THE RURAL WEW-YORMER. 
FES 3 
civs nf i\)t XXTccli. 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday, Jan. 27,1888. 
The fffects of the American Queen, An¬ 
drews’ Bazar and Leisure, were sold out by 
the sheriff, Monday. Judgments to the 
amount of $35,000 had been enforoed against 
the Queen. It is stated that $8,000 was re¬ 
alized from the sale. This is news for their 
subscribers........ Several suicides end mur¬ 
ders owing to religious insanity...The 
Surgeon General says the report that the 
government has paid money for Guiteau’s 
bones is untrue.Scheller, the alleged 
Newball Bouse incendiary, was returned to 
jail in Milwaukee, Friday morning. He did 
not leave the city, but was concealed in the 
house of the deputy sheriff. Seventy five 
bodies of victims found.Owing to the fall¬ 
ing off in freight to England from Boston, and 
the increase in Canadian freight, the Allan 
line was withdrawn from Boston for the Win¬ 
ter, and ships will run from Portland and 
Halifax in the futnre. A fortnightly steamer 
will still run between Boston and Glasgow. 
.Fires still continue unusually disas¬ 
trous everywhere. The Iowa Supreme 
Court sustains the lower tribunal in the pro¬ 
hibitory amendment case, and declares the 
provision unconstitutional, because it was not 
properly spread upon the House records while 
pending in the Legislature.Senator 
McPherson has been re elected in New Jersey 
and Senator Plumb has been sent back to the 
U. S. Seriate by Kansas........The mixing- 
house and six packing houses of the Giant 
powder works at Point Clement, near West 
Berkeley, CaJ., exploded Sunday, the shocks 
of seven explosions being felt at San Fran¬ 
cisco. So far as known 22 Chinamen and 
Ferdinand Kompf, assistant superintendent 
of the w T orks, were killed, 6Dd it was thought 
eight or ten more were in theruinB. Thirteen 
Ch inamen were hurt, most of them not fatally. 
.Gouverneur Morris. United States col¬ 
lector of cufitoms at Sitka, says that Alaska 
is likely to become the great gold field of the 
world. Rich lodes have been found npon 
the mountain Bides, end yield remarkable 
profits to placer diggers. 
-- - » -♦---- 
All classes of chronic diseases are being 
successfully treated by Compound Oxygen. 
Send to Drs.STAPKKY & Palkn, 1109 Girard 
Street, Philadelphia. Pa., for their Treatise 
on this tew and remarkable curative agent. 
It will be mailed free. — Adv. 
----— 
FOREIGN NEWS 
BATURDAY, Jan. 27, 1882. 
Prince Charles, of the royal house of Hohen- 
zollern, brother of the Emperor of Germany, 
died Saturday at Berlin. He was 80—six 
years younger than the Emperor, who is re¬ 
ported to be very feeble...Sir Charles 
Dilke says the pauperism of England now 
amounts to only three per cent, of the popula¬ 
tion against six per cent, in 1849. While the 
population has increased from 17,500,000 to 
27,000,000, the number of paupers has declined 
200,000.Famine is said to reign in the 
whole north of Ireland, where the gTain crop 
was destroyed last September by a terrible 
tornado, and the potato crop rotted by con¬ 
stant rain. In one place, it is aaid, 22 tons of 
Indian tneal a week are required to keep the 
people barely alive. Relief is slow and the 
people are diepairing. Many deaths from 
sheer starvation reported, especially on the 
islands on the West coaet.The damage 
by the December floods in Prussia alone was 
nearly as great as that by the Fall overflow 
in all Germany, when 20,0(X> houses and 60 000 
hectares of lands were damaged and 130,000 
people affected. In the Bayrisehe Rheinpletz 
1,000 houses were sweptaway.and 12,000people 
rendered homeless. Hessen and other dis¬ 
tricts have suffered equally. 
AGRICULTURAL NEWB. 
Saturday. Jan. 27, 1888. 
The Hon. George West, of New York, Mem¬ 
ber of Congress, offers to place $5,000 in the 
handB of Mr. F. C. Morehead, President of 
the National Cotton Planters’ Association, to 
be given as a prize for a bale of jute 
prepared for market by any machine, that 
will compare with the jute imported from In¬ 
dia........ Boston has made a bid for that 
great National Cotton Exposition of 1884.... 
.... Louisiana clai ms about $300,000 for swamp 
lands sold by the General Government after it 
had granted the lands to that State in 1849.... 
.... At the first meeting of the National Ag¬ 
ricultural Convention called by the Commis¬ 
sioner of Agriculture, Loring, at Washington 
on January 23, there were present represen¬ 
tatives of the agricultural interests of 20 or 
more States, among them Dr. Abbott, Presi¬ 
dent of the Michigan Agricultural College; 
Prof. S. A. Knapp, President of the Iowa 
State Agricultural College; L. S. Coffin, of 
Iowa; H. S. Peabody and J. H. Bandera, of 
Illinois. Nearly every person present was 
tbe delegate of a State agricultural college, 
agricultural association, or live stock asso¬ 
ciation, nod several, if not most of them, 
came with some definite interest to work for. 
Western stock-men having particularly in 
view tbe purpose of presenting the needs tbe 
West has for protection of its cattle interests 
against the encroachment of disease. A per¬ 
manent organization was formed hy the elec¬ 
tion of the following officers: President, the 
Hon George B. Loring. United States Com¬ 
missioner of Agriculture: Vice-Presidents, L. 
R. Coffin. Iowa; H H Dudlev, New York; 
Dr. J. R. Page, Virginia; W. W. Pugh, 
Louisiana; T. S. Gold, Conneoticut; H. S. 
Pea bod v. Illinoip; George B. Light. Pennsyl¬ 
vania; ‘C. P. Berry. California; W. Leroy 
Brown. Alabama. Beeretarie". J. ». Wrin- 
nell, Massachusetts; J. A. Holmes, North 
Carolina; E. W. Perry, Chicago. The day 
was spent in reading and discussing papers 
upon the labor system of the Michigan State 
Agricultural College by Dr. Abbott, upon 
science in its relation to agriculture and other 
topics. An effort iR being mode to infuse 
new life into the old United States Agricul¬ 
tural Association.Tbe Mark Lane Ex¬ 
press of January 23 sayR: “ Considerable ruin 
sufficed to beep the land in a hopelessly wet 
and unworkable condition.”.The Glu¬ 
cose husiness reported “very bad”; nine Out 
of 16 of the factories closed. Prices too low. 
.Three hundred delegates of the Illi¬ 
nois State Grange representing 65 counties, 
met at Decatur January 17 and 18. They 
passed resolutions earnestly urging Congress 
to take prompt measures to suppress pleuro¬ 
pneumonia among cattle and to prevent its 
reintroduction into the country. The Asso¬ 
ciation is in a highly prosperous condition... 
....The Iowa Horticultural Society held a 
well attended meeting at Dubuque on same 
date. At the same time the Farmers’ State 
Association had an enthusiastic meeting at 
Des Moines. It baa a barbed-wire fence 
factory at Des Moines and la making a special 
fight in the courts with Washburn, Moen & 
Co. Prospects of triumphing over this huge 
monopoly were reported never brighter: 
plenty money contributed by tbe farmers of 
tbe State to carry on the pin test. Speedy 
victory expected. Congressman elect James 
Wilson is bead of the new board—a strong 
one ....... A prosperous meeting of Nebraska 
State Horticultural Society at Lincoln on 
January 17. A good display of fruits.. 
A convention of all tbe cattle, sheep and 
horse men of Texas haR been colled to meet 
In Colorado City on Feb. 1, to discuss the 
live-«tock business and tbe State Iona ques¬ 
tion. and determine wbat course the stocknien 
shall pursue to secure legislation favorable to 
their interests, and to organize a committee 
to look after their affairs at the Capital dur¬ 
ing the session of the Legislature.. 
S D. Fisher has been appoinre.d Secretary of 
the Illinois Slate Board of Agriculture... 
The New York S'ate Agr. 8oe. met at Alriany 
Jan. 17. For tbe coming year the following 
officers were elected: President—George F. 
Mills, Montgomery. Vico Presidents—C, R. 
Acrnew, Nf*w"York: Isaac H. Cocks, (Queens: 
ErBKtus Corning. Albany; Timothy Hoyle, 
Clinton; James Gsddes, Onondagu: Joseph 
Juliand. Chenango; D D. 8. Brown, Monroe; 
Marcus H. Phillips, Orleans. Corresponding 
Secretary—T L. Harlson, St. Lawrence. Re¬ 
cording Secretary—Wm. H. Bogart., Cayuga. 
Treasurer—A din Tbayer, Albany. Execu¬ 
tive Committee—Davis Cossitt, Onondaga, 
C. C. B Walker. Steuben; T. R Proctor, 
Oneida; Jsmes McCann, Chemung; 11. E. 
Alvord. Orange; W. M. Livingston; 
G. S. Miller, Madbon; L. W. Led yard, Mad- 
iRon CongrepMioiiAl action to provide better 
protection against contagious diseases among 
stock was advocated.*v^ e * enn ‘, 
Dairymen’s Association will lold its annual 
meeting at Meadville, Feb. 7.........The Ver¬ 
mont Merino Sheep Breeders’ Association, 
which met the other day at Middlebury, is in 
a highly prosperous condition. Membership, 
1,020, of whom 290 were added last year. 
Over 7.000 Merinos were shipped last year 
from Middlebury for breeding purposes. I he 
Society protested vigorously against meddling 
with the tariff on wool....-The Southern 
Wisconsin cane-growers will meet m conven¬ 
tion at Palmyra. Wls , on the 15th and 16th 
of February. Caue-growing in that locality 
1r in a prosperous condition.. 1 he next 
Chicago Fat Stock Show will begin Nov. 14, 
and continue till Thursday night the fol¬ 
lowing week.The bee keepers of North 
eastern Michigan are requested by W. A. 
Hutchirifton to meet at the Dayton Hotel, 
in Flint, at 10 o’clock A. M., on Tuesday, 
February' 18th. 1883, for the purpose oi 
organizing a Beekeepers’ Association. Ke- 
duced rates of toard have b-en secured...... 
The Tenth Annual meeting of the New 
Jersey State Board of Agriculture will be 
held at the State House, in Tientsin, ou lues- 
day and Wedn^nday, Feb 0 and 7. 
of Domestic Animals; Cultivation of the 
Carp; Agriculture; tbe Experimental Sta¬ 
tion; Fertilizers; Ensilage; Poultry; 1 otato 
Culture; Sweet Potatoes ; Strawberry Cul¬ 
ture; and the Milk Question will be the chief 
topics discussed. All are cordially invited 
to attend. „ 
J. B. Crowell & Co., of Greencnstle, Fa. 
have lately changed their firm name to the 
Crowell Manufacturing Co. and have added 
to their Grain Drill Department the manufac¬ 
ture of steam engines, boilers and saw mills. 
Mr. Crowell remains President and J. Dear- 
dorff, Recretury, and with their experienced 
business qualities we predict for the firm a 
share of the trade in this line of implements. 
good people—even scientific men—will get into 
ruts and stay there. They are like some old- 
style doctors who will give nothing but calo¬ 
mel because that is what the books they 
studied at the medical college recommend. 
They used to bleed, you kuow, on all occa¬ 
sions. So some agricultural Rcientiflc men are 
very learned on the subject of bone dust, and 
guano, and Charleston rock, and recommend 
formers to invest largely in these expensive 
luxuries, forgetting that farmers cannot get 
their money back in “ printer’s ink,” but have 
to dig for it, and do not always have $150 to 
$200 of ready cash for fertilizers. Nature is, 
after all, the farmer’s beet friend and teacher. 
An analysis of the blue grass region of Ken¬ 
tucky shows eight times as much carbonate 
of lime (». e. ground raw limestone) as phos¬ 
phate—or bone dust. We follow nature, and 
say use 700 pounds ground raw limestone and 
100 pounds bone duHt, and you have the best 
and cheapest fertillizer in the world. Hundreds 
of farmers in New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio, 
Maryland and Indiana have tried it the past 
three years, and the reports for 1882 were the 
best of all The macbtne for making it does 
not cost much; any tw r o or three farmers 
joining together can buy one. Address 
Totten & Co., 
186 Railroad St. Pittsburgh, Pa.—Ada. 
--- 
Tropic-Fruit Laxative meets the popular 
want for a mild, agreeable and effective 
cathartic medicine. Sold by druggists every¬ 
where at 25 eta per box.— Adv. 
-- 
As a home remedy, to be kept at hand for 
use in cases of sudden illness, and for the 
prompt relief and cure of throat and lung 
diseases, Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is invalu¬ 
able.— Adv. 
Ayer’s Cherry Pectoral is the best medicioe 
ever produced for all affections of the throat 
and longs.— Adv. 
-» 
* Ladles, if you would be forever redeemed 
from the physical disabilities that, in thou¬ 
sands of cases, depress the spirits and abso¬ 
lutely fetter all the energies of womanhood, 
you have only to get Lydia E. Pinkham’s 
Vegetable Compound.— Adv. 
- 4 ♦ ♦- 
Nothing so simple and perfect for 
coloring as the Diamond Dyes. For carpet 
rags, tietter and cheaper than any other dye 
Btuffs.— Adv. 
-- 
Hair and Scalp diseases thoroughly cured 
by Dr. Benson’s Skin Cure. None like it.—Adv. 
See Johnson & Fields, Racine Fan Mill ad¬ 
vertisement, issue of Jan. 27, page 61.— Adv. 
- -- 
“Rough on Rats." Clears out rats, mice 
flies,roaches, bed-bugs, suits,vermin. 15c.Adv. 
&\}c ftlnrhds. 
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. 
Up to Saturday, Jan. 27. 
Chicago.— As compared with prices a week 
ago “regular” wheat is higher for 
Jan.; No. 2 Red Winter higher for 
cash; but unchanged for Jan.: No. 2 Chicago 
Spring. % 0 . higher. Corn 4c. higher for Jan.; 
3LG), higher for Feb.; steady for all the year. 
Oats higher. Rye 2J<o. lower. Barley 
2c. higher. Butter 2c. higher for la tter sorts 
of creamery; 2c to 3c. lower for dairy. 
Wh»t strong: Regular. *l.(i?W Jan nano. No. 2 Red 
Winter. #U2H c ** h i 96H* January; . all the 
®enr: No 8 vie; rejected tic No 2 Ohleago Spring, 
i .j j ^ m - Micy ..U. Li mi J T.. m.iu It 27 /y» at 11 t n#» v niiP 
do.. #4.50645: common to fair butcher*’ stock. 
•1 2V»8,70; gor'd to choice do., #4(®4 50; Stockers and 
feeders *3 7V»4 ?0, Siir.sr— M«rket active and 
strong: common to medium muttons. W W»4 25 fair 
to good. #4.5IV»S 96: prime to fancy, #5.35** 6. Hoos 
- Vnrkcrs, $ 4 . 12 ,^ 0 ,r, SO; packing. $6 15®0 98) butchers’ 
#6.80(3)6. SO. _ * , * _ 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
Now Yobb. Rntnrdny. Jan. 27. 1RP8. 
Brass and Pkar - fleane. marrow. 1««2. prime 
#8OS: medium, l hht, choice. * ,fo- ditto, pda choice, 
small, It2.56; do, pea (marrow) #2 50 do. white ktd- 
nev 1RW. choice. #3 70643 75; red kidney, W2 choice, 
#3.7008.75: do turtle «o;ip. 62 806*3 81- do. foreign, 
medium" new. #258682-80 do do old #21RO3-20: Peas, 
green. 1W2. prime •i ?iir ( jl 25: Southern 1>. e. ft two 
busnel Pag. #2.7fQ8 0Q. 
BRKAPETtlKSS AXP PKOWTONB.—PrlCTS 0< 
Peed find Meal -Fiom No 2, *2 ,V»3.B0, latter 
extreme; superfine. #3 3003.DO latter extreme; 
common to fair extra State. *3 806*4 40: good to 
fancy do . *4 R’ktf 7 00 : Common to good extra 
Western. #8 HIM64 (T: good to choice *4 com¬ 
mon to good extra round hoop Ohio. *1 956*4 BO; 
good to choice do. #4 7O«7.0<l' common to extra 
Minnesota *3 90® 4 50: clear. *4 75® 3>75- rye mix¬ 
ture *4 706»5 25- bakers'exira, #5OOrtt.BPO- straight, 
#5 SkftlWl: parent ** (iuaft*0: St lout* common to 
fair extra. #4<»i»4,9P; good to very choice *4 60 
«7 25 patent winter wheat extra. A*. 766*7 *8: city 
mill extra for Wot Indie*. *5 406 »r ,80 8onth Amer. 
lea, #5 Ml 80; Wlstcr wheat patent. *V«V37.2R; 
Southern flour, common to good extra. At «K3i\20; 
good to choice *9 ?v.vs KV Rve (Piir-Hnnerflne. 
#3 6VD4 30 Buckwheat Amir, *3 "'*6*3.2'') Feed-Market 
very Arm; I* 1 It F$a^lh4f fid It **0 th, 95c; 
100 It. 9ftcdt#l: sharps, Hl'P'ua I 15- rye feed OAc. 
Price* of grain.-WHEAT Ungraded Winter red, 
at 88c <&*!»>; No. 8 red, *1.12«nl. I4V(: do Steamer 
No. 2 red *1.13^(31.14 No. 2 red. *i P6M.FM/ or cer¬ 
tificates ungraded white 9‘e®*' l!d-6: No white, 
*1 <»U delivered No. ! white, *1 15 Tor ccrtlflcatcs; 
No 2 red January *1 14(S\1Ri Fehrunrv *1 14W 
(SUM*; do. March. 17*. RvK-Dnll: Far 
Canada. 73c In nrnd. Hasi-bv—T wo-rowed Ktate, 
(»H4e luti'EY Mai.t for two.rnwe4 8tate; 
*16*1.10 for idxroocd State; *hOM«d15 bur Can¬ 
ada. Cohn—M arket unsettled; Ungraded w c«*cra 
mixed 626671 V• Vo S 6tM'e«2e: ‘termer mixed 6,M 
(SfWUf. No 3 In elevator 1<V delivered: No 2 
white. Wlc. tpUow. C76tnc: Southern yellow 7We No. 
2 mixed January. 68^f«)U**c; February 67T«®(»Mc: 
March. ff7MfS68o. Oat*—N o H, 176*4 Wc: No. 2. 4H6» 
4HI-6C • Nn 1 No 3 white 4s M8Wc: No 2 
43*ic;’ No. 1 quoted rsV- mixed Western •l7W'»50c: 
white do. 48l4^53c; White Bute. r .l(^Wc; No 2 
mixed January, 490; February, 47^6618^0, March, 
47*c»48*e. 
Prices of Provisions—Port- N.-wmess spot, 
E18.TR: choice. *'«t family -•'8.50fi»18.75; 
prime me**, $!7.VV.V8: extra Prlmo. »14.7V*1R Beef- 
Vlaln men* *12,rtxal2. r .O e.xfra mex*. *12.7ValSRO: 
pscket *lRWl5 Rft c|t» extra India mess In tc* *26 50 
ffl27.no. Peer ham*. *l« T'-icdM Clli meats-p ek ed 
hnms. tlUAISKc.f Pickled shoulder* Be pickled 
bellies. 12 1* eve rage •■*«*>.: Smoked "’’ouHcr*. 
ft? «mo»«d ham* Bac-m^ w Hear 9 > 5-16 
CtWWk:; at West, long elcu- qOOled short 
clettV. 9 nvM ‘Or Ur-wd Hog* -Cllv. heavy to light, 
ciCft-u t ,lg», KiUfakfWu.; We»te-n, i 9S r '68c l,ard — 
prime'•te*im spot 11c : to arrive, UUTfcaUa.; city 
steam, lO.6ValO.70c; 8 American, ll.ffio. 
BPTrgtt.—Creamery, fntioy. B7®38<s: choice. 336*35c: 
prime. 28 VUc; f*lr to good. 24 , *27e: ordlnarv 2()i»2Sc : 
F;t»*e dairh’* entire tub and firkin, faney. 74c good 
to choice. ?2*t?3e do half firkin tub* nnd pall* fancy. 
27®-av choice. 2'v 5 *tfic: do good 2'6t24i- do fAlr. 70® 
ac; Htnta firkins dairy cntl-c. 23ff*23c.; do ftne.20®ac; 
do. ffdr to gootl IHfMOe: 8late UcUh tub*, 
choice. 25®28C! Welsh tub* good to prime T2 Jl24o; 
State Welsh tub* fair to good 206*72-- Western 
Imitation creamery U)6»20r- <lo. dairy ch<-l-e 24w25e; 
do good to prime 3>v*«c: do ordinary to fair. 15® 
ISc: Western factory. June, fair to good 1 saule; do. 
choice current make If ( 0 , 2 ^’: do. f-d- -’ 'o., 1.KS 
18ct do ordinary. lftElkn Western roll*, 166420c 
CfiKKRK —State fnctcry. fanev Fall, He; do prime to 
Choice. 13M<al3«c: do. good. UWaiSc: do r»lr 11(»12c: 
do. medium, d n pr*or. l»®J$ir: Ohio flat*, 
choice. l«We: do. fin-, 18W®I8: do fair to g'^>d. Ki 
(<«'2c; creamery skims, choice. do. good tWn, 
PctdOL fair, 5646c; Pennsylvania skims, fancy.B^c; do. 
fair to tine, uklms. Iron ulad. 5<a«. 
Cotton. — 
CURRKNT PRICKS. 
Quotations based on American Standard of clas- 
Blflcat,on - N. Orleans. Texas. 
Uplands, and Gnlf 
Ordinary.. 2A S ' 16 ^J 8-16 
Btrlct ordinary. ■ 15-16 * 4 
Good ordinary. Wk » 1-16 ® ’- ,6 
Strict good ordinary. ® ^-'6 
Low middling. 911-16 W 10 
Strict low middling.. 10 W., A^K, 
Middling . 07; 18 l"?- 16 
Strict.good middling. .10$ 11 
8 “ wi ® 
Good ordinary. 7W I Uiw Middling, FK 
Strict good ordinary. ...i 15-16 I Middling.9 7-16 
Brown’s Bronchial Troches for Coughs 
and Colds: “I cannot very well do without 
them. There is nothing to be compared with 
them.”—Rev. O. D. Watkins, Walton, lud. 
Price 25 cents a box.—Adv. 
- --AM- 
New Vepartnrc In Fertilizer*. 
Onb of the best mottoes we know of, is this: 
“ Be conservative in ail that is good and pro¬ 
gressive in all that is better.” But some very 
B t fWJVfrin Tree, nosp « ■ x ^ , 
57 ^c. March; {MMtMUa. May; 51V4C. aU the vear: re- 
lected, 4Vo. OAir firm at 87Ufift37MO. cash; S7V Jan¬ 
uary; 83c. Ktk. *IHrt*6iC. 1'Akl.xV weak at K2®H8c. 
Fi.aX&KRP brm at *l.lMk3>I 21C; good crushing on 
track, $:.S2; rejectod. W.W; choice Rnsslan, *'14. 
Bpttkk dull; creamery, fair t" fancy. W<k36c; dudM, 
good to choice 23®8hc packing stock, l»*w. Kouii 
steady at 266«-27c, DfUCSsKD Hooh Light, #. IP;.'. Ai; 
heavy. »7 S6V®7 »). Foiuc. *17 caah HuOk- 
tulxed. *3 *(Kk6 2J; b»-»»y, # 6 . 16 ( 0,6 73 light. *5 7 35; 
skips, #4 10 or, 2%; market Closed weak. 
ket fairly active, closing weak; prime. ft.lmyt-Si; 
good to choice shipping, #*■ ,2-V-y;. iHd cnmmu'i to fair, 
*4 2(7645 15 butdjer*’ In Talr demand and moderate 
supply: common to fair, *2 4"o(.»3 #•: in*dillDltOgood, 
*3.756)4.40; Miockers nnd fe- ders, *3 I5®4 5U. Shk»t - 
Suprly of low grade stock heavy; common to mir, 
*l.fi04»4.l0; medium to good, *4.30®5.15; choice to 
extra, #5 25*45.73. 
Cincinnati.— Compared with prices n week 
ago No. 2 Red Winter wheat is 2 %c. higher 
for cash and J an. Corn,new ear, a shade high¬ 
er; No. 2 mixed, %c. higher. Oats, No. 2 
mixed, ^c. lower. Rye 1 j^o. higher. Bailey 
lc. higher. Butter unchanged. 
Wiikat firm; No. 2 Red Winter, fl.O&Vid&'-Kft *P®J' 
CORK weak: new oar, 48®fiB0|NO 2 mUed. 54JtC. BPOt. 
5c. January: 341*c. February VK Uuy: j 644C. 
allthc year, Oatm *t*-udy; No. 2 mixed. 41H4»A4e spot; 
4 V> tanuarv Ryu. 664466c, BARUfTsteady: extra No. 
J fuu ":^ Id-KK dull-; new , El7*5rfll.d0. Lauo 
strong at *111.50 IlPTTKR steady choice Wo*tern Re 
serve.25c: "hole* Ontrat Ohio. »)c. Hoos llrm ; com¬ 
mon and light, # r ..«)®6.A5, packing oud butchers . 
*6.86®6.86, 
Bt. LOU18.— Compared with prices a week 
ago No. 2 Red Fall wheat is steady; No. 
2 Red Fall is steady; No. S Red Foil is 
13^c. lower. Corn %o. higher. Oats 23*c. 
higher. Rye lc. lower. Barley unchanged. 
Butter—Dairy, from lc. to 8c. lower; creum- 
ery, 2c lower. Pork steady. 
WinctT steady; No. 2 Bed Kali, gi.Otwl c«h . 
No. 8 Hod Full. Yt^w94Jic; No. 4 do.. 
WUCiti'Aio- cosh; 49|4<(tlV4to. Jauusry. Oats Hi »)4® 
30jJc. ca«b; SfTii c January: 88c February; JkkgfbWf . 
air the year. TtVK. WafiT^c. lUKUtv steady; wm 
nio lots, MkalBo; Nebrusku. 7U(a79c. Burnt* steady, 
dairy, K&WCi cn-aniery. SIk*38c. Eo*is steady at 
2i)Vk«2la roRk, *1?,2B caah. Catti.k -export slccr*. 
*6.76<»*l>; good to choice uhlppuig, *5(it6.76; light 
Dnnm Fruits.—B on th cm apples, ordinary to good 
BWialiic: do. do., fine to choice do fancy. 
9U6H944C; Western orrlln»rv. 6U(!t7Tl do fal* good. 
7Q64744C; choice lots. 86J,«>^e State, sliced. 8}<6»9c; do. 
quarters, nppU* e»»poratod U*l5l<c; do. 
choice, ring cut. I(V(41«W0! fancy selections. 17c.; 
Benches. Southern. fl®9o; do COTOlIrra gOOd to fancy. 
do Georgia, oeeled. tO®13J4c; evaporated 
peaches, peeled, rv)A2«c; do do '("peeled \><A 
{vide; nnpeeled t.eachcs halve*, fcatfiqc do. ouar- 
tcfTi 6V6A544C: Flams Southern. l4i»UWe; do Siafe, 
14 W«HW^ eherrle. 2J6»24c; Blackberries, 7m(i47«c.; 
Raspberries 3(lo; Hnokleltttrrles, ISVic. 
Eooa -Fancy stock. In bids * do*. 2»MOOi| state, 
and Pen»svlvanla In bbl* ?»«*««<*: choice Western, 
27<a>kc: other Western «>a2'*’ fanndlen, line. In 
bbla, 23642V’: Southern, prime ZBfitSBUr: alt kinds poor 
to good nominal; Hmeri Slate, 16(ftl6kid: do. Canada 
and Western. 156416c. 
FmcsH Fruttk — Apples Western N Y.. mixed lots, 
#2,5ivaav) per t)hl do. Baldwins, A3 (IU644 00- Orocn- 
tnns. *3 (10*4IM windfall*. 4" *1 7V.4225 Grapes, W. 
N Y Catawlm. 4(3<Bc CmnlM>rrle*. Cats' Hod. fancy. 4k 
bbL *14 w»|5.nn: do good to prime. #12 m®U m do Ik 
crate. #40064*4 75; do Jersey. prlrnc. V crafe *4(») 
to u f«r>- do fair to stood, * 7!>* ria, 
oranges, choice, bright, per Mi bbl box, #3 506*3 <5; 
do fair to g"od. *2.W3i2,7B.: Peanuts. Virginia, 
handpicked. Ft* n<6t71tc: do.,fam-y 7®7Uc: do., 
good to prime <U' Hickory nut*. * bush., 
#1 50661.75; pecans, ♦* F„*7'- 
Hors —N. Y. Slate, crop of 1882. choice *1 00; do. me¬ 
dian » 906*950: do. do. low grades 8V.6»v do crop of 
1 KHI. good tooholen, 90c.®#l .Wh old olds, 75ktWC. East- 
ern, crop of )RK 2 ralr to choice, 9061*100; do. Fa 
cl Ac Coast, 90641.00. 
Foultrt akd Game.—L ive poultry—Spring chick 
en», near-bt. * h, 12wl8c: do. Western and 
Southern 1066110.; fowls. Pennsylvania and Jer¬ 
sey HkoISc' Huife Hk4'5c: Western 14c.; roosters 
old. * It>.7 Turkey*, Jersey and Ba * I* 16c; 
Western 1564 '80 ducks. Btate, IA and Jersey, 4k 
pair #UI0ab2B; do Western, TVs «#1.00; Geese, 
Western » pair. #1 SK#I.13; do. State. Fa., and Jer¬ 
sey. F pair. *21'0©2 25 
Dressed Poultry—Turkey*. J«**y. choice. 1W»‘. 
prime, dry picked. 19c do aon'ded. l8ai9o; 
do. poor to fair 14(®1()c capons. Urge, 27642'*' do. 
smsll, 2Vit26c; slip*. 286624a; rhl'kens, Philadelphia, 
large ♦ faP 2tka23c; do Phllndalphla mixed weights. 
* a, 196620c; chickens, Stub, choice, 1T<V do. 
Western 166417c.; fowU, Buck* bounty and ^ J-. 
prime. 16o: do. L I. and N.J fair u< good. 146415c; 
do Philadelphia. dry plckfl prime, It: do. 
Hfntr 4M*d Western, dry picked 14®t5u ; do., scalded, 
140415 c; do. fair to greet, 12«41.'k'. duck< Stale and 
W r e*tern, fair in Rcmrl. 126414c; do. 1 hlladelphla 
Spring * *>, 2M6622*' do. State and Western Spring, 
17»19c; geese Philadelphia young, 15c.; do, State and 
Western, young. Uull2c\ do, fair to good, ftaioc. 
Game—Quail, prime F do*., #1.75; fair to good 
*1-25661.50; Partridges, Kaslern and Minnesota 5064 
75c: do. Htate and other West, re. F pair. #1.(56*1.86; 
Grouse, do. #l.(J0v6U0 Woodcock, » pair 7366800.; 
tame squabs, light, per dozen. #3 25 do. dnrk (lo.. 
#2.25: tame plgo(>"B live. F pair. 154640c: wild 
ducks. Western canvas, #1.75647 25; Wild ducks. H. 
de G., red heads TV(3*1: do. Western, red heads, 
90c66#l OU; do. mallard*, ft pair, 5'N«HSt3' do blue 
wing. teal, ft pair. VKgt/T; do common ft pair. 
1 Haros, ft pair, 3066350: Rabbit#, undrawn, 
* puii, 2S4PS0C.) do. drawn, ft pair, 20«|25o. 
