JULY 7 
President of the New York, Texas & Mexican 
Railway, and brother-in-law of “ Bonanza” 
Maekay. The plaintiff claims that he sold de¬ 
fendant 1,250,00(1 acres of grazing lands in El 
Paso County at 80 cents per acre, to be paid 
for Nov. 15 1882, and that Teifener failed to 
meet the obligation. Service has been had 
on the defendant in New York, the papers re¬ 
turnable at the October term of the Travis 
•ouuty District Court. The purchase was for 
the purpose of establishing a gigantic stock- 
I'nncli, in which several European capitalists 
were concerned, with the intention of organ¬ 
izing a line of steamers and supplying the 
European markets with Texas meats. 
From advance sheets of the June crop report 
published by the Illinois State Board of Ag¬ 
riculture, it is shown that the estimated in¬ 
crease in the corn acreage over that of 1882 
is :i per cent., making the coni area this year 
over 7,500,000 acres. The condition indicates 
a yield three-fourths as large as the average, 
or 108,750,000 bushels less than the crop of 
1882. The condition of broom corn und su¬ 
gar cane is discouraging. Winter wheat 
prospects are not as good as in May, and the 
present estimate is 10,000,000 bushels. Oats 
are nearly up to the average condition, and 
the prospective yield is 100,000 bushels. Rye, 
flax, and barley have fallen off 10 per cent, 
in acreage. There will be 100,000 acres of 
Irish potatoes... 
FOREIGN NEWS. 
Saturday June 30, 1883. 
King Makoka, the head of one of the west 
African coast tribes, has been dethroned by 
his own people. The natives are believed to 
have been influenced in the mutter by Stanley, 
the explorer.The lower house of the 
.Prussian diet passed the government's church 
bill by a vote of 224 to 107.There were 
fifty-two deaths from yellow fever in Havana 
during the week. At Vera Cruz the fever is 
making frightful ravages among the Europ¬ 
eans and Americans. There have been one 
thousand deaths within two months. The 
heat lias become almost unbearable.The 
number of deaths from the fearful Sunder¬ 
land disaster has reached 202, Other childish 
victims still in danger.......At Dervio, Lake 
Como, Italy while 00 people, mostly women 
and children, were attending a Puppet Show 
the place took lire, many jumped from the 
windows and were wounded more or less se¬ 
verely, and after the fire was extinguished 47 
charred corpses were found among the ruins. 
.The reports of a quarrel between Al¬ 
fonso of Spain and his wife are rigorously 
contradicted. She has only gone to see her 
mother and will be back in a couple of months 
.At the Cabinet Council in Paris it 
was positively stated that the (Jueen of Mada- 
gascar has l»eeii dead six months, and that 
the military' jHirty hud concealed the fact..... 
The streams in Silcsiu have reached the high- 
w'uter mark of 18211. Water-spouts are re¬ 
ported. There arc disastrous floods also in 
Bohemia and Moravia. The Danube is ex¬ 
pected to overflow its banks;..Louise 
Michel, the communist, was convicted at Paris, 
Saturday aud sentenced to six years’ impris¬ 
onment and 111 years’ police supervision,. 
The University of Cambridge since 1881 has 
admitted the women students of Girton and 
Newnham colleges to the same examinations 
as men, and next year will place their names 
in the university calender with those of men, 
removing the last istinction against, their sex. 
.Lynch, alias Norman, the iuformer, 
w ho testilled against Dr. Gullagher und the. 
other dynamite conspirators, in Loudon, w*as 
released from custody on Monday because of 
his services to t he government as an informer. 
.Peter Carey and family have left Ire¬ 
land. James Carey'is also going to leave or 
has already left, it will be u trifle unsafe for 
either of these informers anywhere unless they' 
contrive to conceal their identity.Before 
the fisheries conference at London the Duke of 
Edinburgh eomiuended to the European 
powers the exumple of the United States in 
expending reasonable amounts each year in 
the breeding of food fisb.A dispatch says 
the Haytian Government made an attack on 
Miragoane from the sea, and were repulsed 
w ith the loss of two vessels aud many men. 
The rebels have captured Jacmot, aud huvo 
possession of nearly all the western coast. 
There is u panic over the outbreak of cholera 
in Egypt. Yesterday 107 deaths occurred at 
Dumietta. At Mansuruh, Tun tali and Port 
Said it is also carrying off many. Efforts urc 
being made to protect Alexandria from the 
dreaded plague. Vessels from Egypt are 
quarantined by Turkey', Italy aud France. 
There is a stampede of foreigners worse than 
at the time of Arnbi’s revolt. In May the dis¬ 
ease appeared in Bombay, India, aud since 
then it bus lieen traveling westward. The 
English delegate to t he Sanitary Commission 
assembled then at Constantinople, prevented 
the taking of proper precautions against its 
spread, declaring that commercial interests 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
433 
were as important as health, and so through 
British greed the plague is smiting the Egyp- 
ians and threatening Europe. All European 
countries, except the United Kingdom, are 
taking precautions against the plague, and 
England is urgently pressed to comply w ith 
the advice of the Constantinople Sanitary 
Conference. In Egypt the infested plates are 
strictly quarantined, and no communication is 
permitted with vessels passing through the 
Suez CanaJ.... 
The House of Lords rejected the bill permitt¬ 
ing marriage with a deceased wife’s sister, on 
its third reading, by u vote of 145 nays to 140 
yeas. Last year the House of Lords refused 
to pass the bill to its second reading by a vote 
of 128 to 132, the other day the same House 
passed the bill to a second reading by' a vote 
of 165 to 158.The Russian government 
has come to terms with the Vatican. 
President Grivy is to reply in pacific terms to 
the letter of the Pope on the French Church.. 
Burrnah is thinking of sending an Embassy to 
France......... 
Tropic-Fruit Laxative meets the popular 
vant for a mild, agreeable and effective cath- 
lrtie medicine. Sold by druggist everywhere 
at 25 cts. per box.— Adv. 
See Johnson & Fields, Racine Fan Mill ad¬ 
vertisement, issue of June 30, page 420,— Adv. 
Have you Heart Disease in any form i if so 
use Dr. Graves’ Heart Regulator; 30 years 
have proved it a sure remedy for organic or 
sympathetic Heart Disease. 81 per bottle at 
druggists. — Adv. 
Ayer’s Ague Cure is warranted to cure all 
malarial disorders, w hen the directions are 
faithfully followed.— Adv. 
For a family medicine Ayer’s Sugar Coated 
Pills are unrivaled. They root out disease, as 
if by magic.— Adv. 
£l)-C iiWluls. 
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. 
Chicago.—F or two months we have omitted 
“Markets by Telegraph” because farmers gen¬ 
erally had sold their crops, and the space 
might, we thought be put to more interesting 
use. Now that the harvest has begun in some 
parts of the country, we once more start our 
“country markets.” The lust were given in 
the Rural of April 28 and the differences in 
prices between then and now are given In each 
case. “Regular” wheat is 10lie. lower; No. 
2 Chicago Spring is 10j$c. lower; No. 2 Red 
Winter is Tj^c. lower. Cora 2%c. lower. Oats 
8c. lower. Rye 8j^c. lower. Barley 3c. lower. 
Flaxseed 10c. lower. Butter, creamery, fair 
to fancy, lc. to 0c. lower; dairies lc. to 7c. 
lower. Eggs lc, lower. Pork $3,15 lower. 
Hogs *1.80 to *1.60 lower. 
Wheat unsettled aud active; "regular” 
t.uu(^ July; #1(04, August; #li4M September; Ss*,c. 
all tne year; Xu. 4 Chicago spring, 9>!-4<aio94e; No. 3 
do.. Sic; No. 2 red Winter. fiLlSe Cues active at 
r>'<>5,o. rash; Mltaif'ijqe. June: i'Jyy-'.-3c. July: 53*«<aA34fcc. 
August: Sept. UPgc; 4Sv- ail the year. Oats, San 
:x»ne. June;July: Mic. August; 
October Kvt 5556c. UIeley Stic. FLAXaKt.n 
#1.32. Be tteb—C reamery, fulr to fancy. 17tf2lo; 
dairies, good to Choice, rlfal&c. Kuos quiet at 15t« 
Li4*c, Koli* trregulur; closed nrm ut Slwefi cash; 
#16.95 June; #l(Li> July. Bullaneuu fair; shoulders, 
..uUe; short rib. M0c; short clear.$.030. lloos—Market 
demoralized. mixed. * 5 . 7 '.»j 46 .UG, heavy, #Stgti.2&: light, 
#5.754*ii,S.t; skips. CATTLE—Market active and 
steady ; prime In good demand; half fat and rough 
weaker, ports, kVJUaUJo; good to choice shipping, 
S i-irsnAtm; common to medium, gi.stHs5.30. tjinucr— 
arket fairly uotlve und Him. Common to fair, 
gl.SO.il.UU;. good. $1.39; hotce, #4.75. 
Cincinnati. — Compart'd with prices on 
April 28, No. 2 Ret! Winter wheat is G to 7 
ceutu lower. Corn, 3^c. lower. Oats, 8c. 
lower. Rye, 1 J 4 c. higher.- Barley, Sc. higher. 
Pork, 5Uc. lower. Butter choice Western re¬ 
serve, 10c. lower. Choice Ceutral Ohio, tic. 
lower. Hogs about- $1. lower. 
Wheat, No. 5 red Winter, #l.06t«l.ue spot; #1.9756 
July; 9i.U94bl.0b August; Sept.. #1.0*8. Cues dull ut 
311*0. spot; .V&f529»c. Juno; 5 - 440 . July; August, 54V,e. 
Oats quiet at '-To. spot. Urn heavy at 564tc. Barley 
dull; extra No. 3 Fall at On. 1‘oKK: uomiuul ut *19.30 
Lard heavy at $9.(9. bvUCKKATs; shoulders. To.; 
clear rib. bWc.; bacon quiet; shoulders, ; 4 »e,; clear 
rlO, 95sc.| clear, 10c. tsuntk; choice Western Re¬ 
serve. 13 c; choice Central Ohio, 13c. Uoos tinner; 
common and light, #5.25<«i9.40; packing uud butchers' 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
New York. June 23,1333. 
Beans and Peas.— Holders still complain of dJs. 
couragements attending the effort to work off stock, 
and the market in a general way has a very dull and 
heavy tone. 
Beans—marrow, 18*2. prime. #2.30©2.25- Beaus, me¬ 
dium. 1382, prime, *2.20®2.2f>; do. pea, #3.30&2.3j: do. 
white kidney 1882, choice, #2.Bh©j2.fs* do. red kidney, 
1382 choice, S&.VKStkliO; do. turtle soup, 
do. foreign, mediums, #L71K&#U5: Peas, green, 1883, 
prime, $1.1501.20. 
Bueadstcffs and Provisions.—As compared with 
prices u week ago. ungraded Winter red wheat 1»$e, 
lower: No. 3 red Is 256c. lower; steamer No. 2 red Is 
354'c. lower; No. 1 white la 3c. lower. Rye—Western 
Is 3c. lower; State 1c. lower. Com—Ungraded mixed 
Is 2e. lower: No. 3 is Vic. lower. Oats—No. :i mixed Is 
$56o. lower; No. 1 quoted 8J^o lower; No. 8 white Is 
2Hc. lower; mixed Western Is 2J6C. lower; white 
Wt stern Is 2e. lower. 
Flour, Feed and Meal—F lour—M arket dull; Quo¬ 
tations: No. 2. #2.lOfitU.ft}, latter extreme: superfine, 
t S.-hYit-4.fli. latter extreme; common to rulr extra 
tato, *3,i4><t 1.25 ; good to fancy do., #I,;lw 1.00: com¬ 
mon to good extra Western, $8,S0r*-».50: good to 
choice, #I.Stot#7.3C: common to good extrn round 
hoop Ohio, *N.9a&4.65; good to choice, do., #1.7 >k 4,6.50; 
common extra Minn., #8.1»b<«,1.69; clear, $5.iJtK« #6.1X1; 
rye mixture, $-1.V><a:5.. r >0: straight, glLUOtaAtS: [intent, 
$6®7.39; st. Louis common to fair extra, *3.UNo i.75- 
good to very choice, #l.-)Yv»8.7J: patent Winter wheat 
extra. iS.ISwfi.ll; city mill extra for West Indies, 
#5.2o6ii.s0: South America, #j.8.V-6i',.-» -.-market closed 
dull nml heavy. Southern Hour dull, declining, com¬ 
mon to good extra. ILVvq&jii- good to choice, #5.15 
<6:6.75. Rye Hour—dull? superfine, $X30d3.30. Fred— 
Rather more steady; 10 Ik uud JC ft. TSc; 90 lb. 100 
lb Wlt-fa, #1: sharps, #I.UH-1.1'; rye feed, 93o. Corn 
meal Quiet; yellow Western, #3&ji3.4,i; new process, 
#3.50; Brandywine, #3.40<&3.50. 
Prices of Provision*—Pork—Mites spot, quoted at 
$17.73<4i18.00 fur ordinary brand; Western prime mess, 
#17.3Y«JH: city do., #lt«r 19.25; family mess, #10.73® 
20.25; extra prime, $15.7.V». 16.29: dear back.#•>>.»«:• 
30.75. Beef—Extra mess, #136}, 13.50 packet, #13.50® 
l«.5Uralate. #13©I*.25, city extra India mess, In tes.. 
#20®21. Beef hams continue senree. and are held 
with decided strength, quoted $27.50. Cut meats— 
Pickled bellies, 14 1b average, quoted do. 12 
lb average quoted 9*4iit956e: pickled shoulders, 8J4's> 
856C; plckleil bamu, !24 h« tJtqc.. Smoked Shoulders, 
smoked boms. i346<6-llc. Middles— Lon# clear 
quoted here, 'Jo; ar West, Iodr <tnd short clear, 
half and half - (hfi&Hlic. Dressed Hogs—city, heavy 
to light, pigs, 9c. Lard—Prime steam 
spot, 9.70c (generally quoted 9.Wk2:9.r»ic; July. y.Mu 
9.48c, closing 9.4 <hs, 5 30c i August. 9..V<5i!i.t5c; 
September, $9,7V*; October, 8-60 (s-9.73c: December, 
9.55c; seller year. 9.35@9.41 g; city steam, 9.40c; retlned 
Continent, 10c; South American 10.is.-. 
PRICES OF Grain—Wheat.-U ngraded Duluth Spring 
at #1.11; Ungraded Winter red, H5e<«bl.lt>: mainly 
#1.1SJ«®L,«56: No. 3 red, *1.t(KU.U>5£: Hteamcr No, 2 
red #l.i:ip,o l.lMq; .No. 2 red, #1,' 
$1.List 1.14 free on board from store; #1 Ji‘*m LLiaBout: 
#1.15&®I.171« for rail eertllleuD-; mainly ut #1.17; Red 
Canada #l.l'J^fjtl. 16; ungraded white, L1B&1.15; No, 1 
while |D9; No. 2 red seller July. #I.I2VJ1.13 #s: Aug¬ 
ust, #l.lf>U(ai.i6«; September. »L17?i,<5ri.l8iii October 
#1.15k«*« 1.21V. November #t.2iw-u.'22&s- R*k West¬ 
ern at t-7c; Slate. 73c; quoted CStkCfe for Weutarn; 71® 
73c for State. iLiU-tv dull and nominal. Barley 
Malt dull; two-rowed state, mYgiAv: six-rowed. Hjc 
® #1.111: Canada, 9Qct4#l.K6. CORN — ungraded mixed, 
at 4so,tide; No. i. 5rtc: steamer mixed, r-Ttsat-'C's-e.; No, 
2, 61li<gt3c: adi-at mainly ut No. •< white 67J*c; 
No.2 mixed sellar June. Me; July, M>v'hiM|8.c: Aug,Clf-i 
@63e;September. tassfaiBe; October, oats 
No. 3 mixed at sqxc; No, 2. S8X>»:hHi; No. 1 quoted ;®V;c 
No. >% 1 1 1 1 < - 4-: No. 2. I8t$c; No. I quoted sBc; No, 
2 Chicago, -10c. afloat: mixed Western 39j6ffi4'?We; 
white do. I2<i*47e; white State li^; No. 2 mixed seller 
July, August, :j7(«379t|C; September, :1c 1 Cit 
361tjc; October, SfcfcSM-fic. 
vtsiblk supply or oii.vrx in the united states and 
CANADA. 
June 23,1883. 
Wheat, bush.20^149,434 
Corn, bush. 14,231 Jf77 
Oats, bush. 4,345,192 
Barley, bush. iilJOl 
Rye. bush. 1,878,412 
June 24, 18R2 
10,555,148 
8,135,318 
1,926,49C 
103,457 
807,902 
Butter.— State dairy packed came in mostly from 
local points and lias an Irregular sale. Western 
stock Is In about old form. The best authorities In the 
trade look upon the present position as very precu. 
rlous. 
Creamery, fancy pails. 24c: do. extra, 23c; do. 
choice, 22c: do. prune, 2tc; do. fair to good, HA* 
die: do. ordinary, I7i»18c: State half-tlrklll tubs 
and palls, best, 23c; do. do. line, 20ta31c: do. good, 
17is.l-V; do. fair. 15-.1.18: State Welsh tubs, choice, 2lc; 
do. good to prime, lTigAY-; do. fair to good, 15<a> 
16c; Wr>tern imitation creamery, choice, Px-slSc; 
Western do, good to prime, IK-tlSe; do. ordinary 
to fair, 18c; Western dairy, best, 17c.; do. good, 
14(^160.; do. ordinary. I2<g 13e Western factory, best 
current make. 14««15c; do. fair to good IPs. 13c; do. 
ordinary, Skaldc. 
Cotton.—A doll listless state of trade prevailing, 
tho;advantage remaining with the buying element. 
Southern crop accounts cheerful. Spot buslnes's, 
moderately active. 
CUUKKNT rRICKS 
Quotations based on American Standard of ClassBl- 
catlon. 
Uplands 
and 
Florida. 
Ordinary... 7 7-16 
Strict Ordinary. Tvg 
Good Ordinary... S 11-16 
Strict Good Ordinary. 
Low Middling.91* 
Strict Low Middling. 10 3-16 
Middling. H)9fi 
Good Middling... U»a 
Strict Good Middling. 11 
Middling Fair. ilia 
Fair. 12*4 
STAINED. 
New 
Orleans 
and Gulf. 
7 U-16 
836 
8 15-16 
946 
i0« 
10 7-16 
1046 
11 
HM 
1196 
1216 
Texas. 
7 U-16 
s^-ie 
nil 
10 7-16 
1046 
11 
11* 
11* 
12 * 
Good Ordinary.6X» 1 Low Middling......846 
Strict Good Oni.., 7 ll-l< I .Middling .9V» 
Dried FJlitts.—P xtrcmely dull markei all around. 
Southern apples, ordinary to good, 7t.«Ke,; do. 
line to choice, s^.oje.: do. fant-y, 93fiiAl9c.; West 
eru, ordinary, 7-,i. Qc.; do. iSo. fair to good. 
tv-4,e.; do. do., ehidee lota, ; State, sliced, 
»®9c., do. quarters, SatsOie.; apples, evaporated, 
11® 12c.: do. choice, ring cut, lVql4c.: do., fancy 
selections, 1 tVyltloc; peaches, Carolina, good to 
fancy, 7i<#l2; do, Georgia, peeled, 7i*9e.: evapo¬ 
rated (leaches, peeled ISiglllc.; do. unix-elod peaches 
halves, Ua.6t»c. ■ do. do., quarters, V.'5*«c.: plums, 
Southern, lllbkll.ujc.; do.. State, lOqtltC.i cnerrtes, 28 
(g2SW-.; blackberries. S iSq,e.; ruAptK'rrtes, :5W84C.; 
huckleberries, I3*tldVtC. 
Kt. Louis,— Compand with prices ou April 
38, No. 3 Red Full wheat is 4j^c. lower. Corn 
4>sc. lower. Gats 9c. lower. Rye 8‘^c, lower. 
Wheat, Very unsettled; No. 2 red Full, *1,07® 1.08 
cash; kt,oi* 4 -.il.wv.Vi; closing at #1.08, July; #1 .o7->a(* 
#1.09(6 closing ut 1 jzVQ, August; gl.ONUilgl closing, 
at#1.10(6, SeptemU-r; #Lll(4«Al.l24y. closing at*1.124s, 
October;j.OfigUunclosing i.inv* ail the year. Corn 
dull at 16c cash and June; 47c. July; LN^scijii484(0. 
August; eAyi-wAe, September: 5 ciaWS-c October; 
tJ-J-teta-Gl 4 c, a(4 the > ear closing at lUslde quotations. 
OAts, All-iniis- ciLsb. 34c, June. 51 1 e-sH 4%e- July. 
27I6e. August; 2b9»,(a26-»4C, all the year. Rye dull at 
4He, bid. BaRLEY— No market. Pork dull; Jobbing 
#L. Oa ltie- Market active and generally Arm; ex 
ports, #.'i.mj<h: 6, goad to choice .nipping, #5.40^3.73; 
light to fair #wt 3U: common #1 5ua 1 7»; good cows 
aud heifers. #4 25(it4 i3;comnuiu to medium do, #3 5U<9 
4; good to choice grass, Texans, #4.2fna5; common to 
fulr do, #3. Rial. Sheep—Market Arm for best grades; 
fair to good *3 i Toil 50; prime to choice, gl SUUj; Tex- 
au» #2,75 a 4; Spring lambs, #1 251*2.75 per head. 
Fresh Fruits. Scarcely any strawberries received 
from Jersey, the season being pretty well over. Rasp¬ 
berries In fair request, but prices a shade easier. 
Huckleberries plenty, but about steady. A few moun. 
tain appeared to day and brought Sifni per half bush, 
box. Cherries selling fairly. Small currants dull, 
but cbetry sell fairly, other fruits about as quoted. 
Strawberries, up-river, fancy. V quart. lk<Cl$o; do 
do. common.do.. 9®12c; cherries, large, sweet, V is, 
Ukal2e: do,, small, swmt, V », 3«8c;do. sour, V lb, 
4<*«c.; huckleberries, mountain, per bu>x, #2.SCi; do. 
Jersey, per box. *1.7Vi<2.fl); raspberries, up-river, 
native, per vjd i'uii, LaHo; do, Jersey Highland, hardy 
per qt,l4otl.'x-; do. Md. Brandywine, per |>t,74v*c; bluet 
caps, MvL. per pint. Ma's-. eurruuta, cherry,per quart, 
8@10e: do. small, per lb, Voo-c; green gooseberries, 
per bushel, #l.75<-»2; watermelons, Fla., V 100, ##L«30: 
poaches, Cla., per I .id crate, #l<*3; do. N. C. and 
S. C., per bush, crate, *:<<.,5: tieunuts, Virginia, hand¬ 
picked. 4* m., 9W*94tc; do., no., formers' fancy, sk-t 
84*0.; no., do., uo., good to prime, T 4 * 1 * 80 ; pecans, 
¥ tt>, lk*7. 
Egos.—T he Inquiry proves disappointing, and the 
market Is lower and weak all around. 
State and Pennsylvania, In bids., per doz., 18® 1846c, 
Western, choice, 1«46®17 c; do. fair to good, 15J6® 
16c; Cauudian, 171*17460. 
Hav and Straw.—R eceipts of hay are only mode 
rate, but fully equal to the supply, which Is slow 
Prices weak and Irregular. Straw quiet and un 
changed. 
Hay, No. 1. prime, per 100 its, 80(3350; do. No. 2. good 
70®75e; do. No. 3, medium. ROCrtO.’ic; do. clover mixed 
56@<i0c: do.shipping. 55<%60c; do. clover. 50®55c; straw 
No. 1 rye. 55c; do. No. 2 rye. 40®45e: do. oat, :3t)c. 
Hops.— The market continues exceedingly dull. 
N. Y. State, crop of 1882, prime to choice. 40® 15c; do. 
do., mediums, r «® 4lic; do., d"., low grades, 36®37c; 
do., crop of 1881 , good to choice, 306tS5e; Pacific 
Coast, fair to prime, crop of 1852.3U®S5c. 
Poultry and Game.— Live Poultry—Chickens are 
In free supply and prices easy. Turkeys without 
noticeable Change. Prime geese In fulr request. 
Ducks slow. 
Spring chickens, near-by, V lb., 24<s25e.; do. .South¬ 
ern and Western, 22®23c; fowl-. Pa. and Jersey, 1746c: 
do, State, 1746c: do. Western, 17J6C: do. Southern, 17® 
1746*-'.; roosters, mixed, old and young, lie; turttevs, 
Jersey and Pa.. 14® 15c; do. Western, i let 15c: ducks. 
Western,* pair, 73<;<,#t.00; do. Southern,* pair,C5(ai75c. 
geese,’.Southern. V pair, #lw.U2; do..Western, P 
pair, l.W®#t.75. 
Dressed Poultry.—T he demand Is good and stock 
Is working out readily at about the same range of 
prices. Turkeys dull and Irregular. Ducks plenty 
and dull, with prices weak. 
Turkeys, prime, 15<»l6c.: do. poor to fair, 12® 14c 
springs, Philadelphia, large, 30w32c.: do., small, 
2fi<cg30c.: do. Stale and Western, '? it, 2l(v27oi fowls, 
Philadelphia, dry-picked, prime, I8<u.i9c.; do.. State 
and Western, dry-picked, 17c; do. :lo, scalded, 16 
do., fair to gooa, 14feil5c.: duck Philadelphia 
Spring, 28®25c; do., old. prime, 14®ttev do., fair to 
gixid, 124413c. 
Game,— Tame squabs ruling dull, with only a fair 
supply. Snipe aud plover a little more active. 
Wild squabs, f dozen. #L5G®2.UJ: wild pigeons, shot 
stall-fed, V dozen, #l.5li®2; tame -quabs, light, V 
dozen, $3,916*3,2*; do., dark, pier doz., #v_A}fe2.25. tame 
pigeons, live, per pair, 40®64 cl; English snipe, Ire.-h 
killea e doz., *2.wi<42.25; plover, fresh killed, > doz. 
*1.796! 2.90. 
Rice.—T rade shows no unusual animation, buyers 
wanting merely odd lots to satisfy immediate re 
qulrementa. 
Carolina, choice, 646®74«C: do. good to prime, 6(«i 
646«5 do. common to lair, 544t-A546c; Rangoon. In bond, 
2F6fe24%c; do. duty paid,xVa.546c; Patnu, duty paid, 
59s® 5c. 
Refined SuoAR-Cut. loaf, V ‘J46®946c.; crushed* 
-><sc; cubes, SJkc.; powdered, ^c.; granulated, 
Bjit s-S 13-t6c; mould “A,'’ S4*,c.; confectioners' ‘‘A,’’ “ 
7-ltic.j coffee A,"standard, s .i-lNiP^e; cofiee off "A.” 
77v«.3c.: white extra. “C,” T^c.: extra "C,' r Dv-^^c.; 
• C,” yellow "C,” -i*T45e.; yellow, t^sfcvrinO. 
Tobacco,—K entucky more active; lugs. 3<*7ei leaf 
•46<»i'-ke: seed leaf lias continued active. >ss2 
Penn., private terms; lstci New Eugland H4s(sl3c; ISNl 
do. do. 14aAuc; INSf 44 iscomsln, UK*Ue; 1882 state, ,-rl- 
vate terms; Sumatra, $1,114*1,50; Havana, ->ic<*$:.13. 
Vegetables.— Norfolk potatoes in better demand 
to-day and a trifle tlrmer. Savannah and Charleston 
about done, aud those here are poor und only salable 
at low prices; Tomatoes plenty and Irregular. Long 
Island peas and beans selling fairly. Other vege 
tables about as quoted. 
Cabbage, L. I., per 100, $1.506.2.Oil; potat*x-s. old. B 
bbL, 5Uqe#il.5U; do. sc.utbern, new, *1.25492.25; do. L 
L, 'e bbi. #2 .iaI;i.Io. Marv la ltd, uu„ #i i 
asparagus, Jersey, dozen, #1.9064L25; do., Oyster 
Bay, ¥ dozen, $L25(gl.50; cucumbers. Charleston, 
per crate, 25 «su 
Norfolk, yellow, per crate. #10u: green peas. L. L. S' 
bag. #l.UUs>l.%; string beans, L t., > bag, $1 ji- -.1.25: 
do. Norfolk, per half bbl. crate, 25.*-'»v; tomatoes. 
Savannah anu Charleston, per bushel crate, 1.25; 
do. Flu., p bushel crate. 50tel.25; do. Norlolk, pt-r 
bushei crate, #1.75; onions, Bermuda, P crate, 
# 1 . 0091635 . 
4Vool.—T rade Is still very small, uud prices in most 
Instances are nominal. The arrivals from Texas. 
California and the Fleece dlstrlctu continue large, 
and a very unsatisfactory feeling pervades the mar 
k'-'t In the absence of Interest iron* mauuiaeturers. 
Ohio, Pennsylvania and West Virginia fleeces, As*-Lie, 
fork and AN; No. 1, 12iarl3c; combing, 37 «t 4 u-; state 
and Western X and XX,. 6 h3Nc; No. 1. *U-i42c; comb 
lug, $4ie_Aijc; do. unwashed. 26e»33c; Georgia tuid Lake 
unwashed, l^a'.Te; California Spring, 2n«2Re; burry, 
16<*2uci Fall. 17®2Uc; low and l-orr', CioW V; Iexas 
spring, 'A"g.2ik,-; low and burrv, JJiatsc; Fall, 
super-pulled, :B(s;40e; extra. SSi-idGc; No. 1, i:<aiSc; 
combing, 32®44c; lambs, 35i*38c; tub-washed, 34®44e. 
LIVE STOCK MARKETS. 
New York, Saturday. June 30,1S4> 
Beeves.—T otal for six days, t3,524 head, again*. 
12,(Ml head for the corresi>ond!ng time last week 
The market was rather Over stocked with common 
and medium steers and coarse gra-» cattle, aud those 
grades ruled dull at a decline of 46c per n>. Good to 
choice bullocks were In demand at steady prices. 
Native stlllers from Terre Haute. 1,296 lt>, at 11‘qc, :>« 
lb; do. 1,135 n>, at UHe. less #10; do. 1.291 ft, ut lie; do, 
1,190 ft, at 10 ?ac and $1 per head; Missouri steers, 1,161 
ft, at Ue; bulls, 1,370 ft, at $1.99: Illinois steers, 1,349 
ft, at #6.70; do. 1,357 ft, at UJ»c, 56 ft and 50c per head ; 
do. 1,23-1 ft at 11440 ; do. 1,161 ft, at 1064 c; stable-fed 
steers, 1,11$ ft, at 1194 c, 06 ft: do. 1,170 ft at 11 * 40 , less 
$19; Ohio stlllers, 1,197 ft, at lie, 56 ft; do. 1,099 lb, at 
lOlqe and $1 per head; Kentucky steers, t.495 ft, at 
44 . 44 c, 36 lb nnd 59c per head; do. 1,212 1b, at Ue; still 
bulls, 1,231 ft, at 546c; Kentucky sutlers, 1,289 ft, at 
like, 56 ft; do. 1,212 ft, at I0*»o; do. t.l«*J ft at tOJ6c ; 
Lancaster County, Penn., stable-fed steers, 1,892 ft ut 
#6.95; do. 1,632 ft at #6.95; do. 1.50$ ft, at 12e, 57 ft; do- 
1.807 ft, at 1144 c, 56 lb; mixed Western steers, 1,248 lb 
at 114 * 0 , Ml 1b; do. 1,323 ft, at U)#o: UHW ft, at 11 * 40 ; In. 
dianu steer*, 1,181 ft, at 1094c. 
Calves—T he market opened dull and lower at a de 
ellue of Vgc. per ft. Buttermilk Calves sold at $L54i 
( 4 . 5 .U>?v Not many prime veals on the market and 
they are not quotable- at above sc. for states. A few 
choice Jerseys exceeded tills figure City dressed 
ve-uls sold at lfla rtnjC., and country dressed at .AwHo. 
for common U- prime. Dressed buttcrmllx ealvcs 
sold at 7 14 sc. Mixed calves, L 8 ft at t-* 4 C do. 125 ft at 
5 J 40 .; buttermilk calves, 157 1b at #5.06*4'• do. !9i ft at 3 
t!.;do, 139 ft ut li t c. 
SiiEKi- and i.amics. -r»tot arrivals for six days • 120 
he«<l ugaiU-st :Sf,ts-.-bead for the corresponding Ulus 
last week. Sheep ruled dull at ubout steady prices 
for good to prime stes-x, but the common grades were 
unusually hard to sell. As high aa si^wVqc was ob 
taltie-d for tine Jersey and Maryland Limbs, aud a few 
choice reached 9e. Most of the Jersey Iambs In 
Washington market sold at I’-Ba-e.; Southern ranged 
from 7 to SHe. for OOUimou cholee; state- lamb 
brought ibeC.; eommon to prime sheep sold at IRsai 'i 
e-., export* ut 64y |L ; Ki ntueky Units. 67 » at il<-. 
(common-, 51 ft at .; suite lambs. 57 ft at 7-\c. ; 
Western sheep, 118 ft at 6 * 40 .; do. as ft at 34*e-.; state-, 
191 ft nt 596c.; Michigan sheets 87 ft at 59#c.;do. sii a. 
at 546c.; state ewes, 94 ft at 44*e.; Ohio sheep. 110 ft- at 
644,e.; do. led ft at 0640 .;do. lot ft at 6e-.; do. 99 ft at M>, 
e\; Ohio lambs, hi ft at 7c.; Jersey Lambs, 69 ft at s-4p- . 
Virginia, do. 5s ft at ^«u.;do. 58 ft at sc. 
Houa.—Uceelpta were 20 cars ot 2 ..-..'- head—14 curs 
at tuthst und 8 ears at Jersey City. Total for six days 
15,578 Dead, against 32,261 head for the eorresponding 
time last week. Western advices unfavorable-; aud 
with a decline In City dressed of lit- yesterday. Live 
Hogs tumbled to-dev fully He on the market. Prime 
are quoted at 644 c for the outside*. 
