« 
846 
THE RUSAL HEW-YOSKES. 
DE6 
'an5 xif X\)t Wall. 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday, Dec, 1, 1883. 
Carl Schttrz has retired from the edi¬ 
torial staff of the New York Evening Post. 
There was no break in his friendly relations 
with the staff, but he found the close editorial 
work from day to day irksome. South 
of Prairie Du Chien, Wis., a cyclone, Sunday 
night, wrecked three farmhouses and a num¬ 
ber of outbuildings. Mary Melvin was 
crushed to death....The Governor of 
Oregon has signed the woman’s suffrage bill. 
.. In Albany, Wis., the loss from Tues¬ 
day’s fire was from $150,000 to $300,000 . 
Dr. James C. Buck, a prominent resident of 
Braddock, Pa., has been sentenced to five 
years and six months for collusion with a 
gang of highwaymen........During the pres¬ 
ent year 2,800 Mormon immigrants arrived 
in New York. Governor Murray, of Utah, 
is reported as saying that, sooner or later, 
there will be a collision between the Mor¬ 
mons and the Government ...Lawrence 
Weldon, of Illinois, is appointed to the Court 
of Claims. He is David Davis's man. 
The President has pardoned Sergeant Mason, 
who attempted to shoot Guiteau, and who 
has served two outof bis eight years’ sentence 
in the Albany Penitentiary. The pardon of 
Sergeant Mason merely recites the fact of the 
trial and sentence and states that the Presi¬ 
dent for good and sufficient reasons grants a 
full, unconditional release. The clothing firm 
of Chicago who contracted with Sergeant 
Mason to act as salesman for them as soon as 
released from prison, have not heard from 
him since his pardon and do not know whether 
he will fulfill his contract or not. It is said 
he has contracted to exhibit himself in a show 
throughout the country, leaving "Betty and 
the Baby” at homo..The annual report 
of the chief of the life-saving service shows 
that at tbs end of the last fiscal year the 
number of lifi-saviug stations were 194; the 
number of disasters to vessels in the field of 
the life-saving operations during the year 
were 800; of 8,792 persons on board those ves¬ 
sels only 15 perished, and of more than $7,000,- 
000 worth of property in these ships and car¬ 
goes only *1,500,000 was lost.A com¬ 
mittee, of which Sir John Astley is chairman, 
has raised *8,000 for the benefit of C'apt. 
Webb’s family. President Arthur has 
cut loose from all the rivalries for the post of 
Surgeon-General of the army by appointing 
to that place Surgeon Robert Murray, chief 
medical officer of Gen. Hancock's head-quar¬ 
ters at N ewYork. Dr. Baxter,the chief medical 
purveyor, will be disappointed at his failure 
on two occasions to become the medical bead 
of the army ........Joseph Jefferson, the 
actor, was stricken with sudden and complete 
loss of voice at Peoria, Ill., Tuesday, supposed 
to be due to a severe cold. His physician Bays 
he may possibly he able to talk again within 
a week or 10 days, and possibly not within a 
month .In Cleveland, O., there is 40 
per cent, less iron ore than usual at this sea¬ 
son. 67 furnaces have gone out of blast and 
the production of pig-iron hardly equals the 
daily consumption. Many iron men predict 
an iron famine before Spring.It is 
said that Senor Juan Valeri, the new Spanish 
minister to Washington, is especially charged 
to look after the interests of Cuba and to 
facilitate the making of a treaty of commerce 
with America which shall satisfy the Cubans. 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Saturday, Dec. 1, 1883. 
Corn in Kansas is said to be greatly im¬ 
periled by wet weather. At some points it 
will not be in condition to crib for weeks to 
come, and may bo rendered entirely unfit for 
shipping. A great many complaints of serious 
injury to the crop from wind and rainstorms 
also come from Illinois, Iowa and Wisconsin. 
..David Davis is still investing liis sur¬ 
plus funds in Illinois farm:, having on Wed¬ 
nesday secured 400 acres in McLean County. 
.....The commissi on appointed by the 
State Deprrtment to investigate the causes of 
trichinae has closed its labors at Chicago and 
other Western points. It will report in favor 
of creating a special Board to study the matter 
at great length, for which a liberal appropri¬ 
ation will be required. The action of the 
French and German Governments is not be¬ 
lieved to have been war rated by the facts ob¬ 
tainable."Yes,’’the Nebraska farmer 
said, "barbed wire fence is expensive; but the 
hired man doesn’t btop to rest every time he 
has to climb it.”.Nathaniel Lee, an 
aged and respected tarmer, was swindled in 
Madison, Ind., recently, out of *5,500 by the 
three card monte game.With the close 
of the canals there will be about 1,500 idle 
horses near Troy. The farmers will get *1 a 
week for each horse that they shelter and feed 
until Spring.Mr. Cariviere, Munster of 
Agriculture for Manitoba, has gone to Toronto 
to confer with the Attorney-Geueral, now en 
route from Winnipeg to Toronto, in reference 
to the territory in dispute between Ontario 
and Manitoba .B. F. Dow& Co , manu¬ 
facturers of agricultural implements, of Peru, 
iDd., have made an assignment to James G. 
Blvthe. receiver. Their liabilities are $150,- 
000. and their assets $300,000 .Dakota 
farmers are holding indignation meetings 
because of a grain elevator monopoly. The 
Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railroad is 
said to have given one company the exclusive 
right to put up elevators along its line in such 
a way as to put it in absolute control of the 
business.......... In Duluth all the elevators 
are filled with grain. There are 400 cars on 
the St. Paul road waiting to bo unloaded. 
Shipments have been ordered stopped until 
storage is provided.Cranberry growers 
at Carver, Mass., have lost about $1,500 
bv shipping berries to New York parties 
who paid in worthless checks. 
In Illinois there are 412 butter and cheese fac¬ 
tories, most of which are situated in the 
northern counties of the State, In McHenry 
County there are 51; in Kane, 43; the next 
highest number is in Du Page County. 
One of the best signs of agricultural improve¬ 
ment in this country is the fact that there are 
1,934 tile factories in it, mostly in the West, 
employing a capital of $6,339,381, and a force 
of 12,107 men. The value of last year’s prod¬ 
uct was $5,462,526 .The tenth annual 
meeting of the Illinois State Dairymen’* Asso¬ 
ciation will be held at De Kalb, Ill., during 
the 11th, 12th and 13th of December. The 
Hon George B. Loring is expected to be pres¬ 
ent and to deliver an address on dairy farming. 
FOREIGN NEWS. 
Saturday, Due. 1, 1883. 
Across the Atlantic attention is chiefly- 
divided between the French complications in 
Tonquin and tne victory of the False Prophet 
in the Soudan. Unless France and China are 
playing a dangerous game of "bluff,” war 
seems inevitable. Re-enforcements are being 
hurried forward from the Mediterranean 
ports of France; a large sum fori the expenses 
of the expedition has been voted in spite of 
some vigorous protests from a respectable 
minority, and the talk of most of the papers 
is exceedingly bellicose. From Tonquin 
come news that Admiral Courbet had begun 
his advance against Sontay and Bac-Nmh, 
both of which places are garrisoned by 
Chinese troops. There is still some hope of a 
peaceful settlement, however.El Madhi's 
victory over Hicks Pasha was complete, and 
his forces are now in the neighborhood of 
Khartoum. Egyptian troops are being hur¬ 
ried forward to that place, but half of them 
are deserting. If Khartoum falls, it is said 
there is no defensible point between that 
place and Cairo. The Egyptian peasantry 
would receive the False Prophet with joy, 
and all Northern Africa is reported to be 
agitated by his victory. It is deemed inevita¬ 
ble that England should send from 30,000 to 
40,000 troops—mostly sepoys from India— 
into Egypt to meet the conqueror. English 
troops couldn’t live in the torrid Soudan. 
Owing to the agitation among the fanatics of 
TuniB and Algeria, the French will probably 
have to increase their forces in those places. 
.Emigration begins to tell on the pop¬ 
ulation of the German Empire. During a 
period of five years, from 1875 to 1880, an in¬ 
crease of 2,500,000 souls took place, but from 
the latter year a sensible diminution is ob¬ 
servable. The chief losses by emigration 
occurred in the following provinces: Posen, 
37,780: Eastern Prussia, 81,617; Pomerania, 
22,322; Bavaria, on a population of 5,284,778 
in 1880, lost 28,166, about % per cent.; Wir- 
temberg, on 1,971,180 inhabitants, Iost.14,600, 
or X P® r cent,; and the Grand Duchy of 
Baden, on 1,570,264, lost 1,767, or % per cent. 
Alsace lost on 1,566,670 inhabitants 27,990 in 
in eighteen months, or 1^ per cent. The 
total reduction amounts to 30,154 souls, instead 
of an expected increase of 750,009. 
CROPS AND MARKETS. 
Saturday, Dec. 1, 1888. 
• THE experiments of the Commissioner of 
Agriculture in the manufacture of sorghum 
sugar have come to an end for the season, for 
the very good reason that the appropriation 
bus given out. During the season the Agri- 
eultu ral Department has made 11,000 pounds 
of sugar and about 300 gallons of sirup from 
232 tons of sorgbum cane. The expenditures 
amount. to $11,000. Three years ago the sugar 
made exist $10 a pound, and last year *5 a 
pound. The success in manufacturing the ar¬ 
ticle this year for only $1 per pound has been 
very gratifying to the Agricultural Depart¬ 
ment, notwithstanding that the commercial 
value of the sugar is about six cents per pound 
A good deal of time and money has been spent 
on experimental machinery. Among the ma¬ 
chines tested is a crusher, for which credit is 
given to Commissioner of Patents Butter- 
worth. It is said at the Department that the 
best results have been obtained by using the 
system of "diffusion.” The reeds are chipped 
into fine particles, which are placed in a bat¬ 
tery-of iron or copper cells. Warm water is 
then allowed to percolate through the chips. 
and thus 80 per cent, of the 88 per cent, of 
saccharine matter is extracted. It is said this 
process has been used in malting beet sugar for 
years. The Commissioner of Agriculture, it 
is understood, will not ask for any more appro¬ 
priations to carry on sorghum sugar experi¬ 
ments. He will, however, recommend that 
$1,000 be appropriated for each State in which 
the cane can be grown, to be expended by 
State Agricultural Associations in the pur¬ 
chase or lease of land for experimental plant 
ing. He proposes tb at 10 acres shall bo secured 
in each State, in two-acre plots in different 
parts of the State, so that climatic and topo¬ 
graphical influences may be studied. The 
total production of sorghum sugar in private 
manufactories in the United States this year’ 
is 1,250,000 pounds. Onehalf of this was made 
at Rio Grande, N. J., the rest was made in 
Kansas and Illinois. 
The largest quantity of wheat exported from 
the Russian Baltic porta in any one year since 
1670 was 99,454,375 bushels in 1878. The ex¬ 
ports last year amounted to76,409,610 bushels, 
and for 12 years, from 1871 to 1882 inclusive, 
the exports have averaged 59,882,600 bushels 
of wbeat and 40,996,200 bushels of rye. 
There is a large amount of smutty wheat 
bemg received in Chicago, principally from 
Iowa. This wheat, the Commercial Bulletin 
says, is otherwise good, and most of it 
grades No, 2, bnt, owing to the smut, it in¬ 
spects No. 3. Buyers do not care to purchase 
this wheat, and holders have considerable 
trouble in disposing of it, and are compelled 
to discount the prices paid for good wheat 3 
to 6 cents per bushel. 
The Mark Lane Express of Nov. 26, in it* 
weekly review of the British grain trade, says: 
Unusually mild weather causes young wheat to 
maintain a healthy aud promising appearance. 
Trade dull and lifeless, owing to a superabund¬ 
ant supply of foreign wheat. Flour values 
tending downward. Engluh flour and wheat 
are difficult tosell In London. Malting barleys 
are very scarce. Foreign wheats unimproved, 
“he stock is large and buyers are apathetic 
and extremely cautious. Flour is in moder- 
at/Q BiipplV) mid tiiH London Lrtido isdepi 
Mixed American mmze is against buyers, 
owing to scarcity. . . 
There has been a general "Loom’ in hog 
products,commonly called "provisions,’’during 
the week. The gazetting of the older in Fans 
rescinding the prohibition of the importation 
of American pork while not promising imme¬ 
diate heavy additions to the export demand, 
warrants ft considerable rise in price. 1 here 
has, therefore, been a grout deal of excite¬ 
ment among those dealing in hog products. 
On Monday the Chicago market advanced 18 
to 15c. for jtork and 3>j to 5c. for lard. rues- 
day there was a further advance at the \\ est 
of $1.05 to *1,16 on pork and 50 to 60c. on lard. 
At New York, on Tuesday lard advanced 5U to 
55c. from the highest quotations made on bat- 
urday. Spot pork was strong and at the 
close Tuesday, mess had advanced $1.00 from 
Saturday’s prices, aud other varieties halt as 
much. Paekorstof bacon were ’*c. inadvance 
of shipper*’ limit. Hogs have gone up from 
20c. to 60c. indifferent markets anti for differ¬ 
ent grades, and doubtless the end is not yet. 
Pork has advanced. $2 a barrel to date. 
A glance at our aummuries of the markets 
in onr regular market reports will show that 
all grains have gone up, the rise being much, 
greater in some markets than in others. I he 
rise of over 5 cents a bushel in corn in Chi¬ 
cago, if permit ueut and ubiquitous, wouldadd 
$80,000,0<X) to the value of the aggregate crop 
of 1,600,000.000 bushels! Corn went up be¬ 
cause considerable injury to the crop is re¬ 
ported from several Western States ow ing to 
late storms of rain, etc., aud because of the 
removal of tbo French embargo on our pork, 
which will appreciate that product and lienee 
raise the value of the corn which goes to make 
it. Moreover, while foreign countries are 
yearly buying more of our corn, the supply 
abroad now is unusually small. Other grains 
went up in sympathy with corn. 
-- 
Brown’s Bronchial Troches for Coughs 
and Colds: "The only article of the kind which 
has done me goes! service. I want nothing 
better.”— Rev. II It- Craig , Otisville, N. Y. 
Sold only in boxes— Adv. 
2 Chicago Spring 2%c. higher; No. 3 do., h c - 
higher; No. 3 Red Winter, lj^c. higher. Corn 
5’ 4 c. higher. Oats2c. higher, Rye, higher. 
Barley 4c, higher. 
Wheat.— Regular in good demand, chiefly for spec¬ 
ulation: the mnrkct opened weaker, and ?6<§s>£c. 
lower than Wednesday, influenced by the Increase 
m the visible supply: later, advanced I m Me.in sym¬ 
pathy with corn, declined fie and dosed Me. lower 
than'Wednesday sales at 9 Dh <d 39MC.. closing at 9?%c. 
November; closing at 9'fic . December; 
OSficr.iHtte, 
sfiwtriwe,,closing at sr>W«,euarj : 
closing at WW'WSWUe, February 07, dosing 
rtgl.iM Muvi No. <! Chicago Spring,enclosing 
atgi.iM MayiNo. i Chicago Spring,id fijffii'lfic.,closing 
atfllfijc.; No. » do. 838ns*; No. 2 Red Winter. #9X6 
$1.0 L Corn excited and much unsettled: the trading 
was large nnd prices were lrrevpjar.*dvanclng above 
the highest point touched Wednesday sales nt 54X@ 
57e. closing nt K5X<$IiSfitt- cash- 58(3870.. clostng at 
55-Ve. November: 53fi<kQ&Xc.. dosing at.Vie. Decem¬ 
ber: ... .•[..-in nt .Vie. all the year: SSfifaMfiC.. 
closing at Mfie. January; Mfflrrfk:., closing atMfic. 
February: £>*fiw5SMc, closing at WO- May. Oats un¬ 
settled nnd Irregular: the market opened strong and 
higher, but closed nt Inside prices; sales at 81®sl^c., 
closing at 31c. cash. Kyo Arm at MXc. 
St. Louis. —Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, No. 2Red Fall Wheat is Ic, higher; 
No. 3 ditto 1’aC. higher. Corn 2 1 iC. higher. 
Oats, l> 8 'c. higher. Cattle, little change. 
Sheep, a trifle higher. Hogs, from 40c. to 
50c. higher. 
Wheat—S low. No. 2 Red Fall, $L01X@L03 cash 
ruary: §..K>X®LlVfi May; No. 3 Red FaD. '.l5}«w96Xc. 
Corn— Opened a shade lower, subsequently ad¬ 
vanced: 4&t|CAsh; -tec, bid December; all 
the. vear; I55-*.«4M*C January; 46fi«47fi February; 
&0!4<S>52Mc. May. Oats cash. Catti.k Market 
steady: domnnd tor good to best grades exceeds the 
supply; exports, fik$(i.40: good to choice shipping, 
*S.itbr.6: medium to fair, $4.7505.25: butcher afeovs. 
$l,,i i.7o; * tuckers and feeders. 88 5044,25; Texans. 
$3 •. , .'im4.1v fiiiEKp Market quiet: common to medium, 
83.2r.ri8: fnlr to good, $3,20(6 8,'i5; prime to fanev, *3.81 
@4.75; Texans, *2.»><i;<.3fl. Flans Active, tlrm and 
higher; Yorkers, 8UiO@4.70; packing, $4.85®5.20; 
butchers’ to extra, $ii.90®?.:i0. 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
New York, Saturday, Dee. 1,1888. 
Beans and Peas.- The demand Is not by any means 
satisfactory, and It Is only on stock positively scarce 
—such as kidneys and turtle soups—that full bids can 
be commanded, 
Beans—marrow, prime, new, *3, Beans, marrows, 
prime, old, S2.85ih2.90; do. medium, prime. S3.75w2.S0; 
do. pea. S2.7 .-jw 2.80; do. white kidney, choice. S3.25 
@3 50; do. red kidney, 1«33, chnloe, iu: foreign 
pea henna, *2.'.*5w3.3S; do. foreign, mediums, new, 
ri.20W2.2Y. do. do. old $2.Of.@2.10. Peas, green, prime. 
5t.2.Vi®1.30: do. Boilthrru U. E. peas, $3.20 a:'. 25; Cali¬ 
fornia, Lima, $3.20<48 M. 
IiHEADSTCFn? and Provisions. As compared with 
prices or a week ago, ungraded Winter red wheat Is 
Hfii 1 . higher; ungraded white Is To. higher i No. 2 red 
is fie. higher for rail certificates. Iiye-Western, 
afloat. Is lfic. higher. Corn-Ungraded mixed is 4c. 
higher; No. 3 Is 8fic. higher. Oats-No. 3 mixed Is 
lc. higher: No. 2 Is Ifie higher; No. I is lfie. higher; 
No. 3 white Is fie. higher; No. 2 ls}£c. higher: No. 1 
Is lc. higher; mixed Western is fie. higher; white 
Western isle. higher; white State Is the same. 
Price* of Provisions- Pork 51. s*. spot, 811(3:14.25; 
Clear Back, 8l6@lf.25; family me**.81.-0*15 50; extra 
prime. $12; orfinary Mess In Job lots quoted $14@ 
14.22; Prime mcwi, nominal. Beef—City extra India 
mess, $23; Extra mess, $12.50: packed In bbls., $1S@ 
18.40- do. In tes. $lij city extra India nil's*, in tcs.. 
$22 &0>«:24.50. Beef hams 823,220(23.60: for Western 
delivery ££}.n0«tZl 75. Cut iue»U—Pickled bellies, 7fi 
Pickled shoulders, 67pc, 7e.jj4 in pickled bel- 
Hes quoted 7fi<67fio.: 12 B- .fitaroa* CHy pickled 
shoulders. To.; pickled hams. Iffiillfic.; smoked 
shoulders, 7fie.; smoked hams, r.fi;«13fie. Middles— 
J^.pg Clear here quoted 7fie: at West, long and short 
clear, half aud half, December delh ery.lfie. Dressed 
Bogs—City heavy to light, tMQ,fifio.i Plg^Sfi. Lard 
—Contract grade, spot, closing. H.TSotN.M); December, 
Closing, gs.to seller ye.tr, closing, 8e.tu'@8.6S- 
January, closing, 83.7:^5.78; February, closing, 88.85 
ZtK.Ki); Starch, closing, 8'.wl@8.i>s; April, closing, $9.03 
«.Oj; May, dosing, 89.136,3,17: City steam. $8.45@S.50; 
No. 1 City, quoted $Ni,;N,25; Kcllned Continent South 
American, quoted it.25@9.35. 
Flour. Fv-koand Meal— Flour—quotation*: No. 2> 
*2.ao@3.10»uperttne.82.8M<Sl3.4l , .l»ttcr an extreme;com- 
pion to fair extra Siaie, aV IiWYSKV, good to fancy do., 
tVa m'iuiicm.iih,£ .><.5.2",ry. mixture, 
84.30.@fl.0U; straight, $3.2iot3.;&: patent. $.>75 a7.10; St. 
Louts common to fair extra, *3.45@4.00: fair lo good, 
84 lWrt5 2V good Ui very choice, 85.:»jili.90: patent 
Winter wheat extra, 85.50<Jt6^5; city null extra for 
West Indh-H, 8i»i@3.50: South America, 8.5.50 *5 60; 
Southern flour, common to good extra, 83.,5@4.90: 
good to choice, do. Buckwheat flour, $3.45 
@3.82, main I v at t8.60 -ii3.75. Feed, market steady,w ith 
a moderate trade reported: Corn meal Brandywine, 
88.10; Vs.iow Western, quoted $3@3.3!i. 
PnteKS of (iiiAlN—WriKAT—No. 2 Milwaukee at 
a; tsdelivered: Ungraded winter red. soe.- i $1.19, the 
latter for n small lot very choice .lerseiANo. 8, red. 
81 04*t U4fi in elevator, $1,06 afloat; No. Y, red, $1.13 
for rati certificate* lu elevator. *1.13 a 1,184* for canal 
delivered; ungraded white, H3c.@81-10,No. 2 red, sel 
. _— 11 ..»i i i.L. of.ioince fcl I1 *#Ia .Ti»»ninrv. 
t icy t w ft tut n rt* parted fct ^ 
LEY Malt— Dull at lust quotations.-U oun t ngraded 
mixed at''.(.aSc, the hitter very choice; No. 3, C0c.; 
No ■* ivw; :Uq In elevator, idfii.i&i'-vc. afloat No. J 
white', KS@54MO. tu store and delivered; No. 7 Mixed, 
Keiier Drceriiuer. Uos'i.rc-iqe., do. January. Jr; 
d.l: February. Mav,$|fi«6f% Oats- 
\o infixed at iwo: No. 2, 37@s,t*c.: No. 1 quoted 
No.3 white. 37Wo.. No. 2, W4fiui.'4le.i No. 1 
(Heiled tle.; mixed Western,, WhtfWfio,* white do. 
Jjta 43 e; white State. 42Vte.; No. 2 Chicago at SSjjic. 
afloat; No. 2 mixed, seller November, 8,e.; do^Ce 
comber, closing 37F6c : do. January, closing 38fi,c- 
do. February. uDitic.; do. May, 4iq>@ll^e. 
ViSIBLK SUPPLY OF GRAIN IN THE UNITED STATES AND 
CANADA. 
Nov. 24. 1883, Nov. 25, 1882. 
Wheat, bush. 
Sv.'huAii.-.:::.^ 1.227 
. bUAh. ... -. 2*318,056 
Bye* 
1,159,294 
"We know Dr. Graves’ Heart Regulator will 
cure Heart Disease. 50 years’ use aud many 
persons of prominence testifying prove it.” 
ReadviUe Press. $ 1 a bottle a t druggists. —Ad u* 
- + - 
The Rubai. New-Yorker will be sent 
from this date until January 1st, 1885, for 
*2.00. Tell your friends of this. 
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. 
Chicago.— Compared with cash prices a 
week ago regular wheat is 3)^c. higher; No- 
Buttkil— Choice Western imitation Creamery and 
Dairy In small supply aud Arm. 
Creamery, Elgin, if here, KH@4n<.; do. average fancy. 
1SS@37- do. choice, 34(<t33e: do. prime. 3d@-k*; do. fair 
tnaond 25(<t‘i'c; do. ordinary, 22i?,2So; at .it u dairies, 
Melina &@27o; do. do. fair to good. iWfirtSoi do. 
nf l flritln», 24c; do. do. falr,ni;it23c; Mao' hnlf tlrkln 
tubs, heat, die; do. flue. 25@. He; do. good, do. 
fair Stun* \\ cinti tu.L»». cJ^oic^ 2!*»*22o, do. 
goo.i to prime, 2 «n27i': do. fair to good, 1 -a.-e; W est- 
tru liilUallon cri am ry, choice. ,Jc, do. 
good to prime. 2.W27C; do ordinary to tu r. 
western dairy, best, 24@<Sc; do. good, do. 
ordinary ISwlbc; Weatern factory, best current 
makefife'^'; do. fair to good, i3»L’e: do. ordinary, 
iii<ai2c. 
UUKK.MK. -State factory. soleL-ted whltj:,12fi,@12fiC 
ranev Sctittsmbijr, do, Oc rancy. 
«lo prluio, do. ^ulr to flood, 
llfic: do. light skims, clioice, 8fi,@9c; do. skljns, fair 
togo id.5(0.sc. skims,Pennsylvania. cho |V?)JjJS 
do ordinary, Stale; Ohio flats, fancy. il!y@12(.. d (• 
good to prime,9hi@lU*c: do. fair. 8<fl>9e,do. ordinary. 
5@6c. 
