THE BUBAL HEW-YOBKEB. 
41 
f^,ettrs of \\)t XUjCfk* 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday, Jan. 8, 1887. 
The first week of the new year briugs the 
usual batch of messages from the Governors of 
States and the mayors of cities. Taken gen¬ 
erally, these documents reflect in a noticeable- 
way the importance which labor has been as¬ 
suming as a political clement of late. A con¬ 
spicuous instance is to be fouud in the mes¬ 
sage of Governor Hill, of New York, who de¬ 
votes much space to a discussion of the rela¬ 
tions of labor to the State. He commends to 
the consideration of the Legislature of the 
State “the propriety of lessening the hours of 
the daily labor of workingmen sO far as the 
same can be properly controlled or regulated 
by law,” and suggests also that the demands 
of wage-workers for increased compensation 
should receive the attention of the Legisla¬ 
ture. He suggests, further, the establishment 
of a legal holiday, to be known as “Labor 
Day,” advises the amendment of the law re¬ 
lating to the collection of wages and of the 
provisions of the Penal Code of the State re¬ 
lating to conspiracies, advocates the appoint¬ 
ment of a special commission to examine the 
whole subject of the grievances of labor, and 
recommends that the existence of the State 
Board of Arbitration be extended for a term 
of years. Other suggestions of the Governor 
relate to the regulation of the tenement 
houses iu the large cities of the State the in¬ 
corporation of a course of manual training in 
the public school system, and the providing 
by general law for the incorporation of trades 
unions. Evidently the interests of the work¬ 
ingmen are not likely to be overlooked by our 
legislators just at present. The messages of the 
Governors of most of the other States.also.eon- 
tain all or most of these recommendat ions ... 
It is said by some that the President is rapidly 
recovering: by others that his condition is 
really serious. 
Houston, Texas, is following the example of 
Memphis some years ago, and of a few other 
cities which have surrendered their charters 
to avoid paying their honest debts. Houston 
owes about 81,600,000.... .Sir John A. 
Macdonald, the Dominion Premier, has re¬ 
solved to dissolve Parliament and “appeal to 
the country.” awl writs for a new election of 
Members of Parliament will be issued to-day: 
elections to take place Feb. fi. Delay would 
be tantamount to defeat of the Conservatives, 
which seems probable anyhow, Liberals 
jubilant.Natural gas is failing in 
several of the mills in Pa., and as “power ’is 
thus stopped, large numbers of men are 
forced into idleness—1.200 compulsorily idle 
at Sharon, Pa .The National Debt was 
reduced $8,000,000 in December.Wall 
Street, holders of 850,000,600 defaulted South¬ 
ern State bonds are eudeavoring to have the 
Government enforce the payment of the 
$4,000,000 of such bonds held in trust for In¬ 
dian tribes.Barnutu’s “Living Skele¬ 
ton” is dead, weighing 48 pounds....There 
are now 0,000 persons in this city awaiting 
trial for alleged crimes under bail, whose 
cases cannot be reached because the law says 
jail cases must have the preference. There is 
an average of about 250 jail cases ou hand, 
accumulating faster than disposed of. and 
new court, facilities arc strenuously demand¬ 
ed...... 
_The “rink craze” has been succeeded by 
the “toboggan craze.” Collected weekly 
accounts of “coasting” accidents would be 
about as lugubrious as an account of u battle... 
....“Jim Cummings,” |Wittrock. of St. Jo.), 
ami his two confederates, have pleaded guilty 
of the St. Louis Pacific train robbery, and 
been sentenced. Wittrock and Haight to seven, 
and Weaver to five yours’ imprisonment. The 
first robbed to pay monev advanced by his 
mother to start him in the coal business in 
Chicago; the others because they were poor. 
The railroad company are now trying to prove 
messenger Frotheringhain an accomplice, to 
escape an action for heavy damages for false 
imprisonment.For a consideration of 
$1,050,000, to be given in ten annual payments, 
the Sioux Indians have relinquished all but 
1,500,000 acres of their lauds at the Fort. Rock 
Agency.John Roach is hardly likely to 
live out the week.,.The whole country 
from the Lakes to the Gulf was heavily blank¬ 
eted with snow last, Tuesday and Wednesday. 
....Minnesota is having a Little Southern ex¬ 
perience—two Governors have been sworn in.. 
D. A. A. Ames, the Democratic candidate, and 
Republican Governor McGill, who is acknowl¬ 
edged by the Legislature.At two o’clock 
last Sunday morning, the Baltimore <fc Ohio 
fast train which left, New York, Saturday, 
when a short distance past Republic, Ohio, 
running fully 00 miles au hour, collided with 
a|freight train going in an opposite direction. 
Crash terrible; cars telescoped; fire seized on 
them; and numbers of passengers not, killed at 
once were roasted to death while piuned down 
under the shattered timbers. Number of 
known deaths, 17. The most disastrous rail¬ 
road accident siuce the Ashtabula horror in 
1877. The freight car conductor thought he 
could “make another station” before meeting 
the express. Many more or less severely 
wounded. Survivors complain bitterly of the 
selfishness, neglect and heartlessnoss of the 
railroad officials. Money damages for deaths 
and injuries ought to be heavy. 
At New Year’s a large number of manufac¬ 
turing concerns and other industrial enter¬ 
prises, among them the Boston Herald and 
some other newspapers, agreed to give their 
employes a proportion of their profits the 
coming year, by way of experiment, after 
reserving the interest, on the value of the pro¬ 
perty-a movement steadily extending for 
some years, generally with satisfactory results 
.. Slight earthquake iu parts of Smith Car¬ 
olina and Texas Tuesday. No damage. 
Articles of incorporation for a now telephone 
company at Rochester, N. Y., to operate in 
seventeen counties, will be signed to-day. 
- *-+-* - 
FOREIGN NEWS. 
^ ; 
Saturday, January 8,1887. 
There is really little foreign news of inter¬ 
est. To fill up their columns and keep inter¬ 
est alive, the newspapers have every day long 
stories of political movements and complica¬ 
tions, which are contradicted next day, re¬ 
affirmed the day after, modified the following 
day, and scouted or reiterated in the original 
or a modified form ou the succeeding day; 
and this sort of “news” is hashed up dav after 
day for a week or a fortnight. Iu the United 
Kingdom the Conservative Cabinet, which 
was broken up a fortuight, ago by the resig¬ 
nation of Lord Randolph Churchill, the most 
radical of his party, has not yet been recon¬ 
structed, as neither Ilartington nor Chamber¬ 
lain. Liberal-Unionist leaders, would consent 
to form a coalition Ministry; Goschen, a Jew, 
a minor “leader,” was not so punctilious, and 
has become Chancellor of the Exchequer, 
equivalent to our Secretary of the Treasury.. 
Anti-rent movement still active in Ireland. 
Most landlords have reduced reuts from 80 to 
50 per cent, Strong Government pressure on 
the others to do likewise. Trials for agrarian 
offences carried on by packed juries to which 
no Catholic is admitted. Judges bitterly de¬ 
nounced by the vast, body of the people. 
Discontent and suffering great and wide¬ 
spread: open outrages held in check bv politi¬ 
cal leaders. Discontent with landlordism and 
church dues rapidly increasing and spreading 
in all parts of Great Britain. Distress among 
tenant-farmers and agricultural laborers, 
only a little leas than that among operatives in 
mines - , factories and works of all kinds. Labor 
generally growing turbulent from want and 
desperation...... 
_On the Continent all the rnlers at New 
Year’s spoke hopefully or confidently of the 
preservation of peace; but every nation is 
straining every nerve in preparing for war 
in spring. Germany has just ordered all 
officers and soldiers absent ou furlough to re¬ 
turn to the army. Russia has just ordered a 
vast number of now repeating rifles to be 
turned out as fast as possible. France has or¬ 
dered 1.000 of a new form of matrailleuse or 
Gatling guns; and so with all other countries. 
Practice iu dri Ring aud marksmanship is con¬ 
stant. Meanwhile all the working classes are 
pinched or starving, owing to the burden of 
supporting the tremendous standing armies, 
and providing the new weapons which are 
successively rendered necessary in all coun¬ 
tries by the latest discoveries In any one; for 
it will never do for any of the great or little 
Powers to fall behind the others in the effi¬ 
ciency of its death-dealing implements. 
During the week there have been constant 
contradictions and affirmations of the alleged 
special ulliunc • between Russia and Germany. 
Do Blowftz, the London Times Paris corres¬ 
pondent, ami the biggest frog in the puddle, 
alone knows of it. All the special correspond¬ 
ents of the Other papers and the Times’cor¬ 
respondents at other capitals deny it; and our 
papers are full of cablegrams and editorials 
about it. It was said that the alliance pro¬ 
vided that in case of war between Russia and 
Austria Germany would hold aloof, and that 
1 iussiu should do 1 i ke wise i f hostilities occurred 
between Germany and France.Nothing 
new with regard to the Bulgarian muddle_ 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Saturday, Jan. 8,1887. 
The Eighth National Convention of the “so- 
called” American Agricultural aud Dairy 
Association has been called in New York 
City February 8 and l*.At the meet¬ 
ing of tho New Mexico Cattle and Horse 
Growers’ Association, closed, at Santa Fe, 
Thursday,resolutions were adopted commend¬ 
ing to cattlemen the yards in West St. Louis 
and opposing the Miller Commission bill, but 
favoring the Bureau of Animal Industry with 
increased powers. Colonel J. W. Dwyer, 
President of tho Association, was chosen to 
go to Washington in the interests of the Asso¬ 
ciation.The Dolores Land and Cattle 
Company of Texas has made an assignment, 
being overwhelmed with half a million of in¬ 
debtedness. Mora failures of Cattle “kings.” 
“ barons” and “syndicates” probable.It 
is estimated that there are 0,000 unlicensed 
dogs in this city; 7,500 are licensed. 
.. The Illinois State Live Stock Commission 
has paid all the expenses incident, to the 
slaughter of the. quarantined cattle. The 
net receipts of the Commission from the sale 
of the meat were $85,398. The original ap¬ 
propriation in the hands of the Commission 
for paying the owners of animals slaughtered 
by the State was $50,000. Of this amount 
$2,500 were used m the slaughter of glandered 
horses, leaving $47,500 iu the treasury. 
With the money derived from the sale of the 
distillery beef thei’C were $82,898 in the treas¬ 
ury. Tho total amount paid the cattle own¬ 
ers is $63,243. The last, of the original appro¬ 
priation was expended last Saturday. All the 
expenses of the quarantine, aggregating $10,- 
000, were paid by the General Government, 
There are now about 1,000 cattle still in quar¬ 
antine.All the cattle in the neighbor¬ 
hood have been examined during the past 
week and the diseased and exposed are quar¬ 
antined. Commissioner Column complains 
bitterly of the carelessness and inefficiency 
of the Illinois Live Stock Commissioners. 
.The Board of Directors <>f the California 
State Agricultural Society is urging the State 
Congressional delegation to use every effort to 
secure the adoptiou'of tho Hatch Bill, which 
provides for the endowment of experimental 
stations. Other agricultural bodies in differ¬ 
ent parts of the country are also moving in 
the matter.The Louisiana orange crop, 
which has just been harvested, is said to be 
loss than one-tenth of the average, and the 
fruit is retailing at New Orleans at 30 to 50 
cents a dozen, against 10 to 30 cents at the 
corresponding time last year... 
The managers of the Citrus Fair of Northern 
California, now being held at Chicago, say 
that the California wine vintage of 1880 is es¬ 
timated at 20 OUO,000 gallons, of which more 
thun two-thirds was produced north of 
San Francisco. California's wine vintage of 
1888 is estimated at 33,000,000 gallons. 
....A tract of land on the western shore of 
Cayuga Lake, near Canoga. has been leased to 
Rochester parties for the cultivation of frogs. 
The raising of frogs for the New York market 
has come to he a recognized industry. There 
is u large frog farm in the neighborhood of 
Waterloo and several in Canada, and still the 
demand is greater than the supply.The 
“National Poultry Union,” so-called, which 
for four years has held a big show of poultry 
in Madison Square Garden, this city, won’t 
hold any show this year, as poultry breeders 
show no interest in the matter. Large 
numbers of cattle in transit on the cars in the 
West to Chicago and other markets, have been 
frozen to death during tho “below zero” 
weather of the past week.An inter-Htate 
Convention of agricultural, dairying aud 
live stock associations of the Gulf States is 
called by Gov. McEnery to meet at Lake 
Charles, La.. Fob. 23, 28 and 24. For full in¬ 
formation, address S. A. Knapp, Lake Charles 
La.According to the Senate Commit¬ 
tee on Transportation, “Thirty-three years ago 
wo produced 100,Oi 10,000 bushels of wheat nud 
about 600,000,000 bushels of corn. Twice 
iu recent yean? we have reached 500,000,000 
bushels of wheat, and in 1S85, the corn crop 
reached 1,800,000,000 bushels—a five-fold in¬ 
crease in wheat and a throe-fold increase In 
corn.”.The Duke of Bed¬ 
ford has remitted the whole amount of the 
rents of tho funnel's and other tenants on 
his Bedfordshire estates for the current half 
year.Glanders is working lmvoc among 
Verona, N. J., horses.Tho 
butterino factories of C. 11. Robinson & Co., 
in Penn Ave., Pittsburg, Pa., and of the Pitts¬ 
burg Moltiug Company, in Allegheny, closed 
down Tuesday on account of the State law 
prohibiting the manufacture and sale of oleo¬ 
margarine being declared constitutional. 
Over 100 persons are thrown out of employ¬ 
ment. There are $60,000 invested m the two 
factories, Over 1,500 tubs of oleo, aver¬ 
aging 50 pounds each, have been sold weekly 
in the Pittsburg market. Other factories in 
Pennsylvania are shutting down also... 
.. In pursuance of the action of the Board of 
Directors of the Cincinnati Chamber of Coni 
meree, ou the recommendation of the Grain 
Inspection Committee, the standard weight of 
u bushel of ear corn in that market has been 
changed from 70 to 68 pounds, to take effect 
ou and after the 1st day of January. 
Success. 
If success be the tine test of merit, it is a 
settled fact t,bat“/fro toll’s Bronchial Troches ” 
have no equal for the prompt relief of Coughs, 
Colds and Throat troubles. Sold only in boxes. 
Price, 25 cents.— Adv. 
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. 
Saturday, January 8, 18S7. 
CHICAGO. —Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, No. 2 Spring Wheat is %jc. higher; 
No, 2 Red, F>£c. higher. Corn, . lower. 
Oats, L'e, lower. Flaxseed, 4e higher. Pork, 
35c, higher. Cattle, a trifle higher. Hogs, 
14 to 30c. higher. Sheep, somewhat higher. 
Chicago.—Wheat.- The highest cash prices were as 
fellows: No 3 Spring, »l THltic No 3 Spring, 7UJ4c; 
No 2 lied. 79\„o. Owe.- No. 3, Il'bSe. Oats.—N o. 3. 
2«uc. ‘ivit. So. 9, rise, mnr.vv. No.2, r.i!.(<•. Flax- 
seed— No I. :hc. Timothy Peed—Prime, * I - i. Mess 
Poke-* 13 35 |«r hbl. Lard -WO. short mb sides 
I lo use I. 4« 30; ilrv salted shoulders fboxed!, 84 90; 
Short clear sides,(Uo*etn, 8« m. tlvitu-r market Arm, 
Creamery, 3SMH10e Didry. VI to Vfie. Eggs, 27 to 38r. 
]>er dozen for fresh, ('at n k — Market strong and 10 
cents higher. Reeves, good In fancy, g4.9W-S.T0: Com¬ 
mon . *a.S0A» -I,?*-, stork, r« mill feeders. *2..Vr>R fifliCOWS, 
hulls and mixed, SI.51 to StfUO, bulk. 4.’ 85. Tex 
as f'nttle. S3 30,<3 ;n. Hon«. Mnrlcei strong and 10 
cents higher ibtin yesterday. Rough nmt mixed, 
s| 70: packing and shinning 41111191 !>5: light 
weights. Its 9051 i;:>! skips, *2 75-3)3 IX). SHEEP. 
Common slow and lower at 41(3150 good to extra 
steady at #1 35*., 1 50: Western, S273«,4 2S, Texans. 
$3(*4- Lambs, *4®S 51). 
St. Louis, —Compared with cash prices a 
week ago. No. 2 Red Winter Wheat is lc. 
higher. Coru. 14°. higher. Oats, a shade 
higher. Butter, creamery 1c. higher for best, 
other kinds unchanged. Eggs, 2c. higher. 
Flaxseed, steady, Cattle a shade higher for 
best in all classes. Hogs, 25 to 30c, higher. 
Sheep, 10 to 20c. higher. 
Ht. Loins— Wheat -Lower- No. 3 Red Winter cash, 
83 u.tj January. come—Active No. i 
mixed. Cash, T.VmiSr.o: May. UtoTtJ^cv. closing 
Hath. Dull. No 3 (‘ash, 28'1 l(c. R\ e VI 5Wc 
Hav.-Q uiet. Timothy, *8Stol3 30; Prairie §Sw,1050. 
ItuTTEn. strong Creamery. 21 2-V : dairy. I5v23c. 
Rous —Steady at 74c. Pi vx Rsico.-Klrmer at 95c. 
POHK— 41250 I.Atm,- Higher al mi* 10. Rut kmkats. - 
Loose lots, long clear. *•; 10: short ribs. *8 30: short 
clear Tloxed lots long clear, tttxhuri ribs. «tj 10; 
short clear, jV ?V Huron strong long ct’Tir, S*> 80; 
Short ribs. 4(1 87W'^9B5, short clear, «? 27 Items - 
Steady at 9*p»l0e. Cattle. Market stronger on all 
grades; brisk demand for desirable grades. Cholee 
Heavy Native S|.-erB. *4 S0G4 8H: Pa.tr to Hood Shipping 
Steer*. «T IHLul :tn Butchers steers, fair to choice, 
«;i*4 15: Feeders fair to good. Wf 7ik-,/. t 41); Stockers, 
fair 'o good, *3,7V «u- Texans, common to cholee, *1 so 
to :i 3', Hoo«.—Market ruled active, and a shade 
higher, closing steady; nil sold. I’holce heavy and 
Ihl tellers. Select Jons. «l 75/1 «5- Packing, fair to good, 
41 50',/i 170; Yorkers, medium to fancy, 4-1 TO ■>. I 50. Pigs, 
common to good, as»tm4 2:i. Sheep. -Market steady, 
common to fair, «1 75(763 (ill; medium to fancy, $3 70 
(Si4 40 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
Ntcw Yoke. Saturday. January 8. 1887. 
State op the 51 auk irr. As com oared with cash prices 
last week, flour l« 5c higher. Ungraded Red Wheat 
44c. higher: No. 3 Red, 2e. higher: Corn about steady: 
No. 3 Oats le. higher: white 2c. higher; Pork 25c. to 
SI.00 higher; Rulier a IrlOe higher; Cheese steady. 
Eggs. 5c. higher; Poultry, 1c. to IRje. higher; Fruits 
about steady Potatoes Improving: 
Ft.oeit. Fpkp a mi Mkal f ton|i ijuotallons: Fine 
*7 SOS3 10; Nutierllne, *2 1)55)340 Extra Vo. (330(3 
3(JV riond to Fancy Extra state. *H f-lkat 10- Com 
moo lo'lood Extra Western 43 3093(5 Hood to 
choice Extra Western. *H 71 is5 30: Common to Fair 
Extra < ihl". 43'20'(I 3': OQOd to choice *1 2v.,,' 35; 
Common Exlrn Minnesota. 13 2093 55: clear. *3 7r,',u 
1 15- Rye Mixture. 43 75 ' l 5: sirnlght *1 15*4 75 Pnt- 
eni,C4 liras 40: Hak«ir«‘ *x»rt *i— i 7 > Bt Louis Com¬ 
mon to Fair Extra 43 250-1: Fair lo Good 41 03G)4 75; 
Good to Very choice *4 WKcn :!*• Patent Winter 
Wheat Extra. *1 30045 'll “By 51111 Extra Tor West 
Indies *1 7"; market closed firm s.it-TirniiN Etontt.— 
Common lo Fair Extra ut 83 304*3 90, and Kalr lo 
Cholee 41-1,3 ”> Rye flour. 'sneerll'n , s ! :n *3 15. 
Core mbai. Dull. Yellow Western quoted at «" Mk* 
2 75 and Brandywine at «2 TV,o2“5. Ruckwiii at Flour. 
-Quoted. SI 8.V91 95. Feed.— Ring moderately, with 
•10 lbs. at 75oA80e. for spring ami frjk- '"0c. for wluicr- 
01 |bs. at 78c: 80 lbs. at 40c; WO lbs. at so.»95c; sharps at 
95e(„,«b and rye feed at 706475c. 12,1X41 bugs rice feed 
sold tit i&e.) 
Grain—Wheat.- Ungraded Spring, 
Mixed Spring and winter, 92e. Ungraded Red, 91 
(rt llRvC.: No. 3 Red 92',(!I24<-’; No 2 Red. UHoi No. 1 Red. 
97 e; Extra Red, 91 h • ltSRJe; No.V bed for January, 92R. 
6t9'Wc (10. for February. 9:iU-.i9iq; do.for March, 
;ir,;>9 .tie do, for April, Wi'.ji*97c do. for Ma v.OJt^-^dSLjc; 
do. for June. 93t4 -i99t4c: do. for July.'rib, gc-tofu-do. for 
August, 99U;tM l 4le; do. for September ii.bF-,,1 U0»t: 
do for December, L'W.i tt milky. -Ungraded Canada 
a*73c. Cora Ungraded Mixed, a’ 47'•* ISsic: No 3. hie; 
Steamer. PiL; ,4ir,'ic; No 2. IV 1 l7S,e- Yellow, 44c: Un¬ 
graded While, tote: No. 2 for January. 47.< ITWe; do. 
for February. |s'-<, a18'i s c: <1o. for 'lav. Jlteasiafc. 
oats.-N o Hnt Y)'lc: do. White. W'-i" lie Vo. 2. T>‘4c; 
do. While I b.kf.'e: 1. While, !c: Mixed West¬ 
ern, 3tka37i! ilo. White do. 37■'P-c: While State, 41) 
(.) I V: Vo 2 for January. AM, - ’retie; do. for February, 
MIL<.36 8 16c; do for May. 3?',»>37 8-|f>e. 
Provisions. Pork.- Mess. <]noted at 412(313 so for 
One Year old. and *W >11 for Family Mess: *11415 
for Clear Unek- and *W 'detdi for Fxira Prime. 
Beef. CUv Fxira India Mess. Exlrn Mess in 
barrel* *7 rOD-e Packet. *8 80649- Plate. *8r«i«H fin. 
Rkkh Hams —Qitotod, vito 19 <*>. Crr Meat* Pickled 
B. lite* 12 n, average, B»ir. Pickled Shoulders, "(vc; 
Pickled Hams. 9Vjc.; Smoked Hams. HHiw 10b,e; 
srnoked Shoulders. <A»e >lmm,K«. Long and Short 
Clear, 8.1V-: Long Clear Iu New York 1 ' at West, 
Short Clear. L. I s'; Igtng and Short Clear, 6 1V6 fi.20c. 
Drk**ki) Hogs citv Heavy t<> Light ut 6«(<rfWe; 
figs, fitge. Laud. Vvc*tern Steam spot nuoted, I! 83R. 
city steam, li.nOci Coulinent. : 10c: Sotilh 
American. 7.35c; January, i'.htci February, fi.g.36i«89c; 
March. •'•.9i;'i«fi.9Sc; April, 7.IM<a?.05c, May, 7.10*7.13c 
.lime, 7 20c. 
HerTi'li -F|g':i creamery °3c; Western, ljest, 90c: 
do prime, Slid Sle: do. -..I 'l - ' do. Ilt'ie. I- -I 
do. Jute- prime, 2(l-»2ie: stale Dairy, half (ubs, m-st. 
27(7i2S: do. half llrkla, tubs, line, 34 »3*>e- do. half Hr 
kins, tub*, good, 3 " •'77c; half firkins, common. l'P-MRo; 
Welsh nils. best. 3-3c: Welsh Hitts, prime, 32d)23o:dnlry 
flrklus, best. 21',t'35, dairy llrkllis, prime 31 » 2*; West¬ 
ern imPuHon creamery hesr, 2,5'giStle• IndlaHon 
Creamery, fair and good, S>i-- 22e: Wealrru, ilnlry. line 
22>:ii2:ic; ilo. common. I3. > I'le 'Vi-stern Factory, poor, 
KtfMOr; Factory, best Iowa. #1*38. 
Ciikksk.—B tate factory, fancy, colored, l V; State 
factory, fancy, white, He: State factory good and line, 
12,td2Ue, State fnelotV. fair. 41 <11* if; Stale fnelory, 
etnnition, |o-Ah>3(c; Stale faetory, light skims, UMille; 
Ohio factory, fine, flat. i?‘j > i2MSe; Ohio factory, good, 
lvnitsylvunlii skims, v : >t'<< -'he. 
Eiio* stale S5e- Wextcrti. Ih'sI. 3| ,i yie-.ijouthcrn. 32 
dale; Limed Slate. 23* .’ie; do. Curtttdlttn, 3li(*32(4e; 
ilo. Wextern, 
Pocltrv. Li»k—C hickens, ni-nr by per It,, at 8649c; 
Chickens, Western, per n, sc: fowls. Jersey. State, 
and Pennsylvania,per <»..’2 > 'He: fowls Western, per tb, 
i2’.i,13e roosters, old, per tb. fidule: -urkeys. per in/,# 
12e ducks, western' net pair, nif iiOc geese western, 
per pair *1 V2>*l 5P; pigeons, tier pair. .Hl-cUe. 
Potd.Tnv. t)ne*«BP Turkeys Jersey, per Tb. 12*1 let 
turkeys. Marylnnd and Delawar\-. prime, per lb, at 12 
GiIHr. do. State, eholce. per lb. at 12*1 V. do.. West¬ 
ern. choice ‘o faoe-V. 12'#l3e: dll, Western, goo 1 to 
prime, u •> 12 c do,western, fair, id8c; eldekens. I’lilla 
iVlphla dry nlekwl. 14 41V: do B'lokx Cuuuiy. l2->I3e; 
tin, Jersey, drv-paekod, U(,»d2c: il", ami fowls, Slate, 
ivnnsylraula, ami Maryland, to lOC! <lo western. Info 
rlor.cGc old cooks, per lb. 3e; (1u< ks m>i lug. Pl.lladel 
phln per lb, 1 KslHt" do. Jersey, per n>, l3(»14o; do. State, 
Pennsylvania, and Maryland, prime. 1 6418c: do. west¬ 
ern. dry packed, per m.8/ffi9e; do. spring, western, In 
ferior, ii(>48c; geese, Philadelphia, prime, I2@13c; do 
