494 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
iH ms 0t .tl )t H>vek. 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday, March 14. 
Gov. Pierce vetoed the Dakota capital re¬ 
moval bill this week, which defeats the 
scheme, as a constitutional majority cannot 
be had to pass it over the veto.The 
Womau Suffrage Bill has passed both houses 
of the Dakota Legislature, so that we may 
presently be able to boast of one State in our 
Union, where the reign of the tyrant man is 
entirely over.A Florida railroad com¬ 
pany, to which a large tract of land had been 
granted in 1856, and which subsequently al¬ 
lowed settlers to improve its value from 10 
cents to $15 an acre, now wants to seize the 
land. Mr. Van. Wyck in the Senate opposes 
the proposed forced sale .A great strike 
of men is in progress against a reduction of 
wages on the “Gould roads” in the West. The 
only favorable feature of the strike hitherto 
has been the restoration of the old rate of wages 
by the Missouri Pacific. This has encouraged 
the men, and they are resolved to stand out. 
Meanwhile the lines are blocked by loaded 
freight cars.Gen. Grant’s condition is 
still very precarious. Bulletins announce 
every morning how the “grand old man” 
passed the previous day and night. His in¬ 
domitable resolution keeps him at work on 
his memoirs, in spite of great pain and weak¬ 
ness. But very slim hopes are held out of his 
ultimate recovery. His death is considered 
merely a matter of weeks. Many of the State 
Legislatures now in sessiou are seuding in 
official congratulations on his restoration 
to the army, and cheering words. . 
....Ten thousand miners are on strike in 
Pennsylvania.The Connecticut House 
of Representatives has passed a bill permit¬ 
ting women to vote in any school district 
meeting, or to be elected on school boards ... 
The Departments at Washington are besieged 
by office-seekers, but they obtain very little 
encouragement...Secretary Manning 
has reduced the force in the Treasury Depart¬ 
ment by dismissing 42 persons, effecting a 
saving of $40,000 a year .The tower on 
Peeble’s farm, in Dinwiddle County, Va., 
built for and used by General Grant during 
the siege of Petersburg by the federal army, 
has been burned. The tower, 160 feet in 
hight, occupied a site opposite Fort Fisher. 
....England has rejected tha offer of the 
United States to negotiate a convention with 
the British West Indies.... A bill has been in-, 
troduced in the Minnesota Legislature provid¬ 
ing that males and females shall not be allow¬ 
ed to use or occupy the same Boor of any 
roller-skating rink in the State at the same 
time. The bill also provides for licensing 
rinks. All the preachers and moralists are 
down upon roller-skating ten times more than 
on dancing.Bayard has offered the po¬ 
sition of Assistant Secretary of State to John 
Cadwallader, of Philadelphia, who is a con¬ 
nection of Bayard by marriage. Cadwallader 
will accept.Epidemic measles has 
spread all over Montreal. The schools are 
almost decimated. If the disease is not 
arrested they will be closed.... 
Consumption in an epidemic form is decimat¬ 
ing the Osage Indians in the Indian Territory. 
.The chief body of Oklahoma “boom¬ 
ers” 800 strong, have started for Oklahoma, 
from Arkansas City. Kansas. Other bodies, 
it is said, will join them near Stillwater from 
Coffeeville, Caldwell and other points in Kan¬ 
sas, while contingents will also invade the re. 
gion from Arkansas and Texas. The move¬ 
ment has a powerful backing in Kansas, Ar¬ 
kansas, Missouri, Nebraska and Iowa, aud 
away dowu South, in Texas: the boomer or¬ 
ganization is reported to number 10,000 in all. 
A payment of $2 gives all the rights of an Okla¬ 
homa colonist.A large consignment of 
articles manufactured by prison labor in the 
United States has been seized at London, 
Ontario. The importation of such goods is 
against the Canadian law... 
Mr. Manning is the only member of the 
Cabinet who is not a lawyer.... .The 
Wild Horse Capturing Associatiou has asked 
the Nebraska Legislature for incorporation... 
.A bill introduced in the Illinois Senate 
prohibits the pooling of railroad earnings in 
the State.Sir John MacDonald an¬ 
nounced, at Ottawa, Ont., that the Govern¬ 
ment had received information that the lives 
of several prominent persons had been threat¬ 
ened, and that plots have been laid for de¬ 
stroying public buildings. 
The Illinois Legislature bas hitherto failed to 
elect a United States Senator. It looks as if 
it will adjourn without an election. In that 
case the Governor will appoint Logan.... 
In 1884 there was not a siDgle death from 
small pox in either New York or Brooklyn. 
Boston, Baltimore, and San Francisco had 
each one death; Chicago 2, Cincinnati22, Pbil- 
adelhia 35, and New Orleans 291. New York 
akes the lead in d eaths by measles, diphtheria, 
and whooping cough; Philadelphia in deaths 
by scarlatina and typhoid fever, while Boston 
heads the list with deaths by diarrhoea, 
having over 800 more eases than New York. 
.The Common Council of the city of 
Lemars, Iowa, bas formally petitioned Gov. 
Sherman to convoke the Legislature in extra 
session to repeal the Prohibition Law. 
In Portland, Me., 994 boys have voluntarily 
signed the triple pledge against intoxicating 
liquors, tobacco, and profanity... 
Abandoned cn«ea. 
A comparatively large number of the cases 
which Drs. Starkey & Palen, of 1109 Girard 
st., Philadelphia, are so successfully treatiug 
with their new Vitalizing remedy, are what 
are known as abandoned or “desperate” cases 
—many of them a class which no physician of 
any school would undertake to cure. They 
are, in fact, such as have run the gauntlet of 
experiment within the regular schools of 
medicine and of quackenj without, until be¬ 
tween diseases and drugs the patient is reduced 
to the saddest and most deplorable condition, 
and one for which relief seems impossible. 
No treatment can be subjected to a severer 
test than is offered by these cases The mar¬ 
vel is that Dr. Starkey & Palen can effect a 
cure in so many instances. If you need the 
help of such a Treatment, write for informa¬ 
tion in regard to its nature and action, and it 
will be promptly sent.—Adv. 
-» • » 
AGRICULTUKAL news. 
Saturday, March 14. 
Geary Bros , of “Bli Bros.” Stock-Farm, 
London, Ont., Canada, inform us that they 
claim April 2lst, next, as the day on which 
they will hold their spring sale of Polled 
Aberdeen-Angus cattle at Dexter Park. Chi¬ 
cago .It is stated that the French Min¬ 
ister of Commerce will ask the Chambers to 
repeal the law prohibiting the importation of 
American meat .......Austria and Hungary 
have decided to raise the duties on foreign 
grain.William M. Singerly’s Holstein 
heifer, Constance S., two years old, in Phila 
delphia, yesterday week, gave 72 pounds of 
milk. This record has only been beaten once, 
by Aaggie, Constance 2d, which gave 76% 
pounds in one day.The Mark Express, 
in its weekly review of the British grain 
trade, says: Unsettled weather prevented ma¬ 
terial progress in spring sowing. Native 
wheats were 6d to Is dearer, and dry samples 
very scarce. The sales of English wheat for 
the week were 50,028 quarters, at 31s 8d, 
against 54,506 quarters at 37s 7d, in the cor¬ 
responding week last year. Flour was 6d 
lower.The moss crop of Florida, says 
the Pensacola Commercial, is worth more 
than the cotton crop, and can be put on the 
market at lees expense The demaud exceeds 
the supply, and there is not a county in which 
this product is not going to waste. 
Buy the Best Farm Machinery. 
The best implement is alwajs the cheapest 
for the farmer. Tne Pacific Broadcast Seed 
Sower, for attaching to wagon, manufactured 
by the Whitman Agricultural Co., of St. Louis, 
Mo., is warranted to sow one fourth wider, 
more evenly than any other, aud to be superi¬ 
or in all respects. Persons desiring a good 
machine will do well in sending for circulars. 
This firm also manufactures the Celebrated 
Whitman’s Rebound Plunger Hay Press which 
is meeting <vith remarkable success through¬ 
out the country, having been awarded the 
highest prize by the New York State Agricul¬ 
tural Society for four successive years over 
Dederick and others. They claim great im¬ 
provements for this season.— Adv, 
Messrs.. David Ellis & Co., Boston, Mass., 
owners of several Creameries in Northern 
New York and in Iowa, where the milk of 
several thousand cows is daily received, say 
that close observation led them ‘to choose 
Thatcher’s Orange Butter Color several years 
ago and the satisfaction it still gives induces 
them to continue. H. D. Thatcher & Co,, 
Manufacturers, Potsdam, N. Y —Adv. 
'i lie Combination of Ingredients used 
in making Brown’s Bronchial Troches is 
such as to give the best possible effect with 
safety. They are the best remedy in use for 
Coughs, Colds, and Throat Diseases.— Adv. 
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. 
Saturday, March 14, 1885. 
Chicago. — Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, “regular” wheat is lc. higher; No. 
2 Chicago Spring, l%e. higher; No. 2 Red 
Winter, 2c. higher. Corn, 2c. higher. Oats, 
l%c. higher. Rye and barley unchanged. 
Pork, 28c. higher. Cattle, from 10c. to 30e. 
higher. Hogs, from 10c. to 25c. higher. 
Sheep, steady on poor specimens of each grade; 
somewhat higher for the bust sorts. 
Wheat. — strong hut unsettled. Rales ranged: 
March, 77078c: April. 77W78«$r; May. 80Jt>icini81$e; 
No. 2 Spring, 7I!A.«7»D4e. No 8 do, 68 ke; No. 2 Red. 
80c-No. 8 Red, 7'3o*78e CORN —active and strong. 
Sales ranged: Cash, 3*t'«4))*t" March, re%ia39c- April, 
89®H»ne: May lifted 4SUc. OATS Kirin- Sales ranged: 
March. 2*9*&3i}{c. April, May, 
Kyk — No. i, U3c. raw. ic* - No ?, t3c Pork. — 
Steady; Casii. *l266fo*l2 70- March, *l2B04il'ie'214. 
April,'*i2TO»i2Wi: May, *12.80tf»12 9#*. Lard Quiet: 
mien ranged: cash, *6 94t4@8 93: Maroh, *6 94ifi , *« 95: 
April, is »7ty07: May. $i 05«#7 Id. BlU.KMKAT8-Sln.ul 
ders, $4 IWaiS: Short rib, »0 3U<a835: abort clear, $ti Hi) <4 
*6 85 Cattle. — Market slow Exports. $5 50^590; 
cows and mixed, *2 40(0.8: stockers, #8 610480: feeders, 
8504 65: Texans, $89004 sO. Hoos.—Market strong, 
ugh packing, $4.4004.65; packing and shipping, 
& 
$4.6*04.95 light, $1.8004.85- skips, $3.25»*4.70. Sheep. 
Market steady; Inferior, *2 250275: medium. $303 50; 
good, 3 7504 25; choice, $4 2504.75: lambs, at $5. 
St. Louis.—Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, No. 2 red wheat is 1 higher. 
Corn, l%c. higher. Oats, lc higher. 
Wheat. — Firm. No. 2 Red. BS»sc: cash 8374c; 
March, S5a2'.<S574c' April, 85ttS*»85Vc Corn -Steady 
Cash, 331 ^ 099140 : March, S9c- April, S8Wc- May. 
39V<e. Oats—S trong. Cash. Sic - May, Sjc. Rv® 
—Quiet at 62Q.C Baulky—S teady at «Im8iV. Flax 
SE&D-S teady at 01.40. Hay Quiet and nnebuneed. 
Biian -Firm'at 63066c. Pork $12 13. Bulkmrats- 
I.nng clear. ** SO: short rib, *6 25*6 10 short clear. 
$s 65. Laud Firm at $6 85*6 90. Cattle -Market 
quiet. Kxnorts, *5.«3*5 83- good to choice ship¬ 
ping. $5.2005.60* fair to medium. *4.5005 00: Texans. 
*4 00x1.50. 8HKEr Common to medium *2.5ti 
03.25: fair to choice,$s..V)04 25. nous-Light at 
$140*4 30: packing at $4.4004.70; heavy at*4.8005.00. 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
New York, Saturday, March 14,1885. 
Breads tuffs and Provisions.— ar compared with 
cash prices a week ago, No. I Hard wheat Is 2o. high¬ 
er' Ungraded Winter Red Is lc, higher: No. 2 Red Is Jfc. 
lower. Corn.— Ungraded mixed Is ttfe. lower: No. 
8 Is Wc. lower: steamer mixed Is lie. higher: 
steamer yellow Is&^c. lower. 
floor. Fred and meal -Flour-Quotatlons;Fine 
$2.2502 ?5: Superfine, *2.53(33 00' Extra No. 2, $3 000 
$3.35 Good to Fancy Extra State. $6.5004.50; Good 
to Chrt’o Extra Western $3.85*5.60: common to 
fair extra Ohio, *9.1038,40: good. VR.MV&AOO: 
good to choice. $4.1003.25' common extra Minne¬ 
sota. t8.dda.03/ii clear, * 8 / 0 * 4 . 10 - rye mixture 
$3 50 *4.00 straights. $1.2504.61; patent, $1.7305.60- 
Baker's ext'n, *:* 1544.25: St. Louis common to fair 
extra. *3.00*3/5' fair to good. *. 8 / 0*4 90: good to vpry 
choice, *4 95*5.25 pntent winter wheat extra. *4.25 
05.50: city mill extra for We»t Indies, *4 60»4 65' 
South America *4/005. Market closing quiet 
80 c to run Flops— Common to good extra, *3.01* 
4 23' good to choice, do. $4 nan so. Rye Flour Su 
p rQue at *3.40*9.85, latter tor choice. Buck¬ 
wheat Flour-S elllug at $7 CO02 85 Feed Quoted 
for to lb, nr St^'-t/Vr lb. ;v. 80 lb 73.*«oc- 1001b, 
8.4095c; Sharps, 95c**i 0(1 U.vc fed. «0e. Pork Weal 
Yellow Western, $58- ?>: and Hrandvwine *3.2048.25. 
Grain Wueat—N o. 3 Milwaukee. «R4fi0HS4ec! No. 
1 Hard Duluth. 994>'it*l 00; ungraded Winter red, 
093c NO 8 red, H63»,e No. 2 rod, 70Wc, In store: 9 c, 
In elevator: State white, ns®931*c, delivered- No. 2, 
red March, W-vABtQe do. April. 1111*0927*0: do. 
May •.l;>W*94kfC. do. June 9444',tt.5J*,e: do. July. 941* 
09356c. Rvk - Y4c, delivered for Canada and State 
Baulky.— Choice ungraded Canada at 89c: Western 
at 79c, Barley .Halt -Quiet. Corn - Ungraded 
mixed, so*.Y2e No 3, 51dc*l5*u: steamer mixed. 52 
052360. for March 1 steamer yellow, MtoMQc. in 
elevator: No. 2. fiiStj-afiHgo, In eievntor: ungraded 
white, 583*c afloat- steamer white. TS«,c de¬ 
livered: No. 2 mixed for March. do. for 
April, 51540520: do, for May, 51 * 40320 -. do, for June, 
5IWi*3l9ie Oats No. 3 mixed, 87Qc; No. 2, 381** 
HH'-io, In elevator; No. 1 3 sq,c: No. 3 White 3i^c; 
No. 2 at 88 ( 40 : No. I at 403*0: mixed Western at 
3*us39C' white do, at 39a4lC: white State, 39®4tC No. 
2 mixed for Mar"h. 39@38Qc, do. April, 37}*'*3796c; 
do. May. 37340377j!C. 
Beans. -Quotations are: Marrows, *1.70: mediums 
at $1 4001.45: pea at *1.50: red kidney at *2.10 
®*2 15; turtle soup at *2 4002 50: white kidney at 
*1.75. 
Pka 6. —Southern blackeyed, *3 6003 75 per two- 
bushel bag. 
Barley —Western at 78c. 
Malt Is slow, 
provisions. -Pork-The following are the quota¬ 
tions *13.50*13 75 for mess: *13 50*14 25 hr family 
mess' *150.6 for clear back and t 1 for extra prime. 
Dressed Boos Saies at 6j*c. for bacon to 6?*c. for 
light average 0 and 7c. for pigs. Cut Meats Light 
smoking bellies at 'kc; pickled ham*. 9!4«»9?hc: City 
pickled shoulders at 5->g*5**c: smoked shoulders, 
t>v*e: pickled bams, 6409-40 smoked barns, 103401 ic. 
Middles Long and Abort clear, half and half, for 
March delivery at Chicago, quoted nt 6.7 '6c. Ufef.— 
Extra India mess. *220 3 50; extra mess tn barrels at 
*1150*12 packet at *126*12.50 for barrels: plate beef 
at *11 5001230: family at *13*14. Beef Bams are 
quoted at *20.50, with light demands. Lamp Wes'- 
erti steam fur prompt delivery at 7 320 c. contract 
grade closed offered at 7250. March option closed nt 
7 2I<*7 '23e: April option sales at 7 2707 28c May op¬ 
tion sales at 7 34 *7.37- June op'lon sales at 1 4>c: 
July option sales at 7 43 * 7 510- City «tuam Is stendy 
at 7,2ue Continent quoted, 7 50c. aud South Ameri¬ 
can, 7 8t'c. 
Butter. Quotations - New butter—Creamery .Elgin 
bcHt,32c: do. Pennsylvania, best 31082c, do, West- 
orn, best, 30c- do. prime 2102 -c: do, fair at 20022 c: 
Stare dairy, half tlrklns, mbs be*t, at 30c. Old 
butter-Creamery, State, Fall made, at i?«i25c do, 
no,firkins i7»'2t!*e do Western, June and July at 
I2i*17c: State dairy tub*, beit at 28*2 c. do. line at 
19«Vlc do. good, I50I7C, do. fair, 12014c: do. at 00 
lie: State dnlrlrs, firkins and tubs, host, tic do, fine 
IH 02 HC. do. good, i.Vfclic: Slate dairy, dr kins, fine, 
20 c: jo p.,od, I** 9e: do. fair, 15017 c: do, common, 
120 14e: Western dairy, fair, U^*@lH»c. 
CHEESE. The following are the quotations for: 
Fancy at l' 20 ! 2 tye; choice at ll 0 U(*c; good lots 
9010c fair lots, 8*9c. 
Kaos.—The quotations are: State, fresh at 26>ic: 
Western. 26c: Southern, 25>*®26c. 
At the New York Mercantile Exchange the follow¬ 
ing telegrams were received: From Philadelphia— 
—Market easier quoted at 23025vto.; receipts, 1,200. 
From Baltimore -Market strong, quoted at 27c: re¬ 
ceipts moderate. From Boston—Mnrket easy at 
25®26c Front Chicago—Market firm at 190l9^c. 
From St. LouH—Market active* at. 18c; receipts, 1,300 
i 
cases: shipments east. 30o bbl. From Cincinnati— 
Market tame nt22e; receipts, 650; shipments, 850. 
Live Poultry Chickens, near oy ♦ ft, 'Oailc; 
do. Southern and Woncrn, lOuille. fowls, Jersey. 
Htnte and Pennsylvania, per lb, i2c: do Western. 
Il 0 l 2 e: roosters,old 7c turkeys, per lb ,10*l2c. for 
beat and, Hg.9i\ for poor; ducks, Jersey, New York 
and Puna a pair. 800 * 1 .12. do, Western, per pair. 
70c®*l: geese Jersey, New York and Pennsylvania, 
per pair. < 1-7802 25 do, Western, per pair *1.50® 
1 . 73 : pigeons, per pair. 45c. 
Dressed Poultry.—F rozen at lie. for turkeys, 
and '3c for chickens. Fresh killed—Turkevs. 12 ® 18 c: 
chickens. Philadelphia, spring, selected broilers, 24c 
t*26o; Jersey anil Bucks County, dry pinked. 15® 16c; 
(in, state and Western, 12®. 8 e; fowls. Philadel¬ 
phia, prime, H01»o; do. Jersey, He, ducks, Pblla 
delimit* per lb, 17 ®lHe- do. Long Island, 1n*18c do. 
Si nit* and Western, tier lb, Ifl®l7e; Western. Inferior, 
11014 c squabs, while, per doit , *8.75®4; do, dark, 
per dor., < 2 . 7503 . 
Game- Wild ducks, canvas, Western, per pair, *150 
®s 1 • JO: do, redheud, Norfolk, per nulr, *1.5061.75 
western nt *'0123; Mallard at MX*Pile, tor Norfolk, 
IO05OC. for western; wild pigeons at *1®1.50 per doz 
Cotton —The quotations according to the Ameri¬ 
can classification are us follows: 
New 
Orleans 
Uplands, and Gulf. 
Ordinary.. 8 15-16 9 8-16 
Strict OrIInary. ‘-rit* ,, 
Good Ordinary . 10 8-16 10 1 16 
Strh'i Good Ordinary. 10 9-16 10 18-16 
Low MlddlUng. 10% IB* 
Strict Low Middling. 11 MJ }} 6-1» 
Middling. 11 8-16 II 1 -I 6 
Good Middling. 1149. 
Strict Good Middling. II 9-16 H 18-16 
Middling Fair.. H 16-JJ H ,iH5 
Fair...... ... 12 9-16 12 18-16 
stained. 
Good Ordinary ... 8 9-16 I Low Middling.... Ill 1 16 
Strict Good Ord,. UQ | Middling,....... 1011-16 
Kukmh Fruits. Apples: Baldwin, per double 
headed bbl. *2.79 *8 24: iJroonlngn, *2 15®8. Cranber¬ 
ries—Cape Cod. choice, peretate, *3 ,r,®4.25; no. per 
l»bi, *14014.50' Jersey, choice, per crate. $8.50*4: 
Jersey, poor, per craro, *803.25: Florida oranges at 
*2.3002.75 pur box ror buvf, and *2.23®2.SU for poor. 
Dried Fruits.—T he following are the quotations, 
for Fancy evaporated apples, 7Q071«c; choice do.fits® 
6Jkc; common to prime do. 506c; fancy North Caroll- 
Texas. 
9 8-16 
99ti 
III 7-16 
10 13-16 
in* 
11 3-16 
II 7-16 
1149 
11 13-16 
12 3-16 
12 13-16 
na sun drlPd sliced. 41^0464°.: choice do., 3?4®4c: 
choice Vlrvlnla,30714c: choice Tennessee course cut, 
SQ'SSQe: Kentucky do. In barrels, 34j®4r: extra fanvy 
North Carodna neded peaches,IH 4012 C; fancy do,1019 
®lic choice do,oagQiC fancy Georgia 9*4 t me: eholce 
8V9®9c: nnpeelod hab'es. »M'* T T'Sa•* unpeeled quarters 
616070; State plum *. lOJ-tf® G e. Dam suns, «19’»9e choice 
pitted chernes 12(6ai$c prime do. IHfOtff’c: evapo¬ 
rated raspberries '7c sno-drtoddo. 26c; blackberries, 
lOaiOH’e- huekloberrles 13®i8Qe. 
Peanuts. -The quotations are: 11905c. for extra 
and fancy hand-picked ; farmers’ crudes nt ojA'aSSJc. 
Rav and straw. The quotation* are as follows. 
Choice bay. t«Ct good timothy, SMtpoo: medium, 
75«80c’ shipping hay 70c clover mixed, 700731*. clov¬ 
er, fill i65o. Long rye straw, 85090c: short rye straw, 
65®70c; oatstiaw. 50055c 
Hops.—Q uoted: New 16®l7e. for best: I3«l5c. for 
good to prime: ’0012c.for low grades: old at 8® 10c: 
Pacific coast at 10® 14c-, 
Rice —Quotations' Carolina and Louisiana, com¬ 
mon to fal", at 4<n@SQ'c: good to crime at 
choice at 5Vs®63£e: extra head at rs<i <*6S|c- Rangoon 
at4bJ‘WC' duty paid, and 26&«234e in boud; Patna at 
5.tg *5Qc: Java ai 
Seeds. For clover quotations are as follows: 9c. 
for crime Western, Hge. for ebotee, and 8Qe. for ex¬ 
tra choice Timothy Is quoted at *1 5501.65. Linseed 
1 r quoted nt SI 8614 cash. 
Sugar.—T he quotatlonsure: 
Cur loaf. *S'’' Crushed. 644 c: powdered, 6b4®6Qc; 
grunulnted, 6 l-lfiUClfi mould * A,” 6c confectioners’ 
•‘A,” StJi' stan'lnrd "A." 55jj®5 Mr; otT A, 34^051^0: 
white extra “O.” St^al^e- yellow extra “C,” 5@5MtC: 
C,” 44408c: yellow- 4t*.vPQe. 
Vegetables.—' The quotations are for:—Potatoes- 
Rose, Maine, per double-headed barrel. *2; Rose, 
*1.75*2 rot State * bbl.; Burbank ,$1 7V**I 87 49 bbl; 
Peerless, at $1,50 V bbl, llu double headed barrels. 
25e. should be added to the above quotations.) 
Bermuda potatoes nt *5 25®$5311, Sweet potatoes 
at *4 75<g*s. Beet r, per hbl , #1 2501 F(J, CarJOts Iter 
bbl.. *10125. Gabbaves-Florida, per bbl. *2 50®3: 
old, per no. at * 8010 . Celery, per do**ti bunches. 
75e<fl!*l. Green Peas—Florida, e.hol 'c, per e.rnie, $3 50 
04 So, Kale —Norfolk. Neoteh, per bbl, at *3 25. On¬ 
ions—Prime white, per bbl, *4 30*5 50* yellow, do, 
at *7* 350: red bulk, per bbl, 13*3 fO, Radishes— 
Norfolk, per 100 buueties, at 1 1 «" Spinach Norfolk 
per bbl, $4a>3 kqun«h-Marrow, per bbl, 75®*7c; 
Hubbard, prr bbl, nt *1,50fli2. Turnip* Rns*t« Cana¬ 
da, oer bbl at 9 e®*i.- P.usMn, Long Island, per bbl, 
*'i3il.l2 Tomotoes - Floridachoice, per bushel crate 
At *1 50c® *2. 
Wool -Nmv York. XX nhlo, 81c; X Michigan, at 
30e- detain" at 37 »97i«o scoured Texas at 35>*0.37c. 
scoured sorts at SOwS'e: combing nt T-’c; M*oured 
California at 35(ft40c;fall Texn* at 12*1 iQc Spring 
do. at 180 16c" uumerohuntable fierce at 2'e. 
Boston. - Quotation* areiFlueOhlofleecra.RtiAafiBc, 
for XX and XX and above. Low wool* are In hotter 
request, and there Is something doing In medium. 
Fine Ohio aud Michigan delaine is rated at 34ivj36c. 
There is a fair demand for unwashed wools. 
Philadelph'a.— The week’s sales foot up 1,000,000 
pounds at unchanged prices. 
LIVE STOCK MARKETS. 
New York, March 14,1SS5. 
BKttves. Total receipts for the six days 8.PG head, 
against 10/fifi head for the corresponding time last 
week. Sales.— Lancaster Couu'y. Pennstlvanla 
steer*, M96 t». do. 1.4*1 V, «•. S3 do, l, ft, * 1 * 0 ; 
Stags, 1,180 It, *4 8v bulls, 1,170 ft, *4 2.6: Cherokces, 
919 tt . *4 85 St Louis steers, 1,746 !»'. $6 '25. do. 1,09(5 
*5 75; Chicago do, 1,779 ft »H'25- <10,1,178 ft *4 50; 
do, 1,164 ft, at *5 S3: Pennsylvania sierra, l.-'V) ». *5 60; 
do. 1,358 lb *3 80 oxeu. 1.620 ft. «l 10: nicer*. 1,000 ft. 
$4 81Q: state do, 1,211 ft, *6; Ohio do. 12 / ft, *5 lO; 
Staes. l.7to ft. $4 2> do, l/tki ft, $4 75 nilxnh Western 
steers. 1.483 ft, $6- do, 1,238 ft, *5 rtu. Slieh'gan oxen, 
1,640 ft, *4 60: do. 1.737 ft. *4 95 do. 1,970 ft *6: do. 1885 
ft. *5 25: hull*. 1.183 ft. 4Hc; Buffalo *tecr*, 1,1 fir. ft, 
$4 95; bulls. 1,537 ft, lc; do, l.SOo ft, 4?i0' Lancaster 
Couutv. Penufylvunla cow*, Lit. n, sqc. 55 n>; 
Chicago s’eer», t, 1 *'! ft,*62 ; do, V807 ft *6: do, 1,295 
ft, *5 47, Illinois “teer*, 1,197 ft. so 20®3 50. 
Calves. Fair to choice, fil 4 ®*e. Country dressed 
In light supply and firm nt. yesterday's quotations. 
Sheri* anp I.amus Sups: Ohio sheep, 12* ft. *6; 
do. 121 ft, $5; do, IlfJ ft, 4lb,e; Michigan do, 91 ft, 5c. 
Indluua sheep, R9 ft. 4'so: do. 92 ft., tfifie Mteblvan 
lambs, 66 ft, (*.'Q ( .. Pennsylvania sheep, lt5 It. 5‘4c; 
Pennsylvania lambs, HI ft.SQC Slate she(*p 115 ft, 
fie do, 94 ft, 5tfie* do, 73 ft, dSic do, 87 ft, l»jo' State 
lambs 86 ft. 6Qci State lambs, 67 ft., r.Aje Pennsyl¬ 
vania do, 7u ft,6e: State sheep, 91 ft, 5e: do, 100 ft, $5; 
and 173 do, 91 ft.44«c'. 
Boos.-Totalreceipts for the six day* 18**0head 
against Si/fts head for the corresponding time last 
week Market nominally steady rit yrstei day's quo¬ 
tations, Country dressed in better demand, out 
prices unchanged, with heavy to light selling at 5c 
®7i*c- 
SEND NINE CENTS IN POSTAGE STAMPS TO 
E. & O. WARD, 
PRODUCE COMMISSION MERCHANTS, 
for Circular giving Important advice about ship¬ 
ping produce. Also containing recipe for pre¬ 
set wing eggs, Established 1845. 
No. 270 Washington Nt„ New York City. 
SALESMEN Wanted hy the introducer* of Ranco- 
cas Raspberry. R O. Chase v Co.. Philadelphia, Pa. 
Salary and expenses pal 1 The bualne.iK easily learn¬ 
ed. Growers of a Full Line of Fruits & Ornamentals. 
COOn AND PURE 
for vour garden, lawn and farm. Our NEW CATA¬ 
LOGUE no3v ready, aud will be sent free to all who 
apply Il ls a be . ui lliil l»ooU. lull <11 l|i*it*rr*»- 
(foil one eoinrtd fi'ait, end contain* a vast amount 
of information Tor the gardener and farmer, a II our 
seeds are grown und selected with the greatest care, 
and we l"vltp market gardener* and other* desiring 
l>ur<* nml good i«eed to *emi for our hook at enco. 
Having Kold «eed tiiurii'rn yrsr*, wi - kuiovvvhat 
'he gardencs want. We Offer the best SF.isflDRILLS, 
GARDEN PLOWS, it KM CULTIVATORS. HORSE 
HOES ETC . at special rates to gardener* und large 
grower*. Original Introducers of the LOUISVILLE 
DRUMHEAD CABBAGE, the best variety ever grown. 
K will pay you to send for our Catalogue before buy¬ 
ing seeus or tool- . .... 
MENDENHALL & CO., Indianapolis, Ind. 
Novelty Bone Worts Phosphate. 
and Pure Ground Bone. Manufactured ut the 
Noveltv Bono Wor n. West Troy, N. V. Estab¬ 
lished 'Jti 1360. This Is a Pure Bone Phosphate, 
making It a complete Standard Manure. Send for 
prices and circulars. 
William B. Williams, 
Genrrnl Agent, West Troy. M. Y. 
UnUf to lie U**» mlful, remove freckles, pimples. 
nUIT blemishes,Instructions,toilet reripestr*e. send 
stamp for pamphlet. Dr. Fleming, 286 W. 55th st., N. Y. 
n Cents I SHEET MUSIC } K M ze 
best pa oer, sold cl*'where at from 
U Copy! 180c to *1 each, sold hy us nt only 5c. 
per copy for any pl*'C(' on list. Largvftl list to select 
from. Send six cent* for sami.le ropy. 1 Dialogues 
fret*. Wit 1.1 AM LAV A I'O . 
14 Ptulo r*ircH, Ulilcago., 111. 
WB1.COME t»ATN. -ln bags or three bushels, 
1 per bushel White Scboenen, tn bags of 2Jg bushels 
5 cents per bushel. Bags 25 cents each. 
J. TALOOTT A fsON, Rome, N Y. 
