MOV 24 
781 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
I 
the home demand. The price in first hands 
is about 81 per bushel. Pears have yielded 
handsomely, and bring 88 to $12 a barrel. 
Quinces, too, are a good crop. Strawberries, 
cherries and grapes were a disappointment, 
owing to cold weather in the Spring and Fall. 
Vineyards have been greatly extended during 
the past few years, but much of the fruit was 
destroyed this year by one night’s frost. 
An abundaut. apple crop is reported in some 
parts of Missouri this year, and farmers are 
shipping them at good prices.Andrew 
County sends out 20,000 barrels, and in Liv¬ 
ingston County a single firm puts up an equal 
quantity of the fruit dried... .The apple crop 
about Augusta. Me., turns out to have been 
as large as last year and of better quality, 
and first-class fruit is selling at from 83 to 
$3.25, with seconds at $1.75, Growers are 
holding for better prices, however. 
J7The Every Evening, of Wilmiugton, Del., 
says that the grand total of rail and water 
shipments of peaches from the Peninsula was 
8,603,705 baskets. The quantities consumed 
by canners, driers and evaporators and home 
use is estimated at from 1,000,000 to 1,500,000 
baskets, indicating a total crop of 5,000,000 
baskets. 
The last reports to the Department of Agri¬ 
culture relative to cotton, show a slight im¬ 
provement in the crop. There wore no frosts 
in October, except on the northern borders of 
the cotton belt. The returns give couuty 
estimates of average yield per acre, and total 
products compared with the crop of last year, 
and indicate nearly 8(1 per cent, of last year’s 
crop. The product compared with 1882 is: 
North Carolina, 85 per ceut.; South Carolina, 
84; Georgia, 90; Florida, 98; Alabama, 91; 
Mississippi, 85; Louisiana, 86; Texas, 80; Ar¬ 
kansas, 87; Tennessee, 95. 
The New Orleans Times-Democrat says: 
“ Our crops promise to yield better this sea¬ 
son than was expected a few months ago 
The cotton crop, which was then being figured 
at 5,600,000 bales, is now pretty certain to 
reach 6,000,000 bales or over. This was to be 
expected, aud nearly always occurs during a 
long drought or hot spell. The cotton is 
burnt and injured, but the hot, dry weather 
has. at the same time that it scorches the 
plaut, the effect of hastening its development 
and ripeuing t. The result this season was 
that the cotton, although burnt, was abuu- 
claut, of excellent staple aud easily picked. 
The Louisiana rice crop for 1882-83. accord¬ 
ing to Dan Talmage's Sous & Co.’s annual re¬ 
view. was 281,800 barrels, or 8,000 less than in 
the previous year, overfiow worms aud har- 
veststorms causiug the shortage. The quality 
was a grade lower than for the season before. 
The crop for 1883-84 is estimated at 240.000 
barrels; early rice turned out well, but 
drought injured the early planting. The 
quality will be excellent. 
The November report of the Department of 
Agriculture gives die local yield per acre, lu 
the October dual report the condition of corn, 
which averaged 78, was interpreted to mean 
a product of close to 1,600,000,000 bushels. 
The average yield per acre appears to be 33.1 
bushels, 1 ’a bushel per acre lower thnu the 
yield of 1882. This gives a result practically 
identical with that of October. On the acre¬ 
age reported in July the exact figures would 
be 1,577,000,000 bushels. In a revision of the 
season’s returns this result will not be mate¬ 
rially changed. The product wilt therefore 
be about 40,000,000 bushels short of the pre¬ 
vious crop, notwithstanding the increase of 
area. The potato crop is large, amounting to 
175,000,000 bushels. 
Wheat.—A ctive and regular at 96We. November; 
WM(a'yi%c. December: 98c. January; jd.OWfi May; No. 
2 Chicago Spring, «54(e ; No. 3 do., 82W®B8Uo ; No. 2 
Rod Winter. *l.tft$li>5. Cons 46@tfltee. November; 
December: all ihe vear: 18c. Janu¬ 
ary. May. Oats Urm at 2st(,e. November; 
29c. December- 28teC. all fbe year: 2Stec. January; 
32tec May. Rye weak at 56e Baulky dull at UtWc, 
Hoos—Market .V-tlbc. lower than yesterday: all sold; 
packing, Stl.0iM4.4i); packing and shipping. $i.45<3f>: 
light, *4.10«4.55: skips, |3o*4 Cattle -Market brisk 
and prices firm: exports, J8.8Tf.tJ.: good to choice 
Slurping, ys.ftV.sij.lU;common to medium, $4.10&$5.-i0. 
Range cattle5<*lbc. higher; grausTexans, $3.60<yi*4.3ft. 
CURRENT PRICES. 
Quotations based on American Standard of Classifi 
cation. 
Uplands New 
and Orleans Texas. 
Florida, and Gull 
Ordinary. 8 3-16 8 7-16 8 7-16 
Strict Ordinary. 896 S% 8% 
Good Ordinary. 9 7-16 9 11-16 9 11-16 
Strict Good Ordinary. 9 13-16 10 1-16 10 116 
Low Middling. 10 1-16 10 5-16 10 5-16 
Strict Low Middling. It))* lute lote 
Middling. 10 7-16 10 11-16 1011-16 
Good Middling... . 10 11-16 101-16 10 15-16 
Strict Good Middling. 1013-16 11 1-16 11 1-16 
Middling Fair. 11 5-16 11 9-18 11 9-16 
Fair. 12 M8 12 5-10 13 5-16 
STAINED. 
Good Ordinary. 7 1346 | Low Middling...,. 9 3-16 
Strict Good Ord.... Ste | Middling.10 1-16 
Dried FRUiT8.--Soutliern apples, ordinary to goon, 
6688c.; do. fine to choice, SteisMc: do. fancy, 9Vjo; 
Western ordinary, (coarse cut, etc.) tax': do fair 
t,y good, 5do. choice lots. W-psti^o; apples, 
evaporated. 9<@12tec: do. choice ring cut. l36<sl4tee.T do. 
fancy selections, Hte«il5c: peaches, Carolina, good 
to fancy, oxalic.; do, Georgia, peeled, lixauc: 
evaporated peaches, peeled 256223c; do. do. tin peeled, 
12te<<*l5c; ttupeeled peaches, halves, j^&sqc• do. 
do. quarters, Ste'* tic; plums, Southern, I2te7(i 12-lie; 
cherries. UV«,17o; hhickberrles. 9te(&9;Wc; raspberries, 
■2'iiST^c- huckleberries. I9te“intec. 
Euob—C hoice fresh eggs continue quite scarce: 
Western command 30c. readily. State and Peunsyl¬ 
van ui, In hhls., per ftps., do.-Western, choice. *)o.: 
do., fair to good, 286829c.; Canadian, :}9682lic.; Umeo, 
Canada and State. 24<a24c.; do.. Western. 22HiFa23J*c. 
Note.—W estern and Southern, in cases, tee beiow 
quotation*. 
Fresh Fruits.—A pples continue plenty. Grapes 
are very plenty, and holders glad to dispose or them 
at most any price. Florida oranges very slow, and 
the feeling weak. Cranberries quiet but itrm. Hick 
ory nuts unchanged. Chestnuts very dull. 
Apples. State and Western, fall, *» bbl. $3,50 vj 3 75 
do. Baldwins per bbl. J3.UG53.25: do. Greenings, 
bbl. J3.12gi3.25; do. inferior, 4* bbl. *j.GG/#2.50; 
B ears, Duchess, V bbl.85@6; grapes, Western N. V., 
clawares. per ft, 3!£<$6; do. Concord Western N. Y. 
10-lb basket, :P-wA'iO: do Catawba, dp. lb, ate-aSc; 
cranberries. Cape Cod fancy, > bbl. Ill.506*12: do. do. 
good to choice, J9..Vlw!0.5O; do. do. V craie. *3.2*83 75; 
do. Jersey, do., j2.7TKA3.ii: frosted, do., JL-VHaLS: 
Florida "ranges, C4»8e,*2,?5i®,J.5b- peanuts, Virginia, 
hand-picked, new. p it. Ste f -i9c,' pecans, per ft. vrtUe; 
hickory uut» *» bush., Jl rtl.av, chestnuts, choice 9 
bush., tH.30: do. fair do. J2.JOia3.00. 
Poultry and Game. 
ens, neir-by, V ft, tat 
12c.: rowts, Fennsylv: _■,_ _ 
12@13e,; do. Western. llQiUc.-. roosters. infxed."oid 
and young. 7i?*8c : turkeys, young, 106612c.; do. old, 
I2(<5l3c.; ducks. Western, per pair, now Tic; geese. 
Western, per pair, l.35<»L5t). 
Dressed Poultry.—T here Is a good demand for 
prime express lots of dry picked chickens, and such 
held tlrmlv, but the hulk of the supply of fowls and 
chickens Is of only fair quality and much of the freight 
stock is more or less out of order, and such quality 
Is very slow and Irregular. Turkeys plenty, but 
strictly prime lots In good demand and Itrm. Ducks 
and geese about steady.. 
Dressed Pocltry—T urkeys, prime, large Spring. 14 
& l5e: do. small, spring. iCfctUi; chickens. Philadel¬ 
phia, Large, 17<£ 18c; do. do. small, 16<j01Tc; do. Jer¬ 
sey, 15A ise; da. State and Western dry-picked * ft, 
is-gl le-do. do. 9calded. l2s<il4e: fowls. Philadelphia, 
dry picked, prime, datic: do.. Jersey, 13sUc; do.. 
Stale and Western, dry-picked, 12<a 130: do. do. scald- 
State ewes, 80 lb, at J3.90; Kentucky sheep, (few 
lambs), 84 lb, at 4%c. 
Hogs.—T otal for six days 38,258 head, against 44,189 
head for same time last week. The market Is 
quoted nominally firm at4<te@5tee. 
Range cuttle5<»iuc. higher; grassTexans, $8.0tKaiL~ - 
Americans, $4.5ll<5i5.6M. Siikep—M arket steady: in- 
fortor to fair. J2.25(93.25; good. J3-76; choice. J3.80; 
Texans. $2.‘i5<3>S,50 
St. Louis. —Compared with cash prices a 
week ago. No. 2Red Fall Wheat is t£c. higher; 
No. 3 ditto }ic. higher. Corn is }£c. lower. 
Oats, }{c. lower. Rye, 2c. lower. Cattle, a 
shade higher. Sheep, a trifle lower. Hogs, a 
little lower. 
Whoat slow; No, 2 Red Fall, $L00J£<$l,0l-l4 ca3h; 
Jl.OOKi November; $1.02 H December: Sl.uOte all 
the year; *l.0tW'&i.i>4te January; $i.0i>u February: 
Jl.lOte May; No. 3 Km Fall, 9ttet<t96e. CORSl—Dull 
at 44t»6j45c. cash; 11Hie. November: 42te<6tSc. De¬ 
cember; 42c. all the year; 42ur, Ijj^o. January; 46Wc, 
May. Oats 2ft-Mui2tb),o. cash; SJtee. Novijmbi-r; 26tec. 
bid December; 26c. nil the year, 2?teC- January; 81^jc. 
May. Rye dull at 32c. Cattle.— Market quiet with 
oui.v moderate demand; Exports Jftua.SO; Gocul to 
Choice shipping, J3.4U.it6; Medium to Fair, JL7.Vao.23; 
Feeders', 33.50(94.23; Native Butchering, J3c«.4.25; 
Texans, $9,25®4.i0; Indians, 10601.25. Sheep— Mar¬ 
ket steady: only good grades wanted: Fair to Good 
Muttons, J8.2 :V.(m 3.50; Prime js.(5fs4: Extra Heavy, 
$1.25. Hogs— Market easy: Yorkers, $4.45904.56 Pack¬ 
ing, J4.50ut4.05; Heavy, 84.60*4.90. 
Terms of Subscription. 
The subscription price of the Rural New- Yorker is: 
Single Copy, per year.J2.00 
* “ Six months.. 1.10 
Great Britain, Ireland, Australia and 
Germany, per year, post-paid.$3.(M 12s. 6d.) 
France. 3.04il6^fr.) 
French Colonies. 4.08 (394$ fr.) 
Any one sending a club of seven Is entitled to one 
oopy, one year, tree. 
Agents will be supplied with canvassing outfit on 
application. 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
New York, Saturday, Nov, 17,1883. 
Beans and Pkas.- Beans—marrow, prime, new, $3.25 
@3.80; Beans, morrows, prime, old. *3.l5@3.2b; do- 
medium, prime, $2.9G62.95; do. pea, 82.90i.c2.B3; do. 
white klndey, eholee, $8,25; do. red kldncv, 1883 , 
choice, J5(4.3.2b: do. turtle soup, 1883, $IM 1.25; foreign 
pea beans, <2.3uit2.lu; do. foreign, mediums, new, 
82.23 *2.30:00. do. old. J2.lG42.15. Peas, green, 1882, 
prime. 8l.SJail.35; California, Lima. $3.2(1.6 3 30. 
BRKADsrnrES and Provisions.—As compared with 
prices of a week ago, ungraded Spring ts lie. higher; 
ungraded Wluter red wheat Is Ic higher; No. 3 red 
Is tec. higher In elevator, Igc. lower delivered; No. 
2 red Is «tc. lower for rail in elevator. Rye—Western 
Is Vfc. higher. Corn-Ungraded mixed Is the same; 
Oat-6-No. 3 mixed is tec. lower; No. 2 Is tec lower. 
No. 1 Is tec. lower; No. 3 white Is tec. lower- No. 2 
white Is tec. lower: No. 1 Is l.tec. lower; white State 
Is tec. lower; mixed Western is the same; white 
Western Is ditto. 
Flour Ako Mkal— Quotations : No. 2. $2 Ww.3.33; 
superfine, J3 mi. I utter nu extreme; cotumun to 
lair extra state, *3.r< good to fancy do., JLO6@g6: 
common to good extra Vvestern, JS.(>J«,i.23: good to 
choice,*4.JfDVM.Uk u-oimmmextraUhlo.83.7)X«4.4U- good, 
8l,4.y,...i tin; good to choice, j.\63(tu6..'H): common extra 
Minnesota, J8.ftLt-i.30; clear. $4.60@6; rye mixture, 
JI.7V*3.<3: straight, 85.50i«,8.2.5; patent, *5.95*7.10; st. 
Louis common to fair extra, *3.ti3@4.25; fair to good, 
J4.SJa3.23' good to very choice, f&iUM&TS: patent 
Winter wheat extra, J5.S0A7.I5: city mill extra tor 
West Indies. J5.-iO@9.5U- fMUilli America, te.55 tn 65; 
Southern Uour.commuu to good extra,J3.;j, i 3 good co 
Choice .do. ju.HN S (H.*‘teo; export 3.25. Rve Flour—Super 
fine, J3.ftV.il. Buckwheat rtour. $:i.5G*l; maluly Jo.75 
@3.yo. Feed—Market without decided change. Co a 
meiil-JYv.tnw Western, *3@3T£' Brundywine, J3 30 
@3.40. 
r-ittcKs ok Grain—Wheat—U ngraded Spring at. 
$1 (Wwl.tiS; Duluth,at JL09 for export; No. 2, Chicago, 
jt.Uiin store: Ungmiicd Wluter red, 92c.@1.17;oholce 
Detroit taken by a city millet- at Jl.li; No. 3, red, 
jUG.te in elevator, $1 07 delivered: No. 2. red, $1.14}* 
for rail certificateslti elevator 4d.ll*I.ltte for caual 
delivered from store and nuoat- 2 red, selter Novem¬ 
ber. Lit}*; do. December, Jl.lCn il !2te: do. Jauuurv, 
Jl.l8tSWl.i4te: do. February, 81.15t + -ol.l«te. do. May. 
jl.3ute-> l.-lft*. l-’.rt:—Western, G7..viutec.: Cauada and 
State, Ti . JjOjo.—B arlet—N o. 2 Canada at sac-.: Un¬ 
graded do. at about 37e.: California brewing, s3c.: 
western, ric.—B a«i.ky .Malt—P rices unehauged.— 
Corn-U ngraded mixed at 324^5 61 tec; uew No. S, fxL, 
57c.; No. 2, ft»tee., tree on board from -.tore., tiiiu.t .1 (jc. 
delivered; new and old Yellow and White South 
ern together, at ftitee,: No. 2 Mixed, seller November, 
59-tec.r do. December; 60te@6btec.: do. January, 
tib'ic.; do. ilny, 6uteuM.-Ytc. Oats—N o 3 mixed at LIT* 
,.(,3 jc- No. 2, 8%te<«i36c: No. 1 quoted 36c: No. 3 white. 
SiteU; No. 2, 38te'-i88tec; No. I quoted IItec: mixed 
Western. SS.gkVc-, tvhile do. SB@l3c; white. State. v 4 2;.v 
•I2tec.; No. 2 mlxeii. seller November, 354JC; do. 
Dcoembr. 36te@8fttec: do. January. STte-L3(tec.: do. 
Muy.Jvte-.tlO. 
VISIBLE 8UTI-LY OK UR.U3 IS TUB UNITED STATES AND 
CANADA. 
Nov. 10. 1888. Nov. 11, 1882. 
Wheat, bush.3U,7;s,4t6 19,189,l(W 
Corn, bush. 9,634,395 4,067,168 
Oats, bush . 3,516.281 8.772,lit 
Barley, bush..... 2,136,925 2,856.967 
Rye. bush. 2.442,066 1.1 
Prices of Provisions—Pork—Clear Back, JiASO.t 
16.26: or Unary Mess In Job lots quoted $12@23: choice, 
$12.10(612.50; family mess, $l,i. tV-( 14 for Western : 
Clear Back, $l5.Bdw.$I6,2r>; extra prime, $11.50; Prime 
mess, nominal. Beef—Extra mess, Jll.SOunfS; packet. 
In bids., J12.5G-(,18- do. lu tea. $17; city extra India 
mess. In ti-s., J22is.23.50. Beef hums quoted $19 75 - 
at West, for December delivery, 19,50, Cut meals— 
Pickled bellies, 12 ft average,?}*: 12 ft Ttec : pickled 
shoulders, for Western delivery: sweet pickled 
shoulders. IVocmber, Jtep; pickled hams. December, 
part 8J»,d9tec.; City plekled shoulders, t-teC.; pickled 
hams. Ute@12teu.; »iuoked»honlders, 7teu« i smok 
ed bams, l-lojlltec. Middlcs-Umg clear, quoted here 
?tec: ai West, long aud short clear. December, 6c., 
Lung clear, prompt, t’tec. Dressisl Hogs—City heavy 
to light, Mi-tec.; I'lgs 6te-r 64*0- Lard—Contract grade, 
spot, $7.90; off grade, to arrive, $7.37}®; choice. $7.95: 
leaf lard,'ic.; November, closing. Ji.SNiti.SS: Decem¬ 
ber. *;.st U L7.s6; year, dosing, jr.Sleil.sii; January, 
$7.82(017.99: February, J7.98<.«8c : March, $8.uk,t.8.10: 
April, J9.14.4S.20; City steam. Si.Ttbc? SO; No. 1 City, 
*7.91: Refined, Continent, private terms, quoted, 
$v20; November and December-, South American, 
JS.-MVs9.fl5. 
Butter.—S tate creamery Is rarely found in first' 
class condition. State dairy of tine grade docs well 
enough- Western stock of fine quick flavor la not 
pleuty. 
Creamery, fancy, Sfc; do. choice. 82 a8Sc.: do- 
prune, MWllc; do. fair to good, 23@28ci do. ordinary 
23@24e.: June creamery, choice. 2M*27c; do. do. fair 
to good, -M@24c; Stab- dairies, entire, fine, iCV.26c.; 
do. do. fair to good. AtojgHo; State dairies of firkins 
24c; do do. fair, 2t)w,29c.; Slate half-firkin tubs best. 
291.030c.; do. do. fine, 26n'29c: do. good,2..i@25e; do. fair, 
17wl9c.; Slate Welsh tubs, choice. 2T(,t2M\; do. good to 
prime. 23@2tie ; do. fair to good, is,t2»lc.; Western 
lmltatloti creamery, choice, 25w26c.: Western do., 
good to prime, 2u@2u.*.; ilo. ordinary to fair, l.Vjclse,; 
Western dnlry, boat, 2:82240.; do. good 2iln*23o.; do. 
ordinary. I5u«19c.; Western factory, best current 
make, 19c.; do. fair to good, I3@17e.; do. ordtunrv, 
lG«l‘2c. 
Add b.t Jc, pur pound to the above for Jobbing se 
lectlousof clioice goods 
Tobacco.-K entucky firm. Lags, 7®8o,: Leaf, 8@ 
14c.; Seed Leaf ls9UPennsylvania, Itk-tliter-.; 1881 do. 
6®llteC.: lMN8do., 3,618c.; issj, New Euglund, ll@3He,; 
laSG’sl, Ohio. 6te ^3c. 
CiiKKsx. Anything above 12tec. Is too excepUona 
to tie quoted. 
State factory, selected by homo trade, 134*64IStec-: 
do. tauoy September. 121*"<- I26l»c.; do. October laucy, 
12 «.l2tec: do. prime 1 Iteot Hte* - , do. fair to good, lues 
llteo; uu. light skims, choice, ste'<-t9c-do. do. fair to 
good. 5,A8c; sltlms, Pennsylvuuia, choice, IteuI'Jtec; 
skims, ordinary, S@4c.; Ohio fiats, fancy, lL-ylltec; 
do. do. good to prime; 9te®10teo; do. fair, 8®9c; do. 
do. ordinary, 5®6c. 
Cotton.— A very fair trade, with farther gain on 
values. 
This Instrument Con 
raining 22 NOTES (6 MORE 
than Is contained In any 
other like. Instrument) Is 
unequalled for durability, 
power and sweetness of 
tone. 
Larger sizes for House, 
Lodge and Chapel, contain 
32 notes. 
Live Poultrt.— Spring chick- 
Ue.; Spring do. Western, ll«6 
iln and Jersey. ISc.; do. State, 
H@13c.-. roosters, mixed, old 
THE AUT0PH0NE 
For Grown People and Children, 
THE FINEST .AND CHEAPEST 
Automatic Musical Iastrument 
ever offered. 
Send tor Circular and catalogue of Music 
The Autophonk Co., Ithaca, N. Y. 
Canvassers Wanted. 
KAImp. Chromo Cards, name In new script type. 
^Nfmc., IS pks. ai.or 10 pits.for $1 arid choice free of 
handsome gold ring, plain, chased, fancy stone set¬ 
ting, or tortoise 2 blade knife. Snow A Co.Meriden.Ct 
_ F14EK CHItI^T.W6S PACKAGE. 
To Introduce our goods and secure future trade, vre 
will send you free of charge. If you wiU send 30c. in 
stamps for postage. Ac , 5 pretty Christmas Cards. 5 
nice Sew Year Cards, 1 lovely Birthday Card, a beau¬ 
tiful gilt-bound floral Autograph Album, Illustrated 
with birds, flowers, fern, ate., a handsome Photo¬ 
graphic Portrait of all the Presidents of U. S. neatly 
arranged In on album with a facsimile Autograph of 
each, also our new HolbJav Book. 
BABCOCK Ac CO Ceuterbrook, Conn. 
The Apocryphal Books of the New Testament, 
rejected on the First Revision by the Council 
of Nice under Constantine, A. D. 325 
The books that exist, of those not included tn the 
canon, are carefully brought together in ike present 
volume; and the possessor of this and the New Testa¬ 
ment has in the two volumes a collection of all the 
historical records relative to Christ and his apostles 
now Inexistence and considered sacred by Christians 
during the first three centuries after bis birth. 
Illustrated from Ancient Missals. Svo. Cloth, S1 -5 0 
post-paid. Send for Vireutar. 
GEBBIE A CO., Publishers, 619 Sansom St.. Philadel- 
ACENTS WANTED 
JAPANESE MAMMOTH CHESTNUT. 75 
cents each: Japanese Pin mis, best vurietiea, 
50 cents each. Free by mall; safe arrival guaran¬ 
teed. Address C. M. SILVA A SON. 
Newcastle, California 
Of all the leading varieties, of my own growth or 
grown especially for me from my choic* stock seed 
of over 35 years' selection and improvement. 
Guaranteed first-class In every particular. 
Wholesale price-list to dealers upon application to 
FRANCIS BRILL. 
RIVERHEAD, LONG ISLAND. N. Y. 
fc§£5T MARKET PEAR. 
Sc l«4,in«>PEACH TUFFS AlUe* 
l of new and old Strawberries, 
r 2 :\ Cnrraau. Gr»p«s. Rs.ipb*rnca, etc. 
In a letter from Hon. Mi's. Pery, Castle 
Grey, Limerick, Ireland, Brown’s Bronchial 
Troches are thus referred to: “ Having 
brought your ‘Bronchial Troches’ with me 
when I came to reside here, I fouud that after 
I had given them away to those I considered 
required them, the poor people will walk for 
miles to get a few.’* For Coughs, Colds and 
Throat Diseases they have no equal. Sold only 
in boxes, — Adv. 
EARLY CLUSTER 
Naw BUvxberrT. early, hardy, good. 
LIVE STOCK MARKETS. 
New Yobs.. Saturday, Nov. 17, 1883. 
Beeves.—T otal for six days, 12,263 head, an-xlnst 
9,859 head tor the corresponding time last week. 
Ohio oxen, M5S ft at llteo. 56ft; 1,283ft at 10c. 55 ft; 
dry cows, 960 ft, at 8c.,54 ft; do 992 ft nc 8tee..53 ft; 
Pennsylvania steers, 151 ft at l2e. 56 ft; do, 1,214 ft 
at 104(0., 56 ft; do. 1,150 ft at Wtec.,X5 ft; do. 1,092 ft at 
10c.: do. (oxen!, 1.665 ft at 6c . Uv*. weight; Ohio steers. 
1,010 ft at 12tec„ 56 ft; do. 1,107 ft at lUteo., 5-5 ft; do. 
1.134 ft at 10c.: do. Ift at 9tee; UUnols steers. i,23i 
ft atlltec.. 56 ft; do. 1.223 ft at lie.; do, 1,133 at lotec.; 
do. 1,056 ft at 10tee. Texans, 9b2 ft at 9c., 55ft; Indiana 
steers, 1,250 ft at tic., 56 ft: do. (oxen) 1.3SS ft nt tOc.* 55 
ft; bulls, 1,112 ft a«3e.; State steers. 1,456 ft at lltev. t 
56 ft; do. 1,130 ft at $5.21; do 966 ft at 9c., 35 ft, tes* 50c! 
per heads Western do 1,108 »mi%„ 56ft; do. 1.120 
ft at lOc.t Connecticut steers, 1,052 ft at 9tec., 35 i»; 
oxen, Lk<GA1.775ft at 9ternl'-teo.; West Virginia steers. 
1,115 ft at $5.68; do. 1.116 ft at U>tee., 56 ft; do. 1,139 ft at 
lUtee.. 55 ft and Stic, per hoad- do. 277 ft at 9tee,; com¬ 
mon State steers, 1,138 ft at It tec.; bulls, 900 at 3tee. 
Calves.—F ed eolvt-8, 390 ft. at N-Kqc; grasaers, 317 
ft, at 4tec: ilo. 290 at 4c. Venl, 160 ft., at 9tec; do. ISO 
ft, at 9c: do. 103 ft. at Ttec: yearlings,4s; n>, at Ic. 
Siikei- and Lambs—T otal for six days. 44,213 head, 
ugalust 12,Gt- bead for tile sume Lime last week 
State lambs, 69 ft at iktec; do 62 ft at c tec: Canada do. 
79 ft at t>tec: do. 80 ft. at 6Hct State sheep. 95 ft. at 5c; 
do. 97 ft. at 5tee: do. 8-1 r, at line; do. 101 ft, at item 
Michigan do. 94 ft, at 4t g e; Western sheep, 102 ft, at 
5*qc; ao 1C8 ft. at 5tec: do. 97 ft at 5c; do. 100 ft, at 
$4.60; Pennsylvania sheep und lambs, 67 ft,at5tec; 
Jersey ewes, 114 ft,at4tec; Modocs, 76 ft, at *8.60; Ohio 
sheep, 102 ft at 5teo; do. 87 ft, at 4tev; do. 91 ft, at 4tee; 
Our Latest Invention, the 
Dr. Graves’ Heart Regulator cures all 
forms of Heart Disease, nervousness aud sleep¬ 
lessness.—Ado. 
EVER MADE. 
We make the only corn 
// j 2 , * and cob mill with Cxuit-Steel 
l Li St. S Grinders. If we fall to fur- 
alsti proof will give you a 
.-X in/M asi- n«a mill. 10 different styles and 
- sues. The only mill that 
We also make the Celebrated Big Giant . Send 
for circulars and prices. 
The Rural New-Yorker will be sent, 
from this date until January 1st, 1885, for 
$ 2 . 00 . 
Mentiou this paper 
St. Louis, Mo 
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH 
D0YLEST0WM HORSE POWER 
Chicago.— Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, “regular" wheat is %c. lower; No. 
2 Chicago Spring, lj»o. lower; No. 2 Red 
Winter varied 5c. during the day, closing at 
3j^c. higher than a week ago; only a specu¬ 
lative flurry, probably. Corn i^c, higher. 
Oats >£c. higher. Rye lc. lower. Hogs un¬ 
changed, cattle a trifle higher, Sheep 25c. 
higher. 
With either regular inclm”" love"end: " k. Has 
the simplest and most efficient governor made. The 
Dojlestuwn Junior Thresher and Uleuner 
has no superior. For Illustrated Catalogue address 
sole manufacturer, DANIEL HVLSH1ZEK, 
Doylestown. Bucks Co., Pa* 
ODEm CROP 
ISLAND IuAJjMuIj 
U 11 J i OF 1883 
