GUERNSEY CATTLE. EX-virK-PKKsinrcvr siortov MAtiMIFK KMT IIKIil). Most Costly llnrn Kvpr Unlit In the I nltcil (Mates -lliittcr-Mnklnji ' on HclntlnV Principle A Ntv Vepss. n. iiEVt p. Mon- TON, Into Vice President of t h e United Htnti'H, in the owner of the InrircHt (incrnsey herd of A nittle in Hi" world. ffn'W The New York Tri w XJACf. I i.. .... u M) of Mr. Morton'n ' J NMII licres on the tlndson, says: An iiitereMiiiff fact repnriliiij the management of the fur 11 is tlmt it is Vented in n eollce tiinn, 11. M. Cott roll, n Kniilmite of the Kims,,.-, Agricul tural Cnlli'i'. He in the superintend Hiit, mid Mr. Morton IhIcIh him ve poiisitilc for ev rything done nlmiit tlie place. He in r. Young limn of unusual nliilily, mid thoroughly pres cient in tlie sc:eitee uf the soil. (o.ie'of the mont important chnu''e Mr. Cottrell recommended v.as thi concentration of enerjry iiioti the cuttle tnd poultry nud tin) nliuml'iumcut of ill other stock. Thin whs done. An other improvement wiih the erection of a mammoth lmru ii. plnee of the one Hint wuh destroyed ly lightning last Inly. Thin lmru ia lielieved to he Hie moot cost iy mid complete ever linill in the United Htn'en. The miiin Imililiug is nl out MOO feet 1 ill n, or, to speak more pree'iielv, i!'.'7 feet lv (l.'i feet in width nnd 50 feet ill height, with nn HI) liy 52 feet. The struetm'e ineliideH liesiiles thr:' fjOO-tmi silos, eneh 47 feet in depth, tool nnd engine room, p,rain liina, Inliorntory, liiit'iin'-roiiiM mid ninplu hallways, nn Ics tlmn 120 ordi nary stalls mid forty-sit lint-stalls on the miiin floor. Ail upml minilier ere placed in the Imim 'iirnt, which ii light, dry Biul niry, its linttoin lieinu level on one Hide with the, ground, hil" on tlie other Hide itn windoWH npeii into n lie preHsed nron thnt P:n lie protected liy n MrieB of trapdoors from the ineomin of hiiiiw nnd ruin. Tluy Iiiivh nlmve the htrtlln enn nceomniodiiteMOO toiiH of Imv, withont coming over the middle hull way; mid the rniu-vnomH will hold twenty cbiIoihIh. The Himtll door, look iiiK up tliroiiKh tlm centre of the Imild iiiK. ih much larger tlmn would lie necesHnry tn mini it u freight train nnd tho earn ami ciiKino would have more than aniplo room iiiHide, tho pannage lieing neiirly hixteen fert wide, and thirty-nine feet high in the clear. The bar n, which ih mi arranged that it can lie doubled in length, will neoommo date IlliO head of Htock, or 401) w ith crowding, nnd alno Iioiihc all the liny, prain nnd cnNilage needed for tliiH regi ment of powh. The grniu bin alone will hold twenty carloads, nhihi three diloH hold r00 totiH each. The powh fit and in two long rown in the biiHement nnd on the first .floor. They are placed head to hend with a wide feeding alley between. Hack of them are the rown of largi', roomy box htalla for culver, SiiiIIh nnd lying-in powh. In laying out the plana, Mr. OottreH' work, no point of hygiene, comfort or ponveni.?ncc hccikh to have been over looked. The basement, which ih made light mid airy by a nvhtcni of double WiiIIh, in really n pellar, but along the Bides :h a trench reaching to the bottom And Kccurely walled ou the other aide. Windows rnn to the bottom of thin trench, nnd tlm let in light in abiiud nnee. Tho air w kept pure by moans rasi.wiiyi. "KiiUtnsiiiF," Mr., mohtos'h hoiie. of box ventilators. Fastened above to 1 the walls in front and back of (he rows of cows are steel tracks on which run hanging cars. That back of tho cowa is for a manure cor. The nianuro ia thrown into this from tho trench, nnd rolled out to the rear, where it is dumped into ft wagon or sled, to be hauled at once to the field. The saving under- this system as compared with the old plan of throwing the manure out through a hole in the wall back of each cow is apparent. The tracks in front of the eows carry cars from the silos and grain bins. The hay is stored ilirectly over the eows. By means of filings and hay forks it can be unloaded nud mowed by steam power. For Guernsey stock Mr. Cottrell shares Mr. Morton's enthusiastic, ad miration. It is the dairy stock of the futuie, ho believes, and he looks for ward with confidence to a signal triumph for his favorites in the stock contest which has been undertaken at the World's Fair. Five of Mr. Morton's Lord have been selected for this pur pose, nd are now in Chicago. The Guernsey, Mr. Cottrell insists, is simply n improved Jersey. "The two breeds differ chiefly,-" he added, "in size, vigor, disposition nud feeding habits. The milk is just about the same, no expert can tell the two apart. The Guernseys are, ou tho average, heavier milkers, and. their milk may have a little higher color. They are heartier caters as a rule. They average heavier . (than Jerseys, and never having been closely inbred or pampered, lire freer from i1isi4 and more vigorous in constitution. The chief difference ia in 'diupositon. They are not nervous and high-strung like the Jer- i. says. Oitprnspys are ttte best barn tlairy rnttlo in thei world. They Bro perfectly lit home at imlilio shows tit contests, whilo Jerseys am usually too rxeiteil nnil frightcnta! toilo their liest. The (luernscvs can In.' nli4tiel ntnl Imiiilli'd rasier mid hnve a rrcater cb- (meity for turning food into milk w hen foil In a linrn. Of the Htock in the linrn Millar, 20'):l, the king, of the herd, attracts mont attention. Ho is n flve-y ear-old, and is pronounced by many experts to be the finest (liiornsoy bull in the world. His large, well rounded body, utrnigllt back, broad loins, tine head, well set eyes, deep, rich yellow Imrns mid skin combine to give him a perfect form. His disposition is so mild tlmt a child enn lend him. lleHiiles being n grand individual he traces back ou both sire nnd ihnu's Hides to noted but ter (lui.rnseys. His dam, imported Helhi I,uce 'Jd, Ilfi.'io, is nil nttvai five cow with well shaped body and good udder, and tins given, under light feed ing, )U'I4 (ninii'ls milk in eleven and a half months. Ah a yearling Midns won first prize at the Buffalo InteriiHtionnl, )utehes County mid Hsy f-'tate Fairs in ISSii, mid second prize in tlie New York Ht'ite r'air that year. Me also headed the first prize herd at the New York nnd P.ay Stale Fairs in INH'.I, nnd in addition, won the sweepstakes at ISiiIThIo as bcrt bull of any ago. Midas him thirty-six pii.o winners muimg his ! miccHtors. I The belle of the ntnl do is TJeiti fail rice 4lh, :)i.')7, declined in the Pay State I'air lieport to be "one of the In st ami i most typical (luornsey cows that ever I lived." A model of ho; kind, mid with ! her huge udder, large tortuous milk veins, nud well-sprimg ribs, appears to be what she is, an enormous milker. r'ho wss exhibited in 1HH, at the UulValo International, New York Htatc, Dutchess County nnd Hay Stato Fairs, w here, notwithstanding the fact thnt she had been in milk since February 10 previous, she was awarded llrst prize in every instance. She has given 1 OUT J pounds of milk in a mouth uud !4li4) pounds in ten months, and '2l pounds of butter iu a day ou regular rations. Like Midas, sho traces to tho famous show bull und stoekgetter, Squire of Lrs Vaiixbelets. r!ho -was selected for tho World's Fair, but did not calve at the right timo to enable her to be sent. Pussagere 2d, 1528, is a fine largo cow, and the champion milk yielder this year, giving 10,410 pounds (over rive tons), of milk during tho last twelve months, and 1288! pounds (more than her own weight) iu thirty days. She was imported by J. W. Fuller. An offer of $H00 for her was refused. The picture of Diss :hl, 3t!H4, appears. Hhe is n tine cow with a model udder. She has given 7133 J pouuds of milk in ft year. Chamoinesse 2d, 3661, whose picture is also given, is another of the lot im ported by Mr. Morton. Blie is lemon fawn and white in color, with a rich yollow skin, and has, as will be per ceived, almost an ideal dairy form, wedge-shaped, with large space for di gestion, a capacious udder, and plenty of room to make it comfortable. She gives from 700 to 800 pounds of milk per mouth ou her regular herd ration. The record of the sixty-two cows and heifers that have completed the sea son's work has just been compiled. It is un interesting exhibit. The average yield as stated is 6110 pounds of milk iu year, the highest being Passagere, 10,316 pounds. Eight eows produced over 8000 pounds, fifteen over 7000 pounds, thirty-threo over 0000 pounds. The veailjr average, of butter is one MIDAS, Hr4D OP THR IIRItP. rNTKnton of titr ntn baiw. FASBAUMta. ' Aaiile from tho few lutll calves that re sohl from time to time, the solo market product of the lienl Is butter, ntnl hutter-making; nt Ellerslle in n most important department ntnl n most interentinR Rite, lletweeti sev- I pound from n little loss than seventeen ! MSS til. ! pounds of the mixed milk of the whole I herd. The cows have never boon forced, but. lire given what griin they nro able profitably to turn into butter. A eniiiiiusite sample of the mixed milk of the whole herd for eight milkinufs, just analyzed by Professo'.1 Cooke, of the Vermont Experiment (Station, shows 15.117 percent, fat, II. 00 per cent. cBMi-in ami li5. IH pi ? cent, total solids. Forty-two per cent, of the milk Ih from eows that have calved within the last three mouths. enty-llve and one hundred pounds are sent to this cily daily. Most of it is taken by th Windsor Hotel, the Union League and some other large clubs. To witiiess its mniiufacture under the ex perienced eye and scientific direction of Mr. liobsoti is to have olio's ideas on the subject completely revolut '!: ized. Tiie milk, as soon as it is taken from the eow.i, is curried to tho dairy. Cold air, taken from outdoors so as to be perfectly pure, is forced into the bot tom of tho cans holding tho milk by a Hill's aerator. This air rises through the milk and carries out every particle of fi ti i tn ii I odor in it. The pumping is continued from one to three minutes or until the air that comes from tho milk is absolutely odorless. Tho milk ns it eomeii fro'.n the eow luis a temperature of about ninety-eight degrees. The aerating reduces it about tell degrees. It is then run through a Do Laval separator and tlie cream taken oil". The separator is Himply it large steel bowl sot in ti suitable frame. This bowl re volves H500 times in a minute, tho out side traveling about two and a half miles a minute. Tho milk runs to the : center of tho bowl and the centrifugal forco throws it to the outside. Tho skim milk, being the heavier, is thrown ! clear to the outside mid tho lighter cream has to go nearer the middle. In this way one is sopnriitud from the other and the cream can be taken from 1200 pounds of milk in nn hour. The cream is taken from the separator and immediately run over a htar cooler which reduces the temperature from eighty-Hix to thirty-eight degrees. It is churned at thirtv-eight degrees in summer mid forty-two degrees iu win ter in ft Diamond cluiru. 1 his consists of a diamond-box, supported nnd r volved upon tritnions, and having its interior divided into two equilateral triangles by a moving centre board, which separates tho crenm in equal parts and produces a balance at all points iu its revolution, illustrating the liquid-balance principle. eiuMoirassE ii. But the most interesting feature of the Ellorslie dairy is not tho mechani cal contrivance or analytical instru ments, but the new process resulting in the immediate production of butter from tho warm milk instead of from the cold cream, as formerly. This is another of Mr. ' Cottrell' improve ments, and one in which he tukoa great pride. He explained the discovery of it at length. "Ripened cream butter was made," said lie, "'from the time the dairy was started. The cream was kept from thirty-sis to forty-eight hours at a high temperature until a certain degree of acidity was developed when it was cooled to sixty degrees and churned. This is the ordinary way of making butter, Early iu 1892 a trial was made with a machine to produce butter directly from the new milk. The butter made in this way had very different flavor from that made hr the ohl method. Samples wera Kent to each of our cmtotncrs with the remicst that flier try it side, liy sido with tlmt mnile ly tho old proofs mid I rejjort. With a single exception every rustouirr wanted lintter fy tho new method. We went to work making butter with the machine, but it dnl not taUe nil the butter out of the millt. The loss wbs about 7 ier rent., mid we had t.i devise some way to make tho ipinlity of butter demanded by our customers and nt the same time. sBvo all the butter. We ran the milk through the separato:1, pooled the cream immediately to 00 degrops mid churned it. T lie buttermilk from this churning was analyzed mid showed about !1 per cent, hntterns mncliBsis found lu ordinery city milk. We tried ngain, pooling tho crenm to ISO degrees, mid tlm buttermilk showed consider ably less loss in butter. We were on the right truck. We kept reducing tho temperature, every reduction showing a corresponding reduction in amount of butter lost in the butter milk until n temperature of !H degrees was readied, when the buttermilk showed only a faint trace of butler, usually less than I -'20 of 1 per cent. Throughout the siimmi r we churned nt MO t.i 40 degree'. After th" cattle were put in the litable and given dry feed wo found it lo'eessnry to raise the chifniiig temperature !1 to 4 degrees. "Mint of our customers Use tho sweet -er-'am butter. For them the cream is taken direct!" from tiie cooler mid churned. I'.y this process tho but ter in ihe milk th-t comes from the cows in tho morning is rosily for the table at noon, and wo have had butter on table in the evening in Now York ninety miles away made from milk given by our cows on the Name day. For such of our ciiHtomi rs as prefer butter made by tho old process wo take the cream from the ci oler and handhl it in tiie iihiiiiI way. Home of our but ter is sold iiusalted, fomo has half an ounce of Halt to one pound of butter, and Homo on" and a iiiai t.T ounces of salt lo one pound of butti r. We mnku just what our cu.-t imcrs demand." This maniiraoti'-i' of butter from sweet ci i am has caused it good deal ol controversial writing in the dairy papers, ns might be expected, and the Kllerslio pi ople have been called upon to defend and explain their methods. They lire ready to do so at all times. The main trouble, Mr. ISobimia sayr, that people have In churning cream sweet is that they put the cream into tlmchu'ii, like they would do with ri;io .ream, and do not pay any more atten tion to it ; si ml, one needs tu have u thermometer for a guide. A ;."i00 lluiiilkeri'lilor. "Dinmonilsoii pocket hmiderpliii-rs !" "Yes, iliainoiels on pocket handker chiefs," r"pt'ateil the jeweler. "l'h very latest fad is the jeweled handker chief. It's just come over from Kug land." The gems di aler was Hpenk in; to a Journal reporter whoso attention had boon called to mi advert i.ieinent. in n London papi ;, which read in follows: LOST At tlie Queen's rwnt liriiwuig llii'iui, a Willi" lace liHii'lkeivhii'f, with tlm Initial M. wnrki'il In illuiiiniiils on tint hor iiir. A lllieral rewar.1 olTeri'il. A'lilnss llelgravi.', n!uVi ol this fi.llier. "It's astonishing," continued tlu jeweler, "how quickly n fad started in Kuglaud takes root here. Although London has had tho start of ns, I reckon that before this time next year we shall be working more diamond initials on lace handkerchiefs on this side of the ocean in a week than the hVitishi-rs will iu six months." "How do yon nintingo to fasten tho diamonds ou the lace'.'" A $7500 DtAsfojfo isrriAi, iMVOKEnnnEF. '"First of all we strengthen that por tion of the handkerchief where the ini tials are to go by several layers of fine linen, about the size of a postage stamp. Then wo set the stones and attuch thcui by means of thin gold wire." These handkerchiefs ore, of conrse, not intended for practical use. They are strictly ornamental affairs. If, in a moment of absent mindedness, a belle applied the be-diamond lace to her nose the would run the risk of scratching her skin with the stone?, and so spoil her pleasure as well as her looks for a time. The accompanying Bketch represent an cluborutcjy jeweled lace pocket handkerchief, costing 87000, and made to order for a rapid young New Yorker with a rich father. New York Journal. Ill Kosiilt ot Early Klsln?. A German doctor has discovered that the majority of the people who live long sit up lnte at night. Eight-teuths ot the people who reach eighty never (so ho says) go to bod until tho small hours and take cure not to get up until the day is well aired. Not only is it a very fine thing to go to bed lute, but it is correspondingly dangerous to get up early. "Early rising," says the doo tor, "tends to exhaust the physical powers and to shorten life, " Indeed, if you have got the wrong kind of con stitution for early rising the practice may carry yon off tn the nowor of youth. unicago limes. The census report wells ia Colitouuu 3000 artesian V . . : - v fliMson and the Half Moon. Now that It has been definitely set tled thnt Henry Hudson, the English commander sailing tinder the Dutch TUB ftAI.F MOOK. flag, who discovered the Hudson P.iver, is to lie Now York's patron saint nt the World's Fair, spee'al pains will betaken by Him World's Fair managers from this State to got up th" most creditable show possilile to co.nmomoriito the works and i'"eds of the intrepid nav igator. A contract liua already bron cnti red into 'or a clay mod"! of Hud son. This will bo ihe mod"! for a bronze pavt. The wi !s of the New York Stale building will no i mic'llic'iied with Inrge piolnr' s painted tin renn, representing, notable scones in the li.'o of the nav igator who met such a miserable fate after his great discoveries nnd noble nets. One o' the sci'lirs selected istluit of the sixty-ton, ro'iml-prviwed Dutch vessel the Half Moon as nil." lay olf till) Highlands, Th" picture selected for enlargement is trim an authentic old wood cut, uf wdiieh the picture hern presented is a true copy. Hudson sailed in the Half Moon from Amster dam, Holland, on April 4, I (Will. He was under commission bv the l'.ast in dies Company, find his mission was to wrest from Spain Hie Flilorado of the unknown New World, to destroy Spain's pom r to il l lii'ni, mid to tlnd, if pmsible, n imir:' iii. t route to the Indies. 'I Ii ih was what brought Henry Hudson to the Kheres of th" New World. Ou the evening of Ho telllliet M, 100!', ho nnolu red inside of Handy Hook ; and the World's Fair Commis sioner will eiiil.iivor next winter to secure mi act making September :) h legal holiday in t Ii in State to loniniein ornto the discovery of the territory ol New York Ktat . On Hopteinlior 4 Hudson took his little vessel through the Narrows ami into N"w York May, and entered tho "iiiwr of the Moun tains," as the Hudson was railed by tlm Manhattan Monatou In linns. Ths Iroquois, however, called it Culiolinta tea ; tlie Delawiires, the Miihieiin-'tt-lok (place to Mahicaus), und tiie Mn'aicniis, the Hhiiteii'.ur. Ou Hcptimber 10 the Half Moon reached a place opposite Albany anil anchored hef," for Jour f.iiys. Of the Indians HmU: in wivite: "I landed in one of their boats in company of an old mail, who was chief there of forty men nu t seventeen women. Wo went to a house of oak bark." On Heotember 2D tlm return trip waa begun, and the round-nosed Dutch Vi -sel passed out into the sea again on October 4 nud reached Daitmouth November 7. Tin) following year Mndmn discov prod the great bay which boars hif name, nnd in 1810 hi.i er.'W thrust him into a small boat with his sou and rive sailors sick witii scurvy and cut him ndrift to perish in the great, water which bear his inline. Now Y'ori Tribune. Alfred Tennyson Diekoii!', n con ol the novelist, lives near Melbourne, and Kdwnrd liulwer Lytton Dickens, a brother, is settled iu u colony oi Nu Soi:tU Wales. J nice Darling's limit. The story of (lacc Darling is fami liar all around thu world. Jt has been told iu versa and heroic prose and put on canvas. Tho little craft in which thu hcrolno wcut to tlm rescue of the passenger steamer B'orfarshire on the rocks of Famo Island. September t; mi l 7, lisHK, was bought in 1S7II bv Colcnel John Joiecy, M. P., for South Durham, of Newton Hall, Htoeksticlu on-Tyne.from Oraee Darling's brother, George Davlin;; (who is still living in Northumberland), n.id was with the utmost kindnerM plr.?e.l at the society 'i disposal by Mrs. .loicc.y for the I yne niouth Maritime Exhibition Hcptem ber and Octolx-r. 1H82) wh er.i it was eagerly visited by about 2:),700 per Tim osAfT. DAnLrxa. sons. Tho litthf boat has reached Chicago nnd is one of the many inter esting exhibits iu the Transportation bulletin. Chicago. I riouue. Dnntreroiis Rattle Oanln. It is surprising, saya Doctor F. Saw yer, how manv people persist in clean lug bottlos with shot after the frequent cautious t.'at huvo been given. Jsotn iug olenns bottles so easily as a handful of shot, which can bo shaken into every corner until th? glass fairly shines with cleanliness ; but tho danger of lead poi Coning is great, even when the bottle is rinsed out with clean water, and it is doubly dangerous when there is uo rinsing out at all, as is usually the case. Clean sand is a convenient und thorough bottle cleamrer, especially iut the parti pies of sand which adhere must be af terward washed out to completo the process. When time is not an object. u bottle can be well cleansed by the aid of potato parings, but as they must be corked in and loft to ferment, the pluu is not expeditious enough for general use, New Z-jtk Dispatvu. THE LABOR WORLD. Massaohcsitts has 90,785 K. of U Usni.s Hm has 9,000,000 unnmplnrsd. IrfiKDOK hospitals employ 6000 persons. llnooHiUKKiift will form a National body. Iwbli. (Mass.) elty Inhornr (rot 3 a day. Rt. Ixiiis is to have a uao.OOO labor tsm iln. Nhw Yens City has a Spanish waltfirs union. Nsw tost stonncuUnrs get 4.S0 for elM noun. rrrrsBtiao's daw Mayor Is a union Iron Biolilsr. Is nnrnuiny Sunday work Is general among Iron wnrknm. JlHArir. Is about to undertake public work that will attract Immigrants. Wiimkh nlrHhlnsrworksni In Han Franolsoo am pafil from 5 to tVi a wnek, Tnr.sr ara only a fw pnrpi-ntnrs' union OiiUliln thfl pais of the llnrtherh.KxI. Tun annual sight hour Intsir dnmonstrs tlnns worn hnlil throughout Kuropn. Tsb Prussian nnvnrnmsnt has ermHnrf 5:i,WK) dwellings for the Uovnrnmstit railway hnmls. At Nnplis, ftaly, 10"0 women plgnr work ers struck against making ofgnrs without to bacco. At Cincinnati, Ohio, a bureau of Justin Pollm-tH wagns from the bnssos wno fall to pay thnlr hnmls. A cioak which sells for 90 In London hois Is snwml by women who rwnlvo two cents pur cloak for thnlr labor. At lietrolt, Mleh., rmlucml rntns of turn am allowed worklngmsn by tho rsllrowl company Isitwsn 4 -SO ami 1 a. m. Thu l.nks Khors liallroad will glvs mrsry niiiloyn transportation to thu World's fair ami a vacation on full pay when tlm trip la taken. Isdermsny svery employer of a ssrrnnt ' girl Is olillgisl to contrllMitn firs cents put wmk, ncluslvo of wug', to provldn a slok fund for her. Nsab Alfrnd, Ms., there la a woolen mill thnt pays twenty per rant, blghnr wages than any other concern In th Slate, and the work la correspondingly superior. Hoot Aimirss are on strike In Kansas City, Mo., nnd several wealthy eontrafltors, who could not gut anytsidy to takn ths piano of their strikers, took up thn hod anil oarrled mortar and bricks for several days. Th Ilrltlsh Itoynl Commission on labor ays In a mount report thnt thn annual rata of remuneration for farm labor In thn Unitnd Htates Is is-i, compared with tlAO In (trout Hrilsla, 1 2 In r'rancn, inn In Holland, In Oennany, i;0 Iu llussla, 50 in Italy, aad 3C ia llidlii. MAIIKKTS. pittsbubo. tub whoi.iwai.k rsii-ks abb oitiw fw. OIIAIN. ri)(lB ABU PKBD. WHKAT-No. I Ked t 7J I 74 No. i Rod TI 73 COKN No. 2 Yellow ear... B'i S3 High Ml led ear M 51 No. 2 Yellow Shelled St B'i HhollDd Mimd 47 44 OATjs-No. 1 White 41 43 No. 2 White 8 , 4tl No. 3 Whit HA IW Mi led m 87 RYK No. I Pa A Ohio.... 7 W No. 2 Western. New 61 66 FI.OL'K Ksnry wintnr ptf 4 60 4 75 rsncy spring psisnts 1 no - 7i Fancy Htrnlgiit winter.... 75 4 OT XXX Makers 8 V 8 50 Itvn Flour DM 8 75 HAY Bnled No. I Tlm y.. 14 75 15 75 itaicii .o. z ninotny i' no if " Mned Clover 13 00 II 00 Timwliy from country... 17 00 19 00 8T It A W Wheat 5 SO 6 00 I sts 7 Mi H 00 FKF.I) No. I Wh Mil V T 17 SU , IH (O Ilrown Middlings 15 At) 14 Ol) ilrsn, Hacked 10 00 10 50 Hrsn, hulk 15 50 IB 00 ntiKT rnonncTS. IltlTTF.H Elgin ieamery 2s 29 Fnnoy Crcsmery 23 25 Fancy country roll lit 20 Iflw grade A cooking.... In 12 CIIKK.SK-Ohio fall make.. 11 It New YorMioshen 12 13 Wisconsin Hwiss 1 17 I.lmburger (Fall mak... 14 14 fRUIT AN0 VB'IBTABI.IM. AIri.K8 Fancy, V bbl... a 00 8 25 Kairto choice. V bbl 2 00 2 50 1IKAN.S hand pic ked V bu. 2 00 2 10 NY M'newjBeanstbbl 2 13 2 25 tin,. II...,. A POTATOK.S " Fsn cy White per ba 00 1 Qfl rom.TBY ire. DRE8SKD C'HICKEN.S V n 19 17 Dressed ducks V ft 17 14 Dressed turkey V lb 20 21 LJVK CHICKENS Live chickens V pr 90 1 00 Live Ducks V pr M ft i.lve Oeese V pr 75 100 Live Turkeys tt 12 15 EOfiS Pa & Ohio fresh. .. 14 15 Ooose .15 40 Duck 20 22 FF..VTH KfW Fxtra livelieese V lb 55 CO No 1 Kxtra live geese V lb 4s 50 Mixed a .3.5 Ml KLI.ANIOUS. TALLOW Country, Vlb... 4 5 City 4 5 8KF.DS Clover 8 25 S 50 Timothy prime.. 2 0) ' 2 25 Dine grus 1 40 1 70 It AOS Country mixed.... 1 HONKY Whita clover.... 12 15 M A Pl.K S Y RC f. new crop. 75 80 W'CK WHEAT T. 10 12 CIDER conntrv nweetfl bbl 5 00 5 50 STKAWBKRRI ES per quart 10 15 Tennessee. 24 qt. crs te 1 75 2 00 ci.M.'ljisAri. Fr)tTR $2 20 13 20 WIIEAT-No. 2 fled 71 RYK No. 2 60 CORN-Mixed 42 45 OATS ; 35 34 EOOS n BUTTER 24 FHILADKLPHIA. FLOUR $3 25(3 14 40 WHEAT No. 2. Red 70 77 CORN No. 2, Mixeil 4 5(1 OATS No. 2, Whita 41 42 BUTTER Creamery Extra. Z) 3tt EUUd P Firsts 15 18 NIW VOXK. fWVR Patents 4 50 8 09 WHEAT-No. 2 Red 7s 70 RYE Western 68 67 CORN No. 2.. 51 62 OATS Mixed Western 88 88 BUTTER Creamery 25 2 EUUS State and Fenn 15 18 liti-stock'bipobt. CAST LtBSKTr, PlTTSSVaiJ STOCK TABDS. VATTLt. " " Prime Steers f 8 75 tu 5 85 Hood butcher 4 75 to 8 60 Bulla and dry cows 2 SO to 4 00 Veal Calves 4 50 to 8 10 Heavy and thin calves 2 00 to 4 00 Freeh cows, per head 25 00 to 50 00 '" snitsr, PrimeM to 100-fc theep....t 6 20 to 5 50 Good mixcWr.i 4 00 to 5 10 Common 70 to 75 lb sheep... S 00 to 8 SO Lambs, fa r to good 8 00 to 0 60 HOOS. Selected......... 8 00 to 8 10 Oood Mix.... .,..., 7 00 to 7 85 Oood Yoraere. 7 80 to 7 80 Common Yurkara 7 60 to 7 70 Roughs. , 8 30 to 9 50 Pigs 1 00 to T 26
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers