950 
New York Wholesale Quotations 
July 14, 1921 
MILK 
The New York prices for July fluid 
milk, 3 per cent, .$2.20 per 100 lbs.; Class 
2, milk used for plain condensed, ice 
cream and cream, $1.55; Class 3, sweet 
condensed, evaporated and milk powder, 
$1.50 in 201 to 250-mile zone. 
PUTTER 
Prices have advanced from one to two 
cents on practically all grades. 
*Jh RURAL NEW-YORKER 
Creamery, fancy, lb. 
... 41 
0 
Good to Choice . 
<a 
40 
Loner Grades. 
0 
30 
City made. 
0 
3 2 
Dairy, best . 
.. 
... 39 
0 
40 
Common to (rood . 
0 
34 
Paoklnir Block. 
0 
27 
CHEESE 
Business is much more active, includ¬ 
ing some export trade. The Utica mar¬ 
ket was advanced one cent—to 15% 
cents—J uly 13. 
Whole Milk, fanoy, now. 
0 1R94 
Good to oholce. 
0 17 
EGGS 
White, nearby, etioloe to fanoy ..... 
51 
0 52 < 
Medium toirood .. 
0 46 
Mixed colors, nearby best. 
42 
0 43 
Common to (food. 
35 
0 39 
Gathered, best, white. 
43 
0 44 
Medium to qood. mixed oolors... 
35 
0 39 
Lower grade's. 
18 
0 24 
LIVE STOCK 
Hteera . 
8 50 
©It 00 
Balls . 
COO 
0 7 00 
2 00 
0 6 75 
Calves, prime real, 100 lbs. 
10 00 
@13 50 
6 00 
@ 9 00 
8 75 
@10 25 
Bbeep. 100 lbs. 
3 00 
0 5 00 
Lambs . 
10 00 
013 50 
LIVE POULTRY 
Prices are reported as follows: Fowls, 
30 to 32c; broilers, 30 to 37c; roosters 
16c; ducks, 25 to 2Sc; geese. 14 to 16c. 
DRESSED POULTRY 
Turkeys, best. <5 @ 55 
Com. to good. 30 @ 40 
Chickens choice lb. 40 0 45 
Fair to Good. 30 @ 38 
Fowl*. 30 @ 36 
Boosters. 1* @ 22 
Docks . 23 0 28 
Bquabs, doi. 4 00 @ 7 50 
BEANS 
Marrow, 100 lb». 6 00 0 6 25 
Pea. 4 00 0 4 50 
Medium . 4 50 0 4 75 
Red Kidney .11 00 011 75 
White Kidney. 12 50 013 25 
Yellow Ky®. 7 50 @ 8 00 
FRUITS 
A few new apples are on hand, going 
mainly around $2 to $2.50 for fine quality 
per bushel. Scattering lots of pears have 
arrived. Peaches in quite large supply 
from Georgia, 200 cars arriving in three 
recent days. Quality is running only 
fair and the price range wide. Small 
fruits averaging poor, owing to hot. sticky 
weather. A few fancy blackberries and 
huckleberries have wholesaled around 30 
cents. 
Apples, new. bu . 1 00 0 3 00 
Peaches, 6-bkt. crate.1 50 © I 50 
Watermelons, carload . 300 00 0 600 00 
Raspberries, pt. 5 0 11 
Blackberries, qt.. 15 @ 30 
Huckleberries, qt ..'. 20 0 30 
Cherries, 8-lb. bkt. 90 0 1 10 
Currants, qt . 6 @ 14 
Musknielons, bu . 3 00 0 4 00 
POTATOES 
Southern stock is showing considerable 
damage. Receipts from Long Island and 
Jersey are increasing. 
Long Island, ubl...,. 2 00 0 3 25 
Eastern Shore... 1 40 © 3 00 
Jersey . 2 00 © 2 60 
Sweet Potatoes, bu. bkt. 1 25 © 8 50 
VEGETABLES 
Asparagus, doz bunches. 3 50 
Beets, 100 bunches. 3 00 
Cabbage, bbl. .. 75 
Carrots, bu. 1 00 
Cucumbers, bu.. 1 00 
Lettuce, balf-bbl. basket. 50 
Onions, now, bu. 75 
Egg Plants, bu. 1 00 
Turnips, rutabaga bbl. 2 00 
Radishes. 100 bunches. 1 00 
String Beans, bu. bkt. 75 
Peppers, bu .1 50 
Peas, bu . 1 00 
Roraaine, bu. 50 
Mushrooms, lb... 50 
Spinach, bbl. 1 00 
Kale, bbl. 75 
Tomatoes, 6-bkt crate.I 25 
3 pk. box. 2 00 
Squash, bu .. 1 00 
Sweet corn, 100. 1 00 
HAY AND STRAW 
• 
Hay. Timothy,No. 1. ton.30 00 
No. 2 .28 00 
No. 3 . ...» .25 0U 
Shipping.24 00 
Clover, Mixed .23 00 
Straw, Rye .22 00 
Oat and wheat.12 00 
© 6 00 
0 4 00 
© 1 00 
© 1 25 
@ 4 00 
© 2 00 
0 1 50 
0 5 00 
0 2 75 
® 2 00 
@ 2 25 
0 2 75 
0 3 00 
@ 1 25 
@ 1 50 
0 2 00 
@ 1 00 
0 4 00 
@5 00 
0 1 5(1 
0 4 00 
©31 00 
@29 00 
in 27 00 
@25 00 
@30 00 
@24 00 
@18 00 
GRAIN 
Gush wholesale prices quoted at New 
Y’ork : Wheat, No. 2 red Winter, $1.44; 
corn, No. 2 yellow. 86c; oats. No. 2 
white, 49c; rye. $1.44; barley, 77c. 
Retail Prices at New York 
Butter—Best, lb. 
.$.47 
to 
$.49 
Good to choice. 
to 
.45 
Cheese, lb. 
.20 
to 
.30 
Eggs—Choice . 
to 
.55 
Common to good...., 
to 
.45 
Potatoes, lb. 
.02 
to 
.03 
Lettuce, bead . 
.10 
to 
.15 
Fowls, lb. 
.40 
to 
.50 
Chickens, R>. 
to 
.60 
Local Up-State 
Markets 
JOHNSON CITY—ENDICOTT MARKETS 
Round steak, per lb., 22c; hamburg, 
20c; boneless roasts, 20c; kettle roasts, 
14 to 18c; porterhouse steak, 28c; ham¬ 
burg, 20c; roastiug pigs, 25c; salt pork, 
23c; pork loin. 20 to 25c; sliced ham. 
35c; brisket bacon. 22c; sausage, 25c; 
lamb chops, 28c; mutton, 12 to 25c; veal 
chops. 35c; veal cutlets, 40c; rabbits, 
live, 35c; dressed, 40c. 
Live Poultry—Fowls, heavy, per lb., 
30c; old roosters. 22c; turkeys, 45 to 50c; 
geese, 36c; ducks, 40c. 
Dressed Poultry—Roasting chickens, 
42c; heavy fowls, 38c; turkeys, 55c; 
geese, 42c; ducks, 46c. 
Milk, qt.. 8c; buttermilk, 5c; skim- 
milk, 5c; cheese, whole milk, cream, lb., 
33c; skim, 17c; cottage cheese, 30c; Pi¬ 
mento cheese, 15c; butter, 34c; eggs. 30c. 
Asparagus, 12c; beans, lb., 7c; beets, 
hunch, 8c; horseradish roots, bunch, 10c; 
potatoes, small, bu., 35c ; large. 50c; rhu¬ 
barb. lb., 5c; lettuce, large heads, 6c; 
onions, green, bunch, 5c; new cabbage, 
5e; carrots, bu., 80c; turnips, bunch, 8c; 
radishes, bunch. 8c; round red, 5c; spin¬ 
ach. peck. 25c. 
Vinegar, qt., 10c; honey, clover ex¬ 
tracted. 11>., 23c; card, 25c; maple syrup, 
gal.. $2.25; popcorn, on cob, lb.. 8c; 
shelled, 10c; black walnuts, bu., $2.50; 
butternuts, $2 ; hickorynuts, $5.50. 
SYRACUSE PUBLIC MARKET 
Beef, prime, sides, per lb., 10 to 12c; 
medium, 5 to 0%c; lamb, 25 to 30c; live 
pigs, each, $5; small dressed pigs, lb., 
lOc; pork, light, 14c; heavy, 12c; veal, 
prime, 15c; common, lie. 
lave Poultry—Fowls, lb., 30 to 32c; 
ducks, 30c; chickens, 40c; geese, 35c; 
guinea hens, each, $1. 
Dressed Poultry—Spring ducks, lb., 
50c; chickens, 60 to 70c; fowls, 45c; 
geese, 50c; rabbits, 35 to 40c. 
Butter, lb., 35 to 40e; eggs, 35c; cluck 
eggs, 45e; honey, per comb, 30c; Italian 
cheese. 45c; maple syrup, gal., $1.75. 
Apples, bu., $2; cherries, crate, $7 to 
$7.50; per qt.. 25 to 30e; currants, red, 
crate. $4 to $4.50; gooseberries, qt., 15c; 
blackberries, crate, $5 to $6; huckleber¬ 
ries, crate, $9.75; qt., 32c; Columbia ber¬ 
ries, erate, $5.75 to $6; raspberries, red, 
qt., 30c; per crate, $8.50. 
String beans, bu., 75c: English Limas, 
bu.. $1.50; beets, bu., $1.50; doz. hunches, 
35 to 40c; beet greens, bu., 30c; cabbage, 
new. doz. heads, 75c to $1.25; celery, doz 
bunches, $1.25 to $1.75; carrots, doz. 
bunches, 30 to 40c; chives, bunch, 10c; 
cucumbers, doz., 5()c to $1; garlic, lb., 
20c; green peppers, doz., 20c; kohlrabi, 
doz., $1; lettuce, leaf, crate, 50c to $2; 
Boston, doz., 25 to 40e; onions, doz., 25c; 
parsley, doz. hunches, 50c; peas, bu., $1 
to $1.75; potatoes, bu.. 40 to 45c; new, 
$1 to $1.60; peck, 40c; radishes, doz. 
bunches, 25e; rhubarb, doz. bunches, 50c; 
romaine, doz. heads, 30 to 50c; sage, per 
buneli. 5c; Summer squash, per doz., 
$1.25 to $1.50; sweet corn, per doz. ears. 
40°:, Swiss chard, bunch. 20c; tomatoes, 
qt., 35c; turnips, doz. hunches, 40 to 50c. 
Alfalfa, extra, ton, $20; hav. No. 1, 
$20; No. 2. $15; No. 3. $10; Timothy, 
$20; straw, rye, $16 ; wheat, $12; oat, $S. 
Rochester 
Dressed beef, carcass, lb., 15 to 18c; 
July 23, 1921 
forequarters, 30 to 13c; hindquarters. 18 
to 22c; dressed hogs, light. 13 to 15c: 
heavy, 10 to 12e; Spring lambs, 30 to 
32c; yearling lambs, 19 to 24c; mutton, 
.10 to 15c; veal, 34 to 16c. 
Live Poultry—Fowls, lb., 26 to 2Sc; 
broilers, 30 to 32c; springers, 15 to ISc: 
roosters, old. 15c; ducks, 23 to 25c; 
geese, 20 to 25c; turkeys, 40 to 45c; eggs, 
35e. 
Cherries,. sour, lb., 10 to 15c; black. 14 
to 15c; white, 12 to 14c; currants, red. S 
to 9c; peaches, homegrown, basket, $1: 
raspberries, red, pt.., 15 to 18c: crate, $6 
to $7; black, crate, $4.50 to $5; qt., 15 
to ISc; gooseberries, lb., 12 to 14c; huck¬ 
leberries, crate, $10 to $10.50; watermel¬ 
ons, each, 35 to 60c. 
Beets, doz. hunches. 25 to 30c: cauli¬ 
flower, doz. heads, $2.25 to $2.50; cab¬ 
bage, new, doz. heads, $1 to $1.25; car¬ 
rots, doz. hunches, 20 to 25e; celery, doz. 
green, doz. bunches, 30 to 35c; onions, 
dry, bu., 40 to 45c; green, doz. bunches, 
15 to 20c; potatoes, new, 14-qt. basket, 
50 to 75c; old, bu., 35c; radishes, doz. 
hunches, 10 to 12c; sweet corn, doz. ears, 
75c; spinach, bu., 40 to 50c; Summer 
squash, doz., 75c to $1 ; tomatoes, lb., 25 
to 30c; green beans, basket, SOo to $1; 
wax beans, basket. 75 to 90c; watercress, 
doz. bunches, 40 to 50c. 
Beans, per 100 lbs., hand-picked, me¬ 
dium, $3.25; red marrow. $8; white mar¬ 
row, $4.50; red kidney, $9. 
Now Sold by Over 
1000 Dealers in New York 
Dairymen quick to adopt this 
non-poisonous but effec¬ 
tive fly-killer 
Fly chasers are not new. Dairy¬ 
men, stockmen and all progres¬ 
sive general farmers know that 
regularly sprayed stock make 
faster and more uniform gains in 
weight. Milch cows give up to 
25 per cent, more milk. The time 
required to milk the herd is 
shorter. The work is easier. 
Meat, milk and work animals all 
gain in condition if flies are kept 
off them. 
But in spite of these great advantages many 
dairymen are dissatisfied with the shortcomings 
of practically every available spray. Most of them 
are made from crude carbolic acid or creosote 
compounds. They are both irritating to the 
mucous membranes and poisonous to man and 
animals. A common complaint is that they stain 
and mat the hair of cattle and, unless used spar¬ 
ingly, often cause blisters. Finally, they are “fly 
chasers” rather than fly killers. 
This spray knocks flies dead 
Morgan’s Sure Death Fly and Insect Destroyer 
has won almost instant success because it actually 
knocks every fly dead that it hits. It is made from 
non-poisonous clear oils. It is not irritating and 
will not stain the whitest cow. One spraying in 
the morning and another at night keep flies and 
gnats away from the animals. 
A fast seller in New York 
Morgan’s Sure Death Fly and Insect Destroyer 
is a new and better kind of animal spray that is 
being sold in great and ever-increasing quantities 
in every county and almost every town in rural 
•CTTVr 
one CALLOW 
SURE DEATH 
ELY INSECT DESTROYER 
Promii Mof»«» and Ciuk From Flf fnu 
•nd V«*ls 
Morgan Chemical Corporation 
HCWAnr or IMITATIONS 
New York. In many of these 
places it has been used ever since 
it was first perfected and sold. 
This year it is being extensively 
advertised and the proof of its 
superior merit is seen in the 
dealers who have put in a small 
initial order which has almost 
invariably been followed by sub¬ 
sequent orders for a substantial 
stock. 
Buy from your local dealer 
More than a thousand feed and 
___ seed stores, hardware stores, 
drug stores and general stores in 
New York State alone can now 
supply Morgan’s Sure Death Fly and Insect 
Destroyer. The price per gallon is identical with 
the price we have sold it direct—$1.50 per gallon. 
Dealers will supply a full gallon of Morgan’s 
Sure Death Fly and Insect Destroyer and a first 
class hand spray for $2 25. Get yours today. 
Special Introductory Offer 
As a special introductory offer in territory where we are 
not as yet represented, we will ship—all transportation 
charges paid by us—a full gallon of the spray and a hand 
spray for $2.25. If you already have a spray, send $1.50 
for the gallon only. The only condition is that you send 
us the name of the dealer you would prefer to buy addi¬ 
tional supplies from. It is further agreed by us that in 
case you are not satisfied with the results you get from 
using Morgan’s Sure Death Fly and Insect Destroyer, 
we will refund your money. We don’t ask you to risk 
one penny. You are the judge. Write today. 
The Morgan Chemical Corporation 
Executive Offices 
New York City 
Room 400 
39 Broadway 
MORGAN’S SURE DEATH 
Fly and Insect Destroyer 
