426 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
JUNE 20 
fffrars of t!)c Week. 
sine die yesterday.Secretary Bayard 
has returned to Washington, and was at the 
State Department yesterday. 
The Scottish Land-league of America, re¬ 
cently organized at Chicago with Rev. Dun¬ 
can McGregor as president, held a large pub¬ 
lic meeting lust week to make known the 
oppression and suffering of the Scotch croft¬ 
ers at the hands of their landlords. The 
league seeks to establish branches all over the 
country, and hopes to emulate the work of 
the Irish Land League in helping their op¬ 
pressed countrymen at home. 
In France reports hitherto discouraging in 
relation to the condition of grain have im¬ 
proved somewhat, aud are now termed “mild¬ 
ly satisfactory.”...,. 
In Italy April weather has been too cold for 
the rapidly-growing crops, but no serious dam¬ 
age has as yet been done. The agricultural 
press of Italy now see no reason, on the basis 
of present conditions, why last year’s under¬ 
average should not be made up duriug this 
season, The cereal crop is reported at 86 per 
cent., and tobacco at 48 per cent., 100 repre¬ 
senting an average crop. 
In Germany, although crops are reported 
backward, the feeling seems generally of a 
satisfactory nature. In Austria the wheat 
average is 113; rye, 106; barley, 110; oats, 
119; maize, 1 tO; and wine, 94.. 
Data from Russia are meagre. Reports 
from the interior state that the growing crops 
have greatly suffered from drought and late 
frosts... 
In ludia 26,000,000 acres are reported in 
wheat, with a total production of nearly 
7,000,000 tons. In 1S83-S4 the total export of 
Indian wheat was 20,956,495 hundred-weight. 
More than half this amount went to England, 
and nearly the whole of the remainder to 
other European countries... 
The cotton and corn crops in the Memphis 
district, embracing West Tennessee, North 
Arkansas, North Mississippi and North Ala¬ 
bama, present a flattering outlook. The 
largest yield of corn ever known in the dis¬ 
trict iB anticipated. 
The aggregate wheat yield of Michigan is 
estimated at 25,250 ,U00 bushels. The southern 
counties promise an average yield of 17% 
bushels per acre, which is a fourth of a bushel 
better than the average for the past eight 
years. The northern counties’ yield may 
reach 16 bushels, or uearly a bushel more than 
the average of the last eight years. 
.... The milk supply of the city Is uo doubt of 
excellent quality as a general rule, but it ap¬ 
pears from the complaint of a New Jersey 
dairy farmer that producers are suffering 
from depressed prices. Whether this is due 
to organized oppression by city dealers, as the 
farmers claim, or to an overabundant supply, 
as the milkmen assert, the fact remains that, 
#25,000,000 invested in cattle and laud devoted 
to this business is earning a pitifully small 
interest. The man who owns a city milk 
route and whose plant consists of a horse and 
wagon, upon which there is a chattel mort¬ 
gage, has probably made as much money dur¬ 
ing the last six months as the farmer with 
28 cows aud a hundred acres of land. 
_It is said that the permanence of the Cal¬ 
ifornia mountain forests is seriously threat¬ 
ened by the herds of sheep and cattle which 
are driven into the mountains every year to 
graze. From the foothills to the highest 
meadows, every blade of herbage and every 
seedling, shrub and tree is devoured. Young 
trees are barked and mined, and the roots of 
grasses are trodden out by the hoofs of ani¬ 
mals. The life of any forest in which all 
young trees are destroyed, is limited to the 
lifeol the full-grown trees which compose it, 
.The birds of Louisiana, papers of that 
State say, will soon be exterminated. The 
colored people there not only make birds an 
article of food, but have begun to use their 
eggs for the same purpose. The eggs of part¬ 
ridges, robins, wrens, mocking birds, and all 
others that they can get their hands on, are 
eaten.Iowa has 35.9 cattle to the square 
mile, a larger number, it is said, than any 
other State.Colorado expects to raise 
corn enough this season to feed fat 30,090 
steers— say 1,250,000 bushels of corn . 
....The eight tons of cherries shipped from 
California to Chicago a few days ago sold at 
an average of 15 cents per pound, lhe cost 
of placing them in Chicago is put at nine or 
ten cents a pound. This leaves the grower a 
profit of five or six cents per pouud, or $100 a 
ton. The San Francisco Bulletin remarks: 
“While this profit is not a large one when the 
cost of cultivation and the value of the land is 
taken into account, it is still a better profit 
than is ever derived from wheat farming.”.. 
.. ..Beef is now slaughtered in Omaha for the 
Eastern markets. The first car-load from 
that point reached Boston a few days ago, 
making its 2,000 miles journey in six days.... 
.... It is estimated that 4,000 Danes will come 
to this country this year, most of whom will 
settle in the Northwest-. Most of the immi¬ 
grants from Denmark are farmers in good 
circumstances. The majority own farms, and 
when they come to this country they bring 
considerable money with them.Wil¬ 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday, June 13, 
An examination of the Washington monu- 
ument this week confirmed the report that 
the cap stone had been shattered by 
lightning. A break was made by the light¬ 
ning on the northeast corner of the cap-stone 
and four fragments fell to the ground, where 
they were found nearly 40 feet from the base 
of the monument.The old claim of 
the Coonz heirs to the larger part of the bus¬ 
iness section of St. Louis is to bo prosecuted; 
and Judge Samuel E. Flanagan of McLeans- 
boro, 111., has entered upon an investigation 
of the claim.The Eastern lunatic asylum 
buildings at Williamstown, Va., were burned 
to the ground about midnight Sunday; loss, 
$14,000. There were 100 women patients in 
the burned building, but all of them escaped 
except one...Hundreds of families iu 
Jackson County, W. Va., are declared to be 
on the verge of starvation; and a strong 
appeal for aid is made.The first amend¬ 
ment of the civil-service rules sanctioned by 
President Cleveland is one obviously proper, 
—namely that a person who has been accepted 
on probation and been dropped after six 
months’ trial shall not be allowed to present 
himself again for examination until after an 
interval of two years.The retirement 
of Sir David MacPherson as the Canadiau 
Minister of the Interior revives all manner of 
rumors as to trouble in the Macdonald Cab* 
inent. The Premier, it is said, would select 
Sir Hector Longevin as MacPherson’B succes- 
or, in order to rekindle the ardor of the 
French-Canadiau Conservatives. There has 
already been one “lively scene” iu the 
Cabinet, meeting with prospect of more to fol¬ 
low ..Adjutant-General Drum has just 
completed a list of casualities in the Federal 
army duriug the late war. The aggregate 
number of deaths is shown to have been S59,- 
496. Of these 29,498 were among Union 
soldiers held as prisoners of war. The total 
number of troops reported as furnished by 
various States under various calls is 2,773,408. 
Some of the returns were duplicated, and it 
is estimated that the actual number was about 
2,500,000.By rejecting $72,752 worth of 
bills, the Board of Managers of the New 
Orleans Exhibition figure their debts down to 
$397,318. Congress appropriated $335,000 a 
few months ago, and this reduces the liabil¬ 
ities to $62,318, a much better showing than 
at first feared. According to present inten¬ 
tions, the Exposition will re-open in the Fall, 
although the Government aud many private 
exhibitors will withdraw their exhibits. 
_The Illinois Legislature has passed a civil 
rights bill giving negroes the same rights as 
white people in hotels, restaurants, theaters 
and other public places. An offender may be 
forced to pay not less than $25, nor more than 
$500 to the person aggrieved, and also, being 
deemed guilty of a misdemeanor, be fined not 
over $500, and imprisoned not more than one 
year, or both.Immigrants to the num¬ 
ber of 06,971 arrived in the customs districts 
of Baltimore, Bostou, Detroit, Huron, Minne¬ 
sota, New York. Passamoquoddy, Philadel¬ 
phia and Ban Francisco in May; 8,280 citizens 
of the United States returned from abroad... 
....Big Bear, the Indian who still holds out 
against the Dominion troops, sent this mes¬ 
sage by the scouts circulating among the re¬ 
serves: “We are doomed and will be killed 
one after another by the whites, but before 
we die or disappear altogether we must en¬ 
joy ourselves as much as we can. Therefore, 
we must plunder the stores and kill many 
white people.” He is marching rapidly 
northward, with the troops close behind him. 
... • ••• ....Last Wed¬ 
nesday was the day for final application for 
the new four-per-cent. Canadian loan, the 
Finance Minister converting $25,000,000 old 
five per cents, into fours. The transaction 
has been a great success in every respet. The 
conversion will save Canada $250,000 a year. 
.. In Mexico, the Government does not 
show much tenderness iu regard to the for¬ 
feiture of concessions where corporations fail 
to fulfill their contracts. The Department of 
Public Work* of the Republic has just issued 
a decree declaring forfeited and null the 
charter aDd concessions granted to the Mex¬ 
ican Southern Railroad Company in May, 
1883, on the ground of the non fulfillment by 
the company of the conditions upon which the 
charter was granted. The company stipulated 
to build at least 250 kilometers of railroad 
within the first two years. The company did 
not do the work agreed, and the Government 
allowed only 15 days to pass after the expir¬ 
ation of the two years before decreeing the 
concessions and the $50,000 deposited by the 
company both forfeited. Both branches 
of the Pennsylvania Legislature adjourned 
HON. WIH. D. KELLEY. 
A reporter of one of our Philadelphia dailies 
spent a morning with Judge Kelley at his home 
in that city. The Judge gave the history of 
his illness and recovery substantially as 
follows: 
“I had, as a hereditary victim to catarrh, 
suffered for years. I was subject to violent 
aroxysms of coughing. Straining for relief 
ad produced abrasion of the membranes and 
daily effusion of blood from my throat. For 
four years I passed a portion of each Congress¬ 
ional vacation in the Rocky Mountains or on 
the Pacific coast. But my breathing power 
continued to diminish, until in the early sum¬ 
mer of 1873 it was a little more than a panting 
for breath. About two years before this my 
attention had been called to Compound Oxy¬ 
gen. A friend who had great faith in its 
efficacy advised me to try it. On reading Dr. 
Starkey's advertisement 1 threw the little 
book aside, and declined to resort to the Treat¬ 
ment, on the ground that it proposed to enre 
everything, and was consequently without 
adaption to any particular disease. I grew 
worse, and iu the summer my breathing was 
so short, that a cough, a sneeze, or a sigh 
produced such acute pain at the base of my 
left lung that l felt it necessary to close up 
my affairs, as 1 did not believe I could last for 
sixty days. Nor do 1 now believe I would 
have lasted for that time had I not found a 
potent curative agent. 
“I bad lost none of my prejudices against 
Compound Oxygen, but in very des 2 Jeration 
seeing that it could not make me any worse 
than I teas, and as medical treatment had 
utterly failed to meet my case, T concluded to 
try it. After a thorough examination, Dr. 
Starkey, to whom 1 was then a stranger, said: 
'Sir. I have uo medicine for either form of 
your disease (alluding to the catarrh and the 
bleeding at the throat), but, if you will give 
me time, I can cure you.’ My response was 
a natural one. ‘You are frank in saying you 
have no medicine for either form of my dis¬ 
ease, and yet you propose to cure me. By 
what agency will you work this miracle? 
‘The Oxygen Gas,’ said he, ‘is not a medicine. 
It has none of the characteristics of medicine 
compounded of drugs. These create a require¬ 
ment for continual increase of quantity to be 
taken; and, if long persisted in, produce some 
form of disease. But Compound Oxygeu pro¬ 
duces no appetite for itself. It passes, by 
inhalation, into the blood, and purities and. 
invigorates it. The system is thus enabled to 
throw off effete matter. Yon will find by ex¬ 
perience, if you try the Treatment, that it will 
not increase the rapidity of your pulse, though 
the beating will bestronger under its influence. 
“This explanation removed my objections,’ 
and I could see how such an agent could oper¬ 
ate beneficially in cases of a widely different 
character. 
“Dr. Starkey said that the eells of my lung 
were congested with catarrhal mucus, and 
that he believed the gas would at once address 
itself to the removal of the deposits and the 
restoration of my full breathing power. 
"I began using the Treatment, and at the 
end of three weeks, was able to report an im¬ 
proved appetite, and the ability to sleep 
several consecutive hours, with a measurable 
relief of the pain in'the tuug. 
“Notwithstanding the intense beat, I re¬ 
mained iu Philadelphia during the summer. 
Before Congress assembled in December, my 
lung had been relieved of much of its nause¬ 
ous deposit, and I was able to breathe without 
pain. 
“lam now more than ten years older than 
I was when I first tested Compound Oxygen. 
/ have had no perceptible effusion of blood for 
more than sir years. 1 breathe as deep!y as 1 
did at any period of my young manhood, 
and my natural carriage is so erect as to 
elicit frequent comment, 
“You ask if I still continue the Treatment. 
Whenever l feel a fresh cold, or suffer from 
the nervous exhaustion which follows exces¬ 
sive labor, I resort to Compouud Oxygen. I 
have the highest confidence not only iu the 
Treatment itself, but in Drs. Btarkey & Palen 
as gentlraen of skill and integrity.” 
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 range of diseases, will be sent 
free. Address Dus. Starkey & Palen, 1109 
and 1111 Girard St, Philadelphia.— Adv. 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Satukday, June 13. 
The Ohio live-stock commission aud the 
State veterinary surgeon went to Dayton, the 
other day, and caused to be slaughtered a cow 
of the Mitchell herd, whose lungs were found 
to be infected. Several other cows were then 
ordered slaughtered, and the whole herd was 
placed in quarantine.The “grasshoppei'” 
ravages in California are much less seriouB 
than at first thought. The damage to gram 
is confined mostly to the southern part of the 
San Joaquin Valley.Grass and grain 
never looked more promising in Eastern Ver¬ 
mont. Corn and potatoes are a little back¬ 
ward. The fruit prospect is excellent. 
.Secretary Sanborn, of the Missouri 
State Board of Agriculture, in his monthly 
crop report., estimates the yield of winter 
wheat at 9,000.000 bushels, the conditions be¬ 
ing 50 per cent. The spring wheat acreage 
and condition are placed at 91 per cent, corn 
acreage at 98.5; condition 77.5 per cent. The 
livestock is’reported iu good condition. The 
harvest of wheat, according to the estimate, 
will not be sufficient for home needs... 
liam Eddy, a farmer of New Bandon, N. B., 
was found in his field on Wednesday gored to 
death by a mad bull. On the remains being 
taken into the house a daughter dropped dead 
from the shock.The report of spring 
wheat by the Agricultural Department is 
much more favorable than that for winter. 
The disposition last Autumn to reduce its 
breadth on account of the low price was check¬ 
ed by the loss of winter wheat area, and later 
by the Britiab-Russian war rumors. Substan¬ 
tially the same area has been seeded as last 
year—about 11,000,000, acres in Northern New 
England, Wisconsin, Minnesota, Iowa, Neb¬ 
raska, and all the Territories. The percent¬ 
age of last year’s area is 95 in Wisconsin, 99 
in Minnesota, 102 in Iowa, 98 in Nebraska, 
and 103 in Dakota. The condition of spring 
wheat is 97, and indicates a crop of about 
158.000,000 bushels. The average for Wiscon¬ 
sin is 88; Minnesota, 94; Iowa, 100; Nebraska, 
102; Dakota, 101. 
-»- 4 -«- 
Prof, Homford’s Baking Powder. 
Baron Leibig, 
Tbe leading chemist of the world, says: “I 
have, through a great series of experiments 
satisfied myself of the purity and excellence 
of Prof. Horsford's Baking Powder. 1 consider 
this valuable invention as one of the most use¬ 
ful gifts which science has made to mankind.” 
—Adv. 
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. 
Saturday, June 13, 1885. 
Chicago. —Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, “regular” wheat is lj^c. higher; No. 
2 Spring, %c. higher; No. 2 Red %c. lower; 
Corn, Kc. higher. Oats, %c, lower. Pork, 
10c. lower. 
Wwrat.- Quiet ■ Bale* ranged: June. 8?H®89Wc ; 
Julv. 8SK«S0Wc August, WHaWHc: No. 2 Spring. 9TM 
<affi*c: No 3 do. 78®79e No, 2 Re-1 MQe ; No. § 
Red,R4®84Hr. Cohn— 8ales ranged: Cash, 4?H®47Qc: 
June. 47<a47He: July, 16V<®4CHe: August 46T*®4 B V«c 
Oats — Sales ranged: Cnsh RHa<@S4e.- June, 534i<a 
3St*r July. 3SH«33V«e; August, 29«®28>ie Rye 
—Quiet. No. 2. quoted at GScr.vSoQc. Caplet. 
—No. 2, at 6l<as.5e Point — Active. On*b, <10 15® 
*10 25- June. *10 I.vai!)25: July, *u> i2v*<3in asi August. 
#10 i?m®1035. Lard.— Lower. Sale* ranged: Cash, 
# 6 * 0®6 55; June, #6 50(.»652H : July. *flV®«55; 
August, *6 «IX&G tV-’Ctfe. Bt'LKMKA fN. -Shoulders, *380<a 
3 SV Short. Rib. #3 2S®527U; Short Clear, #f. 7u®5 75. 
Cattle— Marketstroug: exports, *54fl®!t7P- rowsnnd 
Pitied. *'■! 26®4 7.-,• wtockepv #3 lOi'itn ON; feeder*. #3 40 
®5 n.V Texan*. *8 ‘HkJ l 25. TTOos.- Rough mixed, #3 R0 
rtii: one king and shipping, *'< h>® 4- light. #'< 90®4 20: 
skip*, *h®3 *0. Sheep— market, steady; Inferior *2 50 
®3 *5; medium, #:! 50® l 60; good, #4 30; choice, *4.80. 
St. Louis.— Compared with cash prices a 
week ago. No. 2 red wheat, is lVj'c. higher. Corn 
higher. Oats, 1 %6. higher. Pork,37^c. 
lower. 
Wheat.— Active: No. 2 Red. cash. *108!*' June, 
*1 03V*: Julv *104*4; August. #1 05H Corn-DuU: Cash, 
14o®449*c: June.44Qc- July.45c. Augu*t,4'd*;e. Oats 
—Dull- Cash, KOi®H4e-June, 32<Wc. Rvk. firm nt 64c. 
BARLEY— Steady at 60®70c. Eggs, low-r nt 9P*9V*c. 
Flaxseed — Steady at *1.25 Pork, #10 50. Bulk- 
mkats- Long clear *5 80- short rib. #5.35<S540: short 
clear, *5.fi0. 1 a nr Firm nt #6 25® 8 50. Cattle —Ma> ket 
firm; Exports. #5li.S®5 75: good to choice shipping, 
# 1 *5®565; fair to medium, #3 2T>®4 26. Texan*, at 
*S25®4. Sin i.r—Common to medium, *2 vs®3 75: 
fair to choice, #3V5®4i)0. Hooh - Light, #3 SO®4 00; 
Packing at *3 e&as 85: Heavy, *8 sf>®4. 
Boston— ORitx—Corn Steamer Yellow nt !WU*<a>57c.; 
Steamer Ml*ed at .'W®*nHc: High mixed at 57V*ffl 
58c, and No Grade, per bushel. Oats are 
steady: gale* or No. l white unit barley. l*H«.4«c- No. 
2 white. 4.‘V<!<a43c: No. 3 INMfJWe, and of mixed at 
41<a ti Q,o. per bushel. Rvr Ktnnll sale* at ‘i*»93e. per 
bucheL Barley — Canada West No. 1 choice extra 
light, 9t.rs.Wc : No. 1 do, - No. 2 do. 76®8ftc : 
six-rowed State, Ttl® 73c. and two rowed do, at 60® 
Me. Rhan At #I5S0* ton for Spring,and #l«rKKat7for 
W inter, fine Peed and Middling*, nt 50. end 
Cotton seed Meal. #26.75 » ton to arrive, and *27 50 
g*3*. ou the spot. PRoncr-E.—N ew Butter— Northern 
creatnerv is®19e, pet' tt, for extra : 16®17c, for 
good to choice: Northern dairy —New York and 
Vermont choice to extra, 15®17cs fair to good. It® 
14c: common, StSlMc. oer ib: Western creamery, 18® 
IHr, for extra: 15®'7c, for choice; Vicaltc, for com¬ 
mon to good ; Imitation ereampry, i2<aise for 
choice- choice Indie packed. 10®l?e. per th: fair to 
good, 6®8c; choice oaltw. 12®l5c: fair to good do. 
at 9o*11c. per oound. CtiKKsr. Choice full 
cream, at -® e: Northern extra. 7c: choice. 6®6Hc: 
common to good. 4®"c- Western choice to extra. 
5®Tc common to good. 3t*r>c: anil skim*, banc. Eggs 
— (fresh Carr, HQc-Eastern. I4e: New York and Ver¬ 
mont. 18® 14c; Western, 12V4®lSe: Provincial. i2®lSe. 
Beans- Choice hand picked pr».#lM®l 60 V bu.- large 
do, do, *i 45® 1 00 : medium, choice, #1.45®'.#0: do, 
screened, #1 S0®t 40: veilow eyes, Improved. #190® 
1 «5- Red kidneys, #185® 1 90. Canada pea*. 90c@#l 15 
per bushel for copimon to choice. Green Peas. *1 15 
®t no. PoTAToea— We quote Eastern at, 50®60c, V 
bushel, aud Northern at 50®5fic. 
- «»♦ ■■ - 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
New York. Saturday, June 13, 1885. 
mcADSTUgaa and Provisions.—A* compared with 
U prices a week ago, No. 2 Chicago wheat Is He. 
rer: No. 2 Milwaukee, J«e. lower: Ungraded Wtn- 
Red, choice State 17c, higher- No. 2 Red Is 1 Vic. 
her. Corn. Ungraded mixed 1* 2c, higher : 
amor mixed Is 'He, higher; No, 2 Is lc. higher. 
lopr. Keep and mkal mour Quotations: Flue 
hV.f 'SV Suportinc, #8 (HMDS fll- Kxrrii No. 2 #3 50® 
■ Good to Fnnev Kxtrn State. #3 8001 Ml: Good to 
Pen Kxtra Western, *4Ui®6 vv Common to Fair 
Ira Ohio, #3'45c*4 00- Good, #4 0V»4 40: Good to 
Alee #4 50 ®* ?|l: Common Extra Minnesota, #o 45® 
I’lcnr, #*.m®4 75 rye mixture, *t m>®4 50: 
sight. #i 25®* On- patent #l«.v»,5 so- baker’s extra, 
>5®5 00 : St. Louis common to Tulr cxi ru. *3 i 5 ®s 90, 
r to good. *4 On®4 UO. good to very choice. #4 95® 
• Patent. Winter Wheat extra nt #lfi(>®#5 40: 
y Mill extra for We*l Indie*. *1 iVi«*5wt; South 
lertca #5 05®#r. 20. SocTUKtiN Ft.ouit Common to 
.<1 extra. #3 75®4 55- good to choice do, at #4 7o® 
Rtc Floor - Steady, with n moderate trade de- 
iid Superfine, #3 *0<®4 85, latter for very choice. 
»n Meal — Quiet and steady ltrundvwiue. #3 40: 
ued nT *3 30®s 40; Yellow Western at#3 80®8 35. 
lu.—D ull and heavy- 40 and 60 lbs. at 70®72Hc: 80 
. *t, 7V»sn- 100 lb*, at 80®90c. Sharps at 95c®#1. 
r feed at 85. 
nAtN.—W heat. -No. 7 Milwaukee. 92®9Sq,c; No. 
'hleago, 92o; Upgraded Duluth Spring. tl OUy- No. 
ion to arrive; Ungraded WinJet red, .e<-®#108. 
ter for choice State: No. 4 Red, rail recelptH ln 
vator *1.02; No 2 Ked for June, WIiCG»#irt**; 
for July, #1 01®I 02H do. for August. *1 02H® 
u- do. for September, #1 ft*t*®l 08: do, for Oeto- 
• #1 "7<i do. for November #1 0>: do. for 
L>emher. *1 "9H®1 K'«: do. for January, nominal 
k: ligw Kyk—D ull. Western and C anada, 74®<6c. 
tr 77®7*c, iiAKit-' Dull and nominal Barley 
Lt.- Quiet and unchanged. Corn-— Ungraded 
xed. 5Uitr,6Voc- steamer mixed, 5,3TkC, lu elevator; 
2 53il®r>4V<ic, Iu store and elevntor, .-MawSSHc, 
int. Me. to arrive, cost, freight and Insurance- 
How. 88c, on track; No. 2 White, 
ixed, 80©48c; No. 2 mixed for June. 5S9»®54Hc 
