Pittsburg dispatch. (Pittsburg [Pa.]) 1880-1923, July 29, 1889, Page 7, Image 7

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tSOW FIKST
JThe Pemycomequicks
Written for THE
S. BARINC
Anthor or,MEiiAi.AU,,"CoxJBT EoYAi,,,,'JoHN Hebeino," "The Gaveeocks'Eto
ALL RIGHTS
CHAPTER LI. AOAIK Hymex.
Is there in a'.l Europe a more delightful old
world town than Berne? There are grander
i minsters, tbere are more princely mansions,
but tbere is no lovelier situation tnan that oc
cupied by the dear old city perched on a rock
round which the green Aar forms a loop. May
the great cancer ol modern Berne that lies in
the west never creep over and destroy the
beauty of the ancient town, as the same hor
rible fungus growth is disfiguring and killing
the charm out of nearly every ancient city on
the continent. Even our common red brick
houses are better than the vulgar ash-grey.
Jerusalem artichoke colored edifices, all
staringly alike, and equally uninteresting, that
are growing op in long line and regular square
in Imperial Aix. in patrician Nurnberg. in
episcopal Spires, everywhere treading
on and trampling out beauty. In a
hundred J ears probably all the great
towns of the Middle Ages will have
been transmuted from gold to lead, and be ut
terly unattractive. When we see a ruin of a
church, an abbey, a castle, an old manor house,
even of a straw-thatcbed cottage, we are sad,
for we think what they were, beautiful in their
several ways, and all having lost much by be
coming ruins. But of these modern edifices
everything we can say is that we live in hope
that they may become ruins, for then only can
they conceivably touch the pioturcsque. In En
gland our builders have grasped the truth that
there is beauty in a broken skyline, and in al
ternation of light and shadow in a frontage;
but on the Continent, in France, Italy, Ger
many. Belgium, Switzerland, no architect has
risen above the idea of drawing parallel lines,
and of making of every street an elementary
study in perspective.
On a brilliant summer day, when the sun was
streaming down out of a perfectly blue sky
Into the long main street of Berne, alive with
marketers, three cabs drew up at the entrance
to the Hotel of the Wild Man, near the Clock
tower, and from them stepped, in the first
place, a young man in light grey trousers and
) lavender gloves, and then a young and pretty
lady wearing a bridal veil, a wedding dress ot
6llver grey. From the second carriage de
scended three bridesmaids no other than the
Labarte girls and from the third cab, Mrs.
Sldebottom and Fhllip and Salome.
Captain Pennycomequick had been married
at the embassy to Janet Baynes, and if the
day's weather gave a true presage of the new
life entered on, that of the Captain and his
bride was likely to be a happy one. But there
were surer grounds on which to base a forecast
of their hymeneal condition than the state of
the weather. The Captain was an amiable
man, whom nothing would rouse to opposition,
and Janet, as he and his mother had ascer
tained, was very comfortably off. She had or
w ould have about 500 a year, and GOO per annum
in France where they intended to live would
allow of their enjoying themselves as much as
if they had double that sum in England, not
necessarily because things were cheaper in
France, but because popular opinion allowed
retrenchment in a thousand of those trifles
which in England are the great outlets that let
money leak away.
There was to be no wedding tour; not because
Janet did not desire to escape with the Captain
from tne rest of the party, but because the
Labarte girls absolutely refused to be parted
with. They bad suddenly woke to the discov
ery that Mrs. Sidcbottom had hoodwinked
them, and carried them away out of sight and
bearing, while love-making was in progress; a
cil had been torn from before their eyes and
they saw through all her dodges and subter
fuges, and were in combined mutiny and angry
protest. Henceforth nothing would sever them
from their aunt. Agreatopportunltyhad been
FEATUEES OF TEADE.
:.
ProduceSituationViewedbyaiiberly
Street Merchant
HIDES SLOW, TALLOW MORE ACTIVE
Prospects Are Good for Tanners Stock
Well Cleaned Up.
PB0YISI0NS CLOSETRADE ACTITE
Office of Pittsbdko Dispatch, 1
Saturday. July 27. 1S89. J
In most trade lines the evidences of mid
summer's usual dullness are marked.
Country produce moved freely in the fore
part of the week, but for a couple of days
past has been quiet. One of our Liberty
street commission men, who has been, rusti
cating in Washington and Beaver counties
f oi a week or two past, gives as the result of
bis observations the following as his view of
the situation: "The fruit crop this season is
below the average through the territory which
looks upon Pittsburg as Its trade center. Last
season it was much above the average. Peaches
and early apples are almost a failure. Pears
and plums will not do much better. The best
advices I can get are to the effect that we are
to have a short apple crop throughout the
country this season.
"On the other band, everything in the line of
vegetables and field crops promises to be un
usually plenty in this section. Wheat has al
ready been safely gathered in larger quantity
than for many years past. Hay and oats are
nothing behind in the yield, and whilo corn had
a slow and unpromising start in the spring, it is
fast making up for lost time through the in
fluence of sunshine and timely showers, and all
signs now point to a season of plenty in the
line of substantias. Potatoes promise a larger
yield than I have ever known. They are so
thick in the ground that tbey are pushing the
vines out,
"My observation leads me to the conclusion
that we are to have one of the most prolific
seasons on record in the lines most needed by
consumers."
Hides.
The market shows no new features the past
week. Said a leading dealer in bides: "Tbere
is no snap in our business, as there used to be,
but tanners are working up as much stock as
ever and we are buying and selling our usual
quantity. Local demand holds up better than
that from distant points. We sell a great deal to
New England, and the trade there has not been
up to standard of late. Our tome tanners are
putting the full quantity of raw material into
vats. Local demand for upper and calf skins
lias improved in the past weeK. Tallow has
taken an upward turn and is one-fourth cent
better than last week. The movement of tal
low has been better for a few days past than
for a couple of months."
Leather,
A representative of one of our largest Alle
gheny tanneries reports improved demand for
harness leather since the 1st of July. Tanners
are sold up close to production, and while there
is no advance in prices and margins are close
the goods are moving out freely. The demand
for red sole leather 1 also reported good. Pros-
fiects are good for an active fall trade in
eatber lines, and a little stiffening up of prices
would bring a bonanza to our tanners, as they
never had better opportunities to secure stock
at low prices than for the past year."
Hone Equipments.
A leading dealer in this line reports June and
July trade fully up to the corresponding
months of last year. Said he: "We do not
have dull seasons in our line as we used to
bave. In former years, the three summer
months were our slack months, but of late
years trade runs uniformly the year through.
The first month of tbls year was the best month
we ever had in our line, and trade has held up
remarkably well. We have no doubt that our
volume of trade for 1SSU will pass that of 1888,
with prices very much the same. The drop on
barnets leather since last year,makes no differ
ence on prico of a first-class set pi harness."
Provision!.
Prices are down to bedrock, out goods are
moving freely. The volume of trade this week
was full up to last.
A representative of one our leading pork
packing firms said to-day: "We are as busy
as bees shipping out goods and candled as
'Tt4T'
.
PUBLISHED.:
DISPATCH by
GOULD.
RESERVED.
lost through the craft of that designing o'd
woman, a passion on a grand scale bad raged
so to speak, under their noses, and they had
not sniffed it. Their attention had been drawn
away and they had fceen unable to make those
interesting and instructive studies in the pro
cess of love-making to its grand climax in pro
posal, which might have been theirs and been
to them of incalculable interest and advantage,
but for that dreadful Sldebottom. Thus If they
could no longer take observations in the con
duct of lovers, they could examine, and store
up their observations on the conduct of newly
married people in the honeymoon. They clung
to their aunt, with their arms aboutier neck,
they lavished expressions of tenderness, they
protested that they could not and would not
be separated from hen and Janet foresaw that
a welding tour encumbered with the Labarte
girls would be worse than none at all, or one
with tho Labarte girls plus Mrs. Sldebottom,
and Salome and Philip to draw them off from
her occasionally. As the party drove from the
Embassy. Mrs. Sldebottom said to Philip: "By
the way, what do you think? Wonders will
never cease. Did you see the entries in the
marriage register previous to those made by
Lamb and Janet ?"
"I did not look." .
"I did ; and while you were arranging about
fees 1 made inquiries. Tbere was a marriage
at the Embassy this morning, before our affair.
An unheard-of thing in Berne to have two
English weddings the same day, so the chap
lain said."
"I dare say."
"And guess who they were who entered the
holy bonds."
I really cannot. I know none likely."
"But you do know, and are quite able to
gues3."
I have not the energy, then."
'"Why, Colonel Yeo. that Is to say. Earl
Schofleld and our friend atAndennatt, Miss
Durham."
"Xonsensel" Philip was startled,
"It is a fact. I suppose he really is an Earl,
for he was entered in the register as Earl Scho
field, and not as Colonel Beaple Yeo."
"But," Philip stammered, "it is not possible;
he cannot."
"Up has. I saw the entries. They were
married half an hour before we arrived."
"I will inquire about it,'! said Philip, "as
soon as ever the carriage stops. I will go back
to the Embassy. Something must be done. He
bad no right to marry."
"Why not?"
Philip did not answer. He was excited and
uneasy.
"You cannot go till after the breakfast,"
said Mrs. Sldebottom, "and I suppose it is too
late to forbid the banns. I presume he is
really an Earl. He says that the attainder is
up. He truly is a distinguished-mannered
man, and I lice him. He looks a nobleman."
In the evening- the entire party visited the
Schanzll, a garden or restaurant on a com
manding hill above Berne, once occupied by a
fort from which it takes its name. From the
terrace is seen the range of the Oberland
mountains and, in the middle distance below,
is the town viewed in its full length with tow
ers and spires, and gabled roofs of chocolate
brown tile. Visitors are attended on by wait
resses in the pretty costume of the canton.
The evening was lovely, a meet conclusion to
so bright a day. The setting sun Illumined the
distant snows of the giants of the Oberland and
quivered in the windows of the city below.
Tbere are epoch-making scenes lu life, scenes
to which the memory recurs with unalloyed
pleasure, scenes which have been revelations
of beauty or majesty to the soul, and such a
scene is that from the Schanzll to the visitor
who is here for the first time. It is a double
mnch in the past few weeks as we have ever
done in the same time. To be sure margins
are very close, too close in some lines to be
comfortable, but the stuff Is moving. There is
more work and less gain than in other years,
but wo must take the bitter with the sweet."
A BOW OF PROMISE
Bufi Over the Business World, Encourag
ing the Hustlers.
There was a dearth of new features in
local business affairs last week, but the
volume of trade was large for the season,
and prices were well sustained. Evidences,
of an unusually large all movement con
tinue' to multiply. The failures in Phila
delphia and Richmond had no perceptible
effect here. Local securities were fairly
active and strong, La Noria and Philadel
phia Gas leading, the former with sales on
'Change of 3,250 shares and the latter of
2,767. The total sales oi stocks during the
week were 7,000, not counting office and
street transactions. Realty was rather qniet
in respect of sales, but tLe inquiry, princi
pally tor small houses and building lots, was
large and earnest. The number of deeds re
corded was 230, involving 5406,472. The
business in mortgages showed an improve
ment over that of the previous week, the
number placed and settled being 179, repre
senting $359,036. The largest was for $40,
000. ' Petroleum was spasmodic and bullish
at times, going above the dollar line and
tenaciously holding the advance. It was
dominated by bearish influences at the close.
Tbe fbllowlne table snows the prices or active
stocks on tbo 2(ew York Stock Exchange yester
day. Corrected dally for Tint Dispatch by
WHITNEY A Stephen SOX. oldest l'lttsburp mem
bers or .New York Stock Kxchange, 57 Fourth ave
nue: Clos-
Open- Hlfrn- low- me
ino. cau est. Bids.
Cl.,Col.,Cin. A I., new en K 7M M
U.,CoU,Cin. ftl., pr. 99V WX S9 Six
Am. Cotton Oil MX ta KV Ktf
Aten.. lop. &8.F.... 35H 38 35H K
Canada Southern. MX" tl?,' t 51
Centrall'aetflc. 3H 34S W zi),
Cbesaoeake & Ohio.... K), 2M S2 Z)
C Bur. a Quii.cr.....ioo locf S9 esh
C Mil. & St. 1'aul.... CS B9H C9V 69
C, MU.&St. P.. pr....l(X 10SS 108 H 108
C. KOCK L f Mli UH HH 9Vi
c. st. u. & ruts 14
C St. k 4 Pitts, pf. H
C.St.l'..M.10 II
C St. P-M. AO.. pt K
C. ft Northwestern. ...IWJj 10C4 lu6 lOGIf
C4 Northwestern, pf. ... 139
C C !. &I T8 TSV 78 78
CoL Coat a iron 27X &U "OH W
Col. 4 Hocklne Val 14
Del.. L. & W Ui'A 11 113 MS
Del. Unrtson 141
DeiiTeri HloU.. nr 45V
E.T.. Va,4U tH
K. T..V, AOa.lst pf. 69
E. T.. Vs. A Oa. 2d pf. 21?
Illinois Central USH
Lake Erlfi & Western KH
Lake Erie A West. Dr. 67 H
Lake Shore AM. 8 lOIJi 101,S 101J 101 j
Loulivllle&Nuhvllle. e 09 CJ G8J
Mtcnljran central 87 87 ... 86
Mobiles Ohio..,.;. ". 12
Mo., K. ATexas luS
Missouri fiiclnc t7 C7 eci CCH
New York Central 103 105 104 105
N. Y UE.& W 28 28 56 2
X. 1.. C. AbU L, ' 1SH
1. "1., C A St. L. rjf. 67
N.Y.. C. ASt.l. Id nf 34
H.I4N.1! 49 4X 48X
J. Y.. O. A W 153
orfolka Western 14
Norfolk A Western, of. 503
Northern Pacific 27 2714 VH 27!
Nortuern pacific oref. U'4 63 63H clli
Ohio A Mississippi 21 22 21 22
Orejron Improvement 54
Oretron Transcon 31t 31U 31ft 31
Pacific Mill KM Stli SZH 33
Peo. JJec. A Kvans 20U
Phlladel. A Headline.. S OX OH on
lnllmanpalaee Car... .. .... .. 182
Richmond A Y. P. T.. 22 22 21 K :iy
St. U. A San Fran 27 27 27 26!4
St. L. A San Pn pf.. 56 CSX SGJj CAU
8t.li. A Ban r. 1st pf. 109
Texas Pacific... 19 19 19 19
Union Pacific Kti ts MK 59
Waoasn 14 14V 14 ui
Wabash preferred 28 28H 28 28)2
Western Union. fUH 84 S4 84
Uhrellns A L, .... 68 VS GS C8H
Sucar Trust 108H irs?
National Lead Trnst.. 23 23V
Chicas-o Gas Trust MS 56 U, 56
Ex-dividend.
Philadelphia Stocks.
Closing- quotations of Philadelphia stocks, fur
nished by Whitney A Stephenson, brokers, No. 57
fourth avenue. Members Hew York stock Ex
change. .. . Uln. Asked.
Pennsylvania Kallroad, .. tlK 51 K
Heading 21 iJ-U 21 ;,
LehlKh Valley (3 53M
Lehigh Navlj-atton 52 M
Nortnern Pacific 27 271,
mfRT
revelation to him the splendor ot the glacier
mountain world, and simultaneously with it a
realization of the beauty, the charm of that old
world of the Middle Ages which is being re
morselessly and surely effaced, and on which in
another century the men of that generation
will bo unable to look, or will know of it only a
few scattered monuments, set in wastes of
hldcousness, and judge of it enly as one might
judge of the ocean by contemplating a few
shells dugs qut of a chalk bed.
The party of Pennycomequick Sldebottom
Labarte had settled itself to a marble-topped,
or. to be more exact, imitation marble-topped
table, and bad ordered the waitress to bring
the carte of wines and meats, when Claudine
Labarte nudged her aunt, and whispered
"Seel seel There tbey are, M. le Comte de
Schovllle, and our dear Artemlse. Shall we go
to them?"
"On no account,' a'4 Mrs. Pennycome
quick, that is to say Janet, hastily. "Besides,"
she looked in the same direction, "they do not
seem to desire our interference."
AU looked at the little table, not far distant,
where sat Beaple Yeo, alias Schofleld, and bis
bride. The same day that had smiled on Lam
bert and Janet bad laughed over them, but
without sure augury of calm weather appar
ently; for already a post-nuptial storm had
broken loose. Beaple Yeo was leaning back in
his green-painted iron chair, very red and
blotched in face, and opposite him was Arte
misia whom he bad just made his wife, flushed
and talking rapidly.
It was clear that they were in angry alterca
tionabout what could not be learned for
their voices were drowned by the music from
the little theater in the grounds, in which the
overture to Boildleu's "Jean de Paris" was
being performed.
Beaple Yeo curled his whisker round his
forefinger, and said something in reply to a
discharge of angry words from Artemisia;
whatever it was that he said, it so stung her
that, losing all self-control, she sprung to her
feet, leaned across the tsrble and struckfhim on
theche6k. Beaple lost his equilibrium and
went over with his chair on the gravel of the
terrace, to the great amusement of the Swiss
waitress and the scattered visitors at tables,
who bad noticed the altercation. Artemisia
was startled at her own violence, and ashamed:
she looked around and caught sight of the
friends she bad made at Andermatt. Her
color was so heightened with passion that it
could not become deeper with shame. In
stead of resuming her seat, without regarding
the humiliated man who was picking himself
up from the ground she came directly to the
table where the party of Pennycomequick
Sidebottom was seated, and with heaving
bosom and flashing eye, she stood before
Philip, and said in a tone broken with excite
ment: "You have helped to deceive me. It was
mean It was cruell You insulted me first of
all, and then you conspired with this this man
to play me a base trick. It was unworthy of a
gentleman, of an Englishman!"
"I beg your pardon," said Philip; "I do not
understand of what you are speaking. lam
quite unaware that I ever deceived you."
"You told me be was a nobleman an earl
and be is nothing of the kind."
"1 never said he was."
"I asked you, and you answered me that he
was an earl."
"I did no such thing. You misunderstood
me. You asked me whether he had any right
to the title of Earl of Schofleld, and I answered
I recall exactly my words that he was per
fectly justified in calling himself Earle Scho
fleld. That Is his name. Whether he has any
right to call himself Beaple Yeo, and to claim
to be a colonel is another matter on which I
entertain grave doubts; but I have none what
ever that his surname is Schofleld, and that his
Christian name is Earle."
Artemisia did not speak for a minute, she
was very angry and ashamed. When she had
in some measure recovered her self-possession,
she said bitterly, "You might have been more
explicit."
"I refused to say much about the man. I had
my reasons. Moreover, I had no idea that the
matter was one of importance to you."
"I have sold myself to him. I have married
him this day, and only now have discovered
that X have been basely imposed upon."
"It is I I who have been taken in," shouted
Yeo, coming forward, pushing to the table, re
gardless ot the shrinking fear that appeared
in the faces of Salome and Janet, "It is I," he
repeated, "I that have been deceived. I was
Northern Pacific preferred 63X
63K
Boatoo
Ateh. ATop.IL n... 35
Boston A Albany.. .216
Boston A Maine. ....ail
c, a. Ay mh
Eastern R. R IX
Eastern K. B. 6s ....Ui
Mexican Cen. com.. 15
Mcx.C.lstmtfr. bds. 65
A. Y. A evnr. 48
N. Y. AN.E.7S....129
Old Colony 175
Kntland preferred.. 40
Wls.tJentral.com... 22
AllouezMgCo(new). .50
fitoclM.
Calumet A Becla....2CS
Cataroa 12
(Tannin 8
Huron .' .50
Osceola. 8
rewaoic (newj z
Onlncr.
48
..228
... 6
... S
Bell Telephone.
Boston Land....,
Water Power...,
Tamarack
San Diego..
.3
Santa i"e copper. 45
Feature of the Market.
Corrected dally by John M. Oaauey 4 Co., 45
Sixth street, members ot the Pittsburg Petro
leum Exchange.
Opened 100Lowet S9
Highest 100,Closed 100
Barrels.
Average runs 52,25s
Avpr&n ahlmnpnta 78.003
Average charters 62,111'
Refined, New York. 7.40c
Hefinci, London, 5Xd.
Defined, Antwerp, 18r.
Kenned. Liverpool, 8 7-16d.
A, B. McQrew & Co. quote: Puts, 8Jcy
calls, SI 02.
L1Y STOCK HAKKETS.
The Condition of Business at the East XJbertj
Stock Yarda.
Optice op Pittsbukg Dispatch, 1
Satpbday, July 27, 1SS9. J
CATTLE Receipts, 610 head; shipments, 600
head: market fair at unchanged prices; 3 cars
of cattle shipped to New York to-day.
Hogs Receipts. 2.100 nead: shipments. 2,000
head; market fair; light Yorkers, H 8Si 90;
medium and light Philadelphlas, H 75;
heavy, H S04 50; 5 cars of hogs shipped to
New York to-dav.
Sheep Receipts. 1,800 head; shipments,ll400
bead; market fair at unchanged prices
Br TelearraDn.
St. Lotrrs Cattle Receipts, 200 head; ship
ments, 300 head; market steady; choice Tieavy
native steers, St 104 20; fair to god do, S3 75
4 10; stackers and feeders, nominal; rang
ers, corn fed, S2 754?3 15; grass fed, 82 00
2 75 Hogs Receipts, 1,300 head: shipments, GOO
head: market active and steadier; choice heavy
and butchers, U 454 50; packing, S4 404 45;
light, fair to best S4 65Q4 57. Sheep Re
ceipts, 1,500 head; shipments, 000 head: mar
ket active and strong; fair to choice, S3 504 50.
Indian apolis Wheat weaker; No. 2 red,
77c bid. Corn steady; No. 2 mixed, 55c ;Oats
qnlet;;No. 2 mixed. 24c bid.
CnicAGO Cattle Kecelnts, 2,800 head; ship
ments, none; market steady: beeves, poor to
choice S3 504 40; cows, SI 503 00; Blockers,
52 00683 00; Texas steers, 52 20Q3 00: cows,
S1502 30. Hogs Receipts, 10,500 head; ship
ments, none: market steady; mixed, S4 20
4 50: heavy. S4 164 35; light, S4 854 75.
Sheen Receints, 2,000 head: market steady;
natives, S3 304 80: westerns, S3 604 20:
Texans, S3 404 20; lambs S4 75 6 01 ;
Cincinnati Hogs in good demand and
stronger; common and light, S3 754 70: pack
ing and butchers, $4 404 60; receipts, 620 head;
shipments, 480 head.
Indiavapolis Cattle quiet at S2 504 25.
Hogs steady at S4 254 65. Sheep steady at
53 001 50; lambs. J4 005 5a
The Drysroods Market.
New Yokk, July 27. Tbe market was un
changed, and tbe previous favorable condition
of supplies and tone were well maintained.
Under the apparent quiet conditions it is dlffl
cult to realize that goods are still to a large
extent sold ahead, as there has been no ap
parent disposition to speculate. A hand to
mouth trade is expected during the next two
weeks.
Wool markets.
St. Louis Wool steady at unchanged prices;
receipts to-dav, 90,885 pounds; for the week,
receipts, 111,283.
Metal Blarket,
New York Pig iron quiet; American, S15 50
17 50; metals nominal.
When baby was sick, we gave ber Castoria,
When she was a Child, she cried for Castoria,
When she became Miss, she clung to Castoria,
Whan she had Children,she gave them Castoria
p9-77-irwTSn
PFTTR-RTTRQ-' DISPATCH,
led to believe that you were a wealthy Ameri
can, worth hundreds ot thousands of dollars
and audi want to know where is the money?
You are an adventuress."
"And you are an an adventurer." laughed
Artemisia. "Perhaps we have taken each other
in, and we are both fools to have been so easily
deceived. Who told you I was a rich American
heiress?-'
"The waiter at the Imperial."
"And he told me you were a rich milord."
"I want to know what you really are." said
Yeo, who was also very angry angry and dis
appointed. "J. have a right to know who or
what mannar of person I have married."
"And I," said Artemisia, "I also want to
know who and what manner ot person I have
married."
"That, perhaps, I can Jtell vou," said Philip,
gravely. "But not in the presence of these la
dies. Mr. Schofleld. or whatever you call
Yourself, I will trouble you to return to your
table, or reseat yourself where you were. I
see the waitress is in alarm lest she should lose
payment for what ypu ordered and have con
sumed." Beaple Yeo sulkily went back to his place.
Philip, with a sigh, showed Artemisia that he
desired her to follow. She obeyed. When
they were beyond earshot of Mrs. Sldebottom,
Salome and the rest, Philip said, standing by
the little table: "Mr Schofleld, I also wish to
ask of you a question."
'I am ready, my dear boy, to be put through
my catechism," answered Yeo, with recovered
assurance- "If you want the pedigree of Scho
fleld, I have it at my fingers' ends."
"Ills not tho pedigree so much as the alli
ances of Eatte Schofleld that interests me,'
said Philip.
"Oh, the Schofields have been allied with tne
best blood in the land, better than your twopenny-ha'penny
manufacturers."
"I must ask you to tell me whether, before
you married Miss Durham at the Embassy to
day, you had ascertained that an alliance not
a very high one was at an end."
"What do you mean?" asked Yeo, with his
face slightly changing color.
"You may happen to remember Anne Dewis,
the coal barge woman, whom you married at
Hull some 16 years ago?"
Beaple uttered a low oath. wim..
"I have reason to know," continued Philip,
"that she is alive and you know that she is so,
as well as I do. Miss Durham, this fellow had
no right to marry you. His legitimate wife is
still alive; no countess, but a vulgar old woman
who owns and works a coal barge on the Keld
dale canal. He has a son by her. One good
turn deserves another, and as you did me a
real kindness at the Hospice I repay it by free
ing you from a degrading union just con
tracted with this wretched man, who is a mere
adventurer and swindler. And now, one word
with you, Schofleld. The evidence of your
bigamy Is at band. Take care that you never
show your face at Mergatroyd to annoy me or
my wife, or that you trouble Janet If you do I
shall have you immediately arrested on a
charge of felony, for what you have done to
day." CHAPTER 1JX The Dkvzzs Kkxlx.
In Cansbrook Castle is a deep well, 300 feet
In depth, and, in order to draw the water, there
is contrived a great wooden drum or wheel,
which, when turned, draws up the bucket.
Within the wheel stands a donkey, and it turns
it by stepping on as if walking, although, In
fact, the animal never advances an Inch, for,
as it moves, the wheel revolves under its feet.
One ass was known to perform this task for GO
years and another for 40 years. There is, un
less we guard against it. a tendency in our
selves to fall into the same routine tramping,
tiamplng on, over the same ground, in the
Msrsr unambitious manner, neither advancing
in our course, nor varying our horizon.
The acquaintance with Miss Durham had
wrought much good in Salomo as well as in
Philip. She had opened his eyes to see his Ig
norance of himself, and hers to ber ignorance
of the world. Salome's previous existence had
been within a narrow sphere. Shut off by pe
culiar circumstances from forming many ac
quaintances and having many friends, with
her horizon contracted almost within the walls
of the dingy and ugly red-brick house occupied
by the Pennyco mequlcks, uncle and nephew,
there can be no doubt but that she would in
time have settled Into a condition little super
ior to that of the Carisbrook ass. Her mind
would have trotted round and round iu the
same drum, and have accommodated itself
DOMESTIC MABKETS.
Potatoes Weak, Tomatoes in Better
Supply, Lemons Firms
PEACH SUPPLY K0T DP TO DEMAND.
The Week's 1'eceipts of Cereab Large
Patent Flour Firm.
GENEEAL GE0CEEIE8 UNCHANGED
Office ot Pittsbueo Dispatch, 1
Saturday, July 27, 1889. J
Country Produce Jobbing Prices,
Potatoes are abundant and weak at quota
tions. Tomatoes are in better supply than for
a week past, but demand continues fair. Coun
try butter is weak and prices' nominal; cream
ery is Arm. Cheese is moving freely at our
quotations. One dealer reports sales of 2,000
boxes for the week. In the tropical frnit line,
lemons are the most active at advanced rates.
Blackberries and huckleberries are In full sup
ply, but raspbxrrles are practically at tho end
of their career for the season. Apples are
firmer. Supply of peaches is not up to de
mand. Butter Creamery, Klgin, 184319c; Ohio do,
17018c; fresh dairy packed. 1213c; country
rolls, 1012c
Beans Navy hand-picked beans, $2 402 60;
medium. S2 302 4a
Beeswax 2bS0c T? for choice; lowgrade,
1820c
Cider Sand refined, SO 507 50; common,
S3 5004 00; crab cider, $8 00&8 50 ?) barrel;
cider vinegar, 1012c ) gallon.
Cheese Ohio. 8c; New York, 1010Kc;
Limburger, 89c; domestic Sweltzer, 9k
12Kc: imported Sweltzer, 22c
California Fruits California peaches,
S2 00 V K-bushel box; cherries, S3 00; apricots,
S2 00 a 4-basket case; plums, SI 762 00 a 4
basket case.
Eggs 1515Kc fl dozen for strictly fresh.
Fruits Apples, S2 253 00 barrel: pine
apples. SI 001 25 dozen; red raspberries. 6
10c $4 quart: black raspberries, 68c quart;
whortleberries, 75cJl 00 l pail; blackberries,
58c?4 quart; wild goose plums, S3 50 ?? crate;
currants, S3 504 V 2-bushel stand; watermelons,
S15 0025 00 t hundred; sickel pears, $2 00
2 25 ?1 bushel crate; Georgia peaches, 6-basket
cases, S3 50.
Feathers Extra live geese, 50G0c; No. 1,
do, 4045c; mixed lots. 3035c $ lb.
Potatoes SI 251 50 1 barrel.
Poultry Live spring chickens, 5060c V
pair; old, 70t375c ?? pair.
Seeds Clover, choice, tu lbs to bushel, $5 60
f? bushel; clover, large English, 62 tts. $6 00:
clover. Alsike. S8 50; clover, white, S9 CO; timo
thy, choice, 45 tts, SI 65: blue grass, extra
clean, 14 B. 90c: blue grass, fancy, 14 Iks, SI 00;
orchard grass, 14 Bs. SI 65; red top, 14 tts. SI 25;
millet, 50 tts. SI 00; German illllett, 50 tts,
SI 50; Hungarian grass, 60 tts, II 00; lawn
grass, mixture ot fino grasses, S2 60 ffl bushel
of 14 tts.
Tallow Country, 44c; city rendered, 4
5c.
Tropical Fruits Lemons, fancy. S5 50
0 50 7 box; Messina oranges, S5 005 60 V box;
rodi. S4 505 00; California oranges, $4 604 7o
ft box; bananas, $225 firsts. SI 25 good seconds,
$1 bunch; cocoannts, $4 00Q4 50 1 hundred;
new figs, 8K9c t tt; dates, 5K6J;c ? ft.
Vegetables Tomatoes, SI oul lu bushel
boxes; beans, round wax fancy, 52 50 crate;
beans, round wax medium, S2 00 13 crate; bean"
round green, t2 252 50: new beet, 2025o "
dozen; cucumbers, 75cSl 00 -p bushel box;
radishes, large white and gray, 3035c ft
dozen; home-grown cabbage, SI 251 50 V bar
rel;;new celery, 6060c t dozen.
Groceries.
Green Coffee Fancy Rio, 2122c; choice
Eio, 18K20c: prime Rio, 18c; fair Rio, 1718c;
old Government Java, 26d; Maracaibo, 2223c;
Mocha, 27023c; Santos, 1922c: Caracas
2022c: peaberry, Rio. 21623c; La Guayra, 21
22a
Roasted (In papers) Standard brands. 22c:
high grades. 2i26c; old Government Java,
bulk. MK31,c; Maracaibo, 25H2Cjc; Santos.
2022c; peaberry, 25c; peaberry, choice Rio.
23Kc; prime Rio, 21c; good Rio, 20Kc; ordi
nary, 20c
Spices (whole) Cloves, 21025c: allspice, 8c;
cassia, 6c; pepper, 16c: nutmeg, TOgSOc.
Petroleum (jobbers' prices) 110 test,7c;
Ohio, 120, SXC; headlight, 150, Sc; water
white, 10c; globe. 12c; elaine, 15c; carnadine,
UKc; royallne, 14a
syrups Corn syrups, 26 29c; choice sugar
syrups, 33S3SC; prime sugar syrup, 30g33c;
:.MOND AT
JULY
29
without a murmur or a thought of resistance
to it. In the course of years she would have
become almost as ordinary, as petty-minded as
tho deceased Mrs. Cusworth. But contactwith
Miss Durham had startled her out of this intel
lectual donkeydom. She saw In the American
girl a nvaclty of interest, a breadth of view, a
sparkle of intelligence, a receptivity for novel
Ideas, and a knowledge of the world and of the
things in the world the currents that circu
lated in it, the forces that propelled its- waves
and directed its tides, to which she had been
completely strange. And this stimulated In
her the desire to know. An American gentle
man once said to the writer, "We have no
prejudices, therefore we are always learning."
That is the secret of American success in every
branch ot activity. Self-conceit breeds plg
headedness, which raises mountains of preju
dice in our way, preventing us from seeing, as
the Germans have it, that there are men be
yond these mountains. Salome had noticed
that Miss Durham was able at ouce, and with
out effort, to arrest the Interest and enchain
the attention of Philip, and this she attributed
to the possession of qualities in the Chicago
girl which- were dormant, if not non-existent, in
herself. She had the shrewdness to per
ceive, and the good sense to acknowl
edge, her own ignorance and inability to take
part in conversation when it turned on politics,
natural history, on music, art or social ques
tion of the day. She could talk about recipes
for tapioca and semolina puddings, what pro
portion of water should be put.wlth milk for a
baby, the delinquencies of servants, the ser
mons she heard, the hymns she sang In church,
the cutting out and style of a dress, but not on
much beyond. Being humble minded she was
ready to take to heart what she recognized, and
she studied Miss Durham with attention, to as
certain the points in which she was accom
plished above her own acquirements.
When ale in bottle turns flat, housewives put
in a raisin, and this at once restores the efferv
escence. A prudent spouse should have a re
serve of raisins ever by her to pop into her hus
band's spirits whenever they are down. Some
wives, however, act on the reverse principle,
and perforate the corks, or knock off the necks
of all the sparkling liquors in the cellars of
their husbands' hearts They cannot endure to
see their good men cheery, sanguine, interest
ed, hopeful; they reduce them all to the state of
lymph and insipidity. Such wives when they
And their husbands strung to concert pitch
play the domestic accompaniment a semitone
lower, so that the daily music of the household
is a discord. Tbey take the edge off their hus
bands' wit with a sneer, overshadow his spirits
when they sparkle, lash him to anger when he
Is pleased, and goad and spur him to madnessJ
TUCU kUCJ iiUU UIU1 J-HIOU UU ucauwiu w. IB-
pose. By a native perversity they seek to be
always at cross purposes, with their husbands,
and then grumble because their victims do not
smile and sing on the bed of nettles they have
strewn for them.
Bat Salome was not one who could degener
ate into such a mar-peace as this. In her lowly
mind she acknowledged her deficiencies, and
as she was endowed with energy and with ex
cellent abilities, she determined to .remedy
these shortcomings in herself, and had the ca
pacity to accomplish what she resolved.
The forethought of Jeremiah Pennycome
quick came to her aid opportunely. He also,
by his holiday of two years, bad been thrown
out of his drum, and bad found that there was
another and a brighter world than that of the
tread mill, tie had discovered, late in life, that
all work and no play makes Jack a dull boy,
and not a dull boy only, but a cantankerous
one. "
Man Is a lantern, and the vivid intellect
within is the light; by nature be is a lantern
with many sides, through all of which the
interior light streams, irradiating, and bring
ing into prominence a thousand surrounding
objects. But the pressure of modern life forces
htm to blacken over one after another of these
sides, and to line each with a refleotor, so as to
focus the light, and cast it through a single
lens. The stress of competition, the strain of the
social struggle combine to make of each man
a bull's-eye lantern. It Is true that the light
so concentrated illumines such objects as fall
within the radius of the beam with superior
brilliancy, but it leaves everything else in more
profound darkness. What is gained in
intensity is lost in the periphery. Jeremiah
had discovered this, and more than this. He
had learned by his own weakness to take a
more kindly Interest in others, to be pitiful
strictly prime, 3335c; new maple syrup, 90c.
N. O. Molasses Fancy. 48c; choice, 46c; me
dium, 43c; mixed, 40Q42c
1 Soda Bl-carb in kegs, 34c; bi-carb inKs,
5c; bi-carb, assorted packages, 546c; sal
soda in kegs, 1Q do granulated. 2c
Candles Star, full weight, 9c; stearlne, f)
set, 8Kc; parafflne, ll12c
Rice Head. Carolina, 77c: choice, &K
7c; prime. 5&Vc; Louisiana, b6c
' Starch Pearl, 3c: cornstarch, 517c; gloss
starch, 57c.
Foreign Fruits Layer raisins, $2 65; Lon
don layers. S3 10; California London layers,
S2 50; Muscatels, S2 25: California Muscatels,
SI 85; Valencia, 7c; Ondara Valencia,
78c; sultana, 8Kc; currants, 45c;
Turkey prunes, 4J5c; French prunes,
813c; Salonlca prunes, in 2-ft packages, 8c;
cocoannts. 100, JO 00; almonds, Lan., per tt,
20c; do Ivica, 19c; do shelled, 40c; walnuts, nap.,
1215c; Sicily filberts, 12c: Smyrna figs, 12
16c; new dates, 56c; Brazil nuts, 10c; pecan,
ll15c; citron. Der tt. 2122c; lemon peel, per
tt, 1314c; orange peel, 12c
Dried Fruits Apples, sliced, per tt. 6c
apples, evaporated, CVgOKc; apricots, Califor;
nla, evaporated, 15lsc; peaches, evaporated,
pared, 2223c; peaches, California, evaporated,
unpared, 10!2c; cherries, pitted, 2122c;
cherries, unpitted, 56c; raspberries, evapor
ated, 2424Kc; blackberries, 73c; huckle
berries, 1012c
Sugars Cubes, lOVgglOVc; powdered, 1C
lOJic; granulated, 9c; coniectlonera' A. 9J
9J$c; standard A. 9Kc; soft white', 99K yel
low, choice, 8J9c; jellow, good, 99jc;
yellow, fair, 84c; yellow, dark, 7Jc
Pickles Medium, bbls (1,200), H 50; medi
um, half bbls (600). 2 75.
SALT No. 1. y bbl. 95c; No. 1 ex, V ubl, 81 06;
dairy. H bbl, SI 20: coarse crystal. ?! bbl, SI 20:
Hlgglns' Eureka, 4-bu sacks, $2 80; Hlggms'
Eureka, 16-14 tt pockets, S3 (XX
Canned Goods Standard peaches. SI 80
1 90; 2ds, SI 301 35; extra peaches, SI 501 90;
pie peaches, 90c; finest corn, Sll 50; Hid. Co.
corn. 70D0c: red cherries, 90cSl; Lima beans,
51 10: soaked do, 85c; string do do, 7585c; mar
rowfat peas. SI 101 15: soaked peas, 7075c;
pineapples, SI 401 50; Bahama do, $2 75: dam
son plums, 95c: greengages, 81 25; egg plums,
$-'; California pears, 82 50; do greengages, 82: do
egg plums, 82; extra white cherries, 82 90: red
cherries, 2 tts. 90c; ' raspberries, SI 401 50;
strawberries, 81 10; gooseberries, SI 301 40;
tomatoes, 82K92c; salmon, 1-tt, 81 752 10:
blackberries, 80c; succotash. 2 & cans, Bnaked.
99c: do green, 2 tts, 81 251 50: corn beef, 2-ft cans,
52 00: 14-tt cans, 814 00; baked beans, 81 451 50;
lobster, 1-tt. $1 751 SO; mackerel, 1-fi cans,
broiled, 81 50; sardines, domestics. Us, Jl 50
4 60: sardines, domestic. s, SS 258 50; sar
dines, imported, s, 811 50012 50; sardines. Im
ported, Ks, 818: sardines, mustard, S4 50; sar
dines, spiced, 84 50.
Ftsh Extra No. 1 bloater mackerel. $38 $
bbl.; extra No. 1 do, mess, 840; extra No. 1
mackerel, shore, 832; extra No. 1 do, messed,
836; No. 2 shore mackerel, 824. Codfish Whole
pollock, 4c fl tt; do medium, George's cod,
foe: do large. 7c; boneless bake, in strips, 6c; do
George's cod in blocks, 67Jc Herring
Round shore, 85 00 t bbl; split, 87 00: lake,
S2 50 100-& half bbL White fish. 87 a 100
& half bbL Lake trout, 85 50 i? half bbL
Finnan haddock. 10c $1 tt. Iceland halibut, 13c
W tt. Pickerel. K barrel, 82 00; U barrel, $1 10;
Potomac herring, $5 00 ff barrel, $2 50 fl &
barrel.
Oatmeal $6 306 60 $t bbl.
Miners' Oil No. 1 winter strained, 5SG0c
$? gallon. Lard oil, 75c
Grain, Flour and Feed,
Total receipts bulletined at tbe Grain Ex
change 24 cars. By Baltimore and Ohio, 2 cars
of corn, 2 of oats, 1 of hay; by Pittsburg, Cin
cinnati and St. Louis. 7 cars'of oats, 3 of bay,
1 of bran, 1 of wheat; by Pittsburg, Fort
Wayne and Chicago, 2 cars of oats, 3 of hay, 2
of flour. Total receipts bulletined for the
week, 196 cars, against 193 last week and 152 the
previous week. Bales on call, 2 cars No. 2y.s.
corn, 42c. 10 days; 1 car oats, 29KC spot. De
mand for spring patent flour is firm at quota
tions. Holders are no longer willing to con
cede on.prlces. The best cannot be laid down
here in wood under 86 la
Wheat Jobbing prices New No. 2 red, 83
84c: No. 2 red. 80:391c: No. 3 red. 83g85c
CORN No.2yelloweaT.45H4GXc:blghmlxed
ear. 4546c; No. 2 yellow, shelled, 4243c;
high mixed, shelled, 4142c; mixed, shelled,
40Uc
Oats No. 2 white, 32K33c: extra. No. 3,
31A31Wc; No. 3 white. 30K31c; No. 2 mixed
oats, 26k27c '
Rte-No. 1 Pennsylvania and Ohio, 51052c
No. 1 Western. 4849c
Flour Jobbing prices Fancy winter and
spring patents, 85 756 25: winter straight,
Jo 005 25; clear winter, 84 755 00; straight
XXXX bakers', 84 254 50. Ryo flour, S3 50
Millfeed Middlings, fine white. 815 00
15 60 ton; brown middlings "1 50012 00: win
ter wheat bran. 811 00011 25; chop leed, 815 00
Hay Baled timothy, choice. 115015 50: No. 1
do. S14 00814 50; No. 2 do, 812 60013 00; loose,
from wagon, $16 0018 00; No. 1 upland prairie,
810 50U. 00; No. 2, 87 6098 00; packing do, 55 0
WO 50.
1889.
toward their Infirmities, patient with their
mistakes and even follies.
Having himself tottered irresolute on the
edge of the commission of an extreme act of
folly, from which he had been rescued solely by
a provldentiat intervention, he was able to
make allowances for lack of judgment cr weak
ness of resolve in others.
Jeremiah saw that Philip bad quarrelled
with Salome, and, without inquiring into the
occasion, he understood sufficient of their sev
eral characters to see that the best possible
means he could adopt for reconciling the dif
ference was to give them a holiday together
.abroad to let them travel on the continent for
some time, and mutually learn much of which
both were ignorant. He according wrote to
Philip not to return to Mergatroyd till Christ
mas. He wished, so he said, himself to spend
soma months at the mill in recovering the
threads of the business which had fallen from
his Angers, and to settle thoroughly down again
into the old groove of life.
EThis enabled Philip, who was liberally sup
plied with money, to visit Paris, Rome, Milan,
Venice, and return to England by the Rhine.
He and Salome made traveling acquaintances,
some agreeable, all Instructive; they saw France
staggering after its humiliation, and Germany
ruffling in its pride of victory; they shared
small adventures, and equally small jokes such
as spring up on all travel, and are as poor to
preserve as the flowers gathered. They saw
together picture galleries, beard together
operas, and together acquired a fund of ex
perience in life in many aspects unattainable
at Mergatroyd. The tour was. as Jeremiah de
signed, educative to both, and it broadened
and deepened their mutual sympathies. It
did more; It bound them togethers as chums in
the same school, where both read out of the
same books and summed on the same slate,
and wrote out the same moral sentences in
their copybooks. As they learned together,
thoy assisted each other; what escaped the eye
of one was perceived by the other, and each
took delight in drawing the attention ot the
other to what he or she observed.
They laid up together a fund of pleasant rec
ollections to which to revert when holiday was
over and work began; a shifting diorama of
scenes and incidents and personages that would
transform and beautify the interior of the
drum when they were recalled to the obligation
of treading it.
But not so only. When they returned to
work, it would be to hope and scheme tor such
another excursion together in the future,
though perhaps they could scarcely look for an
other ot the same duration. The retrospect
would enrich, and the prospect stimulate, and
banish tedium and the sense of drudgery from
their lite and work at smoky Mergatroyd.
What veins of Interest bad, moreover, been
opened to both flowers, scenery, pictures,
music, antiquities, social customs, political in
stitutions, European history past and that
making under their eyes, such were no longer
dead words but living interests, germs of
thought, studies to be pursued at home in the
intervals of work, in relaxations from task, by
the aid of books and papers, and in common.
As mention has been made ot the saying of
an American, the writer ventures to quote an
otherthe remark made to him by a Belgian:
"I perceive that when a Flemish shopkeeper
has realized a little money over the necessities
of life he says to himself, 'Now I will buy a
picture!' The German under the same circum
stances says, 'Now my son shall learn another
languager The American Bays, 'Now I will see
the worldP The Englishman says, 'Now I will
have salmon, though it is 4 shillings a poundf
They fill their minds your man his stomach."
There have been found toads imbedded in
stone, which are supposed to have occupied the
same position for even 6,000 years. For 6,000
years their minds have never traveled beyond
the cavity in which, enveloped in obscurity,
they have squatted; and men will allow them
selves to settle down into holes exactly
fitting them, in which they will sit
oat the span of their allotted days
in self-complacency, without an idea be
yond it, an ambition outside it. Indeed, we
live upon a Goodwin sand, that is ready to en
gult us. to suck us down and imbed us in its
heart, unless we bestir ourselves and resist the
downward suction. Let the reader look around
him and see bow many of those he knows are
imbedded in their holes as toads, able only to
talk about their holes, to be touched by noth
ing which does not affect their holes, are un
concerned about everything save the texture
of the stone that encloses them, and the slime
that drapes the walls ot their hole.
We do not say that the only means of escape
from such bondage and mental stultification is
continental travel; there are a hundred ways
of escape from petrifaction, if only we will use
them, and use them persistently. In the case
under consideration it happened to be the way,
and the most effective way, in which Pflilip
and Salome escaped from the boles Into which
tbey were about to sink and become sealed up.
But there Is one way in which the overplus
of money will never help to deliver us from
Straw Oats, 87 50; wheat and rye straw
87 007 508 00.
' Provisions.
Sugar-cured hams, large, llc; sugar-cured
hams, medium, 12c; sugar-cured hams, small,
12c; sugar-cured breakfast bacon, 10c; sugar
cured shoulders, 7c; sugar-cured boneless
shoulders, 9c; sugar-cured California hams,
8Kc; sugar-curedried beef flats, 9c; sugar
cured dried beef sets, 10c; .sugar-cured dried
beef rounds. 12c; bacon shoulders, 7c: bacon
clear sides, 8c: bacon clear bellies, SKc; dry
salt shoulders. &c; dry salt clear sides, TVc
Mess pork, heavy. 814 00; mess pork, lamlly,
$14 50. Lard Refined in tierces, 65c; half
barrels, 6c; 60-tt tubs, 7c; 20-B palls. c; 50-tt
tin cans. 6c; 3-ft tin nails, 7c; 5-ft tin palls.
TKc; 10-ft tin pails, 7Kc;5-tt tin pails, Tc; 10-ft
tin pails, VSc Smoked sausage, long, 5c; large,
5c Fresh pork links, 9c Boneless hams, 10c.
Pigs feet, half barrel, S3 50; quarter barrel,
S2 00.
Dressed Blear.
Armour & Co. furnished tbe following prices
on dressed meats: Beef carcasses, 4-50 to 550
tts, Sc; 550 to 650tts.6Ve; 650 to 750fts,&Kc
Sheep, 8c $ tt. Lambs, 10c tt. Hogs, 6c.
Fresh pork loins, 8c
MAEKETS BY WIBE.
A Sag In the Wheat Fit Allaysj Fears of a
Jnlr Squeeze New York Exports a
Factor on the Boll Side
Chicago The weather was hot and muggy
here to-day, and during most of the session
the usual Saturday's quietness prevailed
in the wheat pit. Trade was enlivened by the
filling of some New York buying orders and pos
sibly some for foreign account, but local sen
timent was not sufficiently pronounced in favor
of either the bull or the bear side of wheat to
create any enthusiasm or competitive bidding.
Upon tbe whole the feeling was one of weak
ness all the morning, and early trading was at
prices fractionally below yesterday's closing
range.
Apprehensions of a squeeze in July property
were still further allayed by a sag in the price
from 80c at the opening to 79Jc and although
a rally to about the opening price quickly fol
lowed this break, it is not believed that enough
of a short interest exists in July to be worth
mentioning. New export business in New
York was variously estimated at from 15 to 22
boatloads, and tbe news caused tbe market
here to firm up c or so, but there was a drag
ging trade during the last half of the session and
December bung stubbornly around 7979c
Corn ruled quiet tbe greater part of the ses
sion, with occasional periods of temporary
activity. The market opened a shade under
the closing prices of yesterday, was steady for a
time, eased off a little, recovered, remained
Inactive and closed nearly tbe same as yester
day. Oats were quiet and steady, the market being
in the same condition as for several days past,
A comparatively light business was reported
In mess pork and nrices ruled uregular within a
narrow range. The feeling wai easy early and
Iirices ruled 10c lower, but moderate buying
aterintheday rallied prices 710c Near
the close the market was weak and prices
receded 1215c and closed anier.
A quiet and dull feeling prevailed in the lard
market and the feeling easy. Prices ruled "
05c lower and the market closed quiet.
Trading was moderate in the market' for
short ribs. Prices ruled irregular within a
small range and closed quiet at Inside figures.
The leading futures ranged as rollows:
Wheat No. 2 Julv. 80KeWX79KQ79Kc:
August, 77K787t377j4c; September, 77V
&T!iTlT!ic; December, 79j79X78K
79-Xc.
CORN No. 2 August, S5K36K35Vg36c;
September. 3536c; October, 3b&3636
36iic.
Oats No. 2, August, 21Jc: September, 21JJ
21c; October, 22c
MessPork, per bbL August, 810 6010 72W
10 604310 62: September. 810 7010 80lu 63
10 70: October. 810 4210 50(310 S501O 35.
LARD.per 100 Its. August, 86 106 07K; Sep
tember. 86 2008 27; October, 86 226 22
6 178 17. .
Short Ribs, per 100 tts. August. 85 42;
September. 85 6005 525 475 50; Octo
ber. 85 475 47.
Cash quotations were as follows: Flour ne
glected, jobbers holding off for lower prices.
No. 2 spring wheat, 79c; No. 3 do, nominal:
seed, $1 4331 45. Mess pork, per barreL 810 75.
Lard, per 100 pounds. So 12. Short ribs, sides
(loose), 85 40005 5a Dry salted shoulders
(boxed), S5 125 25. Short clear sides
(boxed)15755s7. Sugars unchanged. Re
ceiptsFlour, 17,060 barrels: wheat, 103,000
bushels; com, 219,080 bushel; oats, 114,060 bush
putrefaction, and that U by putting It into our
stomachs lathe shape ot salmon at 1 shillings
apouitd. . , . .
We remember the case of a very short-sighted
man, who had been short-sighted from in
fancy. He never wore glasses till he was aged
about Ave and twenty, and then suddenly
found himself launched into a new world and
able to take a lively Interest In things which
had been hidden from him hitherto. VV e are
all, through life, if we do not voluntarily be
come like tho toad-hole dwellers, being intro
duced into new worlds, whether by the
acquisition of a picture like the Flem
ing, or by learning a new language, like the
Gernian,orby travel, as the Yankee. Philip
and Salome had put on their glasses simultane
ously, and it quickened their affection for each
other to be engaged on the same effort, and to
be together in the acquisition ot wisdom and
knowledge and experience. Besides this intel
lectual and moral bond tnoy had another cer
tainly at the time not very intellectual, but a
very fast and dear one the little Philip, who
traveled with them wherever they went, and
who wound himself about both their hearts,
and in doing so blended both in one. It was
early in life for the child to begin his travels,
but traveling did not hurt him. He throve on
It Before he said "Pa." or "Ma," be articu
lated the svUable "Go." As Philip the Greater
said, an augury ot the young man's future, as
one of action.
At length Philip and Salome were home; and
once again Salome flew to the arms of the dear
white-haired old man. whose face had lost all
its hardness and had acquired a new expres
sion of sweetness. And Jeremiah was able to
receive her loving embrace, and to bold her to
his breast without shrinking, without tremor.
Tho storm had passed and the St. Luke's sum
mer had set in on his end ot life, to be cheered
not only by the presence of Salome, but also by
that of Philip the Little, who. it was clear,
would become the pet and Idol of old Jeremiah,
even more than be was the pet and idol of his
father and mother.
. Late at night in the nursery, at the nursery
window on Christmas ove, when Philip the
Great and Philip the Little and Salome were
returned to Mergatroyd, husband and wife
stood, looking out into the star-besprent wintry
sky. Salome bad her arms around Philip's
waist, and he had his thrown over her shoulder,
drawing ber to his side, and she rested ber
golden head on his breast. The only light In
the room came from the fire; the only sound
for some time was the breathing of the child in
its cradle.
Both were happy, and occupied with their
own thoughts.
At length Philip broke the silence and said,
"It Is very, very good of Uncle Jeremiah; he
has taken me into full partnership, and what
is more, be proposes that he should winter
abroad and return in spring to allow of our
then taking a holiday together."
"And what Is he going to do about Mrs. Side
bottom?" "I cannot say. He is himself undecided. He
says that as he laid the trap into which she
fell, he must not be too hard with her. He will
see her himself. He goes after the new year
to France when he will visit her and make
some arrangement. He says, but hardly can
mean what be says, that it Is a law of nature
that persons pinched in circumstances and
pressed for money lose their scruples, as crabs
cast their claws, and lizards drop their tails
when nipped or pursued. It is a law of nature
and must be allowed for."
Philip felt a shudder of protest against his
side, but Salome said nothing.
All at once she started. "Oh, Philip! What
is that?"
A sound issued from the cradle: She ran to
it, stooped and looked at her baby. Tho flashes
of the firelight were reflected from the ceiling
on the little face.
"Hark! oh, hark, Philip. Baby Is laughing
laughing aloud in his sleep. He has never done
that before. It is from very oy at being home
at his own dear home again."
"What, Salome? after Paris and Rome, the
Alps, and the Rhine, poor old dirty, dingy Mer
gatroyd is dear?"
"To be sure it is, Philip how can it be other
wise? And oh. Philip, how kind the people
are! How pleased they all seem to see us back
again. I thought I really thought they would
have shaken my hand off, and that old Fan
shaw, the night watch, would have kissed me.
Philip. There may be more light heirted,
more picturesque, more romantrc people In
other lands, but there cau be nowuere, not
throughout the world, more true, warm
hearted, sterling folk, than our dear Yorkshire
people. Do you not love them, Philip?"
"I have given Yorkshire tho best proof of
my attachment In taking to me a wife from
thence."
"Oh,PhUipr
Salome nestled to his side again by the win
dow, and with him again looked forth silently
Into the night iky.
After a long pause Philip said, "Hark!"
Through tne still night air could be heard the
church bell.
Three.
Three.
Three.
"Some man is dead," said Philip. "How
strange at midnight.
.Then be counted the strokes that denote the
age. He counted to 100.
els; rye, 2.000 bushels: barley, none. Shipments
Flour, 9,000 barrels; wheat, 60.000 bushels;
com. 213,000 bushels; oats, 145,000 bushels; rye,
1,000 bushels; barley, none.
On the Produce Exchange to-day the butter
market was fairly active. Eggs quiet at lie
New York Flour quiet and held firmly.
Cornmeal steady. Wheat Spotflrmerandmore
active, chiefly for export; options moderately ac
tive, Jc higher and firm throuch buying of
exporters. Rye steady. Barley nominal. Bar
ley malt quiet. Corn Spot quiet and weaker:
options dull, lower and weak. Oats Spot dull
and steady; options firmer and moderately ac
tive. Hay firmer, good demand; shipping 65c;
good to choice 8095c Hops easy, quiet.
Coffee Options opened steady, July SO points,
other months 1520 down; closed steady
5 points above yesterdav; irregular;
cables quiet; sales, 46.000 bags; August, 13.95
14.15c; September. 14.1014.40c: October. 14.20c;
November. 14.05Q14.30c: December, 1 Ll014.35c;
January. 14.1514.35c: February, 14.20c; March,
14.2014.35c: Mav, 14.1514.25c; spot Rio quiet;
fair cargoes, lTJic Sugar Raw nominal: re
fined steaay and quiet. Molasses dull. Klce
steady and quiet. Cottonseed oil steadier.
Tallow firm and quiet. Rosin steady
and quiet: strained, common to good,
81 071 10. Turpentine dull. Eggs weak
and quiet; western, 1313c; receipts,
3,461 packages. Pork quiet and steady. Cut
meats firm; pickled bellies, 12 pounds. 7
7c: pickled hams, llHKc; pickled
shoulders, 55c; middles easy. Lard weak
and dull; western steam, to 60; city, S6 15;
options. August, SO 49; September, 86 59; Octo
ber, 86 56: November. $6 43. Batter depressed;
fairly active; western dairy. 1012c: cream
ery. 11017c; do factory, 8 12c Cheese quiet
and unsettled; western, 67c
Philadelphia Flour Limited receipts of
choice old winter-flours quietly absorbed at full
prices, but new wheats dulL Springs in light
supply. Wheat ruled firm under light offer
ings and rather better inquiry for exports;
choice old No. 2 red in grain depot. 81: old No.
2 red in export elevator, 92c; new No. 2 Penn
sylvania red in export elevator, 90c; steamerNo.
2 red in do, 84c; No. 2 red in do. 86c; No. 2 red.
July, 86S7c; August, 85S5Vc; September.
84M35!&; October, 853c Corn Fair in
quiry for local consumption and export and
prices ruled firm under light offerings: No.
2 mixed, in Twentieth street elevator. 45c: do.
on track, 45c; No. 2 mixed, julv. 41JlKc;
August, 43Ji44c; September, 4441c; Octo
ber, 4444fc Oats Car lots quiet; No.
3 white, 3334c; No. 2 white In Twentieth
street elevator, 35c; do In grain depot, 35c;
futures quiet but steady; No. 2 white, July,
31li34Jic; August, 31&32Kc; September,
3031Hc; October, 3131c Eggs steady;
Pennsylvania firsts, l4c
Baltimore Provisions dulL Butter steady:
Western Dacked, 10012c: creamery, 1616c
Eggs unsettled: fresh, 12c Coffee nomlnaL
Flour steadr. Wheat Southern auiet
and easy; Fultz, 8087c; longberry, 82
83c; No. 2, 87c; steamer, 85c: Western stead) :
No. 2 winter red. spot and July. 86c; August
and September, 84c; December, 8&8(c
Corn Southern scarce and firm: white, 49052c;
yellow. 4517c; Western steady; mixed spot
and July, 44c: August, 43c; September. 43&
43c: steamer. 40c. Oats Western white firm
at 3334: mixed firm at 30031c Rye firm at
6052C Hay Old firm.
St. Louis Flour steady. Wheat lower;
there was a selling pressure early which de
pressed prices. There was a reaction later and
the close was somewhat firmer, but c be
low yesterday; No. 2 red, cash, 74c; July,
7374c, closed at 74c; August, 74J74ic
closed at 74fiQ74Kc; September, 74?j74J?c,
closed at 7474)ic; December, 77SVc.
closed at "SKc bid; May. 83c Corn firm; No.
2 mixed, 33K33c; August, 32Kc; Septembef.
3333c, closed at 33o bid. Oats nominally
weak: No. 2, cash, 23c asked; July, 22c bid;
Rye No. 2, 43c Flaxseed nominal at 81 23.
Cincinnati Flour more freely offered.
Wheat dull and lower to sell; No. 2 red. 78
80c; receipts, 17.600 bushels; shipments, 13.200
bushels. Corn firm; No 2 mixed, 3$c. Oats
quletandflrrar No. 2 mixed, 26027c Rye dull
and nominal; No. 2. 4647c Pork dull at SU 5a
Lard nominal at 85 9a Bulkmeats and bacon
quiet and unchanged. Butter steady. Sugar
steady. Eggs firmer. Cheese qniet and firm.
Milwaukee Flour steady. Wheat steady;
cash, 78e; September, 76c Corn dull; No. J,
36c Oats quiet. Rye dulL Barley quiet:
September, 69Jc Provisions easier. Pork,
810 67.
Toledo Cloverseed dull; cash, $4 60; Octo
ber, 84 45.
Cabinet photos, 89e per doz. Lies' Pop
nlar Gallery, 10 and 12 Sixth st. mwfsu
FidelityTitle & Trust Campanyf
CAPITAL, - $500,000
121 AND 123 FOURTH AVE.
Insures titles to real estate, and acts in all
fiduciary capacities. Temporary offices,
No. 100 DIAMOND STREET.
Xe3-86-X
"One nnndred!" exclaimed Philip. -How,
extraordinary. How can that ber
"Philip," said Salome, laugh Ine, "do yon noS
know? It is the Devil's KnelL'r"
"The Devil's Knellf ...
"Yes, at midnight on Cbristn las Eve. the sex
ton here and in other Yorkshlr o towns tolls the)
knell. The Devil is dead. Chi 1st Is born."
After a moment's thought. Philip said
gravely. "Yes the Devil is dca d, that Is to say,
the old evil principle In me my former self
assurance, pride and mistrust it is dead. But,
Salome. I ought to tell you that there was
time, and not so long ago whe n I
Sbeputher hand over his m putb.
"The Devil Is dead," she saidi; "1 want to hear
nothing of bis last sickness. -Bat, Philip, you
ought to know that I was at Andermatt very
foolish, very Jeal '
He stopped ber with a kiss.
"Salome, you were never foolish; you were)
always an angeL"
"Well." she said, "we will not talk of tbe)
East; we will set our faces to'the future. The. A
levuiadead." - ' a
XHE END.
T
WE OFFER SUBJECT TO BALE,
50,000 STOCK
-or THE-
Sharon Railway
(OF PENNSYLVANIA,)
Guaranteed 6 Per Cent Dividend
For 96 Years.
Lease provides that lessee shall pay all taxes
assessed by Local Authorities.' State of Penn
sylvania or United States.
Stockholders bave received! thirty consecu
tive dividends.
Price and Further. Particulars
on Application.
COFFIN STANTON
BANKERS,
72 Broadway, New York.
jy24-22-jrWT
$375,000
5 per cent
First Mortgage Bonds.
Free of All Taxes.
The Central Traction Companv, of
Pittsburg, offers for sale its total issue -of
Three Hundred and Seventy-five
Thousand Dollars, first mortgage five
per cent bonds due 1929, Bonds are for
$500 each, interest payable semi-annually,
are free of all taxes and a first lien on all
the property and franchises of the com
pany, whose cable road will be com
pleted by October z. .
Proposals for all or any part of these
bonds will be received by the Treasurer
of the company up to and including July
31, and allotments made thereunder.
At 104.46 these bonds pay per cent
annually, at 109.24, 4J per cent, at ZZ4.37,
4 Per cent and at 119-87, 4 per cent.
The Company reserves the right to
reject any or all offers. For further in
formation, address
F. L STEPHENSON, Treas.,
; The Central Traction Company,
Pittsburg, Pa.
JylS-85-DSU
PEARS' SOAP
is the MOST ELECANT
TOILET SOAP
xwr o?3a:3Ei -woaEHsX.
Of all Druggists, but beteare of imitation.
MEDICAL.
DOCTOR
WHITTIER
814 PENN AVENUE, PITTSBUKG, PA
As old residents know and back flies of Pitts
burg napers prove, is the oldest established
and most prominent physician in the city, de
voting special attention to all chronic diseases.
SSTSSSNOFEEUNTILCURED
MCDXni IO and mental diseases, physical
IN t H V U U O decay.nervous debUity, lack o
energy, ambition and hope, impaired mem
ory, disordered sight, self distrnst,basbf ulness,
dizziness, sleeplessness, pimples, emotions. Im
poverished blood, falling powers,organic weak
ness, dyspepsia, constipation, consumption, un
fitting the person for buslness,soctety and mar
riage, permanently, safely and privately cured.
BLOOD AND SKINSSJTJWJ
blotches, falling hair, bones pains, glandular
swellings, ulcerations of tongue, month,throat,
ulcers, old sores, are cured for life, and blood
poisons thoroughly eradicated from the system.
IIDIMADV kidney and bladder derange-'
U M 1 1 1 rt ll I 1 ments, weak back, gravel, ca
tarrhal discbarges, inflammation and other
painful symptoms receive searching treatment;
prompt relief and real cures.
Dr. Whittier's life-long, extensive experi
ence, insures scicntllicnnd reliable treatment
on common-sense principles. Consultation
free. Patients at a distance as carefully treated
as If here. Office hoars 9A. M. to 8 r. JI. Sun
day, 10 A. M. to I P. ST. only. OR. WHITTIER,
814 Perm avenue, Pittsburg, Pa.
Jy9-40K-DSnwk
GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE
CURES
NERVOUS DEBILITY,
LOST VIGOR.
LOSS OF MEMORY.
Knll particulars In pamphlet
sent free. The ireuulne Gray's
Speclnc sold by druEtclsts only lu
yellow wrapper. lrlce. ?l per
package, or six for (S, or by malt
on rerplnt of nrlee. br address
DP THE UKA1 JItlJICl.NK CO, UUlTalO, r. X
.bold InPlttsbarg 6yS. 3. HOLLAND, corner
SmlthflrM and Liberty sts. apl2-53 ,
DOCTORS LAKE
SPECIALISTS In all cases re
quiring scientific and confiden
tial treatment! Or. S. K. Lake.
M. R. C. P. S is tbe oldest, and
most experienced specialist in
tbe city. Consultation free and
strictly confldentiaL Office
hours a to 4 and 7 to Sp.m.j Sundays. 2 to i P.
jLConsult them personally, orwrite. Doctors
Lake. 90 Penn ave., Pittsburg, Pa.
jel2-l5-Dwk
toss's Co-btoaa. BOOT
COMPOUND
tmnosed of Cotton Root. Tansr and
Pennyroyal a recent discovery by an .
'old Dhvsiclan. Is mccestfulhl used
montuir-Safe, Effectual. Prico Jl, by mall,
sealed. Ladles, ask your druggist for Cook's
Cotton Root Compound and tako no substitute,
or inclose 2 stamps for sealed particulars. Ad
dress rOND LILY COMPANY, No. 3 Ftahef
Block, 131 Woodward ave Detroit, Mich.
CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH
PENNYROYAL PILLS.
TFnrl Tina. Tllamnrtii "TtrAHii. ' f
'BR?
mm.
X.
13 lft3
T1S ant tHM nlll for fait- Pafr ibA " ,
rut. Ladle, uk lrajOT h ua uia
xnondl!rndiB rrdr'i:ioboiet,i4
-with blue ribbon. Takevoothrrw 9nd4e
(rtjuop) for partfetiar tad MKcMf Hr
Ilu tt. tmttnr- hV VntalL A'aTHM AtlMR,
- v - . -r ... .r..
ClchctterOiemlclCifc9MAdlMnSi..F2aiA(lsVPA '
lyl-SlOIT
A SUFFERED fSSSk. erwM
weakness, lost vigor, etc., wurestored to health
in snch a remarkable mannerafter all else b ad i
failed thathe will send the mode of cure FKEEto t
all fellow sufferers. Address h. O. MITCHELL,
MJtjiauujuu, vviua. zujupje-jjotinft
v if
V2-
jl1
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