336 
THE BUBAL WEW-YOBREB. 
MAY 22 
Bttos of tfrc Mtth. 
HOME NEWS. 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Monday. May IT, 1880* 
The New York Chamber of Commerce held Us 
U2th annual banquet lately at Delmonlco’s, this 
city. Two hundred gentlemen sat down to the 
feast among whom were John Sherman, the 
Secretary of the Treasury, R. W. Thompson, 
Secretary of the Navy, and many other states¬ 
men and celebrities. Secretary Sherman In 
responding to the toast, “ the Financial Pros¬ 
perity of our Country," commented highly on 
the prospeets of the nation. The domestic 
commerce Is so large that all modes of trans¬ 
portation by land and by water are fully em¬ 
ployed. Production In all branches of industry is 
greater than ever before. Great crowds of Immi¬ 
grants are dally arriving on our shores, and It Is 
now established that the mineral resources of our 
country are greater than the wildest Imagination 
would a few years ago have dared to conjecture... 
The permanent exhibition In Fairmount Park at 
Philadelphia wus re-opened last week, on the an¬ 
niversary of the opening of the Centennial Exhibi¬ 
tion in the same building. An address was deliv¬ 
ered by Col. Forney.There has been a bloody 
fight in Tulare county, southern California, be¬ 
tween the squatters on some railroad lands and 
the officers sent to dispossess them by the com¬ 
pany. Six men representing both sides were 
killed, and the squatters thus far are the victors. 
.Victoria's band of savages continues its ca¬ 
reer of murder and ravage on the isolated Arizona 
ranchmen, while It is reported that a party ot 25 
miners, prospecting In the lower Gunnison valley, 
near Indian creek, were attacked by Ute Indians 
on the 7th and 12 ot them were killed.The 
corner-Btoneof the new hall to be erected as an ad¬ 
dition to Wellesley College is to be laid on the 2TI h 
by Mrs. Valeria Stone of Malden, N. Y., w ho gave 
$ 100,000 for the building, and Mrs President llayea 
has accepted an invitation to be present and assist 
at tbe ceremony, and possibly the President him¬ 
self will attend. President Porter of Vale college 
will make the address. The new building will be 
called Stone Uall, and Is intended as a dormitory 
principally, and suited to accommodate one 
hundred students. It Is to be fitted up with 
every convenience, with chambers, music-rooms. 
parlors and four small dining-rooms. 
The reduction of rares by the Boston and Albany 
and the. Southern road comes at the same time 
with a general reduction In all parts of the 
country. The Chicago and Alton, Illinois Central 
and other leading roads In Illinois have cut down 
rates from four to three cents a mile. Other 
Western roads have taken the same course, and 
the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fc, which drop¬ 
ped from six to four cents a mile a year ago, re¬ 
ports that its passenger business “ fully Jus tines 
the reduction.” The New York central has always 
protested against the fixed rale or two cents a 
mile Imposed by law on that line, but it Is not 
Improbable that the exceptional cheapness of 
passenger fares over that road, by stimulating 
travel and the growth of a rural population, has 
been one important cause of the prosperity of the 
Central. Some railroad manager by the adoption 
of a uniform rate of a cent a mile will yet fill his 
cars and Increase his profits....A severe siorin 
visited portions el Ohio and Illinois Sunday and 
Monday of last week. The village of Olsey, near 
Winchester, ill., was almost destroyed by the 
wind, 20 buildings being wholly or partly demol- 
ghed; loss over $25,000. In MeI.eon county $100,- 
ooo worth ot properly was damaged. Twelve 
buildings and an ioo-acre orchard la Arrowsmlih 
township were destroyed. Mr. and Mrs. Edward 
Reese In Empire township were carried a quarter 
of a mile tu their bed and set down In a corn field. 
....Cremation is being practiced more and more, 
and Washington, Pa., seems to be the accepted 
place in which to convert the rrall mortal remains 
into ashes. Last week one Augustave Poeiz was 
cremated at that place. In less tnan three hours 
the incineration was complete. The ashes will be 
taken to Europe by a daughter ot the deceased.... 
We have several limes during tbe last couple or 
months not iced in the News ihe terrible forest fires 
that have long been raging In Pennsylvania and 
New Jersey. But on the 14th the fire fiend put an 
ftwlul climax on his destructiveness. The whole 
thriving little town of Milton, Pa., was destroyed 
by the ilames. The fire Is supposed to have orlg n- 
ated lrom sparks from the saw-mill attached to 
the car-works. In all 666 buildings were burned. 
Only two plaoes of business escaped destruction. 
The vaults and Dooks of the hanks are uninjured. 
The people of the town are almost wholly desti¬ 
tute. The total loss of property amounts u> nearly 
$2,000,000_The forest fires In the above named 
States are still raging, althougb the Inhabitants 
ot the lll-rated districts are fighting the fire with 
great determination. Pliifui accounts are given 
of the desolate condition ot the country over which 
the fire has swept. Timber to the value of hun¬ 
dreds ot thousands of dollars la destroyed. 
A hill has been Introduced In congress as an 
amendment to the “ Morrill Act" of 1862, adding 
10,000 acres ot land .for each Senator and Repre¬ 
sentative, based on the census of 18S0, to the en¬ 
dowment already given agricultural and mechani¬ 
cal colleges... .The case of the colored cadet Whit 
taker, at West Point, upon whom an outrage was 
perpetrated, which we have heretofore noticed, 
seems at last to be clearing up. A note ot warn¬ 
ing to the effect that an outrage would take place 
was found In Whittakers room. Five different 
experts In handwriting employed by the court de 
clare that this note was wrllteu by Whittaker him¬ 
self. Moreover, this note was written upon half a 
sheet of note paper and the other half, upon which 
he had begun a letter to his mother, was found In 
his room, and a microscopic examination of the 
edges establishes as a fact that the two pieces 
were once connected. Whittaker still denies that 
he did it himself. 
Russia has half a million acres under BUgar 
beets and 300 factories for working the roots up 
into sugar. Four years ago she made her first 
exportation of beet sugar—half a ton. She now 
exports 65,000 tons yearly. Beet culture is said to 
give there a net profit of $30 per acre.The Ken¬ 
tucky Legislate re has appropriated $600, to he 
used under the direction of Col. Bowman, State 
Commissioner of Agriculture, In analyzing artifi¬ 
cial fertilizers offered for sale in that State. Firms 
dealing In commercial fertilizers are required to 
submit samples for analysis, and the article sold 
must come up to the sample In quality.The 
will of Lewis Clapp of Lee county, Ill, leaves 
$ 160,000 for the endowment of an agricultural col¬ 
lege on condition that tbe county add $ 100,000 to 
the amount.The IT. 9. Senate patents com¬ 
mittee has decided to report the hill providing 
that no costs shall be recovered against Innocent 
users of patents where plaintiff docs not recover 
damages of $20 or over.'the anti discrimination 
bill, having passed the House of Representatives 
In Albany, Is still before the Senate Committee 
on railroads By lengthy arguments and other 
tactics, the managers of the roads are doing 
their utmost to delay action upon It until 
It shall be too late for the Legislature to 
Interfere during the present session-.A 
A new creamery has been organized at Watervllle, 
Onedla Co., N. Y., wtth P. B. Haven for Pres, and 
F. 8. Risley for Sec. It will be on tbe Falrlamb 
Bystem—that ts, the patrons of the company will 
Bklm their milk at home, the cream only being 
taken to the factory. Thus all will have at a mod¬ 
erate cost the advantage of an experienced butler 
maker; the trouble ahd expense of churning at 
home are avoided; the skimmed milk Is kept ior 
home use; an agent of the factory collects all the 
cream and returns the buttermilk, thus 3av)og an 
Immense deal of travel on the part of the farmers.. 
.. A discussion has arisen in British official circles 
concerning the necessity and expediency of exist¬ 
ing restrictions upon Importing cattle, especially 
from the United States. The rarity of cases of 
Infectious or contagious diseases discovered In the 
cattle Imported hence lu 1879, Is pointed out In a 
recent article In the Pall Mali Gazette, it rerers 
sympathetically to the efforts or Evarts and the 
United States, and says that the most of such 
cases might well be the result of the hardships of 
an Atlantic passage and possibly avoidable by the 
Improvement of transit faculties. The Gazette 
further says: "As prominent Liberals objected to 
the course adopted by the Privy Council at the 
time the restrictive cattle orders were Issued, and 
as the present vice-president of the Council is one 
of the most outspoken opponents of the act on 
which the orders are based, It seems highly prob¬ 
able that a reconsideration or the prevailing policy 
will not be long delayed.... 
--♦-*-*- 
PRESIDENT HAYES. 
The validity of Mr. llayes’ title may always be 
questioned, and hts administration criticised, but 
the payment oi one dollar gives a valid title to one 
bottle ol Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery, 
and Its administration can never be criticised in 
cases of coughs, colds, Incipient consumption, and 
general debility, lor leading physicians of all 
schools indorse the Discovery and proscribe it In 
their practice. Sold by druggists. 
As a Cure for Piles 
Kidney-Wort acts first by overcoming In the mild¬ 
est. manner all tendency to constipation; then, by 
Its great tonic and Invigorating properties. It re>- 
stores to health the debilitated and weakened 
parts._ _ _ 
Opr readers will do welt to notice the advertise¬ 
ment of Hermon W. Ladd, XX Cot,, in our paper 
this week. Here Is a good bed for a little money, 
and It Is appreciated, as the enormous sales of the 
past year fully proves. 
Creameries on Trial. 
The manufacturers ot The Ferguson Bureau 
Creamery announce that they will send out their 
Creameries on trial. 
This apparatus has given such universal satis¬ 
faction tor the last three years, and they have 
such confidence In Its perfect adaptation to the 
wants of all dairymen, that they ireely offer to 
send one to any reliable party, of such size as they 
need, on 30 days trial, li it does not work satis¬ 
factorily It may be returned. 
In the last year they have sent out over two 
hundred Creameries on these terms and not one 
has been rejected. 
Particular attention Ls called to the fact that 
the creamery can he used with either ice, run¬ 
ning spring water, or cool well water, aud that It 
la especially usetul In cold weather. After a 
person becomes acccustomed to It, they will be 
able to use It nearly the whole year without arti¬ 
ficial cooling, by taking advantage of the cool 
night air, according to the directions. 
No other creamery la offered on such liberal 
terms, and no dairyman In justice to hlmsell and 
to his wile, (for they are especially adapted to 
dairies where women do the work) should buy 
any apparatus until he has given the Bureau 
Creamery a trial. 
They also offer to send their Concussion Churn 
on the same terms. 
Messrs. Wells, Richardson &Co., the well known 
manufacturers of tue Pefected Butter color, are 
largely Interested in The Ferguson Manufactur¬ 
ing Company, and we have their guaranty that 
all the business nr the Company will be done In 
the most honorable manner. 
We advise all our readers In want of milk set¬ 
ting apparatus to correspond with the The Fer¬ 
guson Manf’g Co., of Burlington, Vt. 
SPECIALS FROM ALL CENTERS. 
Until Saturday. Mny 15. 
So little of last harvest's products still remain 
In the hands of the farmers, and so few are the 
purchases they have now to make In quotable 
commodities, that we shall, for an Interval, sus¬ 
pend most of our quotations Iri markets out Hid a of 
New Vork, substituting therefor, matter of more 
Interest to our readers. When our market reports 
are fully resumed, we shall have completed ar¬ 
rangements lor making them more complete and 
trustworthy than they have been even In the 
past. 
Buxton.— Butter — The prices have tended 
in buyers’ favor, although the receipts have 
beeu sold up closely. The weather has been so 
warm that the receipts have been affected by It, 
and the butter ls not In so good shape as in cold 
weather. The market Is weak at. lower prices at 
the close. New Butter— choice Northern dairy, 
19<3S1C; fair to good Northern dairy, 16® 18c; com¬ 
mon and bakers’, 15(416; choice Weslci n oream- 
For Coughs, Conns, Catarrh and Throat Dis¬ 
orders. use " Browns Bronchial Troches,” having 
proved their efficacy by a test of many years. 
-- 
Frank Leslie, Esq., of the “Illustrated 
Weekly,” Bays: For some time past I have been 
using Burnett’s Coooaine, and think It far prefer¬ 
able to anything 1 have ever used lor the hair.” 
18 : common ._ 
demand ls light. New whole milk, 14(410; new 
half skims, ms'12c;new skims, 8(*.9c. Eggs.— 
There ls a generally dull tone to the market, and 
n good supply or Western and Northern. There 
are not so many Eastern eggs, and they are firm 
at quotations. Eastern, trean, I2(4i2ce, doz.; 
Northern, fresh. 1 i,v<$ 12 c ; Vermont andN. It., 12 
<s!2k,o; Western, ireah, 10J4@11C; P. E. Island, 
1 1 a, 0180 ; egg oats, 3s@42c. 
Chicago.—W heat Irregular; options higher and 
cash lower; No. 2 chicugo spring, $1.18 eash aud 
j*c. -_... ■_. ■ . I 
H7 wc. August, gats quiet, but firm at Su^c. cash; 
3 oq@ 3 (HflC. .June; 880, July. Pork easy at $10.30® 
10.35 cash; $10.88ji©10.35 June; $10.45(410.47# 
July; $lu. 57 '-,(“( 10.00 August. Lard easier at$6.«2>s 
( 4 * 1 . 060 . casn; 6.26c. June; r,.yi>,,,, ,e July. Bulk 
meals to good domaud and a shade higher; shoul¬ 
ders at 4 qc.; short ribs at 40c; short clear at o.ooc 
Enos were quoted at S(48,v,e. per doz. The In¬ 
quiry was omy lair. Butter.—'T he demand con¬ 
tinues moderate, buyers not caring to stock up at 
present prices, a further decline being looked ror. 
Sales to a tale aggregate were effected at the fol¬ 
lowing quoiutloos. Creamery, lfl«#29c; good to 
choice dairy, 16(3190.; medium, l4(odf.c; lmerlor to 
common, tkailoc. Cukk.sk. - there was a weak 
and unsettled feeling In this market. Fine mild 
grades still find buyers at outside quotations, 
but most of the trading la at Inside to medium 
figures. Full cream, new, I3t4t314c; part sKirn, 
new, loiiiaiiwc; full skim, uew, 8®ioc: low 
grades, o sc. aons—Market weaker arid 60 lower 
than yesterday ; common to rough mixed alfK4- 
$4 3U ; gOOd to OliOICW 101X0(1 Rt $4.34(4$4.46 ; Choice 
heavy at $4 60 ; light. at$4.20(4$4.60. cattle 
—Market firmer for good; common to fair shipping 
at ft;u $4.26 ; good U» choice at $4 40(4*6; butcuers’ 
quiet and slow ; bulla at $2($$3; cows at $'A4$3 60 ; 
atockera and feeders active and firm at $3(4*4.- 
20. Shkkp-C lipped tn good demand at $4.5U(4$3.- 
10 ; wool at $3.7&(4$6 per e wt. 
Detroit. Wheat firm; No i white Michigan at 
$t.ioV Did; May, Si.lflJi; June, $i.i3.t* ; July, 
$1.10#; CORN quiet and unchanged. Oats scarce 
and firm ; No. i white at 4 ov»c. ; No. 2 do. at 4ue. : 
No i mixed 37 tjC. ; No. 2 do at 37c. clover seed 
dull and neglected; prime nominally *4(44.10, 
Mil w* ukee— Wh eat opened unsettled, ad vanced 
ue. and closed dun; No. l Milwaukee hard and 
sou nominal; No. 2 Milwaukee, cash and May at 
*i,i 2 ?k; June at $1.12; July at $1 os>*; No. 3 do. 
at 98 *.c.; No 4 do at tue.; rejected at t*>c. Corn 
quiet out firm; NO. 2,3fJtfC. Oats firm; No. 2 at 
3ohc. Rye firmer at sue. for No. l. barley firm; 
No 2 Spring al 690. Provisions quiet, but firm, 
MeaB pura quiet, at $lo.z6 cash and May; $iu.35 
June. Lard—Prime steam at 6.90c. cash and Aiay ; 
7c. J une. Hogs firm aud unefiauged at $ 4 . 26 ( 44 . 40 . 
St. Louii*.— Wheat unsettled; No. 2 red fall at 
$1.12(4*1.12is cash; $l.l2,ki®*i.i2 7.8 May; $i.05’i 
(4fl.Uf>V June; 26 ) 40 , July ; 92(492,40, August; No. 
3 \io , $ 1.07 Vi bid. corn at 35 >*<43040 cash; 34 7-8 
Thousands ol ladles to-day cherish grateful re¬ 
membrances ot the help derived from the use ot 
Lydia E. Pinkhamb Vegetable Compound, it 
positively cures all female complaints. Send to 
Mrs. Lydia E. Plnkham, 233 Western Avenue, Lynn, 
Mass., for pamplets. 
$ 6 . 90 , asked, bulk meats firmer, shoulders at 40 ; 
clear ribs al $6 2J>t4$6.3U; Clear aides at $6.45(a:$i>. 
so. Bacon firmer; shoulders at 4 6-Se; clear nos, 
$6,96; clear sides at $7.20. 
Toledo.— Wheat weak; No. 3 white Wabash, 
$1.17; No 1 white Michigan at $ 1 . 10 ; amber Mich- 
per ton; fish guano dry and ground fine, to to 11 
per cent of ammonia. 20 percent of available bone 
phosphate. $40@45; fish guano, 8 per cent of am¬ 
monia, $15: unground fish guano, fi per cent of 
ammonia. $25; cantor pomace; $]9c*2i; sulphate of 
soda ground, and In barrels, $l6o*;8 per ton: sul¬ 
phate of ammonia 4«c. ^ lb; bone black. 70 per 
cent of bone phosphate, $30(432; ground South Car¬ 
olina phosphate, r>7 to 60 per cent of bone phos¬ 
phate, $20 tier ton; N’o i Peruvian guano, 10 per 
cent ammonia, standard. $55 per ton; Loboa 
$46 per ton; rectified $o* per ton: guaranteed $56 
ger ton; nitrate of soda, 6X&0X y it- 
Forrester’s potato manure, $47 60; cabbage, 
$50 ; oat. $17.50 ; lawn dressing, $n.r»o; turnip, $52 ; 
grass, $i»; hop, $47.60; strawberry, $«.50 ; wheat, 
$46; rye, $47.50. 
Stockbridcjk’b manures quoted; Potato, $50; 
cabbage, $60: strawberry. $ 40 ; com $46; seeding 
down, $10; orange tree, $35; onion, $50— per ton 
each. 
Mapes’s complete manures for clay soli, $25.50 
per 1,000 it4i.; ror light soils $25.50 per 1,000 lbs.; "A” 
brand for general use, $20 per 1,000 lbs.; fruit aud 
vine. $18.60 per 1,000 tbs.; cabbage and cauliflower, 
$23.76 per i.ooo t*9.; corn. $24.50 per 1.000 lbs.; pota¬ 
to, $24 per 1,000 Ha,; asparagus, $25.60 per 1,000 lbs.; 
gypsum. Nova Scotia, ground, y ton, $7.50. 
Bowkkr’s “Hill and Drill Phosphate” $45; Bow- 
ker s Phosphate $40 y ton, each; Bowker’s “ Food 
for Flowers," 85c. V package, and $3 y doz; Bow¬ 
ker’s “animal meal for fowls,” $2 50 per cwt.; 
Ground oystef sheila, $l y cwt. 
Baugh & Sons’ prices lor goods delivered at de¬ 
pot or boat, In bags and In 2,000 lb lots: Ammon- 
fated dissolved bones, $36; pure bone meal, from 
raw bones, $36: Baugh’s raw bone superphosphate 
$40; Baugh’s $26 phosphate, $25; Baugh’s A. A. 
nitrogen. 13,* per cent, ol ammonia, $ts. 
ber at $1 22 ; No. 2 red mixed at $1.17, corn 
weak; high mixed at 42 k;c.; No. 2 , spot, 4i? 4 c.; 
May at 414 c.; rejected at 4o;<c.; aamageu at 
37>jC. Oats dull aud nominal. 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
Fertilisers. 
Bono at, $23.50(4124,00 per short ton for Texas 
and south American mixed, and $26(427 do. lor 
skin und shank, huiphau: of ammonia continues 
firm at 3&®aXC. per lb; some sales as high as 40. 
have been mode tor the home market. Dried 
blood In good demand at $2.25(42 37c. per unit of 
ammonia lor short ton. Tanking In request at 
I;*,. 3 121 per unit of ammonia, phosphates gratis, 
Tver short ton. Ammonite, azomlne, etc . In good 
demand at $2.62^(4^87X per unit of ammonia 
respectively. Bone ash continues unchanged at 
$23*1,24 per short ton on the oasis of 70 per cent 
pnowphaieol umo. No stock. 
Nitrate ol soda, 4;*o. Saltpetre, crude o@6. 
The above are wholesale prices; at retail, goods 
are delivered at boat or cars at the following raws: 
pure ground bone 47 to 60 per cent, bone phos¬ 
phate aud .. to 4 per cent, ammonia, $a.-%.$4u ; dis¬ 
solved boue black. 16 to 17 per cent, ot soluble 
phosphoric acid $30i.«j!$35; dissolved bone is to 14 
per cent, ot available pnosphortc acid $39 ; amino- 
niated supcrphosphaie 19 (O i 1 percent- ol soluole 
phosphoric acid, 3 per cent, of puiush, 3 per cent, 
ot ammonia, $4U(4$4S; German potash salts, 26 per 
cent, ol sulphate ol potash, $i 6 < 4 $lb per ton; muri¬ 
ate ol potash, 80 percent. 2 @ 2 >jc per ib. land plaster 
7 so; diled blood, 10 per cent ol ammonia. $35(445 
New Fork. Saturday. May 16,1880. 
Beans and Peas.-S upplies of hems sre light, 
but there are plenty in store. Puces are steady, 
but any attempt to aud 10 present rates for good 
marks would cbcck Ihe limited demand ol the xea- 
aon. Extra marks (hat are alwat* held v» film view 
with u view to hot weather trade are arm aud not 
now pressed lor sale. Gnotiituin* tor tlin vurioua 
glades ot prime seldom run so equal xa al til* 
uioVfm nt- P.-us are »teidy. Wisconsin mean fl.HO 
*< butoi.; Southern 1S.K. p aa al 9j«*i 00 F OH. wg| 
M 111 row beaus, prime. U.MtfLlOi other, *145*1.54 
medium, prime, *1.3.(41.40; other, *i.z0<ttl.25; pea, 
*1.45(41.65; white kldney.tl.cOil fi): reo kidney, prime, 
$1.30rVI-60; black, (or turtlesoupj $2.2u Elina, Cal.,$a. 
ftecelpla for week,2,350bush., exports. 87;>pkgs. 
Beeswax.—T here is little doing, with 21(®24Ho 
quoieu lor Western and Southern. 
Exports for week, 1,810 Its. 
Bctteh.— Prices are extremely low and express a 
weak .uturo. Tins, however,is the worrt par*of lira 
year to quote wn«u lota are no mixed- ’l’li-y now in¬ 
clude white, wiilto bottom*, exp -ruuenie In coloring 
ana u tew pure mars inv«n:c». shipper* are In unu- 
ketatihunew ruleH, and want only upper trades 
when they pay 19<j>,0u. Welsh tubw are a Uvorile 
purchase witu thetu at preeeut. Western due* not 
arrive freely, »i d if ^tate urups auy funber whim 
quality become* generally uu,ac.ive there will not 
be rnuuli room tor ordinary Weuieru pa.lted. L uge 
(hipiuenui or lows <jrenU*ere «ro promised. Few 
uiuika ol creamery Oil up their U»nm merit of excel¬ 
lence. and wornc of the beat groceiy buyer* uru rn- 
jectlng ueioc brand* lor reletlioiih of Hue half tubs. 
Uuoiauuus: Oreaineiy, choice, V3u.; fair to prime, 20 
Ii,22l.; poor, ITu.. stale, palls and tit. tuba, olioice, 20C.; 
other, IRfliilc.; tlelMi tuos, 14i* film; Western mu na¬ 
tion crenmei'y. 15*.18 o ; do. dairy, 15i*nc ; 00. feoiory 
extra, lec,; other, 13ml)5c.; very poor. tuudOc. 
Keoeinw,eOj pkga.; exports. 3,9(4 do. 
CHEESJt. - ICarly In the week ths maket broke 
sharply, to coi reapond with aUai s in the c untiy; 
down to lZAfe. lias been accepted for fancy facioi les. 
The redu-uou iu pro and tne improVcu qu .iliy of 
the stock urr.vlng brought» much freer expoit de¬ 
mand, nnd towards tue clone there wjih u tteamer 
feeling. The export* for the week have reached 
2SJ.U3U bOXcB. 
Euetd prices are «t 12H®12S(0- for choice full 
cream. il^iyfEo. for good aud One ! 10,-vdllo lor lair, 
and RrilOc. for hall skimmed. Ohio laoiory Ua. at 
UgutDac. for lull cream; lOS'dDSv* lor lair and 
good lots: ‘Jufiur. for nail utimuiid 
Receipts lor week, 30,100 boxes ; exports, 28,750 do. 
Liverpool cable, . ew cheese, 68*. Steam, A»8. Od. 
Cotttin.— There haB been uu active business for 
exuort and briwn closed strong, latest prices are for 
May, ll.6;tyUU>8<;.; June, ii.72c.; July, il.HJc.; August. 
1182c.; septeuioer, il3Wn#U.3vo.; Octooer, Ju.Kive 0 »3c.; 
November, iU.UhsjO 78C.; Oue«iUuer, 10 7iu»iU.?>C. 
uuv.*i>vut luf *P\A oouou are uaoeu ou scojertcan 
standard of olaamauatlon. *nJ on notion 10 *cnr* 
running In quality not morn th»u half a grade above 
or below the grade quoted. 
N. Orleans 
Ifi>lands, and. Gut/. Texas. 
Ordinary. 9>l 9H 9 X 
ear let ordinary,.,......... 10 lUJ* 10)6 
blood ordinary............ tOX |0>k 
Strict good do...10 13-ib 10 13 *8 10 1 ’-It* 
Low middling........11 5-16 U 7-Jtf 11 7-16 
Strict low middling. DA Disi i'X 
Mladling...--H ll-iu 11 13 *6 11 13-16 
Good middling...........12 1-16 B 8-lii 12 H-ltj 
Strict good middling.... 12 5*hj 13 7-16 12 7-16 
Middling Fair............ 12 11-16 12 Jb-16 12 lo*)6 
Fair........... 13 7-l6 13 9-16 13 9-16 
STAIN kb. 
Good ordinary.9 I Eow middling.10 9-16 
Stricigood ordinary.. U 15 161 Middling.......11 8-16 
Dried Khttitb.—A pples have a fa r Jobbfi g de- 
muuu and pric.-a Bleuily. Beached are quiet aud un¬ 
changed . HiuiilUmitcs are Blow and wuhoutquot- 
K yuotloEmsare for N. C.apples, fair to good, at 
choice, at IkuflOc.; fancy al 10,*lU>»c , Viiginia 
at 11316c.; New i ork date quarters mn od at i>yi»sxic.; 
puicni evaporated iu cnees, ciioici',, at hia*l3^C.; 
g, od and prune at llkidtAc.; evaporated, coulee mined 
&lfi»(«»i8He., aud g iOd do. at 12/tc. Kvaporated 
peeled peaches, good to enolec, ut 2u®2«c.; North 
Carolina peeled, limey, at 3bc.; choice Old at liaise.; 
Georgia prime at lOutlic. ; lulr to good ut HigUic.; 
common at U)ut)2c.; unpeemd halves at i,S<i*8c.: do. 
quarter* ut‘w.7>iC fiitieu cherries at 18, -via (sc. Black¬ 
berries nominal at Ho. Uaspoemes ut 28g*30c. Blums 
u t lit* fi>c. 
KGGB.—Kecolpis tor week, 18,460 bbl*.; do. last 
week, lu.liu do. The demand doee not prevent sup¬ 
plies from accuiDU.ating—a bau mature lor spriug 
when warm wt:aiur.*r is near. The over slock is 
severely ieit, and row prices soem settled once. Buy¬ 
ers are urglug Ion* cil at this eariy u. to,*nu tuut imt 
make* holders auxinua about stored stock, Good 
maiksof Western have sold down to ltiyvC. Quota- 
U liuiir Folnts. 12a»l2.Sc.; State and l*enn. and Cana¬ 
dian, il(«fil>yo.; Western IreBn, lie,; poor or held, 10 
kidUSC.. ouck eggs are no longer a apeoiaUy, now 
counted tu with hen. Uooso scarcely wanted; 18® 
20c. 
Ki.OUR— Triirlo ls lair, well distributed on expurt 
and local trade uccouut, tvuh prices w UhoUt impor¬ 
tant Chang**. .... , , , 
Gates price* arc at $3.tW®4 75 for Inferior to vnry 
choice supeihue state and Western; «4.«U*4.T5 for 
po r to guuu extra State.oda iul* and lines; *4 75® 
u.25 tui very good to lan y do.; 14.40*4.75 for lumrior 
to g /ou hi. tpping extra Weetsm, and $i.i5.j,5.2,i for 
good to fancy shipping extra do.; in tenor to 
very gaod unite wuo-.. eatrai, 14.99*0.60; very good 
to tauey do. at *i.6da6.70; tea ami anibtr *un-r 
wheat, interior to vuif inooVvfade alid family, at (4.75 
kiij lla; rouuu hoop Unie, *4.S5<«.5 35; and trade and 
tainily brands ui do. at iO.o.6 6j ; 81. Goal* at 
(t.8oa»5.(5 for Interior to goou extra; *5.6o® 
b ■(> tor good to fancy; Mtnuesota Clear, in¬ 
ferior to fancy, at *4 <0(36 66; Minnesota “ straight,” 
pour to laucy, Bt *0 40*7.20. and paienl 
Interior to rancy at *5.50®8.50; unsound stock 
hi. from (2 6U<*3 0U: city mill extra at *0.63*6.1)0 
for fair to faucr West luaies; 00. for England, 
M.4tba6.2o for ooor to very fancy; do. trade and 
lamtly extras. (6.25®7.0O; do. fur douib America. *6.00 
®6.36; No. 2 at »2.76«ii4.09 for poor to strictly fanev 
Receipts lor week, flour, 79,750 bbls.; wheat, 2,29 
8,750 
