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BROWN PARTNERS HELD fIVE OF THEM ARRESTED. Broken Charged with Larceny ojf $1,800 Worth of Stock. Five of the partners of the suspended Stock Ex nirif flrrn " A - °- Brown & Co - "were arrested on warrants charging them with grand Urceny. as they were leaving the Federal Building, . pre " jiiey had testified at the bankruptcy pro * jfljjpc against the firm. The five prisoners—Al j^-t O. Brown. ■*• G. Young. Edward F. Buch n«". W. Rhca Whitman and Samuel C. Brown— . er e taken to headquarters by the four Central fr*iCP detectives. and by order of Deputy Commls ioner Woods were photographed and measured. I. HP finger imprints of each prisoner were also taken rrora Police Headquarters they were taken to tho Torr.r> po ;ice '' '" rt "where each was released In j- bail for examination on October 5. Bail was promptly furnished. Edward Lautorbaoh. counsel for the firm, -who T .-as at once informed of the arrest of his clients, hurried to headquarters with ex-Assistant District ttnrT1 py George E^ ■-urman and protested vigor iu«lv, b"t without avail, against the photographing ■jj r a -.suring of the five prisoners. The lawyers then rushed to the Tombs police court and lm t.lored Magistrate Finn to stop the police from frisking tl:e work of photographing and measuring the prisoners, but the magistrate paid he was powerless to intervene. He agreed with Mr. Lau terbach that the action of the police -was en out rape. 0 Lee Stout, the remaining member of the firm, v tins'- arrest was also called lor in the warrants. t»-«s not apprehended, as he is ill In a hospital in Maiailflrirt N. .T. T The detectives who made the ■arrest were at the hearing in the Federal Building. tut did not seixe the five l.ien until they bad left federal territory. A. O. Brown was extremely ner vous when arrested, but The other partners re •aaiiic-d composed, especially Mr. Buchanan, -who itemed •■■ •••"'■ th« arrest lightly. The prisoners j rere not handcuffed. Th« corrirli'r't on which die members of the firm rere erre?t»d was ma-le by Miss Helen P. Aber a«thy. of No. IW East 37th - reel. All are charged Tit:-. the larceny of twenty shares of Missouri. Kansas & Texas Railway common stock, valued nt stout IW. find twenty-five shares of United Stales Pad preferred, valued '* SLJSL The larceny Is nl leped to have occurred on or übout August 87. In the complaint Miss A"bernethy charges that she bought Che stock on August >. nnd -when she went to the country for a vacation she left it with th« firm for paf* keepinr. A few days before August 5 fhe alleges that she went to the brokerage office and asked for the return of the stock, and re cfived no «3t!sfactory answer. On August CS sh« fays that the went again, and also on August 27. Or. the latter date, when she received no word. phe C nn?-: - ' with her lawyer, and It -was learned, the complaint say*. that the stock was not in th« possession of the receivers or in the offices of Th«> company. Mice Abemethy was rot In The co-urtroom when i the cafe wa? called, bat was represented by Rastus ! E. Ransom and W. C Rosenberg, of th« firm of j j^r.i;cp. Grossman & Vorhaus. Magistrate Finn commented that there were only • f.vc .-.--("c before him. whereas the names of six ; r.ere rnrrjtioned in the complaint. Mr. I^auterbach • Mid: ' 'The other perFnn mentioned in the complaint. ! G. L*» Stc-Jt. is at present in a hospital in New ! J?rsfr. *n> win give Ball for him. also. If he is : veil enough we will have him present when th»» ; race Is «• tor examination." ' Magistrate Finn then fixed bail nt J2.0T0 each, and • the bonds .-..-. furnished by James R. Klngsler. | rpprMeritinp the Fidelity and Deposit Company. <»f : . Maryland, j When ask«"3 late last night if he had anything I M say in retard to th« arre?t of himself and his j partners. Mr. Buchanan said: • "Oh. no; nothing particular. Of court*, w« are rtit caiity of the charge, and I am satisfied no on" seriously believes that -we are. Mrs. AheraaJhy Is M ki!f>WT! to any member of oar "firm, as she Appears to have been a customer dealing through m» of cur branch offices. "TCe had no notice of her complaint or of any procsds for any complaint. We win, of course, look cp th» account on our books as soon as pos sible, sai are pure that the j=c-curi:les referred to can be properly accounted lor. "All departments of our firm were greatly rushed taring the last few days of Us existence. tad it was natural that it was impossible to avoid some *rrors; but I am satisfied that when every thing iei c figured up it arm unquestionably be shown that a., of our affairs were legally and fairly conducted. The hearing in the bankruptcy proceedings, which *a* continued yesterday before. United States Com missioner Alexander in the Federal Building, MM largely g:v. ■ over, like its predecessors.- to an at tempt to find the pref-ent whereabouts of 1,239 bonds at the 'Whitrjey Company, which are believed to have been in the i«jsseesi<jii of the Una shortly be fore tee failure. 3lr. "Whitman, who had charge of the . firm's bocks, submitted a long statement in regard to the transactions la which these bonds figured. la brief, it was set forth that 2.151 Whitney Com piny bonds had bees, in the possession of A. O. Brewr. & Co. from time to time, that number bring reduced Is 1.1 in ■ -.:. 1307. and to 1.2y3 lv No vember, 1507. >n >:.., or April last there were UH bonds on hand, and of that number 2,13.", of these were delivered to Mrs. Minnie E. Young and deposited by her •; the Standard Safe Deposit Company's vault. Fifty-eight bonds were delivered to the receiver, the other six unaccounted for, It »as frrjlalned, having been lost. Jackson V.". ];• - who was the firm's cashier nt 0»e time of the failure, was .■examined in regard to certain huge debit balances. Among those which r . IFI EJiid appeared to be "N. (»." sai one ajriaai G. I. Whitney for $10,000; another against hiro«.-i: for $11,400; ■ "Htock special account.' for WW'ji;; an ■ .-. D. R. Acct •• for SJIS.SWn; account Ko. 60-j. H3ELOOQ, and others. A cehit balance was found against the United Beetrieal Manufacturinj Company of which Mr. Buchanan was president, for $41,123 96. Mr. Buch anan said that there was machinery valued at $40,000 or HMI i n tha pi an t. The hearing m then adjourned until Monday acrninc. KAJOE'S DAUGHTER MISSING AGAIN. Hiss Mary Barnitz Found in Portland, Me., but Escapes Police. , [By Mearaitli ''■ The Tribune] • f*o«-<n. Sept. 25.— Miss Mary Karnitz, daughter of W&J*r Albert Barnl«. D. B. A. (r'tircO. who dis app**fed from B'. r.,n Fix months ago and was foutid wandering along the e:-,or« at Weymouth t?t*r I week's search, escaped three nights ago from ■ sanatorium where rise has been for treat ment, tad this morning was found by The police of Portland, M«., wandering about the streets. She **as taken to a pnjice station and her parents were - leforrcea. Before they reached Portland in pome unex- I.lsinec2 way Miss Barnitz escaped from the police. dosser, headed by the police, were pent out in ' ; * rv fijreetirj, but , ate io.;,ight saM had not been found. It is f tared she will stray Into the woods *ri<J <j>» from starvation. She became prostrated through ovc-rMudy at Radcliffe College last year. ERIE TRAIN JUST ESCAPES WRECK. Mm on. x y.. Sept. s._Erle passenger n No, z had a narrow escape from destruction f-re *arjy to-r?nr. It is due here at l:M a. m., and r F^"onisa after It had passed a freight train funning afry miles an hour, one mile east of Kirkwood, leu ihe rails end piled up on the west ack. Ten cars loaded with soft coal , re Tfccked. but no one was Injured. THE C. P. STRIKE CONTINUES. ■ tnal. 8e p t. 25.— One hundred and fifty ad '-iiopal British mechanics arrived here to-day •»« were put to work In iJace of Canadian Pa «?e railway Btnkers. Premier Laurier ha« in formed the Dominion Trades and Labor Congress, ■« "sslon at Halifax, that the government can ™ interfere In the machinists' strike unless both Hots agree BAXK GUARANTEE. James J. Hill's Opinion— Fallacy, Says Professor Laughlin. Lincoln. Neb.. Sept. 25.— A communication from James .7. Hill and an address by Professor James Lawrence Laughlin, of the University of Chicago, were the features of the Nebraska bankers* con vention to-day. Mr. Hill declared the bank guar antee scheme the latest financial fad. He asserted that for several years the railroad business had been the object of incessant attack. Concerning recent legislation he said: The American people are a pood deal like the child that plants and -waters a seed or shoot and then digs it up every morning to see If it is growing. Every session of every legislative body cripples or overturns some legitimate industry by apply ing to it a brand new collection of regulations, some perhaps wholesome, many merely mis chievously annoying, and still others destructive. Before they can be assimilated a new set appears. \\ c do not wait to discover the natural laws which govern the conduct of business. We Rive them no opportunity to act. We heap statute on statute without a moment for rest or recuper ation. The effect on business has been exactly what the process would lead us to expect. It has suffered as a man would who should buy every pat«i.»it medicine advertised in the market and try them all at the same time on his own person. Professor Laughlin, in discussing phases of th» bank guarantee Question, said: The scheme to insure deposits requires all banks, pood and bad. to contribute to a fund to pay off depositors in institutions that have failed. The more successful the bank the more it must pay into the fund: the less successful the bank the less It pays into the fund. The successful are to pay Tor the mismanagement of the unsuccessful., If a burglar robs another man's house, go to the. most honest man in the place and rob him to pay for the loss of the other man; it will increase the eagerness of all men to be honest and discourage burglars. The scheme is perfect; it would -work perfectly— ln an insane asylum. Mr. Bryan, he said, favored penalizing the man Who cheated his depositors by bad loans .ml not the man wh<» protected his depositor by safe loans. That was dnngerous political as well as banking morals. The persistent failure, to understand tho patent facts Of banking was disclosed also in the contention that a guarantee system would dis courage reckless banking. Ho said: ilr. Bryan pays: "T'nder this plan of securing 1h«? depositor, the stockholder loses all that ho h.-is before any other bank loses anything. Not only does he lose all his stock, but ha also loses the penalty that the law fixes, nnd the loss of the stork and the penalty are enough to make him exorcise care." It really amazes 0110 to find any one so ignorant of our national system as this, an i yet this statement comes from one who does not hesitate to instruct and to threaten the bank er*. Is it possible that he does not know that under existing law every bank must first lose nil its capital, surplus, undivided profits and stock holders' liability before the depositor loses? . . . The worst monetary fallacy In the argu ments of tho guarantee theorists is in the claim •that, if established. ♦ the system would draw so much more;,- into the banks as to remove nil necessity of creating an emergency circulation. The error here Is In confusing property with the medium of exchange by which the goods are <» changed. OKLAHOMA BANK FAILURE. Mr. Straus Thinks Democrats Wanted to Show Success of Deposit Guarantee Plan. 'From Th« TrtT>uri« Bureau/) Washington. Sept. 25.— Secretary Strew Is of the opinion that the failure of tho International Bank of Colgate. Okia.. wr« caused by a deplro on the part of the Democratic managers of the national or tho Ftate campaign to make public demonstra tion of the successful -working of the plan for guaranteeing bank deposits. H« said to-day that Mr. Hryan in one of his speeches took groat prid« in the announcement that th« bank had failed, and that when the Oklahoma depositors were In formed of the failure they replied that they -were too busy with their crops to pay any attention to it. "I would like to know." Bald Secretary Straus. "the full message that was telephoned th* farm ers, or -whether they were informed that the failura -was merely for publics consumption. It Is well, I think, for the public to know exactly what The facts are, no that a sane Judgment can b--> made as to the motives which actuated the bank officers in declaring it insolvent. Th* president of the bank In question owed something over K,OM and the cashier owed about $4.<*>>. A.ecordlnc to the Southwestern bank examiner at Kansas City, Mr. Watson, the assistant bank examiner authori tatively stated that the bank was perfectly sol vent, and that its <-ash up i sight exchange- equalled ■vi per cent of its deposits. In view of the fact that the officers of the batik were indebted in th« amount above stated at tho time the bank was permitted to qualify under the guarantee law. It is hard to understand why th« bank was closed. Whether the closing of the bank was broug*ht about to make a campaign exhibit I leave for the "public tO judge." BANK EXAMINERS ADMONISHED. Washington. Bept '.' -Controller Murray at to-day's closing i of the oonfen Bastem national bank ezamlaerl t ; .« in Ti.at If they did their work thorousrhly and courteously he would consider every complaint r. gainst tt'.em a.^ a mark of commendation, ey would be promoted in the service when ever opportunity offered. "You cannot," he Bald, .i» the elbow of an Incompetent bank offl cer and make his loans for him. nor can you stay in a bank and watch h possible thief. The only t.'.ing tha' I demand in that you find out the < •- dition of h bank report, and when a ThW } las ntoien t m funds "f the bunk <>r tampered with (ts assets i!..;t you find that out." FORMER MESSENGER A BANK PRESIDENT my releerasA to Th« Tribune.] Plttabura;. Sept. James B. Kuhn. president or the Pittsburg Hank for Savings, and connected with many of th" large banking institutions of this city, was to-day elected president of the First Na tional Bank of Pittsburg, an institution in which he started life as a messenger forty-one yr«.rs ago. Mr. Kuhn succeeds Frank Skeldiug. whose resigna tion lms been in the hands of the directorate for some time. 1 . The registration days this year are» Monday, October 5; Tuesday, October 6; -Saturday, October 10. and Monday, October 12. All who Intend to vote must register on one of these days, between 7 a. m. and 10 p. m. • — READY TO REPAVE SIXTH AVENUE. It was announced yesterday at the offices of the Hudson & Manhattan Railroad Company that the contract for restoring the. asphalt pavement In Fixth avenue, between 12th and 23d streets, had been let. and that work would he begun nt once. ALLEGED SLAYER'S BOND FORFEITED. In the New Jersey Avenue Court, Brooklyn, Magistrate VoortMea yesterday declared forfeited a bond of J2OO by which Samuel Manner, who has a charge of felonious assault against him, obtained Ms release from Raymond street jail. The bond had bean furnished by Louis Basis, of No. 597 Van Ficklen avenue. Brooklyn, Mannes is wanted for the killing of Frances Rosenthai-'McCabo. INDICTED FOR NOTE FRAUDS. The grand jury filed yesterday two indictments eac!i against Mi' hae] Jacobs and Frank If^lm, who were arrested in June on charges of participation in extensive note frauds. The indictments charge the larceny of $10,000 worth of notes. Judge Swarm. in General Sessions, fixed bnil at $1,500 on each indictment, which was furnished. FEARED PLOT TO WRECK BRIDGE. [By Telesrarh to The. TriboM ] Baltimore, Sept. 2j. — That those In charge of the construction of the jc.ooo.""" l'.a!tlmorr-> ft Ohio Railroad bridge over the Susquehanna had good reason to fear for the fcafety of the structure is proved by the fact that on May 2T, five i=tick.« of dynamite were discovered OO the Perryville side, where the material was kept. Armed guards were at once r ut " n wat.-li. The American Uridgc Com paay, which is erecting the bridge, is an employer of non-union men and declines to recognize the union. I'nlon men resent any intimation that they would resort to such violence. WARRANT FOR HAROLD G. MEADOWS. Buffalo, Sept. 25.— A warrant was issued to-day for the arrest of Harold G. Meadows, of Meadows, Williams & Co.. brokers, who recently failed for liabilities approximating $900,000. The war rant charges embezzlement and grand larceny. It was issued upon the application of Fred Greiner. representing T. I). Silverthorne. The amount which Mr. BOverfnofne alleges is due him from aitadows, Williams & Co. is $101,012 M. NEW- YORK DAILY TRIBUNE, SATURDAY. SEPTE^IBER 26. 1908 BANKERS GO TO DENVER / - Will Oppose Bryan Guarantee of Deposits Scheme. A special train carrying- on« hundred and fifty bankers of this city and state, many of them ac companied by their wives. left the Grand Central Station last evening- on its "way to Denver, where the thirty-fourth annual convention of the Ameri can Bankers' Aseociation will bo held next ive'-k. The delegation also includes a number ot hankers from various parts of the South, the entire party numbering- two hundred and fifty and, occupying two sections of elevea cars each. At Albany the caravan of financiers was joined by still another delegation, from Boston and other cities In New England, making by far the largest collection of bank officers that ever travelled together to a con vention of the American Bankers' Association. Frederick K. Farnsworth, secretary of the asso ciation, said the same keen interest in the Denver meeting: was being- shown by bankers In all sec tions of the country, and that between three thou sand and four thousand, delegates and guests would attend the convention. This is believed to be due in large measure to the general belief among bankers that the convention will express an official opinion on Mr. Bryan's lat est panacea, the guarantee of bank deposits. An open discussion of the question has been invited by the officer*. the association, and there i.« a pro nounced eagerness among the delegates to embrace this opportunity to express their views on the sub ject. The delegation that left the city Is practically a unit in opposition to the Bryan scheme, and it Is considered probable that if the question is brought to a vote, as it seems certain It will be, the entire plan will be overwhelmingly repudiated. If the American Bankers' Association (roes on record as opposed to th« guarantee of deposits it will be only the second time In Its history that it has taken sides on a political issue. Tho other occasion was in ik*. when the convention adopted a set of resolutions denouncing the free sllvrr heresy in the severest terms. The special train is being- run over the New York Central lines under the auspices of the New York State Bankers* Association. Stops will be made at a number of the larger cities, and the return trip will include an elaborate Sightseeing Itinerary through the heart of the Rocky Mountain!". The equipment of the special includes twelve stateroom cars, four dinlnsr cars, two observation cars, two buffet library club car 3 and two baggage cars. In addition to this delegation ■ number of bankers who are prominent in the councils of the associa tion left Now York several days ago for the con vention city to facilitate the work of organization. Among those on the special ar« Clark Wlllama, State Superintendent of Banks; E. B. Tefft, presi dent of New York State Bankers' Association: Charles Elliot Warren, ex-president New York State Bankers* Association and cashier T-Jncoln National Bank; Samuel S. Conover, president Fi delity Trust Company: Jay Cook, 3d, of Charles D. Barney & Co.; I. S. Babcock, president, and James R. Branch, secretary, Trust Company Section, Amer ican Bankers' Association; Uzal McCarter, president Fidelity Trust Company, Newark r P. E. Marshall, president PhetfX Nationnl Bank; I>. H. Rowland, president National Butchers and Drovers' Bank; Charles IL Riecks. vice-president liberty National Bank, G. I". Lewis, cashier Gallatln National Bank; Percival Kuhne, of Knauth, Nachod fit Kuhne; E. O. Eldredge, secretary New York State Bankers)' Association and cashier N»>w Amsterdam National Bank; Howard Bayne, vice»president Co lumbia Trust Company; W. C. Cornwall, of ,T. S. Barho *■ Co.; A. M Barrett, secretary Guardian Trust Company; David Cromwell, president First National Bank, Whit* Plains, and Arthur Day, New York manager Franco-American Bank. P. R. R. FREIGin BUSINESS INCREASES. Report Shows 200,000 More Tons Shipped Last Week on Eastern Lines. rittsburfr. Sept. IS— Th" reports "' last -week's buslijess, mad« pul'llc to-day. show* that the frPlßlu business of the Pennsylvania Railroad c<n Its lines east of Plttsborg and Erie, Perm., was lu creasing greatly, It Is shown that during the week I.OIT.SBS tons of freight were shipped, this being an Increase of more than 200,000 tona over the previous week, and this week bids fiiir to bent even thai flKure in Pi>lte nf. the great drouth, whl< h Is stop ping the coal :.nd coke Industry. Within the la?t t.-n days Beven thousand more freight rats wero placed in commission on the <'•■•■■ xyesx. of Pltts burg. AN ORDER FOR T*#tTY LOCOMOTIVES. Dunkirk, N. Y-. Bept 25. An order for I ftiKltifs wms | . • . ••' ■ •■ Brooks plant o* th< American Locomotive Company yesterday for de livery In November. ThJs, i work la sight, will k.-.-p the plant rtumlng unUl the hoU days.' The n ■'• ''' p ly " "'" name Df Ing the order. - I there w*-r<» reasons for withholding it for the present POWER COMPANY MUST PRODUCE BOOKS Albany. Sept. B- An order was served on the Ecoi omlc Power and Construction I on ; v ■ at Buffalo to-day by the Public Service Comn In the 2d District, directing the company to pro duce before the commission at a public bearing at Albany on Beptember 29 at LO a. m. all of Its books and papers. The resolution directing the v raUon of t),e company's affairs recites that the company is exercising the powers of an el« corporation and claims the right under tho law In corporating it to exercise men powers at any | la. a In the M Dlstrtct without tlio permission and ai> proval of the commissjon. The company holds franchises in several rountios in the stato. DR. KOCH ON TUBERCULOSIS. Philadelphia. Sept. 25.— Dn Robert Koch, of Berlin. who discovered the tubercle bacillus, spoke at the tuberculosis conference to-day. He paid the precautions now enforced almost every where rendered most improbable a widespread epidemic of contagious diseases, such as former ly extended from country to country and for a time over the greater part of the world. He said that he based his Btrong former belief in the efficacy of isolation to stamp out tuberculosis on the fact that the isolation of about one-fourth of the cases of leprosy in Norway had resulted in the elimination Of that dread disease in that land. He added that tho failure In another coun try, which he did not name, had lesse n edlils be lief in the total efficiency of Isolation adding. "I am not so hopeful BOW " NEXT FISHERIES CONGRESS IN ROME. Washington, Sept. 25. — The next meeting of the International Fisheries Congress will he held in Rome. Italy, in 1911. This decision was reached to-day, when an Invitation to meet in that city was extended by I>ecio Vinceguerra, of the Royal Fish Cultural Station, in Rom*. OTHER MARKETS— BY TELEGRAPH. Chicago Sept 2.x — CATTLE — r.».-*!pts. about 2.000 head; market weak; steers. $4 405*7 CO; cow«. 13 269 $525: heifer*. t'i'Sti'iS: bulls, $2 r.o«s4 50; <-alv<*s. $3 50ff$S; utockern an<l feeders, $2 $4 .in. HOOK — RecelptK about 11,000 head; market steady: choice heavy $7 400 $7 4.'.; butchers. 87 SOQfT 45; light mixed. fi£Z@ST: chiles light. $7G$7 25; packing, $6 «!><,s $7 10; pigs, 75@5«25; hulk of sales, $« SO® s7 Jo. BHEEP Receipts, about 10,000 head . market weak; eh«ep. $3 r.o@s4 .'.O; yearling*. tftSsof*2S; lambs, $3 r.Oif $5 50. Union Stock Yards. Pittsbunr. Bept. CATTLE — Supply lltrht. «tea<Jy; choice, fr,^sr, 1.*.; prime. *.". 6."i{r $."i W. SHEEP— Supply Tlsrri t. slew; primo wethnra. $4 $4 10' culls and common. $1 f.o'^s2: lambs, $4 7; $5 85. VEAL CALVES. «&<a*H7r.. HOOS— Receipts lair lower; prime heavies. $7'Jo®s7?.o; m«dlums.' $7 ©$7 15; heavy Yorkers. 7SQi$7: light Yorkers. $."> 50 OSS 75: pIKS, $4 85 |5: roiwra, $5 SO s6 25. Cincinnati. Sept. -." — — Steady and slow; butchers and shippers. $7 2. r .<?s7 S.">; common, $4 '-."'rf *-, .'..1 CATTLE — Steady: fair to (rood shippers, $4 50 $."i ".'. ■ common. $2®s2!>O. SHEEP— DuII ami lower, tie 13 25. LAMBS— null and low»r; frtgS". 2.-.. Kansas City. 6ept. CATTI-K— Receipts. 2.800 head In. lu line 400 Southerns ; market steady; choice export an.l dressed be»f *te<>rs, ?figs7 30: foir to {rood. $4 .10<3JS 00; Western Bteers. $:'. <*rfV3ss 10; stackers and fee.l. < %£ 80Q $4 SO- Southern steers. $-• 000*4 10; Southern COWS. f2'(T is 20- native cows. ?2054: native heifers, J2 Soil s 4 70; bulls' $2 1. r 60; calves. $3W)as3W>. HOGS— Receipts. 10 000 head: market strong to 10c higher: top. $7 10: bulk of ' sales SCSO©?"; hea\-y. $7057 10; packers and butch ers' |8'55«J«7 06: light. $&ij*7; pigs, $4i!?s'. SHEEP— Receipts. 1 2"" head: market steady; lambs., $4f?s"., ewes and Marline*, $3 401g54 &<•: Western yearlings. $3 75® $4 10; Western cheep. $3 10-353 &0; gtockers and feeders, East Buffalo, Sept. 25.— CATTLE— Receipts, 100 head- firm; prime steers. -• $G3s6 60. VBAl.S—Re ceipts «00 head: active and SO.- higher; $fl©-so.">o. UOOS^-Receipts. ni.OfM) head; slow: heavy. 5c lower; others steady; heavy. $7 40«57 65; mixed. $7 200 $7 65- Yorkers, $« 50 $7 2.% : dairies. $0 2.">@s7: {rrass ere $fl'Jfs6!«o. SHEEP AND LAMBS — Receipts, 7,600 head; sheep active and steady; lambs and yearlings clow; ewes, $3 60S? $3 93. THE MARKETS TOTAL DOMESTIC RECEIPTS. New York. September 25. MOB. Peas bush 2.900 Rr*. both 14.623 Beans, bbls 8341 Malt trash *.&*> Grass teed, sacks 833 floor, bbls..,, 3.860 Hops, bMes 386 1 Flour Back?.. 12.1,66 Hiy, tens Butter, pkgs S.OIB Straw, tons. {iO-Cheesa pk^a ■■•■ Commeal. bbls 30 Eggs, pkgs a,**) Oomrneal. sacks 3,123; Prene.l poultry, pklts. 1.83S Mlllfi*^. tons eO|Uve poultry, crates., 1.57* Oatmeal. bMs.' ePOlCnttnn bales 2.170 WhMttr. bbls 4.o« | Apples, bbls.. 10.29 Pork, I.Ms XSiOnton?. bbl« 7.17j Ham... rk|r« gTlPotatPWi bbls 28.060 Bacon, tierces I6slCn».nb*rr!et. pk&s 000 Cut meats, pkg-s Grapes (Cal). cr»ts«.. 10,**7.t Lard, tierces l.iyn: Oranges (Cal). pkgs.. 775 Lard, kfjfg B.423|Peaches (Cal). pkgs.. 22.175 Oar.n»d bat. cases.. l,«So!Pear^ (Call pktrs 1.1?"> TaIIOTV. bbls 4081 Plums (Cal). pkffs S.CKK. Tonsrues. bbls 29 Peanuts, sacks 400 Grea-". pkgs 1001 Rice, pkts 17*» Lubricating oil. gals 197! Spelter F.abs 02' CottMiaeM oil, bb!s.. 200] Rosin, bbls 1,623 Oieo stock, tlercas... 335JRocln oil. bbls 12K "Wheat, bush 20«.#>0i Spirits turp. bbl«i «*> Corn bush 4. 300 1 Tobacco. F.Ms ♦ OT.O Oats, bush 52.5001 Tobacco, pkgs 67? Barley, bush 20.0001 EXPORTS. Wheat, hush 86.893 Kenned pet, gals... 421.< 5(» Klajtreed. bush 25,10; Gasolene, gate 41,200 Bears, bush ©o] Cottonseed oil. gals. 6?, 875 Flour, bbls 1.780 Lubricating oil, pals 218.80 Flour, sacks 4.674) Pork, bbls 68 Corn meal. bb!s llf Beer bbls 10 Fc«>(J. n. 1,200 Lard. lb .' 163. W0 Whiskey, trals Tallow. n> «4.500 Spirits turp. gals.. 52.10 C ; Grease, tt> 116,0<-W R"«ln. bbls 90 Cheese. Ib 1.620 Pitch, bbls 70 ■ j CASH QUOTATIONS. Iron. Nor, No 1 fdy.slfl 87H' Cotton, middling 8.40 Iron. Sn» No 1 16 87V4 Coffee, No 7*Rio «'i Stool rail* 28 00 Sugar, granulated.... 5.20 Lake ripper. Ingots. 13 50 Molasses, OK. prim* 40 Tin 2045 Beef, family 17 12' i Exchange lead 4 47H ! neef hams 80 00 Fpelter 475 .Tallow, prime s?i Wh«*t, No 2 red... 109'iii'ork mess 17 50 j Corn. No 2 mi.r«"l.. .• 8«H ; Hors. rtr»««ied. 160 Th. 9% \ Oats. 28 to 32 TV... 53 Lard, prime 10 &> Flour, Mpls, patents 580 | GENERAL MARKET REPORT. New York. September 25, 190& COFFEE Th« r.-.fTee, market opened steady to-day at unchanged prices to ah advance of 5 points, but be came easier during the Jay an<l closed steady, net 5 points higher to 10 points lower. Sml'b were reported of 20.750 bags. The steadier "i.,m\nß may hay« Yirrn in oo«sce<! to some extent •■.- the Strength of near month* in the French market anj th« continuation of a very small primary movement, which Is supj m i to result from labor troubles at Santos. This explanation, of course, <i<pr!\>'s the receipts of any significance as a umi to the total crop, but th* fact remains that the Impossibility of shipments from Santos comes at a tin • when tti-sre is a fair demand on the port stocks for con sumption, «nd this naturally strengthens the spot situa tion. Nevertheless. September shared in the. afternoon weaktiess, closing 10 j>oln*s net lower, althonrh It still holds a premium over the later months, and October whs 5 points net higher. Santos recelr.ts to UMr were about 3,000 b»3H, making receipt! at •!'.» two Brazilian i'-:"- ; ll>,ooo lajs. against t>",.i»»> last y.-ar. New York ware house recolpta on Thurs.fay were lf>.lin» bags. aK^inst 10.61S last year. Thn weather In Sa» Paul was rloufty In three sections, wttli rain in the. other two. an.i we! weather was supposed to »■<> beneficial for the r-iming crop. Neither of the Brazilian markets reported any change. The market for spot coffee was steady, with quotations on the basis of »i'»c for Kio No 7. The range of contra • prices In the local market to-day was as follows: Yester- Openlnir. Hieh. Low. Close. day. ?«r'Tnber 7.". r. T3 STo 8093 70 5.70 October 5.60 ,•,<•> ;....) r. «• ■'( * ••-"■. r. .' ..". Norton) • r — — — ,-..,/„ r. m 6.f,0 December 5.M r, --, STO 6 soe .v.v> 50 January 6.45 t, +.% 5.4.1 6.4895.94 .'..4.5 February _ ._ __ 8i«a5.49 64D Mnreh 5.40 6.40 5.40 6.4025.43 f..4rt April — — _ 0.4093.4.1 ,r., r . 4'> May 5.45 5.45 .-.+.-. 5 4<»"3 545 f.4D •' 1 "- — — — 5.4C-3G ♦■ 640 J"iy 5.4!« :,45 4<> 11.409*1.43 r. 4" Auirust _ _ 6.4.-.ar,..-,.j 5 4:. COTTON- The cotton mark»t rallied, after a slight « Uae during the early (pjslon, and closM very steady at ■ net advance of 4Jt7 points. .-»;#» were reported of 123,000 bales, I ■■:■.- to estimates). Apprehensions of unset ed weather seemed to be one ■■? the chief factors In th» market, and evidently ra:i«e/l cnvering for over the week <■:.:. us well as some fr^sh burin* for tonfj ac-» ■ .•• Th»» market r.p«--nei H joints lower to 1 point higher, and during the fir«t haif hsfiir s,V,i " to a ■ " ■ .;.'» under kMsd i>-»r | - ing liquidation. The. lower naliaa Ki--t market t<- . iht continuation of Manchester 1a... troubles •■»~ --'» 1 to be t_h"» early farters, »"jt th» market soon steadied on report* that i cyclonic Usl irbancei wens op; hing the L<essef -. n'O'.irt: w.'itfl.ir '. ar.J th«» I ■ its showers or rains In »e\<-.ral Southern sections. It was pointed out tb.it a storm moving westward at th» point indlrate-d would hardly reach th* cotton belt, bat should It veer northerly It might enter {be Gulf At any ra'e. the market !>c!d up to a r.. a.:' an -c r>t MlO point! during 1 « afternoon, and. while th« close was a little -(I from the best, th» 1 let prwsur* i»m*i to : • realri lr.g. A prlva;« crop report Issued during the day showed a heavy deterioration for the month of September, an! ; - ttona are going •' • rwtndl of a very bullish gov ernment oindlUon report next week southern spot mar kern Officially reported w»r« generally ■ I anged. Th» weekly m'>ven-.»nt of the N«ir York Cotton Exchange f .1 lo«-|i Pen receipts. 25«.170 bales. «sr«lnst 211.312 last year; overland to mills and Can*J*. 8.400 bales, ajraiiist 34^1 laat year; southern mill takings festfmated). i".. ''«■<> a(r»lr.^r IT ■»«> last feai gain of stocks a' Interior I wna. 47,983 bale». again 1 SO.BIS l»«t year; br'-ujtht Into *!Rht fir the •■■■ a*".l.J>42 bales, agntnst 273.306 la*t v««r, TtHal crop movsment: Port receipt*. •-■' ■_.' bale ainilndt .'.14.754 laat year overland to mi!N and Canada. n>.!>ss hal<-n. nrali^st 7.7<>rt last year: Southern mill tak- Inga ---. bate*, against lO2.fwv> test year;\al ct at In terior townf !n M ess of September 1. M.3OS bales. ngalMt 53,267 lost year; Irouirht lr.to sight thus far for the season. £«!>O2 bale's, agn'mt «7fl.7ri Ifl't year. Th« total < rep movement Is for 20 days this season, against 27 dsyii isi •• tson The range of contract prices in the W-ftl market to day was as follows: Tesf»r- Openlng Hhrh Lr»w dose Ji> September -- — -- po*>^,r>o2 s ■•' October « ris r. m s t>2 9.02^9.03 .>•>•; November — ~ — R.71'«5.73 »<«»•> Dftcember «.70 RSI «ra :t,,- — s;.-; January . v 111 R.< :> 853 8.W!«5.«7 .'.:• I-VNruary . — — — *.AA@B.64 P. 59 March « firt <70 *.Bfl -•"7 • » :-> v >■- 1 May 8.64 8.78 5.«4 *>• «i.. :-Tl ■.«< Th« local tr.nrkct f^r spot CO t ton was nulet and tin - ■■'■•■■■'• upland and J» H,V- for ml•! (1!!ng Oulf. Southern spV>( markets were telsgia) had as lows: Mobile quiet, un-hanged ■• 01 16c; sales, 200 bal'-s. Savannah s'.eaiiy. unchansce.i at Be; sales 4.4"<". li.'ile*. Charleston steady, unchanged at ".<c; sales, 800 !>aies. Norfolk steady. unchanged at l)M.r; sales, 447 t'/ile«. Bnit!-. nominal, un''har.(rel at 0 l s<'. Augusta firm, un hanged at !H-l«c; "■■- 1 UtO baleo. -• !. all quiet, unchanged at '•'. Little Rock steady, nn'-hnngod it 8!i New Orl^nn-i ptet«.ir, un'-hane.Nl at 0 1 -I**..-; ■alee. 2.050 f.ales Wilmington ■:..-• ■■ hanged at Pc. Memphis quiet, unchanged at K'<r; sales, 1.000 t.ale*. Houston fjtilet. un-iianifr-d (it fi\c; sales, .'; "•»< bales. Galveston stead unchanged it OS<-: sales, 4.006 bale*. H«tlrr»ate.l receipts at l^a.llnif points for tn morron At H'>unton. 16.000 to 17.000 bales aKalnM 7,149 last week and mi last rear: at Oalve«ton. 18.090 to I9.MM against 13.07S la.«t w.<-k nnl O.lfn> last year, and at Sen Orleans, 4,000 to B.flOfl against 2.044 last week and t.22*. last year Cotton Kxchange special Liverpool cables: Spot cotton 1 dull and e«pler; hSile*. .T.OOO bales; H;.<vulat|on and ex ■ port, 100; American, 2.000; receipts, 3.00O; middling nu land, 5.33(1. futures opened fiuiet but steady and un changed; clop".! steady at a net alvnnce .f 1 point tn a decline of 1 ! 2 p<->lnts ' Beptember, 5 "id: September-Octo ber. 4. Rid: October-November. 4.75H4: November-De cember 1.70 V I; December January. 4«? id: January-FVb ruary 4«8H«J; February- 4.^0 : ? 'l: Mai ' April, 4 7Od; April-May. 4 71! : May .Tune. Jun« July and July- August. 4.72<L Manchester — Yarns and cloths dull. The following am the total net receipts of cotton at all ports since September 1: Hales I Pale* Oalve^ton 804.312 Kewpori News 270 New Orleans 52.212! Philadelphia 177 Mobile 24.222 1 San Francisco 2.V> Savannah . . 1ß«5.2<>4l Tlr'.m.«w|rk lS.rS>t Charleston ..„ 27.482J Pens* -i» 1.3<1^ Wilmington 4t.617 Jacksonville 2.57t*. Norfolk 24. ir.1 ! Minor ports ........ IN- Italtlmore 4121 _ " Boston •*> Total .. - ftsi.o,7 Comparative cotton statement for the. week ended Fri day. September 25. 1908: Net receipts at all U S ports during week 2<v!.?4!> Net receipts at all i; 8 ports sain- week last year 213.107 Total receipts pinee Peptember 1 <W1.*77 Total receipts to same date last year 601.54j Exports tot the week ... , li'.T.tv;^ F-xports for siino week ia*t y»ar l<'...f>j j Total export* since September 1 X1it.177 Total exports same data last year 265.608 Stock all V 8 port* • 445. 10s Stock at (,!! V .^ ports same time la»t year.... . 443.838 StOdk at nil Interior town* I'^.T:.'. Stock at all Interior towns same time last year.. 13Z054 Stork st Llv-rpooi this lime last year «0«.(»<> Stock of American afloat for Great Brltln this time last year I<o.ooo FIOI'R "JIB JMKAIi — There was a fair lorn I trade In flour to-day for nearly all grades. Prices remain firm and unchanged Minneapolis ana country mills re ported to have sold around 750.000 bMs In the last two day*. Rye flour was quotably unchanged, with n quiet trade. The following ure prices quoted on the New York Produce Exchange: Spring patents, $5 40 f $6 55: winter straights. $4 25®54 46; winter patents. 14 400(4 89: spring clears, |4 2OigslCO; extra No 1 winter $3 *3 tin; extra No .' winter. $3 40®$3 55. BUCKWHEAT rLOUH Market flnn. Quoted: <:« If.® IS 25 per 1"" ll' RYK FLOUR — Firm. Quoted: Fair to good $4 23(914 40; choice to fancy. 84 BA<9s4 >;-. iii|:nmkai, Firm. Quoted: Kiln dried. $4 23. BAO MEAL — Firm. Quoted: Fine white and j-ellow. Jl 7.".ca>sl 80: coarse. $1 fs.-.-iTSI 70. FEED — Western steady, city steady. Quoted: Western spring, S24tf6; standard- middling, $-'■'> 10; flour flo $28 6O; red dog f.">0«0; city hwn. $:.'* bulk. $24 10*? 24 fiO sacks: middling. IM GO: red dog, $30 firt. all October shipment; hominy chop. $20 50© $30 bulk, $30 70913120 packs. OILHEAL. (32 SO 9833 (IKAIN — WHEAT — The local market for wheat made a new high record, and Chicago came within V of the, previous high point, to-day, although the session as a whole was not so bullish hs the previous day. In fact, final prices at New York were partly He net lower. There wan a good deal of profit taking on th" bulges and less outside, support than heretofore, notwithstanding the fact that sonio of the news was the most bullish yet re ceived. This applied particularly to the flour business at Northwest points, which was estimated to re the heaviest on record, sales for two days at Minneapolis and country mills being estimated by some an high as 750. 0f 10 bbls, domestic and export account. In addition, there was another good cash trade, and will export rumors, involv ing sales up to ISO loads, although only about one-third of that amount could be confirmed un to the close. Clear ances for the day were liberal araln. and for the week. according to Bradstreet's. aggregated 4-19. 000 bush, or the highest of the season, making an outlook for world's shipments this week or about i 1.639.000. 639.000 bod. against 1d. i(i4. 000 bush the previous week. The Northwest re ceipts were a little heavier, aggregating 1.218 cars, against 1,260 oars last week and 583 cars last year, but only 27H cars were received at Winnipeg, owing to a wreck on the Canadian Pacific. Much hevler receipts were ex pected, however, on Saturday. Stocks at Minneapolis in creased 2.100.000 bush for the week. but. as ail mills -«t that point were, paid to be running. th'» Increase, hud little depressing effect. "The Modern Miller" report was a little bullish and in line with private news from the Southwest during the day. For the late reaction In the market profit taking operations were chiefly responxlble. There was an advance of TiWl'id at Liverpool, an.l the Argentine shipments of 1.024.000 bush, according to Broomhall, were somewhat larger than expected. . Th« , cash market at New Tcrk was Irregular, closing as fol lows: No 2 red, fl 08H£$l elevator and $I<H fob a£oat: No 1 Northern Dululh. $1 14. and No 2 hard winter. $1 12 fo b afloat. CORN— There was still son* apprehension over frost in Northern parts of th« belt, ana bulls used this as a means for advancing the market sev eral times during the day. On the bulges, however, theru ■was Quite a good deal of profit taking, notably near the close, when much of the advance was lost. New York closing practically .uncharged from the previous night. Present weather throughout the. belt was quite farvorable, I but the outlook was for rain, followed by much coller i weather, Cash demand early in the day was poor, but ] later improved, at advancing prices. English markets i closed ! «Q l «ii set lower. The movement still continued light, with only 155 cars expected at Chicago on Satur ' day. giving additional strength to the September contract i during the afternoon. No 2 corn here was quoted *6c j elevator and SSHc deliver- both nominal. OATS — .Most . of the day oats showed depression, as there was onjy a i moderate demand and considerable selling for long ac count. Cash oats closed steady, as follows: Mixed. TR • to 32 It). 63c; natural white. 28 to. 31 rb, 63H«9! ar.d i clipped white. 32 to 40 Tt>. 55%v«1e RYE— Market dull: | No 2 Western, 84 lie. nominal, fob New York.- BAR ! LEY— Market steady: malting. 6<>B«7c c I f Buffalo, and feeding. esH<SM l«'l «'- 0 1 f New York. Wheat, including i flour, exports for the week, a.-'-orr'.ing to Bradstree' I*.1 *. aggregate 6.43f>.52« bush, against 3.491.911 :vi^h i««t week and 5.272.737 bush last year; since J-iiy .1. 43.6T.0.3!* bush, against 44J14.573 bush last year. Corn export* for ' the week. fiO.SSZ bush, against 12,443 bush last w»fk and 1,193.190 bush last year; since July 1. 624.481 bu.-h. against 15.308.918 hush last year. NEW YORK TRICES. Yes*»r- . Open. High. Low. Close. day. September — — — 8110% $1 10% December .. . .$1 10%. (1 11% $1 10% 1 10S 1 I" : « May 11l 1 U 7 , 111 111 * 111 1 * Corn : September — — — SSH 85 l * December — — — "" ' "" ** : May — —•-■.•,— '■' ■'<■ 73* i . CHICAGO TRICES. Septern*bVr Jl OiH jmiH Jl not* $I MK Jionn September »1 om $1 $1 <vvh $100%, $ie»* December 108 1 02 L « 101** 101»» IM. May IMS 1 04 i 1 04^* I«8H 1 04 l 2l 2 Corn : ) September 70 £0 78 ?» -;r>\ 78* December. flfi'i 6«H 65H »>''« 6«S May 65H 091 «4 » 6.V. S^jft Sepfen.ber 4** i " i*\ 4-1% «M 4«»» December 4i)'i 4f»*4 49"-* 43*» 4i> 1 a , May B9 MH 61*» &1 1 * •»* L«r<l: October 1012 10 20 10 12 10 17 10 IT January 8 «2 9 *7 l>f*» » S5 952 . Ribs: October f»7T» 9 es 9 75 f> *2 ©77 January 8 SO 883 -ST.". 882 188 Pork: October 1510 15 30 15 15 15 25 15 2., January 18 SO 1689 16 75 lrt 62 »880 METALS- The London market was higher to-day. with spot quoted at £133 10s and futures at t134 17s Bd. The local market was steady, at 21>.37 l 2@2C>.~>o'-. | < 'H'i>£rt was higher in London, with epot quoted at £.*> i Ba un ! futures at £61 Is 3d The local market was firm, i with lake quote 1 at 13.37 'aii 13. » - >: ;c, electrolytic at I i:< i- : g13.371ac, and casting at 12.8TH©J3.12Hc LEAD advanced to £13 Is 3d in London. The local market was dull and unchanged at 4 it ••- 4. '■«■■. SPELTER was un- ( changed at tin 12a M m London. Th» local market re - ! mainwl dull at 4.72 ..- 177 l jc. IRON' was higher in | London, with standard found rj' quoted at SOs 3d ard ; Cleveland warrants .it Ms 7'?:. The local market wa» unchanged: No 1 foundry Northern. $16 ."Off Jl7 25; No 2, Jl<*>6sl4 75; No 1 Southern and No 1 Southern, soft. . »1« 75#5n23. Pig Iron certificates on the Produce F..\ change eentinne dull and unch:iriged. with regulars nuoled as follows: fash $15 2.".'tslti; September. *'•"■ 25 J '•'*I*. 75; October. $13 r-.wSir, 75; November. $15 50<g$lr:. ; and December 15 .".'■ a* :■,.:. MOLASSES AM) SVRir>— The mirk" for molasses ; and syrups was steady, but business was slow and prices , unchanged. Quotations follow: MOLASSES, Sew Or- j leans centrifugal, common. lG#l9e; fair. 1« --". fOOd, ' 2l"<i^rto; prime, 23990 c: New Orleans, open kettl». S-S-^ j 42.;; SYRUPS, common, 15f?17c; fair. 18^2oc; good. ID'S 22c; prime, "iiITJ.-- fancy.- 2T930C. OILS — Cottonseed oil, while a shade easier for crude. • was firm for refined, on demand from tborta. lighter ro— i ceipts and speculative buying. ?a!e*: s.J<> bb'.s October. ; ; i -*\r; 1.3f>0 November. S7**'»3J*c; 700 December. j •■iT ; ,-.-r.T- ■ ©00 January 37'i1T37**c : 1.900 March. 58*4 1 Linseed oH is In slow demand and the tone Is easy, al- j though no change la reported in rric»s. Reftnetl pc- | tmieum is in fair demand, b<it shon no frreh featire. j We quote: PKTROLEI'M. standard 'white, bols. ftWVr, 1 Milk sc: Philadelphia. *iZc. bulk 4.< V.c; r»nn».l rase?. ! New York. 10 HOc: Philadelphia i'»-"-. water wnite, ! New York, bbte, 10c. bulk Lsoc; Phlladi OX.c. , bulk « 4* ■•. water wMt». refer. New York. 12.40 c: P?::!a- 1 delphia, 12.3.".c. COTTONSEED Ollr—Prlme crude, li;: I : r!i ■- summer yeliovi-. spot. SS'iS'ift'sc; Sep:err.b*r. •"• s: - : October. No-.emb»r. 87 a 4t?^'«c; I>- i tember, 87H937\c JaDnary, X7 '~ 'g .>»■-■. and March. S>*''2 j 039 c; Off summer yellow. September, C>7jX»c; good efT I summer yellow, ST93S%c: prime whit<». 42 L i'ff4'?c; prime ' winter yellow. n •-»-■ UNSEED OIL— American «---l. I city raw .44040 out of t.>-.vn raw. '■■' Calcutta raw, -. . !ari I!. 72.1? 71 PROVISIONS— Packers were Oh both silos Of t»e market, and while the farlv traie had an easier tone. later prices were hi=rh*r on prospecta for lighter receipt next w<»ei{ and coverir.? of shorts. Toral Western receipts were 49.000 hoes. Including 11 '•■" at Chicago. 1 ■«■ it j Kansas City and S .W)o st Omaha. SStimat^-1 for Sitjr- I day, $.<*>> hogs. PORK— Steady. Quoted; Mess. $17 i'® 917 75: family. $206121; short c!«ar. $1»-§*J1. BEEf — Steady. Quotel: M«*s *13 50©J14: family. $lrt 7-v? •17 BO; packet |15&$ IS; extra Ir.Jia mess. <24 «^s2s. BEEF HAMS-Stendy. Quoted. $.-«•:■ 1 DRESSED HOii — Ea?y. Quoti Bacor.;. • -■- ISO In, o^c; !•» '~ PS 4 c; 14<> tf.. t^tc; pig?. lOHc. CI"T MEATS— Pickled bellies. Steady. Quoted: Smoking, ll%»c: l" Kb. ll\c; . 12 Ib, n; i . 14 ». Il*-io; P!.-k:«>3 tarns— Qu!?t. Q-iotad. 11HG12C. Tallow—Firm; cit}-. s*»^; country. sfj3«3c. LARD— Steady. Quoted: Middle W*stem. .;.v7"-. 'it-. lard firm. Quoted. lOHe. Rennet lard— Steady. Quoted: South Arr.»rlca. 11.7! Continent, tie; Brazil keg«. 13.25 c. Crtmpourd— Firm. Quoted. 7 a i'tr'< 1 »c. BTEARINB Firm. Quoted: '•:-.:» city and stear- In. , 12 1 RUE — -The rice market h»ld steady at former rate*. wlrh good business panning. Quotations follow: Pcreenincs. aufjJS^c: ordinary. 4\»@4*ic: fair. ■"' ■<? 1 3Sc; good ordinary, sH9">\ic: prime. S^sjric; choice. ■ *>"-«''?7c: Patna. foreign st-'s»>c:5 t -'s»>c: Rangoon. 4 \ ff " Xi c. -1 <• %lt— The market rul»'l steal;.- »nd unchanged. The following are list prices, pubj-ct to 1 rebate of li> point!" and a discount of 1 per r»rir for ca?h. sJt»u days: .Crystal dom:nos. 7"..'Sc: F,ul» tablets. 7..".0 c; cut loaf, flc; cr:ishej. 5.00 c: mould A. &.83e; cub*?. 5 4T.c; .... powdered. &.3SC; F.ag'e 5-Ib haira pow dered and Eagle, eonfectloner*!' granular-d. 5.41 c: P^w . ■ Eagle coarse and extra fine granulared. JV2Oe; Eagle i Ml, eartom "f One grarulared. •'■ •"■• 2-lb hags .!o. B sOc; T- lb .is; do. r,.i'r; r,-\h bags do. 5.4' V; 10-Ib bags 'do." 5.3.'c:' 25 ar.d 50 Ib bags do. 3123 c; Eagl« fine or standard granulated nnj diamond A. 5.20e; confectfon^rs' A. 5o: No 1. He; Nos 2 and 3 4.0T.c; No 4 4 IMV- No .". 4 Sr>c; N"> 6. 4-SOc; No 7, 4.7-V: No ft. 4 70c: N'> '••. 4.65 c; No 10. 4.65 c;* No 11, 4 r.Oc; No 12, 4 4.".-. No 13 4 I'" . No) 14. 15 and Id. 4 "'■■'. Th<» i London market for teet sag ir v .i., quiet, with Sep tember »i<l lower at 09 11 V A. and other months un changed. October was quoted at !>» 7 'id anil May nt 0s 11 "id. The local raw sucar market was stead;,' but .."t and unchanged. f>utr paid prices were ' quoted a» follows: Centrifugal o. 1 . test. S.OSc: Rltt covado, 5^ test. 8.48 c. and molas*ea sugar. S!> test. 8.23 c. 'vi'il!' > tt & Gray: "Total Ktock of Europe an.i America. 031,097 tons, ngalr.st 1.157.421 tons last year at the sani.i uneven dates. Th* decrease of stock is 2"0 "24 tons againsi a decrease of 17«.«38 tons ir>st week. Total stocks and a^oats together show a vlsibl" j supply of 1.299.007 tons. asalnst 1.457,421 t.ms last j year, or a decrease of 159,32-1 tons." . I COUNTRY PRODUCE MARKETS. New York. September 2.'>. 130$. BEANS AM» PEAS— Receipt* to-d.iv. 1.820 sacka beans and 700 sacks peas. There is still quiet trading In i.- '.-■ stat« p^h beans, and pri.-»s are barely steady; the Old stock of both domestic ami foreign has a li?!it demand. Th« feelinjr on the Whole !s ea?y. Enough rel kidney hay« t.et-n taken fur export this week to sustain the price at $1 M lot tha best quality. Llm^i quiet and favoring th* buyer. Scorch peas in fair demand at $- W« quote: BEANS Marrow. 1007. choice, per bus! el, *-' 3 • •« J- 4". do common to good. I $2® s2 23 d.> medium, l!>07. choice. $-209(2 25; do I common to good. 81 90 .1 $2 10 do pea. 190*. choice. | $235; do 1907. choice. $2 1 ;$--■ tio common to f good, $1 80 i?-' 1 -." do Imported marrow. $210Qf220; i do pea. ■ hoice, $2 05G5210; do c.inimon to good. '. ?l 90 . j_". do medium, choice, *l 95Q12; do common ! to good $1 7 i* # l so: white kidney. 1907. choice. $2 35 : .: $- 40: red ki.ln»y. 1007. cliolce. dry. $1 0O; do com mon to good, $15<>3?1 SO; black turtl* soup, choice, t $1700(175: do common to good. $1 403,51 gS; I'm.i. t 'California, choice, $;; 30. PEAS — Scotch. IOCS, bags. ' per bush-el, $2. ' IH'TTKK — Receipts to-day 3.nirt pkps The short- ; age, of fancy fresh creamery Is being felt more severe- I i-. The market is raining additional strength. It I was easy to reach L'.i'sc to-day for special?, and the I sales of extras were at 24'»@2Jc. Leaving thos^ | qualities, however, we still have an unsatisfactory mar ket, with an abundance of stock and limited outlets. ] Exporters have been picking up some of the 20'f210 grades, but most of these purchases ire he'd against future . orders. Process of fins Qua ■•• hi a little firmer. Factory slow. Packing stock dull and weak. i We quote: Creamery, speelafe, per lb, 25<J25V;c: do extras, 244 c; .'" firsts. 21 50 2.1 c; do seconds. "l9 '1 & :oi,c; do thirds. IS-glNc: state dairy tubs, f.nt-st. 22H033e; do good to choice. 2OJr22c: do common to fair. l*©l9c: do process, rials, Jl'-c: do extras. 20%® _'■•; do firsts 1«» 3 <fl!>4c; do seconds. 17i?l<?^: do thirds. 1-. ■ I6'«c: do West imitation creamery, firsts. 19*6030 c; Western factory, Brats late; do sec onds. ISBIS '- o ; d.> thirds. K'&'lT'jc: king stock. No 2. '.7 6 I7**c; do No X. l«Slrt l -c IIKKSE — Receipts to day, 3.663 boxes. Th« mar ket continues to present ahout the sam^ genernl feat ures. There Is a fairly active demand, and whll*» per nape not quite so snappish as a weal ago still is about sufficient to absorb the current receipts of fr.'sh cheese an.l hold th« market In a firm an.! hejlrhy position. Fetter grades of skims continue 1n moderate supply, and with a good home trade d«rnanii prices am firmly sustained. ("heap skims selling slowly. Liverpool cabl^: Pineal Canadian, new. H!<s far colored and white We quote: State, full cream, specials. I.". 1 * «14'4<-: do ■ nil, colored or white, fancy. ISe; do large, colored or white, fancy, !2Hc . do good ta prime. 120T2Hc do common to fair. l" 1 , -iji 1H": fl<> eklms. l«j Ib, specials, IOVIC da skim", One, S{?!)c: do fair to Rood. 4* > '!»7c: do common. 3*ifr4<«c; do full skims. "a ■<■ ■• Note— The classification of specials In clude* Young Americas. Daisies and email sizes of flats of very high quality. EGGS — Receipts to-day. 0. (is cases. Fine to fancy fresh eggs are scare* and fairly firm, bift the market continues burdened with medium and lower qualities, which sre urgently offered and weak. Sales of such are making a lower average, although th.» full range of prices is without material change. Storage- eggs slow, but hoMers of local storage are not generally pressing for sales at the expense of any concession from recent asking prices, though for goods arriving on dock the mark* I la weak and Irregular. We quote: State. Pennsylvania and neabjr selected, white fancy r»2't?R*c: do fair to choice. 2<J |31c; do brows and mixed, fancy, 2SfI."Oe; do fair to choice. 2.1tf27c: do lower grades. 22024*; do Western extra firsts 24 fj !'»•-. r. do firsts. 22^2rtc: do second.*. 20321 - do thirds. 190195 c; do dirties. 14919 c checks 'll 0*?0 *? 17.-. refrigerator. Aprils, 21®22Uc; do May. 2CM-. '? 22c: do summer. T r« -.5 _■ j , • FRrlT!*~-t>RTFI' - Not much business doing in snot evaporated apples. Little interest shown in th« early make. Offerings of new sun dried usually at prices too high to permit of business. No mn'.ra reporter! in futures, the November market ruling nominal at about .-.-,.■ We quote: APPLES, evaporated, fancr. cases. per lb, fUjiff 10>ic; do choice, cases. 7(roc; do prime, cases, carlots, c,\c; do small lots. 6'ic: do common to fair. 906 c: do evaporated, as to quality. l&Ort, r> ■? fir; do sun dried. Southern, quarters, new. per lb 4 !»';•■: do stats quarters. Be; do chopped. 1907 gen eral offerings, per 100 lb. *li®*l 85: do core* an.i skms per 100 lb. 81091 (■> CHERRIES. Southern. fair to good, per lb. 12H»l"c: do Southern an.l Pennsylvania, fancy. He. RASPBERRIES, evaporated, new -per n. 20at1c: BLACKBERRIES, new. 707 He; HCCKLEI BERRIES, new. 12H013c: APRICOTS. California new. boxes, per lb. »019 He; PRUNES. California, as to sire. 1007. per lh. 4f 7',c. FRI'ITS— FRESH— and pears In good de mand and firm for fancy. Plums selling slowly. Orapes dragging. Peaches steady. Qaiv.res comme'nclng to arrive. Huckleberries quiet. Cranberries lor • r Musk melons weak and lower Grapefruit firm. Pineapples scarce. We quota: APPLES, as to quality, per douM« head bb!. JI1T$;;50 : do open head bbl. 75c ©11 50- CRABAPPI.ES. Urge, per bbl. 83083 50; do small cherry. $siji f «}; PEAKS. Bartlett. per bbl. $2 30«J3; do per half bbl basket. $1 25©52: do per b-ish». hanijl* basket. $I©sl 50 : do per ker. Sl©*l" di Sefk»U I per bbj. $2®*s; do per half bbt basket. $10*130: do per bushel handle basket. $1@5137: do p«r keg ~Zc& 51 25; do Beam Bosc, per bbl. 829*3: do Beurra d'Anjou $150952 50; do Beurre. Clairgeau. «!-Vif J2 23: do Sheldon. $173<?52 5O; do Flemish Beauty. Jlso'gs2 25; do L<» Conte. Jersey. $3890073: do KieCer. per double heart bbl. Jl3f2: do open head bbl. $16$1 50; do other ordinary lots. Jig Jt -■■-. QCINCE3. per bb!. %Z ."O-gs-J :-«. PEACHES. Pine Island, per carrier. $1 -§$;:; do per basket. 2-~c3sl; rto Jersey. per carrier, <liist7. do per basket, --">. do) West Virginia, p-?r carrier. SI -C SI T do pw basket. 50cfl$ll'): <To Western Maryland, per carrier. - $10 -. $1 75; do per basket. ZZcQ%I: do Western New York, per basket. 3*cfttl 15; do "nigh hats." 40c@Jl: do j.er carrier. $l'rjsl 75: do upriver. per carrier. $1^ *1 50. do per basket. ZT.cnil. PLVMS, Western N"e^ Tok. per 3-lb ba3ket. 10(?35c: CRAPES. W»<stern X*i» York. Delaware, per 4-lh basket. 0-fflOo: do Niagara. Saiem and Concord. "B^c: do upriver. De!aware. per case. ."><) '<t 7sc : do Delaware, per 10-lb basket. 45^5<ic: do per 4-ib basket. R«rlO.-; do Niagara, per case. 50© 70c: do other white kinds, per case. 40f?f?0c: do white, per 20-lb basket. 50540 c; do Niagara, per 4-lh basket. ~<t^c: do other white. 6S"t: do Concord, per case. 4OQ0Oc;. do WorUen, 4og"».'»c: o» black, per 20-li> fc2Sket. SSO43e; do per 4-1^ basket. 7^-*c: do '<-h;ta. and black, in trays, per lb. «02»4e: HCCKLEBER RIES. nearby. per q-sart. fi-giic; do Nova Sc, .rja, H0 -r .*'• rRANBERRIES. Cape Cod. p«r bb'.. $4W»«3ft; da per crate. $1 SOOS2: JH'SKJIELO.N?. New Mexico, per standard crate. $l"SslCr.: do jwr pony crat?. 50<575e: do Rocky Ford, per standard crate. $Wsl .'.O; do other Colorado, per standard crat». $1 SOOS3; do per pony crate, *ic3sl: do per f!at case. |A^Ue> do I'fah. pep Btundard crate. $' so'ij ?1 75: do per pony crat*. $1: CITRON. p"r bb! »,O|:r.c; r,T\ \PF.FRCTT. FL.ri'da. as to size. J3.-.OWS7 5O; Co Porto Rl< o. $.T«s7: PINE APPLES. Florida, red Spanish. p»r crat^, SjSSOCi do Porto Rico, per crate. $1 !!."'??' Jr.. HOPS — Th<» continued dry weather in this state has prevented balinz. A few small transactions reported at 10913 c; but dealers as a rul- not showing interest. On the Pacific Coast the market i* very- quiet, and we "do not hear of any transactions of importance. Samples coming In from, there from all sections show ing very nice quality. On the local market business Is at a standstill and brewers only operating tn a hand-to-mouth manner. Quotations are entirely nomi nal. We quote; State, 190.T, prime to ch-Mc-^. IZfi 14c: do medium to rood. lOfriiv. do 1:>O7. 3fj 7c: do Pacifla Coast. 190!*. prim» ••■ choice. lfl.jlV: do medium to) good. ft<J!>e; do 1:«17. 4ft7c; do Oermans. 1001 20^.12c; do Pacific Coast. l!>ofi. 2?*.'{c. H.W AMI STRAW — Offerings continue liberal and demand rathT light. Prices, hoir»vr, ar» holding" up f> form»r quotations We quote: HAY — Timoth*. prime. larg» hale 3 per 100 lb. 77 l 3 c; do No 3tol. *> 7.1 c; do ohippine. 5&963e; rlo packin?. Ss^43ci clover and clover mixed. 60070e. STRAW — I>on^ rye. So?i> On.-; ,10 short ard tangled rye. So^|33e; do oat and wheat. 45c. POiI.TRV ALIVE — Only 1 car of Western arrived by fratght to-day, tint being carried over on the traclc until n»xt week. he Hi brew New Year holiday d» mand is over. There has be»n :\ fa!rlv active move ment ail this we»k. and receipts cleaner! up pmrrpflv on arrival, excepting 2 or 3 curs that arrived too lm*. The next ll*brew holiday, the Pay of Atonement. . wilt occur On ifondar. October 5, and there will be act!\« buying next week for thai holiday, nnd out-look i» favorable. We qaote; -SPRr.vr; CHICKENS a*l FOWLS, p?" lb. 14c; ROOSTERS, rour.e and old. per Ib. 0c; TURKEYS, prime, per lb. 14c; DCCKS We« ern. p«r Ib. ISc; rlo Southern and Southwestern. 1 Cc ; '•KK.-F. prime. Wesfrn, per ib. 1 - J<r: rlo poor. Western. Southern and South •.% es'ern. 10c; r,T_'TNE.\ FOWLS, per pair. ;"0c; PIOFON?. r.er p«!r. 200. POirT.TßY— DßESSKD— ''onuirlerahle delayed stoe'e came in yesterday ar.'l to-day and some d^laye,^ lots] still out. r>»r.ian.l for the woelt ta practically over. »n1 wirh lltt!» outlet it will be simply impossible to clean ip of average grades of either *ow!3 or chickens. Fancy heavy fowls In snill prnporrton in th» receipts and gradn cleaning up. Whil» no mafrial cnangi* can be made in quotations the rone It woik and unset tled on average offering!', especially of chickens. Loni? Island an.i other nearby spring ducks selling slowly. Fresh killed tnrkeya are mori plenty, qnality irregular and .-. .in -1 moderate. Squabs unchanged. We quot?: I^ed— TURKEYS, spring, average, p^r Ifc 20<?U2c: d» old hens and toms. 13521 C: CHICKENS, spr'.n?. Broil ers. Philad'lphii. 7 lb and over to pair, per Ib. 22^ .'4- . do 4 Ib nn-i under. J2 - da nveratro £ra.ie«. 2Oc; de Pertn ■'lvanla. 4 lb and nnder to pair. 20c; do avera?^ best. l->c; rlo poor. 14Sl*V: do Western, dry picked. 1."13> lUr- Jo Sllchigan. scalded 14U 17 do othe- Western. scalded, 13c: do dry picked or scalded. 12?»14c; An Southern, averaee run. 12-5130; ""T 3, Western, dry packed, dry picked fan^y. 4 lb »ach and over, in boxes, per Ib. 15^c: do 3to 31--.3 1 --. lb each and under, in boxe«i. 14f?14 l ;c; dO ■Wesrem. dr>- picked, selected, over 4 ll» each, bbla, l * 'jc; do »Vesr»rn. dry pic}t«i. average bey. in bbls. per lb\ 14c: do Southwestern, lrju ff 14c ; do> Southern. l"He: do Western, scalded, average best. i:<i,c: Jo dry picked or scalded, poor. 11 f? 13c; OLD r<~>CK^. <lrv r-irk-d or mMM, pnr IN. T«te: OL't'K LINOS. Long Island and Eastern, "uprirg. IRe; Ao *tzt<* an! P.-nr«- lvan:a. ISfi ISHe: do Westent m!x"d. yosn; arfl nid. 9<9tSS: OEESE. F.asterr.. sprint. wh!t». par !h. 17n1.*-:: do dark. l.">« l*?c: do Western. nl<t. liff; SQUABS, prime. lirpe. white, per doz^r.. $1 r,nn J.t .".O; ' do poor. dark. 7Sc'« St 2".; do cu:i-». 50c; GUINEAS. spring, per pair. f.tVrjjt. GAME — With eontlflue'rj warm weather ther» 13 rerT I!t:le outlet for ?ar.,e cr any description, and prtc?« Bomlaally tjrchar.ge-1. We «not»: PLOVEFI. per dozen. SJHtfJtSO: SNIPE, yelln-x ;eir. per dO2»n. $C^s2 75: do rail birds, jor dozen. TScgSl: WILD PUCKS, canvas. per rv'r «2gS2 s'>; .;•> ref'."^."-!^. Jlo^^Si- <lo mallard. *1 2.-(3sl Z6; A') rtday. TScfiSl !•": ■!•:• t^a!. Kuewir.g. *1«J $1 10; co gr»er.wlnx. •50 / 575~: VrlNiiON. si.IJ!.:». per R>. SStMSti <5-i TTiio;* .l»»r, UttttSOe. POTATOES AND VEGETABIXS— Whit- potatoes moving less fr»-?iy and t-^r.a ei«;,-r. Sweet jotatoes yn ehaage& Onicns tr.owirrg Irregular qtiality arri value. Cucumbers ar.i pfckl— firm. Celery slow. ff(TW< .3 tnwsi Lettuce dragglnsr heavily. Lima tears st?adv. Pecpen weak. String Deaas seliins well tot test igrados. but joor neglected. Southern peas hisi-.er. Tomatoes (fragging heavily. We qcnte: POTATOt:?. ilaine. Irish. CoObter. in b'lik. -• - ;*-• rr $212g52 25: da f*r bar. $" <IJ2 10; da state, in bu!k. r"r !?•> rb. S2-5J2 2.i; do Lons Inland, in built, per bbl. $2 375J2 fi2: d"> Jersey, roun.l. r*r t.bl. taaSSIS: Jo long. $17r.G$2: £0 roun.-i kinds. P«r yacft-. <l 7r.-y?2; do Ton? klnls. SI WT*l SOl do in f»r|or. $1 tT.-g?! ."'►: SWEEIT POTATTiES. fcas"f-r> Shore. yellow, r»r bbl, $1 2T'ssl .V>; Jersey, p-r doofite head bhi. Jl iViiJSJ i 5; d> > r* r basket. 4-*?i l si.-; HHi'SSKu-i SPROUTS, per quart. SfJl4c; BKET?. per bM o r bag. $tS*I2T.; CARROTS, washed. ;er t.b!. ;."«''i.*l: .!o un wast:?;, per btl or bag. t>«i7.V: CAiJPAOES. stare, j^gr ton, SlGt?52O: do flat Ijutch. per tf». %'>Hi^: do small t* $5; do per bb!. 7S--1??! 2S: A-> r»d. ?e? tVZ $lt?$l "3; CUCCIIBSRSk state, per ca.«k»r. r-ocifsi.; go ftcsemx per box or basket. $i??s2: cucur.i^er ri'"'<>'' := . »taf*. Dili rer basket. 7."c§'tl: d~- srate. oth^r sl»es. p^r r-oskef. $lc?#.'?: do. nearby. per I.OOP, $1 .i<v^J3; CF.LERY. p-r dr>Ter» Rtalkr. 1^40.?: CAULIFLOWERS. I>on s WarA. SSoft cut. ;e :■ bbl. JJ'-r?-}: do long c-jr. $t M>sj;-. EGCaXJUTTS. Jersey, per "til. $1C?15«; GREK. I .' C'"»RN. tUteknaatU. per 100. <!Q>l r.O; .jo r.ther Jersey. 7.".c/fS!; KALE, rer bhl. lO023e: LETTUCE. stat->. pv>r bas^i-r. 2T.^s>\?: <I.> per b.rt. 2< > !?4t>r: <!■> nearby. per tb!. SQ&iSe: LJ'I.V BSAX9, L^n* -Island anT Jerser. potato, ptr fcaskat, 73« 65123; do per ba*r. tOe&li do flat. CiVo.7."v-: ONIONS. Conr.«c!icjt -a-.d Kastern. ttUtfi r"r VBt. $2~X-tZs*: do> yellow, Jl Zs4}ft :■■->; do re.!. 91891 2T.: do <«TaTe an.i West ern. whK-e. rer crate. IScQU do whir*» plcklv. jer r««k»^ 91 230*1 CO; do yellow, p-r tzr^ 91230(180: <fl> y*::ow, per 100-O big. SI; d.> Orangs Cotintv, re<l or yellow, per ha?. $13*1 37; f!"> Tsr.s: Islanc! an.i Jersey. re.l and yellow, p&j bi-I. Jl Sfrftil ."0; .!,-> Jersey, white, pickle, per tasket. Sl— >ijsl7.^; do l;irgf. while, per baaket, flss] 2T>: <1> yellow, per ba«k»r. ki»«j7sc; PEAS. Vtrxtnla. p?r ba«kat. $1 COO9I 7.'.: PEPPERS, bull oossj an.f long- r*>.l. jer bbl. Jljjir.o; rt» Cu!l bbM ar..l lon< gre*n. jV.g.iSc: dn cheese, re-!. re r rbl. lt»$l 2.": la cheo-se. green, 7.Vtf sl : So cherry, per bask»t, $1 '—-osi S0- PUIIPKINS. ner bhi. 60g7."»c: PARSNIPS. f>-r btl Jl^ $1 25; P.OMAINE. st«»te. r er basket. l'Vj'4i>c: do per box. l>Ki3.V; STOtSa BfiANS. s::i:-. green or wax. pe? bas':.'t. jSgfflc; <?> n»*rby. per b.i.'ket or to.z. 2-""?73f: do Norfolk and Wash!! per basket. I"^^ih : SPINACH. state, p'-r basket. 4'^?."oc; d.> r.«-aj-hy. p«r bb! 7:..?<isl: SQUASH. H-.!hb.iri ar;ri rr.arr-tv. p» r bM. 7.">'a.'«l • TUR NIPS. Canada, rutabaga. < per t-t,; . Pti}( . r nit.itaca. ■•--•:- t :-> white, rer Ibi 75c- TOII \ 1. Eg --. -v> r >.i^;. 4^-'Tr.,<f ,?.-> Jcr<=r- rT b-?x. 2.-fl.->')c : WATEHrUKS!-'. r -:r 100 btmches %Wsl .'.o ..Toledft Sept A— CLOXERSEEp-Cgab. $.1.".. Octc*er J.tSiH: December. ISSTH; Xtarcb. jr. 77 : »; n-» 2 $-.40- No 3. $r. 27H: reject- 1. Jf. M. ALSIKK-- P r'tn», j». LIVESTOCK MARKET. _»_i__^ X** fork. September 2?. 13"». DEE» Keceiprst w>>re M earn, or 1.2^1 head in cluding l*t> cars for export alive, :; cars tor slaughterers ard 15 cars for th* market S:*ers w--re yi.->w. b-it prioe» Just about *tea.iy; bulls also hel-i up to fidl Wednesday's prices: cows were higher: the yards were c!?ar»vi Forress to N^st steers soli at S3 r^r"s(! CO per Itii) rb- bulls at' J2P<^s3sO: cows at f » 7<>g.<l r>r»»-e'l beif kskl a moderate inquirj-. at TQtOVaa C«r n>. with a little extra beer selling at V> l ie: Texas beel soli at *37c Liverpool an.i Li.r ! m cables ousted llv, caule «.->llir.g at 11512-jo per Tb. dr»s*el weieht; refrigerator beef dull -at 10*fl0 l i^ per IT.. Exports from tliis pert to-morrow include 7it : cattle and LOOO i;uar:er? o* beef on tn* Minneapolis '■ > London, and 3.00>» quarters ef beet on tha Phila-Jelplii* to Southampton, also for tha Loodon m.-jrket Total ex ports from this port for the wwk ending Saniniav Sep tember 2rt. u!i: bf> 721 rattle ar. 1 ».!'4O quarters of beef, all to ports of Oreat I'.ritatn. Sales— J. Shamh-rg .t Son: ir« W#st Virginia steetfL 1447 n> averas*. at $rt ~ft p»r im) rj> lf> do 1413 -•■ it $ci«: 15 dot 14^2 2>. at $•}; 23 do. 13W rb. at $5 &>; » +4, McPbersoa & Co.: 2O Virginia »">er?. 1283 rfc. at $5 65 1 bill. -"•' n>. at $2 90: ' cow. 13im> r>. It *4- ! do fla>» It. at $s ;*►; 7 do. !>2H n>. at $3*B: 3>> do. ,<<li» rb. at $1 70 S. Sar-Vra: lf> West Virginia uteers. 1421 n> at SK 05 20 do 14!.1 re at *S; 1» *», 1097 Tb. at »5 *> 17 ,io 14O> T*. at r>i>O; IS to. 1241 r». ftt $»8S; 1* a£ i~n ' » a . $5 90. li> F'snniTivar.li do. 7f>^ rh. at J. 1".-.: I bull. 13tv> rb. at jarW; 4 do. ir*o R>. at $3 25: 1 cO-.vc O -.v «.•<> rN at $2 »O CAM Receipts were 2;2 h-ad. inclmlir.jr 73 for butcher* and i«i; hen.t for the market, makfttK with th* few Itala calves, ahout !•» head en sale. Fric«a 'wer» rated just abou": • ste ; idv. quality crn=i.! t ->r.>.i A ■ men of common jrrassers was held over. Ctwnmon to prime veais sol.-f at $^-fcJ«M'> rer H.K> rb: common fcrsissers at $° SO \Vextern calves at ?4. Dressei calves Wen slow, except »Dod an,l ehpfca vea!<. which *«o w.inte.l at full price*. H^JSZS? vea:s r* M a£ H^ u - r° T ™- "-aery dr*as*t at , aiJHc; dr«s?e.i *ns.«-rs art-I f-i calves at 5®70 Sales— S. Jtuicl A Co. ; 12<> Wesrern calvs 268 R> s'v«l> *^ at 5-1 PT 100 rt>: 1 West Virginia ve«V I7CV *t a t % Saa<! * fs: I* V9a:s# I * 9 fl at * !l4 ° : 1 *•>: no n* I !****** 0 * & Co : * veals " lv> "*• at ?r>; 2 rfo - ias Aadrsn Mullen: t" <ras«er? 17«^ n> s r $-■ v» R SIIKKr AND £**»-B«ei»pt« ,vere 22V m or 0.145 heal. Jnclud!n< lib cars for slai:sri"#rer3 and 11 «or the mark--, rr.akir«. with the st3 > atock, if?'," cars to be sold. Sheep we r» dnll and barely steady: lambs slaw and weak, with no very choice offered; abour 7 car, were ir^-tohe carried over. Common t-> choice .h#-» l°™*- $ 5- 3f v " ."* - < -° mmo ' l *> »*«»• lambs « Pf-r Tb. ,i> 1 cul -"- atSt - Dresse.t mu tton ejulet, at BO9Q per n>. ana rjr^sseci lambs at , c*» Sa J e *~TI~ Tl " hlrl * Shanr.cn: 243" West rirgrrnfa fambe. .2 rb average., at K «.'. per I 0» ;no Fnugylnutta do. • 1 R>. at ?."•'•>; 2.11 Buffal-. rf.i «7 p> nr MIA; 2 «T>*t at *"?>"£>. sheep " W ?• at J4 ; 3 Fenn!< - v!va:ii '> |g 103 «x «, p ;,. J ' ud - 1 * Co : 2 51 ' Tl> « Vrgl-' ram?>a. e» n> at I- *£ HrH r 'i Kentucky do. 7!> Tb. at 50 50. 2-i:\ F-ufTalo «fe. 6. fb. at *4 .5; 1; West Virsrlnla sheep. l'> 7th at *.1 CS Shippers- Comrni»»lon Company: 135 v Vir?laU lambs •%-> Ilk, at 55«9; 257 c!o. ti4 TT>. <rr. r.i. Kerns • Commission Company: 2»V» Vtrsrinl* lambs M rb. at I4M: I Virginia gheep. S3 It>. at S-X linns — Receipts \v*>r» la car» or £223 hen-* tn clu.ilrs a our for the rrurktr. and ahcnt'fwo cars 'v-rm ttMl over from yesterday. F*elinß weak. Gixid stat* hess sold at $7 Ift per 100 !». EUROPEAN IPRODUCE1 PRODUCE MARKET. . «. Ll y <>r < *> 1 - SajfC 23— Itsaiaa Wllllll Spot stronzl No 3 red Western winter. 7» 9d: No, I Californlx , s 38 futures steady; September. 7s 10d; December. 7s 10d; Jlarch. 7s Svd. CORN— Spot ouiet; Am-rican mrs«d 7» 4.1; futures dull; Ocl b * r - 5*5 * »**: IHemtwr. Sa »\»d. 1 LOlß— W lnter patents steady. 2Ss 3d. HOPS at Lon don (Pacific Coast*, a-i-t.a -i-t. :i 10s4f£2 2* POHK— <PrtnM mesa i^ Ste xx rm.r t n . tirriu 77, W - BEEF— Kxtra India mess « rm - 11«> -^ HAM< Short cut. 14 to 16 T-. «tron*. 57s «d. Cumberland cut, 2B to .Til lt>. strong. iS»- short rib. 18 to 34 rb. strong 3>s; long clear middles lijht. 28 to 34 lb. strong. ;.i?s «sd; long clear mi Id: as. heavy. 35 to Ad lb. strong. CTs «.i; short clear backs, H to 2t> X>. strong. 535; clear bellies. 14 to 1« ft firm. 33, Od. SHOULDERS— Square. 11 to 13 Tb. SHiiSM 45» «d. LARD — Prime. Western in tierces, strone SU» 6d: American re fined in palls firm. S3» M. CHEESE— Canswtian rinast white, new. firm, rtts; Canadian •• colored, new. • MT, 6ts. TALLOW— Prime c!tr firm. 250. TI'RPEXTINE — Spirits steady. 2Ks S)d. UNSEED OIL— Imll. -"to 'M. , PETROLEUil— Steady. ;^t-J. KOSiX— ateaOy, Ta. ' 13