Mtfws jof 
HOME NEWS. 
Saturday. April 10, 1886. 
Logan’s bill increasing the army from 25,- 
000 to 30,000 was defeated in the Senate, Wed¬ 
nesday—yeas 19, nays 81. Some see in the re¬ 
sult the “fine hand” of Blaine jealous of the 
growing importance of Logan. All can see 
in it the effect of the bitter opposition of 
labor organizations and of all others who do 
not like to see the IT. S. Army used as a police 
force in troubles between employes and em - 
ployers. Logan earnestly protested that there 
was no connection between the advocates of 
the measure aud Jay Gould: but just now a 
suspicion of such a connection would be 
enough to kill a ten-times-better bill-The 
following are the rates just established on the 
Northwestern railroad lines from Chicago to 
St.Paul nnd Minneapolis:—First doss,SO cents; 
second 20; third, 15; fourth, 12bj'; fifth, 10; 
class A. 12Vi ; class B, C and D, 10; grain and 
flour, 12}'|........ 
All people iu any way connected with the 
manufacture and sale of intoxicating fluids, 
being excluded from the Order of the Knights 
of Labor, a movement has been started in 
New England to form an Order of these 
“outcasts,” for the purpose of raising money 
to support favorable and oppose unfavorable 
legislation, municipal, State and National, and 
to influence tlieir patrons’ votes to support 
grog-shop candidates. Whatever they may 
call themselves, the public have already dub¬ 
bed them the “Knights of Liquor.”. 
More than 9,000 bills have now beeu intro¬ 
duced into this Forty-Ninth Congress—more 
than 7,2(10 of them in the House. There are 
no signs of an end to the influx till the end 
of the session in December, It is thought that 
not over 100 of all hitherto introduced will tie 
come laws. The others cause heavy expense 
in printing, block the files of the Committees 
and over-load the calendars—mere “bunkum” 
bills to please the introducers 1 constituents... 
.The statement of the revenue and ex¬ 
penditures of Canada for the nine months 
ending March shows a revenue of 825,105,252, 
an increase of $1,916,173 over the correspond¬ 
ing period last year. The expenditures 
amounted to s23.699,076, an increase of $1,174,- 
623 over the same period in 1885.— 
_Total subscription to the Grant Monument 
Fund $119,216; to the Hancock Widow Fund 
$42,732.A bill has been introduced into 
the Canadian Parliament to create a court of 
railroad commissioners, who shall have the 
determining of railway matters and especially 
of differences of rates. These are now regulat¬ 
ed chiefly by those of competing lines in this 
country.The Senate has granted the 
Kansa-s and Arkansas R. R. the right of way 
through the Indian Territory—yeas 86; nays 
8.The Bland Bill authorizing the free 
coinage of silver was defeated in the House, 
Thursday; yeas, 126; nays, 163. A motion to 
suspend the coinage of silver as at present, 
after July 1, 18$«). unless iu the mean time the 
nations of Europe iu concurrence with the 
United States, should make silver a standard 
of value again, was lost. yeas, 84; nays, 201. The 
anti-silver men are jubilant at the first vote; 
the silver men at the second. We don’t want 
more silver coinage, but wo won’t have less... 
_Judge Baxter, before whom the Bell Tele¬ 
phone suit was to be tried at Columbus, Ohio, 
died April 1, at Hot Springs, Ark., aged 67. 
Earnest, peremptory, and independent, no de¬ 
cision of his was ever reversed on appeal. He 
was thought a “patent smasher.” Much 
anxiety as to who his successor will be, among 
telephone men.Near Deerfield, Mass., 
the Fitchburg R. R, at a curve runs along an 
embankment 130 feet above the Deerfield 
River. Tuesday night an express train bound 
east speatl the track, the embankment crum¬ 
bled and the train—baggage car, smoker, 
sleepiug car aud two passenger curs—rolled 
down to the river, carrying about 86 passen¬ 
gers and 10 employes. Some cal’s went into 
the river, others burned on the banks—dead, 
11; wounded, 22: missing, two. A wonder 
that any escaped with life. Nobody’s fault.. 
_It is reported that the Imperial Govern¬ 
ment has decided to subsidize a new line of 
steamers bet ween British Columbia and Hong 
Kong and Australia by paying £100,000 ster¬ 
ling annually for 10 years....Iu 1884 
British Columbia passed an act to prevent 
Chinese immigration. It was disallowed by 
the Dominion Government as involving Do¬ 
minion and possibly Imperial interests, and 
was referred to England, News has just ar¬ 
rived that the Imperial authorities say the 
Canadian Parliament has the right to regu¬ 
late or prohibit Chinese immigration into the 
Dominion without "home” sanction. The 
Australian colonies have exercised the same 
right The constitutionality of the act of the 
British Columbia Legislature, with reference 
to the Dominion Government, will soon be de¬ 
cided by the Imperial Privy Council.... 
The new Chinese Minister to this country has 
been refused “the usual courtesies” on anlval 
at San Francisco, aud forbidden to land till 
he showed liis credentials. The Chinese Min¬ 
ister at Washington indignantly complains; 
State Department telegraphs for explanation 
to Collector of Customs at ’Frisco. ...... 
The hostile Apaches surrendered uncondition¬ 
ally the other day, and Gen. Crook has just 
started 75 of them to Fort Marion, St. Augus¬ 
tine, Fla. Geronimo, after surrendering, es¬ 
caped from Lieut. Maus, and four days’ hot 
pursuit failed to recapture him. 
Municipal elections in Ohio, Tuesday, favored 
the Republicans, who carried Cincinnati, the 
head-center of claimed frauds and ballot-box 
stuffing.Over two-thirds of the succos- 
ful candidates in the municipal election at 
Chicago are also Republicans. New election 
law tried there for first time on Tuesday..— 
Canadians are bound to admit American 
vessels into their ports “for wood, water, 
shelter and repairs,” and Congress is very 
likely to worn our neighbors that absolutely 
no other rights will be allowed Canadian 
vessels in our ports. New England fish- 
masters who oppose a renewal of the late 
treaty with the Dominion “in the interest of 
the American marine service,” have to hire 
seamen in Canada. Although these would 
starve at home, Canada won’t allow American 
vessels to ship them at good wages, and con¬ 
siderable expense is incurred in getting them 
to American ports or on board ships outside 
the three-mile limit. In the Maratime Pro¬ 
vinces many live by selling bait: yet Canada 
says it must not be - sold to Americans, though 
the French are welcomed to buy it. The Can¬ 
adians got $5,000,000 from us for the advan¬ 
tages given our fishermen by Canada over 
those given Canadian fishermen by us, yet 
now the Canadian fishermen are eager to 
make an exchange on equal terms; but our 
fishermen are opposed to it. Bitterness grow¬ 
ing on both sides.The Labor Arbi¬ 
tration Bill passed the House by a large ma¬ 
jority, many who spoke bitterly against it, 
finally voting for it. through dread of the 
workingmen’s votes. While if compels the pro¬ 
duction of the books and accounts of employ¬ 
ers before the Commissioners, those of labor 
organizations need not be produced—law 
should be eveu-handed. 
... .The Chicago city government has adopt¬ 
ed the eight-hour day for all city employes 
after May 1. A similar measure has been ve¬ 
toed by Mayor O’Brien of Boston.The 
annual spring freshets, floods and down-pours 
have been unusually heavy, disastrous and 
widespread during the week, east, west, north 
aud south. Mere mention hero of the affect-• 
ed localities within this week, would fill a 
couple of columns. The Gulf States have hith¬ 
erto suffered most, the losses in Alabama, 
alone exceeding $2,000,000.Flame-swept, 
Key West begs for outside aid.The 
Mexican Pension Bill just passed by the House, 
gives $8,00 a month to all surviving soldiers 
of the Mexican war, and their widows, ex¬ 
cept unpardoned Confederate soldiers—Jeff 
Davis excepted.... 
.Cabel W. West, of Kentucky, 45, a 
country judge and hard-fighting ex-Confeder- 
ate soldier, succeeds Murray as Governor of 
Utah.Cols. Buger and Potter of the 
18th ami 23d infantry, succeed Miles and How¬ 
ard as Brig.-Genfls, because of their long-time 
meritorious services, and because they will 
soon be “retired for age,” making room for 
the disappointed_Sec. Manniir r wasallowed 
to sit up Wednesday; but he will probably soon 
caiTV the biggest brain in it out of the Cabinet. 
_Pres. Diaz says the Mexican troops who 
shot Capt. Crawford couldn’t believe the 
Indian scouts composing most of his force 
were friendly, for the treaty permits only 
the regular troops of cither Republic to cross 
the line. 
The Strike on the “Gould System" is growing 
more stubborn and vindictive. Double- 
dealing charged against Gould iu his confer¬ 
ence with representatives of the Knights of 
Laboi in this city; insolence and disdain 
charged against his representative, Vice- 
President Hoxie, in his interview with the 
men in St, Louis. He virtually refused to take 
on any K. of L., and is fast discharging all 
who remained in the employment of the roads 
of the “system.".A collision between 
deputy marshals and strikers at Fort Worth, 
Texas, resulted in the killing of four of the 
former and one of the latter. First shot at¬ 
tributed to both parties. Men ambuscaded a 
moviug train; but a deputy fired first, it is 
said, at a striker who tried to get on the train. 
State troops heavily massed iu the town; 
armed strikers congregated there in great 
numbers...Fighting also at Laredo, 
Texas. Details not to hand yet....Yes¬ 
terday afternoon at East St. Louis (on the 
Illinois side of the Mississippi, opposite St. 
Louis), the terminus of all the Eastern trunk 
lines and of several to the north and south, a 
crowd of strikers moving towards the railroad 
yards was fired into with Winchesters by 
15 hired roughs acting as deputy mar¬ 
shals, and six men and one woman were kill¬ 
ed, all, except one striker, innocent lookers-on. 
Crowd grew' furious ; deputies fled across 
bridge to St. Louis for their lives; one report¬ 
ed captured and pounded to death; others iu 
jail “for protection” in St. Louis. Bloody 
riot and immense destruction of property pre¬ 
vented only by impassioned appeals of the 
leaders of the K. of L. Three fires rf] silted 
in the railroad yardxat two o’clock this morn¬ 
ing. Powderiy says that now the strike must 
be carried on to the end. Vast numbers join¬ 
ing K. of L. everywhere. Over $3,009,000 
ready to support strikers; much more easily 
collectable. Claims of ruilroads that all 
freight trains are running emphatically de¬ 
nied. Comparatively few miming aud those 
more than half empty. More bloodshed and 
destruction probable, and the end by no means 
in sight.Other strikes numerous in all 
parts of the country. 
After two years’ trial, we unhesitatingly 
jironounce the Boss Zinc and Leather Col¬ 
lar Pad, the only durable aud successful one 
that we have ever used, it retains its shape, is 
cooling, prevents .chafing, and thereby keeps 
the hoi'ses’ necks clean and healthy. Hiram 
G. Dodge & Sons, Wood & Coal Dealers, 
Madison, Wis.— Adv. 
— - ♦ > » 
AGRICULTURAL NEWS. 
Saturday, April 10, 1886. 
Consular returns now show that actual 
purchases of wool this season fox* America 
from Melbourne, Sydney and Adelaide, aggre¬ 
gate 25,419 bales.It is stated that 
the entire Ohio Congressional delegation is 
pledged against any effort to reduce or destroy 
the tariff on wool.A market for 
horse flesh has beeu created in this and sever¬ 
al other large cities, by feeding horse meat to 
the wild beasts in the various zoological collec¬ 
tions. The carnivora are said to thrive better 
on horse flesh than on beef. 
In the New Jersey Senate yesterday, the 
bill allowing a bounty for the encouragement 
of sugar production In the State, was so amen¬ 
ded as to limit the term of the bounty to one 
year, instead of four..... 
One of the results of the cheap transcontinen¬ 
tal freights is the shipment of flour from San 
Francisco to St. Louis aud vice versa, both 
flours crossing each other on the road. Cali¬ 
fornia flour is better for pies, cakes, sweet¬ 
meats, etc., as it is much “shorter,” requiring 
less lard, sugar, etc...There’s a bill 
now before the New York Legislature impos¬ 
ing penalties for killing small birds, except 
the English sparrow. The informer should 
get a share of the fine, to make the bill effect¬ 
ive.Iowa women, in convention at Des 
Moines, have humanely resolved that “here¬ 
after we will abstain from buying any 
plumage where the life of the bird is sacrificed 
to obtain the ornament.".Audubon 
societies are being, formed in many places to 
protect birds from slaughter; ornithologists 
are busy in the same line.. .The Iowa 
Assembly has passed a bill prohibiting alien 
non-residents from acquiring title to land. 
.Strawberries are arriving here from 
Florida in 28-quurt ice-boxes, by freight, icing 
done every 24 hours—railroad freight about 
18 cents a quart,...TThe Iowa 
Legislature has just provided severe penalties 
for all attempts to sell fraudulently bogus for 
genuine butter...In \pril, 1885,Land 
Commisioncr Sparks dcclaml thatgross frauds 
had been committed in making entries under 
the Homestead aud Preemption Acts, and took 
away from settlers in the West the right of 
“perfecting” the titles to the land taken up 
under these acts, until the entries could be 
investigated. Over 40,006 “claims” were af¬ 
fected iu 12 States anil Territories. See. 
Lamar, with the approval of the President, 
has overruled tho Commissioner’s ruling, and 
allowed the Titles to be perfected, so that the 
lands can be sold or mortgaged as the proper¬ 
ty of the settlers. Sparks says a great deal of 
fraud has a 1 ready been prevented by his ac¬ 
tion, and much good to honest settlers has 
resulted, while some hardships were inevitable 
from a rule covering so many cases. Advices 
from the Far West” say Sparks's ruling was 
a salutary check to frauds, and a boon to 
honest settlers in general, though some of 
these suffered temporarily from it.. 
twice as many merchantable potatoes. 
H. J. Baker & Bro., N. Y. 
Gentlemen —I used your Potato Manure at 
the rate of 600 lbs. per acre. Where it was 
used I harvested about the same quantity as 
on land fertilized by other brands, but yours 
produced more than twice as many mer¬ 
chantable Potatoes. Isaac Brooks, 
Chester C'o., Penn.— Adv. 
Crops & litorhfls. 
Saturday, April 10,1886. 
The export trade in live cattle is still com¬ 
paratively small; but only choice animals are 
exported, as freight charges on others would 
be as heavy per head, while the price would be 
lower, aud consequently the proportion of 
expense to cost greater. The number of really 
choice cattle still produced here for the 
butcher is not large—pure-breds are generally 
more profitable for breeding purposes. Ex¬ 
ports, therefore, have much influence on 
prices of choice stock in our home markets, 
and the figures for choice stock influence those 
for inferior animals. Prices for superior cat¬ 
tle are always steadier in our markets than 
those for others. In England, however, 
the prices for American cattle have ranged 
from one extreme to another of late, hnviug, 
within the last six months, reached the high¬ 
est and also the lowest figures for the last 
three or four years. These extreme fluctua¬ 
tions have somewhat lessened shiptaente, and 
consequently weakened the prices of choice 
cattle here. Just now. prospects for the sum¬ 
mer trade are not very bright across the 
Atlantic. 
The total number of hogs handled by West¬ 
ern packers from March 1 to date approxi¬ 
mates 600,000 compared with -175,900 last year. 
At Chicago prices are about 30 cents per 100 
pounds lower than those of a year ago, $2.50 
per barrel lower on pork, 90 cents per 100 
lower on lard and 60 cents per 100 lower ou 
sides. There appears to lie no prospect of a 
speedy advance in prices. 
There has been a very considerable increase 
in the price of mutton sheep of late, especial¬ 
ly in the West, owing to the supply falling 
short of the demand. Of late weeks the mar¬ 
ket lias been steadily rising, until now prices 
are better than n year ago. There is a con¬ 
siderable increase iu marketable lambs, prob¬ 
ably because for the last year or two there was 
little profit iu other branches of sheep hus¬ 
bandry. Owing to the greater number of 
lambs, prices, though still quite profitable, have 
fallen closer to those for mature sheep. Prob¬ 
ably the agitation about admitting wool duty¬ 
free will induce flockraasters to give much 
more attention to tho production of mutton 
sheep in the East for'local markets and in 
the West for Eastern sale. Should the ] iresent 
rise in muttou sheep continue the probability 
will become a certainty. 
A year ago broom corn was worth about 
$80 per ton; now it is worth from $100 to 
$240, and it may go higher. Seed which or¬ 
dinarily sells for $2.50 to $8 a bushel, sells for 
$10, and there isn’t enough of it at that. 
Most of the broom factories have shut down 
in this State and the West, owing to the scar¬ 
city and high price of stock. Several years 
ago so mauy went Into broom-corn raising 
that the market was glutted and prices wore 
unrerniuierative: then there was such a stam¬ 
pede out of it that last year not more than 
one-third of a crop, was produced.and collect¬ 
ing seed was neglected. Speculators soon 
“cornered” the short crop and at once began 
putting up prices, which could be done all 
the more easily as the old stock was exhaust¬ 
ed. The higli prices now are inducing so 
many to go into the business that the markets 
would soon be again overstocked were it not 
for the scarcity of reed. 
The Mark Lane Express, in its weekly re¬ 
view of flic British grain trade, said, last Mon¬ 
day : Trade in native wheats in London is very 
much depressed. In tho Provinces the mark¬ 
ets are irregular. The sales of English wheat 
during the week were 61,240 quarters at 80s 
5d (92L cents per bushel), against. 51,988 quar¬ 
ters at 82s 5d (!)$' cents a bushel) during the 
corresponding week last. year. Flour is freely 
delivered. Prices are maintained, however, 
owing to the increased consumption arising 
from the scarcity of vegetables. Barleys are 
iu buyers’ favor. Trade in foreign wheat is 
without feature; sellers are firm and buyers 
are apathetic. 
Brown’s Bronchial Troches for Coughs and 
Colds: "1 do not see liow it is possible fora public man 
to be himself iu winter without tills admirable aid.”— 
/lev. 11. M. Devens, Pocasset, Mats,—Adv. 
MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. 
Saturday, April 10, 1886. 
Chicago.— Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, “regular” wheat is 3%c. lower; 
2 Spring, 3c. lower. Corn, 6 <c. lower. Oats, 
1c, lower. Pork, 5c. lower. Cattle, from 
20c. to 80c. higher. Hogs, 5c. lower. Sheep, 
from 10c, to 30c. higher. 
Wheat,— Unsettled: sales ranged:Aprtl,72W@ ?3e;May, 
iTioiTiffe-i June, 1 spring, 72*4075-yc 
Cons tiulei, Cash. S&o&to-.; April, 3 Hm.384$c,; May, 
37to*478jc.; June, 37&038k;e. Oats— Sales ranged: 
ii H - 1 ' ■ . ■'YE.— 
No. V, .Wic. MAUMSY—No 2, utflUc. Mess Pork.—C ash, 
*9 2" May. at SJ 2T*va 52; .func at $y 321809 40. 
Laud, quid ami easier; bales ranged! Cush, at 
85UO03 92I4-. May, $5 !«M'r June,(3 l«M01634 Buck 
Ml i l - Shoulders, 8-1 OHM 1 ID; Shop rili sides, at #5 3U(A 
5 3244; Short Clear sides, ‘It #5 05iu. OATl'Ut— Mar¬ 
ker strong. Shipping steers, .*l 3008 u0; Stockers 
and feeders, 82 ito I S); cows, bulls and mixed, 
8204 20; hulk, 83 0008 2.1. Hons.-Rough and mixed, 
81 udr.i,l 35- nneking and shipplng.fl Sato I 50; light, 
$3fl6ail IU; skips, f:t OtoH B5. Shsbf.—N atives. 83 U0 
t«;ii IB; Western, $4 0004 60: lambs, $4 StoO 12; Texans, 
82 Ui.*js4 OU. 
St. Loris.—Compared with cash prices a 
week ago, No. 2 Red wheat is 2J^c. lower. 
Corn, steady. Oats, unchanged. Pork, steady'. 
Cattle, some classes higher, others lower; best 
strongest. Hogs, from 20c. to 50c. higher. 
Sheep, 25c. lower, for poor stock; 50c. higher 
for best. 
Wheat.— Dull; sales ranged; No. 2 Red, Cash al 85%c; 
May. at SS'-MhaWrc.; June, ut UBi£e. Corn.— Dull; No. 2 
mixed Cash, al April, at 33^c: May, 38J*e 
Oats—D ull; No. 2 mixed, Cash, at 29jv<£H0e; April, at 
29c.; May. at 29te.'bld. Rye- steady, at 60c. Harley— 
American, Bto.HOe. H. itku quiet; creamery, 27032c: 
dairy, 18f.i. 26c. Rons—firm at U*tc. Flaxseed at 8109 
Ra! 10 . Ha v -Steadv. Timothy, 8110 14: I’rntrie, 8608. 
Pork nr sm. Hcut Meat- «l,oug Clear, at 85 35; 
Short Rib. at 8S 46; Short Clear, 85 60. L.vRD,—Firm 
at fA-SOcfS 828[C. Cattle- Market firm: fair to choice 
native shipping steers, nr 81 0004 TS; butcher ulcers, 
8450564 64; cows uml heifers, at 82 5O0H 75; Stockers 
ami feeders, s.i ‘Xu.-.*; CO. Hons.-Light, 84 lll@4 30; 
packing, 84UO04 „i); heavy. $13004 SO, 8BKET.—Mar¬ 
ket dull at $B fltK&fi tW. 
Boston. — Corn. — Steamer Yellow, at SOl^o ; do. 
mixed at 50c. per bushel. Oats.-F irm. No. 2 white. 
42»<ol2h£c,; No. 2 mixed, at 4Ut'c., and barley oats at 
44046c Email sales of Eye at 87068c, V bushel. Bran is 
Urm at $16 00 for Spring and 817 00 for Winter; fine 
feed and middlings at 817 OQm. 20 00, and cotton seed 
meal at $23 25 on spot and til T< per ton Ui arrive. 
H ay Asu Straw Hay al 816 500 19 00 ?• ton for choice 
and fancy ; fair to good, #17019, line, #16017, tutd 
813015 for poor and damaged, Western choice 810 
01.7, do fair to good 814015, Rye straw 819 00020 00 
for choice, aud 812014 tor common lo good. Swale 
hav, 811012; Out straw, 89010 per ton. Produce.— 
Butter.— Northern creamery, choice to extra fall, 
HDTgtOC : good to choice summer, IflM 22c: western 
creamery, at S2c>4tte. for choice to extra fresh made; 
good to Choice held slock, at 150180; oortbero dairy, 
J&apaCc, |for Vermont oxtru ; 30023c, choice, ana tto 
We, for fair to good ; Western dairy. 1S02&C, for 
choice, am) lto 15c, lor fair to good; imitation cream¬ 
ery at 25024c, for good to extra; ladle-packed, at 
21<;*23i.\ for extra CnKfcStt—New York ehotee to 
extra, HftjHQV- and common to good, tore; Vermont 
choice to extra, 9010c, and common, ixstse: Western 
choice to extra, at Btaiflc. Sage, extra, ldSjc, good 
to choice. 8010c. Fair*- Cape and near-by, per dozen, 
l4<>ol4lde; Eastern extras, 1301314c; do, llrwu, I2M013C; 
Northern, fresh. ltolSOSe; Western fresh, I8<g>12>tfc; 
Provincial, ut i«c. Rears.— Choice Northern hand 
picked pen. at 81 6501 79 per bushel; do, do. New 
York, small, *1 150150; do, do, screened, $1 1601 80: 
medium choice, hit ltd picked *1 Slk't 35; do, do, screen¬ 
ed. 81150125; Yellow Eyes, Improved, 818501 40; do, 
choice thus, 81 3001 35 : Red Kidneys. 81 6501 70. 
Canada peas, <i,to95e, per bushel for common to choice. 
Green peas. Northern, at 90c081 DO: do, Western, 
$1 80 m 1 25. Potatoes range at 50073c, per bushel, as 
to uuallty. 
PRODUCE AND PROVISION 
New York, Saturday, April 10, 1846 
State oktiik Market.— Compared with cash prices 
last week, Hour Is unchanged. No, 2 Red wheat, iq>e- 
lower; Ungraded Winter Red 2c, lower; pork, 75c. 
higher; butter and cheese steady; eggs, le, higher; 
poultry steadyi fruit higher on best grades; vegetables 
steady. 
Flour, Keep ANt> mkai.. Flour— Quotations: Fine at 
82 8002 90: Superflue. 82800830; Extra No. 2, 8-3 I to 
3 50; Good lo Fancy Extra State, 88 7504 25; Com¬ 
mon to flood Kxtra Western at #32004 00; flood to 
choice Extra Western, 84 000525; Common to Fair 
Kxtra Ohio, #3 95013 75; Good, 83 8V,tt 20; Good to 
Choice. 81 2505 on; Common Extra .Minnesota. 83 200 
3 50; Clear, 83 7504 25: Rye Mixture. |3 toil 10; 
Straight, gi 2504 60; Patent 84 0to3 25- Bakers’ Extra, 
84 2504 75; St, Louis Common to Fair Extra, S3 20@ 
3 75; Fair to Good, 83 S0«4 75; Good to Very Choice, 
#4 8005 25; Patent Winter Wheat Extra, $4 40®5 30 
