410 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
JUNE 13 
font's of tl)c Week. 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday, J une G. 
The Schuykill arsenal, at Philadelphia, 
manufactures 8,060,000 rounds of ammunition 
and 15.000,000 rifle balls each year. Three 
millions are used for target practice by the 
rank and file of the army.For the 10 
months of the fiscal year, the Government re¬ 
ceipts show a falling off of $7,000,000 from the 
receipts of the corresponding period of last 
year .A law has been enacted by the 
Alabama Legislature fining a man $100 if he 
gets drunk out of his own house.An 
order has been issued from the Treasury that 
fractional silver be paid out instead of oneaud 
two-dollar bills, whenever practicable . 
.The San Francisco Board of Education 
asks for an appropriation of about a million 
dollars for the year begiu jiug July 1, and of 
that sum less than $70,000 are for teachers’ 
salaries, while over *43,000 are for janitors’ 
salaries.The United Presbyterian As¬ 
sembly, iu session at Topeka, Kansas, has 
passed a resolution in favor of prohibition... 
.The Western Union monopoly has swal¬ 
lowed the Southern Telegraph Company, with 
about 4,000miles of wire . .The President’s 
rule of denying himself to all visitors on Sat¬ 
urday will hereafter be followed by the heads 
of all the executive departments. This question 
was considered at Wednesday’s Cabinet meet¬ 
ing, and it was the unanimous opinion of the 
members that it was absolutely essential to 
the proper conduct of public business that the 
Cabinet officers should have one day in the 
week entirely to themselves. 
....A grave struggle between the employers 
and employed is under way in the iroq and 
steel works about Pittsburg, Pa., the head- 
center of the business, and also in other 
iron districts in the North. The work¬ 
men’s Unions insist on higher wages, and 
most of the men have struck to enforce the 
demand. They require the employers to sign 
the “amalgamated scale” of wages demanded 
by them; but most of the “bosses” have 
hitherto refused, and most of the works are 
therefore at a stand-still. Duly 11 firms have 
signed the “scale” at Pittsburg, and there are 
13,000 idle and 4,300 working. In the mills 
west of the Alleghanies, there are nearly 
65,000 idle. The number of workmen affected 
by the strike in the different States is as 
follows: Western Pennsylvania, 40,342: Ohio, 
13,053; Indiana, 6.284; Illinois. 15,594: West 
Virginia, 3,454; Wisconsin, 1,226; Michigan, 
1,000; Tenessee, 140; Kentucky. 151. Oue 
hundred iron mills aud 34 nail factories have 
shutdown....“Strikes” are common just 
now in all the manufacturing districts. At 
the great cotton manufacturing center. Fall 
River, strikes are chronic. On Thursday. 16 
mills started up; last Monday eight others shut 
down. In the dull season of Winter, employ¬ 
ers decrease wages; and every Spring the 
“hands” have a fight to put them up again.... 
... .The new assessment of property in New 
York places the value of taxable real estate 
in that city at $1,175,052,885. The real es¬ 
tate exempt from taxation is valued at $265,- 
864,690. of which $178,894,000 represents 
that owned by the city, $12,640,000 that, 
owned by the United States, $40 211.500 
that owned by churches, and $33,948,500 
that exempted by special acts . 
...Four colored men were admitted to the 
South Carolina bar at Columbia this week, 
including Whittaker, the West Poiub man. 
All passed a creditable examination . 
....Both Houses of the Rhode Island Legisla¬ 
ture have passed a ten-hour law—a triumph 
for the working people over the “monopolists’ 
ring.”.Jeff. Davis still thinks this 
country is going to the bow wows.The 
Canadian Pacific Railway proposes to shut off 
the American road* from immigrant business 
of the Northwest by refusing to take chpap 
passengers from St. Vincent to Manitoba. The 
American railroad men claim that, instead of 
diverting the immigrant travel to the Can¬ 
adian Pacific, it will be more likely to set the 
incoming stream toward Dakota and Minne¬ 
sota.. .An intense feeling of dissatisfaction 
toward the Dominion Government on account 
of the land and time regulations is spreading 
throughout British Columbia, aud secession 
is openly threatened. A telegram was sent to 
Ottawa last week stating that if an attempt 
is made to enforce the regulations , there will 
be open rebellion. It is reported that meu a re 
arming in several districts to resist, what they 
term the encroachment, and a feeling of in¬ 
security pervades official circles.. .... 
...The old “Liberty Bell” will leave New 
Orleans June 13fcb. aud reach Philadelphia at 
noon on the 17th, accompanied by a delegation 
of councilmen and two military organiza¬ 
tions from the Crescent City. 
.Several hundred employes of the Ameri¬ 
can Dairy Salt Works at Syracuse, N. Y., have 
struck for 19 shillings a day, the manufactur¬ 
ers offeriug 15. Last year the men got IS, 
with a promise of higher wages when business 
would afford it. It is claimed that large or¬ 
ders at profitable figure have since been taken, 
hence the demaud. Lately the demaud for 
Syracuse salt has decreased. Last year only 
7.000,('00 bushels were made there; while 15,- 
000,000 were produced at Saginaw, Mich. 
....... Decoratiou Day was more widely and 
heartily celebrated this year than ever before. 
Here some of the Grand Army posts and of 
the militia regiments marched past the home 
of General Grant, with lifted faces, bared 
heads and not a few tears, saluting tbeir pale 
comiuauder as he stood and gazed upon them 
from an upper window'. There was inevit¬ 
ably one thought in his mind and theirs—that 
by the next Memorial Day the Grand Army 
would have another comrade’s grave to deco¬ 
rate. Tbe General’s coudition appears to be 
stationary—there does not seem to be much 
prospect of material improvement; while a 
relapse may occur at any time.The 
hostility between President Diaz aud ex- 
President Gonzalez has culminated in an order 
adopted in the Mexican Congress for the im¬ 
peachment of the two Secretaries of the Trea¬ 
sury under Gonzalez, and also minor Treasury 
officials It is generally thought that Gonza¬ 
lez will try to vindicate himself. His friends 
are reported as saying that be will precipitate 
a revolution before submitting ....Abso¬ 
lute prohibition prevails in nearly 100 coun¬ 
ties of Georgia, and partial prohibition in a 
few more counties, leaving only 22 of tbe 13S 
counties in tbe State untouched.The 
Apache Indians, after committing a series of 
horrible outrages on miners and settlers along 
the Gila River in New Mexico, are reported to 
have scattered into different bands. A large 
number, mostly women aud children, have 
been captured; a comparatively few have 
been killed; a small band has made its way 
across the line into Mexico; others have found 
refuge in the mountain fastnesses, aud the 
troops are close on tbe heels of others. The 
settlers are fiercely exasperated, and threaten 
to “wipe out” all tbe Indians on the San Carlos 
Reservation, from which the incorrigible 
savages are in the habit of making their bar¬ 
barous raids, aud where they find food, shel¬ 
ter and protection after tbeir bloody work. 
_Reports of destructive and fatal ravages 
by tornadoes and water spouts come from 
various parts of tbe West and South, warn¬ 
ings of what must be expected as Summer 
advances—-11 out of 16 Bohemian emigrants 
were overwhelmed by a water-spout in Rich- 
man Canon, near the Republican River, 
Neb.; a terrible flood at Waco. Texas, inflicted 
damages to the amount of $150,000 on that 
place, while the injury to growing crops on 
the Brazos, together with the shrinkage in 
value, is said to approximate $20,000,000! 
probably a misprint for $2,000,000—specimen 
horror's.Tbe Shepard lawn tennis 
racket received first premium at the New Or¬ 
leans Exposition, a recognition which liwu 
tennis players will duly appreciate. 
Mm. Mary A, River more. 
A FEW years ago the health of Mrs. Liver¬ 
more became so impaired that she was forced 
to retire from the lecture field IIow and by 
what means she was restored to health is re¬ 
lated in an interesting letter to Starkey & 
Palen. of Philadelphia, dated Eeb. 1. 1884. 
From this letter we make the following extract: 
“Four years ago this spring, at the end of a 
very severe and exhaustive winter’s work. I 
found myself utterly broken down in health. 
My superb constitution had hitherto curried 
me triumphantly through every task I had 
imposed on myself. Rut T was now complete¬ 
ly prostrated with no power of recuperation. 
I could sleep but two or three hours of the 
twenty-four, aud titan only in a semi sitting 
position, because of a difficulty of breathing 
— suffered, exerucialingty from sciatica and 
neuralgia of the stomach - experienced the 
torment of indigest ion, and the train of 11.1 s 
that follow, teas harassed by optical illusions, 
which were a source of (treat discomfort . al¬ 
though /knew them to be illusions. My men¬ 
tal depression was OS Severe as my physical 
prostration. 1 believed the hopeless invalid¬ 
ism which 1 had dreaded had come to me, 
and my chief aim was to bide myself from 
friends and acquaintances who were afflicted 
on my account,.” 
“My physician recommended a trip to Eu¬ 
rope. The change brought no radical im¬ 
provement. While in England some Ameri¬ 
can acquaintances tnJd us of the Compound 
Oxygen and were enthusiastic in its praises. 
“My husband immediately ordered a Home 
Treatment. I used it for a month, punctilious¬ 
ly obeying the directions, before I began to 
rally. Then my return to good health was 
rapid , and since then I have enjoyed almost, 
uninterrupted perfect health and youthful 
vigor. I resumed work immediately, uud 
have assiduously followed the most laborious 
vocation ever since, although long past the 
time of fife when it is considered safe to toil 
severely and unremittingly.” 
In another letter. Mrs. Livermore says: “I 
have always and everywhere proclaimed the 
excellence of the Compound Oxygen. I could 
not live without, it, unless 1 abandoned all my 
work and simply existed, and I would rather 
die than do that." 
A “ Treatise on Compound Oxygen con¬ 
taining a history of the discovery and mode of 
action of this remarkable curative agent, and 
a large record of surprising cures in Consump¬ 
tion, Catarrh, Neuralgia, Bronchitis, Asthma, 
etc., and a wide rnuge of diseases, will be sent 
free. Address Dus. Starkey & Pa pen, 1109 
‘and 1111 Girard St., Philadelphia,— Ada. 
-- 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Saturday, June 6. 
A strange and fatal malady has attacked 
the cattle about Tuscaloosa, Ala. Those af¬ 
fected with it appear to be mad and blind. A 
prominent physician there thinks tbe malady 
closely resembles meningitis, but tbe fact that 
only cattle ruuning at large have been at¬ 
tacked would seem to indicate that the trouble 
was caused by their eatiug some poisonous 
growth ..Dr, C. W. Dubney, of the 
North Carolina Experiment Station, has dem¬ 
onstrated that the northern half of the 
State, especially the counties of Samson aud 
Duplin, is underlaid with a bed of genuine, 
unadulterated, 30 to 60 per cent. B, P. phos¬ 
phate rock, which is mined in such superior 
style as to put the price of the fertilizing ma¬ 
terial below the famous South Carolina phos¬ 
phates. From $1.50 to $2.50 per ton is tbe 
cost in the latter State, while that of getting 
out the other is said to average but 64 cents. 
So says a Charleston paper.There is a 
peach tree at Milton, Ga., which has hereto¬ 
fore borne single peaches, but this year they 
are all double. The tree is perfectly full of 
fruit.The risks of California sheep¬ 
raising are illustrated by tbe case of a farmer 
in the Suisuu Valley, who has succeeded in 
raising eight lambs out of 140. the rest having 
been devoured by wild cats and coyotes. 
At the convention of the Wool Growers’ Na¬ 
tional Association, at St. Louis, the other day, 
referred to editorially last week, it was stated 
that by tbe alteration in tbe tariff made in 
1883, $90,000,000 have been lost to the wool 
growers of America iu lower prices alone, to 
say nothing of the depreciation iu the value 
of our flocks. These figures are based on a 
comparison with prices in 1882. 
A project is on foot at Wells, Me., to start a 
rabbit ranch, where those animals are to be 
raised for the Boston market. The ranch is 
to consist of 200 acres of laud, aud the idea is 
to stock it at first with 1,600 or 2,000 large¬ 
sized auimals from the West.. Elliott & 
Son’s extensive fouudry aud agricultural im- 
pliment works in London, Out, Canada, were 
uearly totally destroyed by fire tbe other day, 
with their coutents of manufactured awl un¬ 
manufactured goods, together with the ma¬ 
chinery. It is estimated that the loss to tbe 
firm will reach nearly half a million dollars. 
....A partial potato famine and a sharp rise 
iu prices are threatened in England, as it is 
estimated that one half of the English potato 
crop has been ruined by frost. The to¬ 
bacco glut at Lynchburg, Va,, is unprece¬ 
dented. Waggons stand in the street all 
night, being unable to get to a warehouse to 
unload. The week closes with a million-and- 
a-half pounds on warehouse floors. Prices, 
however, have been maintained.The 
carnivorous plants known as Utricularia are 
to be extirpated from the ponds of the United 
States Fish Commission. It was found that 
they caught and destroyed iu large numbers 
the recently hatched fry.Last Tuesday 
200,000 bushels of wheat were bought at Tole¬ 
do, Ohio, for shipment by lake and canal to 
New York at 5’^ cents. The wheat w'as 
loaded into 10 canal boats and the fleet 
started for Buffalo on Wednesday. 
Australia is reported to have lost $44,000,000 
from pleuro pneumonia, introduced by a sin¬ 
gle cow that was supposed to have recovered. 
... .Reports of the appearance of the 17-year 
locusts are pouring in from uearly all sections 
of the country. A telegram from Philadel¬ 
phia, yesterday, says the sparrows are waging 
war against the army of locusts in the pablic 
squares, but they do not makemueb headway. 
It is not reported that the locusts are doing 
any damage, although the ground aud trees 
are covered with them.....A telegram 
from Lynchburg, Va., yesterday, says, tbe 
recent rains have greatly improved the crop 
prospects iu Southeast Virginia and East Ten¬ 
nessee. especially oats, corn, clover, and grass. 
In a few places w heat has improved, aud the 
yield will be increased over that heretofore 
predicted-. A telegram from Wilming¬ 
ton, Del., yesterday, says heavy growers of 
peaches are becoming uneasy over the great 
fall of young fruit from the trees during the 
past few days, supposod to he caused by too 
much foggy aud drizzling weather just as the 
blossoms were about to shed. Advices from 
Middletowu and Smyrna report many or¬ 
chards affected. Tbe present fall comes in 
advance of what is known as the regular 
“June drop” of imperfect young fruit, for 
which allowance is always made in estimates. 
. An organized band of horse thieves, 
said t< number nearly 50, are driving off all 
the Loises in Mills and Fremont Counties, 
Iowa, nearly a hundred head having been 
driven off in the past two months. It is sup¬ 
posed that the horses are taken to some of the 
numerous islands in the Missouri River, 
Officers have sought the thieves iu vain. A 
vigilance committee has heeu organized, and 
a lynching bee will follow the first capture... 
....Tbe Manitoba Farmers’ Union has sent a 
petition to the Queen asking Hat that prov¬ 
ince be permitted to control its own lands and 
railroads and to have an equitable tariff. 
The petition mokes serious charges against 
the Land Departmeut. at Ottawa, which, it 
says, is controlled by a ring under whose 
manipulations only two kinds of persons can 
get patents for land—those w'ho have influ¬ 
ence in the Dominion parliament and those 
who are williug to pay such sums of money as 
the agents of the ring demand. Such persons, 
the petition suys, can get patents whether 
their claims are good for anythiug or not. 
-» • * 
MARKET8 BY TELEGRAPH. 
Saturday, June 6,1885. 
Chicago. —Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, “regular” wheat is % c. higher; No. 
2 Spring, lj^c. higher; No. 2 Red >«c, higher; 
Corn, !^c. lower. Oats, steady. Pork, 25c. 
lower. 
WHEAT.—Active* Sales ruuged: June. 8ri'4®8T%;c; 
Jnlv. 87**''®9»‘*e* August, 89V4[®!1l04e: No- 2 Spring, 87 
CiSTqc: No 8 do, s7®79c- No. 2 Red. 95Lie : No. 3 
Red.sSfaHRiv.o. Cork—S alesranged: Cash. 4flA^a4Rtoe: 
June. 40W®47c: -Inly. 45M*40!«c; August. 45Ti®4fi>-i,c 
Oats —Soles ranged: Cosh 8Sltf®33u<\- .Tunc, 327* <i 
astir* Jnly, 37VaSSto'e: August. Ryk 
—Quiet No. 2. quoted at MeiitMQ'c BARLEY. 
No 2. at fiifiWie Pork.- Active. Ca*b, *10 3(1® 
$io :;v June. *10 SO® HM<>* July, *ln H5®in 47W: August, 
ilfl 45*10 571*. Lari>.— Quiet. Sales ranged- Cash, 
*0 5O*652W* -Iune. *8SOfiii-WHt July. *fi 57!4<a« fiO; 
August, *o 6.va.fi Hi i.kmb *ts. Shoulder*, *3 so® 
3Av Short RUr, *525&S77W: short Clear. *r. *n<ar> do. 
Cato.*: Market stroug-Active and a shade higher: 
shipping, t.r-ii to T,5t)0 Iba. at *5 4V*5 75- 1.200 to 1.350 
lbs, at *S lll®«5 40; 9*0 to 1,200 I he, ut *4 80(0.5 25: dis¬ 
tillery cuttle, at *4 90.45 85- corn red Texans, *125(54 
loo grass Texan*, at $3 00*4*70* cows and mixed, 
at *285014 4': stoekrrs, un i feeder*, at #8fi0®50\ 
TToos—Market active and firm and 5e, higher: 
Rauch and mi xed. rm»3!>3; parking mid shipping, 
*’i 1*0 04.15. light, *389*4 15- Skills, *3 S3 Ml. SUKEP 
—Market weak on common, but stronger on good, 
shorn at *2 4043 70: wooled, common to choice, at 
*3 75® 4 75. 
St. Louis. —Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, No. 2 red wheat is 1c. lower. Corn 
^c. lower. Oats, 5}^c. higher. Pork.l5c. lower. 
Wheat.—A ctive; No. 2 Red, ensh, *102- .tune. *102: 
July. *1 " 314 : AugUHt *101-1*. COBH. — Firm: Pash. 
44r(3UVSc: June. Ur- ,1 uly.45t£c. Augn*t,4'Ke. Oats 
—D ull- C6»b,82ix1fcS29ie.' June. die. Hvit, lower at 66c. 
Barley— Steady at 5n*TOe. Eons, llrm at f)J<®10c. 
Fr.AxsKKK — Steady at *1.75 Pork, Sin «7Q>. Bplk- 
MFATS— Long clear *5 80: short rib, *110(35 45: short 
dear, *5,00. Linn-Firm at **50*685. Cattle -Steady 
with a good demand for all desirable grades; native 
shipping steer* ut *4 Pm;* 30O: guild lull chcr-i'steers 
at. ‘St 50®4 81 : mixed butcher stock at *325®4 25 : 
tdoeker* and reederaat*8B0@*75' Colorado steers, 
*irar,ti25- era** Texan*, at S3 50® 4 25. Hoos.-Ac¬ 
tive Yorkers n *4<®4 13: puckers at S3 85® 4: butchers* 
at *4*4 in. snrr.r Steady and best mil Hon wanted; 
good to choice clipped natives at *300®4 00: com¬ 
mon at *2 50*8 85: Texans at *1 75*3. 
Boston Grain— corn in light demand stenmpr 
Yellow. r>0l4®3*c.* Steamer Mixed. Mvr.High 
mixed, 57 t<ra.’Siv No Grade. 55®.*(V, V bushel. Oats— 
Steadvsales, of No. 1 white nnd barley,4tUa*4*c - No. 
9 while. 4?(ii42lyi’i No. 3 4 lt* 4 ll*c, and nf mixed nt 
4fU*'«t4.’c. ner bushel. Rye—S mall sales al "93(*. per 
bushel. BARE nr- Canada West No. 1 choice extra 
light. 90*9*0 : No i lo, 93 ■ : No. 2 do. 76®8lV : 
six rowed Stale. 70®73c. aud two-rowed do. at so® 
use. BRAN At *18. * Inn for Spring, and * l (750® 17 for 
Winter. Fine Feed and Middling*, at *1#®18, nnd 
Cotton Need Meal. *?fi,75 * ton to arrive, and *27 50 
t.i.2-1, on the spot. PUiJKtvB.—NEW BUTTER -Northern 
creamery la®!! 0 c. ner It, for extra ; 1 ?'* 18e, for 
good to choice - Northern dairy New York and 
Vermont choice to extra. lfiaisc: fair to good. 12® 
15c: common. U<ai ie, tu-r a- Western creamery, 19® 
70c. for extra; 17®iSc, for choice: 1 kit hie. for com¬ 
mon to good imitation creamery, IStfHSc for 
choice: choice ladle-packed. iu®r.*e. per it: fair to 
good. B® 10 c; Choice dairy. ! 8 » 180 : fair to good do. 
at 10e«t9c. tier pound. CiiEKsr. - New- choice 
full cream, at 7®So: fair to good, 4(ai!c- and skims, 
9sx3c; eld Northern extra tOes good to choice. 7®8c* 
common to fair. 4(3 <9-' Western choice. 7iitHo* fair 
to good. <l®7o- common, 3*5e. per th. Euus— Fresh 
rat"-, lie- Eastern, lie: New- York ami Vermont, 13® 
Hr- Western, i- 3 ®PU*e: T-roylnclaf, 12® 13c. Beans — 
Choice Band picked pea.SI SIMtt 70 h bu,- large do, do, 
Si kv*i 80: medium, eholee. f4.SV4l.R0' do, screened, 
*1 30®1 40: vi'lluw e ves, Improved, *! !15®2' Red kid¬ 
neys,*! !«®2 Canada pens.90c®*l 13 * bushel for com¬ 
mon to choice. Green Peas. *1 IVAl 50. Potatoes— 
Eastern, 55®65e: Northern, 5S®G0c. 
- »»» 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
New York, Saturday. June fi. 1885, 
HaKAnsTCFFS ank Provisions. — A • compared with 
cash prices a week ago. No. a Chicago wheat Is 
V»c. higher: Milwaukee Is le. higher- Ungraded Win¬ 
ter Red Is obobanged; No. 9 Red Is *»c. lower. 
Coax. — Ungraded mixed Is 1’ie, lower; steamer 
mlXPd Is toe, lower: No, 2 Is qc. lower. 
M.OPR. FKK 1 ) **t> si kal Flour Quotations: Fine 
*?90®*40’ Superflnf*. S300®* '0« Extra No 7. *3 45® 
4 no- Good to Kanev F.xtra State, *3 *1*3 4 V): Good to 
Choice Extra Western, *4110*5 50' Common to Fair 
Kxtril Ohio, *S.|1®4 0 ! I- Omni. *1115*1 10; Good to 
Choice. S4 nOS*. 1 93: Common F.xtru Minnesota. S3 45* 
3 90: clear, *4.00*4 75- rye mixture, *i 00*4 30: 
strn'ghi. »l 75® INI- paleiil * 1.75*5 50- baker's extra, 
SI 25*8 00: 8t. Lonls comtDOU to fair extra. *315® 100; 
fair to good *4 w®5(X). good to very choice. Sim® 
540: Patent Winter Wheat extra at SI 70**540- 
City Mill extra for West Indies. *4 00**5 00; South 
America. *5**5 10. market ctoxlng dull. SorTHKBN 
Fi.ottr- Ccuntritm to good extra-*3 75(34 rv good to 
I’holee do, st *4 70*5 30. Rvf From Superfine, nt 
*.t 45 Corn Mkai. Quiet atidsteady. Bramlv 
wine, *3 40: quoted at *2 fkWi 3 40: Yellow Western at 
*7 00®3 35 F*ltl>. —Quoted for to to 0(1 Ihs. at *14 50® 
10 50* so Ihs at *19 00*1700: 100 lbs at *16 00*13 50. 
Sharps nt. *19*71. Rye feed at *17*18. 
Grain.- Wheat. No. 7 Chicago and Milwaukee, 
fftMUlWc- Ungraded Winter red. 80,(,91c No. 2. Red, 
rail receipts In elevator, '*1.0044 No. 9 Red for 
June 99L,f'i'*i OtlU- do. for July, IMt-to® 1 01QP do. for 
A-iPUSt *' OlH'WlwHf*: do, for September, *1 031g'®l 03: 
(in, for January. *' lOW-do. for February, *11101. 
ftvF-imll and nomliiaL Western and Canada.75®78c: 
Stale ?s®Kilc. Bari icy. Nominal. TUrley Malt.— 
Dull nnd unchanged, CORN-Ungraded mixed, 521* 
». S3 t*c s learner mixed, 5?44e, In elevator: steamer 
yellow 5«e Iu elevator- No. 2. MMMSto'c, In elevator, 
M®54Wd. anoat.39w*59Lje.1n store. M*53Qe. 10 or- 
rive, cost, freight and Insurance upgraded yellow. 
34U(»35e-low mixed, s?e alloat- high mixed, 54>^'c: 
No 7Wlilt-e, ,!| te to nrrtve- No 2 mixed for June, 
52to«584e- do, for July. 53-334740: do, for August. 
MwMtoc do. Tor September. 551**3.5140. Oats-No. 
» mixed, tunr No-‘A 39< 1 :(9(4c. In elevator, 33to®89c. 
47®43c. to anUvr. cost, freight uod insurance No. 1. 
at 4Ue- No S. white 44t(i*43c: No. 2, 40u. In elevator, 
to arrive, cost, freight and Insurance No. 1 quoted 
at 47c* mixed Western. :«14®41e- white do. 43@48e: 
white State 47@48e : No. 2, mixed for June. SBL*® 
39c; do. for July. 88H«S8MC; do, for August, 35®S5Hc. 
