but failed, and a 
conservative Ministry is expected. Threatening 
demonstrations had taken place in London 
among the lower orders ou the Reform question. 
It is reported that France will not long re¬ 
main quiet. An active intervention is reported 
already agreed upon. 
The London Times again indulges in some 
complimentary remarks upon the visit of the U. 
8 . monitor Miantonomah to England, and says 
that in allowing this vessel to visit England at 
the present moment the government of Presi¬ 
dent Johnson has conferred a service only 
secondary to that so frankly rendered In the re¬ 
cent suppression of the miserable Fenian demon¬ 
stration on the shores of the Canadian lakes. 
The weekly returns of the Bank of France 
show a further increase in the cash on hand of 
22,200,000f. ’ The Bourse wa 3 very flat on the 
I 29th, rentes dosing at 63.02. 
The Hungarian Chambers have been prorogued 
for an indefinite period on account of the war. 
The setting closed with cheers for the King. 
A Royal Decree calls out the reserves of the 
Portuguese army. 
A large additional number of sergeants impli¬ 
cated in the recent military revolt, have been 
shot at Madrid. Two newspaper offices of the 
Progressionist and Democratic parties had been 
closed by the Government, 
Later.—B y the steamer America we have 
foreign advices to the 4th inst. 
The Great Eastern, with the Atlantic Cable on 
board, arrived on the Irish coast on the 1 st. 
A new British Cabinet has been formed. Lord 
Derby is the Premier; D’Jsraeli, Chancellor of 
the Exchequer; Stanley, Foreign Secretary: 
Walpole, Home Secretary; Pakington, Admi¬ 
ralty; Northcotc, Board of Trade; Duke of 
Buckingham, President of‘the Council. 
Dispatches from Berlin say the Austrians were 
defeated in the battles of the 2 Ttb, 28th and 29th. 
The Prussians say the Austrians lost 20,000 men 
in killed and wounded, and 15,000 prisoners 
during those three days. The Prussian losses 
are represented as much lees. 
The Austrian and Prussian armies met at 
Ludsowa, Bohemia, on the 3d inst., and after a 
sanguinary conflict of twelve hours, the Austri¬ 
ans were most disastrously defeated. They fled 
from the field in the wildest confusion, leaving 
in the bands of the victors 116 cannon, large 
quantities of arms, baggage aud ammunition, and 
14,000prisoners. The numher killed and wounded 
was very great on both sides. Three Aus¬ 
trian Archdukes were -wounded aud two taken 
prisoners. The news created wild exeitementin 
Berlin, and among the Italians under Victor 
Emanuel in Italy. Garibaldi attacked the Aus¬ 
trians on the 3d., but was unsuccessful in forcing 
them from their position. He received a slight 
wound. It is stated that the Emperor of Aus¬ 
tria has asked for the interposition of the Empe¬ 
ror Napoleon with a view to peace with Prussia. 
As a preliminary he proposes to cede Venitia to 
France. It is thought a European Congress will 
soon assemble. 
- 4 < ■ » 
Bank Resumption. — Ward & Brother, 
bankers of this city, whose house was closed 
early in the spring, resumed business again on 
Monday of this week. Most of those to whom 
the bank was indebted have agreed to grant an 
extension of time. The assignees have acqui- 
eseed in the new arrangement, thus facilitating 
their resumption of business relations with the 
public. 
Valuable and Convenient. — “ Brown’s 
Bronchial Troches ” are widely known as an 
admirable remedy for Bronchitis, Hoarseuc-s, 
Coughs, and other troubles of the Throe and 
Lungs. They are of great value for the pur¬ 
poses for which they are designed; while they 
are usually and pleasantly efficacious, they con- . 
tively upon tbe English com market. Provisions are in 
fair supply and price; generally a shade lower. 
The wool market, owing to the action of Congress on 
the tariff bill, Is less buoyant and transactions quite lim¬ 
ited. Bat few parcels of wool are offering in this mar¬ 
ket, and these are taken at a decline. The range is about 
50 to 5!>C according to quality. There )6 but tittle offer¬ 
ing at any of tbe shipping points In the surrounding 
country. We learn that last week, belore tbe action on 
tbe tariff WU was known,they were paying at Rush vine, 
Yates Co., C2Sc V pound for the best quality of wool. 
Subsequently the trade was checked and transactions 
pretty much suspended. The wheat harvest had com¬ 
menced there and the yield pronounced a good one. 
1f7ialcsafe J'rices CttrrctU. 
floub,fhep,Gf.ain,E tc. , straw.f7,oc(?iz,oo 
Flour, w’twb't fll.C0®ib 00 K nr its Vegetables, Etc. 
Do.red Wbeat,fl8JO®l4jXI Apples, green...( 1 ,50® 1,75 
Do. extra Bute, A5o@ iiig» 1 Do. dried, F ft. U@l2«c 
Do. buckwheat,0,00® 0,0:* Peaches. 00® soc 
Do. extra Bute, V,50®lu,5Ci 
Do. buckwheat, 0,0b® O.O) 
Millfee d, coarse.. r,,fc 
Do. fine... . iS.QO®00,W) 
Meal.corn, cwt., 1,!<0® J.00 
Wheat, red...... 2,50® l.lfi 
Best white.5.(0® 3,00 
Corn, old, * bu.. 85® lOc 
Do. new. so® use 
Rye,..,. 85® !«c 
Do. dried, V lb. It@i2!*c 
Peaches. 00 ® soc 
Cherries. 85c 
Plums. ^nc 
Potatoes.* bn... 100 ® iUc 
Onions . 50® 00c 
Carrots. 40® 40c 
limns ani* SKixs. 
Green hides trtm'd t® Vs 
Do-UTtrimmed.. 7® 8c 
Ost*. e-v 70c Green calfskins ., is® 30c 
Barley,. pv TT.c j Sheep pelts, each,(0,25®AS0 
Beans . .1,12® 1,25 Lamb pelrs,. 85 ® tic 
JlKATA BXl 
Pork, old atess. (00.00®00.00 Timothy v» bt 
Do. newtnets. 32.SO®88,(0 Clover, medn 
Do. clear, ? ». IS® iGc Do. large .. 
Dress’d hogs,cwt n,0<i®l2.00 Peas.....,.,.. 
Beef.loSo®I2,W Flax. 
Spring lambs.... 2,75® 8.75 Sunt 
Mutton,♦ a.... b& lue Wood,hard. 
Hams. 18® 2Rs Do.soft.... 
Shoulder*. II® 15c Coal, lump, f 
Chickens....... IS® 30c Do. large et 
Turkey;. 20® 'lie Do.imaileii 
Geese, 4» it' ..., 10® lie Do.stove. 
Dajkv, Etc. Do. chesinu 
Butter.choice roll <5® 2*c Do. soft..,. 
Do. packed.25® Do. Char ¥> 
Cheese.new.10® ISC Salt, F bbj... 
Do.old. :S® -.Oc Wool,*®... 
Lard, tried.23®&.Wc Hops. 
Do. rough.15® 00c Whltefish, w I 
Tallow, tried ^... 0® 9^6 Codfish, * i00 
Do. rough. 0®tJKC Honey, box, ? 
Eggs, dozen.201® 22c Candles, box. 
Foxaob. Do. extra... 
Hny F tun.E.QC&14.00 Barrel*. 
_ Bxxds. 
Timothy V bu.. (1 CD® 0,50 
Clover, medium,, fi.so® 7.50 
Do. large.0.0C® o,O0 
£?as.1.25® 2 ,oo 
.i,5o® 2,w) 
SUNDBies. 
Wood, hard..., * 10 . 00 ®li,M) 
Do. soft. . 7 j»® 8 00 
Coal, lump, F fun 8,v,®0.(» 
Do. largo egg... f.v^.0,00 
Do. small egg... 8 ,wj® 0.00 
Do.stove. ... ''.laso.oj 
Do.Chestnut.... S/j 6 ®Q ,(10 
Do. soft. 5,00®O,fl0 
Do.Char* bu. u® 16c 
Salt, V bbl. 8 , 60 ®j 85 
])'>ol,¥t®. 50®Me 
Hops.., . 40® b*? 
Whitefish, X bbl. .S.75&9.0O 
Codt.sh. F100 Tt.s .7 r 50®S.50 
Honey, box, * s>. ao® 30c 
Candles, box.14W® lie 
Do. extra.15 w* 16c 
Barrels. 40® 45c 
TIIE PROVISION MARKETS. 
NEW YORK. Jtot M.—Cotton 35®37e. for middlings. 
Flour ranges from (63i®l8jt0 as to quality. Wheat, (1 << 
®S,00. Kye,(l,0Viit.20. Barley,dull. Corn,*5®«6c. u»u. 
8©2ic. for common to prime. 
Corn W'S.Wc. Oats,55®88, Pork, #3S®37. Shoulder*, 37c. 
Haras, Zic. Smoked beef 30c. Batter, S0®35c. Lard 22® 
82.4c. Cheese 20®8ic. Hop»,2ft®40c. 
BUFFALO. July II, — Flour, ship* at t‘i. 73 ®ll,no.— 
Wheat, Corn, 70®71c. Rye, 80®00c. Barley, 
none, Onus 45©49c. Pork, |J2®8S. Lard.8ic. 
CHICAGO. July 13—Flour, ffl,25ffl!Bs wheat.|1.S7®1. 
SOX- Corn,MSUfle. Oats,ao®38«. Rye.50®87c. Barley,. 
TORONTO, .Jrt.v it- Flour ranges Irom fi.TOao^Ot 
Full W heat, (1 ,i>;«jtl,05 1 Spring Wheal, (1,S9@1,45; Peas, 00 
®6i*c ; Oat*,8J®S2c; Butter, 16®lTc; Cheese,new, 14Wc: 
Eggs, 9®llc ; Pork. Mess. (23; Prime, (81; Hams, 134 
0.15c; Lard, J8#©14>fc; Bacon, llfclltfc Globe. 
- .».- 
THE CATTLE MARKETS. 
NEW YORK. July U—Sale* Beef Cattle. (M.00@18, r 0; 
Cows and Calves, $S0®1C0; Veal Culver, 7®i2ej Sheep 
and Lambs, *#13.40; Swine. Ui\<&!3>jc, 
BRIGHTON A CAMBRIDGE. July 18-Beeves, sales 
at UK&HhC. Working oxen |r-‘i®8O0 * pr. Handy steer* 
(ioowir-0. Milch cows, (50®’0o. Metiers.|80®45 sheep 
and 1 am he, sheared, i®7c; in lots, 4®5«,c. Veal Calve* 
f5®Shoxes—Wholesale ll®I8c.: retail 13®14c. .suck¬ 
ers, wholesale, ihei/ISc; retail, Ht®20c. Put bog*. 10 v® 
11c. Hides. Uffll0sc.*a>; Country lot.* tallow % 
toe.; '•« fsklns, 25®27c.; pelts, fl^0®2^0 each; larnhe, 
82c; shearling*, ific. 
CHICAGO. .Trnv :3.—Beef Cattle.—Prices range from 
|4.50aiS.M). Sheep, sales at |4,C4>®4,50. Swine, sales at 
from (»,(.►> to t: 945. 
TORONTO. July 18.—Beef cattle, 1st class, (7; 2d do, 
•5.50(7; fit ■‘■■J, ■ ;®fi. Calves scarce at (ti®7. Sheep, (3 
©6 each, Lam&s, !2®3.a0 each.— Globe, 
THE WOOL MARKETS. 
NEW YORK, July it. —The demand for domestic 
fleeces has been fair, but In prices we have no special 
change to note. Common and coarse- grades have been 
oBered more freely, us the supply ou liaud is fair, but 
fine fleeces are scarce and very firmly held. In foreign 
descnptlCms no snccntl change has occurred. The h nsi- 
ness has boon only moderate. 
We quote prices as follows;— 15 ®-Wc for native aud 4 
Merinos; 5u<j,«Hcfor 4 and % do; 00®8Sc lor fall-blood 
do; 85® 70c lor buxohy ; SO® JOc lor No. lpulled ; 50® (0c 
for super tine; 1 4*2. die for extra do; 80®2lefor common 
unwashed California, and 87®37c for flue. Foreign — 
Chilian unwashed, 2J®*lc; Entre KIob washed, &i®48c; 
Cordova. 40®46c; Bast India. 31®43e ; Airman, 3C610C; 
Mexican, 3C®3Bc j Smyrna. Jl© tic.—.V. F. Ibel. 
BOSTON, July 12—The following arc tbe Advertiser’ll 
Quotations:— Ohio and Pennsylvania,—Choice,?2®7SctA; 
-.'AtffiOL , vauaja. , jr caua, 
fine, 45 ®'jOc’. 3 ; No. l.S&adOc ; Smyrna, ls@45c; Buenos 
Ayres, 20®l5c; Cape Good Hope,3b®12e; Chilian. 24®SOc; 
Peruvian, 8)®«c; African. l&utcJc; East India, 80® «c. 
CINCINNATI, July 71.—There has been a luir trade 
duriDg the vcek.mlo a tendency to higher prices, but s', 
the effse there is not mcich conndence lcit ui the luturc, 
aud prices remain as last quoted. We still quote : 
Ohio undIndiana— Coarse fleece ffianc; mcaiuiu to fine 
4B@60c., and extra. 62©toc. Kentucky — Unwashed. .3® 
8Sc.; washed. 40® 15c,; tub washed. 48®50c.; pulled.85® 
40c. Tennessee— Iluwftbhed, *5®30e, Illinois—<. oame, 
42©45c; medium, 45®50c; fine, ri0©58c.— (raseiu, 
CHICAGO, July U-Fine, washed fleece, 
medium. 58®56c; coarse, 46®54c; cuwu&heu. pi off,fac¬ 
tory pulled, 80®45e; tub-washed, 58®wc. 
TORONTO. July 13.—The Glohe says wool remains 
steady at 37®3sc. Sales were made ut Galt, at 37K®38Ke; 
at Guelph, 39c; at Loudon, 85®S8e. 
he mhmittfd tn the uennle m the li.o „ - x- —- --,-- ‘ me ueuauy aiiu pleasantly MHCaciOUS, Uiey COH- 
in Auenst It avajal and , the £evera ? of Ortega and A Captain Randall of New York, is said to I tain ho hurtful ingredients, but may at all times 
in August. It bases representation upon tbe 
white population, but allows suffrage to all m a i e 
adults why pay taxes, and who are not guilty of 
crime, or by disbelief in tbe binding obligations 
of the Holy Scriptures. 
In many towns in Mississippi the freedmen, 
Juarez had for the time forgotten their differ¬ 
ences, and united against the common foe. 
Advices from the City of Mexico, of June 28, 
be engaged ok a plan for a line of steamboats 
fashioned after those plying on the North River. 
It is proposed to build the boats 500 feet long, 
represent that the Imperial expedition for the -04 feet beam, 14 feet draught, 4 stories high, and 
recovery of Chihuahua had been abandoned, ow- fitted up in hotel style. The propelling power 
ing to obstacles in the way ol its success. 
is to consist of two pairs of paddle wheels. 
be used with perfect safety .—Boston Jtccordcr. 
MARRIED. 
At the residence of the bride's father, July 8d, by Rev. 
Geo. McCartney, wji. h. JONES, recently from Cali¬ 
fornia, and Miss ANNA ROWE, of Webster, N. Y. 
New Advertisements. 
VT ADVERTISING TERMS, In Ailvance- 
Fipty Cents a Line, each insertion. A price and s 
half for extra display, or 75 cents per Une ot space.- 
Special Notices, (following reading matter, leaded,) 
One Dollar per line, each insertion. 
T obacco plants without suckers? 
Dr. A, PACK HAM. PtestonsvHlv, P- O.. Carroll 
Co., Ky.. will send hi* sucker preventative, for 10.000 
Pitots, and directions for use. by mail, for (1,85. [881-lt 
CTRANOEI STRANGE!—Fall Instructions 
l>v which any j-crson can master the Art ot Veninl- 
oqui-'m by a few hours practice. Sent by mall for 50 cts. 
Satisfaction given or money refunded In every case. 
Address M. A. JAGGEES, Calhoun, Illinois. 
EMALE .MEDICAL COLLEGE OF 
PE-NNSYLYANIA.-The Seventeenth Annual Set- 
sion will commence OOt. 15,1800. For further particu¬ 
lars, address the Secretary, Mrs. E. H, clevklanti, M. 
I)., at the College, North'Collece Avenue, aud 82<1 St-, 
Philadelphia. Ann Presto*. M.D., Dean of the Faculty. 
B lossom and decat.-tuis pic¬ 
ture d a cnrlositv of Art—by holding It »t a dis¬ 
tance yon see hothiug'but a human skuU. and clrawteg 
it closer, the skull entirely disappears, and you see two 
young persons making love. Sent, post-paid, cm receipt 
of 15 cents. Address P. I). SWiCK . Dundee, Ills. 
D urand s seedling strawberry- 
A new variety, possessing all the requisites ol » 
I perfect market and family strawberry, superior to any 
i now In existence. Circulars with full description, price 
of plants, and a general list of Nursery Stock mailed to 
all applicants. Address , „ 
B61 ix FRANCIS PRILL, Newark, New Jersey. 
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