daily the railroads. pennsylvania · ti«-k:ts cood toreturn until notember 1. parties willleave...

1
TI«-k:ts cood to return until NoTember 1. Parties will leave New Tork. J>o«toa. and Philadel- phia, etc.. in Jan . Feb.. and March, and visit River- side, Redlands, San Diego. Pasadena. Los Angeles. Santa Barbara Santa Cruz, Monterey, San Jose. San Kafael. and San Francisco. The Return Journey in- cludus the erra N»vada by daylight. Salt Lake City. the Gorges and Cafions of Colorado by daylight. Den- vec, Muuitou Springs. an<l the Garden of the God.-> l.e:«u:c-'v sojourns wtn be m.ad» at the following eese- brated hotels: The Olenwood. Hotel d«-l Coronado. Hotel Gr«en. the Potter. Hotel El Pas> de Robles. Sea Beach Hotel, Hotel del Monte. The Vendoxne. The Palace. Hotel Rafael. The Knutsford. The Brown Palace. Business rani and tbetr families and ladles can see all Important points without na.«te of tlm». travelling luxuriously unfi»r escort of experienced conductors the entire round trip, and being relieved of every care. OTRFR TOURS To Flortda. Mexico. <JIKLa * utJliJ PnrM Rico. Mardl Graa Carnivai. Japan, Around the World, Hawaii. Europe, Cruise to West Indies, etc. Xlallroad nml Steamship Tickets everywhere. Send for book, mentioning information desired. RAYMOND & WHITGOMS CO. 'New Tork: 23 tTnion Sq. FnJladelphla. Boston, Pittsburg. Chicago, etc. KEW YOHlt NEW H£YE!i 1 EMTFO33 I R CASH QUOTATIONS. v . j r*» n7SB ;nour. Mpll patents.. $S 80 KCASH QUOTATIONS. 7.25. mtm.. mm 15 " (> grar.u-.ated.... «.J» U&eoil*' i"i "* J .-, jjj [nicißMna. O X prime. S7 •n BtfßC* li - ; e3O \u25a0 Bed hams r**??^ tpt^f vA'«r«<i - 12rt I Tallow. prUa* '•-,^ H SWi t '- \u25a0* SJC3B LJk. prime 6 05*37 3> EXPORTS TO-CfAY. ..Ji, MiROO.Tar. bWs so Com. *«« 4h > Hefined pet. gals .... 2. fA4 192 os'.f. t; c «* iSSlßrr'-daum. ga!» $i#.WC WIS; S^ Lubricatlr-g oil, ga,s. 142,942 l*i.K!. •-' 5 01* CattOßf**4.«U. «*»•• 106.C63 ccrr." t>c^..-- ,V(, V( t Ueree , l>B 42.St»f' liaw E^rtti tup. X*'-» - - Jj, g«S £ «».!«» fj«in. tnss GENERAL MARKET REPORT. JCew-T«*. January 17. IWS. ft ,rn:n-Thec^ r^a.uet ffgg*£*** weak- «•' da^.n^ J T-r^rg movement \u25a0 '. the 5 fe^,^ st a Vec:iVrrf*fflOj»l B t. and the \u25a0 and the rA :tt: cKipe-. *^-»^ -;•*,_ Tl , e clotlng bids were \u2666^^.M'r^^i^n,, the pr^tou. d«- 1 early last >.'" two early cable, SSSSSSSaSy &^s ss « > this - full, and J2 S*WmS«S com'.r.s so late in the teasou urters as to K^BaUcatitnates »o libemlly cJrculsted a* to the actutl .K^'tii c££ : Euwpe biovei ¥: n«*. After open- U fine biFhe- on BeptembM and uncharged on S^VSta. t*e rr?nch (i^artat cec'.ined ai>d lower. le% *'3!C lowrr. r.hl'.e Hamburß was M. rfg lower. SV Of the Srsrilian markets repone* a-.y ***Bf*- JffSaS S the UK*} rr*rtwt #e»-med to reflect UquMa- S rfwn K«ML M>« UM PWhaps the dumping out c^ time tf O*» lone cofrf that vs. net diFturiied by the tSi»i=Uaa. fading trade tnt«r«i» give compara- trr-j little- mnpert to far as c->ul4 **. gathered, though Shm. orders Irom that source l.aye recently been proml- ST^n th^ msrUpt. The spot ir.crk^t -is quiet _ar.<J ;—"--;> ur.-.-.aT-.prd en tiie bafls of e"»c for P.io No 7. rar.rt Ot contract prices in the local market to-day \u25a0•.Mfl<li. Mfl<li Te— Openlng. 111^.. Low. \u25a0 -•« dar. ,'orv - 7..VK;7flf> 7.C5 MTOKTT ...7.nr. ».«S J.C". 7.«-';£7.«5 775 \."h , 7.fiS T.KI 7.73 7.7057.7.1 7.».» JZA ;.» 7.5-S 7.J«5 7^sff7« fOO jiV ' CM *\u25a0-If *•<» 7.964J5J0 8.15 CL R. 15 »-.ir. 8.15 6.0698.10 S.CS j.!r &;# fc.2o f>.ls 5.1.*.-i'«2o 5.33 jl«Uf. 6>jr.£V3S 5.43 SStSher 6. t0 f.50 6.40 A.40C5.43 BX3 <rtober R.8G68.55 5.63 «N»T«r.ber 8.C9 (L«9 8.«9 8.554X8.00 b.7i> tireeatcr 6.T0 J».7i> 5.70 fc&tf. stiS fc.73 rerr^n CWCea ilarkcts. Kio— CofTfte jr.ersct Sm; No 7 2;o. ?S:-o; exchaiige. USI-82d; receipts, l«.00U Vegs; f.odc t'"."!i> '*r- Corte murktt bartiy r'.eacy; fxod »\u25a0\u25a0•:\u25a0 Bantoa, .*-.--, -.- receipts, 10. (km base (two «rs<: ROCK. I.tH3.«KK> lii^rs Han'.Lurjr Coffee market tMtzri •» p:ecn:g lower; at 2:SO p. m. wna Vi pfennig (•we*; Mies*. 19,00u bags. lla'.-r» ouge« *x.ariitt optned C-let: frar.c higher; other months -_n- ,--,« i-t. :. xxl uncr.ar.gei2; ot 3p. ia. ** to H Trtm l£-»*r: at . r .;3u p. m. uncJ.o4i*e(l to hi franc lcticr; sales. \ \u25a0•\u25a0• . ..=: femnr 4?.25 jujv 81.00 jf'ttrca-r ...» 4».X'f August 61.23 Slars* 4i*.' neptember 51.50 AJES 60L2S OctcS<«r 51 .75 J*Ui So.So!Nov«atet 82.00 J**a« - 60.75 Dec«2;btr Z i^.^s The suiistlotl position of- -i: Man ccOee Ib as '. '.- _ T-—d2j-.La.s: ir«:k Last mor.th. ..«w-Tcrk deliveries ... 10.404 I&4WS 15.445 hi:Urj)r» dCverits .... Jls 227 7<*o .Ne»-Cr;ssßi deliveries .. 1 ;j,7 TctsJ is^rcr.es Kt&M iXtSB 17 432 Jem-lori rj>rk 3.407.147 3.420.2^8 3.24*1 (£3 n&BMMade W.6SS M.753 87.1X3 >*»-orifa2« c-.-jci. 231, f1" 3i3.C77 2&t.t20 Ptesk it ell ports 3.755M7 3.f1C2,05C 2.C52.634 A stl 037. CM 64t,05U M 5.510 FLORIDA- NASSAU -CUBA. Spend th« cold days In the 'Sunny South." PEBSONAXLY CONniCTEI* TOlßfi OK STECIAL LOW KATE TICKETS. Send for Book of "Winter Trip«^,' free of cost and containing complete Information as to routes acd rates, time and fiatsn. »tc. addresslntr TIIOS H. IIENDKXCK3ON TOURS. 34" FULTON ST.. BROOKLYN. N. Y. Surrogate*' Soticei. TN PURSUANCE OF AN ORDER OF HON. •*- Frank T. Kltigerald. a Surrocaie of the County of. KtV-Iwk, Notice Is hereby given to all persons having calms against WUhelmtna Slayer, late of the County of New YoiaL, deceased, to present the same, with vouchers thereof, to the subscriber at his place or tran»acun< business, at the otlice of Holm * £mith. Attorneys. No. S; Park Kow. Manhattan lioruugh. ity of New York, oa or before the l£nd day of Marcn. IW3. next. Dated New York, the Cth lay or September. 1904. WILLIAU I" RINCKOFF. Executor HOLM itSMITH. Attorneys for tx--ejiors. 61 P*r« Row. New York City. »... aml, »j SottMMt tur tusiu.i. na .\»>» LoodoD and Pro-.irt»r..» it. Jo. Ti,,lU.'JO. -xtllO:^ A. St.. fi.ii.UM. »xi;l:«a. --'"«. Ill,i:uu. Mll5;«l. "il2u» P. il. \u25a0 Bua'lu.N, via 'VVUi:maaiu;—ft»:4Bj A. It. t2.00 P. M. bOSTON. via Springneia— T».uw A. 31.. titU:UO. >.*: Ja. •ll:0«> P. M. FITCHBURG. via Putnam A Worcester— f3:oO F. 11. LAKUV ILUC and Nui'.Ku-K-TK.iu A. M.. fJ:3I P. 3C : GT. UAUUiNUIXJN. STOCKCiUDUa. UuSOX. PITT»- FIELJ>-t4.3u. T»:50 A. JJ-. T3:31 P. ii. VTATERBL'BY and \VINSTEI>—t4:3t). |«:00. I'.S.QIK - tlu:<>2. niOatt ilo Waterbury) A. M-. flu*. +1.21K 4»,3:O1. ttf:«x>. 18:0O (U. \Vaterbury> P- M. Ticket offices at cGranii Central »ta.;ion and eU:.i 5t.. also at .113. rSHI. i.iai cl.^o-t broidwij, c 2 Psjrti Place. cJ3 Vaion Square, clttt Fltts Aye.. c-43 '"o.u- Ay«.. 84i* Madison Aye.. c273 West I23th at., 13U E.iai I2sth St. In Broklya. c-. Court St.. SO* Fultoa Si, ' Z'jv Broadway. E. V. •Dally. tKxcept Sundays. ISundaye *r.:y "Stops ac 12S( BX. zStopa a: I^3ta St.. Sundays only. {Parlor Ca» ' Limited. ! Has dining Car. cParlor and Sleeping Car ticket* also. C. T HEMPSTEaD. Gea. Pass. Agt. O. M. SHEPAHD. Gen. Supt. TN PURSUANCE OF AN ORDER OF HON. Frank T. Fitzgerald, a Surrogate of the County of New York, notice \u25a0 h«rebv given to all persons having claims against Simon Lavanburg. late of .he County of New Torh deceased, to pres-jnt the ianw with vouchers tlereof to tne subscribers at their ataes of transacting business at the office cf Doer, Strong & Whltehead. No. 60 Wall Street. In the City of Ne-.v Yo.-k. on or Uofore the 3Uth day of June next. Dated New Y>>rk. irto 12th day of December. 1004. /SIELIA LAVANBCRG. A. B. FRANK. JULES J. B*' "i. Executors. Duer Strong •£ Wfcitohead. attorneys for executors. Lack&wanna Railroa.d. i-eavo .New iorj», loot itaxelay aad Cbriswsaef 31a. t&.uu A. il. For mngfiamuin ana oyracuaa, •lt.u« A. U. For Uu.Za.lo. Cbicagu and Sc Loata •1.40 For Buffalo aad Chicago. T 4.10 P. 11. For Kcranton anrl Plymouth. •«.lvP. M. For BulTalo and Chicago. •5.45 P. M. For Buffalo. Syracuse. t'tieak •? A. M. For Chicago Sleepers open at » P.M. Tlek«t». 14t». 42». 118S. 1454 B-m(lwh. M T.: 898) Fulton St.. Brooklyn *Da>!ly tCxrept Sunday LEHICH VALLEY.! Fo-ot of West ISd A : - ' .rtland t and Desbroasee Str«ea 3- •Dallj. tExcept »un«ft%. »un<jsy: sT.^S. dl.ia. eT 4?. bS.C 13, " 17N.T..A1T.vr..8 M»ncbConßkLoci« t* 40 a. *i t«.» * * Buffalo Eiareas *a 7 JO a hi *«7.J0 a t* BLACKSIAsfUND ZXPSJBO *1.15 . » *ViM » II Msuch itnuutand Hsaietoa Lucal i *t2JB r»|*dl.!oF» \u25a0Wlllces-BiuT* Ei?re*» t3 3S r +4.10 Eastoa Local tt 10 T w +4.20 r* Chicago and T»-oatn Vestlbuie Express. »n5 p m -»x 5.40 k TII3 BXTSTALO THAXW *\u25a0 33 xj *9 U> "C T'.clru and Pullmitn accommodation* '.4». Hi. 2*\ J5B. !»"T« IJS4 Broadway. 132 Srh Ave..S L'nioa Sq. West. «*!» «v.insihee *»s.. N T., 338 * SCO Fulton St.. * Court St . SM Broadway ot Ft. Fultoa at.. Brookir 3. >' Y. Tracsf ex Co. will call f or and ecsck '"sl'sT TN PURSUANd OF AX ORDER OF HON. *• Frank T Fttsgerald. a Surrogate of the County of New YorK. notice is hereby given to ail persons having claims aKa!nsi William H Crawford, late o' the Cnunty r>f New Tork. deceased, ta present tha .vith vouchers thereof to the sub eribe.-s a; thiir place of tranaacting busiqess. at the office of Morgan * Seabury. No. 29') Broadway, In the City of Nr-w York, on or before tea ÜBth day of March. l»0S, nC Dated New Tork. the L'inh day of September. IJO4. MARIE HORTsWSE CRAWKOHD. JOHN a JENKINS. MORGAN A SEABL'RY. Bxecutore, Attorneys for Executors. 190 Broadway, Manhattan. New Tork City. LONDON WOOL MARKET. London, Jan. 17. There was a large attendance, at the opening of tha first series of the 19116 wool auction salea to-day. Several American representatives were keen bid- ders for crossbreds, which they secured at S per c«nt ad- vance, and also several lots of good mertiyje. The seie>-- Uoo was rm&lL only UN beUes being sSered. _ Home MA CnoUMtUaX taint* dinA«l lL» -^r" Nsv-ZsaZaail but c-rdlnary stock dull. Domestic onions In quite liberal supply and moving slowly; Havana jnore plenty and lower. Cabbages selling fairly at steady prices. Brussels sprouts In good dunand whea choice. Beets and carrots firm and hlfher. OttlinoweTS sell well wr.en fancy but market burdened withpoor stock from all points. Cucum- bers In light supply. Celery dull. Eggplants moving siowiy. K<Ue and spinach in active demand and higt-er ujib week. Lettuce In excessive supply and decidedly iot.er. Aot many green peas arriving and choice seil promptly. Peppers dull. Parsley and romalne steady. btrlng beans have met a good outlet, but close slightly lowtr under Increased offerings. Tomatoes would exceed quotations If fancy, but market burdened with poor stock. rtrvTATJISS 1 " rane about as Quoted. We quote: ii «7»*f«'^' / tate ard W'estem. In bulk, per l«o rt>. X ct**...*, 1 , 3 ? 11 S0: dt> Lon X Island. S bulk, p*r ISO R>. nLlk^r iV ii»d^7t^s£i d^ 7t^s£; Ib balr ' » 175 «*-- do Jersey, in *?in h •£*! m> <13 '«» 1B : do per bbl or bag. $123® Vo V 22 I£S*i.2£ «1« 1< *- n> ba « nWI 50: do Bermuda; C, mh/? b bl W»s4 60; do No 2 $3; BWEKT POTATOES basket i-StfiT' 1* i* •*•" bbl - *2C<>Ss3 73: do per $1 "S* 0 J°r«ey. yellow, per Vi-bbl basket. bM JIJS. BRISSELS SPROI'TS. per quart, 5012c: BEET* sV^«s rr ies?i e 5?% pe X 10 ° bunch «». $aoo0$4: s7oW, per bbi; iL*h i"L ; Uo . be t carrou and parsnips Western per Ilorlk il ERS ' I » lal >''. Per bbl. $I®s4; dS case S»Qi4-;5 ? 1' d0 7 Crate - *l3Oi}s4 : CELERY, per vtf»- rfi \u25a0 Jo per doien stalks I<>w4oc CHKiSpv per crate Xi ".n«ii dX j !i -»"-0 > »l 16; UMoN.», Cuban, do w'lnw i ?' white, per bush crate. $1 25«Jl 75 ket or crate. $1 25«14 PEPPERS ri Floriaa. per bus- crate or carrier llfiil'-v V Florlda - P«r basket. $12.". PARSLCT \;V ,!.\u25a0 dO Cvl -* n - P«r currier. 75c$ do Berinu.fa.'r.er V*' V^V-'V^ fe*"! $3fl ,*T per basket. $l 23«f$i 73- par4vt»S Fl ?^'- a - unl.unche 1. green S3e Si fi?> ax ' per baßket « crate. $3354; do Norfolk per h^l' «i«iiV r J fr i V I 1B 280 : -WWACH. Orleans' $- 50053 fio^Voi'^.V^U!" o™'0 ™' ««**:: d <> N**! do marrow. 60c^j«l SHAI itrril v-" '• f- lower" r T-tna^oes Tn ','T- Rhubarb more Plentiful snd m" ir^V^- 5 ?*P«« H a % £n«iuh n <i£g^l \u25a0 tier if. Be^S^'T P rnTiTH < r?- hea:!s - 10 ®33c; MITSHROOMS. ft i<|-2<V P ' dd ° Zen bo »«*^ .\u25a0'''\u25a037s-.; TOMATOE,;. r .. r - HAT ~Th« "in of trad, h falrlv hay rf.i7 / r tally attraf -t!^e for the good line, <* Mvfu^th. ,r" Ck " &r T POOrly *™* 1 at thrt moment. *hi^ dat.^?? " trOn at / UU rates - fullrequirement thi, dale £1 \im "? at SUil rats - Coßßjirea wttk S3s&: Ho c^ mTed H^|^c 8 8h «!» strong at $1 10ff$l 1.', : fancy would brln*- $1 2T>. R»,-eipts of hay and straw, m tonS' reined at the Produce Tx- 680 W^t sCr/'ro^r" 1 ,^ 1 * Hu< n Rlver SSSrS: w»r« T Shore. 70; Erie, B70; Pennsylvania. 13l>- Dea- Ohio M^ O^h 11 * •»o^«tern. 120: Baltimore ar.i unio, 00, Ontario and Western, 90; Central of New- Jersey. 100; total. 1,710 tons. Receipts of straw. 80 tons. NAVAL STORES. tlmTet f w^h'nHr° !! h * mark *l for spirits turpentine con- tlnues. with prices based on 37c formachine rnavie barrels and deman.l was fairly good r,n that baeia RoshTie- mained steady at firm prices. Tar was quiet and fa'rty active but unchanged. We quote" lt^ r >r TCRPENTINE-011 and machine barrels. 50-$ TAR— $5. t?S? ) ift I . N *^ C t m^?.l 0 ' nn S w><l strained. $2 Ss«s2 87 H : E. ?5 C5 I ST irtVflM -f? I?*2J2L, CC '' $320 353 25: H. $3 35«J3 4O; STOCK ON HAND Rcttn. l'h:s -v-w, Spirits turpentine bbls.." ' 1024 Ta /- bbi - -:::::::::::::::::::::::::: i:m ••SS bb n ws- h '.ff« I,V;rTVRPEXTIXE1 ,V;r T V RPEXTIXE flrm - B3l^c : receipts. .. l'o« a t*, 101: hl P m^nti. 234. ROSIN firm- re- li^NG^f^^i3!VVVi? hi ='^^*^ No^hfn^doTng/* 11 - 17 Tr ' RpE T^" E and rosin- Wilmington. Jan. 17.— SPIRITS TURPENTINE— ing doing: recelpta. 44 casks. ROSIN-Nothlng dolnV; re- BS bblf aLKPENT I n^ firm, $2 30 and $3 70; receipts. R^? d . on -. J, n . 17-TI-p.rE^TINE-Splrns, 33s M. P.OSIN ABaerican. strained. 8s; fine. 11* 9d 1 ; , - ; LIVESTOCK MARKET. T _,___ _ , New-York. January 17. 1009. BEBATIS— were 104 cars, or 1.812 head. 'n- c.udlns; 41 cars for export alive. 49 for slaughterers aad 14 ror tbe aaarket. None offer for sale tQ-day. Feel- hik steajy i or good to choice steers: weak for others. I'ressed beef was In fair demand at 7jfi>c per Ib f'>r (i^- oent to prime native siUes. with a little extra b.-.-f sell- lng at Jhtc Uvernool and London cables quoted Uve <attle steady at HRl2Vie per tb. . dressed weieht; sh<>»u selling at 12*i©13*c. dressed weight. Shipments to-da) on the Georglc to Liverpool Included 403 cattle and 2 083 sheeo for J. Shamberg & Bon. 483 cattle for SchwarzachilJ <t Sulzberger. and about 8.800 quarters of beef for various shippers. To-morrow the Titian will take out 3i- cattle for J. Shamberg * Son to be unloaded at Manchester- the Brttish King. 882 cattle equally divided between J. Sham- uerg & Son arj Sehwarz6t-hiid & .<u'zberKer to be v - loaded at London, und the Majestic will carry 2,700 quar- ters of beef to Liverpool for the Morris Besf Company and the Swift Beef Company. CALVES— Receipts were ISI head, all for the market. Prices were rated steady. Common to prime veals sold at $60$»5(> par 100 Ib; barnyard calves at $3 50; a car of Westerns was h<-U over. Dressed calves str ng City dressed veals* sold at Ml4q per Ib. and selected carcasses up to 14V»( , country dressed. 6©l2Vic; dressed barnyard calves at 4<3<sc. Salea S. Sander?: 2 veals. 130 Tr> aye.rage. at $9 50 per 100 n>: 13 do. 116 Ib, at $1»: & do. 101; Ib. at $8. Tobln * Shannon: 17 barnyard calves. 233 Ib at $3 50' 1 real. 140 Ib. at *t»: 4 veals. '\u25a0>' Ib. ai $7 30. Harrington & Co. : 3 Ohio veals. 123 It>. at %J. SfIEEP AND KecHpta were 17 cars, or 3,<"7 head, including S cars for slaughterers and 9 for the mar- ket, maktr.sr. wtth the sta.e stock. 30'i cars on sale. j*,he«p waie steady, but no good sheep ofTereii; lambs declined l«;^15c from Monday's average tales; the pens wer>- about cleared cf all early arrivals. Common an.l medium sheep sold at $s®*i per 100 rb; culls mx $3S7H; ordinary to prime lanibs at $7 23®57 00; a deck of fall clipped di> at $<t 73. I>re*s»<i mutton steaiiy at THO9HC per Ib; dressed lambs weak at 1101£e: country dressed hothouse lambs slow at 85088 per arcass. Sales^ I>. Hairingion: IBS Ohio lambs. S3 Ib average, at $7 80 per 100 Ib: 1!)8 do. 71 Ib. at $7 70; 210 Buffalo <!o 70 Ib. at $7 75; 227 do 68 Ib. at $7 63; 229 do. »i 4 rt at $7 23: 2(5 Ohio sheep. SI !b, at $4 23; 22 Ohio culls. Sti Ib at *.537 4. Kerns Commission Co.: 110 Buffalo lambs. 60 Tb. at $7 73; 221 do. U7 Ib. at $7 50: 204 do, 64 Ib. at $7 40- 139 fall clipped do. 67 Ib. at *6 73. Hildebrand &Co. : 22S> Buffalo lambs. 68 Ib. at $7 60. 8. .Sanders: 84 State lambs. S3 Ib, at $7 00- 65 do. 75 rb, at $7 K0; 10 State sheep. llti Ib. at $5; 1 buck, 130 tb at $4. W. R. Ilume: 110 State lambs. 732 Tb. at $7 75- (late yesterday) 143 Btat« lambs, 87 Ib, at $S 15: 33 do, vi at $8 12 1 6. d0. 73 Ib. at $8; --> State sheep. 11l Ib, at 5.'. su; 17 do, 11» Ib. at $5; 7 do, lib Ib. at $4 73; 1buck ISO Tb. at $4. HOGS Receipts were cars, or 5.1-15 head, all f<>r slaughterers with the exception of a few head. Feelins barely steady. Pennsylvania and State hogs were quotabla at $4 Qtjsitr> 23 per li>i Ib. Country dr^esed bogs higher at 7!g7Ho per Ib for light weights. ti l *iCVc for medium \u25a0weights and sVj®6c for heavy ho^s. Sales (all late yesterday) Ivcrns Commission Co.: 58 Pennsylvania pigs. U5 Ib average, at $3 per 100 Tb- 138 do 102 Ib, at $4 f<o. Newton & Co. :105 Pennsylvania pigs, 100 T?>, at $4 SO H. H. Hollls: 43 State hogs, IC7 Ib, at $3 23; 1 rouzh 200 Ib, at $4 25. * ' OTHER MARKETS-BY TELEGRAPH. Chicago. Jan. 17 CATTLE Receipts, 7.000 head; mar- ket steady; rood to prime steers. $3 ttf»lnif, 25. poor to me- dium. $3 7.'fltsf. 4S; stockers and feeders, $2 23Q$4ST.- cows, tl25Q54 CO; heifers. $2«*.'> a); dinners SI 2.'i $3 3O: bulls $2S$4 20: calves. $3©s7. HOGS—Receipts. 45,000 head: rr.ar;;-t s©loc lower; mixed and Imtche.-s $4 40(E'$4 70; good to choice, heavy, J4 COalT-4 73- lough, heavy. $4 40©$4 60; light. $4 30SS4 CO; bulk of salsa $4M>es4eO. BilEEP— Receipts, IS.OOO head: sheep steady: lambs strong; good to choice wethers. $3ffSs i", fair to choice mixed. $3 IK>@s4 \n>; native lambs. $5 75Q $7 78. Cincinnati. Jan. 17. nOGS steady to Be lower- butch- ers'. $4 70«54 7S: common. $3 75®54 33. CATTLE slow- about steady: fair to good shippers. $4054 75- comn-.on. $26*2 80. SHEEP steady. $3SSO 25 :lamba steady. $3J* $7 7t>. Kansas City, Jan. 17. Receipts. 10.000 head Including- 400 Southerns; market steady to strong- choice esport and dressed beef steers. f4 75 J.". 75: fair to rood. 5380554 75: Western fed ateers. nTfOQIO 111, stockers and feeders. $2 7S<&?4 26; Southern steers. $3 »s*4 75; (Southern cows. S*J >->^$3 "5; native cows. $1 75fc$-l;' native heifers. $2 50© J4 6»i; bulls. $2 23@54; calves, ' iiinf, HOGS Receipts, 14.8C0 head: market steany; top $4 mj- bulk of sales, NUfMaTTtt; heavy. $4 75©54 80- packers. fiWaii'iO- pigs and lights. S4S$4 CTVi. SHEEP—Ile- celpu. 0,000 huad: market steady: native lambs, $tf» $7 60; native wethers, $3&5573; native awes, t-i 2Z>U*^ Western fed lambs. $tigs 7 40; Western fed yearlings, ivM 0$obO: Wectern fed shsepw $4 76©55 2S; stockers aad feeders. Jl'&t'Sjij. BOSTON WOOL MARKET. Boston. Jan. 17. The Bostoa wool market U notice- ably quiet fcr domestic grades. The market is gen- erally firm. The bulk of the new clip held h«re Is fleece* and medium Territories There Is considerable interest In the foreign wools coming forward, and their possible effect upon the altUMtlor. here, for manufacturers will have> to turn their attention to foreign gradas to replenish their stocks. Territory wools are quiet. Pullti wools snd all foreign wools are firm. Leading quotations are: Ohio and Pennsylvania XX and above 33&auc- X. 30#31c; No 1. Sb©33c; No 2, 40©41 c; fine unwashri' 24029 c; W blood unwashed. B£&33c; S blood. 82332 be: H blood, 315F320': unwashed dela:n». 2?&23c; unmorcru»nt- able, 2U030-; Tine washed delaine. S7OSBc. Mi higan fine unwashed. 31032c. U bluod unwashed. 31 if 32.-.; S blood. 31V332c. '.i blood. 3(1@31c: uawashed delalnn. 23 C2ac. Kentucky. Indiana, «tc. '\u0084 and t* blood. 51(732c Territory, Idaho, fine. lh'.ti^llK-;heavy nne. lC017c; flao medium. lSHlc»'l9c; modtum, 22£23 c; low medium. ZS\} 24c. Wyoming Cn«. 17VaS.'lU J ic; heavy tine. 15«loc; fine medium, 17V3ii'lS4c; medium, MMc; lu<v medium, 'Siii 24e. Utah and N.-viuiu. tine, 17il>c; hravy fine. 15 it 16c; fine medium, 17 lite; medium. 22023 c. low me- dium. 23024 c. Dakota floe, lt-gl-Jc. fine medium. Uf) 18c; medium. 2^dr24c", low medium. 23624 c Montana, fine choice. 21022 c. fine aveTace. Ilf&r2oc; fine medium, choice. 21022 c; average. lt)^2oc; stayle, 23&25 c; me- dium, choice, 239230. SOUTHERN COTTON MARKETS. Middling. Net. Gross. Sa'ej. Stock. Ga'.vesron steady 7 1-14 0.832 h.aSl l.^Tit l("^.!*v» New-Orleans Jlrm 7 7.S.HS T.*£Z 2.t«w 4«u.«S»? Mobile steady .7 '-Xt 2*-;:t 7iV J5.31* Savanna! steady ... 7 2.K17 -.'.l^.: LBOB v. ;c: Chariestoa nrnu «"a 131 lai M.i>*S Houstoa quiet ... 7 4.CSKJ 4.»*r; 192 . 7141ft* Augusla. steady . 7 1-1* ->i -'.•\u2666 'ju.3-i:» ilempMa steatiy 7 «iT 1.5a3 2.50<> ii:..i--«-; LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. L:\»rp,j,,l. Jnn 17. 4 p. m. COTTON Ppot In fair demand: prices fiv<t i'.ir.;> higher; .v ..\u25a0\u25a0!.._:: m'ddllcg tair. 4.2Td: v \u25a0••\u25a0! xniauUci. 3.^iKl: rr.iallln^. ;.SM; \ovf mltlUZtng. eVIM; good OftUaaxy. '•* ''\u25a0'•'\u25a0\u25a0 oruinary. Z i.Vi. Tbe iue« ct the day wero U.uOU ; .1. a. oi wotctt 3.UK* wtre for speculation and export, and iu-luded V**> AsuYi- can. Rec«tptJ, 13.0w baiej, including 14.1*00 Anwntao. Futures, «jpen«r(i >:uiet arui str-aily »n;t eluded st«ulj ; Aniertcaa niwilllns g o> « January, j ?.!.!: Janaary ur»«l teoruary. 3.';ad; i-Vtruary an.l Mui'h, S.I7J; Marca smi April. 3.M.M; April aad >»->. 3-S3a; il.i> *mi June, :!*!-!. Jano and July. J •\u25a0;•.»: July and August, XslJ: August aai September. ;:.:'-J; &«ptemb«-r anj Octoter. 3.94J; Octußer and Nv>vemb«r. 3.U&1; Navrmt>er -r.s I- .-t.r..tv:r. S-iMid. EUROPEAN PRODUCE MARKET. Liverpool. J«n 17— •..-•.a*: WHEAT— Spot st*&2j; Xo 1 Callforala. 7i; future* rosy. Marcx C* U\<i.itis. 0s lOHd: July, fts l»i%i. COilX Spot easy; Amerlc&a. m:xnu new. mi U"»d; American sntieit <4u. li>Svt; fu— far** quirt; March. 4a »*it; May. -l» I*»J. PEAS Cana- dian eteacty. Ss l>b<L KLOL'It— St. Luui» fancy wlntar steady, ft» M. HOPS in LonJoo— lMc»?lc Cw«*t steady. £7 lua^gCt ;«. UK::i-' steatly. «x:n India r..-», >'-'-\u25a0* :•!. PORK eisy; |s*aa astsa Western. S W KAassl SAort cut. 14 to 1* tb. steady, ••us «d. BACON s;catjy; Cucitfrlaad cut. to 50 R>. Sis 3»J; s:iort ria. M to »4 n>. 87s ; long clear middles lUnt. 2S to 14 Ib. r.--; long clear mludies heavy. UJ it. 4> >i.. 375; aaort cioar b*k-k». 14 tvt v -•• 10. S3» W: clear beU'.v*. 14 to Mi n>. »- \u25a0 ftiOCL- t>EllS— Square. U t.» 13 n>. quiet. 32» (il. LAIU>quiet: prime Western tn tierces. 9Ds; An*rtcan ssflM io p*i:-i. B ls «A BLTTER-— «>ot>d United States r.vni.rXi; CIIEK.-vtJ »irv>ns: American nest white anil coioree. I3> TAI«- LOW—Prime rtiy steady. 2-«». TVRPRNTlNt>— Spirits- . 8S» Bd. RO3IN Common firm. 4 »<J. PETtOLSUi; r.*ia«i C 31«% K. UX3££D OIL•uad7. "* $6 20: first clears. $4 13-2 54 33. second clears. $2 CO-?-f2 ••>. BRAN,in bulk. $13 iv. rh!la2=:,»i:a_ Jan. 17. WHEAT. Mo - er: <.-ntre« grade. $1 15^41 lti CORN, que^'but steady; January. COSSJHIe. OATS firm No 2 white, nararal. 37 x s93.t«: No 2 white, clipped. 4Sc. EUTt^i s:ea..y; extra \. ,o.r tt c:eamery. 3Cc; extra nearfcy p.inta. 3*—? EGGS ItHiTi; neurby fresit 2So at mark: Western fi-esh. SSc at nvtrk. CHBSSE quiet but bteaay: New-Yurk. full creams, fancy. l^>4<ffl-*2C: Uo choice. 12c; do fair to good. li i i3li*»G. Receipts Flour. 3.U*> bbl3 an. l l,»«n.(XO pounds In sacica; wheat. 4.UH> bush; co.n, t>'-o tn h; cat*. 28.000 luah. Shipments— V.'heat. 4.UVU bush; corn. S:.'.u.» Ui=a; outs. 21.bu> busn. St. Lou!». Jar.. 17. Close: WHEAT. N.> Z rei Sassa. elevator, $114: May. $1 13-*; Ju.y. i*S'»c: No Z uar . $1 lua»l 1- tOIt.N. No caa.i. -tic; May *i'&-«oSio: Juiy. 434 c. OATS. No 2 ca»S. 31c; May. 31 He; }T> 2 wbjst. Toledo. Jan 17 -CLOVER-: cash anl January. $7 775: February. $7 *>: ilaita. $7 S3; AL^IKE. pr.m-. 13; TlilOTUl. prime. *13Ui 5 . THE STATE OF TRADE. Huffalo Tan 17 FLOCR steady. WHEAT. f»rrt»t. r^Z^aln* winter nominal: No 2 red. 1-. store. $12jV>. US tia£v uichinged. RYE. No 1. s«c. Chicago. Jan. 17.— The leading futures ranged as fol- °7vk -r v««- Onenlng Highest. Lowest. CV>sing. sg-s as gg %i "s. \u25a0 n Corn. No 2: \u25a0.\u25a0.\u25a0.'.".\u25a0"..: ..45'siH5^ S* SSBSSS3 '(£&"::::: ** »* JH^fS July .v:........ 31 al> » i 2i!m Mess pork, per bbl : January J!2 42.» $12*5 $1242S $12 45 May 12 70 72 : i 12 &> 12 7<> Lard, per 100 tb: January «62^s «C 5 6 C2V4 « «5 May BoB >-o «S7ii «S.^ *».'Vj July flUi 7 00 « ti,' 7/ in Short ribs, per 100 tb: January «S42S 6 45 642 S.; »:. May •!• •'»* «*rr>» «72S July c s3 «83 655 »o3 Cash quotations were a- rollows: FLOUR quiet. WHEAT. No 2 spring. $1 12&S1 IB: No 3. $1 U£&sl li; .\ o 2 red, $1 lTijtl . CORN. No 2. aSifa No 2 yellow 43 «c. OATS. So 2. SUbc; No 2 white. 21H**32e; .No. 3 while. 31Sl-; RTE. No 2. «4*stf7oc. BARLEY, good feed- inn. 37©Ssc; fair to choice malting. 42345 c; KUXSEED. N.> I. $1 15; No 1 Northwestern. $1 2a; CLOVEUSEJBD.. contract grade. $13; POIIK. mess, per bbl, $12 45tf JU i >. LAltl*. i,er 100 Ib. $CCS: SHORT Hiß SIDES <i»ese>. f'ir.i}oi'»: r'HOUT CLEAR SU'K (boxed). «\u25a0: :«.'.» MCSVt; WHISKEY, bajils of high wines. $123. On the Produc* Ksi-t.ar.ge t.- <i«y the BCTTKS market was steady; creamerlrr. lt^-'sr: dairies. lhs:Mc. EGOS steady; at mark, cases included. 22827:; firsts. 27c; fine rirstj. 2»c; extras. 31c. CHEESE steady. H£l2c. D»l -ith. Jan. 17. Close: WHEAT, N< 1 Nortke-B. $1 12 Ti; No 2 Northern. $1 C3T+; May. $1 14%; Ju y. $1 13; September, 82c. Mtr.neHpoU» Jan. —WHEAT. May. $1 15H: July. *1 12\C31 !-'\u2666: Skptember. tOUC&'.He: No 1 har-1. $1 15.4: No 1 Nortbe.B $1 IS%; No 3 Northern $! O»->. FLO'JB. Crst patacu, 4&SOS^4 4>; s*cosd paltau, #9193 new clip and good slipes were In demand, and wer« taken by home buyers at prices in 3*::trs>' favor. A moderate supply of Ca;* of Good Hope and Natal went to home ar.l German buyers at rates unchanged to 5 per cent dearer. Buenos Ayrea wool sold well at an advance of 5 per cent. Following are the sales: New South Wales. 1.800 bales; scoured. HVIdOIS «-jd. greasy. >dj?ls 2.1. Queensland 800 be.! s. scoured. l»8d»?ls- M. greasy, 6V»© Iltfd Victoria. 100 bales; greasy. 10d©ls V»d. Sou:n AuVtralit.. eu> bales; greasy, h^dtcls. n West Australia, 1 lu«> bales; scoured. Is SJ. greasy. 9S811 »d. New- "ealan'l 1200 bales; seottted, Isfels 4d; greasy, lld^ Is 4d Capo of Good Hop© an Natal, 400 bales; scourej. Is Sd'eis BHd: gnasy, e\«lo',d. Buenos Ayres. t>oo Uies. greasy. 5%910Hd. Easy: quote.l at 8.8097 c. City lard ea?y; quote! at *W«. Renned lard barel> steady. QuoUd: -South America, 7.85 c: Continent. 7.05 c; Brazil kegs 8.66c. Cocapojnd steady; quoted at 4%esWc. 6TEARIXE— Quiet. wuoted: Ol*-o* «U©6Hc; city lard itearlne. 7«r7s»c. RICE Business for the day 'was fairly good, with tona steady here and generally firm at primary po.nts. al- mage. New-Orleans, telegraphs Louisiana crop movement to date as follows: Receipts, rough. 1.288 000 tacks. against 1.232.C10 last year: sales, cleaned, estimated at 542.53& pockets, against 811,102 last year: mand lm- prcved and market strong. Talmas*. Charleston, tele- graphs Carolina crop movement to date as tj'.lows: H<- ceipts. 26.645 bbli; sales, 22.026 bis. with market quiet. Quotation* follow: Domestic, ordinary. HQZMc; fair to gr.od. 3Hff3?»c: prime to choice. 3'»«4«,»c. head. 4\© 6»ic: Patna. .r. r . l ii;"5t »c: Japnn. foreign, nominal; »So 00- me*tlc. 2>*O3ltc; Java, 4HSSHc; Rangoon. In Lond, 2'*©2%c. Refined sugar was fairly active and firm, with fuil ll»t prices quoted on the former range. Prices quoted are net. less 1 per cent for cash: Cut loaf and crushed, t-75c; mould A, f1.40c; cubes, 6.30 c; XXXJC powdered. w.2oc; powdered, coarfe powdered apil fruit powdered, 6.15 c; Eagle confectioners' granulated. C.3oc; Eagle coarsj ana extra fen* granulated. 0.16 c; fc.ag!e »-Ib canons, 2-lb l*fc«s an.l 5-lb bags cf fine granulated. 6.20 c; Eag!e fine granul-ued. standard granulated and diamond A, COOc; cor.fectlone-s' A. t.WOc; No 1, 5.70 c; Nos 2 and. 3. 5.65 c; No 4. 5.55 c; No 5. 5.60 c; No « 5.4 Cc; No 7. 5.40 c; No S. 6.30 c; No W, 5.25 c; No 10. 6.20 c; No 11. 5.10 c: No 12. O.tCc; No 13. 4.«5c; Nos 14 and 15. 4»oc. There whs nome reaction In the London beet sugar market, but the ton* was steady at the decline. The January pCsition de- clined *»d, and February went off 2'id, which put both months on a basis of 16» »id. The stock of sugar in tha Vnited Kingdom Is SO.OOO tons, against 100.000 tons at the same time last year. The lncal market remains firm, with an advancing tendency, with full prices quoted for outy paid, as follows: Centrifugal. 96 test, 5Hc; musco- vado. 80 test. 4Sc: molasses sugar. 88 test. 4fcc \u25a0 COUNTRY PRODUCE MARKETS. For the week ending Tuesday. January 17. 1005. BEANS AND PEAS— Receipts for the week. 2.038 bbls beans and 718 bags ixas- exports 8f» bb'.s beans or.d 34 bars peas; Imports. 250 bags Deans. Tho market has shown a gradual hardening tendency on domestic white benna. bu.Mne has been a littlefreer, and while supplies are ample of most kinds there are more reserved offer- Ing-. After «ell!ne quite a rood many marrow at $t 70 the price was put ud to $2 72^. at which a little business Is reported. Early in the week medium had a few sale* down to $1 82. but toward the close $1 85 is bottom pric*. and It looks as If mor« money could be obtained. Pea are selling quite generally at $1 75 for choice stock. Red kidney held a little steadier, but without Important de- mand: exporters ere tilling soruo orders at J-' 62^a. and occasional jobbing sains are reported at $2 65. Last sales of white kidney at $2;*r>'gs3; deniand not large, but sut>- L>iy light. Turtle jiout, ar«r higher and firm: late sales at $3 2.J Yellow eye still neglected, and values uncertain. California lima, have weakened a little and at the close our i.'Utsidu quotation is uulte extreme. Scotch PSaVi steady, but with plenty of stock offering. We qu»te: BEANd. marrow, ISKH. choice, per bush, $3 7W®s- T2 ; ; do ..am. 1904, $1 K'.Ji Jl t-7 1\u25a0 ; do pea. 1904. $175:: do red kidney. UKM, $3C2^gs^ts : do white kidney. 1804. $2 05; do black turtle soup. $3 20<gJ3 25; do yellow eye. IWM. $2 05C$2 10: do lima. California. $2 95® 53; GREEN PEAS. Scotch. 1804. bags, per bush. $1 07 '». BLTTER— Receipts lor the weeK. 1«.127 pkgs; last week. 83.512 pkgs. Exports to Europe, 400 pkg». and to other countries. 237 pkg*. The market drifted along in rather an uncertain manner for a day or two following our last weekly report. Buyers held off somewhat, and the In- creased an.vals left a surplus of all but the fancleat grade in receivers' hands. There was no thought of yielding anything in the matter of price, but trade was alow. Toward the cloise of the week, however, the temper of the market changed a little, especially on the highest grades, and by Monday prices were advanced H®lo all along the line, with a very ftrm fettling at the close. The official quotation to-day for extra creamery was SOc: three lots were sold under the call on 'change at 3O>4B3oVic, and the latter figure was paid on the street for very high quality; the medium to choice grades sympathise fully in this improvement, and storage creamery has also ad- vanced quite as much as fresh: several Important sa'.es are reported at 27HS2Sc. New-York Slate dairy has im- proved, In sympathy with creamery, and yet there Is so little stock arriving that values are somewhat uncertain. Imitation creamery Is steady for the fine markß and quite firm on the basis of 24c. Renovated . has found a better place In the trade, and the finest standard brands bring 23c. Factory and packing stock are relatively scarce and moving out fairly in about the range of our quotations. We quote: Creamery, extras, per Ib. 30@30Hc; do (Mer- cantile Exchange official quotation, extras. 30< 1 firsts. 'li'a S»Vkc; do seconds, 2-»<&26c; d"o thirds. 19823 c; do held, extras. 27Va0280: do tirsu. 25327 c; do seconds, 22934 c; S-tnte dairy tub«. extras, 28c; do firsts, 25g27c: do seconds, 22@24c ; do thirds. lh®2Oc; Western Imitation creamery, first*. 24c; do seconds. 17SlS>c; renovated, extras. 23c; do Krstb. 21©22c. do seconds. 18#90c; uo thirds. 10#17e; Western factory, extras. 22«T23c: do firsts. lS8l»c: do seconds, 10©17 c; do thirds, 14'315c; do held, firsts. lTbtf 18c; di secunds. Ifr'ul7c; packing stock. No 2. 17c; do No 3. 15&16c. CHEESE— Receipts for the week. 7.55S boxes; exports to Europe, 1.675. and to other countries. 725. There has been a very fcatls'aetury distributing demand the past week and quite a little call from largar dealers In neigh- boring markets for good sized lots, mostly of a grade ob- talnabli- a trifle under top prices, and stocks have con- tinued to gradually reduce. Holders, while quite firm in their views, have been Inclined to meet buyers promptly, and the bulk of the business has been on the basis of offl- ilal quotation as given, though we hear of occasional ex- ceptional sales of especially attractive cheese at a trine premium. A favorable feature during the wee* has been an export demand for cheap grades of cheese, and close to 800 Lose* were purchased by that class of operators. Exporters, however, have not shown a particle of interest in fancy cheese. Skims In moderat* stock, and, with a fair demand, prices have befn tlrmlv held on all gradrs. Liverpool cable. &3s for finest September colored and white. We quote: State, full cream, small, colored and white, faacy, 12Vic. do fine, ll^te; do late made, colored and white, choice. 11-*.; do fair to good. 10^©10Vc; do poor. s%O«ltc; do la.rfrf colored and white, fancy, 12c; do fine. ll'/itTllHc; do lats made, colored and white, choice, lie; do fair to good. l»U©»%c; do poor. 8\«@&c; do light skims, small, choice. 10©10^c; do prime. O'iSOHc; do part Ekims prime S'^eb^ic; do good. B«TS>4c; do common to fair. 6**&7\»c; do full skims. 4®sc .'Receirts for the week. 35.«7« cases. store liberal arrival* consist largely of refrigerator egKS, the remaining supply of which is. however, limited, and with light receipts of fresh egg>\ present and prospective, the market holds very firm throughout. Prices, however, ar« without further quotsble change. We quote: State, Pennsylvania an 1 nearby selected whit*, fancy. SSS4Oc; do choice, S4£3sc; do mixed, fancy, 32gS3c; do average best. j.ilc: do ordinary to good. 23g29c; Western se- lected, fancy 31c; do average best. 30c; do poor to good. 2.1g28c; do "Kentucky 23090 c; do Tennessee. 22f?29c; do Texas. 2032»'c. dirties. lS£2oc; do checks. 17©li>c; re- frigerator* 2lXg24c. FRUITS— DRIED—Receipts for the week. 7,467 casea evaporated epples an.i 20..'Wi pkgs other dried fruits; rxportf. 22.491 pkgs 'Irled fruits. Evaporated apples have had considerable attention, speculators taking a great many carloads, and market has ruled firm and slightly lltlilW Not much doing In sun drl^l apples, though at- tractive Canadian quarters held about steady. Chr>j>s hare -or.tlnued weak, but cores tn<i skins slightly firmer. Small fruits in light supply. California fruits unchanged. We quote: APPLES, evaporated, fancy, per Ir>. 6^f*c; do cbo'ce. 5H66e; do prime, fi'<©u?tc; do corr.mon to fair. 4@sc; do '"anadian. sun dried, quarters. 8 1^'S4 s»i-;s »i-; do Ptate and Wenern. sun dried, quarters. 3jJ3^c; do Southern, sun dried, sliced. S"3B\c; do coarse cut. 2Vi2 BWc; do chopped. per 100 Ib. $1 4O@sl 00; do cores and •kins, $1611 15: CHERRIES. per Ib. 13V53144e; HUrm^EBERRrES 111212 c: BLACKBERRIES. 6H37c; RASPREP.RIES. 22®23n; APRICOTS. California Moor- park. ll&14c: do royaL Ogilc; PEACHES. California, prolix!. 15319 c; do unpeeled. »312 c; PRUNES, California. 3Ofi%e. FRUITS—FRESH— for the week. 4«.020 bbls apples and 652 bbls and 3.670 crates cranberries. The r!*m«r.d for apples has bsen moderate, and with heavy offerings tcne Is weak and price* barely sustained. Cran- berries heicl steady, hut demand light. Oranges mora plenty and closing slichtlv lower. Pineapples In moder- ate supply, but demand limited. Strawberries more plenty and sailing slowly at comparatively low prices. We ouote: APPLES. Jonathan, hand picked, per double head bbl. S2ss3 50; do Far Western, per bush box. $1 CO <Bs2: do anow. hand picked. Der double liead bbl. $1 75® $2?>0; Jo King. Northern. $2 SO£TJ3 50; do Western New- York. $2{rs3; do fipltzenberg. Northern. $2 50«jjo 60; do Western New -York $2"-?t:l 75; dn Far Western, per bush box. (2@t2 50; .io Bmr, per double head bbl. *2'SS2M)- do Ben Davin, Northern. $17C®$3 25. do Western New- York. $1 &o®s2: do Baldwin. Northern. $1 7&352 25; do Western Nt-w-York. $1 25©52: do Qro-nlng. Northern. $17r&$2: do Western New-York. $1 25351 75; do. as to kind, per open head bM. $ias2: do in bulk. per 150 Ib. $ISsl 50: CRANBERRIES. Cape Cod. per bb!, $.IC$»: Ao Jersey, per bbl. <c©so 50; do r>«r crate, tl 60«52; OHANQES. Florida, per box. $1 6O?» .V. : TANGERINES. Florida, per Mrap. $2 50054: MANDARINS. Florida rer strap. $1 su6rs3; GRAPEFRUIT. Florida, per box. $2355; PINEAPPLES. Florida, per crate. $1 Bo©s2 25; STRAW- BERRIES. Florida, per quart COtfeSc. \ HOPJ Receipts for the week. 416 bales; exports. 416 bales. There has been quite a litil« trade on the Paclflo Coast mostly for the fillingof short contracts falling duo in January and February at a ranee of 20329 c, accord- ing to quality. In this State small sales have been re- ported at 30531c. but the firmness of holders or remain- Ing lots Interferes with the movement. On the local mar- ket brewars have shown scarcely any interest, and trad- Ins has beeu very sloxv. Foreign markets generally quiet. We quote: State, 1904. choice, per rb, 35030 c; <lo good to prime. IMMc; do common to fair. 519320: do Pacific Coast. 1904. choice. 33334 c; do good to prime, 31&32 c: do IKO3. choice, per Ib. 80331 c; do old oids. 13&17C. POULTRY—ALIVE— Receipts for the week foot up 23 carloads by freight and a few scattering coops by express. Eupplies have been moderate, demand good and market has cleaned up promptly on arrival of most of all descriptions of weighing stock, and prices show a material advance on fowls, chickens and ro.stfs. Ducks In moderate supply and steadily held. Geese have been fairly plentiful, but selling fairly, though a few surplus lots have had to go to neigh- boring poultry farms to fatten for a later market. Live pigeons In moderate supply, but selling slowly. We quote: FOWLS, Western, per Ib. 14Hc; CHICKENS, Western, per ID. 12c; ROOSTERS, Western old. per It). 10c; TUR- KEYS, old. per Ib. 13314 c: DUCKS, Western average, per pair, 70®80c; do Southern, «o@6&c; GEESE, Western aver- cge. per pair, $1 37©$1 «S; do Southern. $1 2d®sl 37; PK3EONS. per pair. 20c. DRESBBJD for the week. 10.008 pkgs. Supplies of Western dressed poultry have shown a decided shrinkage during the last week and the market has developed a considerable increase of strength. Turkeys have been In light supply and prices held very firmly and with confidence. There has been very little demand for current consumptive use. but fairly good Inquiry from supply houses, which have been anxious to secure stock as against future wants. Some frosen tur- keys have arrived, but held at a limit higher than poeel- blo to reach at tbe moment and have gone Into freezers. Fancy large, soft meated roasting chickens have become very ecarce and would command 150, possibly 16c, for Western If here, but nearly all lots are mixed more or less with cars*, staggy young roosters, and such grades »low and Irregular. Fowls have been in light supply, good demand and prices hlel:«r and firm. Capons are more plenty, but choice to fancy grades In good demand and firm. Ducks in comparatively modVrate supply and prices steadily held Qeeee continue plenty aad slow. Equabe in moderate supply, but quality Irregular, with most lots running poor: choice grades in good demand and firm. We quote- DRT Turkeys, Western, young hens, per m 18V4©20c; do young toms, 19«lu*ic; do mixed weights. IBSIBHc: do good working lines. 18S18Hc; do poor to fair. 15O17e; do old h?na, 17@17%c; do old toms. 16">»317c; CAPONS, Philadelphia, large, fancy, per Ib. 23524e; do mixed weights. li<r2oc; do small and slips, 14916 c; do Ohio and Michigan, large, fancy. 18c; do mixed size*, choice. l&Cl*)c; do other Western, large, 14® 16c- do small and allps. 129IS0; CHICKENS, Philadelphia, 8 to 0 Ib to pair, per tb. 19&20 c; do mixed alzes. 10017o; do other Pennsylvania. 7 to 8 rb to pair, fancy, 10317 c; <Jo State and Pennsylvania, mixed sises. 14915 c; do West- ern, dry picked, average best, 12H'S13V»c; do Ohio and Michigan, scalded, 12H818He; do other TVestern. scaJded. average best. 12 13 '.ae; do Inferior. 10912 c; do young stage. 10tf>lle; FOWLS. Western, dry picked. 6 Tb and over each, per Ib. 13c: do averagx run. 12O12^«c; do Ohio and Michigan, scalded , average best. 18013 do other Western, scalded. 6 Tb and over each, per Ib, 13c; do average run. 12<ri2He: do poor to fair, loeilc; COCKS, old. per Ib. &V»ClO<-; DUCKS, spring. Ohio and Michigan. choles, per Ib, 13914 c; do other Western, choice, l'-'OlSo; do fair to good. lu**llc: OEE«E, spring. Western, choice. 11012c: do fair to good. 8®10c; SQL'AIiS. prime, large, white, per dozen. $3 25; do mixed. $2 60052 79. do dark. $20*2 25. GAME Wild ducks tn moderate supply, but quality irregular and selling clowly. Rabbits nave been In lighter supply, and with a good demand prices have ruled higher. Jack, rabbits also doing a little better. We quota: WILD DUCKS, canvasback. per pair, $I«s2 SO; do redhead. $19 $1 SO; do mallard*. 7&C0S1: do rudtfv, fISOTBc; do teal, bluawlng 40«><JUc; do green wing, 53050 c; do common. 256t0c; RABBITS, cottontail, per pair, l£O2oci da Jack. 4006UC. POTiTOEB AND VEGETABLES— for the week. I».ST3 bbls potatoes and 14.728 bbls onions: Imports. 1.812 bbls and 400 pkgs potatoes. 'Domestic potatoes l! > liberal supply, and with tf«rr.«nd moderate market ooa- unues easy with prices snowin« no material change! »\u25a0 '-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0> *»\u25a0* a*4 Uws* *»act Ist— Oral for ISJMT. &&aaffi«R' I^S!^ «r*l«fcts. nsotl<B4B: winter patents. WB«1« perlfift n- FTOUR «ulat: quoted, rled. f2»«s« 10. \u0084 to SiS<LBAO >«aL «£ ouo?*d fi?r'i^4?» fl^* 1 «"' tl=a: «»•»• new. *1 &6sl 07. rEHD—City firm. Western steady; auoted- Weitem •print;. 11U75: »tan«ard tnlddllns; Sl9 23 flour do taiao^ Ited Doy. »22 25. all Janoan- shtpment- city Lra?'»S M*t *?J£l!- bulk «nd aack»: mldailnr $22«*2& Red I?os7 l=?o*is^r anr chop 521 bulk. trfs'SSSr 1 oilm^: CRAIN - WHEAT— not materially lower than the previous night, to-<lay s wheat market could hardly be termed" a *virce»s from the bull standpoint, except n*t»- tlvely r?rl.u In that the decline was no greater Last rrlccs in New- York showed a partial 'i^'Se net lo»s Pept^mber holdtcg steadier than any other month Im- 1 mediately at the o;-entn(. tn response to a drop of TsO lHd In the Uverpool market, attended by reports of 1 largely tncreased Argentine offerings, domestic markets tircke V. lowed by partial recoveries, led by Chicago j In what eeemed to be an effort on the part of bulls to check anr tendency toward further Revere declines. T.iroQrb<Hit midday and the afternoon unsettled conditions rrrv&lled. with prices fluctuating narrowly, and, as a rule. PtraUler In the local market than elsewhere, tut no ! attempt mad* to promote a scare cf shorts, owing to the fact ti-st cash news from Western markets was far from ouracltia-. both ai< to prices and demand. For this reason also tba primary receipt* of only 482.600 bushels, compared with 779.000 bushelp last year, were nnt much of tt factor, while tbe decrease of 3,r»Q7.000 bushels In "BraditreetV world's etocks was practically offnet l y la«t year's reduction of 3.610.000 bushels for the corre- sponding *f» k Winn»apoli» stocks »ero wild to have dr- creased 100.0U0 bushels In the lust three days. It to reported li»re that 4C».<>oo bushels of No 2 red had been offered st SI Vi\k by a local house. Late PiirU markota were 10 to 25 ji-lr.t* net lower and Budapest closed 14 points down. Ctth prices In New-York were as follows: No 2 red. f 1 So; No I Duluth. $126 l *i: No 1 l.ard Mani- toba, jni'j fob afloat. CORN it. brief drop la prices at the cpenlng. as a response to the wheat break and de. line of v.^'-jj in Uvarpool. corn raaseJ Into bull hands and remained firm ai: day until the last hour, when realizing and Mii—isirai Ini) clearances caused slight re- actions, le.»t prices In New-Tork showing no change from the previous rlgiit. Influences connected with the upturn, besides tta* support offered by bull Interests at Chicago, were light country offerings, as shown by the fact that Chicago f-Htlmstes for 'Wednrfloy were only 14<» cars, abseii'-e cf jireesure and primary receipts of but 610.000 bagsssfa. roir.par«v! with 1.208. 000 buabais la*t year. ld- pert l.:islne«» was limited ta 3 loads. No 2 corn cloied at 624 c rlevr.tor uflltc for afloat: No 2 white. 52Hc. and Ha 2 yillow. t>2r fob afloat. OATS The mark»t for oats ct (T.icairo Vac steady sll day. with corn closing prartira;i\ unchanged from the pre-.-1ou« night. rash prl^n in New-York were a* follows: Mixei, 26 to 32 tb. 37{t3Sc: natural white. 30 to 32 It>. 3sSs»<\ nnd clipped white, to 40 Tb. 40<!?<2e. RYB nominal. BARLEY— Market .1u!". F«*e<llr.g was quoted at 48V,'" c t f and malt- Ing at tSCMB r t f Buffalo. N'K'.V-YOrK PRICES. Yester- \u25a0vThoat: Opening. His*. Low. Close. day. May »1 15^» Jl l.'.'s $115% »1 15S $1 l." 7 Juiy 102V4 1027-10 lv:H 103% 1 O2H September . t*\ OiS 94Vi 94»t M% Corn: May . . .V>'« «S .V>* »I-M 50 CHICAGO riUCES. \u25a0Wheat: May 1 15 l.'S SI 15 $115% $1 15H Js4) »X- t flS^ «8H fiv-, <iBH September .Pi »1V» 91 81H 81 \u25a0* Cornt Msv 44*. 45 44H «4«» 44V July . 4.'.>» 45 i"'t 4T.4 45>^ Pepternber .... 4P4 4." \u25a0 J l-16 45Vj 4? 1 45W Oets: May 80% Slit W% 81' i 81 July 81 Bi'» 31 Sl'i 31 Lard: January 6«2 85 «62 R65 B 65 May <8& 0 «7 « f2 6 67 C 87 Ribs: Jar.uarr 42 « 45 6 42 « 45 6 45 May 6 70 8 72 « 67 6 72 « 72 Pork: .Tanuarv 12 43 12 4-. 12 43 12 4:. 12 42 ilay 12 70 12 72 12 65 12 70 1-i 72 Receipts of breadstuffs at interior point* In thoußands. last thiee ciphers (000) omitted, flour bbl«. grain busn. as ''"'" ovf - Flour. Wheat. Corn. Oats. Rye.Barley^ Chicago 30 84 310 13S 8 M Milwaukee 5 31 « g «5 Minneapolis 276 27 -5 - - 4 Duluth ...... »» .1 St. LfluU » 63 « Kansas *::::::::= " 26 =J Toledo _6 S4 21 _2 Peorla '.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.''\u25a0. _j _f! _z _i: Trtali. T*i 452 IM 810 12 IV- frcra thete points: Chicago 21 »0 204 179 7 40 MUwauke* . 2 10 1 Mlr.r.ea.Mii, 112 16 12 10 Duluih 3 Pt Lou!« 10 »4 40 26 Ksr.sas \u25a0'.'> 34 f* 10 Toledo 8 is I>etroli 3 fl \u2666 ! P«orta I _1» __17 _— _— Totals C 2 226 837 270 20 72 }:\u25a0 ••; bj at Atlantic ports: -York 25 2 130 N IS Boston 2 2 2l» -2 iPhiladelphia IS 4 2* I Haltltr.br* 6 8 !M *> 1 j New-Orleans 1 151 3 ! Galv«ston 1 71 Totals ~40 12 777 111 1 13 Exports from At;ar.-.:? ports: New-York 12 60 5 Host on .1 51 ! PMlad*l9bla 6u I Baltimore 1 , New-Orleans 1 26 Totals IB 187 6 HIDES The market is flrnx with a good demand. Paiea for the w«ek were M.oC*.' hides. The receipts for the ] week were- afcout 70,000 -hides. The nock on hand is . 15.0U0 hides and kip*, coenpaxed with 7,700 for the same i time la»t year. The awtatlcns are as follows: Callfcrr.la. j ISk; Galvestcn. l&c; San Antcnlo Jind Laredo, 2W:; and Ithe following selected, duty paid basis: Matimota> ]!•\u25a0•. j Truxillu. -:^c. Orinoco. 23V»c; Tampico. 21 . Bogota. 21@ I 22c; Orntral Ame.ican. 21So; Vera Crux. 21c; Porto Ca- I bello. L*. Guayra ar.d <'aracas. 22c: Payta. lb'-tQ'JOc; 1 Tal*sco, 20Vc; Rio Hache. dry and pickled. 16c; Port-au- :Psmxte, 18c; Stn Antonio and Lared... 20c. L<KV SALTED HIDE& Texas. 14Hc; and the following selected, duty paid prices: Pa\ta. 14Hc; Progreso, 12c; Uarar.ham. P«-r- narcfcuco and tUr.ia. 15c; Maracaibo and gavanilla. 14H-:; Matarr.or<i.«. 14H©l5c. LEATHER The market is firm, with good demand and prices quote.i as follow*: Acid, flrrt selection. S3 t S'J6c: vlaughter. 2CC2Sc; second*. 21H024c: slaughter. •^.'ii'j.-i . rejects. l«ifell<c. union, light back*. 88a: middle backl ana middle bevy. 33334c: seconds, 32©a3c; thirds. US{J2Oc; l.ght tacks, com-. oieS3c; seconds. ia»c: oak dressed back*. rtr«s. 33c : seconds. 33<J34c ; thirds. 31©32 c; bellies. 20c; belting butts. 35^40c; T«-xas oaj| sole. 26930 c. X-tTALS The feature cf th« metal markets to-day was the advso li. the price of copper, which seemed the r-- f-jlt of en* of t::e leaiilng producers raising Its European selling price of eiectrolytic. Lake copper here was quoted tt 15. 15.50 c; electrolytic at 15. 12^i©1537htc. with ronie c*al«-r« asking as high as 1u.50c. and caatlr.g at 14.57H9-15.2Tjc Jy>nC^n cabled an advance to iC6 17* f«1 for «rot ar.d to £C 9 2s 6d fir futures. The London tin market (advanced al^o, clrstng at £130 5s for spot and £130 7s Cd for futures, locally the market, while quiet as to _-.c seems more or lest unsettled as to price. Spot Is generally •.'ld at from 29.25 c to 29.02Hc, with outside prices a trifle extreme, perhaps, while some talk is heard of weakness in bupplles ft/r future delivery. Lead advanced to IVi Ik* >iin London, but remained firm and unchanged at 4.e0&4.70c in the local market Spelter was lower by abou: lis <te lr. the London market, where spot cloeed at £24 17s 6<S. Locally, however, the situation shous flrni- ness and spot le <4uoted et [email protected]. Iron closed at 54s in Glasgow Htui at 4%s 4^jd in Mlddlesboro. Locally Iron Is unchanged out firm lr. tone, with producers disinclined to grant any concestlona. No 1 foundry. Northern, Is quoted at 117 6(>-2517 t)5, the inside prices being more or lees r.om'.r.a;. No 2 foundry. Northern. Is held at $17 60, and No 1 foundry Southern, and No 1foundry. Southern soft, st $17 7&*Jslß Pig iron certificates on the Produce Bxchange were a little more active to-day, sales amount- ing to 200 tons. The close follows: January. $16,859 IMaC February. $16 «sSsl6 GO; March. $17 aeked; April and May. $16 &OCUI7 10: June, $ICSOCSI7. July, August and 5-ptfMTiber. $17 asked. MOLASSES AND eTRT'PS Trading In syrups was moderate, with offerings not large. Molasses was firm, with a good and steady demand for fine grocery grades here as well as at New-Orleans. Quotations follow: New- Orleai.s centrifugal, common. 12013 c; fair, 15«iri7c: aroo 1. m©2lc; prime, 223r27c; New-Orleans, open kettle, 81«)f37c; SYRUPS, common. 1401.1 c: Jalr. 18C18c; good. lbj?2lc; prime 22*25c: fancy. 2SCf3Oe. OCEAN r'REIGHTS Rates for steam and sail tonnage continued steady, and very little Improvement was noticed In the demand. There were no new or interesting features, and only a moderate business was reported. Quoteuons to Liverpool, l%d; Glasgow. London and Ant- werp. 2d- Leith and Newcastle, nominal; Bremen. 35 pfgs. Hamburg. 40 pfgs; Hu'.l and Bristol. 2Hd; Rotter- dam. b%c; cotton to Liverpool, per 100 n>. 12315 c; Lon- don, oats, nominal. CHARTERS British steamer. 1.554 tons, general cargo. Virginia to Rotterdan.. private terms, February: British steamer. 1.527 tons, phosphate. Tampa to Bor.eas. 13s 84. February; British steamer. 1.561 tons, coal, CardlS to Jamaica, dm; Swedish steamer. 1.292 tons, lumber. CHilf to Blver Plate, private terms, February; British steamer. 1.757 tons. coal, Norfolk to 6t Lucia. $1 CS; British steamer, 1,233 toes. coal. Norfolk to Matangaa. private terms ; schooner, 7W- toes, general cargo, hence to Pcrto Rico, private terms; British schoon- er, SSS tons, lumber, Jacksonville to Bt John, N B, f 7 60; schooner, 618 tons, phosphate, Charleston to Pensa- eola, and back Mobile to Noanic lumber, private terms: bark. 82b tons, lumber, Ferpandin* to New- York, private terms; schooner. C7B ton*. lumber, Jacksonville to Phila- delphia, $C; schooner, 423 tons. coal. Newport tiewg to Charleston. 80c. and back to Boston, dry lumber, private termc, schooner, 4&S tons, coal, Norfolk to Savannah, and* back to New-Tork. lumber, private terms, schooner. 378 toss, dry boarCa, Charleston to New-Tork, $4 SO; rehooner. 421 tons, coal, hence to Palatxa. $1 IB; bark, Bb3 tons, cnal, Philadelphia to Savannah, private terms; schooner, 8.9 toot. coal. Port Residing to Norfolk, about 50c. loaded and discharged: two schooners, 6SB and 1,005 tons, coal, Philadelphia to Boston, private terms; schooner, 2.470 tcr.i. coal, Philadelphia to Providence, private terms; schooner. e«7 tons, fertilizer. Carteret to Wilmington. X C, and bees to New-Tork. lumber, private terms: schooner. SBS tons. ties. Fernandlna to Philadelphia, private terms; schooner. 820 toes. ties. Femandlna to Boston, private terms. German steamer. 1,425 tons, gen- eral cargo, hence to Harre and (or) Dunkirk, Ba on* port. 8s fid if both. February; British steamer. 1.506 tons, gen- eral cargo. Taaaplco and Port Ltmon to Kew-Tork, isOO. prompt. To-day was an active car in cettonseed oil. and prices showed material advances oa renewed speculative ana outside demand, flftles, 3*o Me? at 2«%e: 250 May at 25c; wOO May at 23« c: 8.600 May at 2SHc 800 July at IXVc S.M* Jnly at 280 and 1.000 September at 28Ho. Linseed oil remained unchaar^d. Refined petroleum Is e.utet at the recent decline. We quote: PETROLEUM Standard white, bbls. |7 40; bulk. $4 SO: Philadelphia. $7 SS. bulk. $4 43} refloed cases. New-Yort, |1O 10, Phi:a- delphia. $10 05; water white. New-Tork, bbls, 190 test. $»4O: bulk. M 80: PtsiUdelphla. 88; balk. 45; water white, cases. New-Tork. $13 10; Philadelphia. $13 05 COTTONSJSED Prime crude, fob mills. 18c; prime a-jnuarr yellow. January, 2SWC24HO: rebruary. 28*40 24Vc- March, 24*»«T25c; M*y.25H»260; July, 28«2320, juos teptember. 2B l «Citt?ic; off summer yellow, nominal; primewWle, 27®27ftc; prime winter yellow, 27H5230. UKSCBD OIL— American seed, city raw 43944e; eat of town raw. «l#42c: Calcutta raw. etc LAHDOIL.S»0« p Oc. PROVISION'S— Heavy reoe'pts ag&ln affected tne Chi- cago market lire bogs being fiOl^o lower and the rpecu- lative undertone e«#y after (h*opening, alth<-agh rail Ing •ncnewhs*. around midday with com. The afternoon mar- ket was fairly steady, bat ratber lnaet.v« Total Weste-n receipts were 103.000 begs. ln-lud ng 60.000 at iTilcago. 14 000 at Kansas City anl 10 000 at Omaha. PO*K— \u25a0teady. Quoted: Mess, $13fT$13 1»: family $146114 '0. shorTi-lear. *18»6«ia BBBP— «t»si!y Cuotei: Mess. •w&fteW; family. $}iesl2: psvoket. $I6COCtU: extrm India n£T tUfMIT. USB.?? HAjfl-«tea<sy Quoted sj t^i 122 60. nRE'SC3I HOG&— Ht«»dy. Qnoted: Kaocas. r*,..-;r *,..-; lhO n>. *%c iao tb, C%o; 140 Ib. *%o pigs. 7»t%c. cur MKATB— P«cii;si bellies rteady. Quoted: emoklng, 7c. 10 Ib 7o; 13 Ib. 7c: 14 Ib. 6<ic PleJriea shoo'ijeni ncrn n.-.t. duotad st ©Vio. Pickled ban* nominal) euoiei at e%9 Vifliie K. rP ]y <"3SJ 4.Sf><*.73C 4.lS'-> 344 B»=« Uroe ll«ut V.ZlZ.i!*) 8.2.^.036 2.064.116 WTTOX— Tit- cotton market continues Qvlct pending **** ».ttrt:jon la t!ie Bombcm epat situation, of which T..-ert us co rress^t lr.fllcation. Tbe hcldlng movemtnt has J""J * "M» cf develr^ment wh:ch it is es .<c to esy wu w.er t«!ore tquilled In tee history o: the market «\u25a0— Ccrp:te :l» laife ec.ouats cf rotten, which, according L. 4 ?*, C .*^ us rrjKvrt. rer-iuln to be marketed. t»,e ir.ove- if-f bw-tir.d iatt ye&r'a f:s-ures ty a considerable tT ~.'^. ».* r '''' cf th<? 1:ehl receipts, sentiraer.t .-eem« a_. : ' ! ii., bearith l . avcr"«* ; \u25a0\u25a0•;\u25a0 -'..i itut the > .-... v ' rr~«\ * 1 . 0 held tick KUdlMl. wh!cn. :t Is argued. fcsS.£T B r s 10 lj * * Ai - ar ' 3 tije teem also to be JS*i>22! 1" th * V™*?*** *&***\u25a0 «t the next report *Jl\V? B " rt: * v - \u25a0*!«* to be leeued lati tMs t""n,t" f "-^aciouct of cotton glcned to Januery \u25a0 '. \u25a0 , »""'. a " \u25a0 ' -' '• ••' "' I* I eld in New - it«r <ks7m - \u25a0 - ate (i«— \u25a0"'. : \u25a0 > \u25a0TSS *«J«««J. and MloVrnFtfi Pwcts «t^ acTve 12? *<iva nt<> of about 6£» "citL^r £-l"L P. , SS?S" on * *-*** °' covering by "^crr t^^- r b -LH'L < l em^ c V:°-" »>\u25a0 eource'oci « tt.e prt te i^r^f^ ,Z J* " eJhEff COUoa Purchased 8 ratner b«forr u.t. shorts «I fcwn u^ te'f'.- Ar \u0084 ZjUjy rre * aa ' r . rolnt or two joints. <it=iw pr:r« io i^^fcLS? n ? a J" ke^« rtj.orted of- ..^yyJt.y 1 7>*rk«ta r-^j^rtad un- \u25a0 \u25a0 busi- •>\u25a0 JW liiitV 6 "' tl aJ * ointJ - *^ "tteates^r"^; «?«S^: eßal!rt ? prioa. to tfc. loca: mfk,, tcMlay jtaaer .. ° i * n i : *; H is h " low - Cl^- '3^ r<tru£-y r, M «-fts «-H 6tl©oP2 «85 : 3 fM| W> ?•<* 6.89 e.J#&3«.1..l 6M E;n: " '.1% l)\ ««» w.BS|?.S 7.05 gi- \u25a0 ;;. : ;. : «-J2 7<* 7oS> 7-0457.06 7.10 *>«•«•/: '•» J23 7CS 7.1&87.11 4i« •Nwtnber T.J6«7.17 7.21 '*a<*er I** I* 7.18 7.ief7.lS 7.22 .'.\u25a0;; JiJ J*J 7-»> M557.20 7.25 |s« \u25a0 j. \u25a0/..... ' r»s. uiSi^STL . " I>ot cot '-°*> clome« qus*t. with «J *id 7^5 .' " ,Vi.*. b " lB of 7 - =sc f•: r.. i....:. c up- •iis* v -~ , ~ '\u25a0' ljU ' i t aaiea to »plnrj«rs. SitO ifidk n«y nj*ra*u w«r« ueieirrat J.t-d as fol- - 10c hlrher at «15-16 c; aa:«a «• tat. \u0084 ' ' ' *n«:»d at 7r, sales. ; ««t.- ,-- . r ; H" hlfher a: 6Tbc. Uo- 3a 3r , ce t,." c S?""JSJ*' J^ec: aales. «S1 balea. Bal- \u25a0l nactTvJaVt >--•-.. AUSTU«t* steady ft^T aad Z^ijiy*; ** Io:I o: •"'^ «10 »*»'•\u25a0 O*lv««ton BMaasa ver^^irff' 1 « 7 1-Me: aalea. 490 teles. New- "iZL-I /(* na -n'-.anreiJ at 7c: sales. 2.000 •lai *>m££L»i]^^Zr wchanrefl at 7c; sale., a.Sno ;t At lfasrTLi^^^^-"?- J—'' 3 '- n aT T*>!r-ta for u>-n»or- «6 str Z!kl2??' , ».«» to 12 sft. bales a«a«nvt *t .-Jy-" i *" ! > frir *t Houston 8.06U to ' !*« «eck arid C7V* last y«er- - 1^ j£? h»Jes. a»alr.st 4.723 last wc«k I interior polnta to-day. e<w>- « urn sacs day iMt week ud last jUr? _ . L«*t Le*t PT»s«-r>t "J'tttoa To-«ay. »re*k. year. atoca eaa, 5-S2 10.X« U. 63* I* 2 - 68 * *Jb!le 7 \u25a0 20.0C8 IS.«R4 401.097 .2>ar.e£V~ •22 4.170 *»7 65.823 .SriisT£. *\u25a0*«' *-i7o tens Kaa»M Jii "3 MJHJ J«cU . LSZ2 13 9W 8.«72 gillIS— "4<i7 1.641 3,K» 58.485 r*-Tork ~rr \u25a0 "^ e.oi« f»tea .. JSJ 29* 44 88.713 QteMnuM tJ * '-•" JT7 I"- Ittloas J2» «0 ! 5.,- _ \u25a0• "0 281 1.16S 16.SK> IWer.er."- 20.80 87.000 80.05» M3.OM HSBJU 2»*m» ::: ii \u25a0\u25a0* 1 « 2.43« 4j.ier> tes^-fS !:^ 4 fc® <tei^ r'V *\u25a0<*» •• 1S ia - :U7 T3.458) * *«:entu "flt^* ZZ 11 * 51 * 1 " wr P«>oJ a*J««: toot cwtton S*^ M*o- C l^5 *•' * al °" 700 ° t*le«:t * Ie «: \u25a0pecuUtlou and ?* ; «cl«Mi/^fr 1 =* n - «\u25a0*?; receipt* 15.000 ail Amert- T*"»i SS«? c^iS 8 -*? d: futures optima stsa<s> ft V*?: JtnJjuf*".' A*** s ; ApHl-Majr. S.fcSd; May-June^ ?»• Mtta \u25a0 \-7^l!r' t *t octob * T ' B * 4<J : October-Novem- B £Vc&-lEkT \u2666 a mn ««» ; « <eciand. i?"«««!*e irf1"^5L25" as *<s a™ and business was - ii^'i?*^^ ItlUp1 tlUp - fn- <oUowJm ranss Il*I 1 *- l.ati in*??!*- °*yt *"tf**: cubeb. 84«T««c twony- ft,"Wi«iL22' \ r>frM a Rc>oT^SSk«TTi y . : I."' t \u25a0\u25a0+. . T^^-. *t oW>te as fellows (JcdusO, 4# g-iriOea .i^^n-." ***>^c. «l4 ur.bie*cb«4, 7lk# \u25a0'i*/"1«Mi Staat^P 1 " I**1 ** rf* l^"- there betsr f»lr t*^ »w? Ti 1/ BT * *"* low »T*fi«. tte*tter with B2S tiwrUaf WtWtow—T" V* •»»\u25a0* »n«nu. NEW- YORK DAILY TRTRrXE. WEDNESDAY. JANUABY IS. 1905 PENNSYLVANIA Railroads. THE MARKETS Railroads. TOTAL DOMESTIC RECEIPTS TO-DAY. New-York. Janu*n- 17 1005. __ -rhtte fcb*- - '<** Dr<-aa»d »«juitr> pk«s 1 &S4 »\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0, P.012,L.1ve poultry, crate*.. 111 ri *^ e«ik« 25.«-27!i»ranse« <Fla>. caees.. 1.725 bae» £.fx>^ I'runm <CaJ), pk CT .... 7 450 - -vlB«-t " ISJMTS I'otatoes. bbl» 4 400 «**\u25a0 /; J A- 500; Onions, bbls ' .' 1 two 41 "*" hl«a' " l.'Jk; Dried Jrult. pk«s 1250 J *^v tush JS.SOO;Ros*n bW...!?..... £.«0 J*J*L.J2 ~;... 7MW Fj>:ms turp. bbls 1>75 ***\u25a0 is," r..27f.; Tar, bb> '75S E£C2£ I.TW, Sugar. l»bls ; 77r.' JBy- 10 ""-'" . h ' >-t--^. bjies 7fK) I I-*'-' .^Tbars Slo|Mo!a*w«. bbl» l.«<«» i JljW r-^«. •••- 10.1 ; Tobacco, h»u'.s 25 "^ hH» ' Ss»iwhtt<tay. bbls 404 JV* til' " S-tS'lVooU bale* 15 :i»«r- s - r t«" U7s;\V?xa. sarks Bfx» I* 1*"1*"- F, %iWes" 2.C*» Isrle. bales . T-. rtW«-». i ( s 50' Oof.on. bsies . 4.500 lor*'-'- - , f ""<•„... li; Carper, Tier** r».R25 J*^ 8^ V^' * - :<.«>*! Oor;.er matt*, bars... 1.123 ***• \u25a0• S.TrSillides. l*ies S." l*r*. Uo^ . l.t-S" 1 Hides. Ml* .•\u25a0:: I*" 1 - C^*rs -•• K".: Skins, bales 1W t*»l° w - K±. . . 17:.. Leather, rides S.ST3 PW^SS i... rrc.iloiv bait. » Jlstter> nkcf""' 3OSS I WI.-Mnr»!), tbli "5 "AmspJea's Greatest RnUroad." NEWYORK (entral. V^^ &HUDSON RIVER R. 3. THE SIX-TRACK TRUNK LINI. Direct Lins from New York cfc Boston to Niagara Falls. \u25a0n«i_.n» depart from Gi*iid Central StatUn. «2d s(r««( ai..i yourtn Avenue. New YorW. as Mlvw. Nona anU «est bound trains except 'hose leavtaz i>rand Central Bu»tion at s+» A. ii : «i. J.JO. 1L» r M.. wUI stop at i:.ih St. to receive pasaencsrs ••• .. I t 1 i nut * 3 »'**r ieavlnje Grand Central Sution. I—lo A. II. <UIDNI(;UT tVCPRESX »-K>A. -t«MPI STATE EXPRESi Most t»- _._ »M>u« tr«in tn the world. l>u Buffalo 4.43 L _•\u25a0*» •*• M— •FAST HAIL :4 hours ta Chicaco. 10.20 A. ll.— *r> > y EXPRESS *?2S P M *blkp>lo limited. '•or y.-'SOCTHWESTEKN LlillTED. !••? £- M— CHICAGO LIMITED *-*-P-M— —THE 2*»TH CENTCRT LIHITED.- «• »n. hour train l> Chicacn via Lake Shore. i"^2S- ?>.— tALBANY AM> TP.OY Ft.TER. «.0O F> M —•Mil-: B-Sap. M.— «UKK SHOHE LIMITED. 531 a boors tt» .._ «-hica«». All Pullman Cars. *- s p _ m-"* 1 -M:v£LAND. CINCINNATI. ST. LOCI& ... rPF TR ? l X AND CHICAGO LIMITED. aor- «-~ 'WESTERN EXPRESS. -?2S M— 'MONTKEAL EXI'ItESA b°m {. JJ— 'ADIRONDACK ANU MONTREAL EXP- •••OP-M- "81-KFALO. NIAGARA KALIS. CLEVS- \u25a0 •f>r» L « D ANr * TORONTO SPECIAL. "ra rT.E?s : ' iTEU:i NEW ToitK AXT> CHICAtiO 11 .^|, T . > ,* T^" ICAOO * ST i-ocis izxrr.&3s. uaiiy. tEicept Sutiflav «Ejr-a- M^na^y. \u0084, . ; iKLKM n«^%>CII. and Vo,7V ' ! S - 3;< pIJ »»cept Sunday, to PttuSeUJ ana North Adans Sundays, t ;;> a. XT. Pullman cars on all through train*. _\u0084 * Traln » H'umiMtert »itn Piat«h IleSt. Tlrhet office* at .l 4:> - -* l - 4ti an<s *2*« Broadway. 'S rmon fir, w>»t. ITS < wSSTI««I St. Grand < »ntral Station, tr. 113 th St. Station. Sew BrSoklvn * U<i 7 -* F>ultc>D St. and 10« 8.-oa<l»aw. Cah e '<f. P , h ? B8 SO9S 09 IBth \u25a0»\u25a0\u25a0»«" '<«• \u25a0*\u25a0 T->rk C#ntral b? w-..t V .*." _ E ** a »f' ch^r,(-d from hotel or residence by Wntentt Exi>re»a Con.. A. H SMITH. CEOr.nE H DANIEIA general Manaccr. General Passencer Ac-ct. RAILROAD. THE ONLY FOUR-TRACK LINE LEADING OUT OF NEW YORK. STATIONS fcot of WEST TWENTT-THir.D STREET A.\t> DKSBHUSSE.-' AXD COIITLA.NDT STREETS. C 7 The leavinc time from Desbroaaes and CortUuO; Streets la 3ve invnutes luter tr.-n that glv«n b«low for Twenty-third Street Station. t'OK tUX WEST. •7.55 A.M. CHICAGO SPECIAL. •8.35 A.M. ST. LOUIS LlillTED. •10.','3A. M. THE PENNSYLVANIA LIMITED. M boon lo Chicago. •Ur.JI. CHICAGO AND s>T. LOUISEXPRESS. •4.5J1". M. CHiCAOO LIMITED. ~f, a SJU P. M. ST. I.OL'IS EXHtESS. •SJIS P. M. WEMEKN EXPRESS. "-V". I». M. PACIFIC EXKKfSS. •8.23 P.M. CLEVELAND ANI> CINCINNATI EXP. •BJSP.M. PITTSBURG SPECIAL. WASHINGTON AXD TIIE SOUTU. "05. S.^i, »9.3, •D.SS. 'lO.io a. m.. •12.JJ. 2.10 t«3.2.->. •Con»fee»ional L»mUed">. '3.25. *4.25. •\u25a0*.». W.ii p. nj.. 32.1H night. Mmii), 8.^5. *».23. *10.i3 a. m.. «12.il '*:;.-i. "Consresalonal Llni.ted"). *3.». M.^. *-4.i5, U.^s P- m., 12.1u n;«ht. SOUTHERN KAIL.VVAY— '2.SS. 3». 4.23 p. m.. 12.10 a. m. daily. "•i-outhem Faim Limited." li» p. m. week- da vs. ATI.AXTIC COAST L.INE—923 a. m. and S3 p. m. daily "New York and Florida Special." 2.l'J p. m. week-days. SE.VHOARf) AIR L1NE.—12.55 p. m. and 12.10 a. tr.. daily. "Seaboard" Florida Limited." 12.13 p. m. dally. NORFOLK AND WESTERN UAIIAVAY.— 3.23 p. ta. •lally. CHESAPEAKE A OHIO RAILWAY. ".55 a. m. week- i!»ys. .-,.55 p. m. daily. FOR OLD POINT COIIFORT and NORFOLK.— ».S5 a. ra. ! •'•V-'avs. 8.23 p. m. d?.i:y. "_ . ATLANTIC CITY.— ft.M a. m. and 2.3 ft p m. »jek-dajs. Sundays. »7.55 a. m. CAPE MAT.— 12.38 p. m. week-days. LONG BRANCH A.-Bt RT PARK (North Asbury Par* Sundays), and Point Pleasant. 8.53 a. m.. 12.23. 3.C3. •*-55 p. m.. and 12 10 niKht week-days. Sundays. 12.10. »-25 a. m. and 4.53 p. m. FOX rHH.AnFI.PHIA. 0«S. 7.23. »7.55. 8.25, 0.55. •9.25, »t9 55. •» 55. •tIO.SS. •10.53. 11.55 a. m.. »12.55. 'I.K. 2.10. -" *3.23. 3.55. -: *4.25. «4.M i-t4.55 for North Philadelphia «n:> •5.53. •1.55. 755 6.J5, b.23 (r>.55 for Nf.th i'hJlaJ^'.pl 1 only) p. m.. 12 lo njjjct week-days. Sundays. «5.i'3. •\u25a0.S3. 5.23. »9.23 '...,->. 9 35. 't10.25. *10.53 a. m.. *12.SS. »i C5. •3.23. 3.53, »4.25 <»t4.Ki for North PhlU- delphia <.r.ivi. •4..V.. «5.55. 6.53. 7. 55. 8.25. 20 W. 53 for North Philadelphia only) p. ra.. 12.10 night. •Dining <*ar tKxtra-fare train. Tl?k"t otficfi. Nos. 4(ii, i3.->4. 113 and 261 Broadway: IS2 Fifth Avenue ibalow 13d St.>: 233 Firth Avenue (cor- ner 2Uth St.); 1 Aster House, tnd stations named above: Brooklyn. 4 Court Street. 860 Fulton Street, XiO Broadway, an<l Pennsylvania Annex Station. The New York Tran.s:tr Company will call for and check ba*- sage from hotels and resid*rces through to destination. Teiephono ••543 Chelsea" for Pennsylvania Railroad Cab Service. , W. W. ATTERBURY. J R. WOOD. General ilii;ajr»r. Pa*s"r Trade Manae«r. GEO. w. BOYD. —^^_^__^_ General Fan»grger Agent. Excursions. Grand Mid-Winter Tours LOW KATES TO CALIFORNIA READING SYSTEfVS. CHVsk^?l l H- U ?^ ALtENTOWN v 3XACCU 4 4,, - T '- , 'i !> f Y.Vs" m°'' C!y P " »• Sund * y "- \u25a0*\u25a0»• WILKJCSBARKK AND SCKAXTO^— r* .»». sto a. m.. I m Su'ii". i \u25a0* i; -a ••.- «> * LAKFM <i<:i> | vKUIiKIT ' Vomh itnn »-«n» klPvrriV \u25a0\u25a0lnr.Bl n^l. IUIS MTER UP B.AK.M.OAT «4.d0. «9.4» *• iv.. H.JO tj.49. 4.1* \u25a0• ard I-akenurst on!y>. ai uu. xii.d» p. as. vS^X^Jf CITV-^9 40 a. m . 13.40 p. nv L< JSwv-5 tt i> C . M - ASECRY PAKK. OCEAN fiKbVIL HSK-ffSfSi 1 ? 1 * AXD «SSaoS points^: «4.0». 8.30 11.30 a. m.. xI.IO. 4.43. S.JO. «.30. 11.54 S 10% nday> **ce»t Ocean Grove. »uo a. m.. 4.00. A "S«T*SIN?'%fA ! «- : »? RlClr^ *<«««>"» ICE. 5.59. 1.30. 11.M a m. 3&VM 4 £^ftTi! £ :d * oaly> - <JO »\u25a0-•\u25a0— PHILADELPHIA(P.EADIXG TERMINAL*— -4 S3. 709 p 22:. -^•-, mV.*- tso °- tso °- t7 - 30 - •M?jßa S *7S ANb'cHksTNtrr STnEETS— «4 »5. tS 90 MOLS9 •lISS m<tt m - *- O<J - S **-°"- * Se °- * 7 - 0 i t3;:i * «•: BA .^.°, lof.I of. Doxm?l?f:1?yD o x m? l?f:1?yl ?f:1? y - 90 °' "10-M-"IiM- IA.MsPOBJ—.,4.OI». 24.2 a. tS.OO. , t9.10 (lii.oo ILO9 a. m.. Reading only*. |«1.00. »|»i.S9. tiOO p. m. Head- ing. Pottavllle. HarrUburg only, t4.00. ts.o<> *,£ •5-V^v «- vJ* Str *f t on 'y- •Daily. tDaily. *xce?t sun .ay ISundays only. tParlor cars only. ] via Ta- maqua. xSaturdavs. aExcpt Saturday* Ml. 434. 1300. 13i4 Broadway. I3i sth Ay, 25 Unloi fcquar- West. U3 Ea.it i:r.th Bt.. ITS Wtst 125th 3: 145 Columbus Ay. New York: 4 Court St. 3»4. gsi I'Ulton St. Brooklyn: S9O Broadway. Wliilanu-burV N w York Transfer Co. calls for acd checfc* b.iecan to destlna- ••-• W G BESLER. C M. BrRT Vlce-Pres. and Cen. Mgr. Oen. Passr A«tt. BALTIMORE JIKO OHIO RJWD ROYAL BLUE LINE TRAINS -EVERY OTHEft EVEN HOUR." To BALTIMORE and WASHINGTON. . _„_ Leave Sooth Ferry 5 minutes earlier. Lt.liberty street . . « 80 am. Ex'-ep- Sua. Buffet. " lO.yOam. Dally. Diner. ItNlw Da.iV Diner. " ••*.. 2 "0 pm. Daily "BufTst- "Royal risntted" ..'."..'. 4.00 pro." Da'ly' All Pui'moa. « "\u25a0• cm. Dally. D!n»r ' \u25a0•>\u25a0> pm. Da!!y. Euffet 1113 nlcht. Dallr. Sieeoera, WIFSWI) TRAIN SEKVKC. Sie * peri - THROCOH TR.VIN.S TO THE WEST. n«llyLt. New York City. S-.ut Ferry. Liberty St. Chicaco. Pittsburg ll.lont. 12.15 nt "rsnii. (liicHgo, C'olnmbi:* 11.55 am. 12.00 noon. Diner Plttsborjr. ( Irvel.i<id 3.55 p-i. 4.00 pm. l.irc'ttai -Pltf—l.urg LJniit»<i'" (.55 pm. 7.00 pm. Bu3et. Clnrinnati, St. Louis .. ls.lrtnt. 12.15 nt. K!f«.per. lnnati. St. I.o:ti« 9. .-.."• am 10 00 am. Dtner Clnriniiati. Xf. I.oni* .. . 5.35 pra. (.00 om. Dln»r" Offices: 261. 434. 1100 Eroadway. « Astor Houv m Ore»nw!eh St.. 25 Union P';uar* W.. Zil OranJ S- >T. T.: 3«S Fulton Street. Brooklyn; Sou Ferry a=i Liberty Street 11

Upload: others

Post on 14-Aug-2020

0 views

Category:

Documents


0 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: DAILY THE Railroads. PENNSYLVANIA · TI«-k:ts cood toreturn until NoTember 1. Parties willleave New Tork. J>o«toa. and Philadel-phia, etc.. inJan. Feb.. andMarch, visit River- side,

TI«-k:ts cood to return until NoTember 1.

Parties willleave New Tork. J>o«toa. and Philadel-phia, etc.. in Jan . Feb.. and March, and visit River-side, Redlands, San Diego. Pasadena. Los Angeles.Santa Barbara Santa Cruz, Monterey, San Jose. SanKafael. and San Francisco. The Return Journey in-cludus the erra N»vada by daylight. Salt Lake City.the Gorges and Cafions of Colorado by daylight. Den-vec, Muuitou Springs. an<l the Garden of the God.->l.e:«u:c-'v sojourns wtn be m.ad» at the following eese-brated hotels: The Olenwood. Hotel d«-l Coronado. HotelGr«en. the Potter. Hotel El Pas> de Robles. Sea BeachHotel, Hotel del Monte. The Vendoxne. The Palace.Hotel Rafael. The Knutsford. The Brown Palace.Business rani and tbetr families and ladles can see allImportant points without na.«te of tlm». travellingluxuriously unfi»r escort of experienced conductors theentire round trip, and being relieved of every care.

OTRFR TOURS To Flortda. Mexico.<JIKLa *utJliJ PnrM Rico. Mardl GraaCarnivai. Japan, Around the World, Hawaii.Europe, Cruise to West Indies, etc.

Xlallroad nml Steamship Tickets everywhere.Send for book, mentioning information desired.

RAYMOND &WHITGOMS CO.'New Tork: 23 tTnion Sq.

FnJladelphla. Boston, Pittsburg. Chicago, etc.

KEW YOHlt NEW H£YE!i 1EMTFO33IR

CASH QUOTATIONS.v. jr*» n7SB ;nour. Mpllpatents.. $S 80KCASH

QUOTATIONS.

7.25.mtm.. mm

15"

(> grar.u-.ated.... «.J»U&eoil*' i"i"*J .-, jjj [nicißMna. O X prime. S7•n y»

BtfßC* "»li-; e3O \u25a0Bed hams r**??^tpt^f vA'«r«<i - 12rt ITallow. prUa* '•-, H

SWi <« t'- \u25a0*SJC3B LJk. prime 605*37

3>

EXPORTS TO-CfAY...Ji, MiROO.Tar. bWs so

Com. *«« 4h> Hefined pet. gals ....2.fA4 192os'.f. t;c«* iSSlßrr'-daum. ga!» $i#.WCWIS; S^ Lubricatlr-g oil, ga,s. 142,942l*i.K!.

•-'501* CattOßf**4.«U. «*»•• 106.C63•

ccrr."• t>c^..-- ,V(, V( t Ueree, l>B

42.St»f'

liaw

E^rtti tup. X*'-»- -

Jj, g«S £ «».!«»fj«in. tnss

GENERAL MARKET REPORT.JCew-T«*. January 17. IWS.

ft,rn:n-Thec^ r^a.uet ffgg*£***weak-•

«•' da^.n^ JT-r^rg movement \u25a0 '. the

5 fe^,^ st a Vec:iVrrf*fflOj»lBt. and the\u25a0 and the

rA:tt: cKipe-. *^-»^-;•*,_Tl,e clotlng bids were\u2666^^.M'r^^i^n,, the pr^tou. d«-

1 early last>.'" two

early cable,

SSSSSSSaSy &^sss« > this• -

full, andJ2 S*WmS«S com'.r.s so late in the teasou

urters as to

K^BaUcatitnates »o libemlly cJrculsted a* to the actutl

.K^'tii c££: Euwpe biovei ¥: n«*. After open-,£ U fine biFhe- on BeptembM and uncharged on

S^VSta. t*e rr?nch (i^artat cec'.ined ai>dlower.le% *'3!C lowrr. r.hl'.e Hamburß was M. rfg lower.

SV Of the Srsrilian markets repone* a-.y ***Bf*-JffSaS S the UK*} rr*rtwt #e»-med to reflect UquMa-

Srfwn K«ML M>« UM PWhaps the dumping out

c^ time tf O*» lone cofrf that vs. net diFturiied by thetSi»i=Uaa. fading trade tnt«r«i» give compara-trr-j little- mnpert to far as c->ul4 **. gathered, thoughShm. orders Irom that source l.aye recently been proml-ST^n th^ msrUpt. The spot ir.crk^t -is quiet _ar.<J;—"--;> ur.-.-.aT-.prd en tiie bafls of e"»c for P.io No 7.

rar.rt Ot contract prices in the local market to-day

\u25a0•.Mfl<li.Mfl<li Te—Openlng. 111^.. Low.

\u25a0 -•« dar.,'orv

- — — 7..VK;7flf> 7.C5MTOKTT ...7.nr. ».«S J.C". 7.«-';£7.«5 775\."h , 7.fiS T.KI 7.73 7.7057.7.1 7.».»

JZA ;.» 7.5-S 7.J«5 7^sff7« fOOjiV

'CM *\u25a0-If *•<» 7.964J5J0 8.15

CL R.15 »-.ir. 8.15 6.0698.10 S.CSj.!r &;# fc.2o f>.ls 5.1.*.-i'«2o 5.33jl«Uf.

— — — 6>jr.£V3S 5.43SStSher 6.t0 f.50 6.40 A.40C5.43 BX3<rtober

— — —R.8G68.55 5.63

«N»T«r.ber 8.C9 (L«9 8.«9 8.554X8.00 b.7i>tireeatcr 6.T0 J».7i> 5.70 fc&tf.stiS fc.73rerr^n CWCea ilarkcts.

—Kio—CofTfte jr.ersct Sm; No 7

2;o. ?S:-o; exchaiige. USI-82d; receipts, l«.00U Vegs;f.odc t'"."!i> '*r-

—Corte murktt bartiy r'.eacy;

fxod »\u25a0\u25a0•:\u25a0 Bantoa, .*-.--, -.- receipts, 10.(km base (two

«rs<: ROCK. I.tH3.«KK> lii^rs Han'.Lurjr—

Coffee markettMtzri •» p:ecn:g lower; at 2:SO p. m. wna a« Vi pfennig(•we*; Mies*. 19,00u bags. lla'.-r»

—ouge« *x.ariitt optned

C-let: frar.c higher; other months -_n-,--,« i-t. :.xxl uncr.ar.gei2; ot 3p. ia.

**to H Trtm

l£-»*r: at.r.;3u p. m. uncJ.o4i*e(l to hi franc lcticr; sales.\ \u25a0•\u25a0•...=:femnr 4?.25 jujv 81.00jf'ttrca-r ...» 4».X'f August 61.23Slars* 4i*.7£ 'neptember 51.50AJES 60L2S OctcS<«r 51.75J*Ui So.So!Nov«atet 82.00J**a« • - 60.75 Dec«2;btr Z i^.^s

The suiistlotl position of- -i:Man ccOee Ib as '. '.-_ T-—d2j-.La.s: ir«:kLast mor.th...«w-Tcrk deliveries ... 10.404 I&4WS 15.445hi:Urj)r»dCverits .... Jls 227 7<*o.Ne»-Cr;ssßi deliveries .. 1;j,7

TctsJ is^rcr.es Kt&M iXtSB 17 432Jem-lori rj>rk 3.407.147 3.420.2^8 3.24*1(£3n&BMMade W.6SS M.753 87.1X3>*»-orifa2« c-.-jci. 231,f1" 3i3.C77 2&t.t20

Ptesk it ell ports 3.755M7 3.f1C2,05C 2.C52.634A stl 037.CM 64t,05U M5.510

FLORIDA-NASSAU -CUBA.Spend th« cold days In the 'Sunny South."

PEBSONAXLY CONniCTEI* TOlßfiOK STECIAL LOW KATE TICKETS.

Send for Book of "Winter Trip«^,' free of cost andcontaining complete Information as to routes acd rates,time and fiatsn. »tc. addresslntr

TIIOS H. IIENDKXCK3ON TOURS.34" FULTON ST.. BROOKLYN. N. Y.

Surrogate*' Soticei.TN PURSUANCE OF AN ORDER OF HON.•*- Frank T. Kltigerald. a Surrocaie of the County of.KtV-Iwk,Notice Is hereby given to all persons havingcalms against WUhelmtna Slayer, late of the County ofNew YoiaL, deceased, to present the same, withvouchersthereof, to the subscriber at his place or tran»acun<business, at the otlice of Holm *£mith. Attorneys. No. S;

Park Kow. Manhattan lioruugh. ity of New York, oaor before the l£nd day of Marcn. IW3. next.

Dated New York, the Cth lay or September. 1904.WILLIAU I" RINCKOFF. Executor

HOLM itSMITH. Attorneys for tx--ejiors. 61 P*r« Row.New York City.

»... aml, »j SottMMt turtusiu.i. na .\»>» LoodoD and Pro-.irt»r..»

—it.Jo.

Ti,,lU.'JO. -xtllO:^ A. St.. fi.ii.UM.»xi;l:«a. --'"«.Ill,i:uu. Mll5;«l. "il2u» P. il.

\u25a0 Bua'lu.N, via 'VVUi:maaiu;—ft»:4Bj A. It.t2.00 P. M.bOSTON. via Springneia— T».uw A. 31.. titU:UO. •

>.*:Ja.•ll:0«> P. M.

FITCHBURG. via Putnam A Worcester— f3:oO F. 11.LAKUVILUC and Nui'.Ku-K-TK.iu A. M.. fJ:3I P. 3C

:GT. UAUUiNUIXJN. STOCKCiUDUa. UuSOX. PITT»-FIELJ>-t4.3u. T»:50 A. JJ-. T3:31 P. ii.• VTATERBL'BY and \VINSTEI>—t4:3t). |«:00. I'.S.QIK

-tlu:<>2. niOatt ilo Waterbury) A. M-. flu*. +1.21K4»,3:O1. ttf:«x>. 18:0O (U. \Vaterbury> P- M.Ticket offices at cGranii Central »ta.;ion and eU:.i

5t.. also at .113. rSHI. i.iai cl.^o-t broidwij, c 2PsjrtiPlace. cJ3 Vaion Square, clttt Fltts Aye.. c-43 '"o.u- •Ay«.. 84i* Madison Aye.. c273 West I23th at., 13U E.iaiI2sth St. In Broklya. c-. Court St.. SO* Fultoa Si,' Z'jv Broadway. E. V.

•Dally. tKxcept Sundays. ISundaye *r.:y "Stops ac12S( BX. zStopa a: I^3ta St.. Sundays only. {Parlor Ca»'Limited. ! Has dining Car. cParlor and Sleeping Carticket* also.

C. T HEMPSTEaD. Gea. Pass. Agt.O. M. SHEPAHD. Gen. Supt.

TN PURSUANCE OF AN ORDER OF HON.Frank T. Fitzgerald, a Surrogate of the County of

New York, notice \u25a0 h«rebv given to all persons havingclaims against Simon Lavanburg. late of .he County ofNew Torh deceased, to pres-jnt the ianw with voucherstlereof to tne subscribers at their ataes of transactingbusiness at the office cf Doer, Strong & Whltehead. No.60 Wall Street. In the City of Ne-.v Yo.-k. on or Uofore the3Uth day of June next.

Dated New Y>>rk. irto 12th day of December. 1004./SIELIA LAVANBCRG. A. B. FRANK. JULES J.

B*'"i. Executors.Duer Strong •£ Wfcitohead. attorneys for executors.

Lack&wanna Railroa.d.i-eavo .New iorj»,loot itaxelay aad Cbriswsaef 31a.

t&.uu A. il.—

For mngfiamuin ana oyracuaa,•lt.u« A. U.

—For Uu.Za.lo. Cbicagu and Sc Loata

•1.40—

For Buffalo aad Chicago.T 4.10 P. 11.

—For Kcranton anrl Plymouth.

•«.lvP. M.—

For BulTalo and Chicago.•5.45 P. M.

—For Buffalo. Syracuse. t'tieak

•? A. M.—

For Chicago—

Sleepers open at » P.M.Tlek«t». 14t». 42». 118S. 1454 B-m(lwh. M T.: 898)

Fulton St.. Brooklyn *Da>!ly tCxrept Sunday

LEHICH VALLEY.!Fo-ot of West ISd A:

- '.rtland tand Desbroasee Str«ea 3-•Dallj.tExcept »un«ft%. »un<jsy: sT.^S. dl.ia. eT 4?. bS.C 13,"

17N.T..A1T.vr..8M»ncbConßkLoci« t* 40 a. *i t«.» **BuffaloEiareas *a7JO a hi*«7.J0 a t*BLACKSIAsfUND ZXPSJBO *1.15 .» *ViM» IIMsuch itnuutand Hsaietoa Lucal i*t2JB r»|*dl.!oF»\u25a0Wlllces-BiuT* Ei?re*» t3 3S r +4.10Eastoa Local tt 10 T w +4.20 r*Chicago and T»-oatn Vestlbuie Express. »n5 pm -»x5.40 kTII3 BXTSTALO THAXW *\u25a0 33 xj *9 U> "C

T'.clru and Pullmitn accommodation* '.4». Hi.2*\J5B. !»"T« IJS4Broadway. 132 Srh Ave..S L'nioa Sq. West. «*!» «v.insihee *»s..N T.,338 *SCO Fulton St.. *Court St.SM Broadway ot Ft.Fultoaat.. Brookir3. >' Y.Tracsf ex Co. willcallfor and ecsck '"sl'sT

TN PURSUANd OF AX ORDER OF HON.*•

Frank T Fttsgerald. a Surrogate of the Countyof New YorK. notice is hereby given to ail personshaving claims aKa!nsi William H Crawford, lateo' the Cnunty r>f New Tork. deceased, ta present tha

.vith vouchers thereof to the sub eribe.-s a;thiir place of tranaacting busiqess. at the office ofMorgan *Seabury. No. 29') Broadway, In the City ofNr-w York, on or before tea ÜBth day of March. l»0S,nC

Dated New Tork. the L'inh day of September. IJO4.MARIE HORTsWSE CRAWKOHD.JOHN a JENKINS.

MORGAN A SEABL'RY. Bxecutore,Attorneys for Executors.

190 Broadway, Manhattan.New Tork City.

LONDON WOOL MARKET.London, Jan. 17.

—There was a large attendance, at the

opening of tha first series of the 19116 wool auction saleato-day. Several American representatives were keen bid-ders for crossbreds, which they secured at S per c«nt ad-vance, and also several lots of good mertiyje. The seie>--Uoo was rm&lL only UN beUes being sSered.

_Home

MACnoUMtUaX taint* dinA«l lL» -^r" Nsv-ZsaZaail

but c-rdlnary stock dull. Domestic onions In quite liberalsupply and moving slowly; Havana jnore plenty andlower. Cabbages selling fairly at steady prices. Brusselssprouts In good dunand whea choice. Beets and carrotsfirm and hlfher. OttlinoweTS sell well wr.en fancy butmarket burdened withpoor stock from allpoints. Cucum-bers In light supply. Celery dull. Eggplants movingsiowiy. K<Ue and spinach in active demand and higt-erujib week. Lettuce In excessive supply and decidedlyiot.er. Aot many green peas arriving and choice seilpromptly. Peppers dull. Parsley and romalne steady.btrlng beans have met a good outlet, but close slightlylowtr under Increased offerings. Tomatoes would exceedquotations If fancy, but market burdened with poor stock.rtrvTATJISS1 " rane about as Quoted. We quote:ii«7»*f«'^' /tate ard W'estem. In bulk, per l«o rt>.

X ct**...*,1,3?11 S0: dt> Lon X Island. S bulk, p*r ISO R>.nLlk^r iVii»d^7t^s£ii»d^ 7t^s£;Ib balr'»175«*-- do Jersey, in*?in h •£*! m> <13 '«»1B:do per bbl or bag. $123®Vo V22 I£S*i.2£ «1«

1<*-n> ba« nWI50: do Bermuda;C, mh/? bbl W»s4 60; do No 2 $3; BWEKT POTATOESbasket i-StfiT' 1* i* •*•" bbl- *2C<>Ss3 73: do per

$1"S* 0J°r«ey. yellow, per Vi-bbl basket. bMJIJS. BRISSELS SPROI'TS. per quart, 5012c: BEET*sV^«srries?ie5?% pe

X10°

bunch «». $aoo0$4: s7oW, per bbi;iL*h i"L;Uo.be t carrou and parsnips Western per

Ilorlk il ERS' I»lal>''. Per bbl. $I®s4; dS

case S»Qi4-;5 ?1' d07 Crate- *l3Oi}s4:CELERY, pervtf»- rfi \u25a0 Jo per doien stalks I<>w4oc CHKiSpv

per crate Xi ".n«ii dX j i°!i-»"-0>»l16; UMoN.», Cuban,

do w'lnw i» i?' white, per bush crate. $1 25«Jl 75

ket or crate. $1 25«14 PEPPERS riFloriaa. per bus-

crate or carrier llfiil'-vV Florlda- P«r basket.$12.". PARSLCT \;V ,!.\u25a0 dO Cvl-*n- P«r currier. 75c$do Berinu.fa.'r.er V*'V^V-'V fe*"!$3fl,*Tper basket. $l23«f$i 73- par4vt»S Fl?^'-a- unl.unche 1.

green S3e Si fi?> ax'per baßket « crate. $3354; doNorfolk per h^l' «i«iiVrJfr iVI1B 280:-WWACH.Orleans' $-50053 fio^Voi'^.V^U!"o™'0™' ««**::d<> N**!do marrow. 60c^j«l SHAI itrril v-" '• f-

lower"rT-tna^oes Tn ','T- Rhubarb more Plentiful snd

m"ir^V^-5 ?*P«« Ha% £n«iuhn<i£g^l •\u25a0

tier if. Be^S^'TPrnTiTH<r?- hea:!s

-10®33c; MITSHROOMS.

ft i<|-2<V P'dd°Zen bo»«*^ .\u25a0'''\u25a037s-.; TOMATOE,;. r.. r-

HAT~Th« "in of trad, h falrlvhay rf.i7 / rtally attraf-t!^e for the good line, <*Mvfu^th.,r"Ck" &rT POOrly *™*1 at thrt moment.

*hi^ dat.^?? "trOn at/UU rates -fullrequirementthi, dale £1 \im "? at SUil rats - Coßßjirea wttk

S3s&:Hoc^ mTed H^|^c8 8h«!»strong at $1 10ff$l 1.',: fancy would brln*- $1 2T>. R»,-eiptsof hay and straw, m tonS' reined at the Produce Tx-

680 W^t sCr/'ro^r" 1, 1*Hu<"°

n Rlver SSSrS:w»r« T

Shore. 70; Erie, B70; Pennsylvania. 13l>- Dea-Ohio M^ O^h11* •»o^«tern. 120: Baltimore ar.iunio, 00, Ontario and Western, 90; Central of New-Jersey. 100; total. 1,710 tons. Receipts of straw. 80 tons.

NAVAL STORES.tlmTet fw^h'nHr° !!h* mark *lfor spirits turpentine con-tlnues. with prices based on 37c formachine rnavie barrelsand deman.l was fairly good r,n that baeia RoshTie-mained steady at firm prices. Tar was quiet and fa'rtyactive but unchanged. We quote" lt r>r

TCRPENTINE-011 and machine barrels. 50-$

TAR—$5.

t?S? )

iftI.N* C

tm^?.l0'nnS w><l strained. $2 Ss«s2 87 H:E. ?5 C5

ISTirtVflM-f? I?*2J2L,CC'' $320353 25: H. $3 35«J3 4O;

STOCK ON HANDRcttn. l'h:s -v-w,Spirits turpentine bbls.."

'

1024Ta/- bbi

--:::::::::::::::::::::::::: i:m

••SS bbnws-

h'.ff« I,V;rTVRPEXTIXE1,V;rTVRPEXTIXE flrm-B3l^c:receipts... l'o« a t*, 101: hlPm^nti. 234. ROSIN firm- re-

li^NG^f^^i3!VVVi?hi='^^*^No^hfn^doTng/* 11

-17 Tr'RpE T^"E and rosin-

Wilmington. Jan. 17.—SPIRITS TURPENTINE—ing doing: recelpta. 44 casks. ROSIN-Nothlng dolnV; re-

BS bblf aLKPENTIn^ firm, $2 30 and $3 70; receipts.

R^?d.on-. J,n. 17-TI-p.rE^TINE-Splrns, 33s M.P.OSIN—

ABaerican. strained. 8s; fine. 11* 9d1 ; ,-;

LIVESTOCK MARKET.T _,___ _ , New-York. January 17. 1009.BEBATIS— were 104 cars, or 1.812 head. 'n-c.udlns; 41 cars for export alive. 49 for slaughterers aad14 ror tbe aaarket. None offer for sale tQ-day. Feel-hik steajyior good to choice steers: weak for others.

I'ressed beef was In fair demand at 7jfi>c per Ib f'>r (i^-oent to prime native siUes. with a little extra b.-.-f sell-lng at Jhtc Uvernool and London cables quoted Uve<attle steady at HRl2Vie per tb.. dressed weieht; sh<>»uselling at 12*i©13*c. dressed weight. Shipments to-da)on the Georglc to Liverpool Included 403 cattle and 2 083sheeo for J. Shamberg &Bon. 483 cattle for SchwarzachilJ<t Sulzberger. and about 8.800 quarters of beef for variousshippers. To-morrow the Titian will take out 3i- cattlefor J. Shamberg *Son to be unloaded at Manchester- theBrttish King. 882 cattle equally divided between J. Sham-uerg & Son arj Sehwarz6t-hiid & .<u'zberKer to be v

-loaded at London, und the Majestic will carry 2,700 quar-ters of beef to Liverpool for the Morris Besf Companyand the Swift Beef Company.

CALVES— Receipts were ISI head, all for the market.Prices were rated steady. Common to prime veals soldat $60$»5(> par 100 Ib; barnyard calves at $3 50; a carof Westerns was h<-U over. Dressed calves str ng Citydressed veals* sold at Ml4q per Ib. and selected carcassesup to 14V»( , country dressed. 6©l2Vic; dressed barnyardcalves at 4<3<sc.

Salea—

S. Sander?: 2 veals. 130 Tr> aye.rage. at $9 50 per100 n>: 13 do. 116 Ib, at $1»: & do. 101; Ib. at $8.

Tobln * Shannon: 17 barnyard calves. 233 Ib at $3 50'1real. 140 Ib. at *t»: 4 veals. '\u25a0>' Ib. ai $7 30.

Harrington & Co.:3 Ohio veals. 123 It>. at %J.SfIEEP AND

—KecHpta were 17 cars, or 3,<"7

head, including S cars for slaughterers and 9 for the mar-ket, maktr.sr. wtth the sta.e stock. 30'icars on sale. j*,he«pwaie steady, but no good sheep ofTereii; lambs declinedl«;^15c from Monday's average tales; the pens wer>- aboutcleared cf all early arrivals. Common an.l medium sheepsold at $s®*i per 100 rb; culls mx $3S7H; ordinary toprime lanibs at $7 23®57 00; a deck of fall clipped di> at$<t 73. I>re*s»<i mutton steaiiy at THO9HC per Ib; dressedlambs weak at 1101£e: country dressed hothouse lambsslow at 85088 per • arcass.

Sales^—

I>. Hairingion: IBS Ohio lambs. S3 Ib average, at$7 80 per 100 Ib: 1!)8 do. 71 Ib. at $7 70; 210 Buffalo <!o70 Ib. at $7 75; 227 do 68 Ib. at $7 63; 229 do. »i 4 rt at$7 23: 2(5 Ohio sheep. SI !b, at $4 23; 22 Ohio culls. Sti Ibat *.537 4.

Kerns Commission Co.: 110 Buffalo lambs. 60 Tb. at$7 73; 221 do. U7 Ib. at $7 50: 204 do, 64 Ib. at $7 40- 139fall clipped do. 67 Ib. at *6 73.

Hildebrand &Co. : 22S> Buffalo lambs. 68 Ib. at $7 60.8. .Sanders: 84 State lambs. S3 Ib, at $7 00- 65 do. 75rb, at $7 K0; 10 State sheep. lltiIb. at $5; 1 buck, 130 tbat $4.

W. R. Ilume: 110 State lambs. 732 Tb. at $7 75- (lateyesterday) 143 Btat« lambs, 87 Ib, at $S 15: 33 do, -« viat $812 1 6.d0. 73 Ib. at $8; --> State sheep. 11l Ib, at5.'.su; 17 do, 11» Ib. at $5; 7 do, lib Ib. at $4 73; 1buckISO Tb. at $4.

HOGS Receipts were 3© cars, or 5.1-15 head, all f<>rslaughterers with the exception of a few head. Feelinsbarely steady. Pennsylvania and State hogs were quotablaat $4 Qtjsitr> 23 per li>iIb. Country dr^esed bogs higher at7!g7Ho per Ib for light weights. til*iCVc for medium\u25a0weights and sVj®6c forheavy ho^s.

Sales (all late yesterday)—

Ivcrns Commission Co.: 58Pennsylvania pigs. U5 Ib average, at $3 per 100 Tb- 138 do102 Ib, at $4 f<o.

Newton & Co.:105 Pennsylvania pigs, 100 T?>, at $4 SOH. H. Hollls: 43 State hogs, IC7 Ib, at $3 23; 1rouzh

200 Ib, at $4 25.* '

OTHER MARKETS-BY TELEGRAPH.Chicago. Jan. 17

—CATTLE Receipts, 7.000 head; mar-

ket steady; rood to prime steers. $3 ttf»lnif,25. poor to me-dium. $3 7.'fltsf. 4S; stockers and feeders, $2 23Q$4ST.-cows, tl25Q54 CO; heifers. $2«*.'> a); dinners SI 2.'i$3 3O: bulls $2S$4 20: calves. $3©s7. HOGS—Receipts.45,000 head: rr.ar;;-t s©loc lower; mixed and Imtche.-s$4 40(E'$4 70; good to choice, heavy, J4 COalT-4 73- lough,heavy. $4 40©$4 60; light. $4 30SS4 CO; bulk of salsa$4M>es4eO. BilEEP—Receipts, IS.OOO head: sheepsteady: lambs strong; good to choice wethers. $3ffSs i",fair to choice mixed. $3 IK>@s4 \n>; native lambs. $5 75Q$7 78.

Cincinnati. Jan. 17. nOGS steady to Be lower- butch-ers'. $4 70«54 7S: common. $3 75®54 33. CATTLE slow-about steady: fair to good shippers. $4054 75- comn-.on.$26*2 80. SHEEP steady. $3SSO 25:lamba steady. $3J*$7 7t>.

Kansas City, Jan. 17.— —

Receipts. 10.000 headIncluding- 400 Southerns; market steady to strong- choiceesport and dressed beef steers. f4 75 J.". 75: fair to rood.5380554 75: Western fed ateers. nTfOQIO 111, stockersand feeders. $2 7S<&?4 26; Southern steers. $3 »s*4 75;(Southern cows. S*J >->^$3 "5; native cows. $1 75fc$-l;' nativeheifers. $2 50©J4 6»i; bulls. $2 23@54; calves,

'iiinf,

HOGS—

Receipts, 14.8C0 head: market steany; top $4 mj-bulk of sales, NUfMaTTtt; heavy. $4 75©54 80- packers.fiWaii'iO- pigs and lights. S4S$4 CTVi. SHEEP— Ile-celpu. 0,000 huad: market steady: native lambs, $tf»$7 60; native wethers, $3&5573; native awes, t-i2Z>U*^Western fed lambs. $tigs740; Western fed yearlings, ivM0$obO: Wectern fed shsepw $4 76©55 2S; stockers aadfeeders. Jl'&t'Sjij.

BOSTON WOOL MARKET.Boston. Jan. 17.

—The Bostoa wool market U notice-

ably quiet fcr domestic grades. The market is gen-erally firm. The bulk of the new clip held h«re Isfleece* and medium Territories There Is considerableinterest In the foreign wools coming forward, and theirpossible effect upon the altUMtlor. here, for manufacturerswill have> to turn their attention to foreign gradas toreplenish their stocks. Territory wools are quiet. Pulltiwools snd all foreign wools are firm. Leading quotationsare: Ohio and Pennsylvania XX and above 33&auc-X. 30#31c; No 1. Sb©33c; No 2, 40©41c; fine unwashri'24029c; W blood unwashed. B£&33c; S blood. 82332 be:H blood, 315F320': unwashed dela:n». 2?&23c; unmorcru»nt-able, 2U030-; Tine washed delaine. S7OSBc. Mi higanfine unwashed. 31032c. U bluod unwashed. 31if32.-.; Sblood. 31V332c. '.i blood. 3(1@31c: uawashed delalnn. 23C2ac. Kentucky. Indiana, «tc. '\u0084 and t* blood. 51(732cTerritory, Idaho, fine. lh'.ti^llK-;heavy nne. lC017c; flaomedium. lSHlc»'l9c; modtum, 22£23c; low medium. ZS\}24c. Wyoming Cn«. 17VaS.'lU Jic; heavy tine. 15«loc; finemedium, 17V3ii'lS4c; medium, MMc; lu<v medium, 'Siii24e. Utah and N.-viuiu. tine, 17il>c; hravy fine. 15it16c; fine medium, 17 lite; medium. 22023 c. low me-dium. 23024 c. Dakota floe, lt-gl-Jc. fine medium. Uf)18c; medium. 2^dr24c", low medium. 23624 c Montana,fine choice. 21022c. fine aveTace. Ilf&r2oc; fine medium,choice. 21022 c; average. lt)^2oc; stayle, 23&25c; me-dium, choice, 239230.

SOUTHERN COTTON MARKETS.Middling. Net. Gross. Sa'ej. Stock.

Ga'.vesron steady 7 1-14 0.832 h.aSl l.^Tit l("^.!*v»New-Orleans Jlrm 7 7.S.HS T.*£Z 2.t«w 4«u.«S»?Mobile steady .7 '-Xt 2*-;:t 7iV J5.31*Savanna! steady ... 7 2.K17 -.'.l^.: LBOB v.;c:Chariestoa nrnu «"a 131 lai

—M.i>*S

Houstoa quiet ... 7 4.CSKJ 4.»*r; 192 . 7141ft*Augusla. steady . 7 1-1* ->i -'.•\u2666 2» 'ju.3-i:»

ilempMa steatiy 7 «iT 1.5a3 2.50<> ii:..i--«-;

LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET.L:\»rp,j,,l. Jnn 17. 4 p. m.

—COTTON

—Ppot In fair

demand: prices fiv<t i'.ir.;> higher; .v ..\u25a0\u25a0!.._:: m'ddllcgtair. 4.2Td: v \u25a0••\u25a0! xniauUci. 3.^iKl: rr.iallln^. ;.SM; \ovfmltlUZtng. eVIM; good OftUaaxy. '•* ''\u25a0'•'\u25a0\u25a0 oruinary. Z i.Vi.Tbe iue« ct the day wero U.uOU ;.1. a. oi wotctt 3.UK*wtre for speculation and export, and iu-luded V**>AsuYi-can. Rec«tptJ, 13.0w baiej, including 14.1*00 Anwntao.Futures, «jpen«r(i >:uiet arui str-aily »n;t eluded st«ulj;Aniertcaa niwilllns g o> « January, j?.!.!: Janaary ur»«lteoruary. 3.';ad; i-Vtruary an.l Mui'h, S.I7J; Marca smiApril. 3.M.M; April aad >»->. 3-S3a; il.i> *mi June, :!*!-!.Jano and July. J •\u25a0;•.»: July and August, XslJ: August aaiSeptember. ;:.:'-J; &«ptemb«-r anj Octoter. 3.94J; Octußerand Nv>vemb«r. 3.U&1; Navrmt>er -r.s I-.-t.r..tv:r. S-iMid.

EUROPEAN PRODUCE MARKET.Liverpool. J«n 17— •..-•.a*: WHEAT—Spot st*&2j;

Xo 1Callforala. 7i; future* rosy. Marcx C* U\<i.itis.0s lOHd: July, fts l»i%i. COilX

—Spot easy; Amerlc&a.

m:xnu new. mi U"»d; American sntieit <4u. *» li>Svt; fu—far**quirt; March. 4a »*it; May. -l» I*»J. PEAS

—Cana-

dian eteacty. Ss l>b<L KLOL'It—St. Luui» fancy wlntarsteady, ft» M. HOPS in LonJoo— lMc»?lc Cw«*t steady.

£7 lua^gCt ;«. UK::i-' steatly. «x:n India r..-», >'-'-\u25a0* :•!.PORK eisy; |s*aa astsa Western. S W KAasslSAort cut. 14 to 1* tb. steady, ••us «d. BACON s;catjy;Cucitfrlaad cut. 2» to 50 R>. Sis 3»J; s:iort ria. M to»4 n>.87s;long clear middles lUnt. 2S to 14 Ib. r.--; long clearmludies heavy. UJ it. 4> >i.. 375; aaort cioar b*k-k». 14tvt v

-•• 10. S3» W: clear beU'.v*. 14 to Min>. »- \u25a0 ftiOCL-t>EllS— Square. U t.» 13 n>. quiet. 32» (il. LAIU>quiet:prime Western tn tierces. 9Ds; An*rtcan ssflM io p*i:-i.Bls «A BLTTER-—«>ot>d United States r.vni.rXi; CIIEK.-vtJ»irv>ns: American nest white anil coioree. I3> TAI«-LOW—Prime rtiy steady. 2-«». TVRPRNTlNt>—Spirits-.8S» Bd. RO3IN

—Common firm. 7» 4 »<J. PETtOLSUi;—

r.*ia«i C31«% K. UX3££D OIL•uad7. "*

$6 20: first clears. $4 13-254 33. second clears. $2 CO-?-f2 ••>.BRAN,in bulk. $13 iv.

rh!la2=:,»i:a_ Jan. 17.—

WHEAT. Mo-

er: <.-ntre«grade. $115^41 lti CORN, que^'but steady; January.COSSJHIe. OATS firm No 2 white, nararal. 37 xs93.t«:No 2 white, clipped. 4Sc. EUTt^is:ea..y; extra \.,o.r ttc:eamery. 3Cc; extra nearfcy p.inta. 3*—? EGGS ItHiTi;neurby fresit 2So at mark: Western fi-esh. SSc at nvtrk.CHBSSE quiet but bteaay: New-Yurk. full creams, fancy.l^>4<ffl-*2C: Uo choice. 12c; do fair to good. liii3li*»G.Receipts

—Flour. 3.U*> bbl3 an.ll,»«n.(XO pounds In sacica;

wheat. 4.UH> bush; co.n, t>'-o tn h; cat*. 28.000 luah.Shipments— V.'heat. 4.UVU bush; corn. S:.'.u.» Ui=a; outs.21.bu> busn.

St. Lou!». Jar.. 17.—

Close: WHEAT. N.> Z rei Sassa.elevator, $114: May. $1 13-*; Ju.y. i*S'»c: No Z uar .$1 lua»l 1- tOIt.N.No caa.i. -tic;May *i'&-«oSio: Juiy.434c. OATS. No 2 ca»S. 31c; May. 31He; }T> 2 wbjst.

Toledo. Jan 17 -CLOVER-: cash anl January.$7 775: February. $7 *>: ilaita. $7 S3; AL^IKE. pr.m-.13; TlilOTUl.prime. *13Ui5.

THE STATE OF TRADE.

Huffalo Tan 17 FLOCR steady. WHEAT. f»rrt»t.r^Z^aln* winter nominal: No 2 red. 1-. store. $12jV>.

US tia£vuichinged. RYE. No 1. s«c.

Chicago. Jan. 17.— The leading futures ranged as fol-

°7vk -r v««- Onenlng Highest. Lowest. CV>sing.sg-s as gg %i "s. \u25a0nCorn. No 2:

\u25a0.\u25a0.\u25a0.'.".\u25a0"..: ..45'siH5^ S* SSBSSS3'(£&"::::: ** »* JH^fSJuly .v:........ 31 al>» i 2i!m

Mess pork, per bbl:January J!2 42.» $12*5 $1242S $12 45May 12 70 72:i12 &> 12 7<>

Lard, per 100 tb:

January «62^s «C 5 6 C2V4 ««5May BoB >-o «S7ii «S.^ *».'VjJuly flUi 7 00 « ti,' 7/ in

Short ribs, per 100 tb:January «S42S 6 45 642 S.; »:.May •!• •'»* «*rr>» «72SJuly c s3 «83 655 »o3

Cash quotations were a- rollows: FLOUR quiet.WHEAT. No 2 spring. $112&S1 IB: No 3. $1U£&sl li;.\o2 red, $1 lTijtl . CORN. No 2. aSifa No 2 yellow43 «c. OATS. So 2. SUbc; No 2 white. 21H**32e; .No. 3while. 31Sl-; RTE. No 2. «4*stf7oc. BARLEY, good feed-inn. 37©Ssc; fair to choice malting. 42345c; KUXSEED.N.> I. $1 15; No 1 Northwestern. $1 2a; CLOVEUSEJBD..contract grade. $13; POIIK. mess, per bbl, $12 45tfJUi>.LAltl*. i,er 100 Ib. $CCS: SHORT Hiß SIDES <i»ese>.f'ir.i}oi'»: r'HOUT CLEAR SU'K (boxed). «\u25a0: :«.'.»MCSVt; WHISKEY, bajils of high wines. $123. On theProduc* Ksi-t.ar.ge t.- <i«y the BCTTKS market wassteady; creamerlrr. lt^-'sr: dairies. lhs:Mc. EGOS steady;at mark, cases included. 22827:; firsts. 27c; fine rirstj. 2»c;extras. 31c. CHEESE steady. H£l2c.

D»l-ith. Jan. 17.—

Close: WHEAT, N< 1 Nortke-B.$112 Ti; No 2 Northern. $1 C3T+; May. $1 14%; Ju y. $113;September, 82c.

Mtr.neHpoU» Jan. —WHEAT. May. $115H: July.*112\C31 !-'\u2666: Skptember. tOUC&'.He: No 1 har-1.$1 15.4: No 1 Nortbe.B $1IS%; No 3 Northern $! O»->.FLO'JB. Crst patacu, 4&SOS^4 4>; s*cosd paltau, #9193

new clip and good slipes were In demand, and wer« takenby home buyers at prices in 3*::trs>' favor. A moderatesupply of Ca;* of Good Hope and Natal went to homear.l German buyers at rates unchanged to 5 per centdearer. Buenos Ayrea wool sold well at an advance of5 per cent. Following are the sales: New South Wales.1.800 bales; scoured. HVIdOIS «-jd. greasy. >dj?ls 2.1.Queensland 800 be.! s. scoured. l»8d»?ls- M. greasy, 6V»©Iltfd Victoria. 100 bales; greasy. 10d©ls V»d. Sou:n

AuVtralit.. eu> bales; greasy, h^dtcls. nWest Australia,

1 lu«> bales; scoured. Is SJ. greasy. 9S811 »d. New-"ealan'l 1200 bales; seottted, Isfels 4d; greasy, lld^Is 4d Capo of Good Hop© an Natal, 400 bales; scourej.

Is Sd'eis BHd: gnasy, e\«lo',d. Buenos Ayres. t>ooUies. greasy. 5%910Hd.

—Easy: quote.l at 8.8097c. City lard ea?y; quote! at

*W«. Renned lard barel> steady. QuoUd: -South America,7.85c: Continent. 7.05c; Brazil kegs 8.66c. Cocapojndsteady; quoted at 4%esWc. 6TEARIXE—Quiet. wuoted:Ol*-o* «U©6Hc; city lard itearlne. 7«r7s»c.

RICE—

Business for the day 'was fairly good, with tonasteady here and generally firm at primary po.nts. al-mage. New-Orleans, telegraphs Louisiana crop movementto date as follows: Receipts, rough. 1.288 000 tacks.against 1.232.C10 last year: sales, cleaned, estimated at542.53& pockets, against 811,102 last year: mand lm-prcved and market strong. Talmas*. Charleston, tele-graphs Carolina crop movement to date as tj'.lows: H<-ceipts. 26.645 bbli; sales, 22.026 bis. with market quiet.Quotation* follow: Domestic, ordinary. HQZMc; fair togr.od. 3Hff3?»c: prime to choice. 3'»«4«,»c. head. 4\©6»ic: Patna. .r.r.lii;"5t»c: Japnn. foreign, nominal; »So 00-

me*tlc. 2>*O3ltc; Java, 4HSSHc; Rangoon. In Lond,2'*©2%c. —

Refined sugar was fairly active and firm, withfuil ll»t prices quoted on the former range. Prices quotedare net. less 1 per cent for cash: Cut loaf and crushed,t-75c; mould A, f1.40c; cubes, 6.30c; XXXJC powdered.w.2oc; powdered, coarfe powdered apil fruit powdered,

6.15c; Eagle confectioners' granulated. C.3oc; Eagle coarsjana extra fen* granulated. 0.16c; fc.ag!e »-Ib canons, 2-lbl*fc«s an.l 5-lb bags cf fine granulated. 6.20c; Eag!e finegranul-ued. standard granulated and diamond A, COOc;cor.fectlone-s' A. t.WOc; No 1, 5.70c; Nos 2 and. 3. 5.65c;No 4. 5.55c; No 5. 5.60c; No « 5.4Cc; No 7. 5.40c; No S.6.30c; No W, 5.25c; No 10. 6.20c; No 11. 5.10c: No 12.O.tCc; No 13. 4.«5c; Nos 14 and 15. 4»oc. There whsnome reaction In the London beet sugar market, but theton* was steady at the decline. The January pCsition de-clined *»d, and February went off 2'id, which put bothmonths on a basis of 16» »id. The stock of sugar in thaVnited Kingdom Is SO.OOO tons, against 100.000 tons atthe same time last year. The lncal market remains firm,with an advancing tendency, with full prices quoted forouty paid, as follows: Centrifugal. 96 test, 5Hc; musco-vado. 80 test. 4Sc: molasses sugar. 88 test. 4fcc

\u25a0

COUNTRY PRODUCE MARKETS.For the week ending Tuesday. January 17. 1005.

BEANS AND PEAS— Receipts for the week. 2.038 bblsbeans and 718 bags ixas- exports 8f» bb'.s beans or.d 34bars peas; Imports. 250 bags Deans. Tho market hasshown a gradual hardening tendency on domestic whitebenna. bu.Mne has been a littlefreer, and while suppliesare ample of most kinds there are more reserved offer-Ing-. After «ell!ne quite a rood many marrow at $t 70the price was put ud to $2 72^. at which a little businessIs reported. Early in the week medium had a few sale*down to $1 82. but toward the close $1 85 isbottom pric*.and It looks as If mor« money could be obtained. Pea areselling quite generally at $1 75 for choice stock. Redkidney held a little steadier, but without Important de-mand: exporters ere tilling soruo orders at J-' 62^a. andoccasional jobbing sains are reported at $2 65. Last salesof white kidney at $2;*r>'gs3; deniand not large, but sut>-L>iy light. Turtle jiout, ar«r higher and firm: late sales at$3 2.J Yellow eye still neglected, and values uncertain.California lima, have weakened a little and at the closeour i.'Utsidu quotation is uulte extreme. Scotch PSaVisteady, but with plenty of stock offering. We qu»te:BEANd. marrow, ISKH. choice, per bush, $3 7W®s- T2 ; ;do ..am. 1904, $1K'.Ji Jl t-71\u25a0 ; do pea. 1904. $175:: dored kidney. UKM, $3C2^gs^ts :do white kidney. 1804.$2 05; do black turtle soup. $3 20<gJ3 25; do yellow eye.IWM. $2 05C$2 10: do lima. California. $2 95®53; GREENPEAS. Scotch. 1804. bags, per bush. $1 07 '».

BLTTER—Receipts lor the weeK. 1«.127 pkgs; last week.83.512 pkgs. Exports to Europe, 400 pkg». and to other

countries. 237 pkg*. The market drifted along in ratheran uncertain manner for a day or two following our lastweekly report. Buyers held off somewhat, and the In-creased an.vals lefta surplus of allbut the fancleat gradein receivers' hands. There was no thought of yieldinganything in the matter of price, but trade was alow.Toward the cloise of the week, however, the temper of themarket changed a little, especially on the highest grades,and by Monday prices were advanced H®lo all along theline, with a very ftrm fettling at the close. The officialquotation to-day for extra creamery was SOc: three lotswere sold under the call on 'change at 3O>4B3oVic, andthe latter figure was paid on the street for very highquality; the medium to choice grades sympathise fully inthis improvement, and storage creamery has also ad-vanced quite as much as fresh: several Important sa'.esare reported at 27HS2Sc. New-York Slate dairy has im-proved, In sympathy with creamery, and yet there Is so

little stock arriving that values are somewhat uncertain.Imitation creamery Is steady for the fine markß and quitefirm on the basis of 24c. Renovated .has found a betterplace In the trade, and the finest standard brands bring23c. Factory and packing stock are relatively scarce andmoving out fairly in about the range of our quotations.We quote: Creamery, extras, per Ib. 30@30Hc; do (Mer-cantile Exchange official quotation, extras. 30< 1firsts. 'li'aS»Vkc; do seconds, 2-»<&26c; d"o thirds. 19823 c; do held,

extras. 27Va0280: do tirsu. 25327c; do seconds, 22934 c;S-tnte dairy tub«. extras, 28c; do firsts, 25g27c: do seconds,22@24c ;do thirds. lh®2Oc; Western Imitation creamery,

first*. 24c; do seconds. 17SlS>c; renovated, extras. 23c; doKrstb. 21©22c. do seconds. 18#90c; uo thirds. 10#17e;

Western factory, extras. 22«T23c: do firsts. lS8l»c: doseconds, 10©17c; do thirds, 14'315c; do held, firsts. lTbtf18c; di secunds. Ifr'ul7c; packing stock. No 2. 17c; do No3. 15&16c.

CHEESE— Receipts for the week. 7.55S boxes; exportsto Europe, 1.675. and to other countries. 725. There hasbeen a very fcatls'aetury distributing demand the pastweek and quite a little call from largar dealers In neigh-boring markets for good sized lots, mostly of a grade ob-talnabli- a trifle under top prices, and stocks have con-tinued to gradually reduce. Holders, while quite firm intheir views, have been Inclined to meet buyers promptly,and the bulk of the business has been on the basis of offl-ilalquotation as given, though we hear of occasional ex-ceptional sales of especially attractive cheese at a trinepremium. A favorable feature during the wee* has beenan export demand for cheap grades of cheese, and closeto 800 Lose* were purchased by that class of operators.Exporters, however, have not shown a particle of interestin fancy cheese. Skims In moderat* stock, and, with afair demand, prices have befn tlrmlv held on all gradrs.

Liverpool cable. &3s for finest September colored and white.We quote: State, full cream, small, colored and white,

faacy, 12Vic. do fine, ll^te; do late made, colored andwhite, choice. 11-*.; do fair to good. 10^©10Vc; do poor.s%O«ltc; do la.rfrf colored and white, fancy, 12c; do fine.ll'/itTllHc; do lats made, colored and white, choice, lie;do fair to good. l»U©»%c; do poor. 8\«@&c; do light skims,small, choice. 10©10^c; do prime. O'iSOHc; do partEkims prime S'^eb^ic; do good. B«TS>4c; do common tofair. 6**&7\»c; do fullskims. 4®sc

.'Receirts for the week. 35.«7« cases. storeliberal arrival* consist largely of refrigerator egKS, theremaining supply of which is. however, limited, and withlight receipts of fresh egg>\ present and prospective, themarket holds very firm throughout. Prices, however, ar«without further quotsble change. We quote: State,Pennsylvania an 1 nearby selected whit*, fancy. SSS4Oc;do choice, S4£3sc; do mixed, fancy, 32gS3c; do average

best. j.ilc: do ordinary to good. 23g29c; Western se-lected, fancy 31c; do average best. 30c; do poor to good.2.1g28c; do "Kentucky 23090 c; do Tennessee. 22f?29c; doTexas. 2032»'c. dirties. lS£2oc; do checks. 17©li>c; re-frigerator* 2lXg24c.

FRUITS—DRIED—Receipts for the week. 7,467 caseaevaporated epples an.i 20..'Wi pkgs other dried fruits;rxportf. 22.491 pkgs 'Irled fruits. Evaporated apples havehad considerable attention, speculators taking a greatmany carloads, and market has ruled firm and slightly

lltlilW Not much doing In sun drl^l apples, though at-tractive Canadian quarters held about steady. Chr>j>share -or.tlnued weak, but cores tn<i skins slightly firmer.Small fruits in light supply. California fruits unchanged.We quote: APPLES, evaporated, fancy, per Ir>. 6^f*c;do cbo'ce. 5H66e; do prime, fi'<©u?tc; do corr.mon tofair. 4@sc; do '"anadian. sun dried, quarters. 81^'S4 s»i-;s»i-;do Ptate and Wenern. sun dried, quarters. 3jJ3^c; doSouthern, sun dried, sliced. S"3B\c; do coarse cut. 2Vi2BWc; do chopped. per 100 Ib. $1 4O@sl 00; do cores and•kins, $1611 15: CHERRIES. per Ib. 13V53144e;HUrm^EBERRrES 111212 c: BLACKBERRIES. 6H37c;RASPREP.RIES. 22®23n; APRICOTS. California Moor-park. ll&14c: do royaL Ogilc; PEACHES. California,prolix!. 15319c; do unpeeled. »312c; PRUNES, California.3Ofi%e.

FRUITS—FRESH— for the week. 4«.020 bblsapples and 652 bbls and 3.670 crates cranberries. Ther!*m«r.d for apples has bsen moderate, and with heavyofferings tcne Is weak and price* barely sustained. Cran-berries heicl steady, hut demand light. Oranges moraplenty and closing slichtlv lower. Pineapples In moder-ate supply, but demand limited. Strawberries moreplenty and sailing slowly at comparatively low prices.We ouote: APPLES. Jonathan, hand picked, per doublehead bbl. S2ss3 50; do Far Western, per bush box. $1 CO<Bs2: do anow. hand picked. Der double liead bbl. $1 75®$2?>0; Jo King. Northern. $2 SO£TJ3 50; do Western New-York. $2{rs3; do fipltzenberg. Northern. $2 50«jjo 60; doWestern New -York $2"-?t:l 75; dn Far Western, per bushbox. (2@t2 50; .io Bmr, per double head bbl. *2'SS2M)- doBen Davin, Northern. $17C®$3 25. do Western New-York. $1 &o®s2: do Baldwin. Northern. $1 7&352 25; doWestern Nt-w-York. $1 25©52: do Qro-nlng. Northern.$17r&$2: do Western New-York. $1 25351 75; do. as tokind, per open head bM. $ias2: do in bulk. per 150 Ib.$ISsl 50: CRANBERRIES. Cape Cod. per bb!, $.IC$»: AoJersey, per bbl. <c©so 50; do r>«r crate, tl60«52;OHANQES. Florida, per box. $1 6O?» .V.: TANGERINES.Florida, per Mrap. $2 50054: MANDARINS. Florida rerstrap. $1 su6rs3; GRAPEFRUIT. Florida, per box. $2355;PINEAPPLES. Florida, per crate. $1Bo©s2 25; STRAW-BERRIES. Florida, per quart COtfeSc. \

HOPJ—

Receipts for the week. 416 bales; exports. 416bales. There has been quite a litil« trade on the PaclfloCoast mostly for the fillingof short contracts falling duoin January and February at a ranee of 20329 c, accord-ing to quality. In this State small sales have been re-ported at 30531c. but the firmness of holders or remain-Inglots Interferes with the movement. On the local mar-ket brewars have shown scarcely any interest, and trad-Ins has beeu very sloxv. Foreign markets generallyquiet. We quote: State, 1904. choice, per rb, 35030c; <logood to prime. IMMc; do common to fair. 519320: doPacific Coast. 1904. choice. 33334c; do good to prime,31&32c: do IKO3. choice, per Ib. 80331c; do old oids.13&17C.

POULTRY—ALIVE—Receipts for the week foot up 23carloads by freight and a few scattering coops by express.Eupplies have been moderate, demand good and market hascleaned up promptly on arrival of most of all descriptionsof weighing stock, and prices show a material advance onfowls, chickens and ro.stfs. Ducks Inmoderate supply andsteadily held. Geese have been fairlyplentiful, but sellingfairly,though a few surplus lots have had to go to neigh-boring poultry farms to fatten for a later market. Livepigeons In moderate supply, but selling slowly. We quote:FOWLS, Western, per Ib. 14Hc; CHICKENS, Western,per ID. 12c; ROOSTERS, Western old. per It). 10c; TUR-KEYS, old. per Ib. 13314 c: DUCKS, Western average, perpair, 70®80c; do Southern, «o@6&c; GEESE, Western aver-cge. per pair, $1 37©$1 «S; do Southern. $1 2d®sl 37;PK3EONS. per pair. 20c. DRESBBJD

—for the

week. 10.008 pkgs. Supplies of Western dressed poultryhave shown a decided shrinkage during the last week andthe market has developed a considerable increase ofstrength. Turkeys have been In light supply and pricesheld very firmly and with confidence. There has beenvery little demand for current consumptive use. but fairlygood Inquiry from supply houses, which have been anxiousto secure stock as against future wants. Some frosen tur-keys have arrived, but held at a limit higher than poeel-

blo to reach at tbe moment and have gone Into freezers.Fancy large, soft meated roasting chickens have becomevery ecarce and would command 150, possibly 16c, forWestern If here, but nearly all lots are mixed more orless with cars*, staggy young roosters, and such grades»low and Irregular. Fowls have been in light supply,good demand and prices hlel:«r and firm. Capons are moreplenty, but choice to fancy grades In good demand andfirm. Ducks in comparatively modVrate supply and pricessteadily held Qeeee continue plenty aad slow. Equabe inmoderate supply, but quality Irregular, with most lotsrunning poor: choice grades in good demand and firm.We quote- DRT

—Turkeys, Western, young hens,

per m 18V4©20c; do young toms, 19«lu*ic; do mixedweights. IBSIBHc: do good working lines. 18S18Hc; do

poor to fair. 15O17e; do old h?na, 17@17%c; do old toms.16">»317c; CAPONS, Philadelphia, large, fancy, per Ib.23524e; do mixed weights. li<r2oc; do small and slips,14916c; do Ohio and Michigan, large, fancy. 18c; do

mixed size*, choice. l&Cl*)c;do other Western, large, 14®16c- do small and allps. 129IS0; CHICKENS, Philadelphia,8 to 0 Ib to pair, per tb. 19&20c; do mixed alzes. 10017o;do other Pennsylvania. 7 to 8 rb to pair, fancy, 10317 c;<Jo State and Pennsylvania, mixed sises. 14915 c; do West-ern, dry picked, average best, 12H'S13V»c; do Ohio andMichigan, scalded, 12H818He; do other TVestern. scaJded.average best. 12 13 '.ae; do Inferior. 10912 c; do youngstage. 10tf>lle; FOWLS. Western, dry picked. 6 Tb andover each, per Ib. 13c: do averagx run. 12O12^«c; do Ohioand Michigan, scalded,average best. 18013 do otherWestern, scalded. 6 Tb and over each, per Ib, 13c; doaverage run. 12<ri2He: do poor to fair, loeilc; COCKS,old. per Ib. &V»ClO<-; DUCKS, spring. Ohio and Michigan.choles, per Ib, 13914 c; do other Western, choice, l'-'OlSo;do fair to good. lu**llc:OEE«E, spring. Western, choice.11012c: do fair to good. 8®10c; SQL'AIiS. prime, large,white, per dozen. $3 25; do mixed. $2 60052 79. do dark.$20*2 25.

GAME—

Wild ducks tn moderate supply, but qualityirregular and selling clowly. Rabbits nave been In lightersupply, and with a good demand prices have ruled higher.Jack, rabbits also doing a little better. We quota: WILDDUCKS, canvasback. per pair, $I«s2 SO; do redhead. $19$1 SO; do mallard*. 7&C0S1: do rudtfv, fISOTBc; do teal,bluawlng 40«><JUc; do green wing, 53050c; do common.256t0c; RABBITS, cottontail, per pair, l£O2oci da Jack.4006UC.

POTiTOEB AND VEGETABLES— for theweek. I».ST3 bbls potatoes and 14.728 bbls onions: Imports.1.812 bbls and 400 pkgs potatoes. 'Domestic potatoes l!>

liberal supply, and with tf«rr.«nd moderate market ooa-unues easy with prices snowin« no material change!»\u25a0 '-\u25a0\u25a0\u25a0> *»\u25a0* a*4 Uws* *»act Ist— Oral for ISJMT.

&&aaffi«R' I^S!^ «r*l«fcts. nsotl<B4B: winter patents.

WB«1« perlfift n- FTOUR «ulat: quoted,rled. f2»«s« 10. \u0084 to SiS<LBAO >«aL«£ ouo?*dfi?r'i^4?» fl^*1 «"' tl=a: «»•»• new. *1&6sl07.rEHD—City firm. Western steady; auoted- Weitem•print;. 11U75: »tan«ard tnlddllns; Sl9 23 • flour do taiao^Ited Doy. »22 25. all Janoan- shtpment- city Lra?'»S M*t*?J£l!- bulk «nd aack»: mldailnr $22«*2& Red I?os7

l=?o*is^ranr chop 521 bulk. trfs'SSSr 1 oilm^:CRAIN -

WHEAT— not materially lower than theprevious night, to-<lay s wheat market could hardly betermed" a *virce»s from the bull standpoint, except n*t»-tlvely r?rl.u In that the decline was no greater Lastrrlccs in New-York showed a partial 'i^'Se net lo»sPept^mber holdtcg steadier than any other month Im-1 mediately at the o;-entn(. tn response to a drop of TsOlHd In the Uverpool market, attended by reports of1 largely tncreased Argentine offerings, domestic markets

tircke V. lowed by partial recoveries, led by Chicagoj In what eeemed to be an effort on the part of bulls to

check anr tendency toward further Revere declines.T.iroQrb<Hit midday and the afternoon unsettled conditionsrrrv&lled. with prices fluctuating narrowly, and, as a rule.PtraUler In the local market than elsewhere, tut no

!attempt mad* to promote a scare cf shorts, owing to thefact ti-st cash news from Western markets was far fromouracltia-. both ai< to prices and demand. For this

reason also tba primary receipt* of only 482.600 bushels,compared with 779.000 bushelp last year, were nnt muchof tt factor, while tbe decrease of 3,r»Q7.000 bushels In"BraditreetV world's etocks was practically offnet lyla«t year's reduction of 3.610.000 bushels for the corre-sponding *f»k Winn»apoli» stocks »ero wild to have dr-creased 100.0U0 bushels In the lust three days. It toreported li»re that 4C».<>oo bushels of No 2 red had beenoffered st SI Vi\k by a local house. Late PiirU markotawere 10 to 25 ji-lr.t*net lower and Budapest closed 14points down. Ctth prices In New-York were as follows:No 2 red. f1So; No IDuluth. $126l*i: No 1 l.ard Mani-toba, jni'jfob afloat. CORN

—it. brief drop laprices at the cpenlng. as a response to the wheat break

and de. line of v.^'-jjin Uvarpool. corn raaseJ Into bullhands and remained firm ai: day until the last hour, whenrealizing and Mii—isirai Ini) clearances caused slight re-actions, le.»t prices In New-Tork showing no change fromthe previous rlgiit. Influences connected with the upturn,besides tta* support offered by bull Interests at Chicago,were light country offerings, as shown by the fact thatChicago f-Htlmstes for 'Wednrfloy were only 14<» cars,abseii'-e cf jireesure and primary receipts of but 610.000bagsssfa. roir.par«v! with 1.208. 000 buabais la*t year. ld-pert l.:islne«» was limited ta 3 loads. No 2 corn cloiedat 624crlevr.tor uflltc for afloat: No 2 white. 52Hc.and Ha 2 yillow. t>2r fob afloat. OATS

—The mark»t for

oats ct (T.icairo Vac steady sll day. with corn closingprartira;i\ unchanged from the pre-.-1ou« night. rashprl^n in New-York were a* follows: Mixei, 26 to 32 tb.37{t3Sc: natural white. 30 to 32 It>. 3sSs»<\ nnd clippedwhite, ?« to 40 Tb. 40<!?<2e. RYB nominal. BARLEY—Market .1u!". F«*e<llr.g was quoted at 48V,'" c t f and malt-Ing at tSCMB r t f Buffalo.

N'K'.V-YOrK PRICES.Yester-

\u25a0vThoat: Opening. His*. Low. Close. day.May »1 15^» Jl l.'.'s $115% »1 15S $1 l."7Juiy 102V4 1027-10 lv:H 103% 1O2HSeptember . t*\ OiS 94Vi 94»t M%

Corn:May . . .V>'« «S .V>* »I-M 50

CHICAGO riUCES.\u25a0Wheat:

May 1 15 l.'S SI15 $115% $1 15HJs4) »X-t flS^ «8H fiv-, <iBHSeptember .Pi »1V» 91 81H 81\u25a0*

CorntMsv 44*. 45 44H «4«» 44VJuly . 4.'.>» 45 i"'t 4T.4 45>^Pepternber .... 4P4 4."\u25a0 J l-16 45Vj 4?1 45W

Oets:May 80% Slit W% 81'i81July 81 Bi'» 31 Sl'i 31

Lard:January 6«2 85 «62 R65 B65May <8& 0«7 « f2 667 C 87

Ribs:Jar.uarr

•42 « 45 642 « 45 645

May 6 70 8 72 «67 672 «72Pork:

.Tanuarv 12 43 12 4-. 12 43 12 4:. 12 42ilay 12 70 12 72 12 65 12 70 1-i 72

Receipts of breadstuffs at interior point* In thoußands.last thiee ciphers (000) omitted, flour bbl«. grain busn. as''"'"

ovf-

Flour. Wheat. Corn. Oats. Rye.Barley^Chicago 30 84 310 13S 8 MMilwaukee 5 31 « g

—«5

Minneapolis—

276 27 -5- -

4

Duluth ...... — »» —.1St. LfluU » 63 8» « —

Kansas *::::::::="

26 =J— —

Toledo—

_6 S4 21 _2—

Peorla '.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.'.''\u25a0.—

_j _f! _» _z _i:Trtali. T*i 452 IM 810 12 IV-

frcra thete points:Chicago 21 »0 204 179 7 40MUwauke* . 2

—10

—1 1«

Mlr.r.ea.Mii, M» 112—

16 12 10Duluih

—3

— — — —Pt Lou!« 10 »4 40 26

— —Ksr.sas \u25a0'.'>

—34 f* 10

— —Toledo

—8 4» is

— —I>etroli

—3 fl \u2666

— —!P«orta

—I_1» __17 _— _—

Totals C 2 226 837 270 20 72}:\u25a0 ••;bj at Atlantic ports:

-York 25 2 130 N—

ISBoston 2 2 2l» -2

— —iPhiladelphia IS 4 6» 2*

— —IHaltltr.br* 6 8 !M *> 1

—jNew-Orleans 1

—151 3

— —!Galv«ston

—1 71

— — —Totals ~40 12 777 111 1 13

Exports from At;ar.-.:? ports:

New-York 12—

60 5— —

• Host on .1—

51— — —

!PMlad*l9bla— —

6u— — —

IBaltimore 1— — — — —

,New-Orleans 1—

26— — —

Totals IB—

187 6— —

HIDES—

The market is flrnx with a good demand.Paiea for the w«ek were M.oC*.' hides. The receipts for the

] week were- afcout 70,000 -hides. The nock on hand is. 15.0U0 hides and kip*, coenpaxed with 7,700 for the samei time la»t year. The awtatlcns are as follows: Callfcrr.la.j ISk; Galvestcn. l&c; San Antcnlo Jind Laredo, 2W:; andIthe following selected, duty paid basis: Matimota> ]!•\u25a0•.j Truxillu. -:^c. Orinoco. 23V»c; Tampico. 21 . Bogota. 21@I22c; Orntral Ame.ican. 21So; Vera Crux. 21c; Porto Ca-Ibello. L*. Guayra ar.d <'aracas. 22c: Payta. lb'-tQ'JOc;1 Tal*sco, 20Vc; Rio Hache. dry and pickled. 16c; Port-au-:Psmxte, 18c; Stn Antonio and Lared... 20c. L<KV SALTED

HIDE&—

Texas. 14Hc; and the following selected, dutypaid prices: Pa\ta. 14Hc; Progreso, 12c; Uarar.ham. P«-r-narcfcuco and tUr.ia. 15c; Maracaibo and gavanilla. 14H-:;Matarr.or<i.«. 14H©l5c.

LEATHER—

The market is firm, with good demand andprices quote.i as follow*: Acid, flrrt selection. S3 tS'J6c:vlaughter. 2CC2Sc; second*. 21H024c: slaughter. •^.'ii'j.-i .rejects. l«ifell<c. union, light back*. 88a: middle backl anamiddle bevy. 33334c: seconds, 32©a3c; thirds. US{J2Oc;l.ght tacks, com-. oieS3c; seconds. ia»c: oak dressed back*.rtr«s. 33c: seconds. 33<J34c;thirds. 31©32c; bellies. 20c;belting butts. 35^40c; T«-xas oaj| sole. 26930 c.

X-tTALS—

The feature cf th« metal markets to-day wasthe advso li. the price of copper, which seemed the r--f-jlt of en* of t::e leaiilng producers raising Its Europeanselling price of eiectrolytic. Lake copper here was quotedtt 15. 15.50 c; electrolytic at 15.12^i©1537htc. withronie c*al«-r« asking as high as 1u.50c. and caatlr.g at14.57H9-15.2Tjc Jy>nC^n cabled an advance to iC6 17* f«1for «rot ar.d to £C 92s 6d fir futures. The London tinmarket (advanced al^o, clrstng at £130 5s for spot and£130 7s Cd for futures, locally the market, while quiet asto _-.c seems more or lest unsettled as to price. Spot Isgenerally •.'ld at from 29.25 c to 29.02Hc, with outsideprices a trifle extreme, perhaps, while some talk is heardof weakness inbupplles ft/r future delivery. Lead advancedto IViIk* >iin London, but remained firm and unchangedat 4.e0&4.70c in the local market Spelter was lower byabou: lis <te lr. the London market, where spot cloeed at£24 17s 6<S. Locally, however, the situation shous flrni-ness and spot le <4uoted et [email protected]. Iron closed at 54sin Glasgow Htui at 4%s 4^jd in Mlddlesboro. Locally IronIs unchanged out firm lr. tone, with producers disinclinedto grant any concestlona. No 1 foundry. Northern, Isquoted at 117 6(>-2517 t)5, the inside prices being more orlees r.om'.r.a;. No 2 foundry. Northern. Is held at $17 60,and No 1 foundry Southern, and No 1foundry. Southernsoft, st $17 7&*Jslß Pig iron certificates on the ProduceBxchange were a little more active to-day, sales amount-ing to 200 tons. The close follows: January. $16,859IMaC February. $16 «sSsl6 GO; March. $17 aeked; Apriland May. $16 &OCUI7 10: June, $ICSOCSI7. July, Augustand 5-ptfMTiber. $17 asked.

MOLASSES AND eTRT'PS—

Trading In syrups wasmoderate, with offerings not large. Molasses was firm,with a good and steady demand for fine grocery gradeshere as well as at New-Orleans. Quotations follow:New-Orleai.s centrifugal, common. 12013 c; fair, 15«iri7c: aroo 1.m©2lc; prime, 223r27c; New-Orleans, open kettle, 81«)f37c;SYRUPS, common. 1401.1c: Jalr. 18C18c; good. lbj?2lc;prime 22*25c: fancy. 2SCf3Oe.

OCEAN r'REIGHTS—

Rates for steam and sail tonnagecontinued steady, and very little Improvement was noticedIn the demand. There were no new or interestingfeatures, and only a moderate business was reported.Quoteuons to Liverpool, l%d; Glasgow. London and Ant-werp. 2d- Leith and Newcastle, nominal; Bremen. 35pfgs. Hamburg. 40 pfgs; Hu'.l and Bristol. 2Hd; Rotter-dam. b%c; cotton to Liverpool, per 100 n>. 12315c; Lon-don, oats, nominal. CHARTERS British steamer. 1.554tons, general cargo. Virginia to Rotterdan.. private terms,February: British steamer. 1.527 tons, phosphate. Tampato Bor.eas. 13s 84. February; British steamer. 1.561 tons,

coal, CardlS to Jamaica, dm; Swedish steamer. 1.292 tons,lumber. CHilf to Blver Plate, private terms, February;British steamer. 1.757 tons. coal, Norfolk to 6t Lucia.$1 CS; British steamer, 1,233 toes. coal. Norfolk toMatangaa. private terms ; schooner, 7W- toes, generalcargo, hence to Pcrto Rico, private terms; British schoon-er, SSS tons, lumber, Jacksonville to Bt John, N B,f7 60; schooner, 618 tons, phosphate, Charleston to Pensa-eola, and back Mobile to Noanic lumber, private terms:bark. 82b tons, lumber, Ferpandin* to New-York, privateterms; schooner. C7B ton*. lumber, Jacksonville to Phila-delphia, $C; schooner, 423 tons. coal. Newport tiewg toCharleston. 80c. and back to Boston, dry lumber, privatetermc, schooner, 4&S tons, coal, Norfolk to Savannah, and*back to New-Tork. lumber, private terms, schooner. 378toss, dry boarCa, Charleston to New-Tork, $4 SO; rehooner.421 tons, coal, hence to Palatxa. $1IB; bark, Bb3 tons,cnal, Philadelphia to Savannah, private terms; schooner,8.9 toot. coal. Port Residing to Norfolk, about 50c. loadedand discharged: two schooners, 6SB and 1,005 tons, coal,Philadelphia to Boston, private terms; schooner, 2.470tcr.i. coal, Philadelphia to Providence, private terms;

schooner. e«7 tons, fertilizer. Carteret to Wilmington.X C, and bees to New-Tork. lumber, private terms:schooner. SBS tons. ties. Fernandlna to Philadelphia,private terms; schooner. 820 toes. ties. Femandlna toBoston, private terms. German steamer. 1,425 tons, gen-eral cargo, hence to Harre and (or) Dunkirk, Ba on*port.8s fid if both. February; British steamer. 1.506 tons, gen-eral cargo. Taaaplco and Port Ltmon to Kew-Tork, isOO.prompt.—

To-day was an active car in cettonseed oil. andprices showed material advances oa renewed speculativeana outside demand, flftles, 3*o Me? at 2«%e: 250 May at25c; wOO May at 23«c: 8.600 May at 2SHc 800 July atIXVc S.M* Jnly at 280 and 1.000 September at 28Ho.Linseed oil remained unchaar^d. Refined petroleum Ise.utet at the recent decline. We quote: PETROLEUM

—Standard white, bbls. |7 40; bulk. $4 SO: Philadelphia.$7 SS. bulk. $4 43} refloed cases. New-Yort, |1O 10, Phi:a-delphia. $10 05; water white. New-Tork, bbls, 190 test.$»4O: bulk. M80: PtsiUdelphla. $» 88; balk. $« 45; waterwhite, cases. New-Tork. $13 10; Philadelphia. $13 05COTTONSJSED Prime crude, fob mills. 18c; primea-jnuarr yellow. January, 2SWC24HO: rebruary. 28*4024Vc- March, 24*»«T25c; M*y.25H»260; July, 28«2320,juos teptember. 2Bl«Citt?ic; off summer yellow, nominal;primewWle, 27®27ftc; prime winter yellow, 27H5230.UKSCBD OIL—American seed, city raw 43944e; eat oftown raw. «l#42c: Calcutta raw. etc LAHDOIL.S»0« pOc.

PROVISION'S—Heavy reoe'pts ag&ln affected tne Chi-cago market lire bogs being fiOl^o lower and the rpecu-lative undertone e«#y after (h*opening, alth<-agh rail Ing•ncnewhs*. around midday with com. The afternoon mar-ket was fairly steady, bat ratber lnaet.v« Total Weste-nreceipts were 103.000 begs. ln-lud ng 60.000 at iTilcago.

14 000 at Kansas City anl 10 000 at Omaha. PO*K—\u25a0teady. Quoted: Mess, $13fT$13 1»: family $146114 '0.shorTi-lear. *18»6«ia BBBP—«t»si!y Cuotei: Mess.•w&fteW; family. $}iesl2:psvoket. $I6COCtU: extrm Indian£T tUfMIT. USB.?? HAjfl-«tea<sy Quoted sj t^i122 60. nRE'SC3I HOG&—Ht«»dy. Qnoted: Kaocas. r*,..-;r *,..-;lhO n>. *%c iao tb, C%o; 140 Ib. *%o pigs. 7»t%c. curMKATB—P«cii;si bellies rteady. Quoted: emoklng, 7c.10 Ib 7o; 13 Ib.7c: 14 Ib. 6<ic PleJriea shoo'ijeni ncrn n.-.t.duotad st ©Vio. Pickled ban* nominal) euoiei at e%9

VifliieK.rP]y <"3SJ 4.Sf><*.73C 4.lS'-> 344B»=« Uroe ll«ut V.ZlZ.i!*) 8.2.^.036 2.064.116WTTOX—Tit- cotton market continues Qvlct pending****

».ttrt:jon la t!ie Bombcm epat situation, of whichT..-ert us co rress^t lr.fllcation. Tbe hcldlng movemtnt hasJ""J * "M» cf develr^ment wh:ch it is es.<c to esywu w.er t«!ore tquilled In tee history o: the market«\u25a0— Ccrp:te :l»laife ec.ouats cf rotten, which, accordingL.4?*, C.* us rrjKvrt. rer-iuln to be marketed. t»,e ir.ove-

if-f bw-tir.d iatt ye&r'a f:s-ures ty a considerabletT~.'^. ».*r

''''cf th<? 1:ehl receipts, sentiraer.t .-eem«

a_.:'!ii.,bearithl.avcr"«* ;\u25a0\u25a0•;\u25a0 -'..i itut the > .-...

v'

rr~«\* 1.0 held tick KUdlMl. wh!cn. :tIs argued.fcsS.£T Brs 10 lj* *Ai- ar'3 tije teem also to be

JS*i>22! 1" th*V™*?*** *&***\u25a0 «t the next report*Jl\V? B

"rt:*v

-\u25a0*!«* 1« to be leeued lati tMst""n,t" f "-^aciouct of cotton glcned to Januery

\u25a0 '. \u25a0, »""'.a

"\u25a0

' -' '• ••'"'

I*Ield in New -it«r <ks7m

-\u25a0

- ate (i«—\u25a0"'.

•: \u25a0>

\u25a0TSS *«J«««J. and MloVrnFtfiPwcts «t^ acTve 12? *<ivant<> of about 6£»"citL^r £-l"L P., SS?S" on * *-***°'

covering by"^crr t^^-r

b -LH'L<lem^ c V:°-" »>\u25a0 eource'oci« tt.e prt te i^r^f^ ,Z J* "

eJhEff COUoa Purchased8 ratner

b«forr u.t.shorts

«I fcwn u^ te'f'.- Ar \u0084ZjUjy rre*aa'r.• rolnt or two

joints.

<it=iw pr:r« io „i^^fcLS? n? aJ"ke^« rtj.ortedof-

..^yyJt.y1 7>*rk«ta r-^j^rtad un-\u25a0

\u25a0 busi-

•>\u25a0 JW liiitV6"'

tlaJ *ointJ- *^"tteates^r"^;«?«S^: eßal!rt? prioa. to tfc. loca: mfk,,tcMlay

jtaaer .. °i*ni:*;Hish" low- Cl^- '3^r<tru£-y r,M «-fts «-H 6tl©oP2 «85

: 3fM| W> ?•<* 6.89 e.J#&3«.1..l 6ME;n: "'.1% l)\ ««» w.BS|?.S 7.05

gi-\u25a0 ;;.:;.: «-J2 7<* 7oS> 7-0457.06 7.10*>«•«•/: '•» J23 7CS 7.1&87.11 4i«•Nwtnber T.J6«7.17 7.21'*a<*er I** I* 7.18 7.ief7.lS 7.22.'.\u25a0;; JiJ J*J 7-»> M557.20 7.25

|s« \u25a0 j. \u25a0/.....' ™

r»s. uiSi^STL . "I>ot cot'-°*> clome« qus*t. with

«J *id 7^5 .'"

,Vi.*.b"lB of 7-=sc f•: r.. i....:.c up-

•iis* v -~ , ~ '\u25a0' ljU'it aaiea to »plnrj«rs. SitO

ifidk n«y nj*ra*u w«r« ueieirrat J.t-d as fol--10c hlrher at «15-16 c; aa:«a«• tat. \u0084

' ' '*n«:»d at 7r, sales.•;««t.- ,-- . r ;H" hlfher a: 6Tbc. Uo-

3a3r,cet,."c S?""JSJ*' J^ec: aales. «S1 balea. Bal-\u25a0l nactTvJaVt >--•-.. AUSTU«t* steady

ft^Taad Z^ijiy*;**Io:Io: •"'^ «10 »*»'•\u25a0 O*lv««tonBMaasa ver^^irff'1 « 7 1-Me: aalea. 490 teles. New-

"iZL-I /(*na -n'-.anreiJ at 7c: sales. 2.000•lai *>m££L»i]^^Zr wchanrefl at 7c; sale., a.Sno;t.« At lfasrTLi^^^^-"?- J—''3'-naT T*>!r-ta for u>-n»or-«6 str Z!kl2??' ,».«» to 12 sft. bales a«a«nvt

*t.-Jy-" i*"!>frir *t Houston 8.06U to'

!*« «eck arid C7V* last y«er--1^ j£? h»Jes. a»alr.st 4.723 last wc«k

Iinterior polnta to-day. e<w>-«urn sacs day iMt week ud last jUr?_ . L«*t Le*t PT»s«-r>t"J'tttoa To-«ay. »re*k. year. atoca

eaa, 5-S2 10.X« U.63* I*2-68

**Jb!le 7 \u25a0 20.0C8 IS.«R4 401.097

.2>ar.e£V~ •22 4.170*»7

65.823.SriisT£. *\u25a0*«' *-i7o tensKaa»M Jii "3 MJHJJ«cU . LSZ2 13 9W 8.«72gillIS— "4<i7 1.641 3,K» 58.485r*-Tork ~rr \u25a0

— "^ e.oi«f»tea .. JSJ 29* 44 88.713QteMnuM tJ* '-•" JT7 I"-Ittloas

—J2» «0 1» !5.,-_ \u25a0• "0 281 1.16S 16.SK>

IWer.er."- 20.80 87.000 80.05» M3.OMHSBJU

2»*m»:::ii \u25a0\u25a0* 1« 2.43« 4j.ier>tes^-fS !:^ 4fc®

<tei^ r'V • *\u25a0<*»••

1S ia-:U7 T3.458)*

*«:entu "flt^*ZZ11*51*1"

wrP«>oJ a*J««: toot cwttonS*^ M*o-

Cl^5*•' *al°" 700° t*le«:t*Ie«: \u25a0pecuUtlou and?*;«cl«Mi/^fr1=*n

-«\u25a0*?; receipt* 15.000 ail Amert-

T*"»i SS«? c^iS 8-*?d: futures optima stsa<s> ft

V*?:JtnJjuf*".' A***s;ApHl-Majr. S.fcSd; May-June^?»• Mtta \u25a0 \-7^l!r't*toctob*T'B

*4<J:October-Novem-

B£Vc&-lEkT \u2666a mn««»;« <eciand.

i?"«««!*e irf1"^5L25" as*<s a™ and business was- ii^'i?*^ ItlUp1tlUp- fn- <oUowJm ranssIl*I1*-l.ati in*??!*- °*yt *"tf**:cubeb. 84«T««c twony-ft,"Wi«iL22' \ r>frMa Rc>oT^SSk«TTi y.:I."' t \u25a0\u25a0+. . T^^-. *t oW>te as fellows (JcdusO, 4#g-iriOea

—.i^^n-." ***>^c. «l4ur.bie*cb«4, 7lk#

\u25a0'i*/"1«Mi Staat^P 1"

I**1**rf*l^"- there betsr f»lrt*^»w? Ti 1/

BT**"*low »T*fi«. tte*tter with

B2S tiwrUaf WtWtow—T"V* •»»\u25a0* »n«nu.

NEW- YORK DAILY TRTRrXE. WEDNESDAY. JANUABY IS. 1905

PENNSYLVANIARailroads.THE MARKETS Railroads.

TOTAL DOMESTIC RECEIPTS TO-DAY.New-York. Janu*n- 17 1005.__

-rhtte fcb*- - '<** Dr<-aa»d »«juitr> pk«s 1&S4»\u25a0\u25a0•\u25a0, P.012,L.1ve poultry, crate*.. 111ri*^ e«ik« 25.«-27!i»ranse« <Fla>. caees.. 1.725

bae» £.fx>^ I'runm <CaJ), pkCT.... 7 450--vlB«-t

"ISJMTS I'otatoes. bbl» 4 400

«**\u25a0 /;JA- t£500; Onions, bbls'.' 1 two41"*"

hl«a'" l.'Jk;Dried Jrult. pk«s 1250

J*^v tush JS.SOO;Ros*n bW...!?..... £.«0J*J*L.J2~;... 7MW Fj>:ms turp. bbls 1>75***\u25a0 is," r..27f.; Tar, bb> '75SE£C2£ I.TW,Sugar. l»bls ; 77r.'JBy- 10""-'". h ' >-t--^. bjies 7fK) II-*'-' .^Tbars Slo|Mo!a*w«. bbl» l.«<«» iJljWr-^«. •••- 10.1;Tobacco, h»u'.s 25"^

hH»

' Ss»iwhtt<tay. bbls 404JV* til'

"S-tS'lVooU bale* 15

:i»«r-s- rt«" U7s;\V?xa. sarks Bfx»

I*1*"1*"-F, %iWes" 2.C*» Isrle. bales . T-.rtW«-». i( s 50'Oof.on. bsies . 4.500lor*'-'-

-,f ""<•„... li;Carper, Tier** r».R25

J* 8^ V^'* - :<.«>*!Oor;.er matt*, bars... 1.123***•• ™ \u25a0• S.TrSillides. l*ies S."

l*r*.Uo^ . l.t-S" 1Hides. Ml* .•\u25a0::I*"1

-C^*rs -•• K".:Skins, bales 1W

t*»l°w-

K±. . . 17:.. Leather, rides S.ST3PW^SS i... rrc.iloiv bait. »Jlstter> nkcf""' 3OSS

IWI.-Mnr»!), tbli "5

"AmspJea's Greatest RnUroad."

NEWYORK(entral. •

V^^ &HUDSON RIVER R. 3.THE SIX-TRACK TRUNK LINI.

Direct Lins fromNew York cfc Boston to Niagara Falls.

\u25a0n«i_.n» depart from Gi*iidCentral StatUn. «2d s(r««(ai..i yourtn Avenue. New YorW. as Mlvw.Nona anU «est bound trains except 'hose leavtazi>rand Central Bu»tion at s+» A. ii :«i. J.JO. 1L»

r M.. wUI stop at i:.ihSt. to receive pasaencsrs•••..It1inut*3 »'**r ieavlnje Grand Central Sution.I—lo A. II.

—<UIDNI(;UTtVCPRESX

»-K>A. -t«MPI STATE EXPRESi Most t»-_._ »M>u« tr«in tn the world. l>u• Buffalo 4.43 L_•\u25a0*» •*• M—•FAST HAIL :4 hours ta Chicaco.10.20 A.ll.—*r>> y EXPRESS

*?2S P M—

*blkp>lo limited.'•or y.-'SOCTHWESTEKN LlillTED.!••? £- M—CHICAGO LIMITED*-*-P-M——THE 2*»TH CENTCRT LIHITED.- «••»n. hour train l> Chicacn via Lake Shore.i"^2S-?>.— tALBANY AM> TP.OY Ft.TER.«.0O F> M —•Mil-:B-Sap. M.—«UKK SHOHE LIMITED. 531aboors tt».._ «-hica«». AllPullman Cars.*-s p_m-"*1-M:v£LAND. CINCINNATI.ST. LOCI&...rPFTR?lXAND CHICAGO LIMITED.

aor- «-~ 'WESTERN EXPRESS.-?2S M—'MONTKEAL EXI'ItESAb°m {. JJ— 'ADIRONDACK ANU MONTREAL EXP-•••OP-M-

—"81-KFALO. NIAGARA KALIS. CLEVS-

\u25a0 •f>r»L«

D ANr*

TORONTO SPECIAL."rarT.E?s

:'iTEU:i NEW ToitK AXT> CHICAtiO11.^|,T.>,* T^"ICAOO * ST i-ocis izxrr.&3s.

uaiiy. tEicept Sutiflav «Ejr-a- M^na^y.\u0084, . „ ; iKLKM n«^%>CII.and Vo,7V

'! S-

3;< pIJ • »»cept Sunday, to PttuSeUJana North Adans Sundays, t ;;> a. XT.Pullman cars on all through train*.

_\u0084* Traln» H'umiMtert »itn Piat«h IleSt.Tlrhet office* at.l4:>

- -*l- 4ti an<s *2*« Broadway. 'Srmon fir, w>»t. ITS < wSSTI««ISt. Grand < »ntral Station, tr. 113 th St. Station. Sew

BrSoklvn*

U<i 7 -* F>ultc>D St. and 10« 8.-oa<l»aw.

Cahe'<f.P,h?B8 SO9S 09 IBth \u25a0»\u25a0\u25a0»«" '<«• \u25a0*\u25a0 T->rk C#ntralb? w-..t

V .*." _E **a»f' ch^r,(-d from hotel or residenceby Wntentt Exi>re»a Con..A. H SMITH. CEOr.nE H DANIEIAgeneral Manaccr. General Passencer Ac-ct.

RAILROAD.THE ONLY FOUR-TRACK LINE LEADING

OUT OF NEW YORK.STATIONS fcot of WEST TWENTT-THir.D STREET

A.\t> DKSBHUSSE.-' AXD COIITLA.NDT STREETS.C7The leavinc time from Desbroaaes and CortUuO;

Streets la 3ve invnutes luter tr.-n that glv«n b«low forTwenty-third Street Station.

t'OK tUX WEST.•7.55 A.M. CHICAGO SPECIAL.•8.35 A.M. ST. LOUIS LlillTED.

•10.','3A. M. THE PENNSYLVANIA LIMITED. Mboon lo Chicago.

•Ur.JI. CHICAGO AND s>T. LOUISEXPRESS.•4.5J1". M. CHiCAOO LIMITED. ~f,aSJU P.M. ST. I.OL'IS EXHtESS.•SJIS P. M. WEMEKN EXPRESS.

"-V".I». M. PACIFIC EXKKfSS.•8.23 P.M. CLEVELAND ANI> CINCINNATIEXP. •

•BJSP.M. PITTSBURG SPECIAL.WASHINGTON AXD TIIE SOUTU.

"05. S.^i, »9.3, •D.SS. 'lO.io a. m.. •12.JJ. 2.10 t«3.2.->.•Con»fee»ional L»mUed">. '3.25. *4.25. •\u25a0*.». W.iip. nj..32.1H night. Mmii), 8.^5. *».23. *10.i3 a. m.. «12.il'*:;.-i. "Consresalonal Llni.ted"). *3.». M.^. *-4.i5, U.^sP- m., 12.1u n;«ht.

SOUTHERN KAIL.VVAY—'2.SS. 3». 4.23 p. m.. 12.10 a.m. daily. "•i-outhem Faim Limited." li»p. m. week-da vs.

ATI.AXTIC COAST L.INE—923 a. m. and S3 p. m.daily "New York and Florida Special." 2.l'J p. m.week-days.

SE.VHOARf) AIR L1NE.—12.55 p. m. and 12.10 a. tr..daily. "Seaboard" Florida Limited." 12.13 p. m.dally.

NORFOLK AND WESTERN UAIIAVAY.—3.23 p. ta.•lally.

CHESAPEAKE A OHIO RAILWAY.—

".55 a. m. week-i!»ys. .-,.55 p. m. daily.

FOR OLD POINT COIIFORT and NORFOLK.— ».S5 a. ra.!•'•V-'avs. 8.23 p. m. d?.i:y. "_ .ATLANTIC CITY.—ft.M a. m. and 2.3ft p m. »jek-dajs.

Sundays. »7.55 a. m.CAPE MAT.—12.38 p. m. week-days.LONG BRANCH A.-Bt RT PARK (North Asbury Par*

Sundays), and Point Pleasant. 8.53 a. m.. 12.23. 3.C3.•*-55 p. m.. and 12 10 niKht week-days. Sundays. 12.10.»-25 a. m. and 4.53 p. m.

FOX rHH.AnFI.PHIA.0«S. 7.23. »7.55. 8.25, 0.55. •9.25, »t9 55. •» 55. •tIO.SS.

•10.53. 11.55 a. m.. »12.55. 'I.K. 2.10. -" *3.23. 3.55.-: *4.25. «4.M i-t4.55 for North Philadelphia «n:>

•5.53. •1.55. 755 6.J5, b.23 (r>.55 for Nf.th i'hJlaJ^'.pl 1

only) p. m.. 12 lo njjjct week-days. Sundays. «5.i'3.•\u25a0.S3. 5.23. »9.23 '...,->. 935. 't10.25. *10.53 a. m..*12.SS. »iC5. •3.23. 3.53, »4.25 <»t4.Ki for North PhlU-delphia <.r.ivi. •4..V.. «5.55. 6.53. 7. 55. 8.25. 20 W.53for North Philadelphia only) p. ra.. 12.10 night.•Dining <*ar tKxtra-fare train.

Tl?k"t otficfi. Nos. 4(ii, i3.->4. 113 and 261 Broadway: IS2Fifth Avenue ibalow 13d St.>: 233 Firth Avenue (cor-ner 2Uth St.); 1 Aster House, tnd stations namedabove: Brooklyn. 4 Court Street. 860 Fulton Street, XiOBroadway, an<l Pennsylvania Annex Station. The NewYork Tran.s:tr Company willcall for and check ba*-sage from hotels and resid*rces through to destination.

Teiephono ••543 Chelsea" for Pennsylvania Railroad CabService. ,

W. W. ATTERBURY. J R. WOOD.General ilii;ajr»r. Pa*s"r Trade Manae«r.

GEO. w. BOYD.—^^_^__^_ General Fan»grger Agent.

Excursions.

Grand Mid-Winter ToursLOW KATES TO

CALIFORNIA

READING SYSTEfVS.

CHVsk^?llH-U?^ ALtENTOWN v >» 3XACCU4 4,,

-T '- , 'i!> f

Y.Vs" m°'' C!y P" »• Sund*y"- \u25a0*\u25a0»•

WILKJCSBARKK AND SCKAXTO^—r*.»». sto a. m..I m Su'ii". i\u25a0* i; -a ••.-

• •«>

*

LAKFM<i<:i> |vKUIiKIT'

Vomh itnn »-«n»klPvrriV \u25a0\u25a0lnr.Bl n^l. IUIS MTER UPB.AK.M.OAT—

«4.d0. «9.4» *• iv.. H.JO tj.49. 4.1*\u25a0• • ard I-akenurst on!y>. aiuu. xii.d» p. as.

vS^X^Jf CITV-^9 40 a. m. 13.40 p. nvL<JSwv-5 tti>C.M- ASECRY PAKK. OCEAN fiKbVILHSK-ffSfSi1?1* AXD «SSaoS points^:

«4.0». 8.30 11.30 a. m.. xI.IO. 4.43. S.JO. «.30. 11.54S 10% nday> **ce»t Ocean Grove. »uo a. m.. 4.00.

A"S«T*SIN?'%fA!«-:»?RlClr^ *<«««>"» ICE.5.59. 1.30. 11.M a m.3&VM4£^ftTi!£:d* oaly>

-<JO »\u25a0-•\u25a0—

PHILADELPHIA(P.EADIXG TERMINAL*—-4 S3. 709

p 22:. -^•-, mV.*- tso°- tso °- t7-30- •M?jßa

S *7S ANb'cHksTNtrr STnEETS— «4 »5. tS 90 MOLS9

•lISS m<ttm

- *-O<J-

S**-°"- *Se°- *

7-0it3;:i *«•:BA.^.°,lof.Iof. Doxm?l?f:1?yD

o xm? l?f:1?yl?f:1? y-

90°'

"10-M-"IiM-

IA.MsPOBJ—.,4.OI». 24.2a. tS.OO. , t9.10 (lii.oo ILO9a. m.. Reading only*. |«1.00. »|»i.S9. tiOO p. m. Head-ing. Pottavllle. HarrUburg only, t4.00. ts.o<> *,£•5-V^v «- vJ* Str*ft on 'y- •Daily. tDaily. *xce?tsun .ay ISundays only. tParlor cars only. ] via Ta-maqua. xSaturdavs. aExcpt Saturday*Ml. 434. 1300. 13i4 Broadway. I3isth Ay, 25 Unloifcquar- West. U3 Ea.it i:r.th Bt.. ITS Wtst 125th 3:145 Columbus Ay. New York: 4 Court St. 3»4. gsiI'Ulton St. Brooklyn: S9O Broadway. Wliilanu-burV•N w York Transfer Co. calls for acd checfc* b.iecanto destlna-

••-•W G BESLER. C M. BrRTVlce-Pres. and Cen. Mgr. Oen. Passr A«tt.

BALTIMORE JIKO OHIO RJWDROYAL BLUE LINE TRAINS

-EVERY OTHEft EVEN HOUR."To BALTIMORE and WASHINGTON.. _„_ Leave Sooth Ferry 5 minutes earlier.

Lt.liberty street .. « 80 am. Ex'-ep- Sua. Buffet."lO.yOam. Dally. Diner.ItNlw Da.iV Diner. "

•••*.. 2 "0 pm. Daily "BufTst-"Royalrisntted" ..'."..'. 4.00 pro." Da'ly' AllPui'moa.« "\u25a0• cm. Dally. D!n»r'

\u25a0•>\u25a0> pm. Da!!y. Euffet1113 nlcht. Dallr. Sieeoera,

WIFSWI) TRAIN SEKVKC.Sie*peri

-THROCOH TR.VIN.S TO THE WEST.n«llyLt. New York City. S-.ut Ferry. LibertySt.

Chicaco. Pittsburg ll.lont. 12.15 nt "rsnii.(liicHgo,C'olnmbi:* 11.55 am. 12.00 noon. DinerPlttsborjr. ( Irvel.i<id 3.55 p-i. 4.00 pm. l.irc'ttai-Pltf—l.urgLJniit»<i'" (.55pm. 7.00 pm. Bu3et.Clnrinnati, St. Louis .. ls.lrtnt. 12.15 nt. K!f«.per.

lnnati. St. I.o:ti« 9. .-.."• am 10 00 am. DtnerClnriniiati. Xf.I.oni* ... 5.35 pra. (.00om. Dln»r"

Offices: 261. 434. 1100 Eroadway. « Astor Houv mOre»nw!eh St.. 25 Union P';uar* W.. Zil OranJ S->T. T.:3«S Fulton Street. Brooklyn; Sou Ferry a=iLiberty Street

11