MOV 12 
THE RURAL NEW-YORKER. 
Wntrs flf i\)t 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday, Nov. 5, 1887. 
The United States Supreme Court, last 
Thursday, decided not to interfere in the ease 
of the condemned Chicago Anarchists. Throe 
of them—August Spies, Samuel Fielder and 
Nicholas Scbweh—have weakened and signed 
a petition humbly begging Governor Oglesby 
to commute their sentences. The four others 
are reported to have written that they would 
not accept commutations of their sentences. 
Some of them may still weaken, however, 
probably Parsons and Fischer. The Gover¬ 
nor is deluged with petitions for clemency 
from nil nnrrs of the country; hut the general 
sentiment is strongly in favor of the osedi¬ 
tion of all. nr at any rate of a majority of 
them. The jail is s'rnnglv guarded outside 
and inside—5+ armed policemen being sta¬ 
tioned inside the building. There’s no fear 
among the authorities of un Anarchical out¬ 
break on the day of execution—next Friday, 
Nov. 11 In all the large towns throughout 
the country thpre are Anarchist, associations, 
and their talk is very fierce and bloody, hut 
the public feeling is so strong against, them 
that but little merev will be shown them if 
they commit ativ public outrage. Secret 
dynamite mischief is alone to be feared... 
. Geu. A. R Jackson, a Confederate briga¬ 
dier, and lately U. S Minister to Mexico, 
while speaking at the Georgia State Fair at. 
Macon, the other dav in presence of Jeff. 
Davis, declared that, history would recognize 
Jefferson Davisnml not Abraham Lincoln as 
the typical American.. A flving ma¬ 
chine company has been organized here. 
.. Some of the Canadian opposition papers, 
notably the Toronto Globe, bitterly assail the 
appointment of Mr Joseph Chamberlain, 
leader of one squad of the Liberal-Unionists, 
as one of t he English Commissioners to settle 
the fishing troubles. Chamberlain is aggres¬ 
sively opposed to Home Rule.and it, is charged 
that thereby lie has mad« “himself hateful 
on this continent,.” The Globe insists ihat. he 
shall lie recalled, as his certain failure is sure 
to lead to war Fudge! . . 
The little son of Opt. Charles Haggart of 
Topeka. Kansas, Thursday, tied the rope 
attached to a cow around his wrist. The 
cow ran away and the boy was horribly 
mangled, dying in ti few minutes ....... - 
... The yearling fillv Sudie D trotted a mile 
in 285% the other day at Lexington, Ky.. 
breaking tlio record for yearlings, with a sulky 
weighing 55 pounds and a driver 1 Tib pounds. 
She has been sold for *5.000. Last August 
she was bought for *1,300, at the Lexington 
fair. . .. The Hungarian stallion Kisber, 
winner of the Derby in 1870, luw been sold for 
$30,000.Admiral Porter says nearly every 
harbor in the United States is defenceless — 
... Gen Sir Frederick Middleton, the hern of 
the Northwest rebellion, wlu. was rewarded 
for his heroism by knighthood and a grant of 
$20.000. has reached the ago (621 when lie 
must retire from the imperial service .... 
_At, buffalo, N Y.. Thursday. C. J. Ham¬ 
lin’s famous mares,Belle Hamlin and Justins, 
heat the world’s record for team trotting 
The quarters were as follows: First. 84^: 
second, 1:08%; third. 1 ;44. and mile 2:18; 2:30 
was the best previous record, Hamlin who 
drove them weighs 185 pounds and is 68 years 
old. The wagon weighed 165 pounds. 
.Thursday 20 persons were poisoned by 
tainted milk in Pittsburg. Pa. All have suf¬ 
fered severely, but are recovering. The same 
dealer sold the milk to all . 
_A good deal of complaint in olher cities 
that Now York quarantine officers are not 
sufficiently careful in preventing baggage and 
passengers that may be infected with cholera 
from going to other places. Charges indig¬ 
nantly denied by officials here. Only one 
cholera case here now. All quarantined per¬ 
sons will soon be released; most of them have 
been at liberty some time. .. Up to No¬ 
vember 1 there were 885 eases of yellow fever 
at Tampa, Fla,, and 85 dea'hs—one in ten; 
about the average in ordinary epidemics of 
the plague. Reports that it has spread to 
other points in the State are denied: but, all 
reports of the kind are invariably denied all 
over the South as long as denial isn’t 
a too bare-faced falsehood . ., The 
earnings at Sing Sing prison for the month of 
October were $17,880.41 and the expenditures 
$14,253.01, a profit for the mouth of $3,5'4.4<l. 
. ..The millers and grain commission 
brokers and holders of elevator stock in St. 
Loui- propose to form an Elevator Trust, in¬ 
cluding all the elevators on tiot.li sides of the 
river in order to remove temptation to cur, 
rates, etc. The Iowa Supreme 
Court, in an appealed case, has decided that a 
railroad company cannot tie compelled to 
transpor t beer iu contravention of tb" spirit. 
of the prohibitory law .The (Chinese 
Government lias very honorably returned a 
portion of the indemnity appropriated by 
Congress for the sufferers by the out rages on 
Chinese at Rock Springs. Wy. ft, wn found 
at the final distribution that six claims bad 
been duplicated, and the amount appropriated 
for the duplication has been returned 
_The Georgia Legislature has adjourned, 
after a session of 147 days, without reaching 
an agreement on the Glenn bill, about negro 
education, or anj’substitute f”r it. .. .... 
The Chicago Times. Wilbur F. Storey’s great 
paper, has been purchased by a syndicate 
headed by several of its old writers price, 
said to be $1,250,000 .The North¬ 
western Manufacturing and Car Company’s 
works at Stillwater. Minn., were sold Inht 
week to the Minnesota Thrasher Company 
(Senator Rabin) for $1,105,000 .... 
Jay Gould with somo of his family sailed for 
Europe last Hatunlay— will probably be away 
a year...The Supreme Court of Cali¬ 
fornia declared valid and constitutional an 
ordinance of the town ot Pasadena, Los 
Angeles County, which prohibits liquor 
saloons.Nine persons were killed 
while abed and several others more or less se¬ 
riously injured atjd a house wrecked by a gas¬ 
oline explosion at 8t. Louis Tuesday morning. 
.Secretary Whitney, of the Navy, is ill 
from overwork, and Commodore Harmony 
temporarily fills Ids place. . Of the pas 
sengers and crew of the steamer Vernon, 
wrecked on bake Michigan on Saturday, num¬ 
bering over 30, only one person a sailor— 
was saved ... Charleston, S. C , has been 
thronged with visitors at the celebration of 
the anniversary of her earthquake a year 
ago. Since then 270 new buildings have been 
put up. and 0,050 repaired, at, a total cost of 
$4,294 r?fi.. . 
..The New York Chamber of Commerce at 
its regular monthly meeting Thursday advo¬ 
cated free trade with Canada. 
The public debt of Brazil is $547,830,000.. 
....A bill providing for the punishment of 
bribery was passed bv the lower branch of 
the New Hampshire Legislature, with penal¬ 
ties to “fit the crime.” ... ... The num¬ 
ber of persons who have emigrated from Ger 
many this year is 10,000 over the number of 
emigrants iu 1880 .. .. 
FOREIGN NEWS. 
Saturday, Nov. 5, 1887. 
Suppression of i tie National League in 
Ireland and repression of turbulent crowds of 
homeless starvlings in Loudon still divide 
public attention in England, Editor 
O’Brien’s appeal has been rejected, and he has 
been forcibly jailed amid the execrations of 
the people. More rigid enforcement of the 
“ Crimes Act” is ahead. What, to do with 
the unemployed poor is the great social prob¬ 
lem of tbe day. .. In Fiance Grdvy has 
suspended Ids resignation. Son-in-law Wilsou 
is still to be investigated by the I.legislature, 
Boulanger still remains the idol of the Freueli 
populace. His relative. Cletmneeuu, is likely 
(n he Premi'-r. should Ronvier resign.The 
German Emperor is a very, very feeble man 
at over til 11 is sou. the Crown Prince, is fail¬ 
ing. Much anxiety about the health of both, 
uot, only in Germany, but throughout Europe. 
. .Tbe Scotch yacht Thistle arrived at Green¬ 
ock. Scotland, Nov 1, after a run of 17 dais 
from New York Best day’s run 258 miles in 
ocean trim.De Lessepsinsists tbut 
the Panama Canal will be opened on Feh. 8, 
18(H), It, won’t he completed, but, the passage 
will admit 2<i ships a day, bringing an aunuul 
revenue of iHl to 100 million francs The 
Duchess of Cumberland, sister of the Princess 
of Wales and of the Empress of Russia, and 
daughter of the King of Denmark, who was 
confined as insane some months ago, has en¬ 
tirely recovered. The Marquise de Mores 
has just, left Paris with her mother, Mrs. Vuu 
Hoffman, of New York, for an extended trip 
through India. The Marquis has sunk out of 
sight. The last of his butcher shops here was 
sold at auction a week ago ...... The 
Mormons have applied to the Porto for per¬ 
mission lo establish a community in Turkey. 
Request likely to be granted C»ood thing if 
all went Pi that, polygamous land. 
Jenny Lind (Madame Goldschmidt), the 
“Swedish Nightingale’' of 35 years ago. died 
at London, last Wednesday, aged 00, after a 
serious illness for weeks... 
Shanghai. China, cablegrams November X.say 
the Yellow River has overflowed its hunks, 
causing immense damage to property and the 
loss of 1.000lives .. Lord Lyttou suc¬ 
ceeds Lord Lyons as British Ambassador at 
Paris .... The latest.advices Stan¬ 
ley has advanced about 780 miles since prev¬ 
iously heard from. August, 25. The great, 
Wild West show which has been delighting 
all London and home and foreign visitors 
there for months lias closed with tbo end of 
the bogus “American Exposition” to which it 
waH originally an adjunct, but which it soon 
far outstripped in i uhiie favor. It was a 
great success. Buffalo Bill, for his share, 
is saul to have cleared $250,000. 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Saturday. November 5. 1887. 
... Commissioner Column claims that he 
has sent out more and better seeds for the 
ganized in Providence on Thursday next— 
Nov. 10. At Jerseyville, Ill., Mon¬ 
day. J. V. Stryker’s colt Delphos, a weanling 
sired by Nutwood, dam Dolpmnt* by Harold, 
sire of Maud >S,. was bought at, auction by 
the Caton Stock Farm for $8,750—the highest 
price ever paid for a weanling In this country. 
... The 14th annual meeting of the Iowa 
State Improved Stock-Breeders’ Association 
will ho held at, Newton, December 7. The 
State Short horn Cattle. Draft Horse and 
Holstein Cattle Associations, will hold their 
annual meetings at tin) same place December 
6 and 7. Large attendance of prominent, cat¬ 
tle men insured. Return railway fares one- 
third to those tuking receipts from agents sell 
iug the tickets. Reduced charges at hotels. A 
cordial invitation to all. Fiteli B. Stacy, Sec¬ 
retary. Grmnell, in.The assessed 
value of stock in Texas, as shown by the last 
assessment now on file in the comptroller’s of¬ 
fice is: Horses and mules, 1.198.522 head; 
value. $32.321.771. Cattle, 0,711,904 bead; 
value, $48 735,614. The decrease In value of 
cattle from last year is about $6,000.000. 
. ., Montana Territory claims to be ready 
for Statehood, with plenty of property, plenty 
of population, 1,400.000 cattle. 100.900 burses, 
3,000 000 sheep, and gold and silver at t he 
rate of $30.000,000 a year.The 
Treasury Department has decided that ani¬ 
mals imported esp-ciully for breeding pur¬ 
poses may be udtmPed free of duty notwith¬ 
standing tbo admission ot the importer that 
he intends to sell them.....The Cham¬ 
bers of Commerce of Milan, Pavia, Vineenza, 
Sienna him) Ravenna have sent to the Italian 
Merchant#” Exchange of San Francisco for 
samples of seed of Alfalfa and millet, with the 
idea of trying to introduce thorn into Italy. 
Rut, Alfalfa was a prominent fodder crop in 
Italy in the days of the Romans. 
An "Albany. N. Y.. syndicate that has been 
formed to ones m rage the extirpation of the 
English sparrow offers $1 per 100 tor 50,000 of 
the birds .A call lias been issued for the 
National Wool Growers’ Association to meet in 
Washington on the first Monday in December. 
The farmers of Texas and Florida are 
rapidly organizing Fanners’ Alliances. 
It is stated Hint, I. C. Lihby, the Maine cattle 
buyer, lias sold over 100,000 head of cattle at 
Brighton Market, near Boston, and qver three 
times as many sheep, He has been in the 
business over 30 years .... From October 1 
to 28 seven uow granges were organized 
against eight for the entire month last year. 
. ..The peppermint yield of three countusin 
Michigan and Wayne County, N Y., which 
furnish almost all the world's product, ag¬ 
gregates 145,000 pounds.... Thomas Boot h- 
by, a farmer mar Perry, III., on whoso farm 
a baloon ..utly landed, refused to give up 
the tuiloon to the aeronaut, claiming SHI darn 
ages for the delay of 18 men who left their 
thrashing to look at, the air ship.lames 
D. Pearce, a farmer of Mount Holly, N. J,, 
was carried home dead by tus team '1 uesday. 
The theory is that, lie was robbed and mur¬ 
dered. De was known to have collected 
money in Philadelphia, but only 50 ceri s were 
found .... ..The other day farmer Edward 
Kyser, of Flatlands, Long island, while try¬ 
ing to prevent a couple oi Italian peddli rs from 
loading their wagon wiih celery and other 
garden truck boldly takeu from his garden 
patch, had his scalp blowu off by a load of 
buckshot from h gun in the hands of one of the 
villains. No arrests. Kyaer recovering. 
...,FiRx of excellent quality grows in abun¬ 
dance m Chili; mid the government lias just 
offered free passage to 20 Irish families who 
are experts in dressing flux. togeihur with 
grams of good land. If the natives learn the 
hum ness, it is likely to become an important 
industry.... .Canada is now turuishiug 
more sheep for tbe Boston market than any 
State iu the Union Tne Treasury De¬ 
partment bus decided that so-called wool 
waste made of class one wool washed, costing 
over 80 cents in an unwashed condition, which 
has broil gar netted or put through some pro 
cess by which it is put in (hu condition of 
maiiul octured wool, is dutiable at the rate of 
24 cents per pound ..... .Experimentsare 
Doing made by the Western Railway Weigh¬ 
ing Association, Chicago, in weighing ears of 
live-stock while iu motion, which ii h believed 
can be successfully done .. Tbo Chicago 
Live Stock Exchange has aguiu adopted reso¬ 
lutions asking Congress to repeal tlie oleomar¬ 
garine bill. The same institution was the 
worst enemy the dairymen hud to light two 
y< ars ago.. -••• .. 
amount of money at his disposal than any of 
bis predecessors ....The barns and 
outbuildings of the Burnham Farm or Indus¬ 
trial Colony in Columbia County, N. Y., 
were burned Tuesday. The farm consisted 
of over 800 acres and was presented two years 
ago to the State by Mr. F. G. Burnham, of 
this eiiy. for the training of boys, many of 
whom were taken from poor homes here. 
It. was opened lost May aud 39 boys live there 
now. Treasury empty. Trustees appeal to 
the public f< r money to rebuild. Treasurer, 
W. 1) Kloaoe. 185 East 18th St. N. Y... 
... Lately tb* 1 English Government appointed 
commissioners lo revalue the holdings of the 
Scotch eroltcrs— tenants of the Hebrides— 
who, like the Irish, have lor years been resist¬ 
ing the exaction oi extortionate rents by the 
landlords. The Commissioners have made 
sweeping reductions wherever they nave vb- 
ited, aud the Highland landlords are iu a 
fi rmi-nti and holding meetings to protest 
. ller Majesty has been graciously 
pleased to accede to the request of the “Scotch 
Arbor leu Rural BocJflty” to assume the title of 
“Royal,” .A telegram from New 
Orleans says the weather is all that could 
lie desired for grinding sugar rune and many 
cases are repotted of planters who are 
get ting th ree hogsheads of sugar per acre. 
Tbe negro Knights of Labor in the Parish of 
New Iberia, below Now Orleans, are on strike 
lor higher wages $1.25. A cavalry company 
has gone down to “restore order.” In Ht. Mar¬ 
ti usville also there is somo trouble, the K. of 
L. insisting on the discharge of hands uot 
members of the order. Pros pacts of peace 
favorable. .... Theie are 15 Granges in 
Rhode Islitud, aud a State Giuuge will be or- 
_It is proposed to start a sore hum sugar 
factory at Charleston Mo., $25,000 are ready 
for the business . Tbu bounty of two 
Cents a pound offered by Kansas for sorghum 
sugar made iu that Stale, was ouly for livo 
j ears and of ihtse one has ulieady passed 
It is likely Prof. Wiley, Chemist of 
the Department of Agriculture, w ill reaigu at 
the end of ibis sugar making year 
The Milk Producers’ Association of St Louis, 
owing to tne scarcity of feed, lias “resolved" 
t u raise the price of milk to wholesale dealers 
to 20 cents a gallon on ear lo s or more, aqd 
to prosecute rigorously all persons violating 
the milk ordiuuuee. The freight on 
Scotch potatoes io Bostou is ouly six cents 
a l arid: duty 15 eeute. 
The new officers of tlie National Butter, 
Cheese ami Egg Association are; President 
Johnathan Bigelow . Massachusetts; first vice- 
president, E G. Potter, Minnesota; Secre¬ 
tary, R. M. Littlor, Iowa. Each State will 
select its own vice president hereafter. The 
National Association adopted a resolution to 
provide for an attei ney: ulso Tor a committee 
to oppow the repeal of the Oleomargarine 
Law. VV'rn. P. Quinn, ol New York, was 
ctiOBcn us the attorney for the association 
.. Tho fruit preservers of New York, Phila¬ 
delphia, Chicago, St. Louis anil Indianapolis 
held a meeting at Indianapolis on Thursday 
to discuss prices, which w ill no doubt no ad 
vauced, as il, is said the supply of fruit this 
season was short and of an inferior quality... 
.Large forest fires are raging 
north and east of Belyidere, N. J., and the 
farmers are greatly alarmed that tho flames 
will reach their barns and stocks of grain and 
cause them heavy loss. The atmosphere is 
heavy with smoke and the odor of burning 
leaves. These tires are uuuuully caused bj 
hunters.Secretary Fairchild has 
informed the Surveyor of Customs at, Cincin¬ 
nati that noils made from Class 1 wool cost¬ 
ing over 30 cents per pound are dutiable at the 
rate of 80 cents per pound; that noils made 
Ifixun Class 3 woo), costing over 12 cents per 
pound, are dutiable at the rate of five cents 
per pound, ami that waste consisting of gnr- 
ucU’d waste made from ( 'la-- 3 wool is also 
dutiable at the rate of five cents per pound.. 
.The hog cholera is depleting great 
droves of swine in upper Warren county, N. 
J,. and the farmers are well nigh panic-strick¬ 
en. The contagion is. spreading into the 
Quaker settlement, and hogs are dying bv the 
score. The inspectors authorized by the Slate 
are making an investigation and will do all in 
their power to prevent t bespread ol thedisense. 
Crops i5t iVlavhcts. 
Saturday, Nov. 5, 1887. 
According to the first complete reports of 
actual yields from every wheat growing coun¬ 
ty of Minnesota and Dakota, just, issued, the 
output, of wheat in both is 85,000 000 bushels. 
By actual measurements from thrashing ma¬ 
chines the average in Minnesota is 12 7 bushels 
and 16% bushels in Dakota. Never since 
wlica* has been less than $1 have farmers in 
th<* Northwest, and indeed nearly everywhere 
elsp. shipped their crop so freely. They seem 
to have lost all faith in tho future prices of 
wheat., all hough owing to the dry weather 
and soil in Ohm, Indiana, Illinois and indeed 
in most of the middle winter wheat section, 
the prospect (or the next crop is not very en¬ 
couraging. The mills at Minneapolis and the 
iuterinr points are running at their full ca¬ 
pacity; tin* railroads in the Not th west have 
been carrying as much grain as their rolling 
stock will permit; a large proportion of Hie 
elevators are reported full, mid most of t he 
others are nearly so, yet farmers are said u> 
be complaining of lack Of facilities for mar¬ 
keting their wheat.. Small wonder that prices 
are low. Tin* conditions during October wei e 
very favorable in the West for gathering the 
corn crop, except iu Nebraska and parts of 
Iowa, where the crop w.-ts the heaviest in the 
corn bolt. There and in several other places, 
it will take most of November to secure the 
crop. 
LATEST MARKETS. 
PRODUCE AND PROVISIONS. 
Nkw Yonx Saturday, Nov. 5, 1BH7. 
NEW YORK MARKETS. 
Hav and Straw.- in fairly (rood demand on a 
steady market. Hav -Choice Timothy per 10 is, 
'.me: No. l.H'e; No. 280e;f lover, mixed, ia x.Ttk.’.elover, 
iftvsFV: shipping, line, Straw*. - Long rye 75c, shori do. 
io. uni. 15(55(10. 
Hops A dull and otherwhe featureless market. N. 
Y. stale 'lew crop, choice, 2H(()21c; do medium lo prime 
p. isc crop of infill. common ro goon, 8*»IZc, do l-**.'., 
best, icooc; do common to medium, 4ntbe: Pacific, 
Count, crop IsfiT, fair lo prime, l.Vailfto: do ISSfi, com¬ 
mon to good, He IZe-do I'-M, good to prime, r,,(o'. For¬ 
eign German, crop IBs;, ,‘'(.c.S0e; do isfjfi, Post, Uksloc; 
do, common to fair. UktttZu. 
kkkij. quoted ui stkitSlo for 40 Tb;spring and win¬ 
ter fin I Vis, Kile. SI) Ills, SlX.AHM*. 1(H) lbs. W)c®*i ()5: 
Shuras. »1 01V- I OJtfi, ttyo Feed, nominal at M>w9!)c.; 
screenings. MPr'iSe 
VKaitTAHi.EH.—In potatoes the demand is mainly 
for choice. Onions urc a little weaker, with 
the supply more liberal unit only a moderate trade. 
Cauliflower and turnips sell well, quotations are 
for: i'oi aloes. — Stale liurbauk, per bill t'J (Mk<(- 2 25. 
Slate Hebron, flSQlk.tZlfi: Stale Rose, per bid S2 10 
15 Jersey Peerless, per bid $ I ** (#8 PO; Scotch. 
Magnum per sack g210*42 25: Nova Seotln, per bid 
*2 no,,42 25: German, per sack. 51 75: sweet, Virginia 
choice vellow, per Idd, (2 *0<r,300; do, Jersey choice, 
per bid *2 25 OiPnlw, red. 
per bid $2 5095 do, orange Comity red, per bid, 
si i0ct,215: do, yellow, per old,, *ikvjh no: Cabbages, 
Long Island, per IUU, vAm7: cauliflower, per bid. si 
i« 2 0(1 Celery. Long island, per doz bunches, 15cw,SI. 
Turnips, per bbl, 15 ,cue. 
Far its. Kuksii. Apples, Snow, choice, per bid. 1325; 
do King pel* bbl. *2 I V.I.I m: do. Pippin. $2 50(32 15; 
rio. Greening. SI 50a 2 O0- do Baldwin. 11 50.-g2 < 0: do 
.spur., $1 75042 25; do Spy, *1 lrk<c2 Uijdo Inferior, per bbl, 
SI .*41 25; Grapes, per lb, ;W4c, Pears, Lawrence, 
per till, $2 Via 3 Ml Cranberries, Cape Cod, fair lo 
fancy, pur bbl. $1 OOwfi 00; do do do per crate »2'S 
lu'J 50: do Jersey, per crate, tl fiffiit? 25 quinces, fair 
to choice, per bill, f'JiJS; common, per Idd, t2 00(92 50. 
i'ranges, Florida, choice, per box. 43 1)0,!,') N);do (to, 
fair lo good, $2 ootg’f .VI; do do common, tl 50. 
Fruits. — Drikd -There tire liberal receipt* of evuo 
orated apples, considerable, however, going to fill 
eiirly orders, the best lots are fairly active and 
command full prices. Tito moderate supply of 
sun (fried apples and evaporated peaches are held to 
H duly prices. The quotations are for- Apples, 
Evaporated, Choice to fancy. Deplore; do 
do common to prime, evaporated new, 7)* 
844 c; do sliced, new, 5ai V, do Chopped, 2'^r; do cores 
and skins. 2 (<i 2 ‘ 4 e: > berries-pill* d, now, 156»iec: 
Itaspbcrrle*—evaporutod, new. zLcJilyc do sun-dried, 
2Jo. niuokberries, prime, new, V', Huckleberries 
new, IlkinHc; Peaclii**,sun dried, peeled,new. 15<s 20c.dO 
Delaware, evaporated, peeled, 3O(i032c; do do do un¬ 
peeled, Hi s l He. 
Nuts, Peanuts have a moderate sale. Fancy 
hand picked (|iioU’d at. ISkm lAp*. and formers' grades 
at Jl'ictdc. 
CHKSTNi-ts. — Are unchanged for choice: quoted 
at tiuti 5U, Hickory nuts rule firm at *1 75uv2 uo per 
poultry —Livk.—F owls, Jersey, State, and Penn¬ 
sylvania, per ft, fowls, Western, per ft, 8®ttC 
roosters, old, per ft, 5ci turkeys, per ft 7WJe; 
ducks, wesiern pel pair. 41XS80C: chickens. near-by 
per ft. U&lOJgo: do, western, per ft, Stride; geese, 
western, per pair. SI tHlwl 25. 
eottLTUv. Duksskc Turkey*, per pound, at 5 
fitd&C; fowls, Philadelphia and Jersey in,a i ic; do, 
west Iced, prime, KsCJlni*: old cocks, tier ft, fie: 
Squabs, while, per iloz. S3 00, Squab*, dark, per 
d' •/, S2 !>•; ducks, Philadelphia, spring, per ft. II 
m 15c: do old. choice. 10c; chickens. Phlla 
de plila, per ft, lP tlfic: do. do. Jersey, choice, per 
lb ligiltc; western, per lh, Ks»iic; do do state, 10 
Wile 
Gamk Woodcock, per pair, 00 i75c. Grouse, prime, 
per pair tlGkl 25: partridges, prime, per pair, SCkotl; 
English snipe, per coz, *1 fAkg'J IK); wild ducks, per 
pair. Ii'eei/Mi 0: quail, choice,per dor, 43; Golden plover, 
per dok, $1 00tui2. 
PROVISION MARKETS. 
Nkw York.—Phovibiorb.—Pork.— Mess, quoted at 
gfU£tcUaui()U# 
DIXON'S "Carburet of Iron” Stove Polish was 
established lit 13-L and Is to-day, us It was then, llic 
neatest and brightest Iu tin* market, a pure plumbago, 
giving olf no poisonous vapors. The sl/.t* Is now ttt lib- 
led -(lid cake weighs nearly half a pound, hut the 
quality and price remain the same. Ask your grocer 
lor Dixon’s big caku 
