:V .-'' o- r?i it"? I, L OiiTBall Team Arriyes After ; Tough Experiences. PHILLIPS' PITIFUL TALE. tfhe Team Has Met With Poor Finan- ' cial Success. Ipbes. YOUKG'S great anxiety. 'Interest in the Great Checker Match Which 'f Starts To-Daj. GEKEKAL BPOET1KG MWS OF THE DAI Game. Plnycd Yesterday. Columbus ii....locisyiixes 4 Columbus 12.... Louis villes 3 To. Day's Games. National League Indianapolis at Pitts burg, Clevelands at Chicago, New Yorks at Washington, Pbiladelphias at Boston. American association Cincltraatis at Baltimore; Loulsvilles at Philadelphia; St. Louis at Columbus: Kansas Cltys at Brooklyn. ItfTEKNATIOJTAI, LEAGUE SjraCUSeS at Toronto, Rochesters at Detroit, Buflalos at London, Hamiltons at Toledo. THE BOYS ARE HOME. fiXanaser Phillips Has a Plllfal Story to Tell About Difficulties. There were many glad hearts in the city last evening when Manager Horace Phillips and the balance of the Pittsburg ball team arrived in the city. The team, together with the Indian apolis aggregation, had been expected since Saturday morning. The Hoosiers, however, will not arrive until about 10 o'clock this morn ing. Manager Phillips was probably never more se rious in conversation in his lire than be was last night Thoughts of narrow escapes from fatal ' wrecks, floods and extraordinary rain. Storms seemed to banish all the stock-in-traae, for which he is proverbial, from bis mind. He, however, seemed to be impressed with the common notion that there is a guardian angel ever hovering o'er professional ball clubs when they are on the road. "We're all glad thatwe'ro alive," he said, "but goodness knows we've had an awful home coming. 1 never again want to see such an other storm and the fearful sights that have re sulted from its devastating force. I couldn't tell anybody what the rainfall was like when we were in Washington on Friday. THAT TEEJIENDOUS KAINFALL. ''For two hours and a half it seemed as if cloud after cloud was bursting in rapid succes sion. Despite this fact, however, we meant not to be fooled as in New York last year, and we were on band at all hazards. Of course there was no game, and we couldn't get home by the Baltimore and Ohio route.. We traveled to Harrisburg and were blockaded there along with the Indianapolis team. Trains could only travel six miles west of Harrisburg as all bridges except one were down between Harrisburg and Altoona. We tried in every possible way to proceed west on the Pennsyl vania Railroad, but couldn't make it Finally we returned to Philadelphia, and traveled from there via the Lehigh Valley road to Buf falo, and on to Pittsburg by way of the Erie and Pittsburg. Just as we left Buffalo the In dianapolis players landed there, and they will not get here until to-morrow morning at 10 o'clock. Our journey home from Washington has cost us $600 more than the usual price and' had it not been for Hanlon and Sunday I don't krJw where we could have secured our fares hofie I had sent all the club money home ex cel n. amount sufficient for ordinary x ' v fofces. We couldn't reach Pittsburg by wire EuVtat we would have been stranded It Sunday anS Ganlon had not come to the rescue. KOI A BIO SUCCESS. "Our trip has not been so successful finan cially by $3,000 as our similar trip last year. We were $1,200 short at Chicago, compared with last year. "We were fully $2,000 short at New York and we were about even at Boston. A Philadelphia we increased a little on last year's receipts, which altogether leaves us 3,000 short of what we received last year. The playing of the team." continued Mana ger Phillips, "has been excellent, except, of course, the pitching. The boys have been fielding better than anybody we have met, and batting as good as anybody. But of what use was it to do this when our pitchers were just throwing the ball harmlessly across the plate. Btaley has certainly performed like a hero. He deserves credit in all respects. Our young pitchers are apparently promising youths, but they have, a lot to leam yet The team is in excellent condition of health but almost all the players are weary and fa tigued by our awful home coming. We would have liked to play two games to-morrow, but Manager Bancroft won't hear of it, because of the tiresome journey, which his team will rest from to-morrow. We will, therefore, probably Slay two games for one admission fee on uesday. The Hoosiers have had just as rough a time of it as we have, and it is only fair to say that they will be in no condition to play two games to-morrow." To-day's game, if the weather permits, will commence at 4 o'clock P. it Gal Tin and Miller will be the home battery, and probably Boyle and Myers will be at the points for the visitors. Umpire Fessenden arrived with the team last night He is a big and powerful looking man with a genial looking face. During a conver sation be said that everything is going smooth ly along as far as the umpires are concerned. He thinks that the unusually bad weather so far this season has done considerable injury to the respective clubs. COKCERKED.ABOUT THE TEAMS. President Young Thinks About the Pitta burs and the Chicagos. lETXCIAL TJSLZOBOl TO THE DISPATCH. Washington, D. C June 2. In conse quence of the floods in Western Pennsylvania there is considerable apprehension felt here as to the whereabouts of the Chicago and Pitts burg teams. They started West yesterday, and It is feared they encountered the storm and are laid up somewhere along the road. President Young telegraphed to Chicago and Pittsburg this morning, inquiring as to the safety of the baseballists. Mr. Young received a dispatch from Umpire Lynch, this morning, stating that he is storm-bound at Altoona, and will be una ble to preside over the game scheduled to be played in Chicago this afternoon. ' The assignment of League umpires for the ensuing games is as follows: Curry in Wash ington, Fessenden in Pittsburg and Lynch in Chicago. In the event of Lynch's failure to reach Chicago, Dave Sullivan has been as signed by Mr. Young to officiate THE CHECKER. CHAMPIONSHIP. Great Interest In ibe Reed-Barker Contest Which Starts To-Day. The checker players of this city and through out the country are exceedingly interested in the great championship match which begins to-day at Chicago between James Reed, of Pittsburg, "and C.F. Barker, of Boston. Mr. Barker Is champion of the United States and England, baring beaten Smith the English champion. Barker is a strong favorite, but Reed has a host of friends here and in Chicago. Both contestants claim to be in excellent form and each is confident of rictory. Barker de feated Reed some time ago in this city, but Reed claims his defeat was caused by a very stupid mistake on his part Mr. H. F. McAteer left the city on Saturday to represent the Pittsburg Checker Club at the match. Before leaving Mr. McAteer said that he had great faith in Reed's ability to win. Mr. McAteer further said that the Pittsburg club is causing local Interest in checkers to de velop considerably. ASSOCIATION GABIES. At Columbus Colnmbns 6 0 3 0 0 0 11 0-1 1 LouUvltlet.. ' 0001000 0-4 Second game. Colnmbu 0 2 2 3 10 2 2 0-12 Louisville 0 11003010-1 KUIen BInkcan Dental. The report published to the effect tbatKlllen, the catcher of the Braddock County League dub, has signed with a professional club in Ohio is emphatically denied by KUIen and his IrtenaV As a means of fnl' dlsnravlne- tha wni JOURNEY troth of the report KUIen has made affidavit before Magistrate McKenna stating that be has not signed as reported. A letter from Col umbus also states that Eillen has not been signed by that club. WILL BACK CARTWRIGHT. A Local Sportlnc Hu Will Hatch Him Against Ensledram. A local sporting man, who is Interested in pedestrlanit m, stated yesterday that bo is pre pared to match George Cartwright to run En gledrum 12 hours for 250 or $500 a side. Cart wright's friend said: "Ihearthat Engledrum has a host of ad mirers, who think him as good as anybody in a 12-hour race. Of course. I know he is a good man, but I think Cartwright a better. At any rate, I am prepared to match Cartwright against Engledrum." The latter conld not be seen last evening. He has backers who are prepared to match Mm against good men, but whether or not they will tackle Cartwright is another matter. FIXED UP A ROUTE. How ainnnger Phillips Hustled at Philadel phia to Get Home. rSFECXAX. TELEGRAM TO THE DISFATCH.1 Philadelphia. June 2. The Pittsburg club returned from Harrisburg to this city last night After considerable figuring Man ager Horace Phillips fixed up a route to reach Pittsburg. His club left this city this morn ing over the Lehigh Valley Railroad. AtAl lentown the Indianapolis club was picked up and the train proceeded on Its way to Buffalo. From there the clubs will go to Cleveland and thence to Pittsburg. If Mana ger Phillips' time table does not miscarry, the teams will reach Pittsburg In time to play two games to-morrow afternoon. Races for the Fourth. The flood has done considerable injury to the Exposition Park. The track is almost entirely covered with water, and trainers will be un ablo to exercise their horses for a lew days. When the water subsides, however, it is under stood that the tracks will be put into first-class condition. The management of the track in tends to have an excellent day's racing on July 4. There will be fonr events, two of which will be for good classes. A Pugilist's Opinion. Elmer Grant, the well-known heavy weight pugilist returned from Johnstown last evening. He went there on Saturday to try and find some friends, but he failed to locate them. He says that no man living can give anything like a correct idea of the appearance of the city. He thinks that several well-known Johnstown sporting men have been killed or drowned. The Johnstown Sufferers. The Keystones and the Standards will play a game at 'Cyclers' Park this afternoon, for the benefit of the Johnstown sufferers. The teams are well known, the Keystones bemg the col ored champions ot Pennsylvania. A good game is expected, and a large attendance hoped for. Bent the Water Cares. The Standards, of Pittsburg, defeated the Water Cures, at Phillipsburg on Saturday, in a onesided game. There was a good attendance. Following was the score: Standards... 4 2 12 0 0 0 0 2-11 Water Cures 0 10.140000 6 Arrangements Nearly Complete. The Columbia Boat Club has almost complet ed arrangements for its regatta to be held Sat urday week. There will be four races, the principal being a scull race for the club cham pionship. Valuable prizes will be offered for each event Elected Delegates. On Saturday evening last Messrs. B. K. Ben bow, George Thomas and C. P. Bowman, of St Mark's Church, Southside, were elected dele gates to the Episcopal Convention, which meets in Oil City this week. The Retail Jewelry Business. Jn the returns made for the assessment of business tax the retail jewelers show a large increase in the amount of business done by them daring the past year. Increased fa cilities and larger stocks, with the fact that many expensive goods formerly bought in New York and Philadelphia are now purchased here, has likely been the cause of this increased trade, especially so among the larger stores. '. The following are the'returns as published ' last week of the business done by the largest concerns. Jas. E. Reeti & Co ..I 70,000 E. P. Roberts & Sons 168,300 "Wattles &Shaefer 92,800 E. Seidle & Co 51,000 J. C. Grogan 160,000 "W. "W. Wattles. 100,000 Hardy & Hayes 67,400 H. Terheyden 40,000 Geo. W. Biggs & Co 100,000 CO. Will & Co 60,000 TAYLOR cfc DEAN'S, 203 and 205 Market Street, Is headquarters for adjustable window screens, which will fit any window. Price from 30c to 60c each. Also for fencing oi every description. eod Great Remnant Sale. On Friday, June 7, we will make the greatest remnant sale of the season. Rem nants of carpets away below cost, all grades; also mattings, remnants of "wall paper, browns, whites,golds and borders; remnants of dress goods, inclnding silks, woolenB, wash goods and trimmings; we will include curtains, parasols, gloves, hosiery, summer underwear, etc., etc., making it the greatest day this year. AbIHUB SCHONDELllTEE & Co., mwf 68 and 70 Ohio :t. Omitted From Yesterday's List. The, subscription of Messrs. Danziger& Shoenberg was reported by telephone on Saturday to The Dispatch, bnt by an over sight was omitted from the list published on Sunday and is therefore to be found in the proper column this morning. Choice Old Whiskies. IIX 1855, Pore Rye "Whisky, full quarts $2 00 Monogram, Pure Rye "Whisky, full quarts... 1 75 Extra Old Cabinet, PnreRye "Whisky, lull quarts 1 50 1879 Export, Pore Rye "Whisky, full quarts 1 25 1880 Export, Pure Rye "Whisky,- full quarts 1 00 For sale at G. "W. Schmidt's, Nos. 95 and 97 Fifth ave., city. Cheap Carpets. All-wool ingrains only 00c a yard; any quantity and a variety nf patterns; good brnssels carpet at 40c a yard. Abthub, Schondelmtee & Co., MThs 68 and 70 Ohio st., Allegheny. California Wines. California Sherry, full quarts; 50c California Port, full quarts, 50c. For sale at G. "W. Schmidt's, Nos. 95 and 97 Fifth aye. . India Silks Hundreds of yards sold this week. Nothing like them ever ofiered before at the prices, 65c, 75o and SI a yard. MWTSU HUGHS & HACKE. Best $1 50" per doz. cabinet photos in the city. Panel picture with each doz. cabinets. Lies' Popular Galleby, 10 and 12 Sixth st Bumwf B.&B. Dress goods opening to-day. Extraordi nary offers in dress goods begin this morn ing. Booos & Buhl. Extbaordinaey bargains in fast black hosiery, also lisle and silk hosiery reduced at Bosenbaum & Co.'s. Deess Goods Nothing to eqnal the styles and qualities we are offering at 60c a yard; plaids, stripes and checks; goods really worth $1. Hdgus & Hacke. MWFSU Y B. &B. Jane sales in dress goods begin to-dar. 3 special "dollar" goods nt 50 cents: 2 lines of fine noveltv sizes and a boncle nluM oil 40 inches wide. 'Dollar goods at 50 cents. J30GGS & BUHL, THE IRELAHD'SMWRTJLER Personal Characteristics of the Vice roy Just Appointed. HOT EXACTLY A MODEL PEER. A CleTer Scheme by, "Which to Make Coer cion Unpopular. BUFFALO BILL SUCCEEDS BOULAKGEB. HeUKowPosmgas a Masculine Be&oty In the Eyes of the Parisians, The Earl of Zetland, the new Viceroy ot Ireland, will be no improvement on his predecessors. The Gladstonians are sparing no effort to make coercion, unpopular. The Paris Exposition is already on the high road to success. Buffalo Bill is now the lion of Paris society. IDT CABLE TO THE SISFATCH.1 London, June 2. Copyright At last a noble lord has been fonnd willing to swallow Balfour and the Lord Lieutenantey of Ireland together. Earl Zetland is the name of the individual whom Salisbury, after desperate efforts, has unearthed at the tail end of the alphabetical list of peers. He is a ridiculously modern person, being able to trace his folk back 130 years only, and is probably moved by a desire to add a few linesW interesting reading to his dry page of family history. In debates his qualifications as a man chose 1 to represent the Queen and sit on the throne in Dublin are as follows: He has money, is a well-known turf gambler, belongs to seven good clubs, cares nothing for politics, and so far from interfering with Balfour's methods of making Ireland peaceful, understands distinctly that he is to be an ornamental tool like his sporting predecessor. Lord Londonderry. Gladstoman managers who spend much time devising methods for giving incredu lous Englishmen an idea of what coercion really is, have just hit upon and put into execution rather a good idea. Exact copy has been made of A HUGE BATTEBINO BAM, known as Balfour's maiden, which has fig ured disgracefully In numerous evictions. This ram will soon start on a journey through rural England, accompanied by speakers who will take turns lecturing on its work, and who will seize any opportu nity for practical demonstration of the way Irish cottages are knocked down. This is expected to influence the sturdy country Briton, and make him vote to abolish the use of Balfour and battering rams as peace makers. The Grand Old Man's golden wedding falls on July 25, and is to be cele brated with unusually fine goings-on at Hawarden. Mr. Gladstone will probably not come to London for Parliament any more after that date unless something very remarkable should turn np. I have spent part of the week in Paris and that gay town is evidently destined to be the center of the sight-seeing tourist activity of the world all summer. A fact which impresses one more at each visit is the contented frame of mind suddenly ac quired by fickle Parisians, and which grows with the prosperity of their exhibition. BOTJLANGEK OUT OF DATE. Fiery individuals who three months ago were yelling for Boulanger and getting their coats torn ofi by police are qniet and otherwise engaged. Prosperous ones spend their time bragging and climbing Eiffel tower, drinking cool draughts and watching curious female foreigners dance. The poor ragged Bonlangists seem mostly to have taken np business of speculating in ex hibition tickets, which can be had at very low prices. It is interesting, by the way, to note that America has had the honor of supplying a man to fill the void created in the hearts of the susceptible French females by Boulang er's departure. Buffalo Bill is the man, and he is fast catting the General ont as a professional male beauty. His eyes are not as bine as the General's, but he has longer hair and is bigger. He rides better and there are fierce tales of bears, Indians and bisons weltering in their blood to lend romantic interest to his smiles. The success of this curious combination of American scout and circus actor is all the more pronounced, as French society is not nearly as prone as English to take np outlandish social lions. On "Wednesday Buffalo Bill had dejeuner offered him by one of the fastest and best known Parisian society women, Comtesse Chandon de Briailles. A real genuine princess, and Madam Hackon, a famous Paris beauty, were there, and these with many masculine samples of OLD FBENCH NOBILITY Joined in homage to Cody and a pilgrim age to his circus, which followed lunch. The exhibition is gradually emerging from a state of chaos and becomes more wonder ful every day. There never was anything at all to compare with it. Having seen other international shows gives no idea of this one, which combines the most wonder ful display of science and art, with the lead ing features of the modern cirens. , The big tower is not yet accessible to the public all the way np, bnt it is making itself useful. On "Wednesday a .boat laden with valua ble cargo from Havre came to grief in the Seine. It was dark, and the cargo would have snnk and been lest bnt for a powerful light on top of the lower, which was oblig ingly poured in a steady stream on the boat, while the cargo was saved. Where tfio Emphasis Falls. He's apt to take the world amiss Though boundless be his riches; Whose nerves are only emphasis For his neuralgic twitches. You shouldn't know you have nerves except from such evidence as that lite is really a good thing to you, and that you laugh because you like it This is health: you have lost it per haps so had these witnesses: Dns. Btabket & Paxeit "My wife was re lieved from severe neuralgia by the use ot your Compound Oxygen Treatment" Rev. J. B. BEA8LET, Sumter. S. C. DBS. StaEKEY 4 Pales "Your Compound Oxygen Treatment has been of incalculable benefit to my wife, who has suffered for years with neuralgia." Rev. H. F. Chbettbubo, Chester, S. c. Drs. Starkey 4 Palen's office record shows over 45.000 different cases in which their Com pound Oxygen Treatment has been used by physicians in their practice and by invalids in- Their brochure of 200 pages will be forwarded free Of charge to anyone addressing Drs. Stabkey 4 PALEJf, No. 1529 Arch st, Phila delphia, Pa. t Lace Cubtaets Bargains this.weekr in this department Qualities from 51 to $5 per pair are those that heretofore sold from ?1.50 to $8. Huaus & Hacke. mwfsu Lace Curtains. Spring patterns only 1 a pair; at 82 and $2 60 an elegant line, full 3J yards long; window shades on spring rollers ready to hang, only 45c. Abthub, Schondelmtee & Co., MXhS 68 land 70 Ohio st, Allegheny. ChALLIS In these desirable fabrics we are showing the handsomest line offered this season; best grades at 25c and 50o a yard. Hugus & Hacee. anvTSu. California Wines. California Claret Wine. California Hock "Wine. California Sherry "Wine. California Port Wine. Fox sale by the gallon or case, at G. "W. Schmidt's, Nos. 95 and 97 Fifth ave., city. B. & B. Kft kIaasi fntiAv ifiAhni i rrldAA fctvl At VV intrvca Mau,j wwiwm ,6'w jvjj&, iv Jaeaes wiae & w ceuu, itver &um uuuer a OMlAf wywfiwei jjuuuo j-t-uiUi. PITTSBUKO' DISPATCH, MAEKETSBY WIEE. Bad Wires and Mild Weather Caose o " Slight Decline In Wheats-Other Com modities Pall to Develop Anything- Strikingly Kbit. Chicago The wheat market to-day was weak and lower. Trade 'was fair, phe wires, owing to Jevere storms, were nearly all down and communication, with the East was nearly wholly cut off, otherwise trading would have been doubled. The feeling was weak from the start with opening sales of Jnly at K declined, ruled very heavy and steadily declined lc more, then reacted c. ruled easy and closed about ic lower than yesterday. June sold off2c and closed about ia lower than yesterday, weakness is attributed to milder weather. Tha nortei room operators with Jio range. The feeling developed was, on the whole, a little easier. Oats wore fairly active and unsettled. The opening was at ytia decline. This was fol lowed by a firmer feeling. The decline was re covered, ana market closed nrm. and the market finally closed quiet and easy. The leadimr mtnres rancea as follows: Wheat No. 2 Jnlv. 7ffiG)7&Vfi)75!475M 35X3iK&S5c. OATS-No. 3 July, 22&22X22m gust, siazici.oepiemDer. .a; Mess "Pork, per bbL July, u vzKtgai so; August, ii mx 011 92M: Senteirber. 11 8M)L liabd, per juo Bi juiy, so vugk riMpo 6 70; August, 16 756 758 756 75: September, t6 82K68 82K6 S06 82. Hiiokt Baa, per 100 Ss. July. $5 72K5 5 5 72K5 75; August 82K3 82K5 80 5 S2K; September, 85 S7K590o 87HQ5 87K; Casn quotations were as xollows: Flour quiet and unchanged. No. 2 spring wheat, c; No. 3 spring wheat, 72c; No. 2 red 76c No.2corn.33c bid. Ho. 2 oats. 2K& No. 2rye.SSKc No. 2 barley, nominal. No. 1 flax seed, tlSB. Prime timothy seed, ,.$125. Mess pork, per barrel, $11 S0U85. Lara, per 100 Us, 16 62X6 65. Short ribs sides (loose). S3 6o 57a Dry salted shoulders (boxed), $512K 5 25. dhort clear sides (boxed), S66 12K Sngars Cut loaf, unchanged. Receipts Flour, 1L0O0 barrels; wheat, 12,000 bushels: corn, 435.000 bushels: oats. 234,000 bushels: rye, 8,000 bushels; barley, 4,000 bushels. Ship mentsFlour. liOOObarrels; wheat, 19.000 bush els; com. 381,000 bushels: oats. 142,000 bush els; rye, 7,000 bushels; barley. 2,000 bushels. On the Produce Exchange to-day the butter market was Arm: fancy Elgin, 15Kl"ci choice to fine. lllc; fine dairy, 1214Kc; fair to good, 810c Eggs firm at 1212Kc New Yobk Flour moderately active and unchanged. Cornmeal quiet and steady. Wheat Spot dull and weak, and KXc lower; options unusually active for Saturday, not withstanding the absence of Chicago quota tions, which failed to disturb dealers. Barley malt dull. Corn-Spot dull and steady; options dull and firm. Oats-Bpot steady and moder ately active; options fairly active and firm. Hay dull and weak. Hops firm and in fair de mand. Coffee Options anil and unchanged to 5 points down, closed steady and unchanged to 10 points up; sales, 11,000 bags, Including June, 16.60c; Jnlv. 16.65c; September, lR.9017.00c; October, 17.0017.75c; December, 17.70 17.75c; March, 17.20c Spot rice quiet firm; fair cargoes, 18JJc Sugar Raw firm and quiet: refined firm and quiet Molasses For eign firm and quiet; New Orleans, quiet; open kettle, good, fancy, 2846c. Rice quiet and steady; domestic 4JiSSXc: Japan, 4Ji5Kc Cottonseed oil quiet Tallow barely steady; city, 4Jc Rosin quiet and firm. Turpentine dull. Eggs weak and quiet; western, 13i13Kc; receipts. 2,894 packages. Pork quiet; mess, 813 2513 50; extra prime, S12 0012 25. Lard inactive and lower; western steam. S7 02M 7 60; city, $6 60; June, $7 02 asked; July, 87 04 bid; August, 87 50 bid; September, $7 02, clos ine at 57 10. Butter quiet; choicest steady; western dairy, 9013c: do creamery, 1817Kc; western factory, 7K12c Cheese strong; re ceipts sold up; western, 78c Cincinnati Flour dull. Wheat quiet; No. 2 red, 80c; receipts, 1,600 bushels: ship ments. 1,000 bushels. Corn firm; No. 2 mixed, SSc Oats steady; No. 2 mixed, 25c P.ye quiet; No. 2, 47c Pork firmer at 12 25. Lard steady at 6 60. Bulkmeats steady; short ribs, S3 05. Bacon quiet: short clear, S7 00. Whisky firm. Butter dull.- Sugar firm. Eggs quiet Cheese firm. Philadelphia Flour quiet Wheat dnll and prices steady. Corn opened Ji9jfo lower, but subsequently recovered and closed Jc higher. Oats Car lots weak; prices declined Vfi)lc: futures dnll and unchanged. Errtra -i . ' - . i r -a. tt r steady; Pennsylvania firsts, 15c Butter steady inr nne; Pennsylvania creamery extra, itfifg 18c; do prints extra, I819. St. Louis Flour unchanged. Wheat lower: cash, 76Kc; June closed 73c asked; July, 71 TIKc bid; September. 7273c asked. Com dull; No. 2 mixed, cash, Sl31c: June closed 81c; July, 31o asked; September, Stygc. Oats weak: No. 2 cash, 23c asked; June, 22lc; Rye No. 2, 40c Flaxseed quotable at 1 45. Provisions dull and weak. Bt Tolecraptu Kansas city Cattle Receipts, 2,166 head; shipments, 952 bead; market opened steady, later weakened and closed a shade lower; good to choice cornfed, 13 804 00; common to me dium, 3 25S 75; cows SI 753 00: stackers and feeding steers, S2 253 40. Hogs Receipts, 12,513 head; shipments, 1,885 head: market weak and 510c lower than yesterday's closing prices; good to choice light. U 204 25; heavy and mixed, 13 004 15. Sheep Receipts, 1,571 head; no shipments: market steady; good to choice muttons. S3 754 20; common to me dium. S2 603 50. Chicago Cattle Receipts, 2,800 head; shlp .ments, 1,300 head; market moderately active and unchanged. Steers. S3 504 SO; stackers and feeders dull at 2 603 60; cows, bulls and mixed. Si 753 25;Texan8, Jl 70340. Hogs Receipts. 23,000 bead; shipments, 7.000 head: market active, 1015c lower; mixed. S4 2o4 45; heavy, S4 204 40; light, S4 254 45; stackers, S3 004 10. Sheet) Receipts, 1,500 head; ship ments, 600 head: market steady and unchanged; natives, S3 254 75 Texans, S3 353 90; lambs, S3 25Q110. St. Louis Cattle Receipts. 1,000 head: ship ments, none: market strong; choice heavy na tive steers, S3 904 40; fair to good da, S3 10 4 00; stackers and feeders. S2 200-310; rangers, corn-fed, S2 8003 60; grass-fed. S2 103(XX Hogs Receipts, 3,000 head; .shipments, none; market lower; choice heavy and butchers', 54 SO 4 40; packing, Si 154 30: light, S4 S04 45. Sheep Receipts, 3,000 head; shipments, none; market steady; lair to choice, S3 004 40: Cincinnati Hogs quiet; common and light S3 754 60: packing and butchers', U 204 35; receipts, 870 head; shipments, 1,300 head. Indianapolis Cattle steady at $2 754 40. Hogs steadyat S4 854 CO. Sheep strong at $3 00 4 00; Iambs, S5 006 60. Drycoods Marker. New York, June L In dry goods to-day a fair business was done in flannels, which ap pear easy to sell. The tone is strong all along the line. Agents have made- the following advance in prices of bleached shirtings: Cabol 7-8, 6Kc do. 4-4. Tc: New York mills 4-4, lOc; Fitchville4-4,7ic I River Telegrams. (SPECIAL TELEGRAMS TO TUB DISPATCH.1 Wabben River 109-10 feet Weather cloudy and mild. Brownsville River 14 feet 5 Inches and falling. Weather clear. Thermometer 70 at 4 r. it. Beechak's Pills cure sick headache. Pears' Soap, the purest and best ever made. A Word to tho Thinker. It you are young, vigorous, full of life and health, you requiie no stimulant but un fortunately we are not all so; then think, if depressed in spirits, if lack of ambition, if weak from disease, if lung trouble, if no appetite what is the best to use! Why, ask the hospitals, ask- the faculty and they will all answer Max, Klein's "Silver Age" rye' is the best- stimulant in the world and sold everywhere at $1 50 per full quart. He will also forward you six Suarts of the best six-year-old Gucken eimer, Finch, Gibson or Over holt for ?5 or $1 per single quart You can rely upon any article advertised by Max Klein, 82 Federal street, Allegheny. Send, for price list. "We ship goods neatly packed any where. MOT J. H. Johnston's gun store removed to 706 Smithfield street When baby was sick, we gave her Castorla, When "she was a Child, she ctled for Castorla, When she became Miss, she clang to Castorla, When shehadChildrea.chegave them Castorla apft-TT-MWrBn GEORGE T. GARTER, - INVESTMENT BONDS. s -v ' Jt .Sll-S&Be&tM Bonding. August, 74J74K733i74cs September, U 74K73J74c: year. 7ffii73K72X73c. . CaEH-No.2 Inly. Je$ST33kS4c; An rniL MK(3MV.e?MaMU;c- Bentember. 85 B22&c; An- mylO-TO-BSV.r, - ? . "PlHeburkPa. -'MONDAY, JUNE 3,, INOW FIKST The Pemycomequicks Written for THE DISPATCH by- ; . . S. BARING GOULD, , Author Of"MEHALAH1""COUBXEOYAL,",JOHirHEBBINO,-' "The Gaveeocks,"Eto ALL MQBTS RESERVED. CHAPTER! XXXV.-OIT. When I was a boy I possessed a pet owl. It was a source of amusement to me to feed that owl with.mice. When the trap had caught one of these night disturbers, l,took it to the solemn owl, who sat blinking in the daylight half awako and half asleep. The owl at once gulped down the mouse, and then went fast asleep with the mouse in her inside, but with the end of the tail protruding from her beak. About an hour later I went to the owl, took hold of the end of the mouse's tail and pulled it, where upon up the throat of tho owl came the mouse, backward, and the bird of wisdom was roused to wild wonder and profound puzzlement to account for the sudden disgorging of her meal. Mrs. Sidebottom had bolted uncle Jeremiah and was doing her best to digest him and bis fortune, when, unexpectedly, her meal came to life again, and she sat gulping, blinking, be mnzzed'in her sitting room waiting for the re turn of Lambert from the billiard table, to communicate to him the news that had reached her. Anyone who had seen my owl would per ceive at once that the case of Mrs. Sidebottom was analogous. The consternation could hardly have been greater on Quilp reappearing when a posse of wives was sitting discussing him, esteemed dead: and Jeremiah was no Qnilp. But it is notQuilps alone wbowonld produce dismay were they to return to life. Imagine the emo tions produced in a hospital which has received a bequest of 10,000, and has spent 15 guineas on the portrait of the benefactor, should the benefactor descend from the frame, declare himself alive, and require the return of his thousands. Think of the junior partner, who has been waiting till a senior shuffled off his mortal coll to make room for him ; how would he feel woro the dead to return to lifer Think of the curate waiting for ihe living, the next presentation to which is for him, should the old rector, after having laid himself down in his grave, change his mind and get ont and re sume his benefice for another 15 years! Mrs. Sidebottonvhad but just received news of the reappearance of Uncle Jeremiah, and, like an energetic woman, she wasteias little time as might be in exclamations of dismay. She was not the woman to hover in uncertainty and ask advice how to get out of a difficulty. Like one who has trodden in mire, she pulled her leg out instantaneously to set it on dry and firm ground. "I don't know how the law stands, and whether the sentence of the Court of Probate can be reversed," she said, "but of one thing I am very sure that ho who has can hold, and tire out those who try to open his hands, if he has any wit" Then in came Lambert "Oh, Lambl" exclaimed his mother, "here Is a pretty predicament we are inl My brother Jeremiah has come to life agalnl" The captain burst out laughing. "This is no laughing matter." said his mother, testily. "HowcanyoubesuchahyenaT Jere miah has reappeared at Mergatroyd. and there is well, I can't mince matters the devil to pay. I presume he will want to reclaim what we have distributed between us. The mill, of course, with the business, be will take back un der his control, and cut off the supply thence That Is a serious matter and then there is the money he left " . "Which I suppose he will require you to re turn." "Which I can't and won't return. Bless me, Lamb, what a state of things I Our Income re duced from half the profits of the business to one-sixth, which he cannot touch.as that comes, to me under my marriage settlement We must leave England we must leave at once I shall know nothing abont Jeremiah's return. I shall keep away till I see in what humor he is, Vhat he intends to do, and in what light he re- hgards me. There are trifles connected with the As for his savings, his securities and so on, I will return nothing ''she stamped her foot "no, Lamb; for, in fact; I cant!" "How do you know that he is back, and that this is not a false alarm?" , "Look here" She tossed a letter to bim. "It is laconic He wrote It with a sneer I know be did. Jeremiah never liked me. He has disappeared, and has come to life again, out of spite" Captain Pennycomequlck to be correct Penycombe-Quick toot the letter and read it with a smile. It was short. "Dear Louisa I am back, hearty again. I have been to Algiers for my health. I had rheumatic fever, and wtfen I came round 1 found you had already pronounced me dead, and had divided the spoils concerning which, a word later. Your affectionate brother, "Jeremiah P." "Is it nis handwriting?" asked Lambert "Of course it is. Here is a pretty mess for me to be in. I shall have everyone laughing at me, because I swore that the man in the shirt and great coat was Jeremiah, 'Concerning which the spoils a word later.' What does be mean by that but that he proposes calling me to account for every penny? I will not re main in England. I cannot I will not receive this letter." "But you have received It," "I shall make my landlady return it, with a note to say that she took tho liberty to open it, so as to be able to write to the sender, and say that I have gone abroad for my health. Where shall I say I have gone to? To Algiers, whence Jeremiah has just returned." "You cannot do that" "But I will. Self-preservation is the first law. As for the money I lost somn by that Beaple Yeo; not much, but some. 1 was so prompt and-j had such presence of mind that 1 caught the 4 man and made him refund before he bad got rid of most of it I have money in securities railway debentures and foreign loans. I have all the papers by me I trust no one but myself, since my faith has been shaken by Smithies. Lamb, we must be off directly. It would be too much a shock to my nerves to see my brother that was dead and is alive again. What are you laughing at, Lamb? You really are silly." "There is some prospect nowot my coming to that hundred and fifty, I hope," said tho captain. "Uncle Jeremiah may now write an other will." "How selfish your are! You think only of yourself, not how I am afflicted. But, Lamb, I have had yon sponging on me all these years, and keeping me in au exhausted condition that is intolerable." "We shall revert to our former condition, I suppose, now," said Lambert, unconcernedly. "That is precisely what I cannot do. Return to poverty and middle-class society, the very crown and climax of which is a Lord and Lady Mayoress when we are on tho eve of making the acquaintance of county peoplel What -have you done for yourself? You have been too inert to seize ,tbe chances I have put in your way. You must marry money. Jane Mul berry was worth 600 per annum, and you let her slip through your finger'." "She had a mustache" "She had money. Five hundred pounds would gild it Then there was Miss Smith son." "She was insipid." "What of that? The insipid women make the best wives, they are non-resistant. In marriage, men should be teetotalers and take weak and washy women. They are far the best to get on with." "Don't think I've much fancy for Buch," said the Captain, languidly. "I tremble to think," said his mother, angri ly, "what the offspring o( a weak woman and such an unenergetic man would be" "Then why recommend such a marriage?" ''Because we most consider ourselves, not the unborn possibilities. However, to return to tho subject that now most occupies me. My condition is desperate You must' marry. I can support you no longer." "And so you deport me to Algiers?" "My dear boy, wo are not going to Algiers." "Then where to?" "To Andermatt" "Andermatt where is that?" "On the Saint Gottbard." "And pray why to Ander&att on the Salatr Gottbard?" ;n'BeMuseMTCB8yae is there," : " . i-UB, Bjau im. i s. j t i , lg89. PUBLISHED.1 "What makes you say 'by all means?' " asked his mother, sharply. "She's a jolly girl, good looking, and no non sense about her." "Do you think that I would take you to her, If that were all? You know she is a.widow. She has her 150 from what was sunk by Jere- miah when she married, but that is not all": she has been left well provided for by her iusband, Mr. Albert Baynes. I know all about it I got everything out of Salome. I told her how anxious I was about her sister, how pained I was concerning her bereavement, and how I hoped she was not left in bad circumstances. Salome very openly told me that she was very comfortably provided for, and no stipulation made about marrying again. I know what Salome meant when she let me draw that out of her she meant that you should know; but I then had my eye on Miss Bmlthson. However, now that we must go abroad we may as well kill two birds with one stone Besides, as Jere miah took such a lively interest in Janet, he may be gratified at your marrying her, and not press me with demands which I could not com ply with which Twill not, no, will net comply with." "But she is in bad health." "Oh, nothing bnt sentiment at her husband's death; besides, if she is delicate, all the bet-" ter." "I don't see that" said the Captain, feebly disgusted at his mother's heartlessness. "Fiddle-faddle." said" Mrs. Sldebotton; "It is all part of the business It goes with widows' caps. When I lost Sidebottom I was worn to a shadow and got a cough; but I began to recover flesh when I went into half mourning, and lost my cough with my weeds. When you appear on the scene it will be codliver oil to her." "It will be very dull at this place you speak of." "Of course it will be dull and hateful, but what wDl you have? I sacrifice myself for you. ( You must got off my hands and shift for your self;! have had you as a charge too long. I want to see you well provided for, and as the Bmlthson and Jane Mulberry failed, you must take the B lynes. I can't tell you exactly what she is worth, but I will ascertain from Salome who Is there, before you commit yourself. Re member. Lamb, we must go. j cannot stay here and face Jeremiah." "Why not? It would be the most honorable thing to do, and might answer the best in the end." "I cannot do it Why how would you feel how could you feel toward a person who bad pronounced you dead, and proceeded to ad minister? Much as a man might toward the surgeon who proceeded to dissect him before he was dead. No, Lamb, I will not remain. I can always write to Jeremiah, and express my profound astonishment to hear of his re turn, and assume an air of injury that I should have been left in the dark so long. Indeed, I think that will be the card to play throw the blame on him, and if the case comes into court I can lay stress on this. Willfully he allowed me to remain in ignorance of his existence Something had to be done. The factory would not go on itself. The factory could not be car ried on without money. The business would go to pieces unless energetically prosecuted. Jeremiah may feel grateful, andpught to feel grateful to me, that I acted with such readiness in the matter and saved the firm of Penny comequlck from ruin. lean bring in a heavy bill against him for my services. However, I had rather do this from a distance, and by let ter. I will take the injured tone, and make him dance to that tune" Mrs. Sidebottom was a woman of resource She never suffered herself to be discouraged by adversity; and adversity now faced her wearing the mask of her brother returned to life She had much energy of character and fertility of Invention, which, If she had been a woman of principle, instead of unscrupulous self-seeking, might have made her a valuable person in so ciety. She was at present frightened she had Invested some of the money she had drawn to herself from Jeremiah's savings in a manner that promised well; some she had lost She neither desired to be called to account for what she had squandered, nor to be forced to re imburse those happy speculations which were likely to place her in easy circumstances. Until she had had g"od professional advice, and until she knew what her brother intended, she con sidered that safety lay in absence She .went about in York, leaving her card; and when she saw a friend, she told her that she was oft to the continent for a bit of a change Btiehadnot been very well, and the doctors had insisted on variation of scene and air, and she felt herself that life was too short to spend It in one place. The world was large and must be seen, and those dear snowy mount ains they possessed for her a fascination she had struggled against, but had been unable farther to resist. "My dear Mrs. Jacques, you know what anxi ety and care I had last year about my poor brother's affairs winding up, you know. I held up through it all, animated by a sense of duty, but it told on me in the end, and now I am going to relax. I shall spend the summer in the Alps, and unless I am much better I shall go to Algiers for the winter. Have you any friends who will be there next Christmas? Oh, mydearl to think of Christmas in Algiers; a hot sun and no plum pudding I" Mrs. Sidebottom had not the faintest desire to. spend a winter in Algiers; she thought Men tone, or Florence, or Fau wouldsuitherbetter, according to where she could get into the best society, and she resolved to leave the determi nation to the future; if she found during the summer people whom it was worth her while banging on to, and who were wintering any- where abroad, she would attach herself to them. But with the curious crookedness which prevails in some natures, she went about asking questions abont hotels and pensions at Algiers, keeping her ears open at the same time to hear of persons of position who were likely to winter ' elsewhere. It was possible that if she made it known that she would winter in Algiers, ac quaintances would tell her of friends of theirs who were wintering elsewhere. Nor was she wrong. "Oh, I am so sorry you are not going to Men tone; Sir William Pickering is going there be cause of the health of dear Lady Pickering. Such charming people you would have liked to know them but as you are going to Algiers, ot course I cannot got you acquainted with each other." Mrs. Sidebottom knew well enough that if she bad said she was going to Mentone this piece of information would not have been vouchsafed her. "Oh! Mrs. Side bottom you are visiting Algiers. There is a nice young lady, a niece, going there She Is in a decline I shall be eternally obliged to you if you would show her kindness; she is badly off, and it wonld be goodness itself if you would just look in now and then and ascertain that she is comfortable and not imposed on." "My dear Mrs. Tomson, you could not have asked me to do anything that would have pleased me more but unfortunately it is not certain that I am going to Algiers. If I make up my mind to go I will write to you for tho address of your niece, and you may rely on me, I will do my utmost for her." This was accom panied by an internal mem.: Have nothing further to do with Mrs. Tomson. I'm not going abroad to be anybody's nurse. Heaven forbid. "Ob, Mrs. Sidebottom! So you are off to Switzerland and Algiers. Now there could bo nothing more opportune We are going to have a bazaar to raise money for the relief of the peasants In France who have suffered from the war. Would you mind sending as your contri bution a box of charming Swiss carvings and delightful Algerian and Moorish pottery the latter will sell rapidly 'and at high prices you are so good and charitable, I know you will." "I will certainly do so. Rely on me. I in tended to have had a stall; I will send two cases Instead" with a mental mem.; Forget all about the bazaar till it is over, and then write a proper apology. I "Oh Jin. Sidebottom! Pve lost my maid again. As joa are going to Switzerland, will yon do me the favor of lookins out for a really serviceable girl you know my requirements and arrange all apouttrains and so on. so that she may reach me solely. Perhaps yoa would not mind advancing her Joumey.moaey, and I will repay It If she salte,-of which I have no doubt I am determined to have no more Ba gUasem$s. .,& - Mrs. Sidebottom found that her acquaint ances were eager to make use ot her, but then she bad sufficient knowledge of the world to expect that "Have you secured through tickets, Lamb?" "Yes, mother." "Then we are off to-morrow." CHAPTER XiXVX Deposed. Gone as a dreamt that brief period of hope and happiness and comfort. Philip had a dis quieting prospect opening before him. as dis quieting as that which drove Mrs. Sidebottom from England, but different in kind. Philip was ready enough to account for every penny, and return all the money undiminished wljlch had come to bis share What troubled him was the fearful look-out of a return t fur nished lodgings. He'saw himself abont to be cast forth from the elegancies ot life and cast down to its vulgarities and discomfort. He sawbimself about to be transferred from the cushioned carriage on the smooth road, to a buggy on a corduroy way, all jolts and kicks and plunges and break downs. He was about to descend from succulent joints and savory entre-mets to mutton chops, alternating into beefsteaks, from claret to bitter beer, from a place of authority to one of submission, from progress to stagna tion, from a house of his own over which to range at pleasure to confinement within two rooms, one openlne out of the other. He must go back to streaky forks, and spoons that at dinner recalled the eggs of breakfast, to knives with adhesive bandies and tumblers frosted with finger-marks, to mirror frames encased in flyproof snipped green paper and beadedflower mats, a horsehair sofa, a cruet-stand and old crusted mustard and venerable Worcester sauce in it, to wax fruit under a glass shade, as covered with dust as a Peruvian island with guano, to folding-doors into the adjacent bed room and to curtains tied back with discarded bonnet ribbons. But it would have been bad enough for Philip, now accustomed to better things, to have had the prospect before him of descending alone; but he was no longer alone; he haa a wife, who, however, was absent, and about whose return he was uncertain. And he had with him the encumbrance of a baby; and the encumbrance of a baby drew with it a train of dissatisfied and departing nurses, one after another, like the procession of kings re vealed to Macbeth in Hecate's cave. A babe in a lodging house is as ont of place as was the ancestral Stanley found in an eagle's nest on the top of a pine, of which the family crest preserves a reminiscence Uncle Jeremiah was restored to strength, moral as well as physical. He no longer thought of bis heart, he allowed it to manage its pulsa tions unconsidered. He was heartily glad that he had been saved committing an act of egre gious folly, and he was prepared now to meet Salome without a twinge. Common sense had resumed the place of upper hand, and the tem porary disturbance was over forever. To every man comes at some period after he has begun to decline a great horror of old age, an agoniz ing clutch at the pleasures and f olies of youth, a time ot intoxication when he is not responsi ble for his acts, an intoxication produced by fear lest life with lt3 roses should have passed and left only thorns behind and decay. Men whose lives have been spent in business, sub jected to routine, who have no thought of love and amusement, of laughter and idleness, are suddenly roused to find themselves old and standing out of the rush of merriment and the sunshine of happiness. Then they make a frantic effort to seize what hitherto they have despised, to hug to their hearts what they have formerly cast away. It is the S. Luke's sum mer, a faint reflex of the departed glory and warmth, a last smile before the arrival of the wintry gales. No moment in life is so fraught with danger as this at none is there more risk of shipwreck to reputation. Now that Jeremiah had passed through this period, he could survey its risks with a smile and a sense of self-pity and a little self-contempt He who had always esteemed himself strong had discovered that he could be weak, and perhaps this lesson had made him more lenient with the infirmities of others. He returned to his friend John Dale, looking older by some years, but also more hale. He had touched the earth; but had risen from it stronger than when he felt On reaching Bridlington he learned from Dale the state of matters at Mergatroyd. While there a hasty note arrived for Mr. Dale from Salome to say that she was leaving, with her husband's consent," to be with heslster in Switzerland, and both thought they could read between the lines that there had been a fresh difference with Philip. Thereupon Jeremiah went to Mergatroyd and came in unexpectedly and unannounced on Philip. Jeremiah Pennycomequick had not decided what course to pursue with regard to his sister and nephew. He was conscious that he had played them a trick, that he had put them to a test which he was not justified in applying to them. He was angry with both with his half-sister for the precipitation wjth which she had ac cepted and certified his death, and with Philip for his treatment of Salome He did not dis guise from himself that his interference in such a delicate matter as a quarrel, or an es trangement, between husband and wife", might make the breach worse. When he arrived at Mergatroyd, he had not resolved what course to take He sat up half the night with Philip. "You will find." said the latter with some pride, "that I have maintained the business in a healthy condition; it is not in the condition it was during the Continental War, which affect ed linen as well as other things, 'but that was of its nature ephemeral. It rests on a sound basis. Go through the books and satisfy your self. My aunt," there was a tone of bitterness when he added this: "My aunt watched the conduct of the factory with a jealous eye and drd not trust my accounts without a scrutiny. As for what was in the bank, I can give an ac count of every penny, and the securities, such as came to me, are untouched." "I will look into these matters at my leisure," said Jeremiah, "and if I find that matters are as you say, I will let you down lightly; only, I forewarn you, let down you will be. And now a word about Salome" "My wife." said Philip, shortly, "Your wife exactly but " "With regard to my wife, I brook no Inter ference," said Philip, haughtily. "The mill Is your affair, my domestic relations are my own." "You cry out before you are hurt," retorted Jeremiah; "I am not about to interfere. I know that you are greatly disconcerted at the discovery as to the parentage of your wife" - Philip held up bis bead stiffly and closed his lips tightly. He said nothing. "I am not intermeddling," continued Jere miah, "but I wish you to understand this that 1 have some claim to speak a word to Salome, whom I have always that Is to say whom I have loosed upon with fatherly regarl. The two little girls grew up in my bouse, not a day passed butlsaw them, I rode them as infants at my knee, I bought them toys. They ran to meet me cupboard love, of course when I came from the mill, because I haa oranges or sweet things in m v pocket 1 took pride in them as they became dooming girls. I saw that they were well taught After dinner they, soothed mewiththeirmusic and when I was dull en livened me with their prattle Have I then no right to speak a word tor one or the other? I have been to them more than a father. Their father deserted tbem as soon as thoywere bom, but I have nurtured and clothed them, and seen to the development of their minds and the disciplining of their characters. It is absurd of you to deny me the right to speak. To Interfere is not my purpose,r "Very well, I will listen.'' "Thenlet me tell you this I know who their father was. When Mrs. Cusworth came into this bonse she very honestly told me the truth abont them, and by my advice she kept her counsel. 'It could do them only harm cloud their joy.to know that they had a disreputable father. We knew nothing ot tho man's subse quent history. He bad disappeared, add might be as we hoped, dead. Bnt, even it alive we did not suppose be would care to come In quest of bis twin daughters, and we trusted shonld he do this, that he would not find them. We hdDcd.that he might not conjecture that the children bad been adopted by their aunt and that she had moved into Yorkshire toMerga troyl. Neither Salome nor Janet knew who their father was, or rather both supposed him to be that worthy man who perished so lament ably In my service. By what means he made the discovery and got on their track I do not know, and I hardly care to know. If I could take into my house the children of such a man, it hardly becomes jou '' Philip interrupted his uncle. "That fellow Schofleld never injured you as he did my father. He not only ruined him, but he also was the cause of his estrangement from you, or rather, yours from him." "Bear the man what grudge your will." said Jeremiah, hastily, "bnt do not visit his offenses on the head of his unoffendmg child." Philip stood up. He was angry, but not to be moved from his stiffness of manner. "I think;" said he, "you will be tired. I am, and probably bed is the best place for both. As this is now jour house, andl am an intrud er in it, I must ask permission to occupy my room for to-night" Jeremiah laughed. "And you a lawyer! Why you are In legal possession, and till there is a reversal otthe sentence of the Probate Court, I have no mere rights titan a ghost No 1 am your guest." Philip retired to his room. The wArd of Jeremiah, charging htea with visttlBg the of fences of the fatkei oa the UBoaesMg efcHd, mn bt tfca miesWou of Us owa. setf-ie- Eroach, butfor that very reason leuendnraj what he will not tolerate to be said to him by another. He went to his room, but not to bed. He sat at the window, where Salome had sat, in tha' same chair, thinking with dark brow and se lips. In one thing, his self-esteem was encour aged. His uncle would see and be forced ts acknowledge how thoroughly he had mastered. the technicalities of the business and wltat. what order and prudence he had carried it on. He need not shrink from the closest examina- tion into his conduct ot the factory. Every thing was In order, the books well kept, several; contracts in band. His uncle might dismiss' him, but he could not say a word against his integrity and business habits. He had taken to himself nothing but what Mrs. Sidebottom, as administratrix, had passed over to him.' And as to his uncle's disappearance be tad'' done nothings as to the identification of tha wrong body; he had held himself neutral, as la capable of forming an opinion from inadequate' acquaintance with his nncle If blame was te be cast, It must fall heavily on Mrs. Bidebot-i torn, but none would rest on him. But how about the future? Philip now re-' called the discomfiture, the monotonies, ths irritations ot lodging-house life. Could he go back to that? If his uncle offered to retain; him In his house, could he consent? His pride counseled him to go, his love of comfort ts; remain. Uncle Jeremiah had not invited him to re main, but Philip thought it likely that ba migbt His pride was galled In many ways. It would be most painful to him to continue at the factory, in which he had been a master, henceforth in a subordinate position. Should he return to the solicitor's firm at Nottingham,, in which he had been before? That his serv ices there were valued he was well aware; that his resignation of a clerkship therein had caused annoyance he was well aware; ha knew, however, that his place was .filled, and that if he returned to the office he would ba obliged to take a lower desk. He might and probably would, be advanced, but that would require patience, and he must wait till a va cancy occurred. Besides, it would be a humil iation to have to solicit readmlssion, after ba had left the office on stilts, as one who had come into a fortune Then what was to be done about his wife? He conUnot maintain her and her child on a junior clerk's wage Moreover, he had sent her away when he occupied a lofty moral plat, form, because connection with her sullied tho fair name of Pennycomequick, and might In jure the firm; and now that he n,o longer be longed to the firm, but was a poor clerk of no consequence In the world, was he to write to her a letter of humble apology, and ask her to return and share the beggary of a clerk's Ufa in furnished lodgings with him, to unite with him in the long, doleful battle against land ladies? He had little doubt that Uncle Jere miah would propose to make Salome an allow ance, and that on this allowance together with his salary they might be able to rub along. But to accept such relief from Uncle Jeremiah, granted through his wife his wife whom ha faadsnubbedand thrust away was not pleas ant to contemplate Whatever way Philip considered the meal set before him, he saw only homble pie, and hum ble pie is the least appetizing of dishes. Philip approached it as a sulky child does a morsel which his nurse requires him to eat, without consuming which be must expect no pudding. He walked round it, be looked at it from near,' then he drew back and considered it at long range, then he touched It, then smelt It. then turned his back on it, then with a grumble' began to pick a few crumbs off It and put them be tween his lips. He went to bed at last, unresolved, angry with himself, apgry with Salome, angry with his uncle and angry with the baby who was sobbing in the nursery. Philip's experiences had all been made in spiral form, they were ever turning about him self, and though each revolution attained a higher level, it was still made about the same center. There is a family likeness In minds as well as in noses and eyes and hair; and in this Philip resembled his aunt, but with the differ ence that he was governed by a strong sense of rectitude, and that nothing would Induce him! to deviate from what he believed to be just wbereas his aunt's principles were flexible, and. governed only by her own interests. In these days in which we live socialism is in the air, that Is to say, it is talked of and pro fessed, but whether by any is practiced I am inclined to question. For socialism I take to mean every one for every one else, and no ona for himself, and this is a condition contrary to the nature of man, for men are more or less waterspouts, vortices, attracting to themselves whatever comes within their reach, and to bo actuated by a centrifugal, not a centripetal force is the negative of individuality. We stalk our wav over the ocean, drawing up through our skirts every drop of water, every j seaweed and crab and fish and mollusc that wa 1 can touch, and whirl them round and round. 1 ourselves, and only cast them away and dl3l tribute them to others wnen tney are oi no i more use to ourselves. 1 Every climatic zone through which Philip ' bad nassed had served to feed and build UD tha i colnmn of his self-e3teem; the ruggecLweatber 1 In fti.nlahod Imlirlnn anil tho still lAaS into 3 which he had entered by his uncle's deakh. anjCm. by his marriage, ri otning nau mssrii uown,a dissolved its continuity, dissipated its lorce At sea. when a vessel encounters a water spout, it discharges ordnance, and the vibration of the atmosphere caused by the explosion snaps the column and it goes to pieces. But wonld the shock caused by the return of Uncla Jeremiah, and the loss of position and wealth that this entailed, suffice to break tha pillar of self-esteem that constituted Philip Pennycome quick? Hardly: for though touched in many ways, he could hold up his head conscious of his rectitude, be had managed the mill admir ably, kept the accounts accurately, adapted himself to the new requirements perfectly. He could, when called upon, give up bis place, but he would march forth with all the honors of war. (To be continued next Monday.) BROKERS FINANCIAL. -TTTHITNEY & STEPHENSON, 7 FOURTH AVENUE. Issue travelers' credits through Messrs. Drexel, Morgan & Co., New York. Passports procured. ap2S-l $5 TO J100 WILL SECURE "STOCK OP TIONS: 10 to 100 shares; often yielding large profits; stocks carried on; margin; wau Street Manual iree PECK & COSTER, jel-97 53 Broadway, New York City. MEDICAL. DOCTOR WHITTIER 814 PENN AVENUE. PITTSBURG. PA.. As old residents know and back files of Pitts, burg papers prove, is the oldest established and most prominent physician In thecity, devoting special attention to all chronic diseases. From pes"16 NO FEE UNTIL CURED Mrmfll 10 and mental diseases, physical IMLn V UUO decay, nervous debility, lack of energy, ambition and hope, Impaired mem ory, disordered sight, self-distrust, bashfulness, dizziness, -sleeplessness, pimples, eruptions, im poverished blood, falling powers, organlo weak ness, dyspepsia, constipation, consumption, un fitting the person for business, society and mar riage, permanently, safely and privately cured. BLOOD AND SKIN "& blotches, falling hair, bone pains, glandular swellings, ulcerations of tongue.mouth, throat , ulcers, old sores, are cured for life and blood poisons thoroughly eradicated from thesystem. IIDIMADV kidney and bladder derange U M 1 1 1 M n 1 1 ments, weak back, gravel, ca tarrhal discharges, inflammation and other painful symptoms receive searching treatment, prompt relief and real cures. Dr. Whittier's llf e-long, extensive experlenco Insures scientific and reliable treatment on common-sense principles. Consultation free Patients at a distance as carefully treated as if here Office hours 9 A.H.to8p.lt:Sundy, 10AVM-tolP.K.only. DR WHITHER, 8U Penn avenue Pittsburg, Pa. ap9-31K-snwlc DOCTORS LAKE PRIVATE DISPENSARY. OFFICES. 90U PENN AVEL, PITTSBURG, PA. All fnnmanfnatlMtAftnfTrAnt. plicated Diseases reqniringCox- Medication are treated at this Dispensary with. a success rarely auaineu. in. a. a. " -member of the Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons, and is the oldest and most expe rienced Specialist In the city. Special atten tion given to Nervous Debility from excessive men&l exertion. Indiscretions of youth, eta. causing physical and mental decay, lack of energy, despondency, eic-ims" V?U,V;'0' w"j Sores. Fits, Plies. Rheumatism, and all disease of the asm, oioou- x.uus, "". -p- t ete Consultation free and strictly eonflden tiaL Offico hours 9to4and7to8P.Sl.:8un--days. 2 to 4 p. H. only. Call at office or address S. K. LAKE.M. D., M. E. C. P.6.,orE.J. LAKE.M.D? MMMorwTWk GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE NERVOUS DEBILITY, LOST VIGOR. LOSS OF memory: Fall particulars In pamphlet sent free. The genuine Uray's . bpeclflo sold by drutrzUts only In yellow wrapper. Price, fl per package, or six for & or by mall ne TBE GKAT MEDICINE CO., Buffalo, N. X Sold in Vlttstmrgr byS. S..UULLAND. con rnrner apl2-S3 A OTT1TWUTJ li 1-? from errors or ADUrrJJLtluXVyoutli, wasting weakness, lost vlcor. ete. was restored to health In such a remarkable manner after all else had;. lAiica mat ae wiu sena lao moae ox care je s& r. 9 su fellow sufferers. Aaaret L. u. mi .iMtJbuMsa, Utsn; jbju-i INI