WONDERS OF Til K WI1KEL riCHTINC MOCK DUELS ON BICY. CLES A NEW SPORT IN EUROPE. ft llemanifs T.tprt Ithllng rnmbntnnt Mttat Bf Absolute Masters of tha Wheel Win Kattlea Father anil Flvr Hons Who Hide on On Wheel. Wheelmen of England nnil France now light mock duels on liicycles. It Is not a mere imitation, lint a genuine contest with the foiln, which calls for am iinii'h skill dm the combats which took jilnce on foot. The first qualifi cation for n duellist of this Hint is to Mil. VOM IW'HF.IDT AND 1113 le an expert cyclist. Whoever at tempts one of these combats on wheels must be able to perfectly manage his machine without the assistance of his blinds. One of the first principles of exercise with the foils is to keep con stant watch on one's opponent. The slightest negligence of this sort may give a fencer tremendous advantage. If his wheel distracts his mind from the object he is trying to attain be ives his opponent just so much ad vantage which he otherwise would uot have. So what it really amounts to is that tlie man who w ishes to tight bis duel on a bicycle must leave the man agement of his wheel to his feet and lftiees. The combatants in a mock duel of this nature are dressed in the ordinary outing costume of the cydiid. Their hands are clothed in gauntlets. The stockings worn are usually faced with ft very fine quality of chamois skins. The shoes are of tho regulation bicycle fashion, with rubber soles. On the inner side of the trousers, just above the point where the leggings and the bottoms of the trousers meet, is a round piece of rubber about an eighth of an inch thick nnd seven and one-half inches in circumference. Tho object of this rubber is to givo the rider a linn pressure upon the ma chine, just as the rubber soles of bis alines act ns a safeguard against his feet slipping on the pedals, Kacb duelist wears a mask which has over each eye a projection of w ire, similar in form to a small inverted tea cup. This gives absolute freedom of vision. A short time ago I was fortunate enough to witness a contest with foils between two of the most expert riders iu the United Kingdom. Both were mounted on American wheels, twenty eight pounds each. The wheels were of w hat is called tho new folding pnt tern. That is, the frame is so con structed that it is possible to fold the wheels so that they come Bide by side, the centre of the frame working on n binge. It is claimed that a wheel of this sort enables tho rider to turn more inickly, and thus forms the best pos sible wheel for the mock duellist. F1GHTIMO DUELS ON BICYCLES Each man took up n position about fifteen feet from his antagonist. At a given hignul both mounted their nteeds of steel and slowly circled about ouc another, just as we have seen men fighting with knives seek an open ing iu which to make an attack. The left hand rests lightly on the handle bar. The right baud grasps firmly the foil, held at an angle of forty five degrees. Slowly the two circle about, until suddenly one ridder dashes forward as if from a catapult; there is a clash, elush of steel, and the first passes are over. The circling movement is oontiued by both men, who grow more and more wary as the circle narrows. "Look out!" calls the director. "Gentlemen, uo foul, if you please." This makes the duellist moral wary, for a foul by either means the loss of the honor of the conflict. 'Ware!" cries one of the combat ants, and a thrust is aimed at bia op ponent's helmet with a force that would seem snftloieut to throw him from the saddle. He sustains the hock gallantly, and the spurks fly as me ions beat upon one anoiuer, KeitUet colist bu loat bi squill liriiuu for a moment. The bicycles seem nlmost endowrd with life. The riders evidently hnve forgotten id nt they nre not on steeds of flesh mill lilood. l'nrry nnd thrust, clever defence, Mows thnt seem powerful enough to elenve the mask in twain nit these oc cur with lightning-like rapidity. Then like a tlnsh of light one cyclist whirls and circles almttt the other, nnd before the latter cnn fairly place himself in a position of defence the more active wheelman 1ms touched his antagonist over the heart with the hut ton that protects the point, of his weapon. The cyclist who is thus FIVE HOYS ON A UK VCI.K. touched is forced to dismount bis wheel, and his opponent has scored n lloint. This in ilin method Hint is generally followed, and, as may be seen from the description given, is ex citing in the extreme. One interesting result in France is that it is likely to become something more serious than mere pastime. Duelling is the vogue there. At the same time a duel about which there is n novelty, is something to bo culti vated. Therefore, the mock duel on wheels, which the fencing exercise is called, bns suggested to the volatile Frenchman n chance to furnish w heel men with a method of bis own for re senting insult. SIX ON ONE BICYCLE. Hon- a Komi ItuffHlo Father Take Ills Five bans Wheeling, Mr. " om Scheidt, of Buffalo, bns five boys and a bicycle. As the bicycle is an ordinary wheel intended for the use of one person, nnd as the boys are A SEW 8P01IT IN EIT.OPE. - all of them too small to stride the paternal machine, it is difficult at first to imagine the connection between Mr. Vom Scheldt's six possessions. A glance at the illustration, which we reproduce from the columns of the Buffalo Express, will, however, show that there is something in common to all, and that there is something very vital to the enjoyment of the Vom Scheidt youngsters. The spectacle of Mr. om Scheldt and hie family enjoying a spin upon bis bicycle must be edifying indeed, espec- tally when the family tackle a sharp hill on a warm day. At this distance from Buffalo, says the New York Her ald, we can almost lieur the paternal muscles giouu and see great drops of perspiration rolling down the Vom Scheidt brow. The boy iu front of the family group is twelve years old, and so is the boy in the rear. No. 2 on the wheel is the latest Vom Scheldt to enter this world of sin and wheeling. He is about six months old. The boy seated just behind the baby is five years old. The Bext is seven. Mr. Vom Scheidt is as muscular as be ii kind hearted. Uo hat wheeled CHETF JIVMA TTPLB AND TITS W'HEETJ, himself and his five sons hundreds of miles. He has even tnken them on several occasions to Ningnra Falls and back. It ran readily he believed that, as n contemporary remarks, "This bi cycle load is the centre of observation wherever it goes." An Indian f'hlrf Who Ride n Wheel. This Indian chieftain is on bis first visit to Hnn Francisco, nnd is the guest of T. H. H. Vnrney. He is a grndnnte of the Carson Indian Hchonl, being now employed by the Government as an interpreter and naval officer. He was taught to ride Inst year by C. C. Hopkins, and in an excellent bicyclist. SLAVONIAN LAUNDERING. Mangle fnnnlntfl of a liunmy Log nnil Hollers, I'rnpelleil by Frail Women, Hlavonin is in Austria, or rather in the extreme south of Hungary, but its people are nearly all Hervinu. Its plains stretch for miles in an endless expanse of perfectly flat country. Its mud is fathomless, its women's daily task of scouring nnd fighting ngninst the dirt that the "men folks" bring in from out of doors on their shoes is never done. Between times there is the mnngle. This is n stout plank abont seven feet long, rnised to a height of two feet upon rough hew n logs. The mid dle of the plunk is gripped by n frame work rising from the Door to a height of five feet, with three great beams running ncross it, tho whole fastened together with pegs. Upon the plnnk are laid two rollers, and on these rests il half log of wood just fitting between the sides of the frame. This weight is smooth on its under surface, rough hewn above, nnd is provided at each end with three pegs which servo ns handles. The ironer, when ready to begin, A SLAVONIAN WOMAX moNlNOi takes a sheet, for instance, winds it tightly around one of the rollers and puts an old ironing cloth nround the outside. Thou, lifting one end of the log nnd placing the roller under it, she works the weight to and fro, until the wrinkles are all presumably smoothed aw ay. Then the sheet is re moved, folded and put away, and tho next "ironing" perhaps another sheet or three or four towels, or hnlf a dozen handkerchiefs substituted. Tho sec ond roller acts merely to balance tho log, although two ironers cnu work the machine, one nt each end. The womnn who irons is as pic turesque as her tools, when she wears the Slavonian peasant cos tume. Her shoes are flat and beelless; she has no stockings, but winds linen about her lower limbs and binds it in place with thongs, leaving a space of two inches or so bare below the edge of her kilted skirt of coarse, undyed linen. Her yellow, sheepish jacket is ornamented with patches of red and purple leather, quitted on with bright yarns, and ber head is covered with a gaudy kerchief. Almost as often, bow ever, she is stripped of ber finery, ex cept on Sundays, and wears At her work bedraggled clothing of western Europe's unattractive work-o-day pat tern. The original log of Captain Cook, of the ship Discovery, in which he dis covered the Hawaiian Islands, has been found among the British archives at London. The log was taken to Kamtchatka after Cook's death by a Russian warship, thence to St. Peters burg, and from there to London. llo Envied the Giraffe. "Father, if I bad a neck as long as that I could reach np to the) top shelf in the jam closet." IM7 T17Sjvjt i jyiaTI Jr. r. r v HELPS FOR HOUSEWIVES. t:gga In "alt. To pack eggs in salt, use "coarse fine," cover the bottom. of tub first with three inches salt. On this place the eggs, large end down, fni enough apart so they will not touch each other or sides of tub. Then cover this layer entirely with salt; follow by another tayer of eggs, and so on until the tub is full. Keep in a cool dry place. II. O. ltufllngtoti, in New Eug lutid Homestead. Itennvatlng Feathers. On wnsbdny when the boiler bns soapy, steaming water in it place a stick ncross the top to ' help support the bed, pillows or whatever contains the feathers. Arrange the bed nicely over the boiler; it can easily bo done by doubling. Turn the bed, thnt the steam may thoroughly permeate nil parts, then bang or expose in the sun and air. This will not enliven feath ers, but surely exterminate moth. Nice Wn.vln Serve Ornngcft. Here is n nice way, though just a little troublesome, perhnps, to serve oranges. Make a rich, thick syrup of sugar and water in which you have boiled orange peel till it is tender. I'ut the peel aside to use when dried for seasoning other things. Select large, rather tart oranges, peel and divide them into single sections with out breaking the skin. Drop a dozen or so of these sections'ihto the boil ing syrup nt n time, leave a few min utes, nnd then Iny on a sieve to drain over n deep dish. Treat nil the sec tions this wny, nnd by the time yon hnve finished the lot the first hatch w ill be ready to dip again. It will take about half a dozenilips all around to do the business. Vnon cold serve piled up iu little glass dishes. True Ittitrfor ('milling rotators. So simple n thing ns a potato is in suited by half the cooks ill Christen dom. When potatoes nre to be boiled, pure and simple, only a vandal will peel them before cooking. Potatoes to lioil should be of uniform, medium size, so that one w ill be all that one person wants to eat; and not any more than n healthy appetite will demand. Cutting them injures the flavor for boiling. They should be smooth and plump, nnd should be scrubbed with a clean sen-grass brush thnt is used for no other purpose. They should soak for hnlf an hour in cold water before being put in boiling water, and should not cease a good steady boil in A covered vessel until they nre ready to serve, l'onr oil' the water, nnd set on the back part i f the stove with the liil on" to let them dry thoroughly be fore serving, and then you will hnve a nice, mealy potato well worth the trouble you have takeu. The same rules should be observed for baking. Tho oven should lie mode rntely hot, increasing to a good heat rapidly. When done, which you ascertain by testing with a fork, take in n linpklu and break the skin on one side, to let the steam escape, drop a lump of but ter in the break, if vou like, and re turn to the open oven for a moment or two, till ready to serve. Washing ton Star. ltei'lHs. Gravy Omelet (Mrs. McKinley's re cipe) Make a plain omelet, fry, nnd dish it up upon a hot platter; have ready one large cupful of good beef gravy; beat .this very hot; add one tenspoonhil of minced parsley; pom over the omelet ami serve. ( 'iirdn mom ( U h k ies Th ree eggs, one pint of sugar, half a pint of shorten ing (hulf butter, hnlf drippings may lie used), one snltspooiiful of salt, one fourth of a pint of milk, two teaspoon fills of baking powder sifted in with the flour, two tulilespoonfuls of car duuioui seed, flour to roll out thin; cut into rings, nnd bake a delicate brown. These proportions will make a week's supply. Baked Asparagus noil until tender two bunches of asparagus; when cold cut into inch pieces; lay in a buttered vegetable or pudding dish; cover with a sauce made of two tahlespooufuls of butter, rolled in two of flour; pour two cupluls of boiling milk over this, and season with one-half teaspoouful of salt; sprinkle three tablespoonfuls each of grated cheese and bread crumbs over the top ami liuke a light brown. Orange Jelly To make a e'ear orange jelly, souk one-half a package of gelutme in one-hull cup water for an hour; strain one clip and a hulf of orange juice into a bowl; add one cui fill of sugar, one cupful of water, the juice of one lemon and the beaten white of an egg; put the mixture into a saucepan, with the soaked gelatine. and bfat until the sugar and gelutiue are dissolved; strain through a course cloth into a mold; a nice way to serve this jelly is iu baskets made from the orange peel. Southern Batter Bread Three cup fills of cornmeal, half-cup of boiled rice (cold), oue pint of boiling water. one teaspoouful of salt, oue table- spoonful of lurd, three eggs, one cup ful of sour milk, one-half teaspoouful of soda; sift meal, salt and soda to gether, stir iu the boiling water and beut iu the lurd and rice; now whip in the beaten eggs, lustly the sour milk; pour into a well-greased bread puu and bake about thirty minutes iu a moderate oven. Ham Mucuroni Quarter of a pound of mucuroni broken into inch bits und boiled slightly in suited wuter till tender; drain, and place in the dish iu which it is to be served. Muke a gravy of one level luinespooniui or butter. the same of flour, und three-fourths of a pint of milk; when smooth add oue well-beaten egg, seasou with hulf a sultspoouful of red pepper mid oue of mustard; lustly, add hulf a pint of finely chopped leau hum; mix this sauce with the macaroni and brown on the top iu the oven. KEYSTONE STATE NEWS GONDENSEOL A TESKI1LI MIlTAEI. Well Knows Rsrrlibarf Mas. Tskes Itryeh- alas ana Otis. Herman J. Wols, a well-known Denr- cratlc politician of Harrlsburg-, took strychnine by mistake to-day, and died several hours later In great agony. Ho wns 40 years old. and until recently held a position In the International rev enue service. Mr. WolB was at one time publisher of the '.'Htrrlsburg Sunday Capital," nnd afterwards one of the proprietors of the "Kvenlng Rtnr." He was for severs! years chairman of the Democratic city committee. A widow and one child survive him. After the discoursing situation In the coke Held near lumbar, presented by the reports of several weeks past, the favorable reports of lsst week's trade will be hulled with deiignt. Tne trade Inst week showed decided sign of Improvement. 77 ovens being added to the active list, making ni.xio ovens III blast nnd 8,02 Idle. The production amounted to 103.778 tons, an Increase over the previous week of 2.363 tons. The total shipments from the region amounted to 8,102 enrs, a gain of 147 cars over the previous' week. Tho following pensions were granted: Pennsylvania Joseph It. Wlckllne, tihnrpsburg; Thomas W. Dyott. Krle, Andrew J. Foy, Hellwood: Jonnthnn Wiser, Hopewell; Arthur Colvllle. Pitts burg; Kllzaheth H. I.lttell. Allegheny; Minor y. George, Zellenoplc; Elisabeth I.nunts. Connmaiigh, and Jacob I.. Itecce, Pennsvllle, Fayette county ; Wil liam Hcrwlnkle, Apollo; Adam Leake, Altoona; John Lancaster, Hraddock; Joseph Hryant, Krle; Oeorge T. Head rlck and Margaret J. Croft, Pittsburg; Daniel W. Daugherty, Saltsburg; Hlrnm McCoy, Oaleton, Potter county. John II. Ktahl, Willlamsport; Oeorge F. Mil ler, Lancaster; John n. Stevens. Kaxles mere; John Heymer, Rcranton; Increase, nvld Comfort, Blalrsvllle; reissue, Christopher F. Yockey, Chlcora. Daniel J. Hlattery, the Krle railroad supervisor who has been missing since May 28. committed suicide. Aftr leav ing Hradfnrd he went to Falls Creek, took a train to Pittsburg nnil thenco to Hellalre. o. On the evening of May !! he was seen by a fisherman to leap into th Ohio river. The bndv whs taken from the water soon after. He had removed all miners from his bodv end even cut the Initials from his shirt front. The body was Interred at public ex pense. A mark and the number on his shoes led to his identification. Martin Mailer, of Krle. walked not on the breakwater, sat where he thought he would fall In tho water and then t hot himself through the hi ad. fie reii backward and wns found. Matter had been for twenty-five years KrleV lending wholesale confectioner, but overstepped himself In the en largement of his factory and failed. His next venture was In the Ohio oil field, and It cleaned up the bnlnnce of his wealth. He was a. Knight Templar and leaves a wife and four children. Contracts hnve been let for the recon struction of the Rosenn furnace nt New Castle which will make It one of the hlggcKt furnaces In the'l'nltcd States. The capacity will be about 4f tons. The Knterprlse Company of Ynungstown win ijuiici tne stack and the New Castle engineering works do the Iron work. The furnace will be 5 feet high and 27 feet in diameter. Tho Improvements will cost about lir.n.fKiO. Capt. J. W. Reynolds and John Kyler of Kspy, I'a., were burned to death, nnd Maurice Reynolds was fatally burned on the Susquehanna, at Pitts ton. The dredge was being used by the Spring Brook Water Company, in erect ing a inter. The men went to bed In the cabin and soon after a fire broke out In the boiler room. The bark peeler strikers, angered be cause certain Frenchmen would not Join their ranks nt Croyland, com menced a riot, which necessitated the summoning of the sheriff of the county. Woodsmen from adjoining camps are also striking for advanced wages. Oeorge E. Landers, ex-post mnstervat Newberry, stood up to be punished for shooting Select Councilman Seth T. Foreman last fall. After reprimanding the prisoner. Judge Metzger sentenced him to two years' solitary confinement In the Kastern Penitentiary. To get on ieck. they had to run through the boiler room and only Maurice Reynolds lived through the fiery ordeal, He was rescued by a boat from the shore, but was so badly burned he cannot recover. The dredge burned to the water's edge and sank. Benjamin Thornburg, a Washington county poorhnuse character, famous In his duy as a fighter, died at the age of 97 at the Washington county poorhoute from Injuries received by being struck by a train. H. J. Welsh, brakeman, was killed at Courtney. He had asked a young lady for a rose, and in reaching for it, as the train was moving, Inst his balance and fell under the cars. He was ground into pieces. At the words "two years" Landers fell to the floor as if shot, and his aged mother, uttering a piercing scream, dropped Into the arms of a friend In A dead faint. Burglars blew open the safe tn the Armagh pnstofftce, Indiana, kept in I. R. Mack ft Sons' store, and got 3'0 In money and S500 In notes and postage stamps. The Pottatown iron company has as signed. It failed In February. 1S3, since which time It has been In charge of receivers. Its capital stock is $1,000, 000. Reports from many sections of Fay ette county show the 17-year locusts are multiplying at a rate to cause ap prehension of serious destruction to crops. The general store of Henry & N. M. Dewalt, at Harrison City, has been closed by the sheriff at the suit of S. M. Ferguson and will be sold. Paul Hughes, aged 8 years, and James Faddls, aged 11 years, of Rloea Landing, killed a copperhead snake measuring 27 Inches. Mrs. Robert Malr of Latrobe, an aged lady, attempted suicide by drink ing lye and la in a critical condition. Cleothe 12-year-old son of William Ktnter, of Edinbnro, was kicked to death by a horse he was leading. John Mahley, aged 20, of Franklin, was killed by a train at Ashtabula, O. Ttt Bighsit Brldgs. - Tbs blgbekt brldgs of njr kind In the world Id said lobs the Leo river viaduct oo tbs Autofagasta hallway, lu liollvlo, Bnutn Ainarlua. Tba pluctt wbera tbta btgunit rail way slruoture bas been araotod la over lbs ilulo raplua la ths Upper Andres, sad Is be iwuu tun two sides ul A cuoyou wbluh Is siluaud 10,000 ! from iUt level ol tue raotuo. n.I?- ?MJf'B "PP' o particularly liable to disorders el the digestive organs aadteeaaosr. CONGRESSIONAL, June 10. The sugar schedule wns then taken up, and Mr. Allison, on be half of the Finance committee, of fered an amendment making D5-100 of a cent the duty on refined sugars. Mr. Jones, Democrat, Arkansas, argued that the proposed schedule would In crease the profits of the refiners. Mr. Vest, Democrat, Missouri, said the surar trust had a capital of 175,000,000 common stock and $75.mki.OOO preferred stock, an aggregate of $ISO,0Hl,000, with profits of 12 per cent, on Its common stock artd 7 per cent, on the preferred stock. He said there might be some doubt In the Senate as to what the new schedule did for sugar, but there wan no doubt In Wall street. The sugar stock went tin from 14 to 15 a share art soon as It wns known what the new schedule contained. Mr. CarTery, De mocrat, Loulslann, placed the proms of the trust at cent a pound on 4,000, OOft.O'iO pounds of sugar, w hlch would be ii'o.noo.ooo. No final action was tnken on any feature of the schedule. This leaves the House provisions of the bill, with an amendment Increasing the House tlliferentinl from 875-1000 to 95-100 cents per pound. The provisions relntlng to the Hawaiian treaty went over by mutual consent. .lames T. Loyd, elected to succeed the lute Representative Olles, of the First Missouri district, took the onth In the House to-day. A resolution wns passed to pay the salaries of certain consuls. The Speaker declared the House adjourned until Monday. June 11. The tariff bill was tnken up. and consideration of the sugar schedule resumed. Mr. Oormnn In dlsciinHlng the bill remarked that the bill increased the burden of every man by 10 per cent. Mr. Allison held thnt the bill would be of no more advnntnge to the sugar Industry than the Wilson hill was. Continuing he snld It was the policy of this bill to establish the production of sugar In this country, and keep the $100,000,000 annually paid for sugars by our people at home. PENNSYLVANIA LHGISLATURE. June 10. t bill taxing blryles went through second reading In the house, but the outlook for Its success finally is far from bright. The club license bill was defeated by a vote of 95 to 48, but afterward reconsidered and final action postponed. The amended direct Inheritance tnx bill, prepared by Attorney General McCormlck to mnet the adverse de cision of the Philadelphia court, will. It Is claimed, put upward of $2,000,000 an nually In the State treasury. Senate bill for Inspection of meat shipped Into Pennsylvania from other StHtes passed second reading after a hnlf hour's debate. Hills extending to boroughs the law enacting the State board of under takers, increasing the number of copies of the report of the Pennsylvania State college from 10.000 to 28.000. and regu lating the location of burin! grounds owned by cemetery companies, were defeated. Dills amending the act of May, 1S93. to enable borough councils to establish boards of health, and to allow councils of boroughs containing not more than 10,000 inhabitants to combine com patible offices, passed finally, June 11. The Tlnldwln bill, amending the Krooks high license law, was con sidered In the home. The bill prohib its the sale of bottled liquors from wagons, except on order from the bot tling concern. The direct inheritance law was up on second reading. Gov. Hastings estimates thnt the direct In heritance tax bill will yield $2,000,000. The Young trolley bill, granting tho right of eminent domnin to country trolley companies came up. Discus sion was prevented by an adjourn ment. There are three hundred natives of India, chiefly students, now residing in England. MAHKET8. PITTSBURGH Grain, Flour and Fesd. WHEAT So. 1 red 85 9 84 80 29 7 No il red CO UN No. 3 yellow, ear 81 2 24 26 28 43 4 40 4 45 3 SO 12 00 10 25 14 00 12 50 11 50 10 75 7 00 6 75 io. x yellow, (ueueu Mixed enr OATS No. 1 wblte 25 26 4'i 35 85 80 75 50 00 00 00 50 50 50 No. a wblte IlYE No. 1 FLOUR Winter patents 4 moor sirHigtii wiuier 4 Kve flour 2 HAY No. 1 timothy 11 jiixeu eiover, no. i v Hay. Iron wagons 13 FLED No. 1 White M.I., ton.. 12 Drown middlings 11 II. an I,ILf 111 BT H A W W beat '. '. '. '. '. '. '. 6 Oat t BEEDS Clover, V0 ltt 4 Timothy, prime 1 Blue Grass 1 85r 6 05 50 1 IH 00 1 76 Dairy Product. BUTTER Elgin Creamery. 169 17 Fancy creamery 1(1 17 Fancy country roll 9 10 CHEEHE Obio, new 7 8 New York, new 9 10 Fruits and Vavatablas. BEANS Hand-picked, V bu...i 90 95 VOTATOEH In csr, bu 21 80 CABUAUE Homegrown bbl. 1C0 155 ONIONH Yellow, bu 155 179 Poultry, Eta CHICKENS. V pair 45(3) TUltKEYH, It 7 EOOH Pa. and Oblo, fresh.... 9 CINCINNATI FLOUR 75 4 75 WHEAT No. 2 red so BYE No. 2 89 CORN-Mlxed 25 OATH 19 20 EtlQH 7 8 BUTTER Ohio creamery li It PHILADELPHIA. FLOUR 4) 8 25$ 4 75 WHEAT No. 2 red 83 CORN No. a mixed 28 29 OATH No. 3 white 24 25 BUTTER Creamery, extra 15 EGOS I'a. firsts U NEW YORK. FLOUR Patents S 00 4 75 WHEAT No. 2 red 78 CORN No. a 29 OATH Wblte Western 33 BUTTER Creamery 15 EUOH Htate of Peun 11 LIVE STUCK. CIXTSAL STOCS USDS, EAST L1BXBTT, tk. CATTLB. Prime, I.SOO to 1,400 lbs 4 90 5 00 Good, 1,200 to 1,800 t) 4 80 4 00 Tidy, 1,000 to 1,150 Ins 4 55 4 75 Fair llgnt steers, (00 to 1000 lbs. 8 00 4 50 Common, 700 to 900 lb 8 40 3 7f BOOS, Medium ... Heavy Roughs and stags SBKIP. 8 65 3 '. 8 65 3 6(1 a 60 s as Prime, 96 to 105 tbs, wethers... 4 20 4 25 UOOU, BO to Wl ID.. Fair. 70 to 80 lbs.. Common Cull 4 10 8 40 8 00 1 00 4 85 4 00 6 60 Choice lambs. Fair to good Isnibs. . Tsal calves 8ft 85 7.1 H 10 4 li 8 HO 8 25 a 00 6 10 4 60