rv- assiEr z&fi ' - THE- tlTTSBtRG DISPATOH-MONDAY, "OCTOBER 11889? BHEAKIHG FROM BONDAGE. E. B. CARPENTER. Bev. Justin Anthon's study was not a cheerful room, as seen by the dull light of a lowering afternoon. The cold shadow of the church walls slanted over it and wrapped it in gloom. If its occupant cherished cer tain delicacies of taste and sentiment, some refinement of severity prompted him to ex t elude all sign of them from this plain, bare cell, and the only soltening touches were supplied by his young daughter's books and needlework, which claimed a place among works of learning and appliances of ' study, as if with the fearless simplicity of their mistress. The minister was busy at his desk, but closed his books as the hour arriTed for the visit of a convalescent stranger, who had refused to see him while she lay Berionsly ill at the house of one of his people, but had lately sent him the message which he now recalled. His thoughts were still with his late oc cupation, a study of one of the penitential psalms, rather than with the fortunes of his unknown visitor. It was remarked that Kev. Justin Anthon dwelt upon the peni tential side of the spiritual life with a depth and somberness of tone that plainly pointed to some personal experience. The wretched ness of the sinner, the craving of the sinful soul for renewed integrity, and the intensity of that crisis which we call repentance, were themes that he treated with a singular lervor. Some urgency of his nature seemed to direct him to the analysis of the ethical problems involved in the human relations that are implied in the words repentance and forgiveness. He did not hesitate to strip the idea of re pentance of much of its factitious value, showing that it is in no sense an atone ment, thonch charitv mav accent it as such. " "While, he bade his hearers bow to the de cree which announces that in the Divine mind penitence is counted as the promise and potency of righteousness, he arraigned evil-doers with a somber energy that knew no touch of tenderness, searching their con sciences with the stern warning that no pravers, no tears, may arrest the consumma tion of violated law. God and man may par don the sinner, but perfect peace can never be bis, since restitution must remain incom plete, and over the past the Infinite Him self has no power. Forgiveness, he taught, was the highest virtue attainable by man, since, in exercising it. he approached most nearly to the serenity of Godhead, which knows no wrong, no suffering. He sternly held every soul amenable to the law of for giveness, and to the duty of restoring every penitent sinner to the dace from which he fell. His appeals and promises startled by their literalness, and impressed his hear ers with the sense that they might at any hour reach the unknown soul among them to whom they must be tendered and in whom they would finally arouse the fit response. He lived with this soul; threw himself into all its needs and shared its strivings and its aspirations. VTet the charity and forgive ness that he taught were somewhat siernly, though fervently, conceived. The words were love, but the spirit was law. His peo ple noted these contrarieties, acutely per ceiving that their pastor preached as dis cipline that which they could only practice as love, if haply the hour of trial came to them. They missed the touch of reality in his grasp ot the problem, and divined that. with all his searching", the sentiment which he inculated was not yet known to him in its fullness. Consciously or unconsciously, preachers, in their most genuine utterances, are often, dealing with themselves; and their teach ings are now and again seen in a light thrft reveals them as personal strivings. Bev. Justin Anthon awaited his visitor. Though a man of no forbidding, .aspect, he was not one to whom guilt or weakness would confidently appeal. His features were set in the lines of a resoluteness that spoke severity, if not harshness. Bnt the spirit of denial that farrowed the brow and compressed the lips suggested an introverted vision, and marked him as ascetic, not as Pharisee. A pleasure-loving temperament, quick with the fullness of physical vigor; had been slowly chilled into torpor. The lace was not one upon which an observer would not naturally have looked for those signs of austerensss and asperity that life had deeply graven there. In the sharpen ing of its contours, in the dulling of its tints, it had become A Dale face that seemed undoubtedly As if a blooming face it ought to be. A subtle force had been at work, refining, intensifying, subduing, as some pious me dieval fashioner in marble might have shaped the robust head of an antique Fau nus into a rude likeness of the suffering Christ. The late afternoon light was wasting and paling when his visitor, worn and weak from her illness, entered and stood before him. For an instant they faced each other in rigid silence. His strained, searching gaze met her presence, and their mutual recognition was lite the meeting of the disembodied in a world of anguish. The man's strength failed him, and be sank into his chair and bowed his face upon his hands. The woman fell on her knees before hira with a wordless sob. "Marian," he groaned, forcing himself by a seem rallv of the will to meet the eyes of his wite, "kneel to God." "I have repented before my God," she pleaded; "all these years I have prayed to Him to forgive me. I have lived in prayer and penitence, and His ministers have bid den me go in peace; but, Justin, I did not dare, oh, not even when I lay at the point of death, to ask your forgiveness." She ground her palms together in a pas sion of despair, and her hnsband trembled, while the dim room gathered blackness be fore his swimming sight. His drawn lips worked painfully in shaping themselves to her name. "Marian, for these ten years the thought of this meeting has been with me in my lying down and in my rising up. Night and day I have lived with it." He shivered in the grasp of a deadly chill. I knew you would come," he whispered, hoarsely. "Justin, Justin, for the love of God for give me'she moaned. "Ob, He was cruel; He would not let me die." Powerlessly, as if in a dream, he formed the words: "I do forgive you:" and believed that he had uttered them; but no sound reached her, and with a heavy groan she grovelled at his feet. The action stung his sense of manliness, and be found voice in a call. "Eise up, Marion," he'eommanded. "I forgive you, for God forgives us all. Have I not learned to forgive in these long years?. I have tried to forgive him," he said, with' deepening pallor, "the man who tempted you. Where is he?" demanded the hus band, in louder tones, while his eyes trav eled with unhallowed impulse to his father's sword, that hung high on the walL "What fate has overtaken him?" 'As God is my Maker, I do not know," she breathed. "I know nothing of him. He deserted me six months after he took ns -abroad." , The minister's hand relaxed from the un conscious violence of its grasp. "God lelp aieJlVbe groaned, "that I could forget my pxv Dorn in me luuugm 01 a wretch whom God will judge. Where is my son? have you brought Marcus back to me?" " "Dead, dcad,Justin,"gaspedthewretched mother. "Five years ago he died, and I was left alone. I lived on alone five years before I came back." She wept pitiably, but the father did not hear her. Dead," he repeated softly, qnestioning ly, as if the calamity had fallen upon another. He slowly, mechanically felt In a drawer of his desk, and drew out two worn and tattered primers, Holding them tender- ly, but loolaag at them with eyes that saw not. "My boys," he said, very quietly, "Marcus and Archer. Bead? both deadl Marcus would have been 18 years old." He spoke calmly, musingly, and laying back the books, closed the drawer with a reverent touch, as one smoothes the sods of a grave. "Oh, Justin," implored his wife, "why could I not die? "Why did not God let me die? God knows I thought never to have been here again. If you had not married me, Justin! I was so weak and light-minded; I could not bear temptation; and I was worn down to hysterical weakness with the care of three little children. It was killing me, and my nature cried out for relief and es cape. Sometimes I tell myself I cannot be judged for what I did in such helplessness. I was so unworthy; I had lost all heart to struggle against our poverty. I think you did not know how selfish I was, Justin; you did not watch over me; yon thought I was "happy with the children in my safe, shel tered life. Ton did not know how selfish a woman could be. You never had e yes to see how I wearied of it all. We were so poor, Justin! It was such a hard strug gle, and the people were harsh and sordid, and I was in bitterness toward them, for they did not respect me; and my life was shut up in prison walls. Oh, it was torture! I was meant for something different You did not know how I hated the religious rou tine, and all the thankless work among those people, till I loathed my life- You married me so young, Jnstinf I had never had any thing I wanted. I bad never known any thing of life. I had never been admired; I never had a brilliant hour, lhere was noth ing to do in that place but to be good. No body to appreciate me, to feel my valne, and to understand me my sole society was made up ot boors and crones. Yon could go out and work among the children and the sick people, and the poor, because yon had me to come .home to, and you lovea me, and found in me all the brightness that you craved in your life. Your father gave you a soldier's 'training, and duty was always your word. I was heartless; duty did not satisfv me. I needed so much to make me happy! I wanted gayety aud emotion in my life." She hurried her words, "raising her head and feverishly pushing back her hair. "No, yon are generous to tell me to spare myself; but I will go on to the end. I will confess all. When he came to us as the friend of your old army days, I W3s even then estranged from you. and as his influ ence grew I began to chafe against my lot because you had not chosen the life of a man of the world. I was ont of sympathy with your way of life. Nothing in me re sponded to you. In strong natures, per haps, it is a long way from discontent to sin, but I was weak and ready to be wicked. I knew not what I did. I was in prison, and I rushed out at the first open door. I wanted to live my own life, for myself, and he tempted me with such a brilliant life, all filled with pleasure and triumph. I should be admired, aud my days wonld be full of the joys of stimulus .and interest. We would "live like gods, "instead of crawling through a miserable existence to a dreary end. Luxury and travel and society and new experiences and emotions for every day they had been my dreams, and he prom ised them all to me. Oh, my depraved sonlt But I did love him; I loved him better than I could love you because it pleased me best to be loved bv one like him. "It is not the loving, alone; it is knowing bow to love that wins a woman. The devo tion he showed me, his understanding of me, his quickness to see my cravings, were more to me than all your love. You could have satisfied a better woman, but you never un derstood me, and you maddened me with your blind faitn and love. I could "be my self with a man who understood me, and did not idealize me. God pity me! I lived for pleasure, and was dead while I lived. The curse has fallen on me. But I was not all evil. I did love him.JI would have endnred any hardship, made any sacrifice, for him. How can I say this to you? Why am I not dumb before the horror "of such a life as mine had been? What can I say that will not break your heart? I know that nothing can wipe out my sin against yon. Oh, why did I come here? False wife, nnnatural mother; the sea would not drown me, fever would not kill me, the open grave has not closed before me, but judgment waits for me." "Marian." repeated her husband. "God is faithful and just to forgive ns our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness." "Those words, those words!" she cried; "they have been ringing in my ears as I have heard them from you. Would to God they might be truel The same words that Helen Eastman repeated to me when she was dying. She found me in mv distress. and when I was forsaken she took me up, and had pity on me as lone as she lived. She sent me to take charge of one of her houses, and Marcus and I lived there. When he died and she was dying, she knew there would be no refuge for me after her, for her daughters had never shown me any pity. Then she told me to go to you. and you would take care of me. 'Your husband is a rigbeous man,' she said; 'he will not cast von off; he will find a way to care for von I could almost have thought she knew you, Justin, when she talked of you." "I did know her well, and I loved her once. The words fell from him as coldly as emotionless breathings pass the lips of the dying, but they wrought upon the woman who beard them. "Then it was for your sake that she saved me! and I never had any friend but you! Alone in the world when you married me and now with no one to turn to oh, Justin) my life begins and ends in you. Oh, if I had not dishonored it!" She' wept in a terrible abandonment; but her hnsband did not swerve from his rigid self-command. "Justin," she clasped her wasted hands imploringly "I never meant to see you again. Bnt I could not stay there after her, and when I came secretly to our old home! and found you had come so far away to this place, I wandered out here. Bnt I dared not see you; I onlyihoughttolook at Agnes once, as any stranger might, and go away. And when I bad seen her pass by once, twice, I said: 'I will go. Bnt I could not go, for the great longing to see her aeain that consumed me, day and night, like a fever. And then I fell sick, and she came to me like a healing spirit, and I could not send her away. Every day she came to my sick room my death chamber, as they all believed it was and'eared for me, they said, in the house, 'like a daughter.' Justin, she begged me to see her father; he would do me so much good. And she lores me, and does not know that she loves a lost soul." Her voicerose wildly. "Oh, Justin, have pity; I am not strong enough to go away ifrom her now. I am her mother, Justin. She is my flesh and blood. God knows I ought to take your forgiveness, and depart out of your life, but I cannot, I cannot. My heart is not dead in mv breast, as I believed. I have a mother's heart still, and I must love. Do you think I could ever have gone away if I could not have taken my boy with me? I hunger and thirst after my child. .Let me stay near her, where J. can see her sometimes. Call me not wife, nor ever let me hear the name of mother. Make me as one of your hired servants. Only let me look on her, and my soul shall live." Her husband met the piercing intensity of her look with an unfaltering gaze, before which she shrank, helplessly. "I ninst return your words," he said,' after a silence; and neither the generosity of the man nor the humility of the Chris tian could purify his tones of the bitterness that permeates a naturein -which the springs of feeling have been poisoned at theiraource. "I also must say, 'I cannot'" His lips quivered. "For years I have tried to be stronger than taj- fate. And now that the blow has fallen, I crouch under it like that false servant of God, and cry out in my pain AV, nA V. o-o,. Itr-M nr.-: ' how can I do this thing?" He rose and! v, uwm, m.w unoj auj , c 4UariMU, walked with heavy steps across the room, and again to his place. "How can you re turn to the home you left? , Can the dead live again? You' could not remain un known to Agnes. I will have no secrets in my household. It Is not in my power to spare you. The truth would utter Itself. I am not the man who can take back to bis arms the woman who has wronged him. 1 do not so un derstand my duty." His voice rang coldly. "I have tried to see dear, but 1 no longer believe that it is laid upon my conscience to wrong my daughter for the sake ot her who was my wife. Most Agnes knowr Shall such an evil darken her life? She Is pure and good." She Is holy as an angel!" The words burst passionately from the mother's lips. "Will you claim herT" the father anxiously appealed. "I ask you, In the name of mother hood, and as you have a mother's heart of love, will you bring shame and suffering upon herT Her life has been peace. I have guarded her from all knowledge of evil. She has never heard your name, and she helierps yon dead. If she is ever to learn anything of onr lives, she cannot know less than the truth. Tears and sorrows cannot avail against the right," he coldly warned. "I am not the man yonknewnie to be. Suffer ing has done its work on me. Without Agnes to soften my life, I should bow be out of touch with humanity, i have fulfilled my bondage; I have kept my Integrity; 1 have outlived passion, bnt tenderness has gone with it. The time has passed for bitterness between ns; but as man and wife, or as friend with friend, we meet no more. 1 forgive yon from my soul, but I have no heart of pity. I have crushed it, and It is dead. I have lived trno to my vows: I have kept the purity of my calling; I have preserved my daughter's home sacred trom the lightest breath of doubt. By the help of God I have shunned all things that the Great Tempter might have made a snare to me. When woman's lore went out of ray life I separated myself straight ly from the world, and no woman's friendship or sympathy or cheer has dared to reach me In the Isolation which I have kept." through the silence that fell, the autumn wind made faint, gusty puffs and stirs, and sul lenly agitated the lattice that half screened the open window. 'Marian," he appealed, in milder tones, but sue aus-nerou only uy a xeenie moan, xxis iace darkened. "I haTe not sDoken of myself." he said, "but will you come between me and my workf" His voice fell, and his lips trembled, as he said quickly, "It is the one thing that is left to me in the world." -Silent for an instant, he went on in firmer tones. "My duty is to my people. Separated from them, where should I got what people would receive usT what other work could I find that would be worthy of the vocation wherewith I am called? You shall be safely cared for. as a suffering and sorrowing woman. I shall not forsake my duty to the mother of my children; Bnt what, beside peace and forgiveness, can there be between usnow?" A keen glitter came and went in her wander ing eyes, and her hands clutched aimlessly, desperately, at each other. "lam not wise; I cannot say what is right," she said, in strained, high tones. "Bnt Helen Eastman said you would not tndge as the world judges. Often she tried to comfort me with that. She believed you would not separate mother and child. Think a little of that. Ob, for her sake, Justin! She must have loved you once, to sorrow over me as she did. But it is your soldier's training, Jos tin; and that worldly Idea of honor, as a soldier believes in it, is deeper in you than you know. I used to tell you you had mistaken your calling." She smiled abjectly, covertly, searching his face with the sharpened intuitions of a wife's subtlety. His benumbed senses received no new sbock-at the Bight of her pitiful smiles; they only tola him tnat a smile was a strange, sad wonder in a world of shadows. A sound of tolling from the church bell smote heavily npon them, and he answered her bewildered look: "Another stands there in my place to-day," he said. "God knows If I shall ever Btand there again!" The bell shook out its jarring clangor, and the vibrations filled the air with clamorous notes. The funeral train approached the church, and still the harsh reverberations stung the nerves and dizzied the brain. As if in some hideous dream the hnsband saw his wife draw near, a strange threatening in ber eyes, while her bands were lift Jd in the voice less appeal of maternal passion. 'Marion!" he adjured, respect the presence of the dead!" "I will not!" she cried. "God is not the God of the dead, but of the living. Ho is a God of mercy, and you are his minister. Show mercy to me! Ob, cast not out my soul!" In that dreadful cry she poured ont all her agony, ber repentance and ber entreaty, and he turned si lently away. She called his name in tones that brought his eyes upon her in dim recognition of some strange new power that vivified her with an energy not ber own. "You are a holy man," she said in slow accents, "and 1 am vile. But though I speak as a lost sonl hastening to judgment, I call upon you in the name of Him in whose sight no man living is justified, to remember that you were not always pure. You repented and atoned; Sou gave yourself to God's service in a new fe; you have kept your vows; but, Justin, the past still lives, and your sins also are written in God's judgment book." Her eyes unrelentingly searched bis face, so cruelly drawn and haggard, and suffused with those cold drops which the supreme hour of torture wrings from every pore. In f nil pos session of the hard won peace of the soul that has toiled after righteousness; in the strength of a succession of blameless years; in the se curity of long release from that double con sciousness of wedded life in which no secrets can live, the unholy past suddenly rose up un veiled before him; the pit of nncleannes oncned her mouth at his feet. This soul so rich In works and merits heard at last the voice of the Son of Man saying: "thou knowejtt not that thou art wretched and miserable, and poor, and blind, and naked." "Womaa." be muttered, as though seeing in her at that moment not his sinf nl wife, but the accusing spirit of injured womanhood, "I ac knowledge the sins of my youth, and J humble myself before my God. Enter not into judg ment with thy servant, O Lord!" His head dronned lower and lower, until he hid bis face upon the desk. His spirit was. Droken within mm. ' The sounds of tolling slowly rose and fell and ceased.and at their ceasing he raised his eyes to meet the gaze of the woman who had watched him: and as tbey still regarded each other in a passionless trance of misery, the silence that fell upon them like a pall was lifted by a voice of gong. The wretched pair drank In the mel ody, and their dry eyes grew dim with healing tears as their daughter's step drew near and nearer through the empty house, while she sang the sacred words her father had taught her when she was yet a child: Saviour, breathe forgiveness o'er ns; All our weakness Thou dost know; Thou didst tread this earth before us, Thou didst feel Its keenest woe; rone ana arcary. Faint and weary. Throngn the desert Thou didst go. She threw wide open the halt-closed door, and the last gleam of the westering light fol lowed her, touching her with a spiritual glory. To the worn oyes that waited npon her coming she seemed fair as the morning, radiant as a star. With the timid wonder and sjmpathy of a child she looked from the father she loved to the stranger she had visited. Her father rose to greet her, his countenance transfigured with the oeaceol sacrifice. "My daughter," he said and" he drew her to his wife and joined their hands "be very tender to your mother. She was dead and is alive again; she was lost, and is found. God wills that we should make one household. My wife, my daughter, let us pray." And as they knelt, still keeping the clasp of. the hands be had joined, tbeir spirits followed him in the voice of his petition: "Lord onr God, our covenant keeping God. Thou who art the life of all, the help ot those that flee unto Thee, the hope of those who cry unto Thee, of Thy great mercy deliver us from the bands of those sins which by our frailty we have committed. Thou hast set our misdeeds hf are Thee, and onr secret sins In the li"ht of Thy countenance. We are vile earth and mis erable sinners, yet. Lord. If Thou wilt, Thou canst make us whole. Cleanse us from every evil thought, and give us strength; cleanse our minds and souls, onr hearts and consciences, that from this hour we may live to Thee. For give us our crlevous sins, O Father of mercies; and raise us to the life of holiness, the life of meekness, humility, charity, repentance and forgiveness: for His sake, who suffered and died for us, the Lamb of God, who taketh away the s.ns of the world. Amen." "Amen," repeated the fervent voice of Agnes Anthon. Providence Journal. Dryffoodi. New York. October 12. Business in dry goods was moderate, as usual on Saturdays, very little doing on the spot, though mall or ders were of fair volume. The market pre sented no special feature beyond tuo-e of steady report, In which demand and supply' were in healthy ratio. The export demand for heavy cottons has improved, while print cloths have steadily declined. Mining- Stocksu New York. October 12. Aspen. 350: Cale donia B.H., 230; Colorado Central, 100; Dead wood Territory, 100; Homcstake, 875; Horn Sil ver. 130; Independence. 210: Iron Silver, 252: Mexican, 350; Mutual, 140; Ontario. 3150; Plymouth, 300: Savage, 150: Sierra Nevada, 200; Small Hope, 100. Salvation On., the cheapest and best pain enre on earth. Price 25 cents a bottle. When baby was sick, we gave ber Castorla, When she was a Child, she criedfor Castorla, When she became Miss, she clung to Castorla, When she bad Children, she gave them Castorla p9-77-XWTSu DOMESTIC MARKETS. Eggs Higher and All Dairy Products Are in Good Demand. COFFEE SUFFER SUGARS QUIET. Ear Corn, Ho. 2 White Oats and Millfeed Firm Flour Steady. PKOTIBION HOLDERS GROW FIRMER OFFICE OF FrVrSBUBG DISPATCH,1" ( SATURDAY. October 12, 1889. I Country Produce Jobbing Prices. Saturday's rains proved a wet blanket to trade. Grapes, apples and potatoes are In f nil supply and markets are weak. Sweet potatoes are also slow. Eggs have advanced, and supply of choice stock Is reported very light. All dairy products continue active and firm, without any change in prices. A. leading cheese jobber re ports sales of 500 boxes to-day. The demand for choice grades of creamery butter Is reported equally good. Quinces are scarce and higher. There were a few peaches on market to-day, but Quality was none the best and demand was slow. Consumers appear to have made up their minds that the season is over for peaches. Buttee Creamery, Elgin, 2830c; Ohio do, 26Z7c: fresh dairy packed, 2325c; country rolls. 2122c Beans Navy hand-picked beans, $2 252 40; medium. $2 3002 40. Eeeswai 2S30c 33 ft for choice; low grade, 181320c. , Cider Sand refined, $8 607 50; common, 53 04 00; crab cider. $3 OOfflp 50 ft barrel; cider vinegar, 1012c f! gallon. Chestnuts 'H 004 60 per bushel. Cheese Ohio. llllc; New York, HKc; Limburger, 910Xc; domestic Sweitzer.lu 13c: imported bweitzer, 23c EOOS 22c 33 dozen for strictly fresh. Fruits Apples ti 00275 f? barrel: grapes. Concords, 45c f) pound, Catawbas, 6w8e, Delawares, 79c; Bartlett pears, 5 00 ft barrel; quinces, S7 008 00 barrel; cranberries. Jer seys, S3 003 25 3 bushel box. Leathers Extra live ceesc, 5060c; No. 1 do. 4045c; mixed lots, S03oc "& &. Poultry Live spring chickens, 4045s ft pair; old, 6570c ft pair. Seeds Clover, choice, C2 lis to bushel, $5 00 5 25 ft bushel; clover, large English, 62 lbs. So 50; clover, Alsike, SS 00; clover, white, 9 00; timo thy, choice, 45 lis, SI SO; blue grass, extra clean, 14 its, 90c; blue grass, fancy, 14 Iks, $1 00; orchard grass, 14 J&yll 65; red top, 14 Bs, $1 23; millet, 60 &s, SI 00; German millet. 50 As, SI 60: Hungarian crass, 60 lis. SI 00: lawn grass, mixture of fine grasses, S2 50 ft bushel of 14 lbs. Taxlow Country, 4Jc; city rendered, 4J 6c. Tropical Fruits Lemons, common, H 50 5 00; fancy, $5 50S 00; oranges, U 505 00: bananas. S2 00 firsts, SI 60 good seconds, ft bunch; cocoanuts, ti 001 SO ft hundred; figs, 8K9c ft lb: dates, SKbic ft ft. Vegetables Potatoes, 81 6001 75 fl bar rel: tomatoes 6575c ft bnshel; wax beans, 76c ft bushel; creen beans, 4050c ft bushel; cu cumbers, $2 252 60 ft bushel: cabbages. U 00 5 00 a hundred; celery, 40c ft dozen; Southern sweet potatoes, 2 002 25; Jerseys, $2 75. Groceries. Coffee options keep fluctuating under specu lative manipulation, and at last advices bulls had the field. There is no telling what a day may bring forth In coffee or sugar. Thelatter's general drilt Is toward a lower level and the former to a higher. Greek Coffee Fancy Rio, 22K23e; choice Rio, 2021c; prime Rio. 20c; low grade Rio, 1819Jic; old Government Java, 27c; Star-acaibo,- 2324c; Mocha, 2S29c; Santos, 20 23c; Caracas. 2123c; peaberry, Kio, 2325c: Li Guayra, 2223c Roasted (in papers) Standard brands, 23Kc; high grades, 252CJSc: 0ld Qoyern nieut Java, bulk, JlK34c; Maracaibo, 26 27c: Santos, 2123c; peaberry. 26c; choice Rio, 24c; prime Rio, 22c; good Rio, 21c; ordi nary. 21c bPlCES (whole) Cloves, 2125c: allspice, 8c; cassia, 8c: pepper, 18c; nutmeg, 70gS0. Petroleum, (jobbers' nrieesl 110 test 7c: Ohio, 120, 8Kc; headlight. 150, Stfc; water white, 9c; globe. 1414Xc; elalne, 14c; carna dine, llc; royalme, 14c; globe red oil, 11 llKc hYRUPS Com syrups, 2629cr choice snear syrups. 33k.; prime sugar syrup, 30s3c; strictly prime, 3335c; new maple syrup. 90c N. O. MOLASSES Fancy, 48c; choice, 46c; medium, 43c; mixed, 4042c Soda Bi-carb in kegs, 3U4c; bi-carb In &s, 5c; bi-carb. assorted packages, 56c; sal soda in kegs, lc; do granulated, 2c Candles star, full weight, 9c; stearine, $ set, 8c; paraffine, ll12c Rice Head, Carolina, 77Vc; choice, CV0 7c; prime. 556ic; Louisiana, bSic. Starch Pearl, 3c; cornstarch, 56c; gloss starch, &7c Foreign Fruits Layer raisins, 82 65; Lon don layers, 83 10; California London layers, $2 50; Muscatels. 82 25; California Mnscatels, 81 85; Valencia, 8c: Ondara Valencia, 9Ji10c; sultana, 8Mc; currants, 6Wc; Turkey prunes, 45c; French prunes, SK13c; Salonlca prunes, in 2-& packages, 8c: Locoannts. 100. 86 00; almonds, Lan.. ft ,ft, 20c: do. Ivica, 19c; do, shelled, 40c; walnuts, nap.. 1215c; Sicily mueris, 12c; esmyrna ngs, lijioc; new dates, 5Gc: Brazil nus,10c; pecans, Il15c; citron, ft ft. 2122c; lemon peel, ft ft, 1314c: orange peel, 12Xc .-.-. Dried Fruits Apples, sliced, per ft, 6c, apples, evaporated, 8c; apricots, Califor nia, evaporated, 1215c: peaches, evaporated pared, 2223c; peaches. California, evaporated, nnoared, 10L!c; cherries, pitted, 2122c; cherries, unpitttd, 56c; raspberries, evapor ated. 2421Kc; blackberries, 78c; huckle berries, IUQ12C. Sugars Cubes, 8Jc; powdered, 8$c; granu lated, 7c; confectioners' A, 7Jgc; standard A. 8Jic; soft whites, 7Jl7c; yellow, choice, 7 7Kc; yellow, good, 6oc: yellow, fair, 6cj yellow, dark, 6Kc Pickles Medinm bbls (1,200), 85 75; medi um, half bbls (600), 83 25. SALT No. L W bbl. flSe; Nft 1 e-r. hbl. SI 05: dairy, ft bbl, 81 20, coarse crystal, ft bbl, 81 20; xiiggms- .bnreita, t-uu sacits, ss su: Hirrins' x-ureKa, 10-1 a pockets, JJ w. Canned Goods Standard peaches. 82 00 2 25; 2ds, 81 50 1 65: extra peaches, 82 402 60, pie peaches. 95c: finest corn. 81 00S1 60: Hid. Co: corn, 7090c; red cherrie, 90c81: Lima beans. 81 10; soaked do, 85c; string do, 7585c; mar rowfat peas, 81 101 15; soaked peas, 7075c pineapples, 81 401 50; Bahama do, 82 75; dam; son plums, 95c; green-raged, 81 25; egg plums, 82; California pears, 82 60; do greengage, 82; do, egg plums, 82; extra white cherries, 82 90; red cherries, 2 fts, 90c: raspberries, 81 401 50; strawberries, 81 1U; gooseberries, 81 301 40; tomatoes, 90cl 00; salmon, 1-ft 81 752 10; blackberries, 8oe: succotash, 2ft cans, soakedr 99c; do green, 2 fts, 81 251 60; corn beef. 2 ft cans, 82 05; 14-fi cans, 814 00: baked beans, 81 45 Ell 60; lobster, 1-ft. 81 751 80: mackerel 1-B cans, broiled, 81 60; sardines, domestic, $1, 84 254 SO; sardines, domestic, Ks. 87 257 SO; sardines, imported, lis, 811 6012 60: sardines, imported, s. 818; sardines, mustard, 83 50; sardines, spiced, 83 5a Fiau Extra No. 1 bloater mackerel, 836 ft bbl.: extra No. ldo, mess. 840; extra No. 1 mackerel, shore, 832; extra No. 1 do. messed, 836; No. 2 shore mackerel, 824. Codfish Whole Pollock, 4c ft ft; do medium, George's cod, 6c; do large, 7c; boneless hake, in strips, 6c; do George's cod in blocks, 6K7Kc. Herring Round shore, 85 00 ft bbl; split, 87 00; lake, 82 00 ft 100-ft half bbl. White tisli, 87 00 ft 100 ft lull bbl. Lake trout, 85 50 ft half bbl. Fin nan haddock, 10c ft ft. Iceland halibut, 13c ft ft. Pickerel, K bbl. 82 00; bbl. 81 10; Poto mac herring, 8o (X) ft bbl. 82 50 Jbbl. Oatmeal IS 306 60 V bbl. Miners' Oil No. J. winter strained, 6557c ft gallon. Lard oil. 75c Grain, Flonr and Feed. Receipts as bulletined at the Grain Exchange; 22 cars, as follows: By Pittsburg. Ft. Wayne and Chicago, 1 car ot bay, 2 ef barley, 5 ef flour, 1 of bran. By Pittsburg, Cincinnati and St. Louis 1 car of shorts, 3 of hay. By Baltimore and Ohio, 2 cars of hay. By FlttsDurgand Lake Erie, 1 car of barley, 1 of oats, 1 of hay, 1 of flour. By Pittsburg and Western, 1 car of hay, 2 of oats. There were no sales on call. Total receipts bulletined at the Grain Exchange, 196 carloads, against 193 last week and 185 the pre vious week. Ear corn is scarce and firm. There is active demand for No. 2 white oats and mill feed. The tone of markets shows improve-' ment, but prices are practically unchanged. Flonr is moving freely and prices are fully maintained as compared with a week ago. Though wheat keeps seesawing under specula tive infliipnr.es. the outlook is that bedrock has been reached and that bears have done tbeir utmost. Prices below are for carload lots on track. Wheat New No. 2 red, 8586c; No. 3. 81 82c Corn No. 2 yellow, ear, 4445c; high mixed, ear, 4243o: No. 2 yellow, shelled. 40c; high mixed, shelled, S940c; mixed, shelled, 38K 39c Oats No. 2 white. 2728c; extra. No. 3, 26K27c: mixed, 2425c Rye No. 1 Pennsylvania and Ohio, 6051c; No. 1. Western, 4849; new rye, No. 2 Ohio, 45045c Flour Jobbing prices Fancy winter and sprint; patents, to vw V7 AW1 UVi wv XXXX bakers' c om en. 4 78. MttMrEZD Middlings, fine white, SIS 00 16 60 f) ton; brown middlings. 813 0013 60: win ter wheat bran, til 5011 76; chop feed.S.15 60 i6'oa Hat Baled timothy, choice, $14 (0314 25; No. 1 do, 112 0012 60; No. 2 do. til 00811 60l loose from wagon, til 0013 00, according to quality: No. 1 upland prairie. $8 50g9 00: No. 2, S7 007 60; packing do, S7 507 75. Straw Oats, S8 507 00; wheat and rye straw, $6 008 25. Provisions. Hogs are 10c higher at Chicago than for sev eral days past. There is no change In hog products, but the whole list is firm. Lard Is particularly strong. Holders of provisions are more Independent in their views than they were a week ago. Sugar-cured hams, large, 103c; sugar-cured hams, medium, llfcfc: sugar-cured hams, small, ll?c; sugar-cured breakfast bacon, 10c; sugar cured shoulders, 6Jc; sugar-cured boneless1 shoulders, 7c; sugar-cured California hams, 7c: sugar-cured dried beef flats, 9fc; sugar-cured dried beef sets, 10c; sugar-cured dried beef rounds, 12Wc: bacon shoulders, 55c: bacon clear sides, 7Xc: bacon clear bellies, TKc: dry salt shoulders, 6c; dry salt clear slues, 7c, Mess pork, heavy, $11 50; mess pork, family. 812 00. Lard-Refined, fn tierces. 6c: half barrels, 6Jc; 60-ft tubs. 6Jc; 20-ft palls, 7c; 60- Jo tin cans. 6Xc: 3-ft tin pails. 744c; o- tin pails, 7cr 10-ft tin pails, 6c: 5-ft tin pails, 7c; 10- m tin palls, 7c Smoked sausage, long, oc; large, 6c. Fresh pork links, 0c. Boneless hams, lOWc Pigs feet, halt barrel, W 00; quar ter barrel, 82 15. Drcsned Bleat. Armour & Co. furnished the following prices on dressed meats: Beef carcasses 450 to 660 lbs, 6c; 650 to 650 Bs. 6c; 650 to 750 As, 67c. Bbeep, 8c ft ft. Lambs. So ft ft. Hogs,6c. Fresh pork loins, 8c MAEKETS BY WIRE. Wheat Opens Weak, bur Rallies Lones Coming; Ont No Material Change In Quotation! Hoe Product! Qnlet and Featnreiesi. Chicago, October 12. There was a fairly good trade In the wheat market to-day, largely In the way of evening up. More or less long wheat came out. The opening was weak and prices KJie lower, selling off ip more later, then rallied c, bnt rnled easier, closing about the same as yesterday for both December and May. Corn ruled quiet and inactive, though there were moments of temporary activity. The feeling was easier on the near tntures, while May ruled comparatively steady. Trading was largely local and fluctuations limited tojc range. Oats wero dnll bnt steady and without special features of importance. Prices only fluctuated He The provision trade closed the week in a quiet manner. The October pork deal was scarcely mentioned, and in the general market there was no particular life at any time. Price changes were unimportant. The leading prices raneed as follows: WHEAT No. 2. October. 8O8OX8OK0 S05c; December. 82S2g81fc;is82-kc; year. euwtogoc; May, KoiBo&tHei&c Corn No. 2,October, 3d30c: November, 31313031c; December, 313130 80J&: May. 83Xa33c Oats No. 2, October, 18?c: November, 19Kc; December, 19i19J19K19?6c; jiar 2222S 2222c Mess POBK, per bbl. October, !1037U10 60 10 37K10 60; year, 89 159 12J; January, 9 359(7i9 329 32; February, i9 42 69 40. Lard, per 100 fts. October, 86 126 10; November, 85 92kg5 92K5 92j5 92.K; year. to so; January, so Wfttga vwgio sotxo o. Short Ribs, per 100 fts. October, 85 10 6 15Q5 105 15: November, 84 85; January, 84 75. Cash quotations were as follows: Flour steady. No. 2 spring wheat, S0jS0c; No. 3 spring wheat, 6s69c; No. 2 red, 80SOc No. 2 corn, S0c N o. 2 oats, lffio. No. 2 rye, ilic No.2 barley.nominaL Np.l flaxseed.81 27K. Prime timothy seed, 81 17. Mesa pork, per bbl. 810 50. Lard, per 100 pounds, 86 25. Short ribs sides (loose), Jo 255 SO. Dry salted shoulders (boxed). 84 2584 50: short clear sides (boxed), 85505 02. Suear Cut loaf. 8Jo; granulated, 7Jc; standard A, 7Jc Reoelpts Flour, 17,000 barrels;wbeat,65,000bushels:com.l62,000 bushels; oats 222,000 bushels; rye, 13,000 bushels; barley, 82,000 bushels. Shipments Flour. 25,000 barrels; wheat, S8.000 bushels; corn. 388,000 bnhels; oats. 311,000 bushels; rye, 10,000 bushels; barley, 35,000 bushels. on the JtToduce .Exchange to-day creamery sold at 1623c; dairy, 1319c Eggs steady, fresh 1801c New York Flour Limited business. Corn- No. 1 dull, but steady. Wheat Spot weak and a moderate business; options fairly active; c lower early, and closed firm, at Ko above the lowest, and c under yesterday. Rye quiet; western, 4i52c. Barley dnll; western, 65065c Barley malt qnlet: Canadian, 75S0c Corn Spot firm and moderately active; options firmer and dull. Oats Soot firm; options neglected. Hay Firm and fairly active, at 4045c; good to choice, 7090c Hops steady and quiet. Coffee Options de cidedly unchanged and to 5 points down; closed steady at 510 points up; 'sales of 47,260 bags. Including October, 15.0015.10c; Novem ber. 14.9014.95c: December, 14.9015.05c; Jan nary, 14.9015.00c; February, 14 90c; Marcb, 14.9015.05c: May, 14.9015.05c; June, 1190 15.00c; July, 14.80c; August. 14.75c; September, 14.65c; spot Rio easy; fair cargoes, 19Kc Sugar Raw nominal; refined, easy and qnlet. Molasses New Orleans, quiet; open kettle, food to fancy 2S40c Rice firm and quiet; omestic 4K6$c Japan 45c Petroleum, steady and quiet; united, November closed 99Vc Cottonseed oil steady and quiet; crude 3i93zc; yenow siftiaiwc. xauow qniec uosin quiet and steady; strained, common to good 51 ooeii iv. .turpentine ami, steady at K& 4c 'Eggs steady and quiet; western, 20c; receipts, 40,765 packages. Pork quiet and steady. Cutmeats firm, fair demand; middles slow. Lard Nearby firm, new crops sold easier: closed steady, dull; sales, western steam, 86 70; October, 86 63; November, 86 38 6 89, closing at 86 39 bid; December, 86 31; Jannary, 86 296 30, closing at 86 30; Feb ruary, 86 33; March, 86 36 bid. Butter weak and quiet; Elgin, 2525Kc; western dairy, 916c; do creamery. V2(jj2ic; do held at 1219c: do factory. 7H13c Cheese quiet, unsettled; western, 810c Philadelphia Flour quiet but steady. Wheat steady, speculation very tame; sales. ungranea in xwentiein street elevator, soc: No. 2 red October. 83c; December, 84S4; rnrn vavv nnlnfi Diloe track, 41Xc; No. 1 yellow. In Twentieth street elevator, 42c; No. 2 mixed October, 40 40iic: November. 3940kc; December, 39 39?c; Jannary, 38JS9Jic Oats Carlots quiet: prices firm; sales. No. 3 white, 26c; No. 2 white, 28Kc; futures nniet and steady; No. 2 white, October, 27K28e; November, 27V 284c; December, 2S2S&c; January, 2S 29c Milwaukee Flour unchanged. Wheat steady: cash, 73Jjc; December, 75?c Corn nniet: No. 3. 31Kc Oats easier: ; no. 2 white. 21K22c Rye easier; No. 1.42K42c Barley neglected; uctooer. ooc fork, sio ou. 8610. Cheese steady; Cheddars, eXQIOc, Lard, Toledo Cloverseed active and higher: cash, October and November S3 70; March, 83 82. LITE STOCK MAEKETS. The Condition of Business at the East Liberty Stock Yards. Office oFPrrrsiiTnto Dispatch, l Saturday, October 12, 1SS9. CAttxb Receipts, 1,120 head; shipments, 620 head; market nothing doing; all through consignments; 9 cars of cattle shipped to New York to-day. Hoas Receipts. 2,800 head: shipments. 2.600 bead: "market active: Plflladelpbias, fi 60 4 70: best Yorkers,J4 604 70; common York ers, SI 404 65; S cars of hogs shipped to New York to-day. Sheep Receipts, 800 head; shipments, 1,000 bead; market slow; prime, H 704 85; fair to good, ti 654 70; common, f23: lambs, U 5 75. Br Telegrnph. KAUSAH Crrr Cattle Receipts, 4,289 head; shipments. 2,085 head; slow and weak for beef steers, both natives, grass range; good cows steady, common weak; stockers and feeders slow, good to choice cornfed steers, J4 10 4 60. Hogs Receipts, 4,806 bead; shipments, 3,328 head; market weak and 610c lower; heavy and mixed, S3 80Q4 05. Sheen Re ceipts, 1,169 bead; shipments, 116 head; market steady: good to choice muttons, S3 754 25. St. Louis Cattle Receipts; MX) head: ship ments, 1,100 head; market strong; choice heavy native steers, J4 WIS w; tair to gooa, ao. 53 104 00: stockers and feeders, tl 7002 40; range steers, $2 1002 DO. Hogs Receipts, 300 bead; shipments, 1,300 head; market steady; fair to choice heavy, 32 004 20; packing grades, S3 754 10; light, -fair to best, ti 004 30. Sheep Receipts, none; shipments, 400 head; market firm; lair to choice. 3 20 Ml OU. Buffalo Cattle dull; prices irregular? re ceipts, no carloads: sales, 4. Hogs stronger; receipts, 32 carloads through: 35 sale; mediums and heavy, ti 254 60; corn yorkerv H 55 4 60; grassers, 54 604 65pigs, 11 004 4a Four Songs for 83,500. Boston Herald. What a silly old world this isl Fancy giving Patti $28,000 and expenses for eight concerts. Poor FattI, whose voice has reached the stage of mellow decadence and the has-been-great state, and yet she will receive this ram in England before sailing for America. Paving $3,600 for 'four songs is as absurd as paying $110,000 for "The Angelns." No picture ever painted, no voice ever heard, is worth inch prices, and hence the matter-of-fact conclusion that this ukyoj silly old world. )- ;i-s -. w . ! THE TREND OF TBADE. Leading Features of Hide and Har ness Leather Markets. DECLINE 'OF LIGHT WEIGHT HIDES. Dull Season in 'Harness Leather, and 'Stock Accumulating-. QUALITI OF BAEK BELOW AVERAGE Office of Pittsburg Dispatch. Saturday, October 12. 1888. J The buff hide market is off )o the put week. There is no change in heavy steer hides, which are rather scarce. Calfskins are weak and unchanged. Harness leather manufacturers report a slacking up of orders since the first of the month, and trade is not now sufficient to take away the output. It is to be remembered, however, that the ca pacity of the Allegheny harness tanneries has been increased 'oily 25 per cent in the past two years, and that the time of the year is here when orders are uniformly light. The quiet time for harness leather trade is from the beginning of October to January. Until the past week or two the harness leather tanners of Allegheny were working on back orders, and, now that they have caught np, stock begins to accumulate. There is no fear, however, that ail the stock which onr home harness leather makers will be able to turnout won't, in due time, find ready sale, as has been the case in other years, since their products are always at a premium in the world's markets, com manding easily lc per pound Above All Other Brand. "Western harness makers consider it their best card to proclaim that their materials come from Pittsbnrg, and hence, at the first signs of active trade manufacturers here reap the benefit of the activity. There is general complaint of the bark received this season. V.ery little of that coming to onr Allegheny tanners in response to orders last spring is able to pass the inspector as up to the standard. The quantity of bark necessary to do the appointed work this season is mnch above the average owing to damaging effect of rains in the baric regions of West Virginia. While the com plaint comes from the Northwest that there has been too little rain, from onr southern borders comes the opposite complaint of too mnch wet weather- The Harness Gazette, a monthly magazine published in Rome, New York State, in its October number publishes a number of opin ions from our Allegheny tanners, which are here given. "Martin Lappe & Sons report demand all right, but prices discouraging!; low. J. C Lappe reports prices firm, with every indica tion of an advance "Kiefer & Stiefel think demand for good grades is greater than production, but cheaper- grades are neglected. j.nero is every wuicauoii of hicrher Tirices. " "James Callery & Co. report that they are, running to ineir xuu capacity, sua u. ucmwu continues prices will be higher. This market has Less Stock on Hand than for years at this time. Hides are held firm, with slight advance, but harness leather is too low. The meager profit which has been the result of the band-to-mouth business for some time will turn out to be a loss, but there is a ray of hope for the future from present dealings." The same journal quotes in its news from Pittsburg that packers' hides are very firm, and heavy trace leather, as well as heavy steer bides, &rs scarce and firm ; also a better demand for light leather than there was a month ago. J.ne leatnre 01 tne niae ana learner iraao worthy of notice is the closeness of margins, so close that in some lines margins are about obliterated. More goods have been manufactured and. sold by our tanners this year than ever before, but it cannot be said that more money has been made. ' There is harder work at less profit than any year on record in the trade. But the needs of the country are steadily growing; and it Is true of leather as of iron, that bottom has certainly been reached and that any change mnst hence forth be toward higher prices. Whenrthe change comes our home tanners are bound to be among the first to reap the fruits. The following, quotations on hides are fur nished by James Callery A Co.: No. 1 green salted steers, 60 pounds and over............ .......... ....... ...... No. lireen salted cows, all weights. Mo. 1 green salted hides, 40 to flu pounds. . No. I green salted hides, 25 to 40 pounds.. No. 1 green salted bnlls No. 1 green salted calfskins No. t green sal ted veal klDS.". No. 1 green salted runner kips. No. l green steers, 60 pounds and over.... No. 1 green cows, all weights .no. 1 green bulls............ Ho. I green hides. 40 to 80 pounds No. 1 green hides, a to 40 pounds No. 1 green calfskins 8 5 a 4 5 4 3 7 4 4 4 5 4 J JNo. 1 green veal kips No. 1 .green runner xlps. Sheepskins ,.15 90 Reduction for No. 2 stock, l)4c per lb. on steers and light hides, a on bulls and 2c on calfskins. TH1NG8 ARE L0YLT. Local Business of All Kinds, Except Specu lation, In Good Shnpp. Building was active last week, regardless of the weather. The number of permits issued for new houses, mostly medium-sized dwellings, was 65, involving an estimated expenditure of $115,320. The largest permit was taken out by Frazier & "Vetter for six frame two-story dwellings on Evaline street, at a cost of $15,600. F. L. Campe was authorized to erect a brick two-story house on Harchand street. It will cost $10,700. "W. E. & E. G. ATooney propose to build two brick two-story houses on "Westminster street, for which they expect to pay $9,000. Mrs. C. Korehead will put np a two-story brick building on South Hiland avenue at a cost of $6,500, and Mrs, M. J. Hamilton will embellish Fortieth street with a two-story brick at an expense of $5,000. The Clearing'Hruse report for the past week, although not so good as that for the week be fore, is one of the best ot the year. To justify such ngnres requires a vast amount of busi ness. While the present is satisfactory, the future promises even better. Unlike Alexander, local capitalists are finding new worlds to con quer. Tin plate will soon be included among Pittsbnrg industries. The iron mills are run ning night and day, but this does not enable them to keep up with their orders. Immediate deliveries are impossible. The most interesting feature of the stock market during the week was a break in Elec tric, following the announcement of Justice Bradley's adverse decision, and- its rapid recov ery of almost all the lost ground. It was of fered very sparingly and closed steady; al though a trifle under the best figure ot the rally. Largs amounts would bring par, or thereabouts. La Norla closed a little better than the lowest of the week on good buying, principally, outside the Exchange. Fluctua tions in the rest of the list were small and with out significance, the' only stocks showing any improvement being Philadelphia Gas and-Cen-tral Traction. Petroleum was dull and featureless all week until yesterday, wben there was a little spurt in the market which carried it above the dollar mark for a few minutes, bnt business was too llgfft to sustain the advance, and the price dropped to tl 00, where it stood at the close. In regard to local realty and the outlook therefor, the Real Estate Record and Builders Guild has this to say: "There have been many transactions conducted so quietly that few sur mised that anything worth noting was on the carpet The transfers tell the story. Tbey demonstrate that instead of a decline in values property is holding its own everywhere. We cannot find In any locality any signs of weakness. We observe some districts where the movement Is very slow, bnt prices are firm. On the other band. In many places, there Is a positive advance a stiffening all around. Everything is favorable for the continuance of the conditions which have improved tbe real estate market within tbe past year. "The acreage removed from tbe market by people who are building homes and dwellings f or renting purposes Is so great that the prices of unimproved land Instead of diminishing are Increased in the majority of instances. The effect of unexampled building operations upon the nnlmproved realty is not easily estimated. It is more difficult than to estimate tbe amount ol unimproved realty that has been placed I upon the market within a year. One tains ts evident All the EBimpreved realty alesg tfce lines of the rapid transit roads, espeelaHr the more available building eltes, has been ab sorbed, and much interest Is manifested in ad joining property. It seems to ns that she sole question a man has to answer aad each mast answer It for himself and la his owa .way is, whether the amount of unimproved realty that may be offered within a year will operate in a way to lessen prices. We do not think it will." Business at the Stock Exchange was satisfac tory for Saturday,-when little is expected besides figures. There was a good demand for bank and insurance stocks, and tbey held their own and a little more in the bidding, but there were no transactions. They are good invest ments; and holders show no disposition to make concessions. The inside feeling on Electric was slightly weaker, if anything, probably as a natural reac tion from the sharp recovery from the depres sion Immediately following the announcement of Justice Bradley's decision. It could have been bought, probably, in small lots at a frac tion above 49, against sales at 48 on Friday. Large blocks wonlothava brought more. The stock Is being handled so carefully that there Is very little danger of a reaction. The following table snows the prices orkeme stocks on the New York Stock Kxenange yester day. Corrected dally for THI Disfatcb by Wmmxi i. BTXTHXMBOir. oldest Vltuburr mem bers or Hew York Stock Exchange, 7 Fourth aTe nne: Open lor. .. 43 .. 2SK .. 70W Am. Cotton On. ... Attn.. Top. tc a. r, Canadian r'adflc ., Canada Southern... Central orNew Jersey.l26i Central Paelfi Chesapeake A Ohio.. Mi C Bur. Qul&er. ....les a. Mil. A 8t. fan!.... 71H C jiu. a st. !-. pr....m C Boct.1. 1 99 c.. at. l. ritu C, St. L. ftPltts. PC. .... C St. F..M.0 C. ft Northwestern 112 1M ltt C. 4 .Northwestern, pf.l l, V., V. A 1..... c, c, c l, pr, .... 1U .... )J 3 ikh. ai s iron .... Col. Hocking Val Del., L.&W. VSH Uel. & Hudson , .... DtnrtT&moa Denver ft lo U.. pi... ..- E.T.. Va. ftUa - 1M E.T..Va. G. 1st pr. . K. T.. Va. ftOa. 2dpf. SM Illinois Ontral...... .... Lake Erie ft Western.. 18tf Lake IMe ft West. or. Lake Shore ft M. 8 VSKi LouhrvllleftNasDvllle. 7VH Mlchlnn central.. .... l lex 1&5K M6 79 Mobile Ohio Mo.. Han. Texas Missouri faclflo 70V ft. Y.. L.B.A rY N.T.,L.K.W.pref. ft. X.. Ga ft St. Ij....., .... ft. x., o. ft st. l. pr. M.X.. O. ASt.li.Mpr .... N. TC ft N. E VH ft. r.. o. ft w - lax ftorrolkft Western Norfolk Western, 01 .... Northern Fadfle Nortnern f aclfle met. 7 Ohio ft Mississippi...- TZJi Oregon Improvement. .. . Oregon Transcon. MH PacilloJUaU S2X Feo. Dec. Kvn... .... PhUadel. ft Beading.. 4Mf Pullman Palace Car... .... Rlehmona A W. P. T.. & s& 4SX 5 741, m 5X KicnmonaA w.i'.'i'.ni St. P., Minn, ft Man..lIS St. li. ft San rran pr. si.ii. A Dan jr. lit pi;. ... Texas Faclflo 131 Union Faclflc 64 Wabasn Wabash preferred..... ilH Western Union Kit Wheeling ft U ...... To) Sugar Trust... i . as National Lead Trust.. 22X Chicago Gas Trait Ex. -dividend. 665, MX iiH si M S5H 71 70)i Closing Bond Quotations. V. S. ,rejv. 127 U. S. 4s. coun 127 M.K. AT. Gen. M Mutual Union Ss... .67 .163 U. B. 4Ms, reg. WW V. S. 45. coup.... 105)4 Faclflc s of '9S. IIS Loulslanastampedis I6)i Missouri 6 101H a. j. cut. Cert.. .113 Northern Fac. lsu..mtf Northern Fac.2ds..lll Northw't'n consols. 145 Northw'n deben'i.JI4V xenn. new set. ns... juj Tenn. new set. Ss.. ..101 Oregon ft Trans. 6s.l04 SUL.AI.M. Uen.& SiSa St.UAS.ir. Gen.il.llS Su Faul consols ....138 St-FL UhlftPe.lsta.llsK Tenn. new set as.... HH uanaaa so. mi mm Cen. FaclflclsU 11 (it lien. A K. ., Isu.13i Tx.. FC.L.O.TT Bs.SOK Den. AB. U.U.... 7sSrrx.,Fe.K.6.Tr.KeU 74 D.ftB.Q.Wt.lst8. 110 union i'ac. isis...iuh West Shore JS9 Erie, 2ds W4M U.K. AT. Gen. 6s.. 63J4 Batan Stocks. Atcfa.Top..latTs. 103 A.T. LandGr't7s.ioo Wis. On oral. com... 2SX AUouezMg-Co jl Calunset necla....I franklin.... 9 Huron ........... 34 Osceola. 30 Fewable m Quinsy 49 Bell Teiepnone... ..1S9JW Bo.lonl.and. ........ s Water .Power....... su Atch. 4 Top. B. B... 28X Boston A Albany.. .215 Boston ft Maine.. ...n; V. A. U... ltt) Eastern K. B IDS Flint Jf ere M. oM. 9SH jaexicanuen. com.. Jf)4 ilex.C.lstmtfr. bds. GSM . r. AewlCna-... u N. Y. 4 N. E. 7S....I27 Old Colony. 174 Tamaraet.... ........ 186 ban Diego S FUIadelpUa Stocks. Closing quotations of Philadelphia stocks, tar nished by Whitney J: Stephenson, brokers. No. 57 Fourth avenue. Members New York Block ix cbanre, Pennsylvania JtaUroad...........-...v UH Beading , SH Lehlxh Valley .' UH Lehigh .Navigation....... ...... suj U.Oo.'s New Jersey.. ...... .............. .228 Aortnern raclflo.....-1. K Nortnern faclflo preferred i... 7)j Saturday's Oil Ranee. Corrected dally by John M. Oasiey fc Co., 46 Sixth street, members of tbe Pittsburg Petro leum exchange. Onened.. MHILowest sav lavilUosed. ISO t ' Barrels. Hlzbest.. Averajce runs. ....... 51.775 Averaze shipment 79,860 Average charters 43,154 Befined, Mew York. 7c. ltnne,- London. 5 7-lSd. Beflned, Antwerp. I7Hr. Beflned. Liverpool, S)id. A. B. McGrew & Co. quote: Puts, KUc: calls, Jl 001 OOJf. Hit It the First Time. Philadelphia Becord.I t Being asked the name of the world's greatest composer, a smart university young man said: "Chloroform." THE SHOE BRUSH GONE L i wont miss it, lor i nave long since adopted an easier and cleanlier way. A bottle of WoIff'sAGMEBIacking and a sponge to keep my shoes washed clean, save a deal of labor and shoe leather, Sold by Shoe Stores, Grocers, Druggists, ta. The best Harness Dressing in the world. WtLFF Jt RANIOLPH. rWKLHHU KWTSU T I. .. V WHOLESALE HOUSE. JOSEPH HORNE & CO., Cor. Wood and Liberty Sts., Importers and Jobbers of ,. Special offerings tula week is SILKS, PLUSH3S, DEESSGOODSi . ' " SAOTHNS, SHBRSUOKWB, Gm&HsIS, PRINTS, audOHEVlOTa For Urges assortment and lowest prices eall and teens. WHOLESsUElXCLUSIVELY xeX-itt-a fej. i I I ! V n& ' -i i n w ts new, K fr ?i?.l&m -& WW Eight years ago oaeer' eaaeoaaylewsr Up. It took off my tracer ) frees oae s44e M the other, and down to zsy cftin. I tad K . treated by burning, and got so weak Stat I dM nottblBk that I could stand it moeh tonfor.H After much suffering I discarded ar eerr treatment, and began takln Bwtftf9esHU. and the cancer soon begaa to beat, sad ssta short time It was completely beaied asslnt entirely well. It is now over three yean sfcMe, ' I got well, and there has been bo Hra ef aajr return of the-disease. I knew; it was oaiesn . and I know it was cured alose by S. 8. 8. ." E. V, FjtBBAND, RfHtOH, La. Treatise on Cancer mailed free. The Swot Spsctfio Co. Jlrawer aLAitsaisw Ga. aalMS-xwT fJELtfiyWMEl 512 AND SI4 SMITH FIELD STRCET, r IthwiaMnf n n f TJuVuur aosMKii a uwrm ovum, -mmmii AKMintt nllrttju9 Tana "' l- - ' --"--' tit Credit, for use ot. trarelersL suut y J cial Credits, v ' IN ETTBBLIMGi j j- Available la all jWts.of Mm werteV JUwmwsxE tvieaiss UT DOIiLAKS For use In this country, Canada, Xesieev Wesl jjue9f cwHifl ana lieotnu Asesmv asT-ai-jcwrl ARMOUR'S : EXTRACT OF BEEF.V aau ARMOUR & CO., -CHEAag BULK -MAJMUlTAl-njUUimJ. This is now conceded to be -the beat i market, is witnessed by ta laattfeatwel lust secured the DIPLOMA FOR MX.C LENCEatthePare Food Bxy osiMom. w I CLEANLY IN MANUFACTURE. SUPERIORTX QlPAI And with the bright appetisiBjcStVweii' lyroastea oeei. REM14MBER. ijS-19-XWT JTSDEUXr TITLE AND TBUf T Oft, Foarth aT " rOKBALtfPS.1 JL 121 ana ub r o CanKal 66O.0fla INSURES TITLES TO Acts in all fiduciary capaoltl eg. able investment securities. Beat superior vault from Jo per aranm apward. X Receives deposits and loans oaqr est a traces and approved collaterals. Tntriom Tknonir -- JAMES J. DONNBLL. T.M?swtt.Vi4 . u.u.jucvA.x,isec'yaaaxieasv an2ftJ0K-M BH8KIXS FINANCIAL. TTTTjiTNEx: & STEPHENSON, 7FOURTH AT5HT7K. Issue travel erg credits through Win is ss. Hornxua,xewxorjc. xtusjiohs - JOHM M. OAKLEY fc-M, - BANKESS AND BBO: Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Petroteam. r. Private wire to New York s --!fc- 45 SIXTH ST, Pitts. f A Home raeuifi Rye Per Cent Ini FREEOF'T&XES vft - nrf - .. t J, Tbe Fidelity Title and TTast for sale, at SI 0SK and aeersed iiea,nusioerol 90-yersm me xx. w. s ncs iose .lim stock ot which is SoLOeftMCf allr i These bonds are redeemable by tuna at the rate of siwiooq peraanast; commencing July L 1894. interest bets semi-annually, January ana Jury rnucQ oi sou cdapany. We bave carefully examined bate tba ness of this security, and can recoaiuieaa one otthe'most desirable investments am market. FIDELITY TITLE 4 TRUST COM 131 138 Fourth a SCI54B Pitt; MEDICAL. DOCTOR -j WHITTIER 814 PENS AraUDE,nTTfc&B84J.rt. As old residents snow ana back m burg papers prove, is tbe oldest and most prominent physician In tl voting special attention, to all ehroale TpSrSNOFhtliNTILC ;d MCDnilCand mental diseases IILIIiuuu decay, nervous de energy, am Dillon ana nope, impaired msmoryya disordered sight, self distrust. IwsMwl dizziness, sleeplessness, plmpUa.ercprisas, k-1 poverished blood, failing powsn,OTsJsAit we- J nese, ayspepsia, coBsnpaueB, i fitting tbe person for basineasLSoaiety Lsoetesy -iiWuaar- riage, permanently, safely and privately i BLUOD AND SKIN.aSr diseases blotches, falling hair, bones, paras, swelling, ulcerations of toei ras: nicers. oia sores, arir cores poisons thoroughly eradkat poisons thorongl URINARY, ily eradicated: from tbej ?.. . . f .i j . kidney and Madder meats, weak baekvi tarrhal discharges, inflammation painful symptoms receive searching Ue prompt relief and real cures. Dr. Whlttier's life-long, extensive ence. Insures scientific and reliable tn on common-sense principles Cesealtattetifne.' Patients at a distance as earef aUy treated aK, here, umce nours ju at. w s r. jc 10 a. h. to 1 y. n. only. DK. WHII Penn avenue, Pittsburg, Pa. ocS-t&DSn-wk BRAY'S SPECIFIC EWCW CURES - J NERVOUS BCBIXITY.' LUSI VIUUK. LOSS OF MEMORY. mil psrtleBlars la pjqaMes I sent free. The senatee iflylfj Bpccinc soia oy aruagnts qMrB vellow wranner. Pnee. sliaaea , package, or six for Ss, or trjaaM UK THE GRAY MEDICINE CO., BtiaWe. S.-I" on reeeini ot nnoe. or HHai. Sold in Pittsbnrg by S. 3. HOLLAJfD. etnMT': Salthftrlrt and Liberty sts, apsl SsM DOCTORS LAKE SPECIALISTS In aM oat nnlrini? selentillo and eo tlal treatment! Dr.' 8.X. iafca, M. E. C.P. 8 iathe oMett'Wti most experienced speesaUHJaj tne city. lossojQHKm use if strictly confidential. "OAs hours 9 to 4 and 7 to 8 P. St.; Sundajs, 2ta 4 1 K. Consult them personally, or write. BeeMa Lake, as Penn ave Pittsburg; Pa. Jel2-&DWK ?a fleMh-fciivr ' w " " .i. TTJZ. ccmpouK 4. of CottotrBeet. Peaayroyai a recent oase are. Effectual. Prise seated. ladles, ask voar dnuwtet-l Coton Soot Compoand aa4 take aer; or laoiose x stamps tor seosei ima POND LILY CO SIP. Meek, Iffl Woodward ave Dearest, 49-Seld la PittebarC Pa-, ay Jwsfc Iflfi a raws, uww ami jsaimw ns, Ufc 2jflBm a wm JEf JM tfOJ -F- S , -A..a l .,& . fc .&&&& &M& 9aMBnH9HBBIr9E9sEVB99HSi