2l)f <£rntrr #£& Slcmotrrat. SIIIGFRT A FOKSTKK, Fdilors. VOL. I. ®ht (Cnitvr Drmotr.it. Tarma 81.50 per Annum, in Advance. S. T. SHUGERT and R H. FORSTER. Ed.lora. Thursday Morning, July 24, 1879. Democratic State Ticket. STATU TIIKASLIIUR, DANIKL <>. BAHH, Allegheny county. Tin: third House of Congress, usual ly termed the Fraud of the White House, has located himself at the Sol* diers' Home, a few miles from Wash ington, to pass the heated term. Tut: Democracy of Centra' county were represented in the late Demo cratic State Convention by James A. McClain ami (leorge 11. Barrett, Rep resentative Delegates; and T. C. Hip pie, Esq., of Clinton county, Senatorial. NAPOLEON lh >N.vl'.vttTK was a great man in his day, ami was a terror even to kings, but now we guess he is out of the way. When men once receive a goajal hanging, accoralingto the Ameri can tuoale, they are not often bearal from again. Tiie other day jwior Na ]H)lea>u was hung in Sardis, Mis*., anal now we hope the world will let him rest. IVrhaps it will he well to state that in this instance XapaJeaut was a negro who Was guilty of murdering a fadlow by the plcbian name of Tom Butler. THE. Sherman boom is now ha'aral on the Atlantic coast, away North, in the neighborhood of Newjsirt, K. I. Junketing these hot days in a govcrn meut revenue cutter at the expense of the Uuited States is pleasant work, anal entirely consistent with John Sherman's well rccoguized hnhits of economy. It also shows that he has a pro|aer regard far the uses t<a which gaavernment property may be put. This is especially commendable in a canalidatc for the Presialency, anal will no alouht have alue weight with the in telligent masses when they come to consiaicr the qualifications of aspirant* for that high office. THE Democrats who take the stump in Ohio ami elsewhere this fall, will not lie disposed to waste all their time to gratify John Sherman in discussing financial issues ami caaiintiug his tall columns of figures. The people don't eare a continental for John's figures now. The living issues sent Jowu bv Congress and the Framlulent Presi dent, are those which claim the atten tion of the hour. The doctrine of centralization avowed hv the Republi can leaders in Congress, and the at tempt of the Executive to seize the legislative functions and enforce sup plies to pay for soldiers and executive police to control the votes of the peo ple are now the attraction, and cannot he obscured under issues of less im portance. THE hope that was felt at the close of week that the ravages of Yel low fever in Memphis would lie con fined to a few eases is again dissipated, ami the rejKirt* which come this week inform us that it is spreading with great rapidity. On Monday there Were thought to be at least sixty raws In the city of Memphis. It did not result this year from tho accumula tion of filth, as Memphis is said by those who have beeu there this season, to have lieeii in an unusually cleat) condition; but it was because all trace* of the disease had not been exterminated by the destruction of clothing, bed covering and other arti cle* which had come in contact with the disease last year. ' This seems to be absolutely necessary, as the coldest winter does not seem to lw sufficient to absolutely exterminate it. We trust we are wrong In our conjectures, yet it seems almost certain to us that the fever will spread to other places ' and become perhaps as terrible in its, effect* as it was last year, unless He who alone can control its course sees fit to iuterferc and prevent its progress. I "KylAI. ANIi K.XAIT JIMTK'K TO ALL M K.N, OK WIIA TKV K K HTATB OH PHUtl' AHIOK, UKI.IUIOIs pU KoLITK A I.,Ji-ffrrwiO IT appears Col. Bright, sergeant-at arins of the Senate, since the adjourn ment, has removed a wounded soldier doing duty as a door-keeper at the Indies'gallery. This soldier, it is said, lost both his legs in the Union army, and is of unexceptionable character, ami competent to perform the duties required. He walks upon two wooden j legs. If the facts he as stated we trust the Senators will sec that Mr. Wilson, the soldier removed, is re instated ami Col. Bright properly re linked for such unjustifiable proscrip tion. The removal, it is also said, was made on the recommendation of Sctia- I tor Don Cameron, and one of his friends appointed to the place. There are always two sides to every story, and since the above was in tvpe we find in the Washington iW a statement which places it very differ ent face upon the ease, it now'appear that the removal was the result of insubordination and neglect of dutv, and the complaint an attempt on the part of Mr. Wilson, the crippled sol dier referred to, to manufacture some cheap |>olitieal capital at the expense of truth. Mr. Wilson being the own er of valuable property and in the receipt of a pension of $72 per month and at ingle man, i- not a good subject to make a resectable martyr. The /'• says; <'ol. Bright is still aLcnt from the city, but tho Post has muile sonic in quiries in regard to tho removal of \N ilson. The facts are that in the first place he objected to performing the duties of the |x>-ition which lie held : it required more hours of attention dur ing the day than he cared to be con fined. Col. I'right than gave him an easier place : he put him at the foot of one of tho private staircases intended for senators only, and employes of the Senate. There were no cards to take ill, and, in fact, there was nothing to do but sit at the foot of the stairs while the Senate was in session. Wilson ob jected to this place, because, ss he said, it was too lonesome and quiet : he want ed something more lively. lie was transferred to the west door of the Senate, ami lie at once complained ol this because there was too much work. He was not willing to carry cards to Senators. Wilson said positively lie would not fill tpst place, and before Col. Bright could, in his desire to nc enrntnodate the savior of his country, find another easier place for him, Wil son had gone home. Without waiting for Congress to adjourn, ami without asking for leave of alxence. he left the city and went to his home. THE Republican press affect lo sneer at the startling and damaging revelations of corrupt management re cently brought to light by the publi cation of the report of Mr. (Jlover, chairman of the committee charged with the investigation of the Treasury Department. These revelations can not IK* "laughed out of court," nor answered by mere abuse of the chair man. The committee deal in facts and evidence, and when the investigation shows, among other corrupt practice* and irregularities, that in the Presi dential campaigns of !*<>*, 1*72 and IMTIi, there was a large fraudulent issue of greenbacks, amounting to $19,000,000, put in circulation ami proved to have las-n printed from the original plate* in the Treasury De partment —tht this circulation was kept afloat for months and the Treas ury statements falsifies! to cover the fraud, it seems to us more is demanded than sneers or abuse. The Glover in dictment is plain, and the pleading to it must lie equally so to satisfy /he public. That this fraudulent issue of greenbacks went largely into the cor ruption election funds, is strengthened by the fnet, that after each Presiden tial election the public were notified from the Treasury iVpartnient that counterfeits were in circulation so well executed as to be difficult of detection. They would lie hard to detect, cer tainly, but having answered their pur pose, the cx|H*rt* of the Department could easily find some defect to con demn them. A !*KW nir line railroad is now be ing constructed from Harrislmrg to I'oughkeepsio, New York, a distance of 190 miles and is expected to lie in ruuning order by the Ist of January ncxt. IIKLLKFONTK, PA., THURSDAY, JULY 21, IHT'.i. Better Times. It is very gratifying to note the tin niUtiikcaltlc signs of u genuine ami healthy business revival in almost every branch of trade that eomc to us from ull parts of the country. After the inactivity and depression of years, many of the great manufactur ing industries are looking up with prospects that are decidedly Ixqiefiil. Large establishments, long dormant, are springing into new life and w ill go into o|M>ratiou with fair hopes for the future. May success crown their ef forts. Furnaces and rolling mills are beginning to work upon full orders for their products at an improvement upon the low prices which have rules! in the markets for a long period past, and in some of them, employing a large number of ojterntives, it is a pleasure to state, material advances have already been made in the wages of employes. The laborer is always worthy of his hire, ami, with incn as ing prosperity, employers should with out delay |>crmit their employes to share in the larger profits that urise from their growing prosperity. Todo this will be to follow the dictates of wisdom as well as of self inter" -t. A more kindly fending will tlius be brought about between employer and employe, and much of tin- unseem ly and unncc'-s-ary antagonism—lead ing to riots, strikes, l<s of time •and consequent suffering to dejiendent families —that has lecn aroused and encouraged by what is called the con flict ltetweeri capital and labor may be allayed. With a fair division of profits each will work in harmony with the other and the bitterix -* and uncertainty that have marked the o|cratinm of our industrial pursuits during the past f>eri<d of depression will he forgotten in the general jubilee of the good times to which present in dications point with almost unerring certainty. The Riot Damages. Ihe question having la-en decided by the Supreme Court adjudging tin liability of Allegheny county f->r damages incurred bv the Pitt-burg riots in 1*77, a very large number of suit- arc now living actively entered to l>e within (he two years to which the liability of the county is limited by the act of assembly. Thc-e dam ages will amount to several millions, and will embarrass the people of tlint county very much. Hut with their immense resources, unsurpassed manu factories, and well known enterprise, the embarrassment should lie of short duration. Tf!K tobacco ring of New Orleans, with Morris Marks, collector of Inter nal Hevenue, at its head, has been do ing a thriving business in robbing the government of the taxes due u|hii to bacco. The disclosures recently made of the operations of this gang of thieve* by Mr. Flore*, a prominent tobacco merchant of that, city, nml also by (en. Webster, a trustworthy agent of the revenue bureau, who made nu in vestigation of the charges against Col lector Marks, arc disgraceful in the extreme, and call for the summary punishment of nil engaged in the ras cally business. But as Marks helped to steal the electoral vole of Louisiana for Mr. Hayes he has thus far liven able to hold his own with the govern ment, notwithstanding the exposure of his villainy. He yet retains the posi tion of collector of the revenue, and with the influence of Hhcrman, Kcl logg and the other elect#nl thieves, is likely to do so for some time to come. CI.KKICAL-JvHROIt f*TOU()IITO!, the virtuous statesman who distinguished himself in the Presidential fraud, and was rewarded by the Fraud with the mission to Hussin, after a brief term of service has returned homo on a visit. He now declines to return to his post at St. Petersburg, and the mission is offered to Courtland Parker of New- Jersey, another visiting statesman. i Till: Hi-llcfiiiitc /(epultlicnn pitches into the platform adopted by the Democratic State Convention last week in true stalwart style ; but for a li-sue of deliberate and unblushing misrepresentations its like was never seen. We shall only take time to cor rect one of them. The r<-*t are un worthy of attention. Tin- firi-t and second resolutions arc exceedingly ob noxious to i(s -en-alive patriotism, though we cannot hut think it per mits its loyal in-tincf* ti Is- uixlulv exeiu d over them. 1!< ar it: '*l lie |ir-l Hi,.! *,*•<,hd resolutions *"• drawn expressly to li. kl<; and (Lib r tin peculiar o-nlioe nt of th<-ir-talwiirt D--in iH-riitic brethren of tlo- .South * • * I la- iloetriiio that tlo- sovereignly- of tic- Statu l Mq*r|.-r to tie- sovereignly of tlx- Nation wu not more Ixildlv adv-xat'-l three month- prior to tin; in . igurat. i. ol the r-l*-llion of l*ol than it i now. ' I/-t us .-<•<• alKiut this. If these rc-- olulion- say anything aliout State sov ereignty Ling -tipcrior to the -ovtr oignty of the Nation we have failed to discover it. 1 hey read a- follow*: Amflllf, Fir-t. That we, tbe Dwnorrt lie party of I'-iun-ylvnnia in oiiv.-niioii H-x-mbli-d, reix-w . ,r \..> of fidelity to the fundamental principle* proclaimed and prai-tin-J l.y tli' iilurtrn a men oho* tth-.l • '•ir fr.-o Institution* and founded tbe Dem ocratic party to protect and preserve th-m o l. That the jul f-iwiir of the K--1- -rnl I ni.-n, the right* -.1 the State. and the ■ iberli< -of tin* |--opl- are vital part- .-f one harmonious system. an I to save each part in it whole Constiluiionai \ig--r is to rave the life of the nail n. M e tak- it that the second iv-ulii tion m< an* ju*t what it -ay-, and that it i- a fair re cognition of the divi-ion of pro]* r that -\its under our fir ii of government i*'twc<n the Federal I uion and the State-, and that • ;i< 2i in their p .wt r and legitimate spin r must 1h- preserved intact. If the -lit■ -r of the Jiejiub/ir in ran -< <• anv thing in it thai indicates so foolish mi id< a as In -ugg*t aliout the sovt r< ign- IT of the State l*-ing superior to the of the Nation lie must r-si<! it with sharj>er cy< - than tho* given to the average of mankind. dm Centre county representative, fareil very well in the late Democratic State convetition at Hnrri-hurg. < It. Barrett, Jr. Keq.,—-uti-titufcd for Cyrus lirunigard—was made a nu tuber of tbe committee on perma nent organization, and James A. Me ' lain, Ks<|., wo* a mcmlxr >f the committe' on credential*. In com mittee Mr. Barrett nominntcil the per maiiciit chairman of the convention, Hon. A. 11. Coflroth, nnd supported him in n strong speech. The opposi tion to Mr. Coflroth canx- from F. A. Beamish, of lain rnc, but *a without avail, the committee scleeting the Congressman from Somerset on the first ballot. T. C. Hippie, K*q., of Lock Haven, the Senatorial delegate from this district, wa* on the commit tee on resolutions. Sknator WAl.t.Aii.'A committee will meet in New York next week to investigate and overhaul the crooked ness of John I. Davenport in connec tion with tbe election*. We may ex ject rich development*, a- Wallace i> the man to sift thing* to the bottom. I'uHTMASTKIt II ARTRAM4T lUxl Soc rctary (juay are spoken of a* probable candidates for Secretary of War, in the event of the retirement of Secre tary McCreary. Mr. (juay having been interviewed on the subject says he knows nothing aliout it. Of course he don't. • ♦ The Poke of Argyll nnd the indies M:irjr ami Llixal>cth <\tnipß-ll snde<l lor l-hiro]Ki Wednesday on the Hcythin. They arived in New York from New port Monday evening o( last week ami spent the following "lay in visiting place* of interest in and about the city. Together with Mr. t'yrus W. Field and General di Oesnnla they viewed the Metropolitan Museum of.Natural His lory. \Ve<lne(iay morning was spent by the laii-es in bop|)iiig, wliile the Puke with his constant attendant. Mr. Field, rode on the elevate.l line to Har lem and inspected the working* of the railroad. Before lunch the Duke had a long conversation wilh Secretary KvarU. Among those who went on board to hid the party farewell were Mr. Cyrus W. Field, David Dudley Field, General di (Vsnola, Thurlow Weed ami Allen Thorndyke Hice. of the North America* fMrtr In conversation with those around him tbe IHike expressed much gratification with bi* visit to New York. GENERAL NEWS. Judge Slerrett and family aro at Bed ford Spr ings. lln* I'rohil.ition nominee for Gover nor of lowa declines, '■<> l. Itobert G. Ingersoll ha* sold his $2. f .ono residence at lVoria, 111, Harry Palmer, of the firm of Jarrct ■V I'aimer, died iu London on Kundav. ' iiii-tiii<- I'd*, the murderer of Mr*. Hull, will le hung on the 20th of Au gust. Su-vn It Anthony say- that the nights were liitide lor cats, hit* ami had litis hands, I Inoil, lite <'.ilifomia millionaire, i* to have a -• , |,. huilt at Menlo 1 alk at a cost of ■}><) O xI. .*• r blttsrii 111ornton is to vi-it New port m-xt month, a* th guet ol the I-rench Minister. I lie ' diforni Democratic State fen tr.il • omtnitlee have voted to retain Dr. Glenn i nominee h>r Governor. A reunion of soldier* of the North west will I<• held at Auiora, 111., on August 20, 21 ami 22. I'resiilent Mct'osli hi. the most ele gant month aof any OOIIMO j-re-ident-- the gilt "if th<- Philadelphia Stuarts. A furioii- storm of wind ami rain vis ' it* <i tin- 1i,.:.-rii portion of Ms-skliu ■Ht-i la-t week, doing great danxtge. General William F. Ilarrv, Colonel of the Second Maryland artillery, and in command at Fort M( Henry, died in Baltimore, Friday. '>f the s(Oi .-<*<UKiin refundingcertifl rates i*ue<l hy tlx- l'nitei States Treas ury ? ..'. Jl. is*) iiave la-eu converted in t<i four per ler.t. t-".m1.- The Itev. William fVtoper Mea<l, P. i* , 1.1.. P., rector of Hi, Paul's church, Norw.tlk, ' 'onnecticut, died sudiienly ">n Thursday evening. John Carle, injured on the 11th at Ball uunre By a I-oiler explosion, <ii*l on Satur-lay. Jo.j.li Michael, another vif tint, will probably dio. Anthony Zihri-kie, an eccentric gem ■l-in hi of Morn-ania. New York, worth -Mssi, wa- run ov.r by tbo cars and kill, d one day la-t week*. ' ill- I Bond* are coming in sa fa-t that the Treasury i* unable to keep w..rk up. There will consequently be much delay on making -< tllemerita. Snyder Brothers', distillery at Milton, Kentucky, oppo-ite Madison, Indian*, *** l urried on s iturJay. J. . ; no tnuratice. The war- li i--wa-e<l. Bichsrd Grcviv®. ■ n |ri*h ooachinvn of Phil- 1.-|j Ina. arrived at Long Branch oti "-atunlay night and was drowned at resin Sulci.iy tnie hathil.g. body ws- r< ovcred. I he -teamer <. T. Glvphant -truck i r .-k r1 y "-.mday morning in S:am ford Conn harbor and -.ink. l'lie l-at w... advertise"! to make an extur •ion t<> Coney island en the*day, V fxe broke out at >< al right, n-ar Ix>ng Branch, at 2.1 r la-t Faiday rnorn mg. It destioye"! two blocks of -nd cottages in the bu-incaa district. None of th"- hotels or principal cot 'ages wera injured. Ihe total loss is •bout $ sMssi, ami insurance al>out #l *> (*l. Kirly Monilav morning a fire destroy ed ili-mpy A <V new planning mill at Cleveland, Ohio, loss, s2O,t*Jo ; insur •--I fur fI ► ►>. It ;• supposed to be the *vor*of an incen-liary. Two firemen were injure-t. and it is feared one fatal ly. By falling walls. Mr. James Gordon Bonnet was eulo gised in Paris on Saturday night last. By M. I<oui* Simonin, the engineer ami traveler, at a meeting of the Socite Geographique. Tne sailing of the Arc tic ex|-lortng steamer .B-annette was the immediate occasion which called forth the eulogy. The steamer State of Virginia, from N'.-w York for Glasgow, went ashore at Sable l-land, Halifax, at 7.4"# r. a. on the 12th instant. Four holies ami five children are rep .rted lost in the surf while landing. The vessel had seventy b-iir passengers, one hundred and four head of cattle and a general cargo. Sixty her.J ol cattle were saved. Saturday evening four ice houses half fill- d with ice, owned hy Scott, Vuitin A Morris, situated on Van Itenssalaer iland, at the upper end of the city of Albany, N. Y., were totally destroyed By an incendiary fire. Ksch building wa* thirty feet wide by two hundred in length. The loss is estimated at flu,- 000; partially insured. Governor McClellan has recently made from hi* home on Grange Moun tain a pleasure tour through the north em counties of New Jersey, driving By way of Sehooley's Mountain. IDoketU town and Hope to the Itclaware Water • lap. The party consisted of the Gov ernor, his wife, his son sod his "laugh ter, the former driving a barouche and hi* children a phaeton. The late William Allen had an ex tremely powerful voice—so powerful, indeed, that it gained for him the soiiri qtiet of "Earthquake Allen." When a youth and apprenticed to John Thur man, the saddler, Allen was a tall, erect fellow, and a |>er*istent worker, study ing with his book before hint on his work-bench. An incendiary fire at Oneida, N. Y., Monday morning, destroyed nine build ings, The principal losers are the Joseph Robert* knitting mills, |4.i,000{ insurance, $27,000. Oneida Gss light Company, loses sfi,ooo; insurance, $4, 000. Upson k llnlderi's carriage shop, ss..'ioo| insurance, $2,700. W, C. Law renre. grain, $2 5501 insurance, $3,000. 1. N\ Messenger, slo,ooo] no insurance. IRKMN: |kt Annum, in Atlumw. 'I here wcrp taken from Krie to N.-w York, ori Saturday Over the Lake Shorn and M.clngan railroad, L'2.fXm>ouod of butter. J here i* *o much dan per of a water famine in I'itlsburg that the police have been ordered to report all j.eraoija found wasting it. 'he Deputy Mayor of Pittsburg, who hold* forth at Lawrenceville, a suburb of tin- firat named pbo■< . when do-agreeing wive* arid hu-harid* are brought before him lo k them up in a room, and gen erally finds that when they are released a reconciliation haa been effected. Ihe hirst National hank of hufler ha* been compelled by the foiled State- hank Kvttniner to go into liqui dation. Ihe Kiie llrr thl aaya it i* un • h-r-torel that Fx Chief lu-tice <'harl<-< M<<"atidl( w.JI hee p,n,< •') by it. It ha- turnout < iu*ed a panic among tbo fanning people of ifuth-r county. Ihe New Hampshire House of Rep re-entalivo* ha* passed a hill regulating railway ji*-enger and freight tariff*. It give* to the Railway Comim**;onerii the right to regulate the tariff of any road in the Slate, and prohibit* any 'Railway ''ommi*ioner from holding office in taiy railway corjeiration or from owning the stock or bond* of any railroad. l.x-fiovern r Thoma- Swann, of Mary land, gave a grand dinner on Saturday night at hit Newport cottage in honor of hi* guett, Kr.-Secretary Hamilton Kith. The gue-t included Mr. and '•lt-. - tlney Webster. Mr. and Mr*, lohn Whipple, fit-neral and Mr*. Ceorgo W. f'ullurn, of New York ; ll* • iorcrtior 1.-mrence and I >r. and Mt*. W, J„ Wheeb-r, of Newport, and Mr*. Dr. S. Wur Mitchell and Mi-* (ladwallader, of Philadelphia. Tor three week* past the f'utnlser land and Pennsylvania railroad bi kept an engine standing at a point where the Pennsylvania railroad in Maryland desired crossing track on the out*kiru of f timix-rlsnd. At 1 p. tn. Friday the engine left teni|*orurily to allow a coal train to pns*. A* i-ocn a* the coal train had passed workmen of the Pennsylvania railroad in Maryland tore up a rail of the Cumtierland and Pennsylvania track, preventing there turn of the engine, and effected the orns-mg. Five hundred people were pn-- nt. The excitement was immense, tiul no disturbance occurred. The Nomine"* I- . Ihr AII-aniFn Mr. Daniel ti. Itarr, the Democratic nominee for state Treasurer, i* a na tive of R'airsviile. Indiana county, and is thirty rune year* of age. He w en g iged for year* w hen a youth, a* i telegraph operator on the Western Division of the Pennsylvania railroad. ''ri the l' th of .luly. Is'.*, he accented a position in the old Pittsburgh Trust ' v.tnpany—now the First National i-itik o( Pittsburgh—and ha* since that -late been connected with that institu tion. which i one of the largest bank* hi the city. It is pcrbapa an augury of -tier. ** that hi* nomination by acclama tion a* a candidate for State Tro-anurcr should have occurred nn the twenty first anniversary of bis connection with the batik, in whose service he ha* spent hi* active bu-inea* life. Mr. llarr ha* always taken an active part in Stato and National politics. In lko9 and again in IS7<> he wa* the Ih-mocratic legislative nominee for State Treasurer that officer Wing then elected by the legislature—but the Democrat# being in a minority the honor was an empty ne. This nomination mean* an elec tion, as Mr. lUrrg* deservedly popular; while hi* well-known ability, integrity and bu*ine training admirably quali fy him for the duties of the position. Mr. P.arr i* in all respect* a most creditable candidate for State Treasurer. A trained banker, thoroughly familiar with our finaneiaPsyfttem, active, inteb bgent and faithful in hi* business rela tion* and |>r*onally Maine].-** alike in public and private life, hi* fitness for the responsible trust will not be ques tioned by friend or foe.— Pkilmdrlpkui Tmis*. Mr. Barr's character is spotlessly pure, and hi* long connection, in I'mrst m sponsible |osiiion with one of the lead ing bank* of the city, is the bet evi dence that coul.l l*> offered of his full qualification for the office for which ho ha* been nominated. —Pvulmry leader. Ijirge Bellierlr* of Wheal and Beeline of I'rtm. Ciiic ;o, .luly 19.—There has been considerable excitement the past week in conequence of a rapid and uncheck - ed decline in grain and provision* on < bange. The favorable crop rejavrt* ru more that the combination which ha held wheat up for a few month* |<w*W wers selling out and the ex| eolation of an outliieak of yellow fever in Southern cities have combined to depress prices. The cssh decline on wheat ha* amount ed to about 14 cents during! week, the iowe*t sales being msde today, when on call wheat sold for-luly option at Kfij cents. There were rumor* of' failures, but so far aa is known they were only temporary embarrassments, and all of the Arms interested arc expec ted to continue business on Monday. The clearings to day were larger by 1,500- 0(10 bushels than u-usl on account of heavy deliveries of wheat by the combi nation. The total deliveries made by tbcm were 1,700,000 bushels here and POO,OOO buhel* in Milwaukee, It is un derstood that they sre rapidly getdng out of the deal, and the culmination of the break will come Monday, if it haa not already been reached. No. :*<>.
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers