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THE MARKETS. TOTAL. DOMESTIC RECEIPTS TO-DAY. New- York. October 8. 1900. ..►,-, nkci SiMillfeed. tens 212 #«Wax P*P> 10 Qnss f.e-,1. bin 200 Sn^HltTbM. - . . • 428 1 Rloo. bbls 1 72 rtoo-nrorn balrr r-Miice. r.k(r« **** vi^r iVws 13.373 i Rice Aaff. sacks 470 ''™' M ck» 38,313 RaUlnß. <>1.. bom.. «.'.»00 «m kwhe&t flour. rkg» •• : Prunes, pkes 4.2.V) rorZea bbta 800 Drted trait*. pk s.... 17.720 gSSSt ba KS 5.540 Cotton, bales ,::: 11.SM V^,"' t bbls !-• < ottonseod oil, fcbls... 1,272 V?he^Tbush «85.T73 CottonM«d meal. ba K » 300 n bush 2».1»a C lW r r . oa*k.s , « >,?"' bush i«X«> <>PP»r. pieces 1.707 eve bufh Wi i Copper raalie. bags. . . .«.•*»<) SrSJ : i^ » :». p ia;::::::::::: 2.M0 in. hbl<. l. "!<:: ... K.Ort '•' S&SSTbiii'-.1V.. •.OOOtHOM bales..... >« St' t,1.1« "'•: Hides. h«le» , .«1 n£f' (canned), cares. I.ViT : Hides, bdli |.J}« p^k bMf 47t* lather, slrtes I.WO m»-v'« i*ks ;>4li Skins, balrs S" Kbl* Ml /« ir-cais. P kg« .-ws'siap stock rkg* ii iIM tierce* l.UlS.i Oilcake. pkRS £J0 i,rrf' k»9 5,231f0i«0 Mock, rkes is* ffiJS ' - 1..", i-eanuts. bag.. 1.170 -.•:■:: 33 Tob^co, hM. :::::: 3 gSS SS::i:::: !.M» - 1 --' n^ter PkR» s . Tta i WhlFkey . '.-bis 4^.» OSS'. PkS 5.3.H,; Wool, bales ■•'" rU rf ca."S 7.120: Wool, sacks.... ->• oSe4pCTitry.-pke« MM Wine. Cal pkirs ,'J2 BSTpwUtrr. orates. »M Brandy. Cal.. I'kg*. . W O^r.?ef boxes 8«2 I*tl. Kile*.... _ 129 atoV« 'bMs 3 44«., Plums. Cal.. it* ... 3,950 - ; • irs. :-«!.. pkgrs S.JOO ."..■........ i.»l« Grapes. <"al.. Pk K 5.... 6.300 frraw. tona »<»0l CASH QUOTATION'?. I-ri. Nor. No 1 fdy.Jir. 7* fFlour. Minn patents. ..*» 40 hT So. No 2 soft. . 14 7S I Cotton, mlddllns 11 st^Ji ra l« 28 0* I Coffee. No 7 K1<>. .... - -,s, s pig irrn warranrs.. !♦ 7 o Sugar, eranulated. . . . :i «« ;:~ Oa:?: No 2 mi^ed. . . 25%|L«ard. prime *<» EXPORTS TO-DAY. ™£z£ ,-t. K a15...a.340.«M O^-" buth : :::::2«491 LMbrtcttaS oil. gals JS2.«-.i) F?a«^ bu,n ::.... 22.477 Pork. bH, I^o p^af bush 225 Beet b.*l.* •»-•• Floor, sacks 34.173, Be*-f. U'*. « Blip 2.0325J« SligS Rosin, bbta- ISO, Cheese, rb '-^" EXPORTS LAST WEEK. Wheat, bush 584.537 1 Spirits turp. gals. . . . 38.590 Cirr,. bush _- 88«,«70 Bosln. t'bls .> ; >7 Oats bu*h 41h.440 Pitch. Ijbls -8 p,., K,,»v "J »3 Tar. bbls 48 SrieyTiLri- :::::: s*:^ rtS rrt - . .:::h^ Flaxseed. bush 147,41» Naphtha, gals rSS feas. bush gals i.[g> f!X: b saLkr:::::: s:^? gbricjuing on. kWw»JjM 4 OSO ... ■ • B^ooo SSL^- hh a fiS ::: "SS S?» • :: y'--~^i Hay. bales *.SS6jLard oil. pals -MO ■ Oilrceai. n> 897.125 Buuer.tt kStSa Oilcake, Ib JW36.1001 Cheese,* Ib 8M.84t GE.VERAIi MARKET REPORT. New T York. October S. IWO. COFFEE— market for cuffee was more active. The opening call iio»-»l .-n advance of 10&2O points, with *iles of 7 :.V> bas» m that basis. By noon sales had reached l-O.MO ba^s without further change In price Later the n - H rket ruled (juiet. closing ■*» at a net edvance of IO©2O points; total sales, 2H,(MKt bags. Ihe improvement in prices oriKinated in a better class or Eurr.pean cables iha.n had been looked for; these showed an advance of II 1 * francs at Havre and I'll 1-*1 -* P'es at Hamburg. The early buying was in good part by parties having Kuropeiin oonneciione; otherwise the demand was ir.ainiy from lc<-al ehurts. Warehouse deliveries in this country- gave some eßioiuragement. Vicing 16,«21 bags. while the open market for Fpol Brazilian supplies, without being active, was steadier, dosing en the basis of s *' for No 7 Rio. invoice lots, l'ublic epeculative confidence uas to some extern cJ-iPt-ked by the continued heavy re ceipt* at Ri« and Santos: these came to a total of 64.0J0 ba^s •■lrarci Par.tos October 5. steamer Maskelyne. 4<T?i"(>a baps; .lf-are.i Victoria t)ctoV.er «. Liner Naamytb lsdc-» bags. Total -warehouse deliveries In the Vnited States for the week Just ended were 114.103 bags, against 76i»67 bags la« week and JSC.3S6 bags, the bame week a year ago Of the former amount New-York reported 74 .WS7 bags. Santos r«-eir!s were 306,000 bags for the week ag compared wttii 319,000 last week and 1&8.000 bag" <->r the same werk. a year ago. Rio receipts aggre gated fi9,000 bags, against U6.U00 th» previous week and s'» (XV) laet year. Rio saiproer.ts to the United States, •ii'orw begs for the week; to Europe. 27,000: Santos ship ments to tb* United States. I<i7.<-00: to Europe 222,000; Victoria shipments ta the United ,t.es, 17,0u0, Bah;a trvekly receipts. 1.300. ForeiETi t'oB(-f llajrkcts. — .Santosi — Coffee market <juiel; nod average -Santos. e*'JOo; receipts, &5.000 bags; etock, 10Si«K> ba«s. Jlamburg — Coffee market opened *m.@\* ife higher t:3O p m Jt/IH pfg» net higher; sales. 7,000 bags. Havre — Coffee market opened steady, % franc up; et 12 m advanced * franc, at 3 p m steady and '? frano higher; at 5:30 i- m unchanged; total sales, 24,<K*> bags. Jaruan- 411.00' July _^..60.&0 Febru&ry .. _...41».25 August . ............._.50.75 March ..... _...... • . -- ■*».&*"►; September 51.00 April 43.7.'.' October — ....4N.75 jlaj- .vm'Hi: Novcmf*r ........ .-^. .48.75 June - i MOS\ r>ex-emfcer .« 49.00 pjr, Coffee marktt steady; •To V Rio, T?S>25; exchange, 10 7-16 d; reoeipts. i^.OOo 1-agsi; cleared for the t'nited States. !i.<Mf> bags; cleaned fu-r Btarope; 2,000 bags; Etock, 221, uuo bags. The ranpe "- contract tncea.li> the local market to iky was is follows: Tester- Open. High. Low. Close. day. October ..^....» .7^.-. T. 90 7.25 7.23Q'7.30 7.10 November . ..» - — — 7.35®7.40 7.20 iJec-mtXT ....— .. 7.4. . 7.50 7.45 7.404f'7.&0 7.25 Jar.uarv _...-.* 7.i."> i-Tv. 7.50 T.5012'7.5!> 7.35 JVbruaiT — — — — 7.»&7.tk> 7.40 MarrH 7.86 7.C5 7.65 7.60#7.70 7.45 April ~ — -- ... — — — 7.08ijT.70 7.50 Mlv . ...„.— _ ">""• 7.7"» 7.75 7.70«f7.75 7.58 June i. -.. _ — — 7.7597.80 7.60 Jj'.y » 7.60 7.80 7. feu 7.*0©7.85 7.65 The statistical position ©$ Brazilian coffee 1» as follows; . 'ij, -day. Saturday. I^ast week. New- York deliveries ... 16,0ia 13,038 WOW RalUinore flellverieo .... 445 l.«*» 1.8i»4, .New-Orleans ddtaawlaa. . 163 -23,107 334 Total (Jtflverles ....„ 10.621 83,035 17.817 Xew-Vorlc Stock -._.- -425,0tr5 44L10S 874..819 Kaliimore nock. ........ fc1.46« hl,4Sa 88.117 Xew-Orieaaa etojii —_ J »,»73 ».»78 8.230 Stock al all I-"*" . , . . t:5,&4G 652.067 463,672 Afioat , -, 444.000 886,000 434.000 Visible miiply » 959,649 818^07 897,673 fame tlau. lbSiw.— 1.415.701 1.346,2ai •Including 23,012 taken ex-«i.lp. COTTON — cotton market was lrr«eular. with an upward tendency. A frost so&ro took poasesaioii of tho trad* this moraing. East. West. North and South, and before the day was ciut pr.ru bad anivtmond 17 to 28 ! ;--ir.; s. Including an adv&no« of 3 to 10 points, which occurred on tha opening call. The shorts showed a good Oral of uneasiness, which was increased, by the fact that English cables reported an advance of 6-64®6^i-64d in futures; this, hijwevtr, w«u» attributed by private cables not so much to froet fears as to nor* promising Indica tions reflecting a. demand from fpinnere. Still another «iniula.tin£ factor van a current belief that Wednesday »oula turn up a bullish rnnnthly crop report. Some were inclined to belie**, however, that this feature had been airea-ij- ower-Jlscounted. Trading v.as not particularly *"r:v«, and Uiere -u.tr- sesreral periods of weakness under . erfiing to secure profits. "Wall t-irvet was a heavy buyer of Jtr.uary iind March . 'ton. the Suuth was alao a Urge buy..-, while Liveqp «A sold at the opening, but !at*r bought, on finding cur market bo easily Influenced fey the Indication* «t low ■ . -..Tin-. a cold wave hav u-ig reached down Into >3orth*rn New-Mexioo and Okla homa. "■ •■ could not Irarn. however, that there had been actual frewt in any part of the. cotton belt, while in most localities thft temperat .•» was far away from it. Re <»'rt* wer«; about as expected. A heavy demand for cotton *ai reported. It* the afternoon the shorts were tfcs principal support ot the market, which closed steady *'- * i.< ' advance of 10 to IS points. Th« n-.- . of contract »i>rl(*-s in the local-market to-day was as. follows: Katur- Opening., High. I,ow. Cloee. day. October »,..... I<J.4<> 10.60, f 10.«O 10.47@10.4S 10.37 November . *..... 10.10 10.81 i"iii 10.1&S10.2O 10.0 a pwnkr ..^ ».V»7 10.1« ».« 10.0»i»10.1O I* •« 1 «nuary ...^. Ul I .'. 888 10.063 '■' '< ffunuy ..., v.w.i m.iK u.w io.o;t&io.il :i.'-i'» **«-h i . S.«» IO.IH 8.98 10.11©10.12 H. 82 yrii ,-.-..;♦ 10.02 lo.on 10.02 10.00010 l<i f1.02 f*r * ;it.oi 10.1s 10.00 10.10&10.11 :< B2 * Ur '« . .- 10.01 10.17 10.00 10.10010.12 ««2 3yi 'T k JO.OO ji| 17 10.00 10. 10010 12 1«.!»2 *Jgli« it t.4 j««S 8.88 »M 0 8.88 ».T8 Rpot cotton c»>fed quiet, with quotations Ho up on Hg Us* nt Mr it,v middltnKi uplur.'i and llUc for mld t..ns <\\:\i. Sa'es were P.H baie». Southern spot markets «crt tejegra.r.hf-'i 88 follows; New-Orle«ns firm at He; "-*> - 4r.r.sh rteady ar lo I-lOc. 1-lftc up; Wilmington firm «t 10-»o; Norfolk steady nt lO^ic, 1-Ifir up: Baltimore ••^mlril m 1/i^c; Memphis steady at lOR-I«c; Augusta VJI« et 10R-16C, ll«Wr up; «t. I»uls firm at 10'4c, l-l«o Tk« exporttracn-enient follows: mL . Grtat Britain. Fiance. Continent. £*-*** ■• H. 471 9,474 ™ Ut tti, week 4!.'« i» - tOO 11.974 "• .M th'j «tIW Zit.T.itt 5X.757 223.47« S^"" 51 *'* 4 receipts to-morrow at New-Orleans are =■«• to 2i .<»,•! }nu a . agaii:<-t ■', <CI a week ax ■> and ißst year. At Houston 2SOOO to 27.000 bales, r *'; - if: - s !» f t week and 34,062 bajfea l*j»t year. 't£ji*' : ''* at x *" ix.-rts ard Interior rx«nt«« to-dny. com * *•'" «h«esif,e/t«y last week ar..3 last -.-ear: p I^st I.ABt Present rJwT* To-dsy. week. year. stock. Ef!"*?' 4.7"! .i.HTT 28.474 101.195 jk?,7 Jr ' w !s ...lft.sce > !'7|. 11,800 17»».84'» ;.. ." :• ...'■. 3.502 1.4 M 14.219 .' •-: >- '**■; ?. -jr. 7J ;C2 **i>sv ,n, n '' m ** ' 3 - 78<i I<i.«iVi S,rt,v r/Jn *.W* 5.9C2 2.40 A 27,741 *&&•' 37*73 ' 7 * 7 :,.<*<* *■«» »MM !££*,::::::::::: 847 = -^ 87^6 v -^ fc ".::::::::^i __^ -^ 4,u>i T™* U 48.798 rj.KiT. K.BM 479,129 3!^7'f. 2.S«J 2.310 ■1 -.- 31.207 BtirS!. v~- l 72- , ii 828 .'!- 522 CUteteJSSl 1.374 ' *3 ! tSB 12.0«.) H'rit^f" 2: '" 3« 1.861 «.J72 r • 10,567 12.0"<i 12.801 28 888 Mk?!, «cb«B«i B;iec:sl Liverprol cables — Spot <»tton '** lti« ' r - Ai " I.1 '. *,<#*> bale*;; speculation and export, ! 'l<ii %, ' 3 ** 111 ' '"" tale* middling upland, J♦* » b t'..':,"" 58«"<H »tt*dv, J-«4©:; <J4<J kdv»nce at •*"• LttXi. fi -^4w«i*-«4d net higher. Dec«o>ber-Jar.u "*«»«. JaauMT-Febnujy. tMQOMi Tibrwy-\ -.. N March, S.S2Hs: March-April. K.SOb; April-May, S.2SHb; j May-June, S.27Us; June-July. f>.2B«: July-Au«u«. 8.245; August-September. 6.175: October. 5.63 v; November-De cember, 5.40b. Manchester — Yarns, not much doing; cloths quiet and unchanged. FLOUR AND MBAli Prices on flour were held about as firmly as ever, notwithstanding th« break in wheat, for there was no pressure to sell from the mills, nor any material concessions in Western rates. Trade at this point consequently ruled very alow, with buyers and tellers considerably out of line. Spring patents. $4 2>'n $4«i. winter straights. 8385988 6B; winter patents, $3 TO ©$4; spring clears. $3(353 40; extra No 1 winter. (2 8543 $3; extra. No 3 winter. $:: 70^82 80; no grade," $190£19 ,-.i» a ton, spot and to arrive; buckwheat Hour. 82 In'j $2 30 RYE FLOl'R— Dull. Quoted: Fair to good. *3 1." 1 $3 33; choice to fanavcy. S3 4095» 70. CORNME^L — yulct. Kiln dried, $2 4.')gs2 88. %% to brand BA(V LfEAt» Steady Quoted: Fine white and yellow BBc<l M, coarse, SWlirOOe PEED— Steady. Quoted: Spring bran. spot. 816 T.',';sl7: sacks, to arrive. 200 Th $IG<B> $1t?75; sortna bran. bulk. $1« 236*16 50; coarse winter lean. $17 ;.'»©s 10 50. latter white: middlings, *17«t.--:ti *:, city bran. $17©*17 50; hominy, char). $17; oil meal, $28 30; tln«eed. oil cake. $2>«; corn, oil cake. $20. GRAIN — WHEAT — Although halted several times dur ing the session in their efforts to force prices toward .< lower level, bear operators, realising that they had new? and genera] sentiment in thusir favor, pecsistently hammered the market all day and closed it a full cent lower than it was en Saturday. One of the Influences which afforded a temporary check to this downward movement was a decrease of J».oor> bushels In th.- \-is!bl» supply figures, where x million bushels increase hart been expected. It was found that local calculations had not allowed for the million bushel loss In the quan tity on lakes, which accounted for the wide- discrepancy between the estimate and the official figures. In re* fleeting this bullish Influence prices advanced about 'iQNc. and for a time showed considerable steadiness, but eventually yielded again to selling pressure and cloyed weak at the lowest point of the day. The forenoon operations were, with few exceptions, on a line with the bearish developments of the afternoon, being influ enced by a weak Fct of cables and world's shipments of v 009.000 bush. compared with R. 330.000 bush last week. Still another influence of early importance on the bear side was the weakness of Northwest mar kets and clear weather in all parts of the spring wheat belt, suggesting 1 somewhat larger movement, wltti more activity among threshers. Foreign houses also sold considerable wheat on th» report that c,er- my contemplated raisin*? the duty on wheat and rye English markets closed *id lower. and Paris came 8 to 20 points lower. At Berlin there was a drop of Noi'. marks, and! at Antwerp *4 franc decline while Budapaat was unchanged Export busi ness mounted to !•.•{ loads. The amount on passage showed a decreane of 640.000 hush, bat there whs an in crease of 1.628.000 bush In the English visible. Including 112.000 hush Increase at Liverpool. In New -York stocks there was a gain fee the week, of 759.000 bush, including 412.000 hush of No 2 red. The latter stock Is now 1.10!). 44V) bush, compared with 4.475.800 last year. Spring wheat receipts were, about 400.000 bush smaller than a year ago, and winter wheat arrivals almost twice as large. During the last fifty-four days receipts at Kan - sas City have exceeded the shipments by only 7*J2.000 busk Quotations of earn wheat, fob afloat basis, were; as follows: No 2 red. NOW York. B1*s<"; No 1 hard. Chicago »T» . old N • 1 Northern, Duluth, S7?»": No 1 Northern. New-York. 8-1 %c: No 1 Northern, Chicago, K3^c: No - hard. Chicago. W%c CORN— lnstead of following the lead of wheat the corn market developed a good deal of Independent ' strength, and closed He net. higher. There was an export business of about 57 loads reported, mostly at the West, where October corn was in very good demand from shippers, advancing a cent- a bushel and closing at top point of the day. It was also s?ld that a rather bullish crop estimate put out by a prominent New-York house had its influence on sentiment throughout the West. Bear influences, although quits abundant, had little or no effect upon the market. Ar rivals at Chicago were 801 cars, against ,'.ii" estimated, and for Tuesday 770 cars were expected. World* ship ments were 800.000 bush larger than last week, but the amount on passage showed a decrease of. 340.000 bush. The visible supply increased 395,000 bush, and there was an increase of i.5.600 bush in the New- York stock. No 2 corn close,! 4?e elevator and 47' Sic fob afloat; No 2 white 4» 7 sc, and No 2 yellow. 4!>'«c, middle of October.- .OATS Trade in oats was on a very small scale, and the market showed moderate steadiness in sympathy with corn. Visible supply figures Increased .".Hi>,<m»i bash. There was an increase also of 125.000 hush In the local stock of oats. N<* 2 oats closed 2.V»c; No 3 oats. 25c; n.i 2 white 27'ic: No 3 white. 26 s ic; track mixed, '-'"' "7- track white. 2«'<'sS4c: So 2 white, clips. 2SV2C RYE Market firm; No 1 Western. SOVic, and No 2 West an, aOc both fob afloat; State rye, 56©56 c c i f New- York carlots BARLEY — Market firm; feeding. 44® 4Sc and malting r.4'»tVJc. both c i f Buffalo. .-. .: .BtTCK*- WHEAT — Market steady; quoted: 61gf65c c 1 f New-York. NEW-YORK PRICES. . | Satur- Wheat: Opening. Highest. Lowest. Cloning, day. October BOY. ">" ; * SO SO SI December ...;.. 62 18-16- ST. R2 5-16 82H S.IH March s>; Si; *•""** S s '* *'•'- May 8511-1685% 85!4 85% 86 Corn : October — — — . ♦«** < fil » December 42 7-16 424 42% 434 42'» Hay 414 414 41*« 41'j 4l', a Lard: October — — — *7 so $7 65 CHICAGO PRICES. Wheat: _ October — — — '"^ •"'■» November 77 77V* 78 11-16 76,» 77 i December « Ii 7S 77 * 77 i rs'. Corn : October i 404 4l»* 40H 41'» 40' i November 37 S ?7\ 37% 87% 37 »i December . 34 74 35 34 13-16 S3 34 7 i Oats; October 224 22 1 224 224 22H November 224 22 224 2C4 22 I -i December 224 22% 224 22?« 22 5 Lard: October _ $7 324 $7 324 $7 324 $7 334 $7 274 January 700 7 024 «97' 700 695 Ribs: October „._ . 5. nt> 8 124 800 810 7 974 January. .6 324 6374 6 824 8 324 6 334 Pork: October 17 00 17 00 15 00 l«00 IT 00 January 11974 11874 1185 1183 11874 Receipts of breadstuffs at Interior polrU in thousands, last three ciphers <000> omitted, flour bbls. grain bush, as follows: Flour. Wheat. Corn. Oats. Rye. Barley. Chicago 21 101 570 4SS 4 lii» Milwaukee 12 33 24 23 3 155 Minneapolis „... ... — (is!» 60 us '4 129 Duluth I — 42 0 — 3 21 St. Loui* — 153 >«h 103 — — Kansas city — 3"<rt 4,'< 29 — — Toledo — 63 M 14 1 — Detroit — , 2 8 « 17 — — Pecria ...~. — 8 93 >-2 — — Totals . _.... 35 1.578 935 824 15 414 Shipments from these points: Chicago _ 25 25 Ml 827 1 20 Milwaukee .28 1 1 HI) — im Mirneapolis . .61 88 1 12 2 13 Uuluih ........ — 5 1 — — — St. Louts ....... — 43 70 28 — — Kansas City........ — 7S 5 7 — Toledo — 88 88 80 1 — l>etrolt 2 2 4 IS — - l'eoria _. — 4 50 «i- — — Totals 116 247 1,060 680 4 172 Receipts at Atlantic ports: New-York 41 484 286 234 1 6 Boston 2 .ho 17 22 — — Philadelphia — 30 88 36 — Baltimore ......... X, 85 161 46 4 10 New-Orleans ....... 2 320 1 Totals 70 582 ' 47!* \ 83» 5 10 Exports from Atlantic ports: New-York _.. 10 123 17 243 — — Boston 11 48 11» — — ■ Philadelphia — 27 112 14 — — Newport New« .... — 40 20 80 — New Orleans ...... — 32 146 • — '_. Totals 21 270 420 3»7 ■ metals— from a farther decline of 25 points in H-Bserner pig iron In Pittaburg. th« metal market pre sented very little change of consequence. Pig Iron was easy here, but nut quotably lower on the basis of $»coy *■'• Lake copper, though somewhat lower abroad, held steady here on light offerings and closed quiet at $16 75 »«li. Lead was dull at $4 374, and spelter very dull at $4 O«H!3$4 124. Tin in London declined £1 17«» Sid for spot and £1 7s 6d for futures; this influence prompted a similar dron here and caused an easier feeling on the basis of $2!%50^52». The brokers' price for lead was $4 374, and for Epelter $4 10. MOLASSES AXUHYRI-fS— A fairly steady, but quiet market prevailed for molasses to-day. Offerings were wer« C ,, and buyers were holding off. At the close prices were unchanged. Syrups ruled dull at old prices. Quota fair" i^i?"' - Nevv O . r js an f <-entrifußal. common. 12©13 c: fair. UgMe; good. 2Qotßc; prime. 50@370; New-Orleans ettle 435.VJC; Porto Rico. 34«40T«y™ PB.P 8. common? 35<Sl'!*' fair 17fcl&c; good, l»«20c; prime, 21©24 c; fancy! OCBAN PREIOHTB Hates tar Fall tonnage ««re vXJ n ■" «ff«hore States, and a steady inquiry pre- Ind rat«° r . COaßtWlSe Vessels th o"**"** were freer, •tear,. ' .' consequence, weaker. The demand for ShteS-r. l^i'ViiV unimproved, th reqatnmanta of )e'n ,1 being UghU Rates were ,uotably lower. 48 6d .rt»2? 'h* quotation for grain to Cork for orders for Oc- It thi. ff X'K ' th " igh no actual business was reported at this figure. Quotations: To Liverpool. 4Kd; London vl'wc-.tTe -■* '"'■ l'rlst"l>l ' rlst " l> r '^' 1; I^ llh - "»<J: Huii, 6%d Rouerdam "n ; A i' tWer Ei 3%d; Ha » lbur "f- 774 pfennigs wrl^S'i" : , A T frdllm ' " c: cottOll to I'lverpool, J < >>c: r-r -^ n don oats. 2s 9d. rt in|rßi n|rß of cotton «' e <» o» «ere light, and a good fh^ mlrkel 1 ?' P"^ 1 " 01 '"■«"» »pnt up to February kept unchfn^ . * "L m P 081110 " throughout the duy at change liS I „«*«»«>«* petroleum was also without change^ "weed oil quiet, but "steady. Petroleum bbla fn bulk S4^ bUlk « **,m:, m: «««*delphla bbls. $7 40. , v .d 11. bulk, 84 66; refined cases, New-York. IS 78 cotton velfow Vto r --:c CrUd "- thlß - 3Oc prime' summer nrimr^hiJt £2. Pr "" summer yellow, 360-36 4 c; prime white, 4Oc^ prime winter yellow. 416'J2c; Unseed r.il'.jV^ " ■ r; -'-r 2c under city brands; lard oil! Provisions Pork ra ncr , M e XJM .,,,i at batuMay's Onal prices, art.- which it dropped to $IT,, and dosed dull Ht |, 0 . Th^ v tt .. r ,. ,,„«', L- a i.l tSZFEJHE "'' ll!K hoMeT " Other product, how .-xer. ruled firm all day on small hog receipts and strong VA \Z\ rir W^! 11 KWK W } t 5 th " '~ M d «"* n <l 'or November lard and ribs. . faJ <h i ard at NeW -York closed -, points s™T'~l rl*£ }"* at '■ hlra *-"- were M.OOO. with 11000 expected on Tuesday At all points there were 82.000. tic^,- «i- r ," 1; ?" oted: Mess. $14 60©515 60; family $16 50Ji$17: Bhort lear, $14 50©817 BEEF— Qulet : fjOOSIOfiO extra . India mess. |16«J17C0 .... BEKF HAMS— DuII: quoted: 1209821 . DRESSED HOGS— Firm; quoted: Bacons, -, .... jho Tb. 7',, 160 11. 71,, ■ pigs . 7*c ... ...Cl-T MEATS— Plckle.l belllea ' firm; quoted: Bnsoklng bellies, lie; 10 h,, lOOlO^e; 12 Ib it,,-- 14 Ib. '■'■ Pickled shoulders quiet; quoted. >>■-,■■ Pickled hams e&gy; quoted: H>ieit\c. . . . . .TALLOW-Qulet .-Ity 4\c; country. 4«v:, ..LARD quoted: $7 7o City lard quiet; quoted: 87 40. Refined lard firm quoted! South America. 88 76. Continent, $7 ito- Hrazll keg» *?. Wl i«? onipou «'L5 vl * t: quoted: City. fi',i©«Hc: West.m. (I'-tlljA^c STKAHINH Stead-.-, quoted: Oleo 7%c city lard stearlne. H%<SH\i-. R ICE— Busings In the rice market was confined chiefly to supplying the Immediate wants of buyers with the tone quiet but firm, at nominally unchanged prices Quota tions follow: Domestic common to low, fair. .'i 1 . ,-".- . fair to good. 4»i©sc; prime to choice s'«®r.Hc; head 6% ©6 He: Patna. 4H©6V 4C ; Jar»n, 4% 6 5c; Java, 4'*«# 4^ic; Rangoon, in I ond 292% c SCO AH— The refined market was quiet but steady. with prices unchanire>]. The trade manifested no special Interest In the cable or domestic news, being Indifferent for the present. Quotations follow: Cut loaf and crushed, 0.15 c; •! mines Mn hulf bbls only) and mould A 8c; cubes and XX Xi powdered, ,',.'joc powdered, coarse powdered and fruit powdered, 5.b5c: Eagle, confectioners' granulated, ♦•■ . Eagle. r. )a > granulated, extra fine gran ulated. 2 Ib cartons and 2 It. bags of tin.- granulated, I. me; Eagle, fine granulated, standard granulated and Diamond A. D.TBc; confectioners' A, B.6Sc; Nos 1 and 2, r>.4<>o; No 3, 5.35 c; No 4. 5.30 c: No 6, r.-T.c. No « 5.30 c: No 7. 5.10 c; \. 8, sc; No 0. 4 n't- No 10. 4.83 c; No 11. 4.SOc: Not 12 and 13. 4 75c; Noa 14. IB and IS, 4 70 In the raw eugar market there were sales of 304 v*S» centrifugal and 46 hhds muscovado, landed, at op*a market quotations, with cftartnga at the dot* rnc.ierato. Prie» » were unchanged, en th« basil of -I'ic for cen trifUaTaJ. tHo for mu»covad» as 4*c {or molasses sugar. NEW- YORK DAILY TRIBUNE. TUESDAY. OCTOBER 9, 1900. The official cables reported beet sugar In ismOnn «b nuiet but steady, with current month delivery quoted at fes lOHd and next month 8b t»\d. NAVAL STORES. A quiet and uninteresting market was prevalent in spir it* to day at un,-hnnr«: prices. The undertone, however, remains firm, owing to the light supply on hand. Rosin •ms qtltet and unchanged. Quotations, follow T\R KARiilarK. 82: do oil bhls, $4 25. ROSIN '•oriinmn to Rood strained. $1 47<i'S$l 50; E, 81 7.-, '-. 81 80; >:. »1 .-.-, H. Si l»o. l. $1 <X>, X, »C 06; M, 8320; N. 8250: W <;. SJ s». w W, $3 25. STOCK ON HAM). !!o«m bhls 31.056 Bplrltl turpentine, bbls 202 Th-. 1,1,1s tKi. f'harieston. Oct. B. —Turpentine firm. ?.(\U;r askei. Roata unchanged. Savannah. Oct. 8. — Spirits turpentine firm, 37c; receipts. sales, SSSbbls; exports, r.tlT l,bls. X, sin firm. H. Be ipta, 2,888 11,1s, siiles, 1,414 bbls; export?, 2.2.M New Orleans, Oct. B— Receipts nsln. 55 bbls. Wilmington, Oct. B.— Spirits turpentine steady. ;>ti' 4 'B .it.",, . reoelptß, ">1 bbls, I'.,, sin steady, *1 15981 20; re celpts, 280 bbls. <'nido turpentine fjuist. $1 in'iSL'l"; re oelpts. 02 bhl = . Tar firm. *1 4i>; recelpta, 200 1.V.1h. 1- : on 'i t. S\ — Turpentine spirit:-, 2lis V.id. COUNTRY PRODUCE MARKETS. New-York. October <», 1900. BEAKS AND PEAS There Is still quite a shortage of marrow beans, and the few lots that arrive are quickly placed at higher prices; sales to-day at $2 43.tJ52 SO and market firm. Medium are Inquired for arid have had a few sales at •*'- 15. The trade is being a little ' better supplied with pea beans, hut. there is, no surplus stock as yet. and the price is steady, at $2 10. Red kidney Uelri a little higher In some cases. Other State beans show no quotable change, Green and Scotch peas slightly weaker, owing to a further decline ;n the West. We quote: neans, marrow, choice. -ier bush. $2 4.'i©s2 50; •1" medium, choice. $2 15; do pea. choice. $2 TO; do red kidney, choice. $2 2;.. do white kidney, choice, $2 30; do yellow eye. choice, $2 25; do black turtle soup, choice, $1 83; do limn, California, $3 tilt; green peas, bags, $1 25. do Scotch, ha«s. $1 80. BUTTER There was very quiet trading again to-day. Th,. weather continued mild anil unfavorable, and with plenty of stock of all kinds on offer sellers were forced to concede *ac on. nearly .all classes of .stock. • Extra frei.il creamery BOld genially at 20'.2'\ and market is a little unsettled at that, though most holders take a more hope ful view of the situation, Other grades did not move to any extent, and storage creamery had very dull sale. Imitation creamery and fresh factory still lean in buyers' favor. We quote: Creamery, extras, per tb. -20 1: ic: d" firsts. !9®2oc; do thirds to seconds. IHfj ls'j.- , creamery. Jun.», extras, -jo. ; do seconds to tirsts. I7HOI9Hc; State dairy, half firkin tuba, fancy, 19 1 s02Oc; do firsts. IS# 19o; State dairy, tubs, seconds. 17*5 17 -* c; (to thirds, 15«J 16c; Stale dairy, tins. »t^, l«i}f liic^ Western Imitation Creamery, finest, Iti'. s !g'l7c; do lower grades. l.VgtOe; Western factory, June make, finest. 16c; do held, fair to good, 15®15Hc; do current packed, finest. 15c; do seconds, H'.-,-. factory or dairy, lower grades l3Vi@l4Vic; reno vated utter, fancy. 180 18 He. — Supplies of large full cream cheese were quite, likl;i to-day, but there was an. almost • .-• In ah -.•-.-.. of demand from exporters and home trade buyers, and values entirely nnmtnal. In absence <jf hn-ineFs there Is no basis for changing quotations from last week, but '.' is doubtful if any quantity of large cheese can be placed at lie. Small sizes also dull and lower, with free offers to sell fancy colored or white at lie, and only a few small sales reported on that hasia. ■ Skims dull and weaker In sympathy with the general market. At Water town on Saturday sales 1.000 boxes large at HH-VgiWic. ruling lO'._.r-, and small at 10-"-;gilc. At Canton la-Re sold at lOV-c and small at It>»4c. Liverpool cable, 58a 6d for colored and 52a fid for white. We . quote: Stare, full i-rcam. large, colored. fan»-y. lie; do whlto. fan.-y. . lie: do good to choice, iin..'u io.\,- ; do common to fair, 91;'?9 1 ;'? 10c; do small, colored, fancy, lie; do small, white, fancy. 11c; do good to. choice. 10' .'(il0-i 4 ,- : rio poor to fair, 9>j® I'"*", light skims, small, choice, Jt',!<j«> 2 ,-; do large. choice. 9^9y c: part skims, prime. B®S'- 2 c; do fair to good. ..',V7'.,c; do common. 3@4c; full skims. 2<Si2' 2 c EGGS — Warm weather keeps trade chiefly on fresh gathered eggs, and high grades of these are firm. Colder weather is reported near at hand and receivers expect this, will divert trade to refrigerator* and give an an»pl» supply, so that there Is not much disposition to advance prices. Refrigerators held firmly but quiet. We quote: Jersey. State and Pennsylvania, fancy selected white, 23c; do fancy selected brown, 22,- ; d,, f:»nev. mlied. 2t>® -Ie; do average good. lO'Stttc; Western, loss off. 20c. do fancy, at mark. 19«19^c; dn average best. n^lStje; do fair to good, 15@17c: dr. common. 13<?14e; refrigerator goods, prime to fancy. 17'ul7' -.„ . lower grades, 13tTl«liiC. FRUITS — FRESH — Receipts of apples continue large; •weather a unfavorable. c.nd much of th» stock Is out of condition; a little fancy table fruit meets a light Inquiry, but otherwise holders are pressing for sales without •nuf.-h regard to price. Pears am quiet; fancy table stock ban about steady: ordinary kinds and qualities very dull. Peaches sell fairly well when fancy, but there re few such, and the medium and lower grades generally shown are dragging heavily. Plums In light supply, hut quiet; price* without material change. Delaware grapes of fancy quality meet some inquiry, but common kinds of these and nearly all other varieties are dragging and weak. Cranberries in moderate receipt, but there is some Stack on hand and th* unfavorable weather la causing more pressure to sell; trade Is dull and the tone barely steady. We quote: Apples", fancy, soft, red varieties, $225®<3; usual red fall sort?. $1 2T>@sl 75. fall green varieties, $1 50©$2; King. $1 50«52; Twenty Ounce. $1 25 'ikl 75; Baldwin. 811298125; Greening. $1 25<t$l 50; hard varieties, ordinary. $1; inferior stock, 50<573c; pears. Bartlett, per bbl. $25*3 50: do Boston, per box. $2 75; do Seckel. per bbl. $2 50@5.1: do. per keg, $l@s2; do Beurre '■ -■ per bbl. $1 sO#s2: do Sheldon. $1 25i;$l 50. other desirable varieties. $l'Tisl 50: inferior stock. 50c@$l; quinces. State, per bhl. $2'as2 50; peaches. Ohio and Michigan, per bush basket.. 50"g$l 50; do State, per car rier, (VV'aSl 25; do. small baskets, 30S«0c; Pine Island, per carrier. $198225; do. per basket. SOcQjf!; Jersey, per basket 30;g75e; Western Maryland, per carrier. ">c<jj; $1 50; do. p'r basket. 30975 c; plums, fancy varieties, per basket. 2.*.'a':i'.c: do Rein* Claude and Ureen Gage. 289 25, . do Damson, 25Q35c; prunes, per basket, 230 4Ue; plums, inferior stock, 10<515c; gr?pes. Western New- York, Delaware, per basket. S®l2c; do per to basket crate. $16$1 25; Niagara, per basket, 7igßc; do. per 10 basket irate. 85c351; Concord, per basket. <1'3.7c: Catawba. per small basket. S'&kc; do red varieties,- 7®7'ac; up river. Delaware, per carrier, 65990 c; white varieties. 33975 c black. 251J43.': black, per small basket, S'i<36c,- Wine grapes. In trays', per 10" Th. Delaware. $2; white. $1 23®, ISO; black, 8108125: plums. Colorado, per crate, $1 50}* $2 25; cranberries, Cape Cod, per bbl. $strss 75; do, per crate, $1 GsGsl 80. FRUITS — DRIED — The market for evaporated apples continues quiet and easy. Most of the- fruit lacks quality and quotations are full. Not much doing in sun dried or other grades of apples. Small fruits in light supply and firm. California fruit selling fairly. We quote: Apples, evaporated, fancy. 5 14 ©6 c; do choice, 4Vi@3c; do prime. 4@4^ic; do common. 3@3%c; do sun dried, sliced, ;>/c:4,-, do quarters, 263' ie; do chops, per 100 Tb. BOc9fl; do cores and skins. 2.">'.j.70c. Peaches. Southern, peeled, fir. Cherries, 11912 c. Raspberries, evaporated. 17H ( S18c; do Bun dried. 16917 c. Huckleberries, ir,c Blackberries, 4^© sc. Apricots, California, Moorpark. 8914 c; do Royal, H# BVic. Peaches, California, unpeeled, 7"§9c. Prunes, Cali fornia. 3*4@7Vic. HOPS — There is a little business doing from day to day, but no material expansion to th* demand. Prices are held steady, possibly firm on the better grades, and there is no disposition to hurry matters.. We quote: State. 1000, par rt,. itl!ial!*c. do 1890, choice. 13V>914c; do good to prime 12@13c; do common to fair, 10911%e; Pacific Coast, 1900. 16918 c; do 1899, choice, 18 914 c; do good to prime. H4ui2'sc; do poor to fair, B©Uc; State "i Pacific Coast, lv.»«. s*i9c; old olda. S9Sc. POULTRY— ALIVE— To-day and to-morrow will be ob served by the Hebrews as their Feast of Tabernacles, and with no trade the live poultry market is nominal. There Is a very large accumulation on hand. Jobbers alone hav ing lti to 18 carload?, and when buying commences again next Wednesday morning much lower prices are likely to prevail. Last sales were: Fowls, ' lOc , chickens, 6c; roosters. 6c; turkeys, 9@loc; ducks. 40980 c; geese, $litf $123; pigeons, 15@20c DRESSED — Supplies of West ern dressed poultry were fairly large to-day, but propor tion of fowla and chickens light. Weather was damp and unfavorable and demand alow, but the lighter supply of fowls held prices steady m lOH&llc Western chickens generally held at Me for average beet scalded, With exceptionally fancy a shade higher, but dry licked Chickens irregular in quality and few lots good enough to exceed 10c. Spring turkeys in fair supply, but quality generally ooor and few lots good enough to bring top prices. Western ducks unchanged. Nearby spring Chickens, spring ducks and squabs entirely nominal in ■ absence of fresh receipts. We quote: Turkeys, rpring, dry pick.-!, selected. 129>18c; do scalded Il(gl2c; do average run. Un m, . do common, 6<bh<-; old, average best, 8910 i broilers. Philadelphia. y*e; spring chickens. Phila delphia, selected large, It;^i7c; do mixed sizes, . 13<G15c: do large, 13&14 c; do Pennsylvania, fair to good, 116 12'tc: tio Western, dry picked, large. 1S»c; do scalded. We; do medium weights, 9®9^ic; do Southwestern, average beat, 9',i<-; do Western and Southwestern, fair to good, fc4H>c; fowls. Stale and Pennsylvania, good to prime, lie; do Western dry picked, average prime. 10Vi®llc; do scalded, l&glO'.«c; do Southern and Southwestern, prime, lO'.ic; do Western, fair to good, 9H©loc; old roost ti'fjti'ic, ducks, Eastern and Long Island, spring. >-• ; do Western, spring, 79& C; geese. Eastern, spring, white. 14 4ilsc; do dark. ll'i/12'2c. squabs, choice, large, white, per dozen. |22695260; do mixed, $1 C2ssl NT; do dark, *1 25 9*l . GAME— Grouse In fair supply and only moderately ac tive. Partridges rather plenty, but bulk urrlving out of order. Other game unchanged. We quote: Partridges, pel pair, $1 50981 75. grouse, undrawn. 90ci&$l; do drawn. CO@73c; woodcock, ?10$1 25; English snipe and golden plover, frozen, per dozen. $2 9698290; do fresh, $150; grass plover, frozen, $1 .10S$2 26; do fresh, $l'ffsl 35; wild ducks. Mallard, per pair, 85978e: do Teal, bluewlng, 3"® 40c; do greenwlng, 2r>fj3oc; venison, freFh saddles, per lb, 25980 c; old saddles, 28 POTATOES AND VEGETABLES— Irish potatoes in quite liberal supply and weak. Sweet potatoes In heavy receipt to-day and lower. Orange County onions plenty and dragging at lower figures. Other onions In moderate supply nnd without material change. Cabbages steady. Oiullflowers in light supply, but mostly poor and drag- King at low figures. Celery dull and weak. String beans low. Tomatoes neglected. Squash and turnips weaker. Other vegetable* an quoted We quote: Potatoes, Long Island, per bbl, $1 :<74*l 62; do State and Western, per IXO rt>. $1 ar.-ffJi r."; do Jersey. $198137; sweet potatoes. Jer sey, per bbl. *1 50082; do Southern. $1 25; onions, small, white, per blil. $2i?i.sr'.: do Eastern, white. $10091880; do red and yellow, 8194150 do Orange County, white, per bug, 7.">e(£»s2; do yellow, 50c©$l; do red. .Vn-©sl . do State and Western. In bulk, per 150 Tb. red and yellow, $10 $1 25: Brussels sprouts, per quart. 46>8e; cabbages, per 100, $2&53; cauliflowers, per bbl. 25c&$l 50; cucumbers, per bbl. (25 55; cucumber pickles, per 1.000. $lijf*ri. car rots, per bbl. 75ct)Sl; corn, per 100. BOefMl; celery. per dozen. 100401 . eggplants, per bbl, 7.'.,-i/$l 25; lima beans, ;■■ bag Boc9sl 25; lettuce, per case, $lfjis2; peppers, »per bbl, 50c9f1; pumpkins, per bbl, 40«I6Oc; string beans, Long Island and Jersey, per bag. 20940 c: do Southern, per basket, 25940 c; squash, Hubbard. per bbl. 73r(ii$l: do marrow, 80975 c: turnips, Russia, per bbl, 70980 c; toma tots, per box, 20940 c MlLlv— The Milk Exchange price for standard quality is 3c per quart. HAY AND STRAW— HAY— The buying sentiment was light to-day, as threatened rain kept a number of Mon day's usual buyers away. Supplies keep full, and prices ar.. not quotably Changed from the run of last week. Daalura look for a more animated market this week, as there is expected to be, as has been noted, a good line nt attention directed lo filling of Government bid! '■■■' portions of 150 to 200 carloads for Manila's requirements. In the general demand there exlrts much grumbling over th« disproportion Of desirable grades in the dally supplies, and most of the Invoices of small Imles are in. 11 drug gil condition. The receipts of hay at New-York for September were 32.377 tons: for August, 42.fi47; for July, :{.">,44«1; for June. 39.5411. For August there was an In • < rea«e of 4,700 tons of canal hay from Canada, which waa mainly shipped to England, which reduces the gross OOUnl for thut month. We quote: Prime. large bales. per 100 Ib, !»2V<« ■.>:•,. No 1 do. B7H9MK ; No 2 do, 82H® Bfc No •■' do. n%9foc: small bales 5. under. No definite quotations for rejections or unclaaeed lots. Clover mixed, 7oa>7r« ; clover, «r.4;7<K- . . STRAW— Receipts are light and prices are linn We quote: Long rye, good to prime 70®7fic; poorer lots H.V. Receipts of straw for s-pt.iril.-i-. 4.470 tons; August. 7,0>i3; July, 7,831; June. 5,900. Receipts of hay and straw, In tons, reported at the Produce Exchange ut noon to-day: Hudson River Kail road, 400; Erie Railroad. 600; Pennsylvania Railroad. 110- Delaware, Lackawanna. and Western Railroad. 40; We*t Shore Railroad. 50; L»'hi*h Valla) Railroad, 14«: Baltimore and Ohio Railroad. 100; Central Railroad of Jersey, 20; river boats. .180; canal boats. 374; total. 1 914 tons. Receipts of straw, 70 tons by river and 88 tons by rail; total, 100 tons. , ,;.:..: Elgin. 111.. Oct. B.— Butter sold at 20Vjc on th- Elfin Board of Trade to-day at which price the . committee reported th» market firm. . Tii« output of »>-■« ••*!( »•• o*o,Boo tt. LIVE STOCK MARKET. New- York, October 8, 1900. WEEKLY RECEIPTS. -_ n "I*'- Beevi>s. Cows. Calves. Sheep. Hogs. £r r Tf r . rity 2 ,¥*> 1 1.49S 22.531 11.864 FHxtleth-st 3.807 81 3.752 13.06T, — tortleth-st — _ _ _ 14.417 "eft Shore 2.05» 41 — 6«9 — L«hlgh Valley I.VWO — — — 3.278 \\ eehawken 179 _ — — Scattering — _ $4 42 — _ Totals 11.410 12.1 5.334 M.BBS 2H..V.0 Totals last week... 12.334 230 7,'Jss 54.6ti3 %t,04» WEEKLY EXPORTS. Live Live Qrs.of Cattle. Sheep. Beef. Nelson Morris. Ss, Cevic — " — ' 2.*»0 Nelson Morris, Ss. Oceanic — — 4,400 Nf-lson Morris, Sa. Campania — — 1.924 Nelson Morris. So. Caledonian 178 — — Armour &Co So. Cevic — — 2,000 Bchwarzschlld '* Sulzberser. Sa. Cevic 420 — — Schwarzschlld .v Sulz'uerser. Ss. Man- ■ ~ r.,11 ;.. 172 — 2,330 Schwarzschild & Sulzberger. S<<. St. Louis — — 1.000 .1. Shamberg & Son. S».:Cevlc 420 — — J. Shamberg & Son. 9*. Manltou .. 372 — • — Swift & Co., s«. M.inltou — — 1.553 W. A. Sherman,. Ba> CM>au«lo 200 — — O. H. Hammond & CO.. Ba. Cale don lan — — i>"> W. \V. Braiier Co., B*. Caledonian... 200 — — Total exports 1.763 — 10.030 Total experts laM week 2,124 257 17.830 Boston exports this w«ek 2,120 000 10,115 Baltimore exports this week 7t»3 — • — Philadelphia exports thin week 3«7 — W.O Newport Ntwi exports this week 898 — — Montreal exports this week 2.525 818 — ■ To London 2.291 — 5.556 To Liverpool 3.«7rt Mi 22.713 To Glasgow ...'. 1.143 — " — T. P.ilstol r.:iH 310 — To Hull 200 — — To Manchester 440 — To Cardiff 271) — — To Southampton — — 1.800 Totals to all ports 5.3n7 1.218 30.10,", Totals to all ports last week 11,107 2.795 82,734 QUOTATIONS KOR BEDVEB. Good to choice native steers.: ,|B BOOH 88 Medium to fair native steers 4 804' 5 40 Common and ordinary native steers 4iH>(i 4 75 Oxen and sta«s 175«a45."i Bulls and cows 1 Tina 4 00 Good to choice native steers one year ago .'> 1-V<J 8 >"> BKEVRS— Receipts for two days were 264 cars, or 4.710 head. Including 52 cars to be exported alive, IR3 for slaughterers and 49 for the market, making, with the stale stock. 50 can on sale, of which 35 were nt Jersey City and 15 at Slxtie.th-st. The supply of steers rather exceeded the demand. Trade was slow from the opening to th» finish, and a decline of from Be to I.V was notei 1 . Four ears were in good prospect to hold over. Bulls and cows were in moderate receipt, and prires firm to We higher, with a good clearance. Common to choice native steers sold at 30©$5 80 per 100 Ib; Westerns at 94 HO; bulls at $2 2SSS33O, with no very good bulls offered; cows at $1 s«K«.*.t «t); stockers. at $2 60@$3 35. There was a moderate inquiry for dressed be»f at 7'*'S'.>'4i* per IT) for native Rides and iJ'z'uT 1-':1 -': for Texas beef. Liverpool and London cobles reported a steady market for United States cattle and liv- sheep. So shipments of live itock or dressed meats to-day. To-morrow the Georglc will take out 425 cattle and about 1,043 sheep tor J. Snamben & !-'"ii. 425 cattle for Sehwarzschild i Sulzberger and 6,845 quarters of beef for other shippers, the latter esti mated, and the Madiana. for the west Indies, will carry 20 sheep. Sales — J. Shamberg * Son: 14 Chicago steers. 1473 tti average, at *.") 70 per 100 m; 4 do, UM It), at $5 70; 8 do, 1329 It), at ?srtO; 21 do. 1110 TTi. at $5 45. 9 *>, 1211 n>, at $4 ski. Lit Westerns, 1272 tt). at $4 HO. Sherman & Culver: 19 Chicaso steers, 1443 Xt>. at I&5&; 1« do. 1074 rt>. at $•' 4."> 3> do. 1088 tb. at *5 45; 20 do, 107»! Ib. at *5 42*; 2 do. tills TT>. at JS ,"~^. 14 Virginia do. 13nl It), at *565; 7 do, 1314 n>. at $5 15; 7 do. 125!) lt>. at *!*. Newton & Co.: Irt West Virginia steers. 1275 Tb. at $5 15; 10 do. 1247 TT>. at *505; 8 do, 1223 Tb. at «4 73: « do. 119r> Hi at $3; 20 Vtrginia. do. 13«O m. at $5 l.">. 2t) do. 1350 Tb. at J5 15: 21 do. 1141 lb. at $5: 20 do. 1112 Tb. at *4 BO; 3 do, 1088 TV at *4 M. 4 raws, 802 It., at 12 «2>2. HcPkeraarj A Co.: is Ohio steers. 1315 Th. at 55 35: 19 do. 1288 TT.. at t'> 4.">. 1« Kentucky do. 12«r» To. at $". 4,".. 4 do, 1182 rb. at $.">.!(»; 20 do, 1087 Th. at $5 10; 2 cows. WO tb. at $1 7.V 8. Sanders: IS Illinois steers, 14.18 Tb, at $5 80: 17 do, 1252 Th at $s't>s: M do, 1135 To. at $5 10: 4 bulls. 1010 Tb, at $3 25: 2 do. 785 Th at $»; 8 heifers. 522 Tb. at 88 15; 12 cows, 1011 Tb, at $3 00; 5 do. 48li !t>. at $2 30; 5 do. 824 tb. at *2. 15 do, 725 Ib. at SI •>." John Ducey: 11 bulls. 342 Ib. at $3 23: 1 do, 1250 Ib. at $3 £0; 7 do, 824 rb, at $3 05; 1 do. 550 Tb. at $3; 13 COWS, 1013 Th. at $3 374: 1 do. 1220 tb. at $2 30; U) do. 772 Ib. at $1 75; 4 do, 888 Th. at $1 75. George Pilleiback: 8 >< atockars," 839 Th. at $835: 2 bulls. 820 Ib. at 83 10; 3 do. 717 m. at $2 90: 1 cow. 970 Tb. at $3 05: 2 do. 845 Ib. at $2 75; 9 do, 920 tb, at $2 25; 1 do, 1050 To. at $2 25; 1 do. 1030 Tt>. at $2: 1 Jo. 820 To, at $1 75; 4 do. 735 It., at $1 50. J. G. Curtis & Son: 10 "atockers," 622 IT), at $2 «O; S bulls. 74t$ rb. at $:« IS; 13 *". 75«» It', at $3: » do. 73.S tb. at $2 75; ! cow. 1030 Tb. at $2 25; 23 do. 188 tb, at $2; 4 do. 770 Tb, at »2 23; 3 do, '".47 Ib, at $1 75; 2 do. 850 Tb. at $1 65. J. H Huim & Bro. : 1 heifer. »MO Tb. at $3; 2 cows. 920 Tb. at $3 40; 1 do, 910 Tb. at $." 23: 1 do, 040 tb. at $1 75; 10 do, 707 rb. at $1 *>. 10 bulls. 842 tt. at $3 20; 2 ■?•■, «85 Th. at $2 75; 1 do. 450 Tb. at $2 25. Jelliffe. Wright & Co. : 7 bulls. 940 It), at 83 SO; 2 do. 630 Tb at $3; 20 do. 709 ID, at $3 05; 2 do. 670 Tb. at *•'(: 3 do 587 Tb at $2 35; 1 cow, !»7«> Ib. at *2 50; 5 (Jo, 900 Tb at *2 4O; 3 do, 700 Ib. at $2: 6 do. 790 Ib, at $1 «O; 3 do, 010 To. at $1 .V); 5 do, 826 Ib, at $2 35; 11 do. 838 Ib. at *1 SO. John P. Nelson: 19 cow*, 764 tb. at $180. MILCH COWS — No fresh arrivals. Only sale was a cow and calf for $27. Feeling firm for good stock and nominal quotations were $25'g555 for common to choice cows, calf Included. CALVES— Receipts for two days were 1.870 head. In cluding 100 for butchers, and. with the stale stock, there were 2 000 calves on sale, of which 1,433 were at Sizttetn st. and 5«7 at Jersey City. Veals In light supply and prices advancing fully 25c, with some sales 50c higher; good grades a trifle flrm; medium and common grades slow and steady: the pens were not fully cleared. Com mon to choice veals sold at $4 50ig$S 2.". per Mo tb: se lected lots at 884008850: little calves at.s4W»: grass erf at $^ so(gs3. and yearlings as low as $2 25: mixed and fed calves at $3 25^54; Westerns at $3 25; city , dressed veals firm at S«l2c per Ib; country dressed at 1 6910 c; little calves at 485 c; dressed graders and fed calves at 4@6c. , . _. Sales— J. H. Hume & Bro.: 13 veals. 141 Tb average, at $»"."> per 100 Ib; 60 do. 131 tb. at $8: « do, 122 Tb. at 87 25 S do 157 Ib. at $6; 8 do. 150 Ib. at $5; 4 fed calves 200 ib .it $4; 10 do, 277 Tb. at $3 50: 82 Krassers. 201 Ib. at $3; 21 do. 165 Ib, at $2 75; 3 yearlings. 330 Ib. at $"' 29 Curtis & Son: 27 veals. 149 tt>. at $8 25: 22 do. J. O. Curtis « 5..11: 27 veals. 14! i», at JS 2-V 22 do, 101 It, at SS. IB do. 137 Ib. at $5; 5 grassers. 2jS Ib, at $3; 27 do, 253 tb, at $2 7:.. 8 do, 140 "•■ at $2 30; •-.« yearlings. 204 tb. at $2 25. George Dillenback: 15 veals. 155 tb. at $8: 22 do. l-« Ib at $7 75; Ill) do. 80 Tb. at $tt 50; 4 do. 14.i Tb. at $... S mixed calve*. 225 lb. at $3 25: 27 grassers. 188 TT.. at $2 75- 5 do 280 tb, at $2«2>.-. 5 oullg. l"f> Tb. at $4. Jeliiffe. Wright & Co. : 23 veal*. 142 It, at 50; IS do. 152 Ib at 88; 20 do. 135 lb. at 88 9 14 do, 171 Ib. at $■; 2 do. 130 Ib, at $8: 10 fed calves. 17* Ib. at $3 SO; 5 do ISO It), at $3 26; 20 grassers. 17H Th. at $2 75. John P. Nelson: 8 veals. ltu lt>. at $*: ■• do. 222 tb, at ft 0 fed calve*. 240 It., at $3 .'.<• '.14 grasses. 197 tb. at $2 75: 80 Western calves. 207 tb. at $3 2."i Andrew Mullen: 31 veals. 157 Ib, at $S 40. S Judd & Co.: 121 veals. 123 tb. at $8; 11 do, 140 Ib. at $7 75; 3 do. 100 It), at 87 50; li! do, 115 tb. at $7; 6 do, 205 II) at *5 «>: IS do. 136 Th. at $4 3O: 2 do. 70 Ib. at $4: 3 fed calres. 2.53 Ib. at $4: 3 grassnre, 220 Ib. al $3; » do, 188 Ib, at $2 50. _ S. Sander*: 12 veals. 134 tb. at $2; «i do. I.Ti Ib. at $7 50- 4 do HO n> at $7: « do. 8B tb. at $5; 2 do, 120 lb. at $5; 4 do 102 "j. at $4 50: 19 mixed calves. 2.!0 lb. at 8325 28 grassers. 216 Tb. at $3: 20 do. 209 Ib, at $2 75; BO do. 189 Ib. at $2 45; 4 do, IHS Ib, at $2 50. McPherson & Co.: 20 veals. 143 n>. at $7 2.'i. 4 do, 170 tb. at $5. Harrington & Co.: 28 veals. 120 Ib, at $8 |-j',. ; 8 grass eri,. 20tf It,, at $5 25. M. Collins: 5 veals. 130 tb. at 87 30; I do, SO lb, at $4. SHEEP AND LAMBS — Receipts for two days were tts'-j cars, or 13.790 head, including 4 care for export alive. 7 butchers and 54 for^he market, of which 34 were at Jersey City and 20"j at Sixtieth On light receipts an i active demand firm; sheep of good sort selling 15®25c higher: lambi jumped up SSOftOc. All sold but one late carload. Common to choice sheep. $3 S7'iti's4 50 per MO Tb; culls at $2f(ts2.V); common {■> choice lambs at $.'«ji $0 25; Canadian lambs at $'■■?s•» 23 : cults at $3 75094 75; dressed mutton firm at .V«Ne per H»: dressed lambs at BVi ©104 c. Hales — S. Sanders: 183 Ohio lambs. 72 Ib average, at $« 25 per 100 Tb 283 Pennsylvania do. «4 Ib, at $6: 184 do. «2 th. at $5 87V 100 do, 07 tb. at $5 \2 l .t: 88 do, 98 Ib. at $4 75; 31".7 Stale do. 87 Ib. at $6; IKS do. Kfi tb. at $3 S7S; 141 do, «<> It,, at $5 85; 247 do. 61 Tb, at $5 75: 127 do, 58 Ib, at $."..■.»> 17 do 52 It', at $5: 10 culls. 57 Ib. at $3 75; 18 do. 54 Ib, at $4; 20 Ohio sheep. 102 Tb. at $4 50; 7 State do 1<>:! It' at $4 50: 9 do. m tb, at $4 ."7 V. 43 do. 98 Ib. hi $4: 62 do. 97 it,, at $H 7.".. 3 do. 7« Ib. at $3 90; 34 do. 85 IT, at $3 ;(.-.. 33 do, 811 Ib. at $3: 55 Pennsylvania do, I"* 1 Hi. at $4: 6 do, 105 tb. at $3. McPherson & Co.: 203 Virginia lambs. «5 tb. at 85 874; 168 State do 70 IT', at $5 70; 103 Buffalo do, 64 rb. at $5 30: 31 VlrsinH sheep. SO tb. at $4 25: 124 Ohio do. 103 tb. at $4 35: r>B Buffalo do. 97 Tb. at $3 50; 37 State sheep and lambs. 67 rb. at $4. Harrington & Co.: 7<! State' lambs. 68 rb. Nt $«: 124 Buffalo do. «5 tb, at 80 75; i«) Buffalo sheep, 104 Tb. at $4 25; 130 Kentucky do. lit! rh. at $4: 24 State sheep and lambs, 70 rb. at $4 25: 10 Buck* «05 Ib. at $3 25. Newton & Co 230 Virginia lambs, til tr», at $5 83; 162 do, m it, at $.".85; 252 do. >'2 Ib, at $."..'.'>; 173 Ken tucky do, <:_' tb. at $5.-.<>; 102 Ohio do, «7 Tb. at $5 35; 7* Indiana do 88 Th. at $5 «to. 288 do. 63 Tb. at 85 3.*.; P7 Kentucky sheep. 100 Tb. at 8460; 3 do, UK; Ib. at $"; 77 Ohio do, lmi Ib. at $4 12'!: » Virginia do, 102 Ib, at $4. m; do, 95 rb at $3 7:.. « do, 80 lb. at $3: 28 Indiana d.. 103 Tb at $4 50; 88 do 104 Ib. at $4: 4 bucks. 140 Ib, at 83. D. Harrington: 114 State lambs, 71 Th. at 8825; 208 do. 71 Ib, at 80 12' i, 218 Michigan do. 72 Th. at $« 20; 64 State sheep 97 Ib. at $4 23: 28 do, 70 lb. at .<:; 7." M. Collins: MO State lambs. 74 tb, at $'!: 2<*> Buffalo do, (VI lb. at $3 73; 10! Ohio do. 58 tb. at $5 12 1*:1 *: 57 State cheep 102 tb at $4; S8 Buffalo do, s<» Tb. at $3 75 ; 72 Ohio do. 88 Ib at $3 50. Tr.im ft Shannon 589 Pennsylvania lamh*. IB* Ib, at $3 75; 75 do. »'3 it, »■ $5 73; «]» do. •"."> tt,. at $5 25; "'> Pennsylvania sheep, 90 Ib. at $3 50; 24 do, 88 It), at St; 23 culls. 72 IT. at $2 80; 17 do. 80 It, at $2. 8, Judd & Co.: 122 Kentucky lambs, 77 rt.. at 88 25, 20*. State d'>. «3 It, .it $5 73: Tii Kentucky sheep. 12» Tt). at 84 25; 28 State do »o Ib, ••■ *:<?*'. 84 do, 84 Ib, at $3. J. H. Hume & Bro.: 89 Vermont lambs. S3 Tb. at 50 12 1*:1 *: ISO State do. 67 It., at 85 80; ltW do. 73 Ib. at $3 90; 197 do, «3 tb. at $5 60; 30 do. 39 Tb. at $5 25; i do, 51 It, at $6- 13 State sheep. 108 tb. at *4; «1 do, 91 To, at $2 87 V 12 culls 72 Tb. at $2. 18 Vermont sheep. 109 tt>. at $1. George Dlllenbaclt : 200 Canada lambs. 85 Tb. at $* 25: 2«M do. •■* Tt>. at $«• 188 do, TO Ib. at $«; 11 State rheep. 104 It., at $3 .V> ■'elllfTe. Wright * Co.: IM State lambs, «3 Th. at $110; 101 do. 70 Ib at $0; 103 Vermont do. 68 tb. at $5 80; 8 State sheep, ins Tb. at $4: 0 do. 72 Ib. at $3 50. Andrew Mullen: 19 State lambs. 72 Ib, at $i'> 25 ; 8 State sheep, ii»» rb, a , $4 12H. Hogs Receipts for two days. 754 cars, or 13,3*1 head. Including 8 ram to he sold. Slow with a:> easier feeling for all weights. Sellers estimated that ordinary to choice hona would sell at $5 45©55 TO per 100 Ib: but no ISlae were reported before 'Change. Country dressed weak, at 7©B'»c per Ib for medium to light w-lghts. Sales— S. Judd 4 Co. (late yesterday): 274 Western hogs, 144 rb average, at $5 «> per 100 Tb OTHER MARKETS BY TELEGRAPH. Chicago. Oct. B.— Cattle— Receipts. 19.000 head. In cludlnr 2,.V» Westerns and 650 Texans; steady to strong: butchers' stock strong: Westerns about steady; Texans higher. Natives Beat on sale to-da.v 4 carloads at $'". ■pod to prime steers. $5 50«S$fl: poor to medium. $4 sojr $r>4s; selected feeders slow, $3 754*4 80; mixed stackers w«ak, $2 6Oes;iU3. cows. $2 rtstfs4 23: heifers, $2 73«4tW; canni-rpi steady, $2#s2 50; bulls steady. $2 3O^s4 40; calves steady. |4frJtl; Texans receipts. $0 50; best on wale to day 1 car at $3 7O; Texas fed steers. $4 10»$4 85; Texas grass steer M . $3 30<jf$4: Texas bulUi. $2 sO<es3 25. Hogs— Receipts to-day. ;i."..ih«» head: to-morrow. 23.000; left ov«r. 4 00O; strong, active, top, $5 42'». mixed and butchers. $4 <«Ti«rss 40 good to rholce heavy. $4 0A985 40; rough heavy. $4 ROOM 90; light. $4 9OiQs3 42*4 ; lulk of sale». J5 lu'as;. 30. Sheep -Receipts, lU.OOO head; rheep J'/L"'* I *'"- lambs lOfi-I.V higher: good to choir*, wethers. $3 80f?$4 flo : fair to choice mixed, $3 400i53 W); Western i,T£± *"""•»»•». Texas sheep. $SCO(BSSSO; native lambs. $4 a&esft 40; Western lambs. $4 75*55 16. d""'!*!!*!!. Oct. B.— Ho« active, strong. $4 268 55 40. cattTe - active. 89*138ju JB. Kiwfl strong.- U!g*e*. • 88»Ma> Lambs active, higher. $3 25985 90. Last Liberty. Oct. B.— Cattle steady: extra, $5 503*5 75: prime. $5 25555 50; common. $3 25553 75. Hogs steady: extra tine, heavy. $5 5098S 55; assorted, mediums. $5 V»0 $.145; best Yorkers, IB 40; Ihaht Torkers. $308 $5 35; grasses. $5 3T-j?sr. 30; pigs. as to quality. 88#85 25: Toughs. $3 50«54 85.. Sheep steady: choice wethers. $40 ♦4,15: commom 81 90QIC .•*: choice* lambs. 843808&OU. common to good. $3©s4 75; veal calve*. $5 l*t<ff*K 30. East Buffalo^ N. V., Oct. ».— Receipts— CaXUo. 12.234 cars. sheep and lambs. 47 cam; hone, !C car». 9>lpiaents — Cattle, US cars: sheep and lamb*. 20 cars; hogs. 47 cam. Cattle — General trade steady, with lower and easier basis on undesirable grades. Good to best smooth fat export cattle of desirable quality. $:► 00353 «>: »F*>d to best, $5 10 WS.-1 36 tiilppinK steer*. $B 4CQSS.6U; export bull* cbolrt extra, 8498* 25; good choice butcher steers. $4 .*)«** 7.1: good, to be** butcher stenrs.. $4.23394 50; good to best fat bulls. $3 .100*4 75; feeder bulls.. 8C 754»83: York Slate bulls. 82 50e$2 75: «001 to bent fat heifers. fifiHTM. fair to good, heifers. $3 r,ii<j??4; fat cotm. choire to extra. $3 !H>> 'dt*; fa" cows, common to fair. $1 7"t(»2 -?> : feedirg stee*-*, good to extra. JS.r.o6s4 10: fair to good. tSW3 25. Canada stock steers. $3 40-fi*4: stock calves Mlcl>l«an. chcrtcw to extra. $3 26«tt.Vi; stock bulls. 42 50@53; calves, good color stock. $3 sO{?s4; do fair to (ir'xt. «2.'.<i*»rV common Michigan stockers, $.'t@s.t2s: Michigan heifers. *.'{ .".o'a*;: ST.. fresh cows, choice to extra good bag. $So*» $K0; Rood to choice. tTWI": spdngisra. choice to extra. $42@$riO; common and poor cow*. $IS4s2(>; cows and springers, common to good. $233530. Calves — <7holc« to wxtra. $7 r.o^.JT 75; good to choice. $7957 50; heavy, fed calves. *.l .-.i»*i*4; grass. «.t*Js3 -V>. Sheep and lambs stronger; bulk of good lambs sold. $Ssoess «0. with bunch or two fancy, $."> 7.'. good to choice. 89 25©55 9O: fair to good, $4 2.Virss 25; mixed sne»p. choice to -.xtra. *4'as4 10; good to choice. .«.".. *..-.-!( *4: wethers. |4<rs4 25: yearlings, chotce to extra. *4 2.'.'as4 50; export ewes. $3 «s'Ss4 20; Canada lambs. $.Vf?ss 70. it->hh. 10«15c lower; heavy. ST, 30<tCf 35.: with two fancy devk« at 85 «•: mixed, me.ll - urns. $5 sO*rSs SB; i hole- corn York«r«, $5.. generally, with some sales at $5 45: pigs. *", 25: grassers. $5 25'o$-"» 3o; roughs $♦ To<»*4 W; <a. .oas4. THE STATE OF TRADE. Buffalo. Oct. Spring wh»at. No 1 hard. spot, old | i->-r!->ads «**»<■: No 1 Northern, spot. old. S5 4 »c; winter j wheat nominal; No 2 red. 77c: mixed. 7«4c: No 1 white. lie. Corn stronger: No 2, yellow. 4«*«c: No 3 yellow. , 48 .ic; No 2 corn. 4.'.\«4«c. No 3 corn. 454«45»4c: No 3 corn 454<^45 t r«c. Oats steady; No 2 white. 37.-: No 3 white. 2«'4c; No 4 white. 2.V;,-. No 2 mixed. 244 c: No 3 mixed. 24c Barley closed unsettled, range being from 494 cto 57c- Rye dull. No 1. on track. 57c asked. Flour i>r»ady. Canal freights firm; wheat. 2\c. corn. 2':c: oats lc- barley. 2 ! Sc; rye, 2Nc. flaxseed. 33 l *c to New York. Chicago. Oct. B. The leading future* ranged as fal- , lows: Wheat. No. 2: Opening. Highest. Lowest. Closing. October 78% 7«% 714 7h\ November 7743774 77?. 7t5»» 7«P» December 77\-87S 7W7SW • 77* 774577* I Corn. No. 2: October :.. 4O' t 41 '» 4«Mi „_„ 41^ November 87*«S7H 37 ■» 3T> 37>4*r.7H December 34 7 « 35^354 314 -i-WAt - * Oats. No. 2: October ''24 22 1 * —4 ""^ Novemb f r'::.'.:.224?rz:n 22»i^24 2249224 SHO^^ December 225«-. > 2\ 22\ Sifik _22%O22lk Mess pork, per bb l : October $1700 $17 81«OO »1« 00 November 11 !»7V 3 »•• 11 *«'.» U•? January 11 »24 12 ' M) 11 *• 11 81 Lard, per 100 It): October 7 324 7 35 7 324 TEH November 7 27 1 7 324 7 27 •• >_ -> » January 7 00 7 024 6 9.4 188 Short ribs, per 100 Id:. October 8 00 •» 15 «0O S 10 November 7 a" 4. 7 43 "374 7 1<» January -8 Xl"* «374 6 324 « -■• cash quotations were as. follows: Flour Heady; No 3 spring wheat. US .®77Hc; No 2 red", 77.-.T" 1 . .No 2 corn. 40»it»414c: No 'i yellow. 41H ( 5414c; No 2 oats. 224® 22-^c: No 2 white -4 4 u-f.'v. N.i 3wh!u, Sjg-JV'ao; No - rye. We; fur to choice malting. 48«5ftr; So 1 flaxseed. $15S; No 1 N...rth western, *1 S(VJ*I <<» prime timothy Feed, $4 30984301 mew pork, per bbl. $1.) 0O&S16: lam. per 100 Ib, $7 jirs7: > -1; short ribs sides (loose). $!«aV '•^>- dry salted shoulders based*. o-.-i<iS. . t-r»rt clear sloes (boxed). $8 4.V-. >■>.-,.-.. On the Produce Exchange tf>-Ua» th« butter market was firm: creameries. l*<j.S>< . uairie*. 13^l8i:; cheese firm. lO I **!! 1 !'-. eggs ;irm. fresh. We. Cincinnati. Oct. &— Flour steady: fancy. » 40£$a .-: family, »2 UO«?s3 30. Wheat arm; No 2 red. .8 !«. Corn easy; No 2 mixed. 42\»#42*c. Oata firm; No 2 mixed. 24c. Rye quiet; No 2. 57c. Duluth. Oct. B.— Wheat. No 1 hard. cash. «l**c: .to arrive. Sl?4c; October, «%e; December. B.c: May. hsc; No I Northern, cash, 7.9** c; to arrive 7»«*c; October. 7»*c; December. 30c; May. 83c: No 2 Northern, 74 a »c; No 3 spring. 7l^»c. Corn. 3.V. Oats, MBjBMI Milwaukee. Oct. B —Wheat lower: No 1 Norton*. SO® Sl»*e; No 2. North-em. 7V'i7 1 : 3 • Rye active: No 1, 55« 554 c Barley lower;- No 8. 67«58c; sample. 4M».V»c. Minneapolis. Oct. 8. -nose: Wheat October. 78,'ic; Da cember. 7S4®7S4c; May. m>-V<Jho'», On track: No 1 hard Me No 1 Northern. 7!>c: No 2 Northern. Id«9.6'»e. Flour We lower: flr.-t patents. *4 t»®s4 35: second pa««J« *■» .)5-cis4 l.> first clears. $3o3#sais; second clears. $-05 ©$2 15. Bran in bulk. »12»*la 2V. Philadelphia. Oct. 9.'— V.'heat 4o lower; contract srade. October 7540734?. Corn firm: No 2 mixed. October. 4ri.94«1V- Oats firm: N-> - white clipped. 2S'«c; No 3 white do, 841!*; No - mtsed do. 27H274rc. Hour steady but quiet; winter super, *2 50«$a 7«; do extras, |2 73#53- Pennsylvania rolMr. oi«ar. -vS*:> 4u ; di> struiaht $3 MX* *'.<**. Western winter clear. &; a3'3»3 .>.>; do straight. S3 iii)^,s» 7.'. ; *> patent. $3 So(jrs4 10; Kansas, straight. In sacHs. $3 4<K»s3 65; Kansas, patent. In sacks. 53 7tir*3 00- spring clear. 8»1»98^3S: do straight. S3 .o'u. $4: do patent. $4 IS«*4 35: do favorite brandy $4 40*3 $4 60; city mills, extra. $2 75«J3: do clear $3 4o<S>i £ <K> ; do straight. 83 «M 81»; do patent, $4«54 <*>■ Rye flour steady o,uiet, $3 ID per bbl for chore* Pennsylvania. Buckwheat flour dull, unchanged: fresh ground, new. 8233 per 100 lb; mixtures, $2i:*&s2Us: all old, $17ria*2. as to quality Butter steady: fancy Western creamery. 2ic- do prints. S'.e. Eggs firm: fresh, nearby. 20c; do Western. l!)4®20c; do Southwestern, r9e: do- southern, 18c , Cheese quiet, but steady; New-York full creams, far.cv small. 11<-: do. fair to choice. fc»4BUVic. Re celpts n>«r 411W) bbls and 2 9OO.<KX> Ib in sacks; wheat. 20 000 bush: corn. 80,000 bush; oats. 3«.00i> bush. Ship ments—Wheat, 27.000 bush. corn, 112.W0 bush; oats. 14. 00<> bush. St Louis. Oct. — tioae: Wheat. Ms 2 red. cash. 744 c; October. 74c; November. 74'; c. December. 73 He; May. 79 s ic- No 3 hard. 714®724e. Corn. No 2 cash. Me: October 87%e; December. 33 »c: year 33*»c; May. 344 c Oats No _ cash, 22'*c; October, .'2 s -.-, December, 23c; May' 34%e; No 2 white. 27®214e. Toledo, Oct. S. — Wheat active, lower; No 2 cash and, October, 7!)4c; May. &54c. Corn quiet: No 2 mixed. 424 - October. 414e. Oats dull; No 2 mixed, 23c. Rye ; inactive; cash. ."i4c. PtoTarsesd active: "88 prime. $*30; i yj prime. $4 56; October. *7 8*; December, $7 SB SOUTHERN COTTON MARKETS. Savannah Oct. S.— Cotton steady: middling. 10.1-18 c; low middling, ■> 11 16c; receipts, 5,881 ta'.es; exports ioast wise, 2.884; stock. 71.-J22. - -- Baltimore, >•■- >. — Cotton nominal: middling. 10^,-: low middling, 108-18 c; good ordinary. 9 11 Me; gross re ceipts. 108 bales; slock. 1.441. Oatveston Oct. 8. — Cotton steady: middling. 10c: low middling 9 9-ltW-; good ordinary, !♦ t I*.-; receipts, 4.7V1 bales; sales, 1.115; stock. 101.195. Memphis. Oct. S.— Coil steady; middling. tw3 We; low middling. !)11-l«c; simk: ordinary. 818 l>ic. net re ceipts. x **1 bales; gross, 10.335; shlumema. 3.577: sales. <;:-'■ stock. 38,822. St. Louis. Oct. ».— Cotton firm; middling, 104 c; low middling 913 16c; good ordinary. 9S»-16c: net receipts. 1.574 bales; gross, 4.9^2: shipments. 4.77 1 *: sto»-k. 12.i»V>. New-Orleans, Oct. 8 — Cotton firm: middling. loHr; low middling 10c: good ordinary. USe: receipts, ln.»"U bales- exports coastwise. 188*; sales. 5,080; stock. 175.340. LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. I i..T|,0,i1. Oat ». 4 p. m.— Cotton— Sc<'t—Mo<ierat» business- price* firm; American. «13 3M. Th» sales of the day were a <»*> tmlea. »f which SW) were for speculation and export and included 5.000 American: futures opened quiet but steady and close.! firm: American middling. I m c October. 5 «3-Wd value; October and November. 5 45-4435 *<: 04. i seller*; November anil December. 5 4ft-64d buyers: I>ecember and Januar>-. 5»7-«4«5 ;V<-«i4d sellers- Jaiiuarv and February. 534 iMaK 3B tUJ value. February and Ibn-t 5 32-ti-ISS 33-«4a sellers; March and April 5 30-fi4d sellers; April and May. 5 2.H- rt4ir^ 29-«4d buyers- May and June. 5 27-H4'<rs 2*<- «4d sellers; lime and July, ■"■ -'■:<;«! sellers: July and August. 524 ti+d sellers; August and September. .*> 1~-«4d sellers.' EL'ROPEAN PRODUCE MARKET. Liverp.»l. Oct. B.— Clceing — Beef— Extra India mesa steady. 70s; prime mess steady. «ss. Pork — Prime muss Western quiet. 7<>s. Lanl — American reflaed in palls strong 4us ltd: prime Western in tlercea steady. 3Ss '•'•! Hams— Short cut. 14 to !•• rb. firm. 4ft.*. Bat-on —^im berland rut. 2« to 30 rt,. strong 5"«; short rib. 18 •,> 23 It), firm. 50s «sd; long clear middles light, 35 to 40 m. firm. 4tss lid: long clear middles heavy. 35 to 40 lb. firm. 4."is . short clear back.- 1 . 11l to 18 Ib. strong. 44s 6d: clear bel lies 14 to 16 Ib. strong. 50s !M. Shoulders— Square. 12 to 11 A strong, 88s 80 Cheeps American fln**t white quiet." .".-:' fid; do colored quiet, 535. At. Tallow — Prime city nominal; Australian in London firm. 28s. Cottonseed all" Hull refined. November-April quiet. 21» 9d. Turpen- -Spirits dull. 20« lid. Rosin^ — Common tlrm. ss. Hopst at London — Pacific Coast steady £2 .'.*'<jt3 ss. Linseed OH dull. Ms. Butter— United State* finest quiet. S»5»: do good easy. 82» fid. Petroleum. K4d. Peas— Canadian quiet 5* lii'«-l. Wheat— Spot. \.. 2 red Western wlnler steady 9i M: No 1 Northern sprin- firm. 8s 7'-«d. No 1 California quiet. «« 7d. Futures dull: I>e<-<tmber. tta 3*« d. Februar\. Os 4 4d. < '"rr. Snot — American mixed n«w firm 4. 3d: do old nominal: futures quiet: November, '. 3d: Deecvber, 4s 2'» d; January, 3s US*. Flour— St. I^oui« fancy winter steady. s " <W. The Imports of wheat into Liverpool last week were »7.Su> r,rs from Atlantic sorts 12.000 ore f >m Pacific ports and 14.0fi0 from other port* The Imparts el corn from Atlantic ports last week ere 22»-> qrs. RoilroaDs. BALTIMORE & OHIO RAILROAD. Leave NEW YORK CITY. l4bertr St. {truth Ferry. Chicago Plttsburg *4.30 a"m Chicago, Pittsburg M2.loi»t. »12 10 nt. Chicago Columbus - •1.30 p.m. *1 23 p. m. Piner. Plttsburg, Cleve *3.00 r> m. *3.55 p. m. Diner. Pittsburg Limited *7.00 p. m. *8.53 p. m. Buffet. Ctn-mnatl. St. Louis. .. •lt.MaVt »12.10nt. Cincinnati. St. Louis . . •10.00 a. m. IB 1. m. Diner. Cincinnati, St. liouis . . . '7.00 p. m. »«.53 p. m. Buffet. Norfolk -" ••"••• ♦1.00 m tIS.SSp. m. Diner. ROYAL BLt'B TRAI.\S. Washington. Balto tß.t)o a. m ♦* »a m. Buffet. Washlnston. Balto '10.00 a. m. •• »a. m. Diner. Washington. Balto •11.30 a.m. *11 a. m Inn r Washington. Balto tl 00 p. m. til 55 p. m. r>lner. Washington. BaJto M.BO pm. «l 88 p r>. Dw.r •• Royal Ltd.. Pullman. *3.00 p. m. «2 p. m Dm»r. Washington. Balto *3.00 p in. M.M p. m. Diner Washington. Balto T .(K> p. «. •« MV- m. Bu.f et. Washington. Balto »12.15 nt '12 10 •Dally. tDauy except bun<say. BAO Elect romobll* Service to and from trains. Of fices- 113 172 -«1. 4*4, 1300 Broadway. 25 Union Square. W Sill Grand St.. N. T.: 339 Fulton Street. Brooklyn; Whitehall Terminal and Liberty Street. Bagsage cheeked from hotel or residence to destination. v 4 DVERTIBEMEXTS and fub»rrlrnons for The Trl^ ma 2\. laming at their Uptown Offlc*. No. 1.242 Broadway. 3d door north of Slit -M. until » o'clock p. m.; advertise menu received at the following branch offleea at regular office »ates until 8 o'clock p. m. v!«-: 254 B*h-ave.. s. c. cor. 23d-st.; 132 Otn aye.. cor. llth-st.; Maeya, 6th-ave. and 14th-st. ; 14- Ctolumbus-ave.. r.»*r West 6«th-st.: 106 West -st. near «th-ave. ; V 2 East 14th-st. ; 287 W*»t 42J-st , between 7th and Bth aver: 159 East 47th-st . 1,83 M-<.v».. between 7«th and 77th st».; 1.038 £d*ve., nt*r «lst-«t • 1.70» Ist aye.. near s»tb-at . 750 Tr«mo«it-av*. , 65rt Sd-^v«.. near 41st St. 864 S4-ave.; 210 Bleeoker-st. ; 523 Bleecker-sV Cailroafta. PENNSYLVANIA j STATIONS foot ef We* Twen,y-thlr« Str««t an-i !>«• •""■seta and CortlazxJt street*. f'*-* I^HiTta^ »««• (POIIi Tnim aw* . rortlawlt "***•*" 1* •*• -*■■••• Inter •*.— , Huit •*•"••» •*•«■«• to , Twenty-tHlrd Street j "'_""""■ «-»«-e>a»t where othmwiM ••«•*. ' r?™\?t v F t iJT * A JU-Uinited to two HuS*t Park* ' >?■,,„ v°*" 11 k l " lst ""* Sleeping Car IMttaburs to • U Z .-. 4. Si^VT >. LINEL -» > »»wt>uni and Cleveland. I m,»Vm J- * !! TnßT nB - W^ti Smr;kln», and Ob«erv»- I inTiai ?.. i r Lhlo *« n '- ' '"eland. Toledo. ■'-"»•«. j Indianapolis. Ivuiisvllle. St. u>uln FoV tVi!V r""r ""' A ' : « AND ST. IvOflS EXPRESS- TrJi,!?^?* 1 * •«»» Cincinnati an* Louwvilie). >- JndJanaplL*. rhlcago. St. Ijoui* l»m»V M i* /,? T - I ' OI ' IS EXVRKSa— fW Plt!sbur«. Co lumbus . Indianapcdte; Loulrvili*. SJu Luul*. ' t*iJ *■ '• nKSTEKN ' EXI'RESW.-Kbr Chicago, r^r i-Z' IMo - «-sc#pt Saturday • V7?fe£; ™r rALI^ II ' EXITtES3._FV>r Ptttabur. »N.i ; Ro,£* .• OT Knf '* vl ' J »*. dally, via Shenandoah Valley ! (.5: 1 "!, <«nnects for Oevelanrt oxcrpt S.uurdav. ! S t'RF« \' - «01-KVKI-ANI>« 0 1 - KV KI-ANI> AND .IXnXNATI EX j ' Kt^s.- f r PlttsburK. <.'f\>-lanil. ti.icinnatS j:J ■ V'M.'\«.T«»\ VXD TUB HOI TH. ""^n lrt 10 iOwUJratten an<l Cnrtlandt Struts. ii" V (Dlmns Car». U>..-« .Lining Car) a. m.. li.W. &M j .TV-hros»* acwl «-nrtl«inUt Str»*tß. ■.'.2')). (3.25 'XXn | Kresslon.il Urn.." all Parlor »nd r»inin»f Car*) .1.25. 4.^4 I «D»»un«s «-ar). 4..V. (Dlnins Car*. 0.^5 p. m.. lil«>ni|thr ; pttntf«y. *~\ *M. 10.35 .I-inlnir Car> a. m.. i2..v> m.2s i r^??E55??9 I*:m-"I * :m -" all Pr.rlr.r ami rinlng Car»». 5.25. •~' h . lr * t -* ar> - * 35 'Dining i-ar). fr.25 p. m.. SS I SOUTHERN RAILWAY:— Bstpi-r^, Mi 4.25 p. m.. «1O j NORFOLK ANI> WFSTFRN RAtT.W \T •■ Memphis ATLANTIC CO VST LINE.-Ett-t™.. - ..-» m. an* ».2» r». m. 'Lilly. CUKSATKA/iKr & OHIO RAILWAY.— J*..'..I ». m. an<l 4.5.» p. m.Taily. SEABOARD AIR LINE.- Expr«Mi. li» p. m. and mo nts;nf .laity. FOIt OLL» !*OIXT Cf>MFORT ami NORFOLK.— ?.."»». m. '"■'!( •!!>>• in\ ■» ..Vi p m. ■lai'y. ! ATf.ANTf.- CITY. -1» .V. a. m. ai>rt %■% p. m w^l»-<1)»t». I Thr.vi«rh V«Mibt|lrf| Trams. Ruff. Parlor- Car* and S»i»n<lar<t foa^hes. ' CAPB MAY. 12..V. v. m. w«»k-tli«v<i. I For poinr* on \,-.r York an.l l«n* Prqich RallroaJ «*ron» WVst T«-.i>'> -|: Str»«»t Station). Sv.VV a» m.. tlio 3.25. 4.J0. '• V». an.J «.:A p. m. Swwtaya. 9.2» a. m.. 45* p. m. <fr<?m r>«»iil)i»w«» and Cortl^ndt Str»»t«». tfcO<> a. ra.. 12.ax -■ U>. 4.21t. MO, and 7.0U p. m. --.!■>•». 8.15 a. m.. "..lr. p. m. KM» PUa.\DEiri!l\. 6.10 itl—bn an Rnrt Cr.rtl^nfit Str«>i^. «.20>. 73^. T.I» k ».25. vi.x,. :,..-. O.X p»nn:t. Umit-.|>. 1».1«> « r>slji->a9«» anil t'orU Strerta. la"Jo> i'>ininw <"ar». 10.55 I Dining Car». U. 63 a, m.. 12..13. ato i .rvshr<x»»-» and «>rt!andt Struts. 2.20). 2»35. X2T>. 3..V> *.U5. 4,2.% tDinin* <> r >. 4.55 (Dinins Cart. ,\."i (Dminc Cax». 7 ">. h.SV. 8..T3. ».» p. m.. 12. lo n'srht. Sun.lry». «.l:». T. 33 inn roaches). R.2.\ SJ«. fcJ5, f>..\% ,UrritH>. 9 -V.. 10.83 ir>inin* Cart a. m.. 12..".. 1..13 i Dining fa'), s.'^s. r!.",. 4.2.*» iDlntrc ''art. 4..*k% (Dinin* Car). 5..V, ( Dinlrnc Car>. 7.:^, 8.2.\ v".\ ».2T- ;•. m. 1-J.lOnlphi T.rkct ..flic*-*: Nos.. 4«i. :h.">. nn«. 1.T54. iii. and 2n hrr>ai!w.>y: 1 A.-t..i House-: \V»*t Twenty- iniM Srr»-t Station; anil stations foot of D<^i.fcro!«!>.'>» an-1 Cortlandt. isTr<HT<t. 4 Court Sii«»-t SW) Fulton Str^t. M Broadway and Pennsylvania Annex Srailon. Isnv>itlyn: Station. Jf-rsry City. The \.-\v Y.rk Transfer Company will call for anil i he. ■!< baggage tM hotels and restiencea •hriwigh to .n.ni >n. Telephone "«il4 Klsht»en^ Street" for Pennsylvania F.ailr<-p'l C a b .Servi.-o. i J. B. KIT.'HINSON. J. R. WOOD. Heneral Mana«>*r General L"u--a I Agent. ItVS-UifiO. CEHTRAL. 8. B. OF m"MIm "MI Anthracite Coal am*} exclusively. Four Track?. "Elevtr^Pneumatic"* Signals. Stations In New York. Überty St. an.l South Ffnr. Train* leave liberty St. a» bel..-w itlme Cr.:m South Few? fly« minutes earlier except as n >ted>. iWeeit t'ayiki Sunday i. Kaston UaL .". I 7. I RS) a.ra.' M.!-i. Ctnrak Local ! T:t»svaw] N. Y. «% Lori; Ursn<-r. R. R. . . ' M:3»a.m.l •■ « a.nj. I.iUewjod i Burrv?«tat i Jt:3» a.m. j 9;i>U.!ti. Sera nton £ Reading ! !t:W a . m . ; N. Y. A I-fiv- Branch R. R. I U:3«»ik.m.l Easton Local i 12:u0noon! Vaueh Chunk & Retsdlng f i 1:00 p.m. Wllkesbarre .£ Si r.mi.-n. j 1:30 pm. ...... Uliew.*-.!, R.»-ne,< 4 c & Allan i tie City | 1:34 p.m. N. V. Jk Long Broach R. R I l.Jop.m. Lakewood & ATLANTIC CITY! Special j 3:*»P-rn. •....;.■ N. Y. & Lang Branch K. R | :\ X: -, m. 4:o* p.m. f iiliwi .. ! .v Barn sal | t :s<ip.m. Mauch Chur.k * Reading I 4:4» p.m. ' jl3 :3© p.m. X. Y. & Lone Branch R. R. . "4:43 p.m. I Gaston Local 1 1 3:45 p.m. l ...... X. Y. * Lon< Branch R. R |:6:2a: 6:2 a p.m. ..... Kaston Local ?:3Op.m.| .... SANDY HOOK ROUTE" From foot of Rector St. Through to Point Pleasant — 10:0u a. m.. 4:30 p. m. Sundays — Through to Point fleaaact— 10:00 a. m. Throu«!> to Waal End — p. m. ROYAL BLUE LINE. FOR PHILADELPHIA. :»4:30. t7:3t>. •9:0»>, •li»:f». «11:3t^A. M-. tt:0O •1^30. /a:00. t3:3i>. •4:W>. U:3O. -j:!*. •7:00 i, t7:30. |!»;tttC BALTIMORE AND WASHISGTOX. , •4:.:o. rS:OO, -!<»-:•»•>. »ll:3i» A M . tl:oi>, «1 :3<). "3:00. •;. 1 •7:08 ■•• M.. '12:15 mdt. Offices: Liberty St. Ke.-rv. South Ferry, 11.1. 172; 2&1 4*4. MJ, 130... i;<o4 Broadway. 173 sth Ay*.. 7.17 «th Aye..* S3 ' Bton .-.,. West. Isa East 125 th St. 273 West 12flth St.. -'4.. CVifcaailmii Aye.. New Tock; 4 Court St 344 ggg B'ulton St.. Brooklyn: W* Broadway. Wtlllajnsburg. New York Transfer Co. calls for ana checks baggaga to dead niti 11. day j^ndi b !. rt o'-u t ' ° aiy ' • r>ailjr - * D *"y. except Sun- NEW YORK CENTRAL. Trains arrive and depart from Grand Central Station l-'d .--ir •"-. N -ix Yiiiii as follows: " Leave .New YurW. Arrive New York •N. 60 a. m 9><^.«sa Local t(?.25 p. m. *S.3oa. m Empire st^.t^ Kapreaa nn.iop. m •5.4.» a. m • Kast Mai! •!«>., a. m . tlrt.ana. m Day Ex^rtsa +7.oi> p. m. fll ■•'» ' m R'it:ii.Tl Kxpr^ss -7 >»► m •' "•>]■ in Southa-est-rn IJiniteflT ..... ••; 08 p DL ••_>.«!> p. n0 ...... N. V. & CfcteaffO Spect;il »I.3i»p. m. iX'.U) p. m Albany and 't'n.v Fi>vr . . til. lrt a. m. •;;.;« p. m \lbany Spe, !al *2.«» p. m. •4.(1 1 p. m l>etr.>i: Fpeti-tl . 'loin 4. m •">■"•.• mi.. Tti« Lab.* .--..-•- Lima, 1 . •*.:!*>». m. m 7<::» >. m. . St. Luuis I-lmited •_ ;:, p, m. "\s.i<» p. m Western Exp, ess • < ».45 p. m •••■-" P. in Northern Exoresn .. *7.20 a. m. •7.:»» p. m. Adirondack * JJi-ntrea! Ks »H.55a. m. •S.l>> p. m Pan-American Expn-ss *7.27 a. ro. •*».2i» p. m ftuffaio .% S. W. Special •V«H>a. m. •!>..".(> p. ir. Pacifti- Kxpr*s* •"■ :•> a. m j!2. U>a. ra UKiiiight Eapif>«« '7.00 a. m. *I>ailv. tDaitv. ex<--t»r sumrav. ll>at!». except Monda*. l!\ni.KM DIVISION. 9.12 A. M. »nl .'!. S."» P. M. Daily. exoeDt Sunday, to pittsfleM; Sundays oplv at ».2l) A. M. Pullman Cars on all through trains. Trains illuminated with Pimseh Light. Ticket ofiVes at IIS, -'M. 41.*. and h£t* Broadway. t5 Tr.lon Sq. W.. 27Ti Ci.lumbus Aye.. VX*. West 125 th St.. l-3lh St. ami I3sth St. stations. Ne<v Tork: 33S and 728 Fulton St. atwl 1»4 Bruadwaj. K. !>.. Brooklyn. Telephone "!*'o .'J«h Street" for New To*k ,'eatnal Cab Service-. Baggag* elMcked from hotsl or rediJeac* by West cott Kxyress fjmpany. OEORGB H. DANIBXS, General Pa<>3ecger Agent. LEHICH VALLEY. Statlocs foot cl West Md, Cnrtlsr.ilt and Descroases Streets v :\-ii^— IC U ferries.) A •*•■ Zm. Street. ■ • or'.l»ndi or L>e*br-«ae« *». *Dalij. ♦ Er.cepi <ui;3a»-. v Sucitay 4.J-> I'- M. t Suaday « «A. M. • Sun •X»\ * !.'• V') x- U :.,-:.., i <■•:< ;Sw;hjj..j!'.)|, sSuaday "Ll'iA. M. »Sgii .Uy i »A. M. ._ ._, A trS y £ F»sio.t Lls^:.... .. . 11l ■'• » » 'rt-jO a M hnjt,. Ac d V.««t.-a txft.-e»» •»• . •>• » Hi 'en .» * ■ BLACK DIAMON'I> SXPKES3 ♦!».« » »> fU i« XX '.VCiirt-B-rrracil »< ri-.t.ia l.ut-*> *U 1i ra . •1.00 nt V.i l.c«.rfarreauJS. roal.'n Eif rr»». ♦"« i» ml M.M m Ma.icavhu .* Local *tS.»tf * a 'y> ■» m rbtt«s>»n>> to i-u<* v,-«:!f.i:tf K»pre»*.... ** Mr a ; 'x*. » » « BXPOsirrio:-. rxrn?t3 • v. r » 'i.mm !.-*.». UuJl:.;»a&4 Vitvia fs?r*n •- V> »>» *• .«> m % Fnl v maa( arses ail e.»^rrt> tu>! .8 SOI T'l I'L.VIXKIK I .^ fc-a ROCTXD BRiV>S locals. Weekv *ay«. Iv. W i>l >• t . •> ~s A. M.. » X: • !i'.«l»-fl f. M. L». CortL a:..i D^ea. »:« . •» V. M . ♦.a. - .1. B«4 • -*> r M. 1 irvets &u>l t'a":ti»a ac" .•«i!i>tH*itt | -« :i],*i|.msi,>uua V-l* Eroaaw-K.^ i'at>B Siu.uo HViu stt CoUft^w -NY. SW FuidHi .1 1 i'U'-. >5. W bilw'* *a.l Asik-x StKloß. Brook! ja; N. Y. Tr»iJfiT Cc» wIU Call tor w..l ..ix-ck '»>{-•« from hotel «* residence tftrou.i^ ' »disi3t»rfaa. ERIE RAILROAD. Through t.-at.is W&\« N*w Yoik. foot of ' ".ar-.-.hers Bt. as follow*, am! J n.iuui»s earii^r frtun \\. i3d St ».<>«> a. r.i. l».illy.— Soiid luin for Buffalo. Arr. *p. m. Rlngharuti'n. Woverly. tlniiia an.l Etrajford. Coaches, parlor car and car* dining car to Buffalo. 2.3»» p. it: D»!!V.— l'h'cu*) Umited— Fast mail— SoJlJ train to CTiioag-'. "'riving fkS* !•• m. Arr. rieveland 7. •» a. m 81eep*rs la Chicago. • i-v-:..>-!. .*!!• ■.v:. 1 :i Lining oar. 7.:i0 r m I'ailv. — B Jffalo and Cleveland ::\i>r««» Arr. rtuffalo 7.05. KraJfi>rd 7.20. Jamestown 7.«k> and r«4aaaja town l" -7 a. a*.; t'loveluitl I- 3o p. as. 81>mn ta Buffalo and Oevelard- Cafft •■*'. Ulilpti D*i!y. — t^oliii train for Bingiuiinton. Waver lv Elmira. ChiiMs>>. Sicepers t>> Buffalo, Chicago, in«!U» natt Dining c*r. rricKfcjr.s. ijhal tims cari>s am» pi l.iai v.v J. ACVOXMOnATION* at 111 US. 2*l 401 «-i ta>7 Broadway 143 Kai«t 1201 st and 273 Weal 155 th St.. Chambers and Wh* a3d St. ferr»^». New-Torlt: XII aad *,fO Fulton ?t.. !»» Hfi«'iw«y. Hrcokrvn; --' Kiv«r at.. ll.iboken. an.l Jersey Clry Station. -New York Transfer Co calls for and checks baggage to destination. LACKAWANNA RAILROAD Mi.t.on» la .N«*-Var». f»i of Barclay ao4 rtirtaaa pUcr bis. L<i.v«. Arrive. Uw>«i.i.j Mill B:uo*.a» » 00 p.av UI'KAU'ANNA LIMITED »10 00 a.» ••00 pm. Ntw-York * ChUago E* M.tWp.TO. *J:35 m. Uu.c!-.ar.iu>:i Ex «.>x>p.sa. 13 JO 0 in. Chicago A liurfali Limited «;Wp.m. 7:3Oa.ci. Ullca- Ithac* * Bu-t 543 p.m. *f:Mavaa, Syr Buff, a Chi. Ex - 12.00 ain't 10:30 ci. &lcep<rs cimu .• t a.*) p. m. Tickets and I'ui; i;:».'i accommodations at 113, 4-*9 Broil way. UA Fifth Avenue, and 14 Park PU.-e. Weatcott's Fix ,r«»s Company will call for and «a«ck b»e.A«» to daatlnatlon. *Dally. WEST -SHORE R.R, Trains leave Franklin St. Station. N. V.. m follows. aid 13m later foot West 42.1 St.. S. R. : •1:15 A M. — For lntcrm. point* to Albany * Montr? tll.-w A. M. -il) Lake M»lionli. Mlnnawaska. Saratoga and Catsktll Mountains. •2:40 P. M Com L4d. for *>etroit. Chicago * St. Uwli. To.*.'. V. M — (2> Tor Hudson River point* to Albany. •« It P. M. For Rocnestar. Buffalo. Clave. * Chlcagow t8 O0 P. M — For Rochester. Buffalo. Detroit * St. U.ui». •» 15 P. 41.— For Sv a Ho, . sug. Falls. Det. * Chi. •Daily tDalljr. except Sunday. Leaves Brooklyn An nex. No lat 16 4S AM. lit] P. II Leaves Jersey City. P. R. R Sta.. No 1 at 11:20 A. M . 8 at 8:88 p. m. Ttm* table* at principal hotels and odcu. Bacsai* dMrhwt from hot*! or rasldew— fey Weatcott Ec C. S. LAMBERT General Paasenger Agent K. " 13