THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
'AUG 4 
cxo5 of tlje 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday, July 38, 1888. 
The great telegraph strike still continues. The 
Rapid Transit Company has compromised with 
the strikers and its offices are now doing a 
rushing business. The Western Union still 
holds out. and boasts tliat the strike hasn’t se¬ 
riously crippled its service; and, having com¬ 
mand of the lines, it is constantly publishing 
boastful dispatches from other points; but the 
strikers get word also and are still determined 
and confident. The real hindrance to a settle¬ 
ment is the reluctance of the Western Union 
and Baltimore and Ohio to recognize the 
Brotherhood through fear of future complica¬ 
tions. Its steady, law-abiding action, how¬ 
ever, has doubtless prevented an enormous 
amount of loss by cutting wires, etc,, during 
the strike. The men are still resolute. Here 
is a sample of their pay in comparison with 
that of workingmen:—Good masons are now 
paid in this city from $8.50 to 84 per day; 
plasterers the same; carpeuters, $2.50 to $3.50; 
plumbers, $4: house-painters, $4; ordinary 
workmen in these trades, $2 to $3.50; shoe¬ 
makers, $10 to $15 per week; cutters of ready¬ 
made clothing. $18 to $25 per week; bar-keep¬ 
ers, $15 to $20 per week. Now. the highest 
salary paid skilled telegraph operators in New 
York is $80 per month, and the average wages 
paid is *53. or $13 25 per week. $1.90 per day. 
But telegraph operators are not in the cate¬ 
gory of ordinary laborers. It necessarily 
costs them more to live than it costs a mason 
or a carpenter. They must dress better and 
live in a more expensive manner. 
Pursuant to a resolution of the Senate 
adopted last February, a sub-committee, with 
Senator Blair for Chairman, was empowered 
to investigate the labor question. Senator 
Blair is here to consider the telegraphers’ 
strike. He will summon bis committee and 
proceed to business ... A subterranean 
forest, seven feet below the surface of the 
ground, has been discovered in Ceasey, Clin¬ 
ton County, New York. Many of the trees 
are in an excellent state of preservation. 
The story telegraphed all over the countiy 
that Bishop Knudson (Mormon) had blown 
up his wives with dynamite is a hoax. There 
is no bishop in the Mormon Churcn named 
Knudson...The 
Hostile Apaches have killed five persons 
near the place where the meeting occurred 
with General Crook. A detachment of Mexi¬ 
can soldiers pursued them, but were repulsed 
with a loss of seven killed. There is a cock- 
and-bull story that Crook was actually cap¬ 
tured by the Indians and brought back on his 
promise to settle t hem peaceably on the San 
Carlos Reservation, his own Indian scouts 
joining the hostilee against him Pec. Lincoln 
ridicules the story, and says the expedition 
was conducted in a way entirely satisfactory. 
.........Chief Justice Doc, of New Hamp¬ 
shire, who will resign his office September 1, 
after a continuous servite of twenty-four 
years, is only fifty-three years of age. 
Chief Justice Waite has arrived iu Toledo 
from his Western trip. He is suffering some 
from injuries received in the recent accident, 
but it is not yet decided whether his rib is 
fractured or not.Marsh K. Polk, ex- 
State Treasurer of Tennessee, was found 
guilty of embezzlement and sentenced to 
twenty years’ imprisonment and a fine of 
$366,000—the amount of his embezzlement. 
Over one hundred persons were poisoned 
Thursday by ice cream at Joliet. 111 _ 
The Howe sewing machine factory at Bridge¬ 
port, Conn., was nearly destro'ved by fire 
Thursday. Loss $350,000...Same day a 
a log rush that inflicts hundreds of thousand of 
dollars’ damage occurred on Grand River, 
Mich - The National Encampment, Grand 
Army of the Republic, now in session at Den¬ 
ver, Col , reports an accession to their ranks 
during the past year of fifty-seven thousand 
men.Ex-Gov. Swan of Maryland is 
dead.A bond call issued from the Treas¬ 
ury Department, maturing November 1. will 
retire the balance of the three-and-a-balf per 
cents, amounting to $32,000,000.Ex-Post¬ 
master General Montgomery Blair is dead 
.- - • -..Ex-Senator Roseoe 
Conkling and Mrs. Cnnkling with a few per¬ 
sonal friends, including ex-Gov Boutwell of 
Massachusetts. Judge Coxe of Utica, George 
C. Gorham of the Washington Republican 
and United States Commissioner Griffith of 
New York, start on a trip to the Yellowstone 
Park this week, to l ie gone three or four weeks 
.Senator Edmunds is home from the 
Pacific coast and is very enthusiastic about 
Puget Sound scenery. He says the glaciers 
at Mount Rainier a re grander than anything 
he ever saw in Switzerland. Ilis trip has 
done him a world of good.The Georgia 
House of Representatives unseated D. P. 
Proctor, a white representative, from Camden 
County, and seated Anthony W ilson. colored, 
in his place, Wednesday, by a vote of 87 to 61. 
Wilson has been in two previous Legislatures. 
.Mary Crowell won the literary essay 
prize at the Vanderbilt University, Nashville, 
over 121 young men. 
391 Cheyenne and 14 Arapahoe Indians have 
left the IndianTerritory under a military escort 
en route to Pine Ridge Agency Dakota.. 
Second Assistant Postmaster General Elmer 
reports to the Postmaster General an amount 
in excess of $1,000,000 which it is proposed to 
recover by suits against various combinations 
of Star Route con tractors.Judge Flodgett 
in the United States District Court iu Chicago, 
Monday held that stockholders in a national 
bank are liable for the debts of the bank to 
the amount of their stoek, and that individual 
suits to recover on this liability can be com¬ 
menced without intervention of a receiver_ 
The building of the Munro Publishing Com¬ 
pany, in New York, was burned Sunday af¬ 
ternoon. The loss amounts to $200,000. The 
Seaside Library and Fireside Companion were 
published by this Company. fiteve* al firemen 
had narrow escapes.According to the 
report of the Chief of the Bureau of Statis¬ 
tics, the number of immigrants arriving iu 
America during the year ending June 30. was 
599,114, or 189,878 less than the immigration 
during the preceding fiscal yw.nnd 70.317 less 
than during the year ending JuneSO.1881. Ger¬ 
many contributes a greater number of her 
citizens to our population thau any other 
country—101,643 Germans having landed. Ire¬ 
land sends 63.720; England and Wales, 79,852; 
Canada, 64.971; Italy, 31,715; Sweden. 34.596; 
Norway, 21.849; Scotland, 19.612; Austria, 
10.517, and all other countries, 70,840. The 
year previous 249,161 Gertna' s conic over, 76.- 
"253 Irish. 83,697 English and Welch. 93.029 
Canadians, and 64.276 Swedes.It is said 
that the monagor of the Louisiana Lottery 
Cmupanv will bring a personal suit against 
Postmaster General Gresham for $100,000 
damages for the cutting off of the lottery com¬ 
pany’s mail. He also threatens a suit against 
the official Postal fluide in case it reports his 
com pan a- on the ‘ ‘black list.” .... The Park- 
er-8aulsburv combination of Star-route con¬ 
tractors will be sued by the Government for 
something over $1.000,000.»The Society 
for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals 
has arranged for the organization of Bands 
of Mercy among children. 
The Scott Law liquor law continues 
to grow in popularity in Ohio. In the 
smaller towns it has reduced the number of 
saloons and the amount of drunkenness. Dem¬ 
ocrats. as well as Republicans, are speaking 
its praises .The will of the late- Henry 
L. Kendall, of Providence, leaves to the 
American Unitarian Association of Boston, 
$6,000; to the Hampton Normal and Agricul¬ 
tural Institute of Virginia. $1,500; to Provi¬ 
dence Public Library. $175,000; to various 
local charitable institutions, $37,000 .At 
Rosebud agency.Dalcotu.the annual sun dance 
of the Sioux occurred Tuesday. Ilf toon war¬ 
riors, who had fasted for four days, entered 
for the dance, with their bodies frightfully 
lacerated from the testing of game qualities. 
It is probable t lmt this is the last time these 
cruelties will be permitted... 
Last Monday night the T-nieee of a rotten old 
pier at North Point Trivoli, on the Patapsco, 
about 14 miles from Baltimore, gave wa v un¬ 
der a load of some 400 returning excursionists, 
precipitating about 250 or more of them into 
the water 900 fret, from the shore. About 70 
were drowned. Public grief aud lamentation 
.Dr. J. A. Warder was buried very 
qnietly last Saturday, the funeral starting at 
3 o’clock iu the morning. It was his desire 
that all needless expense and display should be 
avoided ....Captain Matthew Webb, the 
famous English swimmer, perished while at¬ 
tempting to swim the Niagara River rapids 
and whirlpool Tuesday afternoon. At 4 p. m. 
he sprang into the river above the new bridge 
and was carried down to the whirlpool where 
the river bends sharply towards Lewiston, at 
the rate of 30 miles an hour. On eutering the 
whirlpool he was borne towards the American 
side, where the waves rise 20 feet or more, in¬ 
stead of towards the Canadian side as he in¬ 
tended. "When last seen he had thrown up 
one arm; then he dived or was sucked under, 
and did not reappear. The railroads and 
hotels refused to have anything to do with 
“hisgoing to his death.” He leaves a wife 
and two children.Gen. E. O C. Orel 
died of yellow fever at Havana last Monday, 
on his wav from Vera Cruez, Mexico, on the 
steamer Citv of Washington. Born in Mary¬ 
land in 1818 he was annointed to West Point 
from Washington in 1835; graduated in 1839 
and entered the army as Second Lieu tenant 
of the Third Artillery. Served against, the 
Seminoles in Florida from 1839 to 1842. 
Served in Mexico in 1847-18. At outbreak 
of late war was fighting Indians on the 
Pacific Coast. From Nov. 1851 to May ’62 
commanded a brigade before Washington. 
Later he commanded a division on the Rap¬ 
pahannock. As Major General of Volunteers 
he was in command at Corinth, Miss., during 
June, July, and August 1862. He took part 
iu Grant’s operations in Mississippi iu 1862, 
commanding the left wing of the armv dur¬ 
ing August and September, being hotly en¬ 
gaged at Inka on Sept 19, for which he was 
promoted to Brevet Colonel in the regular 
army He was severely wonnded at the 
battle of Hatchie in Oct, 1862 again at the 
capture of Fort Harrison Sept. 29,1864. He 
was present at the surrender of Lee and was 
created Brevet Brigadier General on March 
13, 1865. Afterwards he commanded several 
Departments find was mustered out of 
the army in 1880. He leaves a widow and 
five children.Terriblv destructive 
storms in Southwestern Missouri near Mar¬ 
shall; about Dubuque, la.; Iu Blue Earth. 
WasecH, Steele, Dodge. Wahasha and Olm- 
stead counties, Minn. In the lost count}' alone 
the damage is summed up ns follows:—8100,- 
000 worth of crops destroyed, 30 dwelling 
ing houses, 25 barns, and many other build¬ 
ings ruined: 29 families destitute. 33 persons 
injured seriously, one killed, and three not. 
expected to recover. Si x had limbs broken.... 
At Elgin three persons were seriously injured. 
Near Mantorville there were nine serious 
casualties. By the overturning of a passen¬ 
ger train near Owatenna 34 persons sustained 
injures of a more or less serious nature. Near 
Hitchcock Mr. Glissinger and mother were 
killed, and Mrs Bowles was killed near Red- 
field. Near Huron, Dakota, it is reported that 
nine persons were killed and 50 wounded. 
Wind and rain storms nearly equally disas¬ 
trous have afflicted the districts round Grand 
Rapids, Eaton Rapids. Onondaga. Leslie, Kal¬ 
amazoo, East Tawas and Charlotte, Mich.. 
Ashbury Park, N. J,, too has been visisted 
by the severest storm ever known there. 
» » » 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Saturday. July 28,1883. 
Latest Condensed.— The winter wheat 
harvest in Nebraska is better than ever. The 
com crop never promised better. Through¬ 
out Iowa the prospect is that the crop will ex¬ 
ceed last year’s. Throughout Wisconsin there 
is a depression, owing to the late heavy rains. 
Clear weather aud cool winds would largely 
overcome the trouble. There are favorable 
reports from Dakota for all kinds of grain. 
There is also an improvement in Illinois. 
..A Colorado swindle is to 
buy a lot of “remnants” of Texas herds, mostly 
barren cows and bony steers, have them 
“ booked,” compute the increase by ordinary 
rules, and after a while sell the lot on the 
range, of course, without counting. It is said 
that in this way herds of 2,000 have been sold 
and paid for as 10,000 . .... The Canadian 
cheese market* were inactive last week. At 
Tngersoll 3.080 boxes were offered: 595 sold at 
10 cents, 75 at nine and three-quarter cents, 
and 10 cents were offered for most of the re¬ 
mainder hut refused. At London, 4,895 boxes 
were boarded, of which only 805 were sold 
at nine and seven-eighth cents and 630 at. nine 
and three-quarter rents. 
Total values of exports of breadstuff's, for the 
six months ending June 30, 1883. $85,148,- 
935; the same period iti 1882, $64,856,930; for 
the 12 months ended June 30,1883, $202,971,- 
491; the same time in 1883. $177.001,396. 
.The cotton crop of this year is put at 
6,800,000.The stock of wheat flour in 
Great Rritain at the close of last week was 
3,480,000 quarters, being double the amount 
in the country at the corresponding time last 
year. The quantity in bond was 1.830,000, 
against 2.600.000 in July. 1882....The 
Navajo Indians will have a wool-clip this 
year of over 800,000 pounds. The hides and 
pelts that they handle will amount to about 
000.000 pounds.The wool crop af Pierce 
County, "Washington Territory, will aggre¬ 
gate about 50,000 pounds, and grow ers have 
pooled it and hold it for 23 cents.About 
80.000 pounds of wool have been marketed at 
Monroe, Michigan, this season the larger por¬ 
tion of which was in a very fair condition. 
Prices ranged from 20 to 30 cents .. .The 
Chelsea (Mich.) wool syndicate has bought 
over 225,000 pounds of wool this season thus 
far........A Hudson (Minn.1 man marketed 
1.096 pounds of wool from 114 sheep this year, 
some of his yearlings yielding from 10 to 17 
pounds each.Henry Wade, of Toronto, 
Ont., Secretary of the Agricultural and Arts 
Association of Ontario, announces that the 
North American Gallow'ay Herdhrook is now- 
ready for delivery.. A stock company has been 
formed in Schuyler, Nebraska, with a capital 
stock of $10,000, for the purpose of manufac¬ 
turing sirup from the Amber sugar-cane. 
Iowa pressed hay is now- shipped as far East 
as New York, and even to Europe when prices 
are favorable.Mr. Peter MoUeoeh.who 
failed in lard at Chicago a few weeks ago. has 
made a settlement with his creditors, and is 
now ready for “business,” When the firm 
failed, its gross indebtedness amounted to 
$6,000,000, of which $4,050,000 was due banks. 
They were secured to the extent of $3,900,000, 
tearing n net deficit of $150,000. Thorn was 
also due to customers over $1.930,000and there 
had been deposited as security $700,000, leav¬ 
ing the amount due to creditors and unsecured 
parties $1,400,000, Mr. Fenslev, the receiver, 
realized from the assets $250,000, and the re¬ 
maining $450,000 was furnished bv Mr. Mc- 
Geoch, who thus made up the necessary $700,- 
000 with which to pay off all his indebtedness 
of $1,400,000, at the rate of 50 cents on 
the dollar, to which all the creditors 
agreed. The celerity with which these 
complications have reached adjustment, 
through the management, of Mr. Benslev, is 
considered remarkable. The expenses of re¬ 
ceiver. attorneys’ fees and clerical assistance 
is said to have been less than $20,000. Had 
McGeoch been forced into bankruptcy and a 
Receiver been appointed, the settlement would 
have been deferred until the Receiver and his 
friends could pocket all t he available assets... 
.Accordiug to the official re¬ 
turns of the condition of the crops in Hungary, 
the average yield of w-heat and rye is general 
throughout the country. It is expected that 
barley will be below- the average. Oats are 
everywhere good.According to the 
Illinois Board of Agriculture, glanders exists 
in Carrol County, at Thompson Du Page 
County, at. Lombard;Ford County, at Melvin; 
Fulton County, at Canton; Livingston Coun¬ 
tv, at Campus; Marion Countv, at Vernon; 
Mason rtturitv. at Mason City ; McLean Coun¬ 
ty, at. Hevworth, Gridlev, and Normal; Mont¬ 
gomery Count}-. at Irving: Ogle County, at 
Woosung and Forreston: Peoria Eonuty, at 
Elmwood: Porrv Count}-, at Paradise Prairie; 
Piatt County, at Mansfield and White Heath; 
Scott Countv, at. Oxville: Warren County, at 
Ellison and Kirkwood: Whiteside Poiiuty. at 
Sterling, Rock Falls, Garden Plains, Coleta, 
and Como; Will Countv, at Wilmington. 
The following is the Milter’s National Associa¬ 
tions latest estimate of the wheat crop in 21 
States. 
Wheat Present Indl- 
Crop, 1888. cations. 
California. 34,546.600 42,750.000 
Nebraska. 11.9I7.W1 16,.500,000 
Texas. 1,173,71X1 2,100,001 
Kansas.. SS,218,000 29,000,000 
Missouri... 29,539,61*1 17,024,701 
Iowa.2r.,4m,gxi i7.«.50,ono 
Dakota {approximate!. 18,01)0,000 18,000,000 
Minnesota..... 37 , 030.500 35 , 000,000 
Wisconsin.. 9 n.p 5 . 40 O is.sno.ooo 
Illinois.r.2,'102.901 23 . 530,000 
Kentucky,. 17,9-50,000 11.2IXHXX) 
Tennessee. S.971,200 S.vso.ooo 
Georgia. 8,912,1)00 8JOO.OOO 
Virginia .. R, 311,100 R,300,000 
Maryland.. 8.695.900 s.txxi.mn 
Delaware. 1,209,000 1,0X1.001 
New York.. . 12,145,200 10.900,000 
Pennsylvania. 20 , 300 , 71 x 1 22.300,001 
Ghlo. 45.153,600 23,250,000 
Indiana. 45,461,S00 25,0X1,0X1 
Michigan. 33.315,400 23,300,000 
States named—total,.466,297.900 359,690,700 
♦ • ■» 
FOREIGN NEWS. 
Saturday, July 28, 1883. 
The cholera is still ravaging Egypt. Yesterday 
the deaths numbered 311 in Cairo, 56 at Ghizoh, 
48 at Chibin. 2(1 at Mehalla, 30 at Tantah, 12 
at Mansurah and 25 at Kafa-El-Hamzn. In 
manv of the towns its ravages are decreasing 
on account of lack of subjects. Not half the 
actual cases are thought to be reported, and 
no reports are made from the villages und 
rural districts where the disease is likely to 
he very fatal owinp to lack of sauitarv pre¬ 
cautions and of medical attendance. In the 
British army in Egypt, 25 deaths hod occurred 
up to yesterday. Nine cases are reported to 
have occurred in London, but the health au¬ 
thorities scout the idea of its tiecoming epi¬ 
demic there or in any European country, 
as the sanitary precautions will not 
permit it to spread. The British Government 
has decided not to quarantine shipping arriv¬ 
ing at English ports, hut to inspect thorn in¬ 
stead. Tainted rags are being shipped bv the 
cargo to thiB country from Egypt, and our 
Custom-house people have been ordered to 
qua ra nt.ine vessels bearing such rar-s, at. Boston, 
New York, Philadelphia and Baltimore. 
Two Majors and ten Lieutenants in the 
Egyptian army have been sentenced by court 
martial to seven years’ penal servitude in the 
Soudan for complicity in the massacres at 
Alexandria last year. The Prince of Ho- 
henlohe-Langeuberg, President, of the German 
Colonial Society, is about to start on a journey 
through the United States and Northwest 
Canada.The Franeo-Egvpl i.-m Bank of 
Paris offers to place a loan of $ 15.000,0(H) for 
the Mexican Government.The Chinese 
Government has prohibited the exportation 
of cattle for use by the French troops in Ton- 
quin. Protests have been made by the French 
Admiral and the British Consul, the latter 
haring been impelled bv the consideration 
that the shipping of stock afforded profitable 
employment to British vessels..The Sur¬ 
geon General has been informed that small¬ 
pox and yellow fever have appeared in Ma- 
tanzn.s and Cienfuogos, Cuba, and that chol¬ 
era exists in Gampeachy and Oaxaca. Mexico. 
.Cont rary to all expectations. thePompte 
do Cliambord still survives. The trouble with 
him is catarrhal inflammation of the stomach 
and bowels. The only treatment is judicious 
and regular refreshment. If he can be fed he 
w ill get w ell.The annual international 
rifle match hetw-een picked “teams” of Ameri¬ 
cans and English came off during lnstweek'at 
Wimbledon, England, closing last Saturday 
aftemoon. There were 12 men in each team. 
The following is the score at each of the dif¬ 
ferent. ranges; 
At 100 yards. 
4 
English. 
. 340 
American. 
852 
At 5i*l vards. 
. 977 
m. 
At «0O vurds. 
. 354 
360 
At 800 yards. 
. 330 
84ft 
At 900 vnrds. 
. 396 
263 
At 1,1X10 yards. 
. 254 
219 
Grand total. 
. 1,951 
1,906 
The English thus won by 45 points. The Lord 
Mayor of London entertained the Americans 
at lunch Tuesday.. . 
Cetcwnyo, poor Cetewayo, instead of con¬ 
quering and killing his insurgent chiefs, as 
lntelv announced, has been conquered and 
killed by them. UHndi, his capital, has been 
burned, all of his wives and most of his chiefs 
have been massacred—it. might, have been 
bettor for the fat old fellow to have remained 
n well-fed prisoner in the hands of the Eng¬ 
lish.The dispute between the United 
States of Columbia and the Panama Canal 
Company, with reference to the pnvmont of a 
canal police force, has been settled, the canal 
company agreeing to pnv the expenses of 300 
officers, which will bo $80,000 annually. 
There are no longerany individual diggers for 
diamonds in South Africa. Companies of 
capitalists have bought, the claims, and not 
much is being done pven by them, owing to 
the low priees that the stones now command. 
See Johnson & Fields, Racine Fan Mill ad¬ 
vertisement issue of July 28, page 483.— Adv. 
-- 
Health first, riches afterward. All forms of 
Heart Disense including palpitation, rheuma¬ 
tism. spasms, bony formation, enlargement, 
valvular derangements, acute pains in left 
breast, <fec., yield to the use of Dr. Graves’ 
Heart Regulator. $1 per bottle at druggists. 
—Ad r. 
Ayer’s Ague Cure breaks up the chill and 
fever expels the poison from the system, and 
restores health. "Warranted to cure.— Adv. 
Ayer’s Pills take the lead of aperients and 
purgatives. Their action is gentle, searching, 
and thorough.— Adv. 
ft\)t rftlavhcts. 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
New York. July 28. 19S8. 
Beans and Peas.—F all rates are asked, and confi 
donee * Is held In eholee lots of domestic beans, 
especially marrows. Nevertheless the deinund 
lacks volnmn. 
Keans—mnrrnw, 1892, prime, $3.i?74<>(&3.4(> Keans, 
medium. 1882.prime *2.20r.i 2.0.5; do. pea. $2.25*2 30: do. 
white kidney 1SS2. choice. 89.MV.i2.Ul: do. red kldnev, 
1882, choice, *3.(X»®S.7B; do. turtle soup. 18H2, 8S.KXo3.i5: 
do. foreign, mediums, $1.60(4$1.75: Pens. green, 1882, 
prime, $1.20® 1.25. 
Brkadrtukfs and PROVISIONS.— rngrnrtcYl W-|nter 
red wheat Is 2c. higher; steamer No. 2 red Is ll^c 
higher; No. 2 red is I' jc. higher for rail certificates; 
ungraded white Is 70c. higher. Corn-Uugrnded 
mixed Is 16<ic. higher; No, 3 Is 4c, higher: steamer 
mixed Is 3o. higher; No. 2 white Is SVjc. higher. Oats 
—No. 3 mixed Is 2c, higher; No. 2 Is 1‘jo. higher; No- 
1 Is (4c. higher; No. 3 white Is lo. higher; mixed Wes¬ 
tern same; white State same. 
Flour, Feed aud Meal—F lock—N o. 2. $2.lVrt8.«) 
latter extreme: sn per One, $36t,3.90. latter extreme 
common to fnlr extra State, $3.H5<</4 :»5; good to fancy 
do.. 84.!XX3ti.(Xl- common to good extra Western, 
88.86A4.4U: good to choice. $4.IV,i 7.36; cmriuou extra 
Ohio. $3,!Xk'liitJ4I: good, $4,4O'A5.S0; good to choice, 
*5.50(.i.6.50- common extra Minn., 88.85sb4.90; clear. 
84.759i86.75; rye mixture. 84.tXk.r5.l0! straight. $5.50 
<26.50! patent. $r. 75«/7.35; St. I.oul.> common to fnlr 
extra, 88.20* 1,50; fair to good. $1.5fi6*.V good to very 
choice, *5.10it6.75: Intent Winter wheat extra. 85.35 
(37.25, latter tin extreme: citv mill extra for West In¬ 
itios. $5,.S0@S.H)- South America, 85.85666.00, Southern 
Hour—Common to good extra, *l.20(a'5.10 i good to 
choice, $5.16i«f..79. Rve (lour— Superfine at $3.5(k<r8.S0 
for common lo good, $9.826/4.25 for good lo choice. 
Feed—steady with mod/rate trade. Corn meal 
Brandy wine. 83.25.^8.90: mnlnlv choice at $3.50; yellow 
Western, $3(0,3.40; new process, $3.56. 
