228 
APRIL S 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
ms of t\)t Week. 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday, March 29. 
A deputation of ladies from the Ontario 
Woman’s Christian Temperance Union waited 
on the Minister of Education. Thursday, with 
a petition having over 4,000 signers, praying 
for the introduction of temperance text-books 
in the schools. There is a temperance boom 
in many parts of the Dominion.In the 
Connecticut House, Wednesday, the bill giv¬ 
ing women the right to vote, on license or no 
license, was overwhelmingly defeated, and 
without much discussion. On the bill giving 
them the right to vote in school-meetings, 
there was a full discussion, and the bill was 
rejected by a vote of 95 to 83..The 
woman's suffrage amendment was killed in 
the Iowa Assembly, Tuesday ... .The Ben- 
net-Mackay cable, now being laid across the 
Atlantic, is expected to reach Cape Ann 
about tbe middle of April.The New 
York State Canals will be opened May 1. 
.. The Massachusetts House Judiciary Com¬ 
mittee will report favorably on the Senate 
bill providing that disbelief in God shall not 
discredit a witness .. .The Connecticut 
Senate has concurred in the passage of a bill 
fixing a fine of $1,000. or one year's imprison¬ 
ment, for tbe deprivation of any rights 
because of race or oolor. 
Governor Robinson, of Massachusetts, has 
signed the bill providing free text books for 
scholars in the public schools.Floods 
are announced iu the Red River of the North 
at Bismarck, Dakota; in the Hart River be¬ 
low Mauden, Dak.; the Upper Missouri at 
Fort Lincoln; tbe. Kennebec, at Bath, Me.; 
and the St. Lawrence, at Montreal. The 
Lower Mississippi has burst its banks, making 
a sea of the whole adjacent country. Enor¬ 
mous destruction of property and great dis¬ 
tress. A large number of lives reported lost. 
Congress has turned over for the relief of the 
distressed the unexpended balauce of the ap¬ 
propriation made for the relief of the suffer¬ 
ers by the late Ohio flood. This amounts to 
$150,000, and is immediately available. 
The report is gaiuiug ground in Tennessee that 
her late defaulting Treasurer, Marshall T. 
Polk, Is not dead, but is living iu Texas. It is 
said that the coffin in which his body was sup¬ 
posed to have been buried, was in reality 
empty, and was used merely as a blind. 
The women of Canton, Kan., raided the 
saloon of a man who opened in defiance of 
the prohibitory law, and emptied all his rum 
into the street. They are sustained by the 
citizens generally.The Legislature of 
Rhode Island in the Lower House has passed 
a resolution for an amendment to the State 
Constitution reducing the property qualifica¬ 
tion for voters to $134. and taxes paid to $1 
per annum .The House Judiciary Com¬ 
mittee of the Massachusetts Legislature has 
reported adversely upon a bill requiring news¬ 
paper articles to be signed by the writers 
thereof.The prohibition amendment 
has been defeated iu the New Jersey Assem¬ 
bly by 80 to 2(j ... ....The outline of the 
River and Harbor bill has been completed. 
It aggregates about $11,000,000.The first 
through train from the city of Mexico to Chi¬ 
cago passed through Kansas City, Mo., Thurs¬ 
day ..... Tbe number of post offices in the 
United States March 20 wa6 48,993, an 
increase of 1,135 in less than uine months. 
.Governor Ordway, of Dakota, 
has prepared an elaborate and voluminous 
reply to the charges of malfeasance and cor¬ 
ruption made against him by certain citi¬ 
zens of that Territory.The Republican 
State Convention of Rhode Island has renomi¬ 
nated Gov. Bourn and other State officers.... 
Recent elections in the Province of (Quebec, 
Canada, seem bo portend a great falling off iu 
tbe support, if not a speedy defeat, of the pres¬ 
ent Tory Ministry which has ruled tbe Domin¬ 
ion for the last five years.Sir John 
McDonald, the Canadian Prime Minister, is 
reported to be dangerously sick.The 
hop, skip and jump record, 28 feet 3U inches, 
was beaten Wednesday night at the New York 
Athletic club exhibition by M. W. Ford, 
who scored 29 feet 2*4 inches... • -C. P. 
Huntington is said to have secured a control - 
ing interest in the Oregon Railway and Navi¬ 
gation Company, and has been heard to boast 
that he controls every mile of Pacific Coast 
Railway.An Ontario Parliamentary 
Committee at Toronto is investigating the 
case of an attempted bribery of members. R. 
C. Peters, a Michigan lumber king, is charged 
with having tried by bribery to obtain legisla¬ 
tion by which he could secure the trees on 
10,000 acres of timber land he had purchased 
on Pigeon River, Ontario. The land cost him 
$60,000, all told, but he found that in Ontario 
the timber does not go with the land, but is 
reserved by the Government, and he was 
willing to give $10,000 in bribes to get the 
timber with the land.Ohio has followed 
New York’s recent example in abolishing con¬ 
vict contract labor. In future prisoners must 
be employed on work that will not compete 
with that of free labor. Prisoners under 22 
years must learn a trade, aud a part of the 
earnings of others must be paid to the prison¬ 
er or his family. 
Tbe Tortures ot Neuralgia 
Are promptly relieved bv a new Treatment, 
which acts directly on the great nerve centres. 
If you are a sufferer from t his painful disease, 
write to Drs. Starkey & Paleu, 11 Of) Girard 
Street. Philadelphia, and ask them to send you 
such documents and testimonials in regard to 
their Vitalizing Treatment as will enable you 
to judge for yourself whether it promises to 
give relief in your particular case.— Adv. 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Saturday, March 29. 
Epizooty prevails in Dayton, Ohio, to a re¬ 
markable extent among horses, and is re¬ 
ported as being worse than ever before. 
.Kansas packed 55,000 more hogs than 
Cincinnati during the Winter.The 
new quarters of the Manhattan Hay and 
Produce Exchange were opened Wednesday 
iu the basement of the new Field Building, on 
Battery Place, this city.... A bill now be¬ 
fore the New York Legislature fixes the tin- 
on hops at three-and-one-half pounds, instsad 
of seven pounds, the present tare. This bill is 
in tbe interest of hop growers .The 
U S. Senate Wednesday passed the bill for 
the allotment of lands in severalty to Indians 
on the various reservations, and to extend the 
protection of the laws of the States and Ter¬ 
ritories over the Indians. An amendment 
was adopted providing for the sale of the sur¬ 
plus reservation lauds, and for the payment 
of the proceeds to, or their investment for the 
benefit of the tribes .... . Peter C. Kellogg 
& Co sold at auction last Thursday, at the 
American Horse Exchange, this city, 84 head 
of imported Jersey cattle belonging to T. S. 
Cooper, of Coopersburg, Pa. The total pro¬ 
duct of the sale was $49,560. The highest 
price ever paid for a Jersey cow was for 
the four-year-old cow Voth of St. Lam¬ 
bert. She was sold to ex-May or H. L. Pierce, 
of Boston, for $6,200. Next to her came 
Nina of St. Lambert, for which Mr. Pierce 
paid $3,800. Nina Pogis heifer calf, was sold 
to Charles Van Ness, of Boston, fur $1,500. 
The seven-year-old cow Gold Mark went to 
Moulton Bros., of Vermont, for $1,150 Fan- 
tine. a six-year-old cow, sired by Brownie, 
went to W. H. Canyinglmm, of Wilkes- 
borough, for $1,100. Gold Mine, cow, seven 
years old. sold for $1,100 to H. M. Shoemaker, 
of Baltimore, who also paid $1,000 for the 
four-year-old cow Westphalia. 
A police edict has been published in Ber¬ 
lin, warning the people against eating raw 
pork. It points out that perfect cooking 
destroys trichinm.Governor Glick, of 
Kansas, has appointed as State Veterinary 
Surgeon, Dr. A. A. Holcomb, of the United 
States Army, at Fort Leavenworth, and 
three State Sanitary Live Stock Commission¬ 
ers .......In experiments made at the Wis¬ 
consin Experiment Station with sorghum for 
fodder, the Honey variety yielded best, White 
Mammoth next, and Early Orange third. 
At the meeting of the Holstein Breeders’ 
Association of America, at Syracuse, N. Y., 
on the 19tb inst., E. A. Powell was chosen 
President, and Thos. B. Wales, Jr., Secre¬ 
tary. The proposition to change the name of 
the breed from Holstein to Holland was voted 
down, and it was decided not to receive for 
registry any animal having a red spot upon 
it. four inches in diameter. The next meet¬ 
ing will be held in Chicago.. .The Gov¬ 
ernor of Illinois has been advised that 24 bead 
of horses and mules at Shanuon, Carroll 
County, are afflicted with glanders, and 
that several others have died. ....... A mem¬ 
orial presented in the Iowa House of Repre¬ 
sentatives askmg Congress to restore the duty 
on woe], has been defeated by a vote of 44 
against 87 .The Mark Lane Express, in 
Its review of the British grain trade, says 
* 4 The mild weather continues. The value of 
wheat is tending down. The trade is inani¬ 
mate. Foreign wheat is wretchedly dull.”... 
....Indianapolis is starting a vigorous war 
against bogus butter...In one raid 
by the sanitary squad iu this city Monday, 
150 carcases of “ bob veal ” were cap¬ 
tured aud confiscated at. the ferries to New 
Jersey .The U. S. Veterinary Associa¬ 
tion held its annual meeting at Boston on 
March 18. The association is growing steadily. 
.There will be a Convention of the 
National Wool-Growers’Association at Chica¬ 
go on May 7.The Pennsylvania Wool- 
Growers’ Association will hold its annual con¬ 
vention at Pittsburgh, Pa., on April 17 and 18. 
There are 72,425 wool growers in tbe State, 
and every one of them is invited to attend.... 
.A decline of one cent a pound 
on American cattle in Liverpool. 
On the steamer France, loaded -with a cargo 
of 393 cattle, which sailed from New York to 
an English port, 114 animals were lost in the 
voyage.The French Society of Agri¬ 
culture, that was organized only five years 
ago, now has 2,500 regular and 24,000 affiliated 
members. Much of its success is due to the 
labors of M. Pasteur, who has devoted so 
much attention to the diseases of plants, fowls 
and animals.Advices from Dodge City, 
Kansas, are to the effect that the cattle drive 
to the north this year, will be from 325,000 to 
375,000 head. Ranches on the Arkansas and 
adjaceut territory report the losses of the Win¬ 
ter at 1to U.j per cent., while in Northwest¬ 
ern Colorado the averago will be 5 per cent. 
Prices for beeves may be a little lower than 
usual.Ireland is declared free from the 
foot-and-mouth disease by the officers of the 
British Privy Council ... 
The following veterinary surgeons who have 
been in consultation at Neosho Falls, Kau., 
have made a thorough examination of the 
alleged foot-and-mouth disease among cattle 
in that locality: Dr. Beattie, Chicago; Dr. D. 
E. Salmon, Veterinarian for the Department of 
Agriculture; Dr, M. Trumbower, Sterling, Ill.: 
Dr. Geo. C. Faville, Colorado, State Agricultu¬ 
ral College; Dr. E. E. Hazzard, an old Scotch 
surgeon, now of Lexington, Ky.; Dr. Stocker, 
Iowa. In spite of previous diaguosis by other 
veterinarians, they have unanimously come to 
the convictiou that the malady is not foot-and- 
mouth disease, but an ailment produced by 
ergot. They found there wild rye containing 
“ 20 times more ergot than was ever before 
known in feed.” It is claimed that the feet of 
the cattle froze because the ergot contracted 
the blood-vessels and retarded the circulation. 
FOREIGN. 
According to the latest tabulation the total 
force of the German army on a war footing 
would be 1,487.700 men, not including from 
820,000 to 340,000 well-trained soldiers of the 
Landstrum between 32 aud 42 years of age... 
. At the Consistory held in Rome on 
Thursday the Pope appointed the Rev. F. X_ 
Leray, Archbishop of New Orleans, and the 
Rev. D. Manucy, now at Corpus Christi, 
Texas. Bishop of Mobile .Prussia gives 
her Deput ies $3.75 a day; Saxony and Baden $3; 
Bavaria $2.50. The Hanse Towns give nothing. 
J. E. Wisner, of Friendship, N. Y., owns 
80,000 acres of the choicest lands in Ransome 
County, North Dakota, on the line of the Fargo 
and Southwestern R. R. He has about. 2,000 
acres in cultivation, aud will sow upwards of 
8,000 bushels of wheat this Spriug. The Cbey- 
euue River runs through Rausome County in 
one of the most, beautiful valleys iu the world, 
which is about one mile wide and 150 feet 
below the rolling prairie on either side, with 
bunks 20 feet high, which it never overflows. 
There is a splendid growth of oak, ash, and 
other timber aloug this valley, and splendid 
springs of pure water ou either side, with 
splendid water powers. Mr. Wisner built a 
flouring mill last Summer, which cost $30,000, 
aud manufactures his wheat iuto flour. He 
now offers any selection of his lauds for sale 
on time, to suit purchasers, and will take his 
pay for same in wheat, delivered at his mill at 
$1 per bushel, aud if the market price he 
greater he will allow the market value. See 
his advertisement in this issue, page 232.— Adv. 
Low Price# for Bufttr. 
The New York Tribune in its market report, 
xplained why some butter is sold for such 
ow prices. In speaking of butter it said: 
‘ Light-colored goods are very hard to dispose 
>f, and several lots were thought well sold at 
sight to 10 cents.” If butter makers would get 
he top price, they should use the Improved 
latter Color, made by Wells, Richardson & 
lo.. Burlington, Vt. It gives a pure dandelion 
solor and never turns red or rancid, but. tends 
o improve and preserve the butter.—Ado. 
--- 
They gratefully testify to the virtues of Dr. 
4raves’ Heart Regulator for Heart Disease. 
?rice $1; 6 for $5.—Ado. 
Numerous are the cures of Heart Disease 
from using Dr. Graves’ Heart Regulator. 
By druggists.—Ado. 
For Throat Diseases and Coughs. 
Brown’s Bronchiai., Troches, like all really 
good things, are frequently imitated. The 
genuine are Hold only in boxes. —Ado. 
The Country Gentleman'* Opinion. 
The Country Gentleman, in au editorial no¬ 
tice of “Science in Farming”— a book which 
will be found advertised in this paper—says: 
“ We think it a very excellent book—tho¬ 
roughly correct in matter, so far as we have 
observed (and a professional chemist says the 
chemistry is all sound), besides being remark¬ 
ably lucid in style, carefully progressive in 
the development of the subject, and easily in¬ 
telligible to any person of ordinary education 
who will read it with the attention it de¬ 
serves.”—Adr. 
--- 
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. 
Saturday, March 29,1884. 
Chicago. —Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, “regular” wheat is 6%c. lower; 
No. 3 Chicago Spring, 6>sJc. lower. Corn, 
2,V£c. lower. Oats, 1 lower. Rye, steady. 
Barley, lc. lower. Pork, 30c. lower. 
Wheat.— "Regular" very active find greatly unset¬ 
tled, opening weak and closing decidedly stronger. 
The market opened 10116”. lower than yesterday.ral¬ 
lied 2c., receded Uc., rallied Ic., ruled (Heady and 
closed We. lower for Mav.Wc. higher for June, and 
1 ,(». lower for .Inly than yesterday: the fact that 
from 70U,non to 1,000,070 hit she is were taken accounted 
for Uv reaction and rirntne** late In the session; 
sales t anged: March, 9iV*3%ctcln*lnK ut »39iJ: April. 
*tv<*'*««•. ©loaltw ttt «I5se; May, WW*3H2*W!. Closing 
at SNA®-.- June SVaflMw', closing at 9u!$C! July, 0816® 
*nue; August. SBUtOwSe: No. Chicago Spring, 88W® 
86Qe. CottN In fair demand- the market ruled lower 
early, hut grew stronger at the close of the session 
and closed Qe, over yesterday: sales rangrd: Cash, 
Closing at KTUr. Oats opened weak and 
lower, but closed arm nt outside prices; prices de¬ 
clined t-pa.qje. hut rallied Ate an I closed steady: sales 
ranged: Cash, 29ftt8lWc: March and April, 2Siy®29c: 
closing at 39c; May,32*i*335*0.closing: at H39*c: June, 
SShSo. Flaxseed firm at *1.68 on trank. Pork 
opened weak and lower, hut closed firm nt outside 
prices: sides ranged: Cash. $17 (*17.70: April *17.0216: 
Mnv, *17.4.5.1*17.73, closing ot $17.?2k® *17.75; June, 
*1?.57K®$ 17.85: closing at $17.«2*6'" *’7.87: July, *17 9(1 
®8I?.9?X: August, •is; All the year. $l5,7rg»i5.T7Q. 
l.Attn In fair demand: the market ruled weak early 
hut closed stronger: sales ranged: Cash. 89.15*9.20; 
April, *9.22W: May. #9.2.5® 9.877$. closing at $9.85® 
89.37 k; .Tune. #9.42W®$9.44. closing at $9.42j*asus ; 
July 87 4(1*9 &?(*• closing nt # 9 . Ml® 9.WW Bulk 
meats in fnlr demand; shoulders, #7.»: short rib. 
$9 25; Short, clenr, *9.87. Eggs weaker nt l?K®l8c. 
St. Lorta.-W heat—A ctive, but lower: No. 2 Red, 
•MBaUttWe. cash- Aurll, 81.08iw;®l.09ti; May. Sl.OSk 
A 1.087** Juno»|t1.0WfWM.W! July.92®98?*e: All the year, 
closing at outside prices: No. 8 Red Fall, 
U5i39(!!6c. Cons—Iu active demand, 47Qe. bid, for 
rash! 1*74,®48c. April: 47«4S*fC. May. Oats— Firm at 
SSe. bid,cash; May. RfE-FIrm atr,9*yc. 
bid. Bar lev - Firm at 70®85c. Eoos-Flrm at Ific. 
Flaxseed -Dull at $160. Hay— 8teady: Timothy. 
*11.00® 15.00: Prairie. 8M.O0AW.5O. Bran— Firm at 81® 
82c. Corn mkal— Firm at $2.55. Pork— *18.12*6, cash: 
*18.25 March. 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
Nkw York. Saturday, March 29,1884. 
Beans and Peas.—B eans, marrow, prime, new, $2.80 
®2.85; do. medium, prime, $?^u®2.55: do. pea. $2 55® 
2.60- do white kldnev, choice, S3.40ftt8.no- do. red kid¬ 
ney, choice. *5. 00 ®5. 10 ; do. turtle soup, $3,5088.75: for¬ 
eign 
82 
orn. 
Brkapstu*k8 and Provisions.—as compared with 
prices of a week ago. Ungraded Winter Red Wheat 
is I I". lower; No. 8 Red Is 4e. lower: In elevator; No. 
% Red is 5}$e. lower In store: ungraded White Is 4kc. 
lower. Corn.- Ungraded Mixed Is 4e. higher: steamer 
mixed Is 24c. lower; No. 2 is lVfie. lower delivered; 
Yellow Southern Is unchanged. Oats.— No. 3 mixed 
4c. lower- No. 2 Is 3J$c. lower- No. 1 Is 3}*c. lower 
No. 3 White is 3c. lower; No. 2 ls3J*c. lower: No. 
1 is 3c. lower: Mixed Western Is 2c. lower; White do. 
Is 2c. lower 
Flour and Meal —Flour—Quotations: Fine,$2.15® 
2 . 75 : superfine, 82.60*3,25. latter an extreme; common 
lo fair extra State. $3.20*3.40- good to fauey do. *3.45 
C,o (5; common to good extra Western. $3.20*3.60; good 
to choice 83.(15®*.75; common to fair extra Ohio. 83.25 
(S.4- good. 84.05®5. > i* good to choice, common, 85.55® 
(, 1,5 ut; extra Minnesota. ‘8.80*IMi; clear, 84.00® 
5.M>- rye- mixture, * 1 ® 15 ; straight, $5®5.75; 
parent. #5.40®5.75; bakers' extra. JtM.e'.f.O: St. 
Look, common to fair rxtra. #S.?3*4,35; fair to good. 
$■ 1 . 30 * 5 . 20 ; good to very choice, SS.3na.fi 2i- patent 
Winter wheat extra, $5.35*6.75; city mill extra for 
West Indies, 35*5.20; South America, *5.25®5.80. 
Hoi tiiekn FLOUR—Gammon to good extra, $8.3u* 
4.25: good to choice, *4.3h,*&25. Rye Flour - Super- 
tine. nt *'<.25® 3 .BO: latter for choice. Cohn Meal— 
Yellow Western. $3®3.3U; Brandywine, *3.33®3..15. 
Oiuin -WHEAT— No. 2 Chicago and Milwaukee to 
arrive, at *Sc: ungraded Winter Red. at ,0c.® 
*1.03: No 4 Red, ssUe. In elevator-, No. 8 Red. 99c. 
in elevator- No. 2 Red, delivered 
from store; *l.03tt® I.03M free on board from store: 
$1.03 for rail ecrlifteuteB In elevator, $1 OtiVt delivered 
from elexatof: Ungraded White, 96k-'" No. 2 Chicago 
cost fr.-lglit aud Insurance to Liverpool at #1.01; No.2 
Chicago cost freight and Insurance to Glasgow at 
81.03; No. 2 Red, seller March. $UJVff: do. April, 
*t.nlk®t | i2 5 i-. do. May $LiWW*UI5* do. June, closing 
81 054 . 4 ; do. July, closing. #i.ii't?i; do. seller. August, 
closing. St.uTk. Rye—W estern, W®71hje: Canada 
and State, 74 trie: No.2 Western, At Tee. in elevator. 
Baulky Market quiet and firm. Babi.ky Malt dull. 
Corn Ungraded mixed, fii*«6c; No. 3. w hich Is scarce 
anil wanted at 1 <*1 V-advance, 54®Y»kc: closing with 
55V(,o. tdd: Hleatner mixed. 5So. In elevator; No. 2, 
fVinfi-Hfilc.. delivered; Old No.2. dUWWke. In Store, 
67c. delivered; No. White, (He. In elevator. Southern 
Yellow, flic, on dock: No 2 Mixed seller April, elos 
Western, Vie.: white do., 40k®He: White State, 
42k®-)lk.c.; No. 2 mixed, seller April, S1®37 L tC; do. 
May. S7>-v*:#k-: do. June. STktfSrQr. 
Provisions— Pork Mess spot, $17.50; mess on spot, 
quoted $17.3l)@l 1.75 for old, and g1-t.MMIS.7A for new; 
family mess. $19®19 75; dear back. *iu.2va2i>. Bkkk- 
Ultv extra ImUan mess Hi tierces, 823® .5: extra mess, 
812.50® 13; packet . 813 In barrels aud 821.50 In tlerops; 
plate beef. *12.50® 13. BEEF Hams Quoted here 
at $27.50, and at West $26.00. CUT Meats- 
Plekled bellies, 12 It- average, quoted 8kc ; 
pickled shoulders 9V<®8mc : uh-klml hams, ll>H® 
Due- smoked shoulders, 9'.j®9k; smoked hums, 
lfiCfttdlo. Mlimt.RS Umg clear Ip New York, 
quoted ut 97*0 for Chicago delivery long 
und short clear, half and hnlf. Site. Dressed Hogs, 
City heavy to modltnu. 854®SWc,; pigs, ske. La a t>.- 
Contrnet grade on spot quoted at #9.45. choice, $9.50; 
March, closing u‘ $9.50®9.7<l; April, closing $9.50®9.90 1 
Ma». elo.dng $9.60- June, Closing *!U«S®!M;s July, 
closing 89 75®9 . 31 ); city strum. 9.20®«.25- refined quot¬ 
ed at $9 75 for Continent, urn! 10c. for South American. 
Butter.—T he demand Is slow, and the general 
market lacking In cheerful features. 
NKW HOTTER 
Creamery, selections. FJgltis. etc., 3i®3Se, do.fancy 
85®Sfi: do choice, 83*34: do. pirltne. 3"®83: do. fair to 
good, 37®29 do. ordinary. 2.5®2t;; halt tirklus, tuba, 
best, 33c:do. do. do. fair to good,25®31e:Wi-lsb tubs, 
beat, 29®3lc; do. do. do. fair to good.2i*3se; Western 
tmltuiion creamery, choice, 38®2.9c; do do good to 
prime, 22®J5c; do. do. ordinary to rnlr. 18®20c; do. 
factory, best, 22 c-do, do, fair to good, I5®21c; do, 
do, ordinary. 10®12c. 
OLD butter. 
State dairies, entire, choice. 29c. do. do. do. line, 
26 ®28c; do. do. do. fnlr lo good, 21®25c* do. do. or¬ 
dinary. ii;®3H.-; do.<1o of tirklus. One. 28®29e;do. do.of 
llrklDS, fair to good.22®27c;do. do. flrklu*.ordinary, 
ttiaSOc: do. half firkin tubs, best. Hue; do. do. do. 
line, 23®29c; do do.do. good, 22®2rtc; do. do. do. fair. 
18w20e: Western dairy, best, l«*l7c; do. do, good, 14® 
Hits: do. do, ordinary. lWilMe 
Add 1®3‘* per pound to the above for Jobbing selec¬ 
tions of choice goods. 
CHEKSE.-State factory, fancy, 15c; do., do. prime 
