Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, January 1, 1880, Page 10

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iW THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: THURSDAY, JANUARY 1, ‘1880-SIXTEEN PAGER. " i 3 m1 has been above the average of former years, | clique delivered 1,670,000 bu, being nl the | ‘Tho receipts In December wero relatlvel roads advance rates ton polnt which gave | figures represent millions aud dectmal parts | demnnd for the grain, to compenhate the n % jo thai country. ‘The others woro kilted tn 4 mens ty ; or winter stared wheat tlint remained ean hand, | amnallin both years. is water navigation the advantages nolwith- {| of milllons: 3 qlerunnd Tenetene yleld of pena pe a « Qhicago, mostly on commission, ag mensnred on n gold basis, the only higher In \ ‘ a avernge since the panic being that of 1877, There was due on it 9 per bu atornge, of The reason for this deeadence Mes in tho | standing the fact. that take frelghts were | Year, Acrea, Crop. Exports. | tho United Kingdoms but {t now appears i ar FLOUR. 2 ‘| which ye was deducted from tho selling fact that the biggest crops of winter whent | much higher thin in any previons year sines | 1810, irvA s+ | that the deficteney Ig being inrgely met by ar ant ? Fe . Quotations ranged down among the cightles price to Inake it regular to the buyer, who | wore ratsed In Indiana, paris of Oho, and | tha panic. Hence n great deal of corn was BOL +1 Increased consumption oF ‘corn, oi at THE MARKET FOR FLOUR {n seven montha of the twelve, but were | then nssumedthe whole atorngecharae. This | Southern Ttinols {the two first named re- | drawn here’ from the far Southwest, as in aNh wi THE cnop. }. ‘has been unusually active, with a much | aboven dollar fully one-thint of the year; | broke the market from M@te (the previous | covering their old-timo prestize no wheat- | 1878; nnd there was not much golng around as th ‘The nerengo bf tho United States, and the’ ]}.. larger movement through tho city than ti | and even the Jowest figures compare fayorn- | ny) to Sige. On the ist nhout 350,000 | growhue States), ‘Tha movement of tho | ng on the cut-off tines from lownand Western K3 Ki esilinnted stold of ants for aaveral nm at at ne i roviots twelve months. The wholesale | bly wilh the 624e paid fn 1850 and the mq | bit ore was delivered, whitch closed ontthe | wheat from those sections cut n bie figure in | Lltnola, In November. the Teeetpts haiti TOLd 80 | in millions of bushols, was'as { Moweret rey i Any Bro Bd peat Di i deal and left the trade more tn wondor than | the exports of tho United States, hut little of | fell off, but for another reason han that BIRO, Wh i Gis, 0) gt \> trade has shown n decided reaction from the | Sse paid for largo quantities In the first year | ever that tho corner lind hot been, extended | iteante to this elty, The enormous exports. noted above, tho Grint visit: helping moist RS bn ‘ rae a ee tendency to become:strictly local, which was | of the War, Conatdering that the cost of | Into July, when the eurrent recetpta_to bo | of last autumn ‘did not, therefore, show | weather to Keep baek the new corn. 00.3 135 | pe bd noted In oir Inst review, the export trate reduction hag taaterially. ecreaned sine takeat ear of weer Polatively grunt Durlig rue), ab Chlenrat bak he saniall Portion a8 THE OLD chor ots a Oon700 Fr 4 - | then, owing to the widespread substitution o| he whole of Aus! 1a market ranged bee HA Whe! meved on orders sent by: fe is Die ae hat hal | uevolling io largo sivenolont ris sivctae imehine {oF hantt Inbar the prices of, tho | low Me, the average priee for that month he. | chants whose business headanarters are Pang lores ono im Guautity, and eirett vel qen ie ey zn | : Mons in prices have been wider, though the | past year may be considered good, and re- | ing astinde under sey and on Sept. Vwhenat | hero. Kansas and Missouri, which are in | ter tan Pe AR att Pah i a a pee a TOUTS AGL ++ market was rather slow to follow tho up | inuerative to tho farmers, except those who | sold at 8c aunt, owlng to the reports that our | Inte years ilreetly tributary to Chicago, had paselidieto Anis tA hey y earls int ia year, BT cri 13,858,008 ward movement of wheat during the specula- | are so far nway froma market. That 0 large | crop, both of winter and spring, would prove | but a light frop ‘of winter wheat. ‘This ae- | wud withoutt Ne severe cise whieh necurren Wend ma 12,820,148 406g {lve demand of autumn, part of tho price here {s enten up by the cost | to be the Inrgest ever known, counta for the falling off, whieh Tas been Ine Live ah bs aT ie te SoU eo ai 12RKB 03.8 aa AN ! 5 b: to th ivalent In b of trangportation hither, ‘Tne AtTUMS noost gentously (and disingentously) charged to | arrival in Europe, Bu es pet ny net Ten 15 12,083,500 Ug ‘Reducing bags to their equivalent In wr | “Phe crop of 1873 was a large one, and. pre- tinenrly in September, Enstern eapttat | te, new rules for inapecting winter wheat, | Wanted there ill the unparalleled anil wwenthie ase 0.0 np of last yeni fs oMlelally estimated rols, the receipts of the past year were 3492+ | coded hy a prolific sled in’ 18rz,, giving a | sce {tently in September, Enste Pima | Which went into forea here a few months | Or fsstired them of n big falling off In thelr OL 190.0 251,000 bu, aid value nl $120,855,000, , 110: tls, Aaalisy 5,00, basrelg in datas ralter lirge surplus at the beginning of the hake {ARNE holt ciety fur nue, Aan no. lt gnnst hie autmaltted, however, that the yield of breadstuffs. English. buyers were + _ and tho shipments wero 3,297,816 bris, against | year Just closed, and many fears were ex- | wry Europe belnyg the stinulus to investments 7 Tie atiser y rmieRrowers tian actual; t T B779,010 tho provious year. Our elty mills | Pressed that nnvthing Ike d good crop In 1879 | Hho resulting naivanee, with the isseminne | draw trom the South, while aise tintnatiey Oottred el ae rns HNN Mecenaaey (0 PG THE AREA OF COUN-OULTOIL: APnvods wens alestoneeT 130,000 ea A to thete full enpmelty during nenrly | Would be the slznal “for a range of priees | tion of the hows of extensive crop fillures | @alnst Northern-grawn winter wheats and | frelahta’'down toa very. low pulnt in the | Inthe United States has ited n ateady {arts Was iecrensedd 190,000 teres, bein are. rh hue Dutiieklone He ventite x wach Tower, than any rip tnoneuslons “] on the othor side of the Atlantic, Rradunlly Hety the miehesauntedt ee ri theta apring to induce the eran to move. Theao | increase since the ante, and its breadth in {tice numninat SER, 00 heres in Asya inatoriat increnso has revently been made to | operated freoly on, the: short ste, backing {ook hold of Hye papa ta Mearts meal ehlely quautily to make for that articlo n market sunditiony helt ont Hite a ines ay te tute te oe at eon, englly alse not having harvested more than two-thirds “their productive capacity, ‘The volume of | thelr eitlons With pard Cash. But they | people beeame satistiet that the wheat was Worthy of thornanie. @red whiter averaged | entlly ruled dull during the frst half et the | twice as much cor ns now If ways and | Of 84 avernge crop, recelpts and shipments Is not, however, n | tre Ssnpraltitead | Cur eron | A ae cing sold too cheaply, Che elty followed | qos Augiist, 8,0 in September, tow in | Neate ‘The low prices rullng In Moreh dle | men E ; RYH, fnuge to the magnitude of the flour trade fn | revent Investlimtions Indicates, butethe OlL tis pauntty, an Hes Phere sone poo Octoher, and SLat¢ in Novombers or re- jew ope tio Prominent operatnys Jo buy ii present prnspael le for, a lari Mera TR MEE sok nye: this city, ‘hore fs yot a gaod deal of | World was crop poor to an unusual extent, before Under the outside eondt Ie ff spectively 8e, 5l¢e, Be, and 53x above No, 3 ately In. ho spring, and thay carried the A ‘ ee ONS Perea A four shipped through Chiengo, which | A continuance at bad weather made the ale | Ccfore dt. Under the outside conditions of spring. In December the promiun shrunk | deal over from ong month, to another tli | being much more mtimerons now (inn afew | has beon a. steady one, compared with the int i Ch {| id Ki bro; but | Ways short western const of Europe shorter farmer st 4 the bite would probably hot | th zer, and the Inst weal of tho yer Ie was | Wrenn without finding a chance to turn ata | years ago, ut its relative abundance tn the | suotuattonsin other grain, atid hns also ruled s' not bought ond sold here; but i havo Rieger amiele aNoe Oe tanh cats scarcely salable at. ie diseonnt from the prlee pena. racy tho anion At sean annernlly Ban Hag anal Lb very Pein anit there. ts tat | tow. The velume handled here shows a de a “ . by was plenty, i= me No. 8 The 4 pelle: at there was a brilliant prospe ’ om u 2: . tl ensnted by th vement | Milling of In the yleld af other countries we nnd stocks of air Kinds going | Cyr uk tor No. 3 Sarin, out Ho, 8 inter for thethen conti crops, and that shade tho inerense in production, aA grent deal of tho | crease, as does the yield. The receipts wera more than compensated by the movement | whieh’ hnd hitherto helped the United States The nergy: ssf. | (Northern grown) ranged 2@8e below No. 4 tilted Ty “ity. , 7 5 of flour around us on orders sent from this | to supply the deficiencies of the United King. | UP Fanidly. “Che surplus enermy of the West | rea i aitinun, Due the distinction ts now | comntry sell very freely. ‘Tho trade ind to | corn tat eamo to. this elty during the Tae | 2,500,748 bit, against 2,400,615 bu in 1878; and ; elty. “No Inconsiderable proportion of tho tom, any Franee, Tho consequenes wasn The pete Te eh pret nto weal penrly, Nt nom bial cee NaS Tungedt nasa insetholond ant pats Mt os ict ee year barely wald the farmer syors tt an Xu dale the Zelinatets were 2,271,408 bu, against : steady demand our res a, whirl 10) shal? the country, | below No. 3 winter, during the greater par re , 5 e 2,025,051 bu tho previous year. , Hour tilted in St. T.ouls his been sent to- wae ted nay petra nae “titel es, und the matfiin oat Let fy the conntty, of tho time sines Inst harvest, No, 3 winter of thie anarkel MUL August... Then tho market nat) ngs Ia to nunsiety to Soy nol ne Of the | there was a BOIL deal of speculation in. 1 Sencar ir RRR wc TEE omuntoveD tote iasaabte than the In- J in thecity, went into wheat. It Ig note: | Ayermulne about 6@10e above No. 3 apriius. nine in wheats Tal nh tow legal Op tora | hear of Inrae uecas of lind weeded with wine | this article earty in the year, tho low price of Wine manufetured In Minnesota than in 4 terlor to carr ; tho grain towards the con- worthy that the greatest bulk of the wheat was Phe wiuter hent wie Shelly: fakan for Bitte: (working pa 1y for persona utah ce) tele ter wheat. Which have hitherto been planted. about He in January inviting buyers, and it ea is y ROU ite, Y oRale is dence c Ns ‘ " i argely for October and November, 'Yhey | Inconsiderabls part of the land referred . an Atlantle ports for weeks In succession, The | pric , le 1, | local milters, ‘arly supply of steady customers for small lots, bn | 4, piles due toebband flew tn the demand, y nWnst year ven he breadth sown lust year was Inerensed ated to | Poy, looking for n bizger conpetition with 14 1 4 54489000 bin aa if RS Ta ae 190,000 neres In Kansns, 85,000 acres in Minnes could ba found for getting rd of It. less of that than In 1878, and this 1s probably than ever; and this was necompanted by a C4 y del C! q = = bal . 1 hnve to be plowed up in tho spring and weakened by heavy deliveries. ‘Tho market mm increased demand bad been. parthilly fore | PM aa a au THE cnor, found that the old corn was neary exaust. | wil ‘ ! i | rented, and advanced to tle In Jui : Ihis ant other cites, ‘The Inereave In out re- | sev by wdeawenke enpitaliie, and thay | gupumueoubcangnrnutels Tule heat, TH | ses gcieuseuralpuren piven tho fallow Sout, Interere. to prevent tho’ neve-eryp | dli;be any seat falling of ta tHe cost neve | eye selling in Wine month at Ere for'Seploney. | cuipts hu3 been chiefly in took hold to n large nt. Jatter they were | short, and the recollection of the fact that Ju | Ingas the whent product of the States named, | Would Interier prey iy Gate bof tl tne ye livery, S38 A Sxpone REO telnforeed by an anny of ‘speculative oper- | Sestiients by ‘themullithde lave xoldom bee nm | in bushels for 187 fron eomiliy ott the market early, In Octo- | age of the coming year. Pek dell verse ae former tone was due to; tN f 5 ety a a tad el eI b have " g 4 r there wis THE INSPECTION OF NEW CORN reports that tha crop would bea very short « the business In whieh started np tnto ing | Mors, whose nnuxicty fo Invest caused a fur | of tong dnmition Indueed many shrewd capl- ‘ luring the whiter tte tho speculative gerade re ! greased activity about a year ago. Tho Hee jentara hn pele the fdvance being so | tatists to go In heavy on the short slde. They A SIAN? ADVANCE, durt pe one, on necount of the drought, some place y check the outward nverely ° : wel augumented needs of Western Europe in- | movement, md help to enuse 2 glut at the fost several ATTRA ARTA MR aires a i abl duced dealers on the other side of tho At- | prinelpal points of, aceumulation, right on | done, however, was on a mmnunoth sealer Nebruska, Of, . . the forward edge of winter, when. our bing |} i maboa ei ” oe TOUS rl 4 yechenp. 4 us tho Inspector was Hable to mistake frost- | well exhausted, most of it having been ox- tinlis.to extablith buying agencies tn tho should have been nearly empty, A reaction Bsporling houses be the aeuboard went ‘The area planted Inst year ty stated to be went no ie Lint montie Gatsoon felt once hardening for real dryness, But ottr State | ported hi the spring, Tho prospect improved United States, and it was only natural that | 4 He “ 4 down for hig sums, A prominet dry-gooils rr # .- e t 1 5 i ff draleecy i ? Was the necessary consequence; hut the de- | house wag reported to have lost nearly halt a | 20,000 cere han averngo yield of 159 | Indeed, thera Is reason fo'belleve hat the ad: | Inspectors grado corn Into No. 3 Irrespective | towards the thne of harvest... The first car {hey should select Chiengo as their head- | mand conthined: good, and confidence re- | ROW Wig dolar. patty: In when, betors | PEE mere fase TEL for 1878 Ohio Michi | vance ot only occurred sooner than looked | of the season, and this exposes the trade to | iondof new rye arrived July 14, and the new aah ag te ue Denial ocDle Duslnesss “THE MAMKRT WAS QUITE TAME others last nuatl rat thal lad boat Fpnett by of tho United States ts stated to be 448,755,000 Plans aM inte jatar, to eee Ing that | wo -years ago some. of our. sity | that buyers hold off to sco how low prices ant ey orders. from people who ‘icine muaccarly nate f lust winter, ‘Th Tines of bt ance pple " Du and the atte GER rtp EA08, . | would check reevipts, and thus give them lit- | Pers Tost very” heavily by guaranteelng | would decline, Exporters let it alone till + Bsed to boy in’ New York and other: points | during Inman ae ma - ee vith ionty Nota fow of the specutative class of ox. | -khe following are tho Coftelal) estimates | te grain. to handle ‘at tho Anes of the | com, which was nothing bub mush after % | about the middle of Soptember, leaving the further Inland, as well as tu Chicago. Sines | Wine behind in first hinds. md tht vdizhed | porters were put to thelr wits" end to tulalt | OF tte wheat nerengo of the United States, In | jranth, “But the corm came in tteteand | fw hours’ exposure to the moist wir in the den! to tho local crowd, A few shipments tho miserable fallure of. the British whet | tther heavily pn tho ath te ce eae eee | potters a ee vier | Willlons and tenths;-and the erop yield of “iilel Tedd They sold | Mersey. Last year there was little complaint rowil. “A fe pay m is ritisit Wheat | rather heavily on the minds of the bears, | thelr obligations, They were mostly men | 2! 4 4 vith th fast, whieh spolled thelr plans. They sold ero made to New York, and netted al crop there has been, more demand than | though the wheat In store hore. was belloved | who operuied on the seubonrd, but te ettece | Wheat in several past’ years, with the annual aut nearly nt the top, instead of enrrying the | 2bout condition, though our stocks were so | Were made Bath TINA 0 1088, fn sympathy with wheat, ‘Tho tide of specu- | 18 t polut about which there Isa radical Mf | ing the shortage at nearly 50 por cent; while of he wheat market, and after: | ference of opinion, It used to he helleved §6 wai a tee eorae Morauve the fatter wag | Was Unsafe to pasa eorn ns No. 9 tit_syring, | #0 surplus from the erop of 1878 was pretty ever forour flour, ‘The reason Is evident. eld by Eastern e: od wi re. ‘Phey ‘ very freely | xports, and the honie consumption, seed, | Goat through; so that the October comer | large in tho spring ns to make many operators | In September , a I British millers used to buy our wheat to mix san tees Pipi ay another ae that the finwlisn tnetteets aro keptd wie ay and waste, In millions of bushels: proved to be only scare, Some of theso very nervous, “Cho current crop 1s x euecally: ; A DRISK EXPORT DEMAND i eee ie pc tn the acter Aa Tus fo ROOF gurrent premiums: | ‘The wheat tind heen | the welght of thelr offerings, in spite, of tne = ‘Acre | crop, | Be [eam | P riley took hold auuin at the ros tng des go dry thint Here {3 Overt Wea rule {OF fear, sitddenly sprang up, and about 500,000’ bu i ‘ LG Bh it 0 fnvestmenr nyers y{ poraliclal storms in England about haves! "car, . » | norte, [sum | cline, but only to lose the profit previously y M ay % H Big hamid produat wchen fey’ ¢an abtuin tha theirawn muneyeinta tty amd talending te | dimes When the vessels aerived. tec kalee e auet_| CP: | rts. |"itane | nade. dn the early part oF November tees | tnt the Fiske is too erent, anil that no corn | Were taken in about a couple of weeks, tha Erieam. 4! Ret vi 2 Cl ize re hold It until lt eoutd be shipped out by water | grain on board only a part of It was ready for ——— | was anothor flurry, the Sta remium vanish- | Should be graded No, 2 under any elrenm- | result being an advauce to Gs before Octa- a + Is the fuet that the demand is naw largely for | fy the spring. But the tr was in const: thems and the exporters were reduced to the sess vee) Ing undor fears that a good deal of corn sold | stances til after It has been through the | ber came in. ‘The demand continued active + our better grades of fours; it used to bo | dread thatthe wheat inate i tn eunntns necessity of buying almost wildly at one za’ | aay’ tourrive tint month could not be brought in, | frost and well out of it. during the whole of that month, and itty iostly for the poorest qualitles for consump | the market at nny monient, and the very cnn. | tine in every graln market in the Union to meg | 151 as the railroad officials furnished cars very * estimated that two-thirds of the rye which 5 no nerenased the general nervousness, as it waa | iver property which belonged to others nt 13 ag | Above selie ‘ 10 Wi VOLUME 7 3 "0 zact steak, Uetay 5 vale lige eetealsh gaeks argued that Sante deep design Nistor to | the tne they sold it. "The failure to de- ie i 6 which the new vorn Inspected No. 2 on ar- STEN OUCH: OF O48) foreign gitpments, have heen tight since bo covered up by the avewal of y liver on thine caused an similar tight- tlour-barrel has Letter y" avewal, of an intention BI 234 | 184 | rival here caused tho longy to lose courage, | Passing through the city exhibits n decrense, | Nov. 1. The market ndvaneed sharply in oecasionully sent #4) 324 | and they relluquished ‘thelr hold, ‘Thig.| but was much larger than that of any provi- | Sympathy with whent, touching 7c by’ the i tently of the course of | ness in) England, where the cargoes for tir itl ica from ca von Morehieh Snows to Recinlk MTbClts i ae original program. ‘Tho impression prevaile fo De made fram this city nearly atthe top. Suliich, Teason bagged flour ean bo sent across | outside that prices wera much higher than | But the flurry was soon over in England, ihe water for et eae 100 ths than t€ | they would have been but for the “New | though importers continued. to. take ont pur wn fie bares, a te a eset an Hino Xork tnantputation,” ond that they ould not phent freely. ge gxellement Subsiled all . ,, vo) be sustained, ‘This cheeked the consumptive 6 sooner, ns the New York operators who that, the English people fake sore kindly to | itemand, white It increased, deliveries. from | had bought largely here at aueatlicrdate sold ner, and the market ruled quite weak under | ¢- a " * ‘o vient. TY | ye TSU yore thes ‘afferings in the second week. of the Si percent. Tho reeetpts of 1870 were 16, jected wheat. The price of rye used to ayer- Bia | 10k 4 700,018 bu, neninst 18,830,207 bu in 1878; and | 880 higher than that of rejectod wheat afow — , ay month, eapecally ag the shipping movement b 1) AEE 839, H 3 ! ao | aoe yas rather light stocks fn store, Inte er the atipmantsavers lant an bn, nugninst i years ago. autiGka: : : 4 195 han was considered favorable to n healthy # bu tu the previous year. The marke! . Joey | 218 | market at the closing of navigation. | puted higher than in 1878, but lower than any The following table shows the monthly iin" | 0 | Phere was quite n spnsm. of weakness at the ‘ “ing b Tange and te avernge price of No. 2 rye tho bag as a home lnstitution. “Most of our 2 i ae . 5 th {teri ‘oi th other year slnce the panic, oats having been | throughout the year: denters absurdly persist, however, first hands, the farmers, fairly exhausting | out on tha upper part of the down-grade close of-the month, under offerings from the in selling | themselves’ In thelr efforts to get thelr | which depressed our market and stemmed | js Weoeen tine Ie tie ain November longs, but the market for May | generally cheap as compared with other its flour at so mueh per bri of 106 Ibs, wheat to market before tho a Thoam™ the tide of speculative Investin Tha “consumption” ts the difference be- clos ‘ization, and Sly. in) December, almost become obsolete ax an export | prices, Probably this popular distrnst, more | hnd been sold to others In advance 0% | 20015 | brought out considerable quantities that had | ous year, except 1878, when the recolpts tant of cuustenton altrnctive to consti: package, The bag oceuples tesy room Hinn anything caused the subsequent } of arrival. ‘The result was that British quota- 24) UMls | been held by others in anticipation of a cor- | showed an Increase of nearly 4,750,000 bu, or | ors, though it kept far below the price ape on aipbourd, and 1s less Hable to shift | sather wlide-nwake diver oi wg with 1a i motion of they Lowest, Highest, Av'ae, 48 4 ent in Europe, re te - | keptupinsympathy with wheat. fhe May | grain, ‘The range of prices was a rather wide ql a 48 . heheh it Is charged for by the 100 ths on | was over, (‘The — result owas a | Our Western speculators were left high aud Eyre cron and “exports, spore cerieees tla ie den! wis renlly netlve towards the close of | one. ah rt pa ' Inland relght, and its cost Is reckoned up bs congestion on the western shore of Lake | dry to take eare of the hnmense volunes of | nt the close of each crop yent, Th is falr to | Navigation, and tt Is probable that the founda | “rhe cropof 1878 wasn very Inrgoone, and the it “46.10 Dir fearilent ee ate sont ete aera Afetlenn, Ghicaetn ft piliwautes being wheat that hind beer atirhetelt towards thet, add about 15,000,000 to the aleve-named. Hane have caro The fendi sent reeeipts- welghted down the murket, making = au < a a ed up early in the winter. ‘There was | and Enstern capital again stepped in at the y * nth comes w J. ple y low the example of dealers in lard and meats, | qbout 5800,000 n of nll grades here at the | resulting decline. There wis 80 much of auallty ayatlatle. ‘irae natalie ot ok on both sides nre of the order of Titans, | it quits flat during tho winter. No, 2 mixed ra) even it the cental system bu not adopted by | beginning ‘of the. year, to whieh another | collective confidence In tha nriichs that prices | whent in store four ta fiye months age. It | tongh, of course, many smaller ones have | sold at 10}e at the opening of tho yenr, and oo tothe grads beats: 1 san 2,000,000 bu was udded during ‘the next two | here ware kept relatively til there belng | would not be fair to add all left behind, be- | Jolned {n. | ‘The btiyers are believed to bo tho | barely passed 20c during January, ‘The mar- Th Our exnort usiness was helped in the au- | jienths, Under this owing lond the mar- |} about three shillings per quarter to the die catise there {s nlways some left over, ‘We | Men who took the deal Inst spring. Many ket Improved to 25!fe In March, but fell back Hema iy rustful dullness had settled down upon er, é we y i by large hos Ure, re y . — * Chiengo to New Yorke nt one tine (Septem | which would continue, at Teast, til Wyrards OUR MARKET FoR sroT WHEAT ere: por ceince lat tare te the iteld of itis sold ogalnst purchases already mado in | apolis party, since somewhat notorious, took ra ber) at phout Xe per bri, while the rate from | the advent of the new erop. « opened in September at about 8c; on the | was less, ns is believed by many, the quantity | the country. A great deal mora money Is | hold freely, belleving thera was “millions in 60 Rochester, N. Y,, was Se. ‘The country ‘The market riled very steady all throngh | 11th {t passed 0c, with only 4¢ discount on | available for export will be corresponitingly | put Into eribbed corn this winter than ever | i. Kew other people took the same view, 4 WEST OF THE MISKOURT January at Sly asinge, and then rose gradit- | No. $, so-inuch ‘was. the Jattor Wanted by | reduced. It ts estimnted that 60 per cent of | pefere, and more would have been invested | oy evory little advance brought out free mM «River hus sent little flour here during tha | ally during February to we, with a very | slippers, On the 2d it passed $1.00; antl | the avallable surplus has nlrendy left tho | I lumber could have been obtained to bulld Mares vo 1 bane that dhe cm bl . Bey anh past year, In comparison with 1877 and | strong feeling at the elose of tha month, uie | Oct OIL passed Si.10, | By tho 20th of the | hands of the farmers. The probable how erlbs; cars could not be obtained to car- | sellers in such numbers that he was unable BE 18%. “The people there have made | cera much Inerensed demand by the New | month tt had touched $1.20, and it fell back WANTS OF EUROPE: ry lumber to many places where it was want- | to control the deal to a successful issue, The reat eat of flour, but it ns been | York operators, By March 6 ithad advanced | to S1,l0% nt the close of the month under : cd, ‘The sales nre so large that soine aperators | market torched 85c spot on the Yth, 10th, and WHERE TRITAR OUNE 20. Wanted elsewhere. Tht Government. took | to ¥02ge for reguinr, and confidence rapidly to t2d at th elu oft rises hore h under st have been variously estimated, but they ore | think there will ben block in deliveries thnt Lith of June, fell baer to 82e on the th, and The ryo taken In this elly by exporter: nyost of the Dakota supplies, and Colorado and | grew, ns those who wore watehing the mar- | seaboard. Up to this time tha apecuiative | Yet very large, notwithstanding the Immense | month, espeelally as the warehouses will T tmeise Inv duis avi Shae singe dnst harvest was wanted by Germany Nebraska have sent thelrg to the nines, the | ket closely becama convinced. the the power | trading had ehiefly beun for November do- | OXPort movement froin our Afinntic ports In Probably be full of rath, to begin with, For | declined to 2¢ in July, with a rather large | ond Moltand, and same of It went to. Frmice,. westward movement belng helped by’ the | of Eastern capital was pledged to earry tho | livery, and the premium paid for that future | He putin, which” avernged nearly, one | this reason Juric corn sold during Inst month | accumulation of onts on hand to bo taken The rye craps of Europe wero generally Vigh fretght charges In this direction, Our | deal through Into summor, At the first call | waa hirge enough to give a good profit to million bushels per day in wheat and flour | ata wie discount, from Atay. Tho market | caro of by the trade, The gran was mostly | poor, especially in Russia, whieh had hither flour hing come from Towa, inois, Wiscon- | on the morning of ielday, March 7, thero was | capitalists on the operat The ee ‘ for several weeks, British shortage on | during the Inst fortnight has mh tun e = | to usually supplied. the: shortige of: her of carrylng tl ri during [3 Mipped Ww York at nv loss, and quota: sin, aud Minnesota. ‘The quality was excep- | very little wheut offered for sale at 930 for spot whe: It ranged at 2 > menti, shout 7 i Aeale fhe new i and : acreage alone was 60,000 acres, cqual | ¥ lefly sustained by sympathy with aya neighbors. ‘The Lungarian crops were very ie per month, to 21,000,000 bu, as compared with the previ- wae pill fogea weak, 0 SMMPAthy with | tions declined to21:¥eIn August, the new crop EE a ts ‘he deal change tonally good on both crops, the wheat being | April. tT over Int . a q nen “Thore wort fair putea le Gemanit harvested in good condition except ns to dirt, BLACK FRIDAY, about the same rate, with bit little friction, ts An a Vive atindatshed Toren ee Aw PRICES. burntnis out Latter Hi linet He Sake out ee here for 8 in October; olielly for Clo, and the miller could) rem that: before But fust then there camo flushing over tho | though the prices of the middle of Ovtabur Theavern th 4 feta Is A tanta nN a if fone The following table shows the monthly ‘Tho above-named excltament-was the only. ; Op eine oi in th ons Bt ie He te grinding. ‘Chere has also been a not! wires the well-remembered dispateh: were not returned to, Our visible supply | ittend of one Whieh is themenn of many | Tange and the average prleo on No.3 corn OASIS IN, A DEIENY tlauu the total stele af the Ur lee Blakes Ee improvement in inill-muchinery, espeetally In New Yonk, March OJ, K, Fisher & Co. Cht- | W88 80 Jurge that it depressed quotations vents, The London “ines estimates that the throughout tho year: of dullness during ‘the first elght months of | « au he otal ine at ther nl Het Bt ig ay A Southern Urlhols hich dS ducreased the | eagae Soli whatever wheat NMuret or April mar- abrontl 1a Well ns Hero; by tha aulddis of Walls of tie people this cereal ene aro 102,- | afonth, Lowest, Highest, Average, | tho year. In October the boom Int wheat, In- | G40 a Tho dey wonthor made the atari - ket. ‘The muanifacture of patents hag In- pie ett tabs Withoutdeelintog more thin woe about 30,000,000 bn, of whith 13) ve K wera Sor pot Lia, of witch they ning Import 144,000, | Januury.. a On 8.14 | fluenced onts, but not to the:snina extent, | thin, however, In many parts of the West; creased, and n good many Nave heen taken | « Arehio® Fisher at once Deans ull in New York and Chteayo. ‘Tho warehouse peepee more tan the average fins fy i in spot being only 25 per | but the quality is suporh, being believed to hss ghee that “mnonth, err es tae Be tho finest risen slnee 180, lost of It hag eer Inspected No, 3; and the rejected has sold w ket dragged at that; 32%/c was the highest well, showing bat It is a good grade this am on forclen aceount, chiefly the medium quale | qe . - block: men at other polnts, whieh held far smaller | PE the two preceding yours, 1, K. Jackson, Wes, Winters havo also sult well, the de- | TIRE aud left tn bls blocks, (At first te | aren et erat eat ya sean oe the wall-known ngrieutturnt writer, estates , Insul being stimulated by the fuct that they freely took all that was offered. But soon | crease In storage rates, and that caused spot ee : et ay dlunt any 140/000;000 bi “Were sometiines 25e@.31.00 per brl below the | the fecling changed, and tho market went | Prices thory to rule so low that shipments | le mean of theso estimates Ix 140,000,000 bn, z of thess ¢ price, with iit demand for ulpitent ear, ‘The cro aap ve uichtatl rapid- peices charged for sprlig patents, , ‘rom this city were almost out of ues | France, which o few yenra ago was an ex- ‘Thero was, however, more, speculation for | ly, and probably little of the surplug now re- een in alg payee ig Da Se ee a down at rapid, rate to Doxee er, five by tes y were alti the a porter, now nets 89,000,000 bi and, other Mny delivery, and large quantities wero sol | malng in frat Inti th stilt hata tion of I Alaa to tte trae, eee unitiene OF course n grent deal of other wheat was t Tn fis latter Hart ob Novant se prices Senin Tie muatees in total ote 335,000,000 but wanted, by parties who hind them in the country on few Tuetttes abut oie firms) ce ay : atepitr inte Tied uk tale: hoe \. S | toolc an upwar partly due ie : : i: i ‘Towed hy move harmony: In tho handling of seated ae in ihe beaks Tate noni dbs of mailer rece! pis, witch Aomawhnt reduced Hiusala, hes heen extimoted lo have wsurplin snaay county’ warcwauses ure full of oats, | CxTZI™5 J¢ Joka this mont, and perinps to santbles and comparing them with the stu | covered thit the talegramrwas a forgery, and | the visible supply, Our stock at the close of | Sf About 80,000,000. A Inte writer makes It olds there pave been io complatuts In this Louie back £00,000 (bu that aflemGane Tho navigation wis bout 6,600,000 bu, and, in: Shoot Colo but thy Auisian rye cto te very lop eta H but tess rere mn to expect ty ei, | next day he bought through frlends the other ercaned AHI further to 7, ,823 bir the last | hsorb a great deal af whent.. Canada and fa eely ny unaound, lonr was seni heres 2,000,000 bu, and perhaps more, the market | Week In December, ‘The speculative furore Stanitopn had 34,000,000 bu, atid other couns Tnlcormt ry i thot inrowc, “Tite br ne reacting to sie under thedemand, but closed pricovnt tha wen ia Much on the sath irles besides the United States 31,000,000 bu, more confidence in our fuspection than ever | Sater 4 It. sttbgoqnent market belng es leaving room for 185,000,000 to 000. bu. very 3 one, consitering the fluctuations | our local millers have wanted but Nttle, and pefare, rund the result. isn inerense i the aT y Silt tong be rememberest nent "Ulbs tie: subsoaty ne Tak is weak, fo bo Wanted from tilis country, without take Thong! i tho crop of 1878 was the Inrgest pory steady, one ‘entire Tange of the inontiy | Canadn his taken Plone, the duty on the arti- LOUIS esi, wie Dente, xis and out of exist thelr ware forced out of | ‘The following table shows the monthly places south of the United Staten ‘Tiitmments Sethi the ‘iWelva montis caflee anatase fuer ait put ge of sink ee ieee tile aomeelns Solera ae ‘i inal geaden in irae Ate better that | tho deal hundreds of outside ‘parties, and | range and the nveruza price On No Sapriny | Pace eh eye oe feel States, Te upper {a | than that of any previous year. ‘There was | Murry the Inst two days, jun’ td : i nominal grades in 1878, caine near stranding nota few members of | wheat throughouttho years id planty of room for every bushol of whent Hterally no old carn left In the Sunt ‘hy | Bure to square up tis Fe A OE NI | qcule, following nro usilmates of the rye THE COURSE OF TI MAUKET the Board, In fact, the heaviest fallure of | afonth, Lowest. Highest, + " ‘ : ey y | curly. In December there was a, good ship- | acreage, and yield In millions of bushels, In has been approximately that of wheat, with | the year (McHenry) ought to date. from that JAIME voveses cea ‘iy luke Angrage. hat We have te spare betwveen this, and next | tho tine the new was ready to move, Wl 3 many country’ warchauses ure full of oats, | spring, A good many people haye faith in though the stock In sight (not era coun- {| the article nnd smihs ete A Val pay ae Y 8 bee! er than usual. ‘Tho | per bu, “The States named will wa s Ah Hae eo months rare red by-n good con | deal of rye yet, and there Is soine hopo ‘that aig BS | sumptive demand, partly due ton scarelty of | the export demand will revive with the re- fx. | hay. ‘The market duel November was | sumption of Inke navigation. We note that Ing demand, which put strictly fresh onts to | the United States for several yeara: e i Hf] harvest; und the carrying capacity of the | neas the fuct that old corn was bought In this | INS ci ‘1 ti the id eon an woxeri By'3to4 | Muck atleast tin thet Boa | Sac o ‘isment eating Wats | HRM tas A A aREW | a ha ara ent tu ate |S aaae “He 1 TOD eT No, 3] wee erwards, H ployment tn dlatributing polnta where | stirch factory In Ottawa, Low prices for rw ‘i i 13 wheat, the No. 2 being ehietly used for | was demoralized would be to put it tamelty, tt in needed. Thy large visible supply of the | the article in the West, the revival of manus ty und eopn weit tle trnalag ise ig RD Watton The Hour narket started up in | In the language of a prominent operator present winter {s not, therefore, an element | facturing Industries here and tn the Eastern = ‘, 18%. September because No. 8 wheat had grown | (Dunham), the nnrket was of weakness,. It is simply hold in reserve at | States, and an wnsual shortage in thy cereal PRIORSs 1870. scarce, nid this started up No.2, whiett soon STRUCK WITIE PARALYSIS, Hh rl nts of Heer tion till viel e by conspire ‘The following table shows the monthly | ya77' nn eta palit ae ecient tat and ee Se thw eae fil canaelred to range and the average prico on No, 2 oats Tis of tt is held there by capitalists who probably | lea wider a July sun. The rather Jarge visi- | throughout the year: Pita, to carry it til it can bo sent toward pie: Supply nt tho lose of navigation aA dls consumer. ‘athe fact that tho new crop began to be |- ENGLAND AND FRANCH markated early, and In splendid condition, wero in the wnrket ovory day, up £0 fhe clone | AE tery tigeann iN Enel ake ee of navigation, buying somethere. The Chit. ft matured curly, and afew drys’ expeutire to auein porsche aye, thaws gulpplng polnt the air nftor husking mado it fit for market, and some buyern.who could not get thele contiiience, and oii ule ied holders to alt the tot ih the Late wero filled on the seaboard, or | Lots of new corn was Inspected Jn this elty BD ri may as No, 2 durlug October, and in the next orders fled here went on a personal tour “ ms Sead " 4 " back in the country, The United States have “i 7 among the country mitts to ito fele up continnal fear of another break the market THE NEW CROP OF WHEAT. tho month — the proportion fs Hterally poured wheat in upon Europe; " No. 3 . & Sanit te 3 dropped to 88/¢e for spot on the 14th, ta 88igo | was at first reported to bu enormously great | Was rathor large, though the ‘bulk : enous toatl fiele as Ehe ite ty} on the 19th (laren) tind had receded to ete oF than tat of nny previous year, Thigeariy. | ques ne a0 die ban a nua o tJ rrival re alece sections. ‘The ‘oad in Novumbie ats by April, tho day on which the term “of | reports by tho bears vero wildly substan tinted wearled, except ns some of thoit agricultural | 80d the | weather was damp during rolatively dull, as. consumers aN ft ie wihter storage expired, by the “ofleial” guesses mde at Washingtany | writers have, drawn pen pletures to that | & arent part of November, Threa weeks ngo “Ing back on ‘stocks pierced ‘i on ia a These law prices, however, induced other | but oven they were outdone by xomg of our | effect. One polnt has been lost sight of, | Some large export orders for old corn were matin ‘December tho market was not ng | capitalists to enter the market as purchasers, | amatourstatistictins. One enthusiastic Indl: | Our largo ndvance in October stimu inated q | Teeclved hore, and could not be tilled, because Holders were unable to obtuln fieen etree: aud they bought lurgely, believing that all wo | vidual advised English operators that we lad great ileal of speculation on the other side of | 2ON8 was obtainable unmixed with now. There ava 2 aaraolyturce / gpahiding with those fn wheat Winer rive might lave to spare Would: ba wanted fn 580,000,000 buy, nnd others thomslt 475,000,000 | the Atlantic, Asa consequence, prices varied | ‘Lhe movement from the farm continues atv ie year opened on a moderately-larg © fulr-export demand ‘at atirrant quotutionay | EULoRY before the ensuing harvest. ‘Thera | bw was a low'figure, No wonder prices went | wean aon thace somneiimes tathor wildly, | Tate which seems to be only Iimited by the stock, Rood in quallty, but much of “it rather hut they ware go unsuthsfuctory Youtne SiMe {4 renson to belleve that some of them jolned | down. But the Beaune shortage In | as they did heres ‘but without proditcings | fcllitlea for transportation, and i rather THE NEW CROP badly stained by unfavorable weather about ‘faeturer that not’ fow country mills ohee fareug with asi who had an acaltional futons look tha wheat out {dant os it eauild, sue of any Yarintlon in the steady, con- Targa nronortion 0 phe [vt crop ts already is good, in quallty, and, fram the first, was the tle of harvest, There was‘s poor, do- ‘ a Bebe ey te re Inuous demand for consumption, ih r jer in quantity than |; nie following little table shows tho difter- to 0 Ly hed At for having dipped into some- | that the crop of sprliys wheat had been large for constniptte scarcely touvhed except on the farin, understood to he smal nn mand for consumption during the first two or went ahead so ripidly tint millers were serl- 1 eon orders two or three weeks ahead onuse y nnd the pries of whent hud advanced upon bu caused more wonder and alann than the them hy the thie they were rently to use ity autunin advance of nearly 40c¢, sing. unsettled it * confidence for months afterwards, go thar Je was diliicult to. make both ends | “Xs above noted, the market rallied, but the weet. The. demand fn autumn was a couple | sige was nob sistalned. ‘The crowd was aUs- ee H frome tay alent oe meudlctlaty, piclous that the whatu'aifoir was bit a trick, aU! un ‘th to a vory low poin T hing | + Bung anly. abort 1700 ris ieSeprenber, enough being bought. buek to re-estabily 635,400 ‘The ylold of Inst year is stated to ba 23. 610,000 bu; having a value of $15,505,000, “ BARLEY. TIE MARKET YOR DARLEY has ried tame and flat durlng the greater partof the year, with no speculation In It, and n lessened movement of the artlele, the yolumo being not far from one-sixth less, The receipts were 65,100,806, bu, against 5,754,050 bu In 1878; and tho shipments Were 8,895,003 bu, agalnat 8)520,083 ba the pro- vious year, The absence of speculation has mada prices rule very low, that of 1878 or 1877, the yield being estimated 4 i thing ho did not wnderstind, and made an | ty overestimated, Careful observers, who TUX FORVIGN DEMAND : ' ont le three months, and the price of extra, No. 3 Be they hea eco anuaEy and Nove Ignominious failure, or take holt still | fuvost money in. researches ns a basis on conn, for corn shows an fmprovement for this time py come earttes In, ho trade af per cet Leas, fell to 88e in March, with 840 In April. Alle +> “halves of the years Wore deeply cand “vindlents his reputn- | which to. trade, Inform us thut tho crap of THE MANKET YOR CORN of the year, and promises to be unusually | mulged” from Washington placed the erop | tle later brewers and snaltstera started “up 1 dubtemetig exten. 8s Tents | Feaivad ay dior ant eet owns | BURST aga aaah HG a | ext ding oth quatiyandaric | eget sear heft iat Ute | ao fy each ay Bria yae°N | aio Nal ves fel bite eg a 02 ¥ 00 i * af , ’ " tb Ce he rece! wore uy, against - | States has a surplus will nat act as ndra Wling-off | 3 per cent, But the x 4 Pauble snriig xT. FAUNAS rede outa good denl of wheat in the early spring, | bu at first reported, "Phe crop of Wisconsin | gst 5 h Ht 878+ bai th hit .. “ Bt ft did ten 4 twelve months ago. for ihe ior riing moved tewiy thus far, and chictly stimulating consumption, Thelrdemand Taps, ‘i TG he kept enough hero to prevent. an uprush of | will probably be about 1 bu; [lnols does | 24518 bu in 1878; ie ehipmnenta .syorg ‘oplo of Western Europe find they will have for tho Teason that our Weatern men have | {ly reduced stocks and ‘caused a-roao; yt T@tso | Prices while hoe was buying, Under the bet- | not grow mueh spring wheat. ‘The total | 01,983,933 bu, against 50,014,200 bu the pre- | fe 7 use a great deal more of It than over bofore | valued it more highly than did those of the | tlon to tho upper side of. 600 in; May. v Rye tour, Sy anogine wag Hie, tarleed galvnced to $1.00 b spring ron If Hig Rortiwest Us ae ratte vious Rati It should be Tomoruberedl, how. to ill tha aap {nu their own cereal and oor Enat, During ihe autumn ONT quRteoe wags | Tho market averaged a little better than {i "Rye flour has been ¢ enerully aul oxeept the dollar mark May #1, not to. fail below It uf 10, 047,000 neces + but the {ald Is “prohanly aly . cet se a _ ‘hind jbl tl an Wy iene’ BI 2 Toast thts ei mute a ii ite a ‘ie ais cpt cian yy 0 Ba FMIUB I Any, TUNG aM ANY: pelees a!” that It sold up to $5.00, with koma uetiviiy | agaln for several weeks, . Tha shorts had no | much less, Of this total Utinols contributes | clty tn 1878 was Pen ONE UE carger tha ie. vowing Tie conitatuves of athial and Aastern maikets, have becn Ton ay aupplica gradually hardening under a better demand jy) owhon rye advanced in November, it soon | hesitation in’ golng in Kory deeply, as our | about 300,000 buy but the total wheat erop iW 38, belay mach ths imeesk santa ited starch are now added the ninkmg of beer ani | with New York State oats, and thoshipments | than usual for the inedium grades of malt, ‘s elapsed! into duliness. beon quite heavy thi: The. Senkyue™ wheat ath geal fea calor Roce at 300,000" eee party ft a8} | phenomenal Tealve months na, forme one Ailucoge, both of winlah used up vast quant; | from this clty were mostly of ample lots ta | whlch mada ft probable ith * ta ols barley 1, winter, ew nas a vy this | id In (Now York at about 81.05 while ting | Rogue Hy A 137, P ree tel x Hes of corn lust yoaty and the consumption of interlor Now England points. There argmore | crop would be protty well used up by the \ winter, jiries hero wan in tha nelghbarhudd of $1.00; A nnedat wheat, whlch formerly ocenpted will compare with ono just elapsed in re- | corn In the glucogg factories. promises to be | white oats from the last crop than froin the thuo the new came. on the market, The pro- 4 1 F * ren nearly | Sard to the quantity handled, and no recent | augmented fully 50 per cent within the ensu- | one preceding, and the quality Is about the duction of becr steadily increnaed, and some " ie ATE ane thotoWas uot neeesearliy lous he th. opr: ist aight ae te die eetaer ai Been eR ong has ruled so low tn tho price -of the | Ing, thelye months. If therefore nppente aay toe thcke out, For tata average multstors doubled thelr capaelty without be- «has been unusually netives and awn vory lon. ioe Thspectors still grado Ht separately, but Ithins f article, Even the autumn advance in the | Teedu by noxt harvest, ant tl tore tions for No, 3 | tng able to keep a falr stock of malt on hand, s tad tt By tho ond of May the “investment” of | practienlly commanded no dremtiun at any | prices of all kinda of produce failed to ralse | be reall y cares ten montis ene article Tay pein we, ot fixed mee patically the But they only bought barley as fast as ‘they . lua Seeee ree partot ihe yout, Be Ano ui amunnted to about 11,200,000 Sine ees he toast vents he ery or ee the corn average tu a fnir $rice, as gouged Weather prove unfavorable toan early mar- | anine durin; Tost of the time aineo hurvest, wanted It to use, and the remarkable absence “wos probably a greater voluine of trading In June, und there was probably ani aggregatu of | the Stuto wher the yield ts controlted: by | bY the record of many a past year, Corn hos | Keting of the crop of 1 Tho reason ls that only the poorest qualities , : * e i law Cc " G i ‘The following are the latest retirns of corn | of white are placed In store, the best being of apeoulation Kent quotations down to 8 4 ‘tho article than in any previous twelve othe partes, athe inate n total pei ae. ig but une avoall aati etna hie rete Pogedeie the bid saying that ie inmoute sermnge and Nocioni wane ee Snlllionse a etlthe fist Lae were mrohon ts Mimnesptacnd hata hd eo fo bore nrded ie a dangers mouths fh our history, as wall ng an Increase BSEVENTERN MILIION BUBTELS Ns wus wanted for little else thin to fll |. wore as plenty as stones thoy would bo as | above: . Wisconsin, the weather of summer not belng | U8 oe In which to operate ahead, and thoue {n the actual movement of the gratis u fall- | of ghorta out for that month two-thirds of | Shorts, ond was no better for thls purpose | oheap. > i ‘Tog off In winter botng more than compun- | Which wuseoncentruted Into g nichaaids ut than any athor No, 8 wheats ye eal prob. oe reason for tho diminished movement ,, dated by augmented recelpts of spring, ‘The | der onemanagenient (Baker), Allthishadto | 2 y rece ry mitre arsed f th h this city {s to be found b: ocelpts tod 3,095,423 by i he Milled hh atover 81,00 per bu, the market | Harvest; i ts estinated that the wheat now | of corn through this city is ‘found bya il At 1.07 nt the clove of le is scarcely suillclen eop | comparison of rall with lake frelghts, The roooipia nearegutod 2309542) bu weutnat | Heine tas io clove of the monty | leftin the Stato Is searcely suilictent to ke Ison of rall with Inko frolghts, ‘Th 80,713, iu the provious year; an the About 7,000,000 bu of tha “clique” whent | the Jocal mills running for the next eight | rallrond companies did not discriminate .., htpmonts were 81,044,027 bu against 24, | wis tilted in during the last fortnight, and prontliaiaties ullowlng for seed aud other von Against Chicago so severely asin some former 21,700 bu in era, aie are the totals of only Home 60,000 int i remit ‘Mueovered ae pt Rite WISER WIE Ay MOVEMENT years; but they did carry gral custward at tho returns made to the Board of Trade by pee coat g (thls wins uttorwurd pitted al Bb ‘ share one timo at such terribly low rates as to beat ». ‘Custom-House and raitroads, The footings | basls of 81. vith per cent dana; the | has been rather small, a3 compared with? that the water route, In Bf ‘was carried “tof the Inspection Deparinent, showlng the Jongs facititaling matters by paying 81,10 for | of tho previous yor. In August, 33288 pat 6 Water route, ay corn wus a. in ado Jarger. or better crop of onts than In deal ailactel fooat ofthe abit tim iad ‘Tho foreign demand for Western oata has { Deen used In former y ] riled Heit ‘Thare ts usually Helle profkin | WAKO, somthing out ‘of handing sbany exporting oats, because ocean, fruights are baal oor largel contented them charged on bulk instead of weight, For this | badly. Consumiors largely con! a th 1 Feuson our exports havo chiefly been in the | Selves with the lower grades; and those wha Torin of meals -but oven that has seldom pald | Wanted something better, found Dlenty of Ju tho past with oats much above 00 per bu | Pot barley aiferad from Oullforuls. at, relie — | — || too | In this market, ‘There was, however, a good | cow dntohe trom one, marth to anotos from Chicago to New York at 10c per 100 tbs, Potala. .s.seevesss vvve «(24.70/664.40]123.04|708.67 | demand for oatmeal all through the autumn +f ONAN ss ctas ands ance STAM TTOOOS OUR ONTOS GT favorable further south, Minnesota never who wanted fo deal In futures turned ial spol wheat on tho lat day of July, There ta | cont of our receipls wa ter, in be} ynovement by rar loads,eto, are given Ina | reason to believe thata han same protit was fats per county ity Oetaber Ib eeu . ll near autumn, when {t was malted by the 4 reulmequont co! ae i ‘ a mands b the enerution, wie nis a rather wns | November 13,25 por cont. Totaltor the rst a renee ice pen are ; sue oF ee xuate adda 4 Brnovied fo Cada hs “spol “the halders ond gel alata te ie 16 course of the markos. 1: mal thing vorners, th f 20 " ’ ves the estimated | busiuess of grinding our oats on}, 3 - THE 3 ? ‘uniform, prices ihustuaton ren eanmree wie nyu kot woltet back fo “3.00 a i eid the recent ae celts Peres sult was comparatively light receipts here, a8 Peta sieht the United States | English acedun "ta jeveral Canadian | came in under rather favorable wusplocs, ye 16 be a aa ry Lining of n tho 2d, 't' 4 ci it Septer fi there was not at that time any commercial BY t. The ret for 1863 | millers haye builé or ure building. milla ju | but speculators still fought shy. Th wi f gaversl nioulliss Infact, the market. oquld | frheat Fon Tuned Pa eS Son! hot ban’. ih Oclober it rl prember 34 carloads doom to put u the prico’ in this city suf ig ioe este, erase only, Mine loyal the United States foy the DuEpots of making lant trade in August In new Nod a Arcely be called a steady one, except dur | moved out, as was oxpected. ft had been | cap-loads. Total, 7,899 cara, or 8,160,000 bu, manny. bay tue oxtr cost of Marchoushig tates,” Also the fotal exports of com and | oat-neal to be exported to. Western Euro) eptember delivery, and the price t Jost winter, Tho general course of prices | sold for July delivery, ghd on tho 10th the | ugalust 4,469,000'bul for samp time In 187 | and {uspection, Luter in the year the” corn-iucal from aj] United States ports, The { Somo operators anticipated a-brisk export | from 70@80c durlug those two months, fo)

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