A ds ‘mault or-Dupont. . grees his own n of Patents, 802 : Cc DI N OC HEE . SD INONE : The French * De.” If the name began with “de,” which the particle indicative of nobility, it was an easy matter, the only thing necessary being the separation of the - initial syllable from the rest of the name, says the Nineteenth (entury. Yor instance, M Delamare became M. de Lamare; M. Delestrade was trans- ormed into M. de Lestrade, and M. Dervilley signed “D’Ervilley.” But the operation became a little more trouble- Some when the name was a very com- monplace one, such as Durand, Reg- In that case the name of a town or a political division was added; and the gentleman called himself Dupont de I'Eure or de Nem- ours; Regnault "de Saint-Jean d’An- geuly; Durand de Romorantin, and so forth. When no name of a town or.village was available the would-be nobleman applied for permission to add his moth- ‘er's maidem Rame to his own, especially if it had an aristocratic souhd. In this way & certain ambassador, whose fam= - ily name was a ridiculous one, but whose mother’s name, though plebeian, was easy to disguise, dropped by de- e and retained only the maternal appellation, just prefixing the particle “de” and the title of baron conferred on him under the empire. In the elevated circle in which he moves, thanks to his Intelligence and superior education, no one suspects that his real name, if he went by it, would associate him more intimately with kitchens, than with diplomatic salons. Happy Austfallan Shopkeepers. Shop assistants in- Australia do not have a hard time of .it. They work only fifty hours per week. In Ballarat every shop, excepting those of tobac- conists; fishmongers and hair-dressers, close at 6 p. m for the first four days «of the week, on Friday at 1 p. m. and on Saturdays at 10 p. m. The majority open at 8 a. m. to:be swept and dusted by the errand boys, the assistants ar- riving at 8:30 a. m. ’ 7 Ten Weeks For Ten Cents! Strange as it may appear, that big family paper, the ILLUSTRATED WEEKLY SENTINEL, o Denver, Colorado, (founded 1890) will be sent ten weeks on trial for 10c; clubs of six 0c; 12 for #1. Special offer solely to introduce the paper. Gold rings set with Rocky Mountain gems are given iree as premiums. Latest mining news and illustra- tions of grand scenery each week, also true stories of love and adventure. Address as above and men- tion tlds paper. Write to-day, pogtage stamps taken,. Fits jormanently cured. No fitsor nervouns- ness after first day’s use of Dr. Kline's Great Nerve Restorer. $2 trial bottle and treatise free RB. R. H. KLINE, Ltd., 931 Arch St.,Phila..Pa. India is entering the market as a competitor with Scotland in the manu- facture of low-grade jute goods. Chew Star Tobacco—The Best. Smoke Sledge Cigarettes. At sea level an object 100 feet ‘high is visible a little over 13 miles. If 500 feet high it is visible nearly 20 miles. I could not get along without Piso's Cure for Consumption. Italways cures.—Mrs. E. MouLToN, Needham, Masgs., October 22, 1894. At Chrichel, England, there is a farm on which all the animals—horses,” cows, pigs and fowls—are white. The Chinese ‘fiddle, in the shape of “an ordinary hammer, has two strings, and is played®with a bow. In cold weather We need heat, | The blood must be Warm, rich and pure. - Hood’s Sarsaparilla Keeps the blood In perfect order, Sending it, in a ~ Nourishing stream, To every organ. PRU Wm. 990009090000000080600000 T FOR 14 CENTS ‘We wish to gain 150,000 new cus- hence offer tomers, an r xe. Is Dar Radien, 30 arly Spring Turnip, Ic « Earliest Rod Bost, ~ 10 « Bismarck Oc great Plant and ‘Seed Ca upon receipt of this notice and Ide. ostage. e invite your trade and w when you once oy Salzer's seeds you will never get alon, out them. Potatoesat$1.5 . a Bbl.Catalogalone bc. No. ,0 2 JOMN A. SALZER SEED CO., LA "CROSSE, Wis. AND TUMOR PERMANENTLY Cure without knife, plaster or pain. All forms of BLOOD DISEASES thoroughly eradicated from the system. Six weeks Hleme Treatment for $10. Book of Information free. ; NATURAL REMEDY CO., Westfield, Mass. PROFITABLE SPEQULITON | SERTAINT We accept $100 and upward, guarantee 36 per cent. yearly, pay 9 per cent. quarterly, and - : ea ddpostiors en ei WHEELER. & WHEELER G3, 29 Broadway. N.Y; iR, Room G3, { Pale People. Chronle Rhemwmatism, _ From the Industrial News, Jackson, Afich. The subject of this sketoh is fifty-six: Jour of age, and actively engaged in farm- ng. When seventeen years old he hurt his shoulder and a few years after commenced to have rheumatic puins in it. On taking a slight cold or the least strain, sometimes without any apparent, cause whatever, the trouble would start and he would suffer the most excruciating pains. % He suffered for over thirty years, and the last decade has suffered so much that he was unable to do any work. To this the fre- quent occurrences of dizzy spells were add- od, making him almost a helpless invalid. IN ALL SORTS OF WEATHER. Ilo tried the best physicians but without ising benefited and has used several snecific rheumsutic cures, but was not helped. About ono ye: xr and six months ago he read in this paper Jf a case somewhat similar to his which was cured by Dr. Williams’ Piuk Pills and concluded to try this romedy. After taking the first box he felt some- what better, and after using three boxes, the pains entirely disappeared, the dizzi- ness left him and he hei now for over af year been entirely free from all his former trouble and cnjoys better health than he has had siuce his boyhood. Ho is loud in his praises or Dr. Wi'liams’ Pink Pills for Pale People and will gladly corroborate the abovestatements. His post- office address is Lorenzo Neeley, Horton Jagkson County, Michigan. All the elements necessary to give new life and richness to the blood and res:iore shattered nerves are contained, in a con- densed form, in Dr. Williams’ Pink Pills for All druggistsesell them. The weight of the Greenland whale is 100 tons, which is equal to that of 88 elephants, or 440 bears. Pres. McKinley Vs. Fres Silver. A battle of giants is going .to take place this. summer on 30,000 farms in America, not in talk or votes, but in yields. Sdlzer's new potato marvels aré named as above, and he offers a price for the biggest potato yield, also $400 in gold for suitable name for his corn (17 inches long) and oat prodigies Only seedsmen in America growing ‘grasses, clovers and farm sceds and selling potatoes at $1.50 a barrel. The editor urges ‘you to try Salzer’s seeds, and to SEND THIS NOTICE WITH JO CT8. IN STAMPS to- John A. Salzer. Seed 0., La Crosse, Wis., for 11 new farm seed samples worth $10.00, to get a start, and their big catalogue. ACD: How’s This? We offer One Hundred Dollars Reward for any case of Catarrh that cannot be cured by I's Catarrh Cure. F.J. CaeNEY & CO., Props., Toledo, O. We, the undersigned. have known F. J. Che. Rey for the last 15 y ears, and believe him per- fectly honorable-in all business transactions and finencially able to carey out any obliga- tion made by their firm, - Wxsr & TRUAX, Wholesales Druggists, Toleds, 10. WiLbing, KINNAN & MARVIN, Wholesale Deuggists, 'I'oledo, Ohio. x Hall's Catarrh Cure is tak®n internally, act. Ing directly upon tha blood and mucous sur- facesof the system, Price, 75c. per bottle. Sold by all Druggists. ‘Testimonials fr. Heall’s Family Pills are the bes; From the report of American Consul Jackson, at Cognac, [dt appears that the vintages of that” section, having been affected by frosts, the output this year will be less than last year’s, and the Quality possibly not so good. To Cure A Cold in One Day. Take Laxative Bromo Quinine Tablets. All Druggists refund money if it fails to cure, 25c. The shipments of boots“and shoes from the Eastern States was larger during the month of October than ever before, with cane exception in 1894. The fastest flowing river in the world is the Sutley, in British India. Its de- scent is 12,000 feet in 180 miles. > Mrs. Winslow's Soothing S for children teething, softens the gums, reducin, inflamma- tion, allays pain, cures wind colic. 25c.a bottle. Viviparous Fish. A doubt that has troubled scientists for years—whether there exists a vivip- arous kind of * , one that gives birth to its young © | living state—was defi- nitely settler a the amrmative the oth- er day wheu the City Hall fountain of the capital of Arizona Territory was cleaned out, Insurning the water out of the big cement basin, where a gold- fish variety of the carp family has long disported itself for the edification of the Phoenix nurse girl and the Mari- copa’ County hobo, it was found that many of the fish had given birth to progeny fully forined and ready to dart about in search of food at the moment of coming into their watery world. Oth- ers had given birth to tiny creatures that were globular in shape, except for the protruding eyes and a nascent tail fin, that could scarcely. be seen without a strong glass. From all evi- dences, it was clear that the clean-up had been made during the breeding season, yet there was no sign of fish roe or eggs. Many specimens of the strange young fish were collected, and will be shipped to. different experts, tution.— Phoenix (Ariz.) Correspondent Bt. Louis Globe-Democrat. one lot going to the Smithsonian Insti Secret of Good Butter. To have good butter the maker must be given good milk, must keep it clean, then use common sense. The buttermaker should have authority to choose his own assistant, as a cheap thick-headed man at the weigh can is not the ome. to judge of the fitness of "milk. —H. N. Miller in New England Homestead. , : Cream Temperature. Strange as it may seem,sonie house- wives have not yet learned the use of the thermometer in buatter-making, but still rely upon the old ‘finger test,” which, in reality, is no test at all. Meanwhile, the hot days ap- proach wherein the *‘butter spoon’ will be in demand on some farmers’ tables. Get a thermometer and know “where you are at.” If you have no ice use plenty of cold water. around (not in) the milk and cream. Churn in early morn at as near 58 degrees as: you can get it. About Farming Machinery. bh This is the season for storing farm machinery, and why do not manufac- turers make them so they can bestpred more easily? © If horse - rake thills could be unfastened or a mowing ma- chine pole be removed without taking the machine all to pieces, it would be . much better. The old-fashioned mowing machines were made with a wooden platform for the feet so the driver could shift his position and balance himself better on changes of surface, but now improvement has made two little foot rests or stirrups, with a seat that keeps the . driver's body at an angle of 45 degrees and every motion of the spring tends to throw him further out of balance. This is all wrong,” ‘The machine should be so made that the feet can be moved to support the body and the spring of the seat fixed so that instead of throwing the driver’s body back- ward and downward, it will give it a vertical motign, which is more natural and less injurious.—American Agri- culturist. , ; Russet Apples, 3 The russet or rusty coat apple, as it ased to be called, is an old standard variety, but so far as the English rus- set is concerned, is valuable chiefly for its late-keeping qualities. ~ It is tough, and deficient in flavor. But what is known as the golden russet of western New York isa larger “apple, niuch better flavor, and having a. lighter-colored but still rfissety = coat. It-is very nearly as good a keeper as the English russet, and as. good a bearer. It should always be preferred when setting out orchards where late- keeping apples ate desired. One of the peculiarities of the russet is that if its skin is bruised it will dry up without rotting. All kinds of russets have this peculiarity. It is due to the tannin in their skins, which prevents fermentation and -decay. There is one variety of russet which is sweet. It grows much larger than other rus- vets. probably because the sweet rus- set is a shy bearér. It has no com- ‘mercial value because the yield is not so great as that of better-known sweet apples. : > Thawing Frozen Soil. It is very difficult to make an exca- vation in frozen soil as is often needed when the building of a house or base- ment barn is begun in winter. The work may be greatly helped by gov- ering the surface it is desired to thaw with unslaked lime, applying just enough water to start it to slaking, and then covering the lime so that as much as possible of the heat shall be kept in. Heat does not readily pass downward, and it will take from five to ten hours to thaw down, depending for time on the depth to which the soil is frozen. =~ Where very deeply frozen; as it is apt to be in dry, sandy 30il, it may be necessary to dig out after the first freezing what sail has been thawed, and then make a second trial of lime. A When once the lime is below the surface it is much easier to Lin-the first application. Work on city streets is often done in winter by first thawing the frozen surface with coal fires made in coal furnaces that reach confine the heat it gives off than it is | missing what it takes to keep striet feed when the cow begins to fattén and the milk to dry off. Prob- ably, even then, some succulent feed, in place of part of the grain the cow receives, will check the tendency to fatten and hold the cow to her milk longer than she otherwise would. The trouble with cows tliin in flesh is that their milk will have always less o butter fats than that from cows which are in good condition, but not fat at farrowing time. An old farmer once said that a year when hay was plenty and cheap, and corn or other grains were scarce, was always followed by high prices for butter the next season. Too many farmers rely wholly on coarse feed for their cows during the winter months. © Some grain in addi- tion would be much better. So that the cow is not made too fat to have her. -calf come safely and: without caked udder, for herself the more fat is put inte her, the more she will put into the milk pail next ‘summer. American Cultivator. Clover Hay for Horses. There seems te-be a great prejudice in the minds of ‘the public against clover hay. for road or driving horses. That this is common, especially so 1n cities, is fully proven by the greater demand for timothy hay, and its very much higher price over clover. Cliemical analysis shows, writes J. |:hat a boy&ott S. Woodward, in the Prairie Farmer, that clover has by far the greater feeding value, especially in those ele- ments necessary for the fast-driving road horse, and ‘the experience of every one who has “sensibly experi- mented in the matter fully substan tiates the claims of chemistry. The facts.are that clover hay ismuch better for all hay-eating animals, and that they can do more nd drive farther on the same wei ble is it is too good; it is; palatable to the hors be stuffed, so he can eat will gorge himself so as to beren unfit for fast driving. It is like fill- ing a boy with some dainty ‘of which he is very fond and then putting him to hard work or close thinking), or like turning a lot of hungry cows .into a fresh clover pasture, from which they are sure to be troubled with hoven, not because the food is unwholesome, but so good that they eat- so rapidly as to retard digestion. With mangers filled ever so {full of timothy, especially as usually cut, much over-ripe, the horse will not eat tos mmnch. his appetite. : To feed clover hay. to a road , or driving Horse the feeder should use his judgment and give just what the horse needs and no more. Let it be eaten ever so quickly, the horse should have no more until the next feeding time. The feeder’s brains and not the horse’s belly, should be the judge as to-what he should receive. = > There is as much digestible, muscle- supporting food in one pound of clover hay as in. two and one-half times as much timothy, and as much carbohydrates, weight for weight, and fifty per cent. more fat or food of energy. . : . Early cut, bright, well-cured clover hay and oats make an ideal food for a driving horse, fed a proper quantity. Then, if the owner wants to amuse his horse between meals, “fill his man- ger with any kind of straw; but if the straw 1s bright ‘and has been well housed he will eat too much for own good in fast driving. For a growing colt there is no food so good as clover hay and wheat bran. Poultry Notes. Vermin may be expected henhouses. : : It is folly to expect eggs from poor- ly fed hens. in filthy Nicely fattened poultry sells readily and brings good prices. As a means of recreation for over- worked business men the poultry yard offers many attractions. Have a lot of dry leaves or chopped straw ready for the winter scratching pen, as it is a thing almost indispen- sable for fowls; and then in this year of cabbages there should be no lack of green stuff to throw to them now and then. Fifty or more turkeys can be raised on most farms every year without ever them. They will bring enough ready cash to -buy-the winter clothing for an ordin- ary family,or pay a year’s taxes on the There is nothing to tempt gaged in th | ters Union and Journeymen’s t= "7 INDUSTRIAL. in-Plato Men Spend > Whale Day Without A = i 0 combination yet among the tin- te manufacturers of the United Staftes: This is what the members of the Qassociation who met at the Hotel Linc®In, Pittsburg, Pa., Tuesday sald when@l the sessions were over. The same »ld sBOry of meeting to considef the bettergment of the trade by Sunday school §ethods was given out. About 10° of @he members of the association were pResent. D. G. Reid, of Elwood. {nd., is Qthe President. The meetings were str ctly secret. After all was over and afte hours of earnest talking the gentleme said that “nothing at all had been: don Labor Notes. nearly all the Russian rail- Bince 189§ way syste! the immedi the Govern in. passeng been made the trains 1 and on the s "have been placed under te administrative contrat cf nent. Enormous reductions r and freight trafiics have the number and spee r ve been greatly incr vhole, the new admuinistr ; fe very way an improvement fon. I which it supersedes. Al- tocether theg country is more deeply en- railroad business than any , world, and has so Tar made >ther in the a success oO Brooklyn - Shorter Hou it; i Druggists’. League for rs will submit a bill to the |! day and. leg holidays they ask that is]: xing ten hours as a day's Legislature ee SEurdy, hor ye | work, excep stag he 2 hours will constitute a day. On Sun- : i | only four h irs’: work shail be per- mitted. Thedf also urge that’ persons | shall not be paRgnitted to sicep in drug h Mgey are employed. d) Dock Laborers’ “the Practice of lamps at or be- stores in “whi The @Dubli Union has de (Irela t ded th sxtinguishing@the cityy > ne fore o'clock on mi Virgen mornings 's unfair tre@ ment to hf workingmen >t the city, sho have, iN Most. cases, to travel Jong @istances t° reach their work in profer time.” A veierin 10 established a, scientific sas City wa Horseshoers, y. surgeon Ww orseshoeing sh expelled from the“ Association. followed which ruined his business, and he has sued the Mas- Associa- le tion for $20,000 damages. One nundred men -went to work at th: Ensign Car Works at Iuntington, W. V., Wednesday. Several valuable orders have been received during the past few days and orders are now booked ahead suflficent to keep the plant running constantly for 12 months, The steam shearing plant put in at Wolton, Wyo., has been taken out, and shearing will be done by. hand next season. ao Milwaukee's electric railway = com- has offered to light the city, the xacted for each arc’ light being ge wants a State nd advocates the 2 New jon . is discussing th ing the eight-hou Buffalo Board of Alde dered that all printing for th bear the union label. Fifteen hundred people attende New York mass meeting in aid of the striking engineers. : The unions of Indiana will hold their State demonstration at Indianapolis on ‘Labor Day next year. Hartford Central Labor Union held a mass meeting to discuss ‘‘Municipal Franchises.” 4 Bridgeton © (N. J.) Glass Blowers’ i Union will wage war dgainst company stores. ; Five hundred Italian Canal laborers at Byron, N. Y., struck for 15 cents per hour. - Kansas City “trading stamp” com- pany has been visited by the sheriff. Debs’ Social Democracy has 25 ! branches in and about Chicago. CYCLING NOTES. Yrving Harrison, of Hackensack, N. J., | rode more than 26,000 miles on his bicycle last year. . Many farmers of Sullivan County, New York, it is reported, have decided not to {employ young men who ride bicycles. Louisville letter carriers must not here- after ride bicycles as an aid to delivery. | They prefer to ride in strgat cars, after his | three years’ trial of the wheei. Against the bill proposed to tax wheels in various counties of New York State an anti-bicycle tax petition to the Legislatnre is being circulated throughout the State. The Lady Cyclists’ Association in Eng- land, in order to popularize rational dress, is forming a brigade of those who wear the costume to the best advantage, which bri- | gade will parade the parks of London, en- deavoring to impress the public mind with the beauty as well as utility of the dress: A new tire which it is said combines all the merits of a punctureless tire has been placed on tho market. It cannot leak and it need not be pumped up. Itis made of a composition of fibre, granulated cork and rubber covered with a canvas coat covered with rubber: It is said to be just as light and serviceable as the pneumatic tire. One of the most expert wheelwomen of St. Louis, Mo., is a young woman who is blind. She rides alone about the streets, and has never yet been in’ a collision or met with any serious accident. when awheel. As her sense of hearing is so acute as to inform her of the approach of vehicles she is perfectly safe and fearless wherever she rides. : It is expected that the tricycle will again be brought. into popular favor among-the elders of the leisured classes in England. The demand for some vehicle in which the joys of cycling can be tasted without the fear of consequences that may result from the propelling of a two- wheeler, will probably bo answered by the return of the tricycle. There is oho nuisance of -whieh—mueh complaint’ comes from the United -King- dom, especially England, but whieh is al- most if not entirely unknown here. Over therethe cyclists are praying, with “most petitionary vehemence,” for enactments ‘Watson E. Coleman, Attomeyarlay and Solicitor F Bt., N. W., Washington, D. C. warts gf the country. ENSIONS, PATENTS, CLAIMS. ghest references in all jo} te = yrs. in last war, 15 adjudicating claims, atiy. sincs OUR Use c remedy of great power; a certain cure, _ plemailed free. Write Hoxsie, Buffalo, N. Ys 1 HNW. MORR 1S, WASHINGTON, D.C |- A RUBBER_ ST. JACOBS OIL Soreness Ti Stiffness. "IT CURES IN TWO OR THREE VIGOROUS RUBS.e 50 e mper. "It Sheds a Brightness ‘Everywhere’ © # very close to the ground and give out very powerful heat. But the lime method is cheaper, and with the fur- ther advantage that the lime after, slaking may be used in making mor- tar. It ts also valuable for applying to all soil that has- much vegetable matter, as the lime hastens fermenta- tion, which is necessary to make veg- etable matter into food for crops.— Boston Cultivator. y Milk From Thin Cows. It is a great mistake to allow a milch cow to become very thin while she is giving milk. If she be a deep milker, she will never become very fat, however highly fed. All that the cow-receives in feed in such case, ‘above what is needed to keep her in thrifty condition, goes into milk and butter, and is worth more ‘in that form'far more than what it ‘costs as feed, It will be time énpugh to re:. farm: i There is no better floor-than. one of cement in the poultry house. Keep it covered with fine sand or loam, which will become mixed with the droppings as they are made, and so increase the amount of fertilizer gnd make it easy to handle. | : : If you do not want the chickens in the garden, take some of the garden to them. Refuse cabbages are a de- light to them, and'so are other . vege- tables, since green stuff is becoming scarce. For the little trouble you take you will be well repaid. : To fifty pounds of wheat bran mix five pounds . cotton seed meal, five pounds corn meal and eight ounces of salt and you have a most excellent feed for laying lens, or any other fowls. This should be wet to a crum- bly mass before feeding. In winter wet with hot water and feed quite warm for breakfast. . 3 against farmers to prohibit them Trom- | scattering hedge-clippings' over the road- way. These sharp thorns are a fruitful source of punctures. : A wheel that will be appreciated by the slow-riding brigade or military service, has an attachment of two steel supports that drop to the ground when a brake-like appliance on the handie-hars is lightly touched. Upon these supports the bicycle rests and the rider can come to a stand- still and use his hands for any purpose without dismounting. When not' in use the supports are folded up against the front fork. India’s Plague Grows. "During the last week thé deaths in Bom- bay, India, from the bubonic plague, num, bered 851. From all causes there were 1540 deaths. The exodus is increasing and business is stagnant. _ Calitornia’s Orange Crop. The orange crop of Southern California, now being harvested, is said to be unm- usually flne. There was a slight fall of however. snow at Los Angeles, which did no harm; No. 088. : . This highly Por ! ished solid oak 5- drawer Chiffon- ier measures 54 inches high, 8 inches wide, 19 inches « Pe Each drawer is furnished with the best locks, n "$3.39 buys this exact piece of furni- 28 : ture which re- ; tails for - $8.00. : {Order now and avoid disappointment.) - rop a postal for our lithographe : Carpet Catalogue which IR with exact distinctness. If carpet sam- les are wanted, mail us €c. in stamps. hy pay your local dealer 60 per cent. more than our prices when you can buy of the mill? The great household educa- tor=—ournew 112 page special catalogue of Furniture, Draperies, Lamps, Stoves, Crockery, Mirrors, Pictures, Bedding, Refrigerators, Baby Carriages is also yours for the asking. Again we ask, why enrich dealer when you on ys the maker ? Both cata- you nothing, an all postage. os 5: 800 We pay Julius Hines & Son BALTIMORE, MD. Please Mention This Paper, a Dixie Knitting Mill Burned. The Dixie knitting mill, in: Atlanta, Ga., the largest hosiery factory in the State, was destroyed by fire. S.A. Magill says that the mill will De rebuilt and the opportunity will be embraced to organize a strong stock, company and make it the largest mill the kind in the South.¢ The capacity be quadrupled, giving employment t 150 people. The mill has been a terprise from the heginning. Depar IE er epar tient Stores Surrender. Fourteen |arge department: stores in or Cla : Denver, Chl., combined and demanded that the newghapers of that city reduce adver- tising Mates twenty per cent. The news- ’rs resisted the demand and an inter- esting fight took place, dealers in single lines of goods also compining against the department stores. - After a fight lasting for nine days the department stores made an unconditional surrender. orm fe peer mepett rCmt ry No Reindeer For Klondike. 7 The War Department has determ#hed to abandon the use of reindeer for the Klon- dike relief expedition. THE MARKETS, Late Wholesale Prices of Country Produce Quoted in New York. 4 MILK AND CREAM, I'he average price paid for the surplus on - the platforms has been 2%{¢ B® qt. net to shipper: Receipts of milk and cream at the different railroad distributing points in and near the city for the week have been a3 follows: Average daily receipts of the week, Avid milk, cans... ov. cian cnn 21,900 Condensed milk, cans... i Seer 149 Cream, cans. ......... 00. 00 es RPT BUTTER. ¥ y—West. extras... .— @8%8 20 ema iaia a geden 18 @ 19 onds......... Hse 17 firsts. HH @ 18 88... .. — @ Imi . Fadtory, Low gra State—Full orffamp 952 Part skims, good to pri 5) Full skims@........... 4, v 3 EGGS. State and Pénn—TFresh...... — @ 25 Jersey—Fancy.........o.... — @ 26 Western—Choide........... Lo — @ 24 Southern—Choice...... ala 23 @ 23)4 Duck eggs, # doz... re AG) Goose eggs, B® doz... ...... mee (OD, BEANS AND PEAS, Beans—Marrow, chaice, 1897 — @-1 373 Medium, choice, 1897,..... — @ 117% Pea,. choice, 1897.......... —@ 115 Red kidney, choice, 1897... 170. @ 175 White kidney, choice, 1897 — @ 145 Yelloweye......., nue. @ 1385 LimauCal.; # 601bs....... — @ 130 - Green peas, DAZS........... ‘70 @ 12% FRUITS AND BERRIES—FRESH. Apples, Ben Davis, ®obl.... 300 @ 400 Greening, P bbl.......... 250 @ 375 Baldwin, # bbl............. 300 @ 400 Grapes, Del,, ® basket...... — @ i+ Catawba, @® basket........ 7 @ 10 Concord, ¥ basket..... san ml AD Cranberries, Cape Cod;# bbl. 600 @ 8 00 Jersey, # bbl.............. 600 @ 650 HOPS. State—1897, choice, Tb. 4. 17%@ 18 1808, prime. .......o. ive — @. 74 Pacifle Coast, 1897, choice. — @ 19 Good to prime:........... 16 @ 18 O14 oda. cies. oo ENN 3 @ b LIVE POULTRY. Fowls; Bl... 0 no. 9. @. 94 Chickens, Bb. .....0ivi0.v us 8 @ 81 Roosters, B Ib.............., 6 @ 54 Turkeys, BIb......... 0 as — @ 10. Ducks, B.pair.........\... .. 40 @ 65 Geese, Bpadr.......i. hoa, 75 @ i50 Pigeons, ® palr............. 15 @ 20 DRESSED POULTRY. Es Turkeys, BIb............... 10 @ 138 Bpring chickens, Phila...... 10 @. 14 Western, dry picked........ — @ 9} Fowls, State & Penn., # Ib., 8id@ 9 Western ducks........... ren OD Geese, Western, BIb........ 5 @ 8 8quabs, ® doz............... 150 @ 300 HAY AND STRAW. ; Hay—Prime, 8100 Ib. :...... 7s@ 80 Clover mixed. ..... ++: 40 @ 5b Jiraw—Long rye........... . 45 @ 56 Short rye.........i...o.0 30 @ 40 Oat ie sl SE 25 @ 35 VEGETABLES. Potatoes, Jersey, Bhbl...... 200 @ 225 Fo dn bulks........... 250 @275 . Sweet, Bbbl............ ... 250 @ 400 Cabbages, $#100............. 175 @ 3850 Onions, white, $bbl......... 300 @ 600 Loi Red, § PPL... ... iin »200 @ 300 Green peas, Va.,'® basket... 100 @ 117 Egg plant, B bbl............. 100 @ 400 Tomatbes, $ carrier........ 100 @ 300 String beans, ® basket...... 100 @ 500° Squash, Bbbl...............- 150 @ 176 White, nea 40 @ 0 Turnips, Russia, 8bbl....... 60 @ 80° Celery, #-doz..... isa eae 5 @ 10 Carrots, 8bbl...............«100 @ 125 Cauliflower, bhl........... 100 @ 900 Beets, ®.bbl....... . 50 @ 7 Lettuce, 8 bbl.. . iee2...8300 @500 Pumpkins, ¥ bbl........ cise — @ — Kale, per bbl............ an 40 @ 60 Bpinach, per bbl....... veeee 100 @ 250 Brussels sprouts, #qt...... 5 @ 10 GRAIN, ETC. Flour—Winter Patents....., 480 @ 515 | Spring Patents........... .500 @ 520 | Wheat —No. 1 North N. ¥.... — @ 102} No.2Red.......0....000 0s = @ 102 Cori—NO. 2......ccvccvaveee. — @ 34 Oats—No. 2 White........... — @ 29 Track mixed.... se WH@ 20% Rye—Western....... es D4M@ Barley—Feeding............ — @ 343 * Lard—City steam........... 4.60c @ 4.650] LIVE STOCK," - Sis Beeves, city dressed........ 7 @ 87 Mileh cows, com. to good..2000 @4500 | Calves, city dressed. cee @ 11 * Country dressed.......... 7 @ 11. Sheep, $100M.............. 350 @ 500 | k B 100 600 @ 650 ® 400 @ 425 | dre 4 @ ©