Pittsburg dispatch. (Pittsburg [Pa.]) 1880-1923, May 05, 1890, Page 7, Image 7

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THIS LIFE'S PERILS.
A Masterly Sermon by Dr. Talmajje
on Dangers Surrounding Men
IN THEIR EYERY-DAT VOCATIONS.
Temptations That Threaten to Destroy Both
Body and SonL
THE ' PITTSBURG- DISPATCH, MONDAY, MAT 5, 1890.
HOW PERFECT SAFETI MAT BE FOUXD
rerrcrAL txleoraic to toe Disr.iTcn.1
Brooklyn, May 4. Alter the long
meter coxology and appropriate hymns had
been "sung by the congregation, in the
Academy of Music, and prayer had been
offered. Dr. Talmage preached on "Narrow
Escapes," taking as his text Job xix20, "I
am escaped with the skin of my teeth."
Following is his sermon in full:
Job had it hard. What with boils and be
reavements and nankruptcy, and a fool of a
wife, he wished be was dead; and I do Lot
blame him. His flesh was gone, and his bones
were dry. His teetli wasted away until nothing
bat the enamel seemed left. Ha cries out, "I
am escaped with the skin of my teeth." There
has been some difference of opinion about this
passage. St Jerome and Scbultens, and
Drs. Good and Foole and Barnes,
hare all tried their forceps on Job's teeth. You
deny my interpretation, and say. "What did
Job know about the enamel of the teeth 7'' He
knew everything about it. Dental surgery Is
almost as old as the earth. The mummies of
Egypt- thousands of years oM. are found with
gold-filling in their teeth. Ovid and Horace
and Solomon and Moses wrote about these im
portant factors of the body. To other provok
ing complaints. Job, I think, has added an exas
perating toothache, and putting his band
against the inflamed face, he says, "I am es
caped with the skin of my teeth."
A Tery narrow escape, you say, for J ob's body
andsonl; but there are thousands of men who
make just as narrow escapes for their soul.
There was a time when the partition between
them and ruin was no thicker than a tooth's
enamel: bat as Job finally escaped, so have
iney. xnauK uoa: mau&uoa:
SATED AS Br FIEE.
Paul expresses the same idea by a different
figure when be says that some people are
"saved as by fire." A vessel at sea Is in flames.
You go to the stern of the vessel. The boats
have shoved off. Tho flames advance: you can
endure the beat no longer on your face. Ynu
slide down on the side of the vessel, and hold
on with your fingers until the forked tongue of
the fire begins to lick the back of your hand,
and you feci that you must fall, when one of
the lifeboats comes back and the passengers
say they think they have room for one more.
The boat swings under you, you drop into it,
you are saved. So some men are pursued bv
temptation until they are partially consumed,
but, after all. get off "saved as by Arc." But
I like the figure of Job a little better than that
of Paul, because the pulpit has not worn it
out; and I want to show ) ou. if God will help,
that some men make narrow escape for their
souls, and are saved as '-with the skin of their
teeth."
It is as easy for some people to look to the
Cros as for you to look to this pulpit. Mild,
gentle, tractable, loving, jou expect them to
become Christians. You go over to the store
and say. "Grandon joined the church jester
day." Your business comrades say, "That is
jnst what micht have been expected; he always
was of that turn of mind " In youth, tbis per
son whom I describe was always good. He
never broke things. He never laughed when it
was improper to langh. At 7. he could sit an
hour in church, perf ectly quiet, looking neither
to the right hand nor to the left, but straight
into the eyes of the minister, as though he un
derstood the whole discussion about the
eternal decrees. He never upset things nor
lost them. He floated into the kingdom of
God so gradually that it is uncertain just when
the matter was decided.
Here is another one. who started in life with
an uncontrollable spirit. He kept the nursery
In an uproar. His mother found him walking
on the edge of the house-roof to see if he could
balance himself. There was no horse that
ha dared not ride no tree he could not climb.
His boyhood was a long
SERIES OP medicaments;
his manhood was reckless; his mid-life very
wayward. But now he is converted, and you
go over to the store and say, "Arkwright joined
the chnrch yesterday." Your friends say, "It
Is not possible! You must be joking." You
say: "No; I teU you the truth. He joined the
church." Then they reply, 'There is hepe for
any of us if old Arkwright has become a Chris
tian!" In other words, we will admit that it is
more difficult for some men to accept the
gospel than for others.
I may be preaching to some who have cut
loose from churches and Bibles and Sundays,
ana who have come in here w ith no intention
of becoming Christians themselves, bnt just to
see what is going on; and yet j ou may find your
self escaping, before you leave this house, as
'with the skin of your teeth." I do not expect
to waste this hour. I have seen boats go off irom
Cape May or Long Branch, and drop their nets,
and after awhile come ashore, pulling in the
nets, without havinc cauirht a sinrl fish Tt
was not a good day, or they had not the right
kind of a net. But we expect no such excur
sion to-day. The water is full of fish, the wind
is in the right direction, the gospel net is
strong. Oh Thou who didst help Simon and
Andrew to fish, show us to-day how to cast the
net on the ncht side of thn shin'
Some of you, incoming to God, will have to
run against skeptical notions. It is useless for
people to say sharp and cutting things to those
who reject the Christian religion. I cannot say
such things. By what process of temptation or
trial or betrayal you have come to your present
state I know not. There are two gates to your
nature the gate of the head and the gate of
the heart. The gate of your head is locked
with bolts and bars that an archangel could
much in it! Do you not think, upon tho
whole, that Its influence has been beneficent?
I come to you with both bands extended toward
you. In one hand I have the Bible, in the other
I have nothing. This Bible, in one hand I will
surrender for ever just as soon as in my other
hand you can put a book that is better. To
day I invite yon back into the good old
fashioned religion of yonr fathers to the God
whom tbey worshipped, to tbe Bible they read,
to tbe promises on which tbey leaned, to tba
cross on which they hnngtheir eternal expecta
tions. You have not been happy a day since
you swung oil: you will not be happy a minute
until you swing back.
Again: There may be some of you wbo, in tbe
attempt after a Christian life, will have to run
against powerful passions and appetite. Per
haps it is a disposition to anger that you have
to contend against: and perhaps, while in a very
serious mood, you hear of something that
makes you feel that you must swear or die. I
know a Christian man who was once so ex
asperated that he said to a mean customer, "I
cannot swear at jou myself, for I am a member
of the church; but ir you will go down stairs
my partner in business will swear at you." All
your good resolutions heretofore have been
SOMEESET COTJKTY CHANGES.
not break, but
THE GATE OP YOUE HEABT
swings easily on its hinges. If I assaulted your
body with weapons you would meet me with
weapons, and it would be sword stroke for
sword stroke, and wound for wound, and blood
for blood; but if I come and knock at the door
of your house you open it and give me the best
seat in your parlor. If I should come to you
now with an argument you would answer me
with argument: if with sarcasm you would meet
me with sarcasm; blow for blow, stroke for
stroke: but when I come and knock at the door
of yonr heart you open it and say, "Come in
my brother, and tell me all you know about
Christ and heaven."
Listen to tn o or three questions! Are you as
happy as you used to be when you believed In
the truth of the Christian religion? Would
you like to have your children travel on in tho
road in which you are now traveling! You had
a relative who professed to be a Christian and
was thoroughly consistent, living and dying in
the faith of the gospel. Would you not like to
live tbe same quiet life, and die the same
peaceful death! I have a letter, sent roe bv
one who has rejected the Christian religion. It
saj s: "I am old enough to know that the joys
and pleasures of life are evanescent and to
realize the fact that it must be comfortable, in
ola age to believe in something relative to the
future, and to have a faith in some system
that proposes to save. I am free to
comess mat j. would be happier if I
could exercise the simple and beantiful faith
that is possessed bv many whom I know I
P not willingly out of the church or out of
tbe faith. My state of uncertainty is one of
unrest. Sometimes 1 doubt my immortality
and look upon the death-bed as the closing
scene, after which there is nothing. What shall
I do that I baye not doner Ah! skepticism is
a dark and doleful land. Let me say that this
Bible is either true or false. If it be false, we
are as well off as you; if it be true, then which
of us is safer?
Let me also ask whether your trouble has not
been that you confounded Christianity with
the inconsistent character of some wbo profess
it? You are a lawyer. In your profesion
there are mean and dishonest men. Is that
anything against the law? You are a doctor
There arc unskilled and contemptible men in
your profession. Is tbat anything against
medicine? You are a merchant. There are
THIEVES AND DEFRAUDEES
in your business. Is that anything against
merchandise? Behold, then, the unfairness of
charging upon Christianity the wickedness of
Its disciples. We admit some of the charges
against those who profess religion. Some of
the most gigantic swindles of the present day
have been carried on by members of the
church. There are men standing in the front
rank in the churches wbo would not be trusted
for $5 without good collateral security. They
leave their business dishonesties in the vesri-
ouie oi mo church as they go in and sit at tbe
communion. Having concluded the sacra
ment, they get up. wipe the wine from their
lips, go out, and take up their sins where they
left off. To serve the devil is their regular
work: to servo God. a sort of play-spelL With
a Sunday sponge tbey expect to wipe off from
their business slate all the past week's iucon
sistencies. You have no more right to take
such a man's lire as a specimen of religion than
you have to take tbe twisted irons and split
timbers that lie on tbe beach at Coney Island
..umra oi an American snip. It is time
that we draw a line between religion and the
Xrallties of those who profess it.
Do you not feel that the Bible, take Itall.in
sol, is about the best book that the world has
ever seen? Do yon know any book that has as
TORN TO TATTEES .
by explosion of temper. Now there is no barm
in getting mad if you only get mad at sin. You
need to bridle and saddle those hot-breathed
passions, and with them ride down injustice
and wrong. There are a thousand things in the
world that we ought to be mad at. There is.no
harm In getting red-hot if you only bring to the
forge that which needs hammering. A man
wbo has no power of righteous indignation is
an imbecile. But be sure it is a righteous in
dignation, and not a pctulancy that blurs and
unravels and depletes the soul.
There is a large class of persons in mid-life
who have still in them appetites tbat were
aroused in early manhood, at a time when tbev
prided themselves on being a "little fast,"
"high livers." "free and easy," "hail-fellow
well met." Thev are now paying, in compound
interest, for troubles they collected 20 years
ago. Some of you are trying to escape, and
you will yet very narrowlv. "as with the skin
of your teeth." God and your own soul only
know what the struggle is. Omnipotent grace
has pulled out many a soul that was deeper in
the mire than you are. They line the beach of
heaven the multitude wnom God has rescued
from the thrall of suicidal habits. If you this
day turn your back on the wrong and start
anew God will help you.
If. with all tbe influences favorable for a
right Hie, men make so many mistakes, bow
much harder it is when, for instance, some
appetite thrusts Its iron grapple into the roots
of the tongue, and pulls a man down with
hands of destruction! If. under such circum
stances, he break away, there will be no sport
in tbe undertaking, no holiday enjoyment, but
a struggle in which tbe wrestlers move from
side to side, and bend and twist, and watch for
an opporrunity to get in a heavier stroke, until
with one final effort, in which tbe muscles are
distended, and tbe veins stand out, and the
blood starts, tbe swarthy habit falls under the
knee of the victor escaped at last as "with the
EKin oi nis teetn."
There are men wbo have been capsized of
of evil passions, and capsized mid-ocean, and
tbey are a thousand miles away from any
shore of help. They have for years been try
ing to dig their way out They have been dig
ging away, and digging away, but they can
never be delivered unless they will hoist
SOME SIGNAL OF -DISTRESS.
However weak and feeble It may be, Christ
will see it, and bear down upon tho helpless
craft and take them on board; and it will be
known in earth and in heaven how narrowly
tbey escaped "escaped as with the skin of
their teeth." There are others who in at
tempting to come to God must run be
tween a great many business perplexities.
It a man go over to business at 10
o'clock in the morning, and come away at 3
o'clock in the afternoon, he has some time for
religion; but how shall you find time for relig
ious contemplation when you aro driven from
sunrise to sunset and have been for five years
going behind in business, and are frequently
dnnned by creditors whom you cannot pay, and
when, from Monday morning until Saturday
night you are dodging bills that you cannot
meet? You walk day by day in uncertainties
that have kept your brain on fire for the past
three years. Some wltbl ess business troubles
than vou have gone crazy. The clerk has heard
a noise lu the back counting room and gone in
and found the chief man of i he firm a raving
maniac; or the wife has heard the bang
oi a pistol in ine oacK rianor and gone
in stumbling over the dead boay or
her husband a suicide. There are
in this house to-dav 300 men pursued, harassed,
trodden down, and scalped, of business per
plexities, and which way to turn next they do
not know. Now God will not be hard on you.
He knows what obstacles are in tbe way of
your being a Christian, and your first effort in
the right direction He will cron with success.
Do not let Satau, with cotton bales and kegs
and hogsheads and counters and stocks of un
salable goods block up your way to heaven.
Gatber up all your energies. Tighten tbe
girdle about your loins. Take an agonizing
look into tbe face of God, and then say, "Here
goes one grand effort lor life, eternal I" and
then bound away for heaven, escaping as "with
tbe skin of your teeth."
In tbe last day it will be found that Hugh
Latimer and Jobn Knox and Huss and Ridley
were not tbe greatest martyrs, hut Christian
men who went up incorrupt from the contami
nations and perplexities of- Wall street Water
street Pearl street. Broad street State street
and Third street On earth they were called
bi okers, or stock-jobbers, or retailers, or im
porters; but in heaven Christian heroes. No
lagots were heaped about their feet; no inquisi
tion demanded from them recantation: no sol
dier aimed a pike at their heart: but thev had
mental tortures, compared with which all physi
cal consuming is as the breath of a spring
morning.
A PERSECUTED CLASS.
I find in the community a large class of men
who have been so cheated, so lied about so
outrageously wronged, that they have lost their
faith in everything. In a world where every
thing seems so topsy-turvoy they do not see
how there can be any God. They are confound
ed and frenzied and misanthropic. Elaborate
arguments to prove to them the truth of Chris
tianity, or the truth of anything else, touch
them nowhere. Hear me. all such men. 1
preach to you no rounded periods, no ornamen
tal discourse, but put my hand on your shoul
der and invite you into tbe peace of tbe gospel.
Here is a rock on which you may stand firm,
though tbe waves dash against it harder than
tbe Atlantic pitching its surf clear above Ed
dystone Lighthouse. Du not charge upon God
all these troubles of the world. As long as tbe
world stuck to God, God stuck to the world;
but the earth seceded from His government,
and henco all these outrages and all these woes.
God is good. For many hundreds of years He.
has been coaxing tbe world to come back to
Him: but tbe more He has coaxed, the more
violent have men been in their resistance, and
they have stepped back and stepped back until
tbey have dropped into ruin.
Try this God, ye who have had the blood
hounds after you, and who have thought that
God had forgotten you. Try Him and see if
He will not help. Try Him and see if He will
not pardon. Try Him and see if He will not
save. The flowers of spring have no bloom so
sweet as the flowering of Christ's affections.
The sun batb no warmth compared with the
glow of His heart The waters have no re
freshment like the fountain that will slake the
thirst of thy soul. At the moment tbe rein
deer stands with bis Up and nostril tbrust in
the cool mountain torrent tbe hunter may be
coming through the thicket Without crack
ling a stick under his foot he .comes close by
the stag, aims his gun, draws the trigger and
the poor thing rears in its death agony and falls
backward, its antlers crashing on the rocks;
but the panting heart tbat drinks from the
water brooks of God'spromise shall never be
lauuiy wouuaea ana snail never die.
SEEK FEACE FROM GOD.
This world is a poor portion for your souL oh
business man! An Eastern king had graven on I
nis tomo two nngers, represented as sounding
upon each other with a snap, and under them
tbe motto, "All is not worth tbat" Apicius
Ccelins hanged himself because his steward in
formed him that he had only 80,000 sterling
left All of this world's riches make but a
small inheritance for a souL Robespierre at
tempted to win the applause of the world: but
when be was dying; a woman came rushing
through the crowd, crying to bim, "Murderer
of my kindred, descend to bell, covered with
the curses of every mother in France!" Many
who have expected tbe plaudits of the 'world
have died under its Anathema Maranatba,
Oh. find your pece in God. Make one strong
pull tor heaven. No half-war work will do it
Ihere sometimes comes a time ou shipboard
when everything must be sacrificed to save tho
passengers. Tbe cargo is nothing, the rigging
nothing. The Captain puts the trumpet to his
lip and shunts, "Cut away tbe mast!" Some of
you have been tbssed and driven, and yon have
in your effort to keep the world, wellnigh lost
your soul. Until you have decided this mat
ter, let everything else go. Overboard with all
those other anxieties and hardens! You will
u4eioarop tbe sails of your pride, and cut
away the mast With one earnest crv for belli,
put your cause Into the hand of Him who
helped Paul out of tbe breaker of Melita. and
who. above tbe shrill ahit nf , ..,h...
tempest that ever blackened tbe sky or shook
ocean, can hear the faintest imploration for
mercy.
I shall go home to-day feeling that some of
lm' ' IZ considered your case hopeless.
W'ilJ.e.art Kain,and that with a blood
red earnestness such as vou have never ex
penenced before, you will start for Uie good
land or the gospel-at last to look back, saving.
"WbS? v,5Je,r l rauI -Umost lost bit
saved! Just got through, and no morel Es
caped by tbe skin of my teeth.
The Coming County Convention Promise! lo
be nn Interesting Event.
rSPICUH. TZLXOKAU TO TUX DISPATCH.
Bedford. May 4. "While the contest be
tween an army of candidates will make the
coming county convention decidedly inter
estiiif; the question of instructing delegates
to the State Convention is just now occupy
ing the attention of the politicians. The
county, it is said, has been set up lor Dela
mater, but there is a possibility that the
scheme will miscarry.
Charles "W". Stone is anxious for the dele
gates and Longenecker is Stone's deputy.
It would be very mortifying to the latter if
he were unable to control his own county for
Stone, and it goes without saying that he
will leave no stone unturned to secure the
delegates.
John Cessna's candidacy for Congress has
suddenly taken on a hopeful aspect A few
weeks ago no one had any idea he would be
nominated, but he seems to have taken ad
vantage of the sunshiny weather to make
hay industriously. One of the rumors is
that J. D. Hicks', who has Blair county's
instructions, will turn his strength oyer" to
Cessna at the proper time. It is also said
that Mr. Scull is thinking seriously of the
advisability or withdrawing from the con
test, and it is conceded that with Scull out
of the way Somerset will go for Cessna.
A TBHTIKG DISPUTE
DOMESTIC MARKETS.
Choice Yegetabfes and Berries Still in
Scant Supply-
FIKST-CLASS S1UFF FIRMLY HELD.
Shell
Corn Weak, and Lower, bnt Other
Cereals Are Steady.
FL0DE IS LIKELT TO ADVANCE SOON
Ends In n Pistol Shot nnd a Death nt
Allnntn.
Atlanta, May 4. At the European
Hotel to-day M. Goldman, of Memphis,
shot J. "W. Howard, of St. Louis, and How
ard will die. Both men are strangers here
and there is a mystery over the shooting
which is yet unsolved. Howard, though
conscious, would pay nothing except that
his real name is Edward Skinner, and his
brother-in-law, named S. O. Doan, is in
Sherman, Tex.
The shooting was deliberately done. The
men came here together and were on appar
ently good terms. They went to Goldman's
room and the door had been closed but a
minute when the shots were heard. Gold
man walked out into the hall, and in the
confusion made his escape. Goldman and
Howard, as thev were known here, had been
in Atlanta at intervals since April 16.
They were believed to be showmen.
PEDAGOGUES IM POLITICS.
A Lively Foar-Coracrcd Flslit for Superin
tendent of Olercer.
'SPECIAL TELEOBAM. TO THE DISPATCH.
Meecer, May i The canvass for the
office of County Superintendent to be filled
on Tuesday next for the next three years
uas Dcen carriea on in dead earnest for the
past two weeks. The candidates are M. E.
Hess. Sandy Lake; H. P. McMichael,
Stoneboro; G. H. Lamb, Mercer; L-. E.
Eckels, Fredonia, and G, H. Bell, Wheat
land all principals of the schools of their
respective towns.
The best information leads to the opinion
that the contest will end between McMichael
and Eckels, though Hess has a number of
strong friends pushing his claims. Lamb
entered tbe field a little too late.
GOSSIP OF MUSICAL CIRCLES.
Miss Agnes Vogel has been engaged to
sing at a school commencement at Greenville
Pa., on the ISth Inst
Miss Ltjella Totten, who has baen prose
cuting her piano studies under Mr.W. H. Sher
wood, of Chicago, has come home for a brief
holiday.
Shakespeare's "Tempest" with the new
music by Wilhelm Taubert. was produced at
the P.oyal Theater, Berlin, for tbe first time on
the 8th mst. with great success.
Miss Agnes Vogel, Mr. Carl Better and
Mr. Harrv B. Brocket! contributed tbe excep
tionally fine musical programme for tbe Art
Society's reception at tho Pittsburg Club Thea
ter on Friday evening.
Miss Elizabeth Norcross, daughter of
the Rev. Dr. Norcross. of the Pittsburg Fe
male College, has gone to Jersey City as lead
ing soprano of the Hedding M. E. Cbnrcb. The
ATews of that citv speaks in the highest terms
of Miss Norcross success at a concert given
there a week or so ago.
Edottakd Stbauss and his famous or
chestra leave Vienna to-day fortbeir American
tour. If they get past Collector Ehrhardt's mu.
slcal examination, thpv will be in Pittsburg for
three concerts in the Exposition building. May
28 and 27. The local management gives assur
ance tbat any doubts that may have arisen as to
the transformation of Machinery Hall Into a
concert hall by that date, are now set at rest
The close of the ninth season of tho Boston
Symphony Orchestra which last week started
upon the Western tour which brines It to Pltt.
burg for tbe Mozart Club concerts on the 19th
and 20th inst gives occasion for an extraordin
ary amount of gratnlatlons by the journals of
the Hub. The Traveller devotes about four
columns last Monday to a laudatory review of
tbe final concert a summary of the season, a
description of tbe personnel of the orchestra,
and a forecast of the tour to be begun that
day. Mr. Niklsch gets enough praise on all
hands to turn his head.
The Zitterbart Orchestra gives its first con
cert on Thursday, the 15th inst. at Old City
Hall. Some 30 players all but three or four of
them amateur make up this band, which has
oeen arnica lor a year or more by Mr. Fidelus
Zitterbart Jr. For this concert the orchestral
numbers will be: Schubert's unfinished Sym
phony in B minor and two MS. compositions bv
Mr. Zitterbart the "Domitian" overture
(first time) and a fantasia entitled "A Child's
Dream." Mr. Zitterbart will play a violin con
certo by Maurer. with piano aanmninlmmt
and Mr. Hugo Raiber will play Mendelssohn's
Q minor piano concerto with orchestra. Mr.
Harry Brockett and Miss Heleno Zitterbart
will contribute vocal numbers.
The second concert of the Monongahela
Choral Society. Mr. Charles Davis Carter di
rector, will take place at Monongahela City
on next Thursday evening. Tbe following so
loists will participate: Mrs. J. Sharp McDonald
soprano: Miss Price Patterson, soprano; Miss
Lenon Taylor, contralto: Mr. W. H. Arison
tenor; Mr. J. E. Pettee, tenor; Mr. Louig
Critcblow. barytone; Mr. Joseph H. Qittings.
pianist. Tbe concert will open with a miscel
laneous programme, to oe lonowed by a per
formance of Gode's dramatic cantata, "Coma
la," for solo and chorus, with pianoforte accom
paniment The soloists for tbe cantata are
Comala, Mrs. McDonald; Dersagrena, Miss
Patterson: Meltcoma, Miss Taylor; King JTJn
gal. Mr. Critcblow, with Mr. Qittings as accom
panist LIVE STOCK MARKETS.
Office of Pittsburg Dispatch, )
Saturday, May 3, IfcSO. f
Country Produce Jobbing Prices
Choice green stuff is scarce, and prices are
more than maintained. Large quantities of
green stuff have been coming to market in poor
sbape. Good goods readily bring quotations.
The offerings of choice vegetables and berries
were light to-day, and markets were quiet for
me reason that there was not enough to go
around. Choice dairy products are good stock
at prices of last week. Good cabbage is scarce
and higher. Old cheese of high grade is very
scarce, and markets are very firm. Now cheese
is beginning to show up, but is too fresh to
meet the demands of trade. Tropical fruits of
choice quality are firm. Potatoes are quiet,
good stock is firmly held at quotations. Mar
kets have been overdosed with inferior pota
toes the pist week, and the rosult is general
depression. Holders of good stock arc, how
ever, very firm in their views of values, and
show no disposition to concede.
,n5n.TTKI:-Ureame""y. Elgin, 2121c; Ohio do
1920c: country rolls, 1416c.
UKANS-Naw hand-picked beans, Jl 802 00.
.11",a" - Bsc a lorcnoice; low grade,
18.0c
Cider Sand refined. J7 60: common, f3 004
4 00; crab cider, ?7 508 00 M barrel; cider vin
egar. 1012c $ gallon.
CHEESE-Ohio, lie; Hew York, 12c; Llm
berger. 144&15c: domestic Sweltzer, lS17c;
imported faweitzer, 2c.
EGGS-1212c ? dozen for strictly fresh;
duck eggs, 18c; goose eggs, 8510c.
FBUITS-Apples. fancy, S4 6U05 00 barrel;
strawberries, la25c a box.
Feathers Extra live geese. SOiffiGOc: No. 1
do. 4045u; mixed lots, B0Joc f) ft.
Maple Syrup New, W0&95c a can. Maple
sugar, ll12c $1 ft.
Honey 15c $ a.
Poultry Live chickens. 75c$l 00 a pair;
dressed, 1415c a pound; ducks, 75v!l 00 a pair;
dressed turkeys, lS20c f? ft.
Seeds Clover, choice. 62 lbs to bushel, $4 00
bushel: clover, large English. 62 ft S4 :i'x5
4 CO; clover, Alsike, $8 00; clover, white, $9 00;
timothy, choice, 45 lbs. SI 601 70; blue grass,
extra clean. 14 lbs tl 251 SO; blue grass, fancy,
14 lbs, $1 30; orchard grass. 14 lbs. 1 40; red top,
14 lbs, SI 00; millet 50 lbs. tl 00; Hungarian
grass, 60 lbs, SI 00; lawn grass, mixture of fine
grasses, $2 50 ?) bushel of 14 lbs.
Tallow Country, 3Jc; city rendered, 4Jfc
Tropical Fruits Lemons, common, 2 75
3 00; fancy, 3 253 75; Florida oranges, g4 50
tjo CO; Valencia. 56 50ffi8 00 for 420 case: Jamai
ca, S3 008 50 a barrel; bananas, 52 OO&i 50
firsts, SI 75 good seconds, $) buncb; cocoanuts,
$4 004 50 t? hundred: dates. 6$7c $1 lb; layer
ngs. jz$2ioc; pineapples, S3&4 a dozen.
Vegetables Potatoes, from store, 65
75c; on track, 4360c; Bermuda potatoes, 9 00
a barrel; new Southern cabbage, S3 50 for small
crates, $4 50 for large: Jersey &wect potatoes,
S5 255 75 a barrel; Bermuda onions, E2 40
2 75 per bushel crate: green onions, 152U a
dozen; parsnips. $2 00 barrel: onion sets,
S3 504 00 $1 bushel; kale, SI 001 25 $ barrel:
asparagus. 2550c ft large bunch; rhubarb, 20
30c ! dozen: green beans, SI 752 50 fl box;
wax beans, S3 003 50 ) box; green peas, $2 50
4 00!jbox.
17 00 fl ton; brown middlings. $18 0O16 50;
winter wbeat bran S14 6015 00; chop feed,
SI6 501B 00.
THY-Bi"lert timothy. No. 1, SU 0011 50;
No. 2 do, $10 00Q10 60; loose, from wagon.JH 00
17 00, according to quality; No. 2 prairie hay,
97 008 0J; packing do. 16 757 00.
fTRAWOat 81756' ; wheat and rye, SO 00
Su 25.
Provisions.
Sugar-cured shoulders, California hams,
heavy mess pork and lard were advanced to
day, as quotations below will disclose.
Sugar-cured hams, large, 9c; sugar-cured
hams, medium, 10c; sugar-hams, small, lie;
sugar-cured breakfast bacon. Sc: sugar-cured
shoulders, oc; sugar-cured boneless shoul
ders, 8c; sugar-cured California hams, &c;
sugar-cured dried beef fiats, 9c; sugar-cured
dried beef sets, 10c; sugar-cured dried beef
rounds, 12c; bacon, shoulders, 6c; bacon, clear
sides, 7c; bacon, clear bellies, 7KC: dry salt
shoulders, 5c; dry salt clear sides,-7Kc Mess
Eork, heavy, 13 50; mess pork, family, $13 0.
ard Refined, in tierces, 6c; half-barrels,
(Kc: 60-B tubs, 6c; 20-lb pails. efo 50-ft tin
cans, 6c; 3-ft tin pails, 6c; 5-B ttn pails, 6c;
10-ft tin pails, Uc Smoked sausage, long, be;
large, 6c. Fresh pork, links, Oc. Boneless
hams, 10c. Pigsf feet half-barrels, S4 00;
quarter-barrels, 52 15.
HIDES AND t.-eathhh ACTIVE.
Abmoub & Co., of this city, report the
following sales or dressed beef for the week
ending May 3, 1890: 220 carcasses, average
weight 677 pounds, arerage price ?6 66.
The Condition or Bnlncnt the East Liberty
Stock Yards.
Office of Pittsburg Dispatch, i
Saturday. May 3. 1S90, (
CATTLE Receipts, 1,197 head: sbtiinenta,l,140
bead: market nothing doing, all through con
signments; 32 cars of cattle shipped to New
York to-day.
Hoas Receipts. 3.100 head: shipments, 2,600
head; market slow; medium and selected, J4 35
4 45: common to best Yorkers. $4 254 30; pigs,
004 10: 12 cars oj hogs shipped to New
York to-day.
Sheep Receipts. 4.000 bead; shipments, 1,200
head; market notblng doing, nothing on sale.
Bv Telegraph.
CHICAGO The Drover' Journal reports:
Cattle Receipts. 5,000 bead; shipments, none;
market quiet and easier; beeves, $5 0U5 30;
steers, S3 8C5 00: stockers and feeders, S2 60
3 90; cows, bulls and mixed, $1 G03 40: Texas
grassers and cornfed steers, $2 903 80. Hogs
Receipts, 12,000 bead;sblpments,none:market
wfiK and 5c lower; mixed and light, S4 10
4 su; neavy, si iws j: skips, a iwga w. csneep
Receipts, 5,000 bead: shipments, none: market
steadv: natives, S4 C06 25; Western cornfed.
S5 006 10; Texans, S4 005 50; lambs, So 25(3
7 00.
ST. LOUIS Cattle Receipts. 200 head;
market steady: good to fancy native steers. S4 20
04 90: fair to good do. S3 304 35: stock-en. nH
feeders. S2 403 50: Texans and Indians. 52 50
380. Hogs Receipts. 3,000 head; market
steady; fair to choice heavy, S4 104 22K: pack
ing grades. S4 104 20: light fair to best. $4 05
4 17K. Sheep Receipts. 250 head; market
strong; fair to choice. S4 005 1KX
INDIANAPOLIS Cattle Receiptsligbt; mar
ket strong; shipper". S2 504 90; butchers'.
S2 504 00; bulls. I22j3 50. Hogs-Receipts!
3.500 bead; market active and strong; choice
heavy and medium, 84 17j4 25: mixed. S4 050
4 20; light 104 22 Sheep-Receipts light;
market active; lambs, 54 005 75; sheep, $4 00
35 75.
CINCINNATI Hogs lower; common and
Hght,3 254 15: packing and butchers, S4 05
4 25. Receipts, 3,250 head; shipments. 3,750 bead.
Kenl Eainto Miles.
Uagaw fc Goff, linu, 115 Fourth avenue, sold
In tbo Oak Station plan. Castle Shannon R. R.
to G. F. Cella. lots Nos. 108 and 109 on Second
avenue, for S200; to E. F. Acor, lots Nos. 97 and
98 for SXO; to H. F. McCurry, Nos. 99 and 100
for 5200; to Thomas Smith, Nos. 112 and 113 for
S225; all on payment.
Groceries.
Greek Coffee Fancy Rio, 24X25Kc;
choice Rio. 22g)23c; prime Rio, 23c; low
grade Rio, 20JlKc; old Government Java,
2SK30c; Maraciibo, 2527c: Mocha, 30
32c; Santos. 2226c; Caracas, 24K26c; La
Gnayra, 2bfi!27c.
Roasted (in papers) Standard brands,
25c; high grades, 2630Kc: old Government
Java, bulk. S334Kc: Maracaibo, 2829c:
Santos, 2G30c; peabcrry, 30c; choice Rio, 26c;
prime Rio, 24$c; good Rio, 23c; ordinary,
bPiCES (whole) Cloves, 1718c; allspice,
10c: cassia, 8c; pepper, 17c; nutmeg, 7080c.
Petroleum (jobbers' prices) 110 test 7Jc
Ohio, 120, sc; headlight 150, 8c; water
white. lOUc: globe, 1414Kc; elaine. 14&c; car
nadine. HKc; royaline, 14c; globe, red oil, 11
llc; purity, 14c
Miners' Oil No. 1 winter strained. 42ffi44o
ft gauon; summer, issowc: i,ard oil, 60SB5C
Syrup Corn syrup, 2729c; choice sugar
syrup, 3638c: primo sugar syrup, S033c;
strictly prime. 3335c: new maple syrup, 90c .
N. O. Molasses Fancy, new crop. 4748c;
choice, 46c; medium. 38Q13c; mixed, 4042c
Soda Bi-carb in kegs, 33Jc; bi-carb In
Ks. 55ic: bi-carb assorted packages. BY.ftiSc:
sal-soda in kegs. lc;do granulated, ic.
Candles Star, full weight, 8Jc; stearine,
1 set. &c; paraffine, U12c
Rice Head, Carolina. 77jic; choice, 6K
6Jc; prime, 56c: Louisiana, ofiic.
Starch Pearl, 2c; cornstarch, 56c; gloss
starch. 47c
Foreign Fruits Layer raisins, S2 65; Lon
don layers, 52 75; California, London layers,
52 75; Muscatels. S2 60; California Muscatels,
$2 40; Valencia. 8J4C; Ondara Valencia. 10
lie; sultana, 12$c; currants, 66c; Turkey
prunes, 6K5c; French prunes, 9l2c; Salon
ica prunes, in 2-B pickages, 9c: cocoanuts
100, SO; alraonos. Lan., $1 ft, 20c; do Ivica, 17c;
do shelled, 40c; walnuts, nap., 13014c; Sicily
filberts, 12c; Smyrna figs, 1213c: new dates, 6
6c: Brazil nuts, lie; pecans, 910c; citron,
lb, lS19c; lemon peel, ISc f) ft; orange peel,
XJC
Dried Fruits Apples sliced, per ft, 6c; ap
ples, evaporated, 10?llKc; appricots. Cali
fornia, evaporated, 1618c; peaches, evaporated,
pared. 2426c; peaches, California, evaporated,
unpared, 1820c; cherries, pitted, 1313Kc;
cherries, imputed, 5gGc; raspberries, evapo
rated, 3132c; blackberries, 77c; huckel
berrics, 1012c
Sugars Cubes, 7c; powdered, 7c; granu
lated, 6Kc; confectioners' A. 6c; standard A.
Wic: soft white. 5JK6c: vellow. choice, lfi.fi
r?.
5'
Pickles Medium, bms
diuin. balf bbls (600). S4 25
Salt-No. 1, $ bbl, 95c: No. 1 ex, fl bhL
SI 00: dairy. J? bbl, SI 20; coarse crystal. W bbl,
SI 20: Higgins' Eureka, 4-bu sacks, S2 80; Hig
gms' Eureka, 16-14 ft packets. S3 00.
Canned Goods Standard peaches. 52 00
2 25; 2ds, SI 651 SO; extra peaches. 52 402 6a;
pie peaches. SI 00: finest corn. SI 001 50; Hid
Co. corn, 6590c; red cherries, 8085c:Lima
beans, tl 20; soaked do, 80c; string do, 6570c:
marrowfat peas. SI 101 15; soaked peas, 70
80c: pineapples, SI 3D1 40; Bahama do. 52 75;
damson plums. 95c; greengages, 61 25; egg
piums. ;4 uu; inamorata pears, rc ?u: no green
gages, $1 85; do egg plums, SI 85; extra wjiite
cherries, 52 40; raspberries, 95cSl 10; straw
berries, 80c; gooseberries, SI 301 40: toma
toes, SJgSSc; salmon, 1-ft. SI 501 85; black
berries, 60c; succotash, 2-ft cans, soaked, 90c;
do green. 2-lb, SI 251 50; corn beef. 2-lb cans,
52 05; 14-ft cans. 614 IX); baked beans, SI 401 50;
lobster. 1-tt. SI 8001 90; mackerel. 1-ft cans,
broiled, SI 50: sardines, domestic !, 54 25
4 50; sardines, domestic, s, $6 757 00; sar
dines, imported, i, SH 5012 50; sardines, im
ported. Ks, S13 00; sardines, mustard, S3 50; sar
dines, spiced, S3 50.
Fish Extra No. 1 bloater mackerel. S36 $
bbl; extra No. 1 do. mess, $40; extra No. 1 mack
erel, shore, 632; extra No. 1 do, mess, S36; No. 2
shore mackerel, $24. Codfish Whole pollock,
4Kc $1 ft: do medium, George's cod. 6c; do
large, 7c; boneless bake, in strips, 4c: do
(jeorges coa in oiocks, a7c Merrlng
put, so
Old-Faahloned Calfskin Asnln In Fashion
Prices Here and Elsewhere.
The market for buff bides has been very act
ive the past week. There has been an advance
or c per lb. Heavy hides are nrm,.but bare
not shared in tbe upward movement The Ut
ter, however, did not share In tbe downward
movement of last winter. Calfskins are also
in good demand and prices are lc per lb. above
the lowest figure reached two or three months
ago. A leading Allegheny tanner express?d
himself as follows to-day: "1 cannot under
stand the great activity in calfskin trade.
ana advancing prices except on tbe theory
tbat the e onsumption of split leather is falling
off and consumers are going back to the good
old ways.
"It looks as though the old-fashioned calf
skin shoe was coming into fashion again, and I
would not be surprised to see calfskins going
up to old-time prices. Certainly the present
drift is in that direction."
The jobbing season for harness leather is
about over, until fall orders come in. which
will be early in July, according to precedent
Tho Allegheny tanners report stock as well
cleaned up for this time of the year. Tbe same
reports come from Cincinnati and Louisville,
where harness leather tanning are large inter
ests. Advices from tbe West are that the fall
trade will probably open earlier this season.
Our tanners look for fall orders by the mid
dle of June. From now until tbat time stock
is likely to accumulate,accofdinr to experience
of former vears.
From Boston comes the report of Tery firm
leather markets, and on tbe whole the outlook
has never been better at tbis season of tbe year
for a healthy hide and leather trade.
Tallow is a drug at old prices.
Following are the latest prices as furnished
by James Callery A. Co.:
no. I green salted steers. 60 pounds and
over ,
Mo. 1 green salted cows, all weights
No. 1 green salted hides, 40 to flo pounds..
No. 1 green salted hides, 25 to 0 pounds..
No. 1 green salted bulls
No. 1 green salted calfskins
No. 1 green salted veal kips
No. 1 green salted runner kips
No. 1 green steers, 60 pounds and over....
No. 1 green cows, all weights
No. I green balls
rio. 1 green hides, 40totepoands
No. 1 green hides, 25 to 40 pounds
No. 1 green calftklns
No. 1 green veal kips
No. 1 green runner kips
Sheepskins ..".."I"."!
xauow, prime 4
reduction for No. 2 stock. le per lb on steers
and light hides. Ho on balls and 2c on calfskins.
7
4
4M
4
V
6M
4
4
4
4
5
4
3
10I5o
WESTEBff PE0LTJCE PHICES.
An Iowa Dlnn's Experience in Buying nnd
Selling Pomtoes.
Walter Peck, of lndlanola, la., was in the
city to-day trying to dispose of three car loads
of potatoes from that prolific region. In
dianola is a prosperous young town 20 miles
south or Des Moines, and is a center for one of
the most fertile sections of the Empire Stats of
tho West Mr. Peck gave his views of the
situation as follows: "In lndlanola, tbe price
of potatoes is 25c per bushel, and no better
were ever grown. Last fall they were sold as
low as 9c per bushel in our town, and slow at
tbat
Tho crop of potatoes in Central Iowa
last season was fair, but not extra large.
Tom aw to 250 bushels to tbe
acre was tbo average yield. 1 have heard of
400 bushels to the acre, in former seasons, but
do not think this amount was reached last sea
son, ineireignt on potatoes from lndlanola
tn Pittsburg is 21Kc per bushel, making the lay
down price here 46Jc A month ago I brought
three car loads to this market and did well
enough to try it over again. Last
season was a good one for apples around
lndlanola, and prices tbere tor the best are 25
to 35c per bushel. Two-year-old beeves are
selling in Central Iowa at $2 to S2 25 per cwt
Hogs bring within 5 to 10c per hundred of
Chicago prices. Poultry brings 4c per pound,
and spring chickens $2 40 per dozen. Eggs are
about as high in lndlanola as Pittsburg.
"I have found nothing in this city much be
low prices in Central Iowa, excepting horse
flesh. In my section the raising of fine draught
horses has become a specialty of late years,
and I find from investigation that we can get
better prices at home than people are willing
to pay here for a first-class team of horses."
MABKETB BY WIRE.
Another Bnlgo In Wheat, Which Sends
Valors Skyward Bayers en tbe Jninp
Cora Also Excited Oau Un
settled Pork Neglected. '.
CHICAGO There was an Immense trade to
day tn wbeat, and tbe market was an unusually
wild one, prices varying so rapidly that jumps
of c to lc were made in May and
June, and He to JJc in July without a trade.
Excitement was at fever heat and so anxious
were buyers at times that offers of Jc to lc
above what previous sales were made at were
rapidly accepted. Buyers fairly jumped for
the wbeat At times tha market was bare of
offerings for May and June, and the sharp ad-'
vance in prices in these deliveries carried up
the more deferred fntures. but tho advance
was not so great as in the nearer futures.
May opened lc higher, and sold up 6c more
reaching 51. then eased off and closed at 5c
higher than yesterday. Up to noon prices
ranged from 94c to 98c, and then jumped to 99c
to SI very quickly. June advanced 6c, and
closed about 4c higher than yesterday. July
was very erratic, and opened from Jcto lc
higher than yesterday's closing, advanced very
irregularly 33Kc more, and closed 3c higher
than yesterday. Orders came pouring in from
all quarters, the majority to buy, though a
good many selling orders were received from
parties, wbo, having profits in their favor, were
disposed to realize. Parties who had sold yes
terday In expectation of lower market on pros
pects of rain, covered freely to-day.
Trading was general and individuality was
almost lost in the shuffle. A prominent trader
nan reported as naving pougnt irceiy ana mere
were some parties wno tnougnt it was "snort'
wheat There was nothing new in tbe situa
tion, the excitement and nervousness being at
tributed to the continued dry weather in the
Northwest and bad crop news. Althougb
cloudy weather was reported in the Northwest
scarcely any rain has fallen with the exception
of a slight shower at Dnluth and St. Paul. Ad
vices from South Dakota report the ground dry
as powder and high winds blowing seed out of
tbe ground. Several dispatches of this tenor
were received from the Northwest To offset
these advices, however, a harvester company
claimed that if rain came within a week or ten
days the crop would be all right Tbe acreage
in the Northwest while smaller In some sections
is larger in others, and may on the whole be as
large as last year.
Tbere was another day of activity witnessed
in corn, the feeling being nervous and unset
tled, prices fluctuating sharply within c
range, lie traue was mainly in Juiy, inougn
there was more doing in August and Septem
ber than on yesterday. Business was in the
main local tbere being less doing on outside ac
count than noted yesterday. There were fran
tic sellers of J uly at 35c around the opening
and tbe market hung around 3435c some
time, afterward declining to 34c up to 35 to
34K34Jc, and final .quotations on all futures
wereac higher than yesterday. Stronger
cables and the advance in wheat were the lead
ing factors.
Oats were active but unsettled, prices fluctu
ating freely within a range of c The con
tinued reports of dry weather in the Northwest
made operators: nervous, and although no ac
tual damage bas resulted, shorts were anxious
to cover and bought freely. Opening sales
were at tbe same to a slight decline from yes
terday's close Offerings were light and the
demand good, both from local and outsiders,
and prices advanced KKc May sold to 26c
and a round lot of 200,000 bushels brought 2CJ
26cat private sale. The advance induced
free selling by longs, and as a good many of the
eariy ouyers naa Doen niiea up, prices receded
Ha but again rallied, and the market closed
steady at a fractional decline from yesterday.
Very little business was transacted In pork.
Early sales were made at Friday's closing fig
ures and a few transactions were made later
at 1015c advance. Toward the close the feel
ing was easier and prices settled back again,
closing quiet
A fair business was done in lard, bnt the
feeling was unsettled. Prices ruled 57c
lower, and the market closed tame at medium
figures.
Trading in short ribs was moderate, with the
interest centering in July. Prices declined 5
lev quiet at 45c Provisions easier. Pork,
CIS 00. Lard. 53 40. Cheese steady, 910c
TOLEDO Wheat active and easier: cash and
May, 96c: J uly. 93c bid: August, 91c bid. Corn
dull and steady; cash and May, 35c: Jnly, 36c
Oats quiet: cash, 27K& Clorerseed dull; cash,
S3 60; October, S3 9a
GALLED A HALT.
Dealings la Railroad .-"bares Show a De
cided Loss of Vim Tbe Railroad
Mnddle a Dlstdrblnr Element
Insignificant 'Changes.
New York, May 3. The stock market was
quiet to-day in comparison with the large busi
ness of late. It remained feverish with no
marked changes except in a few shares, which
wore affected by special influences. This was
most marked in tbe granger stocks, Lacka
wanna, Oregon and Transcontinental, Manhat
tan and Wheeling and Lake Erie, both pre
ferred and common. Trading to-day was of a
professional character, but the pressure was
from Chicago. While tbere was a good demand
for specialties there was a feeling of disap
pointment about the condition of the railroad
war. There is nothing to show that the settle
ment contemplated is intended to cover any
thing but passenger business, while the war of
freights, which represents tbe most important
part of the railroads earnings, Is likely to con
tinue.
The market was up and down within narrow
limits, wiih no movement at all worthy of note
in the general list, and only in a few special
ties was there anything like life. Oregon Im
provement, the Chicago, St Louis and Pitts
burg stocks and one or two others made sham
upward spurts, bnt these constituted the only
features in tbe trading. Tbera was a better
tone developed toward the close on tbe scarcity
of stocks offering, and tbe close was fairly act
ive and firm at insignificant changes for tbe
day. St Paul, Atchison, Oregon Transconti
nental and Richmond and West Point were the
active stocks.
'ltie following table shows tne prices or active
stocks on the New York Stock Exchange yester
day. Corrected dally for The Dispatch by
WHITSsr 4 STEP niNSOX; oldest Pittsburg mem
bers of New York Stock .Exchange, 57 Fourth ave
nue:
tmmmmtmmmmmmmm
Purely a vegetable compound,
made entirely' of roots and herbs
gathered from the forests of
Georgia, and has been used by millions
of people with the best results. It -
CORES
All manner of Blood diseases, from ths
pestiferous little boil on your nose to
the worst cases of inherited blood
taint, such as Scrofula, Rheumatism,
Catarrh and
SKIM-C3NCER
Treatise on Blood and Skin Diseases mailed
free. Swift Specific Co. Atlanta, Ga.
.1:1
. 94K
. :y,
. M
'. sin
.1MX
roti
TUc. and the market closed aniet.
-rt, , ., . ..
ue leaumziararea ranea as louows:
iay. ki ouwsMQisrrjic:
; July, 9191291
Wheat No. 2.
June,
93Kc
Corn No. Z May, 333S3K633Kc:
June. 34J431B33a3fc; July. 34e35Ji31i
342c.
Oats No. 2. May. 2526K25K25Kc;
June. 25K2525K25Kc; July, 2525&
25S25Ja
Mess Pork, per bbl. May, $13 20S13 20
13 1013 10: June, S13 3513 35I3 2513 25;
July, S13 S513 5013 30Q13 30.
labd, per 100 fis. May. S6 37J6 37K
6 356 37K; June, S6 47K6 4726 42K6 ;
Julv. S6 55H6 556 47K06 50.
dhobt itras. per loo as. May. 85 405 40
Open
Ins;. Am. Cotton Oil pref.
Am. Cotton Oil Trust.. I7
A ten., tod. & V -H
Canadian Faclfic 78
Canada Southern S3
Central of New Jersey.122
Central Paclfle MX
Chesapeake & onio.... nn
C. Bur. A Quincy... .M8!
C, Mil. & St. .Paul 73H
C, Mil. 4 at. P., pr..
C' Kock I. & P
C St L.&ritts
C, lit L. 4 Pitts., pf.
a. stf.. m.&o
C, St F M. O. p
V.A Northwestern...
C.&li.iVf..Vt
C, (.., C A la.......i
j., i;.. vsi.. pi
Col. Coal & Iron SI
Col. & Hoeklntr Val... 25
Del., tack A West 1M
Det & Hudson IM
Den. & Klo Uraude.... IS
Den. & Bio Uraude,- nf ....
E.T., Va. AGa
E. T.,Va. JfcGa., lstpf ....
E. T.. Va. Jt a., 2d pr 23?
Illinois Central
late Erie & West 19H
Late Erie A West pr. 65H
LskeShoreAM.fi ill
Lonisvllle A aashvllle. 9IX
Michigan Central
Mobile AUMo
Missouri I'acinc...
New Xork Central.
S. Y.. L. E. A W.
N.1..L.E.A W.pref.
si. r.. a a st. i- ,
. Y.. C. A St. U. Df.
N. Y.. C. A St. L. 2d nf 42
ji.Y.tn.t tat
N. Y.. O. A W 20
Norfolk A Western.... 23
Norfolk A Western pf. ....
Northern Pacific 33Tf
Northern Pacific pr... 803,
Ohio A Mississippi
Oregon Improvement.
Oregon Transcon ,
Pacific Mail
Peo.. Dec. A Evans...
Phlladel. A Heading... 42
gunman -aiace uar.
Richmond A W. I'. T. 24
Richmond A W.P.T.pt SI
St. P., Minn. A Man..ll2
St. L. A ban Fran 29
St. ti. A San Fran pf.. S3ii
St. L. A San lstpl
Texas Paclfle 2IX
union racirc 66
Wabash 13H
Highest
Lowest
23 27K
42J 41S
78 77H
58'4 S-H
1 121X
35X 25
241 24
mii van
74 73
121 121
WS" Wi
1SX 17J,
52 51
tSJ,'
75),
si
98
114
Clos
ing Bid.
16
28
574
I2IV
WV
U'4
108$
73S
I20H
94X
n
an
WHOLESALE -:- HOUSE,
I
IN
143
n
99
51 H
24V
1X
16.1
13
53X
78
23T iZTi U4
Jld
1DH
no
91)4
M17i
164
18
19U
63 'i
111
75
ii"
24S
143
163)
IS
19'4
1I0H
Embroidery and White Goods Department-
direct importation from the best manufac
turers of St Gall, in Swiss and Cambric Eds
lngs. Flouncings, Skirt Widths and Allovers,
Hemstitched Edginss and Flouncines. Buyers
will llnd these goods attractive both in priest
and noTeltles of design. Full lines of New
Laces and White Goods. UPHOLSTERY DE
PARTMENT Best makes Window Shades io.
dado and plain or spring fixtures, Lace Cur
tains, Portieres, Chenille Curtains, Poles, and.
Brass Trimmings; Floor, Table and Stair Oil
Cloths in best makes, lowest prices for quality.
WASH DRESS FABRICS.
Tho largest variety from which to select,
ToilDuords, Chalon Cloths, Bath Seersuclt.
ers. Imperial Suitings. Heather & Renfrev
Dress Ginghams. Fine Zephyr Ginghams.
"Wholesale Exclusively.
Ial3-D
FDELITY TITLE AND TRUST CO..
121 and 123 Fourth ave.
Capital S50O.O0O. Full paid.
INSURES TITLES TO REAL ESTATE.
Acts in all fiduciary capacities. Deals in reli
able investment securities. Rents boxes in 1UJ
superior vault from $5 per annum upward.
Receives deposits and loans only on mort
gages and approved collaterals.
JOHN B. JACKSON, Pres't
JAMES J DONNELL. Vice-Pres't
ap8-32-M C. B. McVAY. Sec'y and Treat
BROKERS FINANCIAL.
Whitney & Stephenson,
.. 74
..109X
. 27M
'.Hh
.74
. 49
.40
, 44V
.Sl4
5eu
05 37JSU5 37K: June. SS 47V5 475 42J
', SO 00a 7seio 17XS 50.
vyKi Bulk wuue. u;fe4uu; .veiiow, cnoicc, 0igi
5JJc: yellow, good, 5K5c; yellow, fair, 5
55" yellow, dark, 5K 5Jgc
U.aAij, a ou; me-
0NIY 'WAITmo.
Strong Undertone to Local Securities, bnt
Business Slow.
There was a dull but strong stock market
Saturday. Sales were 60 shares. Philadelphia
Gas and Airbrake scored handsome advances,
the latter moving up SI a share. Westingbouse
Electric, Switch, Bridgewater and Wheeling
Gas were among the other good features. The
tractions were practically unchanged and neg
lected. There was the usual Saturday bidding
on bank and insurance stocks, with tbe usual
Saturday result holders refusing the terms.
There is every indication of increased activity
as soon as a settlement of the labor trouble
shall be effected, but in tbe meantime both
sides are disposed to move cautiously to avoid
entanglements. Buyers are a little under the
market and holders refuse concessions on the
ground that there is nothing calling for a sacri
fice. This places the market in awaiting atti
tude, with very little stimulus needed to give it"
an upward direction.
Sales were 10 shares Westinrhnnsn PTlei-trli.
at 43, and 50 Philadelphia Gas at 32.
Round shore. So 00 fl bbl; sp
50; lake, S2 00
W 100-fi bbl. Wblto fish, SS 50 n 100-m halt bbl.
Lake trout, S5 50 half bbl. Finnan haddock,
10c 1 ft. Iceland halibut 13c $t ft,. Pickerel,
hair bbl. S3 OOiqnaner bbl, $1 35; Potomac her
ring. So 00 bbl; S2 50 half bbL
Oatmeal 56 OOgO 25 11 bbl.
ETTEPLTJS CUT DOWB".
Grain. Flonr und Feed.
Sales on call at tbe Grain Exchange: 1 car
sample corn 3Sc, 5 days. P. R. R.; 2 cars No. 2
white oats 33c, 10 days, P. R. R.; 1 car No. 2
white oats 32c, May delivery: 6 cars No. 3
white oats 32c, May delivery. Receipts, as
bulletined, 41 cars, of which 22 cars were re
ceived by the Pittsburg. Cincinnati and St
Louis Railway, as follows: 10 cars of oats, 5 of
com, 5 of bay, 1 of bran; by Pittsburg. Ft
Wayne and Chicago: 2 cars of oats, 1 of wheat
1 of hay, 2 of malt 1 of flour; by Baltimore
and Ohio: 1 car of corn, 1 of bay; by Pitts
burg and Western: 2 cars of corn, 1 of oats, 2
of bay; by Pittsburg and Lake Erie: 2 cars of
oats, 2 of rye.
Receipts for the week ending May 2, 1890, 331
cars, against 305 last week and 156 for the week
ending May 3, 1SS9. Shell corn is weak and
lower. Hay is also weak and only choice stock
holds its own. Receipts of shell corn for tbe
week were 70 cars, against 10 for tbe corre
sponding week last year. Oats are firm.
Wbeat and flour are tending upward. Another
advance in flour cannot be far in tbe future
from present outlook.
Prices below are for carload lots on track:
Wheat NewNo. 2 red, 9596c; No. 3, 92
93c
Corn No. 1 vellow. ear, 4646c; No. 2
yellow, ear. 4546c: high mixed, ear, 4344c;
No. 2 yellow, shelled. 3S39c; high mixed
shelled corn, 3737c.
OATS No. 2 white.- 3333Kc; cxtral No. 3.
323-.iKc: mixed, 2930c
Rye No. 1 Pennsylvania and Ohio. 5860c;
No. 1 Western,. 585nc
FwBR Jobbing prices Fancy winter and
snrinc patents, $5 255 75; winter straight
th 0005 25; clear winter. S4 504 75: straight
XXXX bakers', S4 251 50. Rye flour, S3 75
X w.
Some of tbe Local Bunks Closely Loaned
Up Encouraging Figures.
Said a Wood street bank cashier Saturday:
"This mornlngl was telephoned by a neighbor
ing bank if I wanted a good loan of $20,000. 1
replied that we were a little short, and referred
the Inquirer to two other banks. The answer
came back that both of these institutions had
been applied to and tbat neither was in a po
sition to take the paper. I mention this inci
dent to show you that a few of the banks are
pretty closely loaned up. There is no dearth
of money, however, for regular business pur
poses. Tbe fact that funds are actively em
ployed shows a prosperous condition of busi
ness." Tbo Clearing House report, while not so
good as tbat of the previous week, was any
thing but discouraging.) The week's clearings
were Si.000.900 in excess of those of the corre
sponding time last year, which, however, was
only a five-day week. Still, the ira'n is suf
ficient to show a steady expansion of business,
which promises to increase as the season ad
vances and disturbing influences are removed.
Tbere is nothing in sight to cause mistrust of
the future. Tbe following is Manager Chap
lin's story: p
Saturday's exchanges t 2,C92.447 67
batnrday's balances.
weeK's exenanges
Previous week's exchanges.
Exchanges week of 1889
Ualn over 1839
47J.220 28
16,250.023 89
17, !;, 783 70
12,267,012 27
3,933,011 62
ABURSTIHG LAMP
Fatally Injures Annie Knestrlck at Little
Washington Her Intense Sufferings.
rSPECIAJ, TZLXGBAM TOTHE EISPATCn.
WASHlNGTON,PA.,May 4. Annie Knes
trick, a domestic in the employ of David
McQuay, of the West End, was probably
fatally burned last night by tbe explosion of
a lamp. She was carrying 'the lamb up
stairs when the explosion occurred, setting
fire to ber clothing. She ran downstairs,
where the family was, and tbe flames were
extinguished, bnt not before she was terribly
burned from her yfaist np.
A physician was called, who stated that
she had inhaled the flames, and would likely
die. She is still living, but suffering intensely.
Pxttsbcbo Beef Co., wholesale agents
for Swift's Chicago dressed beef. Sold for
week ending May 3, 209 carcasses of beef;
average weieht cer carcass. 623 lhs. : nver.
MJxiBED-MJddlings, Una white, 18 00 jage price per lb, 6.73 eta,
5 42; July,
Cash quotations were as follows: Flonr firm
and 1025c higher; No. 2 spring wheat 9798c;
No. 33pnng wheat 8489c: No. 2 red. 9769SC;
No. 2 corn. 33a No. 2 oats, 2525c. No.
2 rye, 50504c. No. 1 flaxseed, SI 45. Primo
timothy seed. $1 28. Messpork per bbl, S13 10.
Lard, per 1O0 lbs. S6 356 37. Short ribs sides
(loose), S5 40; dry salted shoulders (boxed), S5 00
65 15; sbort clear sides (boxed). S5705 75.
On tbe Produce Exchange to-day tbe butter
market was firm and unchanged. Eggs, lie.
NEW YORK Flour less active and 1015c
higher. Wheat Spot higher and unsettled;
options fairly active: early excited andl
l?ic up; reacted JjKSKc and closed unsettled at
lH2c higher than yesterday. Rye strong,
western, 5860c Barley firm, western,
nominal; Canada, 6075c. Corn Spot dull,
KJc up and scarce; options fairly active,
(2c up and steady. Oats Spot firm and
less active: options active and firmer. Hay
quiet: steady; shipping, 40c; good to choice,
708S5C-. Hops steady: dull. Coffee Options
opened steady; unchanged to 10 prints
down; closed barely steady; 5 to 10
Soints down: sales, 17,750 bags. Including
lay, 16.6016.65c; June, ia5516.60c: Jul
lB.4518.50c; August, 16.30; September, 1B.20
16.25c; October, 15.9016.00c; December. 15.65
15.70c: March, 15.50c; spot Rio quiet and easv;
fair cargoes, 20c; No. 7 flat, 1816a Sugar
Raw steady and quiet; refined dull and easy;
powdered. 6Jc; granulated, 6 3-16c Molasses
Foreign quiet: 50 test, 20c; New Orleans firm;
common to fancy, 3145c. Rice firm and fairly
active; domestic. 46Kc: Japan, 56c Cot
tonseed oil strong. Tallow strong; city (S2 for
packing), ic Rosin firm. Turpentine
steady and quiet at 38K3S);c Eggs steady;
Western, 1212c; receipts, 6,170 packages.
Pork strong; mess, old, S12 2512 50: new, $14 00
011 25; extra prime, ,511 00. Cutmeata quiet
and steady. Middles strong, lard easier and
quiet; Western -steam. 86 63: options, sales,
1.750 tierces; May. S6 63: June, S6 706 71; July,
SB 83; Aueust Stf 9106 94. closing at 50 91; Sep
tember, S6 96; October, $7 02. Butter moder
ately active: choice firm; Western dairy, 712c;
uu creamery, vtivc; uo neia at iuc; lucm. 10c
Cbeese dull and easy; Western old, 89c
PHILADELPHIA Flour Strong but quiet
AVbeat Q,uiet but strong under bullish man
ipulation in Chicago and prices closed nomi
nally l2c higher; rejected. 7380c; fair to good
milling, 9297c: prime to choice, 98c$l 02: No.
2 red. May, 9697c4June, 9596c: July, 9495c;
August 9lK92c Corn Options firm but
Suiet; carlots stronger with a good local trade
emand:No. 4 low mixed, on track. 35c: No.
4 mixed, on track, 36c; No. 2 high mixed, on
track, 37c; No. 3 mixed, on track, 3839c; No.
3 mixed, in export elevator, 38c; steamer No. 2
mixed, on track and in Twentieth street ele
vator, 40c: No. 2 mixed, in Twentieth street ele
vator, 42c; No. 2 high mixed, on track, 42c;
No. 2 mixed. May, 4141Wc; June, 414lic:
July. 4IX41Jsc: August 4242c. Oats Good
local trade demand and prices of carlots
iiizber: No. 3 white. 3434c: No. 2 white. 35
35c; do clipped, 35c; futures strongand
Ji- higher; No. 2 white. May, 3434c; June,
S3J34Kc; July. S3K3fc: August 29Q30c
Eggs Dull and steady; Pennsylvania firsts. 12c
Receipts flour. z,wu oarreis ana j;ati sacks;
wheat. 2.400 bushels: corn. 82.600 bushels: nats.
6.900 bushels. Shipments Wheat 5.100 bushels;
corn, 460,700 bushels: oats, 8,000 bushels.
MINNEAPOLIS Receipts of wheat were 179
cars; shipments, 41 cars. Nearly all of tbo
elevator companies were active buyers of No.
1 Northern wbeat to-day. They did not want
anything else. Tbe quality did not appear to'
cut much figure, the better class not bringing
any more than the poorer. As long as it was
contract grade they took it. Sales were also
made to arrive at about tbe same price cash
was selling at Other grades were dragging.
Closing quotations: No. 1 hard. May, 92c:
June, 93Jic; July. 91Kc; on track, 91Kc; No. 1
Northern, May, 92c: June, 93c: July. 93ic;
on track, 91c; No. 2 'Northern, May, 9lic; June,
91c; July, 91c; on track. 90c
ST. LOUIS There was no regular session of
Merchants' Exchange to-day, having adjourned
over till Monday to enable its members to take
part in the formal opening ot tbe merchants'
bridge, but tbera was back door entrance,
which grain doalera took advantage nf, and tbe
pit was as full of traders as ou other. days. No
cash wheat was soIdvbut options were active.
Tbe price fluctuated' greatly: tbe advance for
July was 3c Tbe close was fie below tbe top
at88Jc August sold at 85K8Sc,and closed
at sTJic. Corn was also higher; May, 32Jc
bid: July, 32Kc; August 32Jc Oats firm; May,
26c bid; July, 25c Provisions steady, but
tbere was only a retail trade.
BALTIMORE-iWheat Western strontr:No.
2"Vinter red. spot 86c; May, 95c; July, 923c
Wabash nreferred.
Western union
Wneellng&L. .....
Sugar Trust.
National Lead TrnBt.
Chicago Gas Trust...
Ex-dlvidend.
, 29
.75
. 75
. 2U1
. 50S
75U
1OT(
27
"ji
74 .
42
4S1(
20H
24
MJ
81U
50
41H
Uh
42J
24"
S3
112V
29,
li
2l"'t
esa
134
29
34 'i
76H
75i
Vl
51J4
74 i
109S4,
27
iiji
74
42
435f
20
3
iiii
SO
49H
Sf
21JS
41
23 H
82
112V
2S
13
esH
sax
844
7o
74H
20'4
SO
IS
75
109
?-H
Do
17
73
ilH
48
19
22
644
S3H
em
Ho
40
44S
I1H
425,
1S1
an
112,
23V
S3
99S
21
csH
lt
2Stt
75V
74
20'
57 Fourth Avenue.
my2
e Represent Large Amounts
Of foreign money for investment in busi
ness enterprises, or for assistance to those
needing more capital. Must be able to
sbow large dividend earning capacity.
Principals only dealt with. Communica
tions confidential.
John DX. OaMoy fc Co.,
BROKERS. 45 SIXTH 8T. apl5.7j
tT. s. 4s. Tea-..
U. 8. 4s, coop...
U.S.4SS, reg...,
U. S. 4XS, coup.
racincssoi 'So.
Closing Bond Quotation.
.122
...122
.. 102H
...lm
...no.
Loulslanastamned4s 0S!
aussonri cs...........iuu
lenn. new set. 6s....lC8M
Tenn. new set. 5s... .103)
Tenn. new set 3s.... 76
Canada So. 2ds 99 H
venirai 1-acinciSts.lllK
JJen. 4 It U. lsts...U7
Den. & K. . U tza
i.sit. u, westisig.
Erie 2ds 103V
M.K.4T. Gen. es.. 81
M. K. A T. Uen. 5s.. 71
Mutual Union 6s.... 99
-N. J. c Int. Cert...ll2K
Northern Pac. lsli..lI6
Northern Pac. 2ds..lll)4
Sorthw't'n consols. 141
Morthw'n deben's 5sl094.
Oregon A Trans. BS.104X
St.L&I.M. Uen. Ss. 9134
St.I,. iS.F. Cen.M.112
St. Paul consols 131
St. P. Cbl&Pc. Ists.1181
Tx Pc Jj.G-Tr.Rs. 94 U.
Tx.. Pc. K G.Tr.Ks. 41
union racioclsts 112
West bbore 105X
Boston Stocks.
Atch. Ton 42
Boston A Albany. ...213
Boston A Maine. ....220
V., B. AO 108V
Eastern if. K. 159
Eastern R. it S 125.&
nisi i-ere ai 39
Flint A PereM. preno3
Mass. Central 17V
Mex. Central com... 24
N. Y. A .N.Eng..... 48V
urn colony. i,s
Wis. Central com... 31H
Wis. Central pi 61
Allouez Alg. Co 4
Atlantic 1
Boston A Mont 50
Calumet A Hecla....290
Franklin I7JJ
Huron 3h
Kearsarse 14
Osceola 24V
Qnlncy 92
Hanta Fe copper 45
Tamarack 174
Anniston L.and Co.. EaK
Boston Land Co 8'
west End Land Co.. 2SV
Bell Telephone 223
Lamion stores 35V
water rower s
Centennial Mining. 26V
TO INVESTORS.
THE COLORADO MINING STOCK EX.
CHANGE, from Its proximity to properties
listed, offers better facilities for a quick turn
of capital than is to be found elsewhere In
the V. S.
It H. BUCK. INVESTMENT BROKZB. 18 T
bor Block, DENVER, COLO., member of abovsi
Exchange, solicits orders from large or small
investors. References: All Denver Banks. Cor
responuence invited. my4-99
GEORGE H. LINCOLN, -
BROKER,
23 BEAVER ST.. NEW YORK,
Member New York Stock Exchange, Stand. -
ard OU Trust, Natural Gas Trust
bought and sold.
Stock.
myl-68-ssu "
JOHN M. OAKLEY & C0
BANKERS AND BROKERS.
Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Petroleum.
Private wire to New York and Chicago
45 SIXTH ST., Pittsburff.
rav29-HI
Philadelphia Stocks.
Closing quotations of Philadelphia stocks, tar
nished by Whitney & Stephenson, brokers. Xo. 57
Fourth avenue. Members .New Xork stock Ex
change:
Pennsylvania Kallroad
Keadlng
Buffalo, Pittsburg & Western,
Lehigh Valljy
Lenign navigation
Northern Paciflc SH
Northern Paclfle preferred 81
3ld. Asked.
S3 M
20 15-15, 21
WV 11
52V 523
81X
, , . Mining Stocks.
New Yoek. May a Mining Quotations:
Alice. 200: Belcher. 200: Best and Belcher", 280;
Brunswick Consolidated. 150: Consolidated Cali
fornia and Virginia. 465; Commonwealth. 400;
Deadwood T.. 140; 1 Cristo, 125; Hale A Nor
cross, 210; HomestaKe, 850; Horn Silver, 285:
Iron Sliver. 200; North Commonwealth, 140;
Plymouth. 450; Savage, 180; Sierra Nevada,
220; Sutter Creek, 150.
MEDICAL.
Features of Saturday's Oil Market
Corrected dally by John M. Oakley fe Co.. 45
Sixth street members of the Pittsburg Petro
leum Exchange:
Opened t!H (Lowest...-. 85
Highest S&H I Closed M
" Barrels.
Average charters 24,045
Average shipments 87,383
Average runs . 61,994
Refined, New York. 7.20c
Kpflned, London, 5Xd.
Kellned, Antwerp, 17Xf.
Kenned. Liverpool. & n-16d.
Beflned. Bremen, 6.7om.
A. B. McGrew quotes: Puts, 83K84c;
calls, 86c
S. "W. Hill, Pittsburg Meat Supply
Company, corner of Church avenne. Ander
son street and P., Ft. W. & C. E. "W"., Al
legheny, Pa., sold for Messrs. Nelson. Mor
ris & Co., of Chicago, 111., for the weekend
ing May 3, 1890, 181 carcasses of beef, aver
age weight 621 pounds, average price $6 62
per 100 pounds.
DOCTOR
WH1TTIER
814 PENN AVENUE. PITTSBUEG, PA.
As old residents know and back flies of Pitts.
burg papers prove, is tbe oldest established
and most prominent physician in the city, de
voting special attention to all chronic diseases.
SarSSSNOFEEUNTILCURED
MFRWfll IQand mental diseases, physical
null V UUO decay, nervous deoility, lackot
energy, ambition and hope, impaired memory,
disordered sight, self distrust basbfulness,
dizziness, sleeplessness, pimples, eruptions, in
poverished blood, railing powers, organic weak
ness, dyspepsia, constipation, consumption, un
fitting the person for business, society and map
nage, permanently, safely and privately cured
BLOOD AND SKIN "&
blotches, falling hair, bones, pains, glandular,
swellings, ulcerations of tongue, mouth, throat
ulcers, old sores, are cured for life, and blood
poisons thoroughly eradicated from tbe system.
1 1 D I M A P V sney an(i bladder derange.
UniliAn 1 1 meats, weak back, gravel,
catarrhal discharges, inflammation and other
painful symptoms receive searching treatment
prompt relief and real cures.
Dr. Wblttier's life-long, extensive experience)
insures scientific and reliable treatment on
common-sense principles. Consultation free.
Patients at a distance as carefully treated as iC
hero. Office hours 9 A. jr. to 8 P. M. Sunday,
10 A. Jr. to 1 p. it only. DR. WH1TT1EB, 8li
Penn avenue. Pittsburgh Pa.
mhS-21-ssuwk
DOCTORS LAKE
SPECIALISTS In all cases r.
a airing scientific and confideo
al treatmentl Dr. S. K. Lake,
M. R. C. P. S.. is the oldest and
most experienced specialist in
the city. Consultation free and
strictly confidential. Offlca
hours 9 to4 and 7 to sp. jr.; Sundays, zto4p.
jtOonsnlt them personally, or write. Doctobsj.
ULIE, 323 Penn ave Pittsburg; Pa.
je-12 45-DWfc
-
THE GREAT EXGLISH REHEOV. ',
used tor 35 years
Ivti. f irf-sAi .TYgifihirrsrtftr ifcA TifnSt ijfinBMJistitsWslTifa fisti 3fiiisiiliisiTfea4gsiBi1ia5tSlMriif jsteMfflKMMftgMMgjftggtokaggAy
38c; do mixed. 3335c; graded No. 2 white, 87c.
Rye easier: prime to choice, 61 62c Provisions
fairly active and unchanged. Eggs firmer at
HK12c Other articles unchanged. Receipts
Flour, 5,036 barrels; wheat 4,000 bushels; com.
67,000 bushels; oats, 8.0U0 bushels: rye, 2,000
bushels. Shipments Flour, 818 barrels; corn,
182,000 bushels. Sales Wheat 73,000 bushels;
corn. 8.000.
MILWAUKEE Flour firm. Wbeat No.
2 spring, on track, cash, 8990c; July, SSKc;
No. 1 Northern, 44J95c. Corn steady; No. 8. on
track, 33c Oats firm; No. 2 white, on track,
2SKc Bio Heady; No J, OHmiHt. u
t. . -, . . -
When baby was sick, we gave her Castorla,
When she was a Child, she cried for Castorla,
When she became Miss, she clung to Castorla,
When she had Childreitshe gave them Castorla
4o-77-srwTsu
T. MELLON & SOC BANK.
12 AND 514 SMITHFIELD STREET,
PITTtiBTJEG, 3PA.
Transact a General BanHng Bnsifless.
Accounts solicited. Issue Circular Letters
of Credit for use of travelers, and Commer
cial Credits,
IN STERLING,
Available In all salts of the world. Also Issue
Credits
IN DOLLARS
For use In this country, Canada, Mexico, West
Indie, Bonta and Central America.
paw-innr
by thousands suc
cessfully. Guar
anteed to cure all
forms of Nerrons
Weakness. Emis
sions, Spermator-
rnea. impotency.
and all the effects.
fTaAs?
ef.rt aad Alter.
Photo from Life.
of Youthful f on
and the excesses
of later yean.
Gives imnediata
strength and rtg
or.Askdrugrisa)
ior wood's rno
nhodine: taxano
.substitute. Oa
OaeXaffe. tl! SItL XA. hT m.tl Writ es. lunnMrf .
Address The.Woo Chemical Co..X31Woodwar
vei, Detroit Mich.
.as-Sold in Pittsburg, Pa., by Joseph Flenn
ing & Son, Diamond and Market sts.
ap5-JIWTB7kEOWk:
i
TO WEAK MEN
Buffering from the effects of youthful errors, early
decay, wasting weakness, lost manhood. et&. 1 will
send a valuable treatise (sealed) containing; full
particulars for horns cure. FREE of charge. A
splendid medical work: should be read by arery
man who Is nervous and debilitated. Address,
Prof. F. C. FOWLEB, MoodBSi.CoBxu
ocltt-43-Dsuwk
GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE
-.- CURES
NERVOUS DEBILITY.
LOST VIGOR. "
- LOSS OF MEMORY.
rull particulars Is pamphlet
sent free. Tha ff.nnln. Mpv.
BpecWe sold by draajrlsts only la
yellow wrapper. Price, fl per
package, or six for S5, or by man.
m$$
on receipt of price, bv address.
.. ittw nt.7 uvnuiTu. ri .--- u
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BaliUeia and Liberty its,
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