458 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER 
MAR 7 
fetors JCrf 11 )t 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday, February 28. 
President Arthur has found a man in 
Wyoming Territory to govern it—Francis E. 
Warren. This is the first time he has ap¬ 
pointed a Territorial Governor from the resi¬ 
dents.Gen. Horace Capron died at 
Washington this week as a result of his ex¬ 
posure at the dedication of the monument. 
He was horn in Attleboro, Mass., but went to 
Maryland early in life. During the war he 
commanded an Illinois regiment, and was 
Commissioner of Agriculture from 1867 to 
1871, when he went to Japan in a government 
capacity. He retired some years ago with a 
handsome competency...Gen. Grant’s 
tongue and throat, are now nearly healed, and 
the doctors say that all the suspicions of can¬ 
cer which were entertaiued are disproved by 
the present condition of the parts. The case 
is described in the New York Medical Record 
as one of chronic superficial inflammation of 
the tongue, affecting neighboring parts, and 
probably caused by excessive smoking, al¬ 
though the disease sometimes occurs in those 
who do not smoke.Ex-Associate Justice 
J. J. Wright, of the South Carolina Supreme 
Court, who died at Charleston last week, was 
the only colored man who had ever held a 
Supreme Court position in the United States. 
It was he who recognized Wade Hampton as 
Governor against Chamberlain iu 1877. 
....About 100 Mormou converts left Chat 
tanooga for Salt Lake Thursday night. They 
came from several Southern States. 
.. ..Mormon elders in Hillsboro’, Illinois, and 
vicinity have been warned by the people to 
leave the country under penalty of being 
tarred and feathered. .It is reported 
that the Governor of Arizona, has given 
the Mormons the right to settle in the 
Yaqui country. This is one of the richest 
sections in the world.The people in 
Gilmer, Braxton and Calhoun counties, West 
Virginia, are suffering for want of food. The 
crops of last year were a failure, and 
the supply of grain is nearly exhausted. 
Cattle are dying by hundreds. 
.The deposits in the Postal Savings 
banks in Ontario, Canada, last month 
amounted to $709,377, and the withdrawals to 
$484,729. This is the best showing as regards 
the deposits since these banks were estab¬ 
lished.The building of the Georgia 
State Capitol at Atlanta develops the fact 
that granite can be quarried in Maine, shipped 
to Savannah, and thence carried by rail to 
Atlanta at a less cost than it can be had at a 
quarry only sixteen miles away.,.The 
North Carolina Legislature has passed a 
bill prohibiting, under a heavy penalty, the 
importation and sale of obscene pictures or 
literature of any kind.The Minnesota 
Legislature has passed a new penal code sim¬ 
ilar to that ofNew York. The most import¬ 
ant change from the old code is making hang¬ 
ing the penalty for murder.In Toronto, 
at a meeting of workingmen, on Wednesday, 
a resolution was passed asking for manhood 
suffrage and condemning Chinese immigra¬ 
tion.The gang known as the “mountain 
boomers” are terrorizing the negroes who 
lately moved into Pope aDd Conway counties, 
Ark., from the south Atlantic States. Farm¬ 
ers who have given employment to immi¬ 
grants have been ordered to discharge them. 
They refuse to comply, and the matter has 
been laid before the Governor, who declares 
he will protect the colored people.Sat¬ 
urday afternoon only two charges were pend¬ 
ing against Frank James in the Cooper Co.j 
M o. circuit court. These were dismissed and 
he was released.An effort will prob¬ 
ably be made at the present session of the 
North Carolina Legislature to secure an ad¬ 
justment of the $16,000,000 in bouds which 
were repudiated by the State. The bouds 
were issued in aid of railroads.. 
.... The Swairn court-martial has convicted 
the Judge Advocate-General and condemned 
him to be “retired” on half pay for 12 years. 
By this be will lose about $30,000 in pay, and 
in 12 years he will be too old to be restored to 
“full pay.”.President Arthur will re¬ 
main iu Washington several days after the 
inauguration of his successor, as the guest of 
Secretary Frelingbuysen. He will then take 
possession of the residence in New York City 
prepared for him. Sec. Lincoln will resume 
the practice of law in Chicago.The 
Oregon Legislature could not agree on a 
United States Senator, so it has closed its ses¬ 
sion without electing one, though the Repub¬ 
licans had a clear majority. The Governor 
will appoint one.It now looks as if the 
Illinois Legislature, too, could not agree upon 
a U. S. Senator. The Republicans and Demo¬ 
crats “tied” until the death of Logan, a Re¬ 
publican, the other day; but now the Demo¬ 
crats can’t agree upon one man, and if they 
could, the Republicans would remain away 
to prevent a quorum—half the members 
elected. It is likely the Governor will appoint 
a Senator after the Legislature has dissolved. 
The Governor is a Republican.-Mr. 
Cleveland has declined Mr. Arthur’s invita¬ 
tion to stop at the White House and will stop 
at the Arlington Hotel. Mr. Arthur gives a 
grand dinner in his honor on the evening of 
March 3d, and on the following day will 
attend a dinner given by President Cleveland. 
.. Secretary Lincoln has written a letter 
to the Military Committee of the Senate, in 
which he favors placing the Signal Bureau 
upon a purely civil basis.....There are 
16,700 skilled laborers unemployed in Cincin¬ 
nati. One-fourth of the iron- workers are idle, 
one-third of the builders, and one-half of the 
carriage and furniture-makers. The total 
number of men out of employment is estimat¬ 
ed at 30,000.Milwaukee dispatches 
state that Lake Michigan is frozen from shore 
to shore, the ice ranging from nine inches to 
three feet in thickness ....... A constitutional 
amendment was passed b 3 r the California 
Assembly Thursday providing that railroads 
shall pay a tax of 2 }£ per cent, on their gross 
earnings. 
From Dentil’s Door. 
Many who were thought by physicians and 
friends to be at death’s door have been restored 
to their families and to comparative good health 
by the new Vitalizing Treatment of Drs. 
Starkey & Palen. 1109 Girard St., Philadel 
phia. 'The cures in Consumption, Catarrh, 
Neuralgia, Bronchitis, and various Chronic 
diseases are indeed wonderful, aud are at¬ 
tracting wide attention. Nothing like it is 
known m medical history. If you have an 
interest in learning all about this uew Treat¬ 
ment, write to them, and pamphlets and re¬ 
ports of cases will be promptly mailed. 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Saturday, February 28. 
A good deal of discussion has lately been 
filling the columns of many of our contempo¬ 
raries, agricultural and political, with regard 
to the next Commissioner of Agriculture. 
The drift of public opinion hitherto appears 
to be decidedly in favor of Major H. E. Alvord, 
in the East, and he has a large and influential 
backing in the West also. De Witt Smith, of 
Illinois, seems to be the second choice. Both 
of these are good, capable men, and either 
would, as Commissioner, be very likely to give 
much satisfaction to the agricultural commu¬ 
nity ......There are very nearly a million and 
a half acres of unimproved land in Massachus¬ 
etts, according to Prof. Maynard. 
.... O wing to the recent “strike” at the Oliver 
Chilled Plow Works at South Bend, lnd.» the 
proprietors, it is reported, intend to remove 
the works to Indianapolis or some other large 
city. They employ from 1,900 to 1,500 hands, 
mostly Polish, and the strikes have been so 
annoying, and the destruction of property 
so great, that they have resolved to move to 
some place where they will be better protected 
by the authorities, and where there will be 
greater competition in the labor market. 
... An alarming epidemic has appeared amoug 
horses in Carroll County, Ohio. Many have 
died, and the disease is extending. Cattle 
are also attacked. The loss thus far is $20,009, 
The disease appears to affect the kidneys, kil¬ 
ling the animals in thirty-six hours. 
Prof. Law, of Cornell University, and Dr.. 
Kerr, of New York, have examined the stock 
on Gray’s farm at Poughkeepsie, where rin¬ 
derpest was reported. They certify that the 
cattle had died of meningitis, and that those 
remaining on the place were free from symp¬ 
toms of rinderpest or other contagious disease. 
.Alarm is felt at the spread of conta¬ 
gious plenro-pneumonia in Delaware, near 
the Pennsylvania (State line, where the plague 
has appeared in a malignant form. 
Queen Victoria’s great Windsor park of 
14,000 acres yielded last year, from sales of 
produce, rents and venison fees, $25,000, while 
the expenses were $125,000.......It is rumored 
that, Morton- Fr 6 wen has at last succeeded 
iu making some kind of arrangement with 
the British government by which American 
cattle from the North-west can be exported 
to England for fattening purposes . 
Women constitute over a quarter of Ger¬ 
many’s agricultural laborers. Of 4,692,348 
persons engaged in agricultural work iu the 
last census, 1,238,080 were females.The 
Iowa Hereford Cattle Company had landed 
at Quebec last week seventy-three head of 
Hereford bulls.It is stated that there 
is a general movement and disposition in many 
sections of Kentucky to start creameries. 
....Many Kansas farmers are arranging to 
use hay and straw burners, to take the place 
of stoves for coal and wood........The Con¬ 
necticut (Senate has passed the bill providing 
a State bounty of ten cents to any person 
planting, protecting and cultivating elm, 
maple, tulip, ash, basswood, oak, black wal¬ 
nut, hickory, apple, pear, or cherry trees, not 
more than sixty feet apart, for three years, 
along any public highway. 
F. W. Downing, Ravena, Ohio, proprietor 
of Beach wood Creamery, (600 cows) says Jan. 
7, 18S5: “1 have used four of the leading But¬ 
ter Colors. I find Thatcher’s Orange Butter 
Color much the best, just what we want. H. 
D. Thatcher & Co., Manufacturers, Potsdam, 
N. Y.—Adv. 
- 
Over 150 Darrel* Potatoes per Acre. 
H. J. Baker & Bro., N. Y.:— I Send you 
this day one basket Jumbo Potatoes 1 raised 
with your Potato Fertilizer. 500 pounds to the 
acre The yield was more than 150 barrels to 
the acre. C. B. Wagner. 
Monmouth Co., N. J., Sept. 24, 1884. 
“Brown’* Bronchial Troches are 
widely known as au admirable remedy for 
Bronchitis, Hoarseness. Colds aud Throat 
troubles. Sold only in boxes. — Adv. 
CROPS AND MARKETS. 
The Mark Lane Express, reviewing the 
week’s grain trade, says: English wheats de¬ 
clined 6 d Friday. Extreme dullness prevails 
in the market. Sales of English wheat during 
the last week, 58,109 quarters at 22s 4d, 
against 53,190 quarters at 36s lid during the 
corresponding week last year. Flour 6 d 
cheaper. There is a limited business in bar¬ 
ley, and the tendency is weaker. Oats iin 
proved in price. The foreign wheat trade was 
wretchedly slow and prices against sellers. 
The prospects are of deeper gloom, if that is 
possible. 
The grape-growers of the lake region, and 
notably those of Euclid, where the Catawbas 
and Concords are produced to perfection, 
have examined their vines, aud report the 
fruit buds killed and turued black, and the 
vines so frozen that they will have to be cut 
down to the ground in the Spring. They also 
report the peaches killed along the lake shore. 
They are about as tender as the grape-vines, 
and a temperature lower than 12 degrees be¬ 
low zero is sure to be fatal to trees which are 
not most favorably protected. The tempera¬ 
ture in the lake region has been more than 29 
degrees below zero several times since the 1 st 
of January. 
-- 
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. 
Saturday, February 28, 1885. 
Chicago. — Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, “regular” wheat is S’-^c. lower; No. 
2 Chicago Spring, 4j£c. lower; No. 2 Red 
Winter, l%c. lower. Corn, >*c. higher. Oats, 
steady. Pork, 25c. lower. 
Wheat.— Weak. Sale* ranged: February, 7U^®75!4c; 
March, 74Vd(itiS'-,e April, Slay, 7fl ; v«. 
June, »3:>*f*834*(v No. i Spring, No 3 do, 
ole; No. i Red 7!)®#e-; No. s Reii, 70^*710 corn— 
Easy. Sales ran ko< 1: February, s7&<$311*c: March, 
SJUimRiije April, 3*®31}6C: Muy. 4(#t*4lC. OaTS- 
Sleady. Sales ranged: cash, 27£ic: Fibruary. 27Vde; 
March. '2.k *27<*c; Slay, o04*c. RYE—No. 2. We. 
Baulk* - Choice. 63®«5c Pork. —Steady: Cash, 
SW65iat2 70: February. *'2 65*1270 March, *12 62tt® 
*12 7u: Mav, $l2.HlJ4al2 9>: dosing at *12 S7»®12 90. 
Lard-Quiet fifties Tanged: cash, *M 87v06 90 Feb¬ 
ruary, #6«71*iii".90: March, «6.871*<8fi.!'0. Cattle. 
Market slow and weuk- 1,230 tt>. $4.4 75 1,250 to *,350 
tti *1 IfOtiVb Hj; I, Mill to 1.530 itis *5 5fi.« fi- COW* llUll mix- 
•a common, riaiiv. medium. 63*5oo; good *3 7 m a 
*4 25: stocker*, *8 4 1*410: feeders, $1 50: Texans, 
*3iSraJ7\ Hons. Good grade* rather stronger, 
rough pncklug, *t.2i*4.b',; packing aud shipping. 275 
to 400 lbs, *4. < 5*65.05. light, 14u to 2 lu lbs, *«a4.7n: 
skips, *8.50 »*t. SHEKP.-Market very dull, owing to 
poor quality of stock: Inferior, *247 50: medium, 
*2 7 (4324: good, .8 50»4: choice, |4ij*l?3: extra 
lambs at S3. 
St. Louis. —Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, No. 2 red wheat-is 4%c. lower. 
Corn, }£c. lower. Oats, ^c lower. Rye, lc. 
lower. Flaxseed, 2c. higher. Cattle, 10c. to 
25c. higher, Sneep, steady. Hogs, 30c. to 
40c. lower. 
Wheat. —Quiet; No. 2 Red, 83v$®384ye. cash ; Feb¬ 
ruary, 83%c March, 81c; May. 83 hc. Corn-S teady 
Cash, 164*0; February. 3<;a&c.: March, Se^C* April 
37 c-May, diR*e. Oats—F irm. C«»b, 80j*c. Muy, 3,4 »c. 
Rye—F irm at 04c Harley— quiet at tiOABoe. Flax- 
seed- Steady at * 1.4th pouk, 813021*. Bulkmeats— 
Long Clear, *6 20; short rib, *« JUaB 34; abort clear. 
55. l.ard Firm at 75 nti. Cattle - s.eudy 
with a fre. r movement: Exports, *5.15»fi: good to 
choice shipping, *5 3 uj,A! 0 - common to medium, 
*4.5U«u on, butcher's swers.*i®4 Ml: cows aud heifer.* 
at 13 1 .1; (Stockers at S3 30 *,4 feeders at *1 2.VA4 6J; 
corn-fed, Texans. *4<HU4.flO» sheep Oonlrooti to 
menlum, *2.io<»5MS: good to choice,*8.90<#i: extra at 
*4 23. Rods Firm; Yonkers at |l Wn4 50: pncielng 
at *4.41X04.65; heavy ut *4.65®4.V0. 
Boston, —Compared with cash prices a 
week ago. corn is X higher. Oats, Jic. higher. 
Grain.— Corn—I s in moderate demund at steady 
prices. Steamer Mixed, -it«$3ilSiC; Steamer Yellow, 
5?<*»7 Jac.: High Mixed, 57*53 and No Grade 54itw 
55c. per bush. Oats arc steady "ah'* of No. 1 White 
null barley, nt 41 V«rl3C-'. No. White. 40l*'«/4le. No 3, 
39.0*3isc. and or mixed at 3rf.fi,4 jc, p bush. Rvic, 
Small Rales at. it*74o. 4? bu»h. Dran, at *17,644 V 
ten tor Spring, and *is*is flu for wluter. Fine 
Feed and Ml dill togs al (W.WUSR, and Cotton Seed 
Meal. *26.50 ton to arrive, aud *27027 50 on the 
spot. Hay and writ aw—C hoice grades of hay have 
been In demand ui * 18 ** 1 9 m>r ton. fair to good at 
*itWfii'i. and common to fair at $H *15. Rye straw is 
lieid at *19 iiVOfor ehoien. Swale Hay at *lo *11. Out 
Straw »t *»gtl0 per ton. Hutteh—N orthern ereani- 
erv. extra, '.M029c, choice, fresh, ftj»'4T0: good to 
choice, 2*)®23c: Northern dairy, Franklin bounty, 
Vt extra 23'.b25c: New YorK and Vermont, choice, 
23 i 025 c; siraignt dairies, choice, m.»2he: fair to good 
do, liigilic. common (lu, io«*Uc: Wextern creamery, 
extra 32®31C:choice, angUue; good t> choice summer 
uiuKe M«2dc Western dnlry. choice, 18 »25c. full to 
good, 15 aIRC. Imitation creamery, choice. 31*2101 
ladle choice Itte'-Sie; du. common to good, U) *l4c. 
Cheese New York and Varm int, choice, Ul4<e> 1 
p r, Weste n, choice. Ill*'x 12c lair I0good,9<e< le. 
V tt. Eaas—Fresh Cape, 24c. Eastern. 230.4c: New 
York un i VI., 23 021 c Western. 22a^lc Provincial, 
13(0die. Hears Peu choice unnd picked, *1.60*1.75 *< 
bushel; large, do, du, *1,55 ud.th; medium choice, (1.45 
(01.50, do. screened. *1.25*1.85; Yellow Eyes. Im¬ 
proved *2.156*421): Red Kidneys, *2.1Ui*2.20: Canada 
peas. 80c®l. 10 per bush, for common to choice. 
Green Peas at * 1 . 001*1 40. Potatoes— We quote 
Eastern, 05«00c. V bush; Northern, 53,055c. 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
New York. Saturday. February 28,1865 
Bbradstupps and Provisions.—A s compared with 
cash prices a week ago, Ungraded Winter Red Is 54c. 
lower: No.2 Red is 2iste lower: No. 1 Red Is 3c. low¬ 
er. Cobn.— Ungraded mixed Is lc. lower: No. 3, is 
2)*e lower: gleumer mixed Is 2o lower; No. 2 Is 2c. 
lower; steamer white Is unchanged; steamer yellow 
la IJgo lower. 
Brans.-Q uotations; Marrows, *1.80*1.85: mediums 
at *150; pea at Sl.55fitl.fi0: red klonty at *2.25. 
turtle soup at *2 25 white kidney at *1 90. 
Pea*-G reen nre quoted at $1.'.’Oof 1.25 for new. 
Southern blaekoyed, $:) 6111*8 75 per two-bushel bag. 
cloou, Kkicd and tieai. clour Quotations: Fine 
#2.25 *2.BCh Superfine, s2.tiii'*S.OO: Extra No. 2 , $3 oo<* 
#3.40 Good to Fancy Extra State, *.V.l)>e4.90: Good 
to chft.'o Ettra Western *8.85®5.H)- common to 
fnlr extra Ohio, *3.0048.50; good. 3.80*4.00: good to 
choice. *4. to .u5.2.v on non m extra Minnesota, *8.006* 
uf.3. 0 clear. *3.50,i.4.hr ry.- mtxtur-. *8.5O<04Ot); 
(nralubts, *1.25(04.5 ■; patent, *4,1.56*534)* Baker's ex- 
l>a, *4 00(04.27;St. Louis common t- fnlr extra, *3.00 
6*8..5; fall' to good. $3.'-o*5; good to very choice, *4.10 
6tiX.4«: pH tout winter whent extra, #4.* m 5.60: city 
mill extra for West IdOIcs. $1 Ml- South Ameri- 
c», *4.t,:. (,:>. Socthrr.n Flour—C ommon to goon ex¬ 
tra, #3.15 “.4 20 - good to choice, do. 84.25*5 30. Buck¬ 
wheat Flour Selling at *2 406*2 #6 Ryb Flour— 
Steady; Sup lOoe at $3.40*03,35, latter lor choice. 
FKBn Quoted for lo lbs at *15 506*16 fit) to 80 lbs at 
? lt(,il5: 100 lbs at ai5ml7 Sharps at $iSfA20. Rye 
ed at #15<0lH. l.IN«*KD Oil. Meal—C ar lot9, *25.40 
tn bulk, *<1.40 sacked. Cohn Meal Dull Yellow 
Western #86*3.20; and Brandywine 83.20uH.25. 
Provisions. -Pom Tbo following aru the quota¬ 
tions #13.75,014 for new mess: Tamtiy mess, *14 ,ti4.50: 
clear back, *1550®ifi;extra prime,* 150 Dressed 
lloqa Sa'es at SDfe. for bacon to tie. for llitht averages 
and liUc. for pigs. Cut Mkats Pickled bellies, for 12 
n., average ut 64*ie. and 100 bxs. dry salted nboulders 
nt the Wrist for export ut 4 6.He, City pickled 
shoulders quoted at 5(*c: smoked shoulders, Blfcc: 
pickled hams. Ofa'aiOc; smoked hntns at lol«(a,l I5yc. 
Middle* Long and short clear, half und half, rcir 
February deliveries at Chicago, quoted at 6.50e. 
BeEF.—The Quotations are as follows: K.xtra indla 
mess. * 284 # 3 50; extra mess In barrels at *11 50(012; 
packet nt *12(011.90 for barrels; plate beet at *11 50 
6*12.M): family at #t3<*i4. Beef Hahn -Quoted at *20.50. 
with Utile demand. Lard Contract grade closed 
held at i 25e. March option sales at 7 I9 »7 22c: April 
option soles at 1 27,t?28c- May option sales at 7 84 
1 *; 37‘ .tune option soles at 7 rltffli.48o: JWly option 
sales at 7 IS *'49e-August, option sales at 7 56c. For 
city steam there ts (till some irregularity: one party 
offers 7 37H*. while others w 11 not go abm-c 7 10c- sales 
at 7 l.*e. and at 7 10c. Refined 1* dull; Continent 
quoied,70dc and South American. 1 80c. 
Grain— wheat No. 1 Sard to arrive,cost, freight 
and ln-uranee, ungrnded Winter red, 82*92440: 
No. 2 Milwaukee, to arrive, cost, freight and Insur¬ 
ance, 3'c: No. 2 red. *Aie for roll receipts In eleva¬ 
tor No 1 red, 97c,and white State, 9034 c- No. 3 red, 
March, SlfRf.i.s'K!do. April, rt'36(*89!*c; do. May 90& 
91c. do. June. 91'i<iV2c. ltw— Nominal at 72c for 
Western 70*74c Canada nud state Barley— 
Market quiet prtecs unchanged No. 2 Two-rowed 
Stute at fre afloat. Barley .halt Dull; prices un¬ 
changed. Gong-Market favors buyers. Ungraded 
mixed, 50'^6tr>2e No 8, 51c. steamer mixed, 5la51*4e 
in elpvator- No. 2 51 He o.r. 15,0 in elevator, steamer 
white. .*i5ov.5656e: ungraded white. 53*tC afloat- yel¬ 
low, 52c in elevator. No. 2 mixed tor February, 
.5iH'‘»-'>l*K, closing at rdqe- do, for March. 498JC, clos¬ 
ing at 49400 do. for April, 49'.),', closing ill l!4dc do. 
for May. IFia lMHc; do. for June, 4STR6 x4jc Oats No. 
3 mixed, 87o; No. 2, fWitjtaftK&c- No. 1, 88540 * No. 8 
white. » 8 c; No. 2, ds^a'tsq.e: No. I, 41c- mixed 
Western 336*3'Je-w hite do, 33ttr<t-lie; white State, 40<a» 
•tic: No. 2 mixed for February, 381038140 . do, for 
March, 86><i!0K64 a e do. for May. 36W'«365te. 
Bdtitcr —The quotations are: for Creamery, Elgin, 
«6c Pennsylvania extras, .Wo: do, prime 3t<033c: 
ereftmerv Western, best, ut Sic: do State Fall 
best ai do. Western, held at I7(s>2ue; State 
tlulrv, half firkins, tub-, and pulls, be,t, at 26e; 
do, "prime, at 23a'24c; do, good at 2I*22i*: no, fair 
nt 116619c. do. Welsh tubs.best. 2Kg?5e do. prime. 21® 
22c- do, fair, Pi<i*2i)e: do firkins and tubs, best, at 
2f'/*23c-do, prime at I9w20(!: do, good, at UdtlSe. do, 
Inlr, nt lifildfie: do. firkins, hc-t, nt *>®'21e: do, 
prime, nt lflc: do good, at 17 mI8c; do, ft.li- nt 14® 
leer Western Imitation creamery,choice, at 24®26c; 
(lo, prime, at 2IC; do. fair, nt ific. Western dairy, 
choice at 20e; do, prime at l7®l8c:do, fair, at 13® 
14e; do, poor nt l(i<*llc: Western factory, fresh, best, 
at 20<d>2!c; do, fair, nt 154617c do. poor, at 10®llc; 
grease, 9 ^ 666140 * rolls at is®16e. for ucst. 
At the Mercantile Exchange the following tele 
grams were received; From Philadelphia.—Market 
steady. Quoted, extra creamery, nt 35e : Western 
do, at 84®35c: York und Bradford, 27<®28c: dairy, at 
23®24c: receipts, l.soO. From Boston—Market dull: 
Extra northern ereuinery al 26®2 s e; Western extra 
do. 82-033e: dairy selected at 28®25o, From Chicago. 
— Market steady. Extra creamery at frHam extra 
dairy at26c. 
Cheese. The following are the quotations for- 
Fancy colored at 12lt,<-. do, white at i2Q(«12Hc; 
choice at 11447612c, (Job lots JSe): llUe for fine; 
good lots. MUlOltc fair Jots, 9<aiH6e; light skims 
ut 7®9c- skims nt 2uJRyc- Ohio fiats at. 1l46ll5tiC. 
for best 8 , 0 ’tic for fair to good; Pennsylvania 
skims. 8c. for prime: 24 ic. for good, nud l® 15 ac. for 
common. 
At the Mercantile Exchange the following tele- 
granm were received- From Philadelphia-Market 
quiet- eheddnrs ut ttfcattc fiats at MQe receipts, 
in) boxes. From Ronton-Market dull extra at 12® 
12i6e. From Chicago Market quiet* Cheddars, lie. 
Eaos.—The qnotutlon* are: State, fresh at mark, at 
•i856e.'Western. 23«28)6e- Southern, loss off.28®2o>6e; 
Limed, 19(019140. for State. 19c- for unhadtan. and 
IK®I9e. for Western; Imported, 184*184*0. 
At the New York Mercantile Pxehaugo the follow*- 
Itjk telegrams were received: Fioru Philadelphia— 
—Mamet easy quoted at 27<a27Vic.* receipts, l.0(». 
From Boston Market lower* quoted at 234t24)sC. 
From Chicago -Quoted ni 24?Hc. From Baltimore— 
Market firm quoted at 27c receipts light. 
Ijvr Poultry Chlokeu.v near by. ♦ B, I2e; do, 
Southern and Western, iPv»l2e fowls, Jersey. State 
aid iYunsylvnnin. net lb, l4(/*l*H': 'to Western, 14® 
Hue roosters, old 8 c turkeys,per lb , I 2 <<si4c.: ducks 
Jersey, New York and Penn 0 pair, 90o«t,*l.25: do, 
Western, per pair, 81 ) 0 . 0 * 1 : geese Jersey, New York 
and Peuusylvanla, per pair. *1 75,*2 do. Western, 
per pair *1.30(61.75; pigeons, per pair, 5t)e. 
Dkksmko Poultry.— Kroxen nt 14c. for turkeys, 
nud 12 * 6 ®'8c for chlukeus. Fresh killed—Turkeys. 
Philadelphia, I5e Jersey ut 14® 5c: State and West- 
ei n, nt 18 > no- ehlekcDs, Flillndelphla. spring, select¬ 
ed broilers, 24»25e; Jersey and Bucks ( ouuty, dry 
picked. I5«17e; do. btute uud Western, I8*®l4c; 
fowls, Philadelphia, prime, ttAlle; do. Jersey, 18c 
®14c, ducks. Philadelphia, per lb, 17*018c do Long 
island, I 60 IV. do. Smie and Western, per lb, 14® 
Ific; VVt-steru. Inferior. Hut 14c squabs, uhlte, per 
doe , *3.76(61' do. dark, per do*. *2.75 m,3. 
game-W ild ducks- cunvna. Western, per pair, *2 59 
«t*2 75: do, redhead, Norfolk, per pair, $i.25»1.50; 
wild pigeons at (hod.so per do*. 
CoTtOK.— The quotations according 10 the Ameri¬ 
can classification are as follows* 
^ p w 
Orleans Texas 
Uplands and Gull. 
Ordinary. 9M 
iltrlutOrdinary. 9 II 16 
Good Ordinary. lot* 
Strict Wood Ordinary. lot* 
Low Middling. II 3-16 
strict Low Middling. ills 
Middling.. 115* 
flood Middling.. II 1 1-16 
Strict Good Middling.. . 117* 
Middling Fnlr. 12M, 
Fair ..%. ■ I2t* 
6TA1.SKD , 
wood Ordinary.... 87* I Low Middling. hbk 
S'rlet Wood Ord. 9 9-16 | Middling. 11 
Fbebii Kuo its. Apples: Baldwin, per double 
headed bbl. *2,50 A3 Tit Greoulugs, #2 7i«*8. Cranber¬ 
ries Cape Cod, choice, per crate. *3 7504.25; do. pel 
bbl, *14®14 BO' Jersey, choice, per crate. *3.5004, 
Jersey, poor, per craie #3a,3.2' Florida oranges at 
*2.50®2.75 per box for best, aud *2.25<02.5U for poor. 
Dried Ftturrs. Th- following are the quotfttlou* 
for Fancy evaporated apples, 7V*e: cboteedo. 6)«<06«o. 
good do. 5)ii®6c; fancy North Carolina sun drwu 
91* 
9 15-16 
10»4 
UV? 
II 7-16 
IW 
11*4 
11 15-16 
124 * 
121 * 
13H 
914 
9 15 14 
1094 
HH>„ .. 
11 1 -I 6 
HH. 
11 D-16 
12V6 
121 * 
131* 
