THE PITTSBURG- DISPATCH, TUESDAY, JULY 29, 1890. T THE STOCKYARDS. Beceipts of Cattle ami Sheep at flerr's Island Tery Large. MARKETS HEAVY AT A DECLIKE. Tidy Butcher BeeTes at East Liberty are Scarce and Firm. HOGS Iff SHOET SUPl'LI AND HIGHER Office or Pittsburg Dispatch, Monday. J uly 2S. 1S90. , Beceipts of cattle at Herr's Island were considerably above average and markets were slow at a decline of 10c to 15e per cwt. from prices oflast Monday. Prime heavv beeves sold at $5 00 to 55 10; good to prime medium weights, $4 45 to 4 60; common to fair dt, $3 90 to ?1 00. Low grade Etuff crassers, feeders, stockers, dry cows and Wills sold at a range of 52 25 to ?3 25. JPresh cows ranged from $20 00 to $40 00 per bead ana were slow at these figures. Calves were strong and active at ojc to Cc for Tellers and 4c to 4c for grassers. Beceipts from Chicago J, Zeigler, 141 head; L. Ger son, 110; Jj. Rothschild, 51; A. Fromm, 64. From Ohio Needy A Smith, 12; N. K. Bu chanan, T; E. Wolt 8: N. T. Harper, 19. from Pennsylvania Various owners, 1L Total. US: last week, 373; previous week, 36S. The run ot sheep was the largest of the year to date and there was a sharp decline in prices. A large proportion of the offerings were sold at a loss to the drover. Chicago drovers were heavy losers, as a large number of their stock died in transit. The range ot prices tor sneep was So 60 to So 10. A small lot of choice wethers brought $5 25. The most of the sales were at 1 00 to H 50. Yearlings sold at H 75 to $5 25; spring lambs at ic to 6c per lb. At 10 o'clock prospects were that a large number of sheep and lambs would not nod buyers with out very liberal concessions on prices. Re ceipts from Chicago: L Zeigler, 200 head. From Ohio: N. K. Buchanan, 47; J. Zark, 92; J. F. Cruikshank, 135; G. W. Keesy, 85; H. Home. 41; feanrord A Lancdon. 87. From Pennsylvania, T. Bingham. 189; D. O. Pisor, 218: J. Roller, 51: L McNeese, 137; J Wright, 1W; W. Ganin. 46: G. Flinner. Ill; W. McCreary. 150. Total, 1.701: last weec, 896; previous week, 978. The offeiings of hogs were comparatively large, demand slow, and market heavy at S4 004 20 per cent as the range. Re ceipts'from Ohio. N. K. Buchanan, 25 bead; G. W. McCannon. 43; E. Wolf, 19: J. F. Cruik shank, 10: W. Zoller. 10S: Needy A Smith. 140; Sanford A Langdon, 23; Huff.Hazelnood & Co., 72. From Pennsylvania, D. O. Pisor. 12. Total, 450; last week, 163; previous week, 2)2. At Wooili' Rnn and Enit Liberty There were 152 bead of cattlo on the market at the Woods' Run yards, from Chicago, and 20 from Ohio. The best on the market weighed 1,450 lbs. and were close to prime. Chicago cattle ranged In pnee from $1 005 00 per cwt. and Ohio from H 10 to $4 70. Markets opened slow at a decline ot 15c to 25c per cwt. from prices of last Monday. As an offset to this prices were a shade lower than in the West. But, on the most favorable interpretation ot markets, it will be difficult to figure out any profits on this week's operations. There were 458 head of sheep and lambs on the market. Sheep sold at a range of 4Jc to 5c per lb.; year lings, 4Jic to 6c: soring lambs, lrom 5Kc to 7c There were S4 head of bogs on sale and all were disposed of at an average price of 4c per lb. There were 115 loads of cattle on the marKet at the East Liberty yards this morning against 150 loads last Monday. In to-day's receipts there were not above ID per cent of good butcher stock, such as our markets call for. Markets opened strong for lichr, tidy butcher cattle weighing 1,100 to 1,200 pounds, and lor this grade prices were a shade better than last week's prices. There were no strictly prime heavy cattle on the market. The few heavy beeves offered were coarse. The best price obtained was $4 40 for some Indiana cattle weighing about 1.300 lbs. The range for light, tidy butcher beeves was 3i to 4c per lb. There were 26 loads of sheepand lamb on the market this morning at the East Liberty vards, ana qnality was generally poor. A few trades of half fatted lambs from Missouri weighing 63 to 64 Bs were on the market and until some sales were made at 5 05 it was reasonably cer tain at 9 o'clock that more than one half would i,,,..- vt i a.. i.AnB be sent on Last in fiiit hands. Wnsliioffion Connrr Sbeep. There were three grades of Washington county sheep in to-day's offerings, fairly good. and weighing 92 lis which broug'htlS 10. Prime sheep were very scarce, and good were not plenty. The bulk were common and low grades and for these prices w ere off 25c from last Monday. There were 18 loads of hogs on the market against 23 loads last Monday: Markets were strong and active at 5 to 10c better prices than the close of last week. The range for the best this morning was $4 10 64 15. and all found ready buyers at these prices. The outside price at Chicago is $3 90. and receipts there this morning were 25,000 head, according to advices receit ed by one of our packers from his buyer. Meat Inspector McCutchbcon condemned to the sblndery this morning seven head of cattle from Delphos, Allen county, O., which gave conclusive proof of poison from milk weed. The disease is called milk disease in Ohio. These cattle w ere received last week, and have been held several days that the inspector might witness the de velopment or the disease. Two were consigned to the sbindcry on Saturday and the other five were condemned this morning. CATTLE Receipts.1,344 bead; shipinents,l,14i head; market slow; shade off from last week's prices; 30 cars of cattle shipped to New York tc-day. Hoes Receipts. 5,150 head: shipments, 4,400 head; market opened lirm; closed slon; best Yorkers and medium. 4 151 20; common and heavy grades. $4 00 i 10: years of hogssbipped to New York to-day. Sheep Receipts, 4.000 head; shipments, 3,200 head; market slow at: lC15c off from last week's prices. By Telrcrnph. BUFFALO Cattle: receipts,270 loads through; 350 sales. Fair demand for top grades at lower prices. Common cows, stockers very dull, prices irregular. Export steers, good to extra, $4 25gl 50; choice heavy butchers, $3 904 15; light bandy, $3 503 85: common mixed, $2 25 2 75: Michigan stocRers, heavy, $2 503 00: do, vearling. $2 002 25; stock bulls, $2 002 25; fat, S2 25g2 50; export, 2 S53 10; bologna. $1 752 25; cows and heifers, common to extra, S3 0OQ3 25. Milch cows, good to extra, SliQSS. Sheep and lamb", receipts 30 loads through 42 sales, dull. weak. Sheep Choir to extra. $3 90j 25; good to choice, SI 04 85; common to fair. $4 U04 55. Lamb. Choice to extra. $6 0036 40, good to choice, $5 C55 95: common to fair, 14 25S5 60. Hogs, receipts. 65 loads through 90 sales; fairly active,: firm; mediums and mixed, 610c: selected heavy, $4 104 15; heavy yorkers, $4 05g4 10; pigs, $4. NEW YORK Beeves Rcceints. 6.G73head, including 69 carloads for sale: market dull; natives, bulls and cows,Sl 8003 10; dressed beef, 67KC per 9: shipments to-dav. 1,016 beeves: to-morrow, 1,563 beeves, and 4,000 quarters ot beet Calves Receipts, 3,411 head; market Jc per ft lower; veals. $5 O0g6 10: buttermilk calves. $2 623 00. Sheep Receipts, 13,893 head, market slow and per ft lower; sheep. 4 005 60 per cwt: lambs, $4 00Q7 00; dressed mutton dull at 80c per ft; dressed lambs weak atl0HKc- Hogs Receipts, including two carloads for sale. 11,229 head: market dull at$100120. CHICAGO The JJrover' Journal reports: Cattle Receipts, 15.500 head: shipments, G.000 head; market active and higher; beeves. $4 50 4 80: steers. $3 504 45; Blockers and feeders, 12 203 40: cows, bulls and mixed, $1 403 30: Texas cattle, Jl 753 50; Western rangers. S3 40 3 65. Hogs Receipts. 21,590 bead: shipments. 6.500 head; market active and higher; mixed. $3 753 95: heavy. S3 703 97K: light, S3 25 4 cfl; skips, 52 50j3 75. Sheep Receipts. 10,000 head; shipments, 2.000 head: market dull and lower; native, is 755 5V Western, $4 004 60; Texans. $3 754 50. lambs, 4 75g5 80. KANSAS CITY Cattle Receipts. 8,000 head; shipments, 6.100 head; market Strang; steers, $3 404 40: cows. SI 50S3 00: stockers and feeders. S2 fc3 65: range steers. $2 25 2 95: range cow-. $15 o2 00. Hogs Receipts. 12.000 head: shipments, 4.450 head; market 5 Jfc.-lUSS-15 ou,k. S3 672KG3 70: all grades, S3 6oSS .o. Sheep Receipts, 2,600 head; shlp menK 00 bead: market Ei.nni t,mht $4 855 25: good to choice mutton's. S4 00 4 75; stockers and feeders. $2 753 25. u?T- L,0SrCJaWIe-ReceiPM- head; hipments,600 head; market active and strong: '00!iton ,ai1.Tsteers- "-Sl 50; fair to good do, S3 D0g4 30; stockers and feeders. S3 856840; Texans and Indians. $2 30S3 5a 'Hogs-Receipts, 3.300 head; shipments, 1.700 head; market a shade liigner; fair to choice heavy, S353 8a; packing grades. $3 70193 80 light, fair to best. U 80fi3 90. Sheep-Receiptt S4005 10. PmentS-L70 " CINCINNATI-Hogs in -good demand and stronger; common and light. $2 T54 10: pack ing and butchers'. S3 753 90. Receipts 3.715 bead; shipments. 910 heau. -"-e'P, ak Grain In Slglu. CHICAGO. July 28. The Board of Trade report on the visible supply of grain is an fni lows: Wheat. 18.416.000 bushed decrtase 141.000 bns is. Corn. 11.805.000 bushehrd crease. L323.000 bushels. Oats,2.030.0U0busbeIs decrease, 647XI bushels. RycTwuXo bushels;' decrease. 10,000 bushels. Barley, 8SS.000 bush' i; decrease, U.080 btuhels, '' wu Dnsl1 MABKETS BY WIRE. Another Bnlgo In the Chicago Grain Pit Everything Higher, But Tap Prices Not Sustained Hob Products Show New Life CHICAGO Wheat-A larce business was transacted and the feeling was unsettled and nervous. More or less excitement existed, especially during tho early part of the session. Prices were higher, but the full advance was not sustainea. The opening was 1K2 higher than Saturday's closing features, but the ad vance brought out free speculative offerings, under which prices declined I1KC then fluctu ated and closed about lKl.Vc higher than Saturday. The advance was attributed to about the same influences which have affected the market of late. Advices from the North west note very hot w eatberandfurther damage to the cron. At points in Northern Dakota the thermometer was 105 and 110. Corn There was an immense trade which was exceedingly wild, unsettled and very irreg ular, price changes being sharp and frequent, covering a lX2c range. The feeling prevail ms was much stronger and a quick advance was scored early in the" day. but i sharp break followed, the market ruling easier, but closed Arm. The early strength was due to bad crop advices. The buyingin of short corn, when the failure of a local house was announced, also tended to boom the market. There was free realizing on the advance, large quantities of long property coming out and prices receded la from outside figures. -.. Oats were active, and during the first pan of the session considerable excitement pre vailed, doe to the announcement of a promt nent trader that he wished his trades closed out. This made operators wild to buy, and first sales were at lJIc over Saturday's close. September and May were the most excited and showed the greatest irregularity. Sales for September werele apart at about the same moment, July and August, while not traded in very heavily, sympathized with the other de liveries and advanced lc for July and Sc for August. Mess Pork Trading was fairly active. Prices advanced 50g75c early, but settled back again 40050c and rlosed steady. Lard Trading was very active. Opening sales were made at 12I5c advance. Later, prices receded 57c and closed comparatively steady. Short Rib Sides Anlunusnally heavy trading was reported. Opening sales were at 10c ad vance, followed by a further Improvement of 2Kc Later prices settled back 25c. At the middle of tho session prices rallied 6K10c. Toward the close prices receded 2K5c and closed steady. The loading futures rangeu as follows: Wheat- No. 2. Julv. 93K33?92K?3e: August. B3UemX,G9S93MZ September, 9o 90K694Kffi95Kc Cork No7l Jnly. 4Hi46f44Jf46l:: August. 454bK45J446c; September, 4oK 47Je4546c. Oats-No. 2. Julv. SJi6S33SS3S3Kc; An eust. 33Ke34'ie3333c; September, B233K Mess Pork, per bbl.-Julv. 112 2512 25 12 2512 25; August. JI2 25I2 25U 60011 60; September. $11 2511 7511 25U 40. Lard, per 100 . August, $ 156 1566 10 6 12M: September. $6 27W6 30,16 22G6 SO; October. ?6 37K66 42 356 42K. Short Ribs, oer 100 fiss. August, $5 25 5 27K5 2565 25:" September. S5 37&5 405 S5 5 40; October. $5 505 52K5 45o 4 Cash quotations were as follows. Flour firm witb 25c advance asked. No. 2 spring wheat. 93c;;No. 3 spring wheat, S3gS5c;No. 2 red, 9ic No. 2 corn. 46c. No. 2 oats, 33Wc. No.2 n e. 54c No. 2 barlev nominal. No. 1 flaxseed. SI 30. Prime timothy seed. 81 421 43. Mess pork, per bbl. $12 25. Lard, per 100 lbs.. $6 12K Short ribs sides (loose).$5 205 30. Dry salted sboulders (boxed). $5 625 76. Short clear sides (boxed), $5 605 75. Sugars unchanged. No. 2 white oats, 35K3oVc; No. 3 do. S5 S534c On the Produce Exchange to-day the butter market was unchanged. Eggs 1313c NEW YORK Flour very firm 515c up and moderately active. Cornmeal Yellow west ern. 60c Wheat Spot dull and lgljic up, closing barely steady; options advanced l2c, chiefly December, on the general bull excite ment through adverse crop news from abroad and the West; the foreign houses became buyers and a reaction set in; the close was barely steady at c over Saturday: trading was active. Rie firm; Western. 5SK60c Barley ont ot stock. Corn Spot firm: scarce, Sc higher and quiet; options remarkably ex cited on crop news and squeeze of shorts, ad vanced 3J4c closed c under bestflgures and active. Oats Spot quiet, lc up and steady; options firmer and quiet. Hay steady and quiet. Hops steady and quiet. Coffee Options opened steady and unchanged to 15 points up. closing steady, 5320 points np; sales. 32,000 bags, including Julv, 17.4017.45c; August. 17.15I7.25c; September, 18.65I6.75c: uciouer, jo.uoiu.iuc; xiovemuer, io.iic; I -LccemDer. jaouttgiaooc; ajarcu, laovc: adhi. j.. fDot aio ..' and flrmcr. I fair cargoes, 20c; No. 7 flat bean. 1818c Sngar Ra w fi rm and fairly act! ve:f air rt lining. 4c: centrifugals, 96 tcst,5c: sales, 15,000 bags; maroim, 84 test, at 4c; bOO tons Barba does, 89 test, 4Jc; renned quiet and steady; off A, 5 9-lG5ic Molasses auiet. Rice scarce and firm. Cottonseed oil dull. Tallow qniet and steady. Rosin quiet and easy. Turpentine dull at 4242c Eggs firm; fair demand; Western, prime to fancy, 1818Kc: do good, 1717c; do poor, per case, S2 0003 00: receipts, 5.482 packages. Pork active and firm: mess, $13 00R14 00; extra prime, $10 0010 5a Cut meats higher and active: pickled bellic, 5Ji 5c; do shoulders. 56c: do bams, 10llc; middles strong: short clear. Sc Lard excited, mnrb higher with corn; active:Western steam, 6 55; sales, 500 tierces at SB 306 35: options sale, 7,2a0 tierces; August. $6 S2g6 42. closing S6 49 bid; October, $6 636 72. closing at S6 62: Nvember, S6 77; December, S 7Sg6 83, closing at $ 78: January,v SG 86. Butter extra firm; others quiet and easy: Western dalry,6llc; do creamery. 917c: Elgin. 1717Kc Cheese stronger and quiet; part skims, 35c; Ohio flat, 5Q6c PHILADELPHIA Flour firmer and higher; western winter, clear, 14 151 50; winter pat ent, $5 O0Q5 20; Minnesota clear, $4 OOg'4 50; do. straight. S4 604 9a Wheat opened llc higher, but subsequently reacted &c and closed harelv steady; No. 2 red. July. 93Ji9SVc; Au gust. 96i4e97c: September, 96Kffl97c: October. 97K9Sc Corn strong and prices advanced 324c under bullish speculation in all mar kets, based chiefly on hot and dry weather in the corn belt; no 2 mixed and yellow, for local trade. 53c; No. 2 mixed, Juh-. 5051c; August, 50i51c; September, 5QK51c; October. 51 51c Oats strong: price generally lc higher, witb good local trade demand lor car lots, but nothing doing in futures: No. 3 clipped, white, 4343c; No. 2 white, 43043c: do. clipped. 44c; No. 2 white Julv. 424Jc August, 3SK 39c; September, 37J437Jic; October. Sijes 3SVc Provisions Arm and in good demand. Mess pork, new, $12 5013 00: do. prime mess, new. S12: do. family, $14 OOSH 50; bams, smoked, ll12c Lard Western steam. J6 35. Butter Fancy goods scarce and firm; faulty qualities dull: Pennsylvania creamery, extra. 17c; do. prints, 2225c Egis scarce and firm; Pennsylvania firsts, 1718c Cheese steady; part skims, 50c. ST. LOUIS Flour very firm, but quiet. Wheat excited and sharply higher; cash and July, lower; No. 2 red, cash. 92c: July closed at92c asked: August, 92- asked: Septem ber. SJJic: December, 975g97Hc Corn No. 2 cash,41Jc: August closed at 43c: Septem ber, 41Vic bid; October, Uc; May. Wc Oats No. 2 cash, 35c bid; August closed at 34c bid; September, 3434c: May. S7K. Rve higher; No. 2 cash, ole bid; No. 3 cash, 47c Hay weak except for top grades; prairie,S10ll for choice to fancy; timothy. $U 00U 6a Bran dull sacked lots, 6567c Flaxseed firm; cash $1 261 27; August, $1 27. Butter easy; creamery. 1218c; dairy, 612c Eggs steady at 9c Cornmeal higher; cash lots. $2 31 Bagging quiet at 6KSc MINNEAPOLIS Receipts of wheat over Sunday were 70 cars. Shipments, 61 cars There was a very fair demand for good milling with the buying about equally divided between local and outside accounts. Prices were strong during the early part ot the session but weak ened some later in sympathy with lower fu tures. Tho offerings were not heavy, and most of the good wheat was picked up by the end of the sessb n. Closing quotations: No.l hard.July and August, 94c; on track, 97g9Sc; No 1 Northern, July and August, 91c; September 90c; December, 92c; on track, 93c; .No. 2 Northern, July and August, 8&c; on track, b590c BALTIMORE Wbeat No. 2 winter red. snot, 9G96c: Jnly, 96Jig96Sc; August, 969bWc: September. 96964c: December, OSJfgosfc. Corn Western unsettled: mixed, spot, 4alc August, 60c asked; September, 50c asked. Oats active but stiff: Western white, 4748e; West ern white mixed. 4547c: graded. No. 2 whir,. 48c: graded. No. 2 white, mixed, 47c Rye quiet; choice, 6658c; good to prime, 5355c common to fair, 4951c Hav very slow; nil me' to choice timothy. $11 0012 60. Provisions steady. Butter firm; active and scarce for best goods; others quiet. Eggs firm; active and scarce at lc Coffee steady. MILWAUKEE-Flour higher. Wheat firm No. 2 spring, on track, cash. 91692c; July, 90Kc; o. 1 Northern, 9ac Corn firm; No. 8. on tract 45c Oats firm: No. 2 white, on track, S637c Rye steady; N o. 1. in store. Mc Barley quiet: No. 2, in store. 68c Provisions firm. Pork August, $11.65. Lard-August, $6 (XX Cheese unchanged; Cheddars, TJJSSc TOLEDO Wbeat active and flrmsr: cash and July, 83Jc: August, Kc; September, 94j;c; De cember, BTJic Corn active and steady; cash and August, 4Sc; September. 47Jc Oats quiet: cash, 36c Cloverseed active; cash, S3 90; Octo ber, $4 15. DULUTH Wheat opened firm and higher and ruled steady, with slight advance near the close. Closing prices are: July, 96J(c; August, 97c; September. 95c; No. 1 bard, WJVfc; No. 1 Northern, 94c; No. 2 Northern, 69c Sleeplessness, nervous prostration, J nervous dyspepsia, annness. Dines, cured by Dr. Miles' Nervine. Sample free at Jos. Fleming St Son's Market it. xu ALL IN THE WHIRL. Clearing House Figures, Show How . Pittsburg is Progressing. ACTIVITY ALL OYER THE COUNTRY. A Lively Day In Home Secnrities and a Eeal Surprise in Fetrolenm. IMPORTANT MOVEMENTS IN EBALTI Business opened np for the week in good shape yesterday. Cooler weather made hustling possible. Bank exchanges were $3,250,000 in round numbers, against $2,242,111 22 same date last1, year. There was no corporation checking, nor anything ontside the usual movement of trade, to produce this splendid result Proof of this is furnished in the lact that all the banks came in heavy. This shonld not be over looked in estimating the prosperity of the city. A strong and encouraging feature of the business situation is the fact that the entire country is prosperous. This is shown in official Government and State reports, and in thelarge employment of money. Almost every line of industry shows a rapid and steady advance. There is no speculative ex citement outside of a few localities, but simply a solid and substantial growth based on the development of vast resources. Business Newa and Gossip. The WilklnshurgM. E. Church building and lot have been sold to Prof. Van Tyne, of the academy, for $8.00a The trustees reserved the right to use the building for 18 months, by which time the new church will be ready for occupancy. 1 W. A. Herron A Sons We can report a fair ly good demand for medium class houses, a good part of which comes from outsiders seek ing homes in our city. As a rule they are a good class of people. It was urged yesterday by a prominent busi ness man that it would have been a better plan to have offered the City Farm at public sale than to have taken bids for it, as was done. At a public sale, he continued, competition is ex cited, while the other mode does away with it to a great extent. Mortgages on file for record yesterday num bered 37, of which the largest was for $5,000 and the smallest for 72. Eleven were for pur chase money. Asphaltum floors is the latest idea In fire proof buildings. Strips of wood are attached to the sides and ends to tack carpets to. Pittsburg bankers predict an easier money market from this time on until the opening of the fall trade. They do not look for lower rates, however, the greater ease being in the direction of wider accommodations. The Pennsylvania Rail road reports that the quantity of coal and coke originating on and carried over its lines east of Pittsburg and Erie for the week ending July 19 was 325,900 tons, of which 227,862 tons were coal and 9S.03S tons coke. Tbesusplusof the city banks, as (shown by recently published statements, is $5,776,329. They bold $420,343 In excess of the 25 per cent required by law. Movements In Real Estnte. The most important transactions in realty that escaped the clutches of the brokers yes terday took place on the Northside. Black A Balrd sold for the Third National Bank of Pittsbnrg to W. J. Richter the property on the New Brighton road. Eleventh ward, at the head of Davis avenue, formerly owned and oc cupied as a residence by Hamilton E. Goo, consisting of 6? acres, with a handsome frame dwelling of 12 rooms, for $24,240. Mr. Richter will subdivide the property and place it on the "market. The same Arm closed a deal for nnlmproved property in the East End. not a stone's throw from the corner of Center,Ellsworth and High land avenues, for $11,000. While admitting the sale, they ref nsed particulars. J. E. Glass made a Dreak Into new territory, which will no doubt be fruitful of good re sults. He sold for Samuel B. Ross to Messrs. Dornberger & Oebmler a tract of land contain ing 6J4 acres, situated on Lincoln nearLem ington avenue. Twenty-first ward, for a price approximating S11,000. It will be laid out In lots, to be known as Lincoln Terrace, and be put on the market by Mr. Glass. Au East End firm sold a piece of nnlm proved property near Negley and Penn ave nues, Nineteenth ward, for $10,000. It was reported that Chief Bigelow, acting for the city, has an eye on 17 acres adjoining Highland Park for the purpose of enlarging that handsome breathing spot. J. B. Larkm & Co. sold for E. D. Smith, of this city, to Clement B. Streator. 11 lots in the Keystone addition to Chicago, 25x125 feet each. Terms cash at a satisfactory price not named. Black & Baird sold for F. G. Frioke to R. G. Gillespie lot No. 47. onMcPberson Boulevard, Boulevard place, East End. 55x140 feet, adjoin ing Mr. Gillespie's other property, for $3,300. W. A. Herron fc Sons sold a brick house ot five rooms, on Clark street. Seventh ward, with a triangular-shaped lot, for $1,400. Samuel W. Black & Co. sold for the Blair estate, Glenwood, a lot on Almeda street, 24x 120 feet, at a price approximating $600. James W. Drape fc Co., closed the sale of a piece of property In the suburbs of 12 acres of ground, with dwelling and outbuildings, for $15,000 cash. A BEVTVAL. Local (Stocks Bracing; Dp Under the Lead enlilp of Wentlnsbonse Electric. The stock market yesterdsj was one of the liveliest of the yoar. A comparatively wide range of properties was handled, bnt Wcstlng hoase Electria was the chief attraction. A scrip dividend and the extension of the time for subscribing for new stock gave it a docided boost. The first sale was at 41. against 39 on Saturday. It advanced to 42, and closed at41? bid. Over 1.000 shares of it changed hands, beside 478 rights. Other features of the market were advances in Philadelphia Gas and Switch and Signal, and slight declines in street railways. Fidelity Title and Trust Company was offered down to 155. Bids, offers and sales follow: nnsT CALL. B A SXCOKD CALL. B A Pitts Petro. S. M. Ex.. Commercial Mat, Bank... Fidelity Title and T. Co.. Marine Nntlonal Bank,... Masonic Bank Mer. & Man. Kat. Bank.. Mononirahela Nat Bant.. Boatinans' Insurance Brldgewater. Peoples' Wat, G. P. Co. Pennsylvania Gas Co .... Philadelphia Co Colombia Oil Company... Central Traction. Citizens' Traction Pittsbnrg Traction Pleasant Valley. Pitts.. All'y Man Second Avenue Electric. Pitts. Western R.K Co.. M. Y.4 Clev. Gas Coal Co.. bnspenilon Bridge (nth st) La js'orlaMlnlnc Co lister Milling Co Allegheny ConntyElectrlc East End Electric Westlnghonse Electric... Union S. S. Co 439 105 108 ma 1MK 106 10S 65 70 128 r.H 66 60 15K SS 60 15 J4 aox soj-s ..... 28j 65 ...... S7 ZSM 29 Hi "eo" 30V a 2 27 29K '."'.'. "H" 29 225 "is" "ii" 84 60 42 i'4 18 17 116 1163 00 nv 41 16 IT Westingnouse a. a. ui... n. . -11 -a ft i,Aa Phll.il alnhl. Gas at 30k. 40 at 80. 100 Electric at 41 and 20 at 41?i- Before call 40 Philadelphia Gas brought 30. Three hundred and seventy eight Elecirio rights realized 6U At second call 100 Electric realized 41. 10 i 200 for whom it may concern 42.1041; 8 Citizens' National Bank 65JJ, and S Central Traction 27. Between calls 110 Philadelphia Gas sold at 30, and 100 Pleasant Valley at 28. Before rail 150 Electric went at 42 and 600 at 42. One bnndred Electric rights changed hands at sec ond call at 6U The total sales of stocks at New Xork yester day were 163.062 shares, Including Atchison. 18.410; Delaware, Lackawanna and Western, 14,720; Missouri Pacific 3.SS0: Richmond and Western Point. 8.659; St. Paul. 9,692; Union Pacific, 1M70. A GOOD 8TAET. Heavy Checking and Depositing at the Banks CioTrdlna; San Francisco. The week opened at the banks with an easy money market, a good demand for discounts, and heavy checking and depositing. Exchanges were $3,240,869 45 and balances $299,075 97. Rates were steady on a 67 per cent basis, with most of the business at the inside figure. Tbaei race Xor positions In the Gearing House report resulted in placing Pittsbnrg ahead of Baltimore by nearly $3,000,000. and be hind San Francisco by considerably less than $1,000,000. Cincinnati, New Orleans, Cleveland and other ambitious cities were nowhere. Pitts burg will soon crowd San Francisco perman ently out of sixth place. Baltimore is no longer a rival. Money on call at New York yesteroay was easy, ranging from 24 per cent, last loan 8, closing offered at 3. Prime mercantile paper. 6S6. Sterling exchange quiet and steady at $4 85 for 60-day bills and $4 Sbi for demand. Cloalng Bend Quotations. U. s. 4a. reg....l....IV U. S. 4s, coup K3h U.S.4KS, reg losx V. S. 4s, coup 103s 1....I23V M. K. AT. Oen. to.. W Mutual Union es....ii M. J. C. int. uen...j jj4 ftinptfi te- lRta.. 1163s raemcBsoi 'w ua f.oulslanastamped4s 91 Missouri Es 101 Northern Pac. 2ds..llf Northw't'n consols." Northw'noeoen'sosiiu Oregon &, Trans. 6S.108X St.Lfcl. M. Gen. I. 86 St.L. 4S.P. Gen.M.lll St. Paul consols.. ...123K Tenn. new set. Os... .1064 Tenn. new sit. &..., lui Tenn. newset. 3s.. . 73X Canada So. Ms IWV Central Pacific Ists. 109 Den. A K. G. lsts...U6M St. P. CM&Pe. Ists.114 Tx.. Tc L.G.Tr.fls. 9-X Tx.. Pc. K G.Tr.Ks. 41 uen. sk. u. k:4 U.JtB. G. VVestltts. Erie 2ds 103 M. K. 4 T. Gen. 6i.. MX Union 1'acino isu. ..uu West" Shore 104 New York Clearings. $66,839,772: bal ances, 53,856,751. BOSTON Clearings. $14,644,518; balances $1,585,407. Money 4 per cent. , Phh.adei.phia Clearings. $3,207,711; bal ances, $1,482,117. Baltimore Clearings. $2,362,542; balanoes, $189,503. Londok The amount of bullion gone into the Bank of England on balance to-day Is 107.000. PABts Three per cent rentes, 82f 67c for the account, Chicago Bank clearings were $12,741,000. New York exchange was at par. Rates for moneyweresteadyat6percentoncall and at E7 per cent on time A SUEPEISE. The Deadlock In Petroleum Broken by n Snle Limn Certificates. The oil market produced a genuine surprise - yesterday. There was a sale of 25.000 barrels by Archie Megrew. It brought 89, which was the opening, highest, lowest and closing quotations. The possibility of a sale was con sidered so remote that several operators went to the cirens and missed tbo excitement. A meeting of members of the Exchange will be held directly after the call this morning to take action on the recommendation of the Con ference Committee to list buckeye certificates Np opposition is known to exist. It is Hobson's choice. For Lima oil 38 b. o. 30, was bid. Re fined was down at London. Featnre of Yesterday's Oil Market. Corrected daily by John M. Oakley & Co.. 45 Sixth street, members of the Pittsburg Petro leum Exchange: Opened.... '. 695 I Lowest. S9H Highest S9H I Closed , 89) Barrels. Average charters Average shipments Average runs 25, S34 79.031 .... 63,335 RCnea. New Tore. 7.20c Keflned, London. S 7-16d. Kellned, Antwerp, 17f. Kenned, Liverpool. S 1I-1M. BeOued. Bremen, 6.80m. A B. MoGrew quotes: Puts, 88; calls.S9 89. Other Oil Markets. Oil Cttt. Jnlv 28. Petroleum opened at 89Jc; highest, SDJc: lowest, 89c; closed at S9c Sales, clearances not reported; charters, 80,616 barrels: shipments, 79,967 barrels; runs. 82,009 barrels. Bratjfobd. July 23. Petroleum opened at 89c; closed at 8Sc: highest, S9c; lowest, 88e; clearances, 80,000 barrels. New York. Jnly 28. Petroleum feature less, continues dulL It opened steady with spot 88c, and August option 89c. The movement during the day was insignificant and tbe close was dull with soot oil 8Sc and Au gust option 89c Stock' Exebange Opening, 88c; highest, 89c: lowest, 68c: closing, S8c Consolidated Exchange Opening, 89c; high est, 89c; lowest, 83c; closing, 89c Total, sales, 73,000 barrels. SOUTHWEST OIL WELLS. A New One In nt Chartiers and One at Forest Grave. A good well will likely be brought in In the Chartiers field to-day. It is, in fact, all ready in, tbe hole being full of oil. but the company does not wish to crowd tbe mourners. Tbe Thompson No. 2, at Forest Grove, is in and a payer. It is close to No. L whioh was a duster In tbo hundred-foot, Tbey are putting the No. I deeper. Another well on the Hugbey farm reached sand yesterday. Tbey were still fishing in the Haymaker, on the Watt heirs' place, at Coraopolis. They got the anger stem out yesterday, but found that It had parted company with the bit. A Butler Wildcat. rSPECIAI. TXLXORAH TOTHB DISrATCH." Butieb, July 28. A 100-barrel well on tho Monroe Cecil farm lntbesoutheastpart of Fair view township has caused some excitement and sent np the price of leases to 51.000 per acre. Tbe well is in advance of development and began flowing when but a few feet of the sand had been drilled. SLIGHT IMPROVEMENT. Noted In Wall Street, Dae to Trouble la Ar gentine Republic nnd Advices From London Sugar Refineries Still Lend. New Yoek, July 28. The stock market on the whole displayed a little more animation than on tbe average last week, bnt the bears seemed to have acquired courage from lower prices "in London, coupled with the disturb ances in the Argentine Republic Prices, con sequently, are generally slightly lower than at the close last week. London was a seller to a limited extent owing to the fortnightly settle ments, but London is not now either a buyer or seller of American stocks to any amount, and specnlation for the present in American stocks there seems to bo in the same condition that our market is here. The lower London figures and the Blight pressure of foreign stocks for sale led to a trial of tbe market by the bears, and that is all there is to to-day's stock market. As usual sugar refineries attracted most attention, both for its activity and weakness, the only stocks of the regular list showing any animation or a tendency to follow being Atchison and Union Pacific. nd never did the fluctuations amount to much. Lackawanna came in for some of the pressure late in the day, theory being that it is no longer supported and must yield read ily to pressure ot short sales. Among all but professional operators there is not the slightest disposition to trade either on one side or tbe other, and in the dullness as usual tne snort siae is most inviting to tbe traders. The apathy displayed among even that class of operators, bonever, is remarkable. Tbo bears are working on the theory that be fore any material rise can take place there must be a downward movement to invite buy ing, and hence are from time to time testing tbe market in a limited manner, but the suc cess attending these tactics last week will not encourage any larce ventures in that direotion unless supported by some outside influence like that of to-day. The pressure upon the list was almost continuous to-da7, and prices slowly yielded without material losses except in tbe few stocks mentioned, and tbe market closed barely steady on a limit rally, with prices generally slight fractions below those of Saturday. Sugar, however, was down 2 per cent, Atchison 1 per cent and Union Pacific . Railroad bonds showed considerable sympa thy witb tbe decline in stocks, but tbore was no marked loss. The tone of the dealings was generally heavy, with fluctuations as usual scarcely perceptible, while tbe dealings lacked feature of any kind. Mobile and Ohio news, however, roseS per cent to 115, but no other important changes occurred. The trading was light throughout. Government bonds have been dull and steady. State bonds have been neglected. Tbe Post says: Tbe constant market for silver in India and China, which has always sntitatned tbe price, appears to be reasserting Itself. Bullion dealers now find a small profit in excreting to Loudon. The returns of the New York Custom House for the three weeks to July 19, show total exports of $824,600 of silver and only $76,355 of imports. The move ment of silver at San Francisco is a constant large excess of exports, the demand being from China. Even m June, when the excess of silver imports at the port of New York was very large, tbe exports at San Francisco ex ceeded the Imports by $317,949. bo that now that tbe movement at the port of New York has turned to one of excess of Import, it ap pears probable that tbe normal export move ment of silver to India and China has been re established on the higher range of prices. Tne foiijwing tame snows tne prices or active stocks outne New York Stock Exchange yester day. Corrected dally for Tux Dispatch by Whitney A STEFBXSBON, oldest Pittsburg mem bers ofNew York UtocK Exchange, 87 Fourtn ave nue Clos ing Bid. 24 63 28 43V 79J4 88)2 124 S21 23H 13 Open- Hlfh- Low est. Inc. est. Am. Cotton on Am. Cotton Oil pref. Am. Cotton Oil Trust.. 1&H Atch., Top. A S. F 41M Canadian Pacific 79M Canada Southern Central or New Jersey. 123 jf Central Pacinc ,. .... Chesapeake A Ohio.... 23V 29 44X iiH 43M 79 Hi 125 12& r& S3 106 H uaieago uu null, .... M4 u., oai. a uumey ,...109: lacy ....108K 107,, t?..Pf...U! U8X u., aui.SBt.paul..., 7ZH MX 72K vii au. a Bb r, US. 90 liox 73 ji si" aox i5i 167 90 14 82' 110 "144 73)- 99V MX SO C4 44 147H 167M lsx &4V 9 78 22H 118 MM aiH 21 M 72 hi 20h isK 25H 4 18 20 60 5 8IV 24M 45 A& 45H 20 45K 220)4 Ziii MX 37 93 108 74X 20H 62) KH iiJi 8 IK 37K 75 C. & Northwestern ....111H u&x.w.Dt 7 c., c.. c. & 1 7.. nx u., c. v. & L pref. Col. Coal a iron M Col. & Hocking Valley 80 Ches.Jt Ohio 1st pref.. .. Ches. ft Ohio 2d pref Be ..Lack A West H7 Del. Jt Hudson W7 Den. Jfcltlo Grand Den. & Klo Oraude. pi KH E.T., Va. AGa ;!, Y?-&G- Istpr .... E.I.. Va. AGa 2dpf23 Illinois Central J16V LaKeErieAWeit ., (.ate Erie A West pf.. ...' Like Shore AM. 3 109!$ Louisville & Nashville. 85 Mobile A Ohio 2I Missouri Pacific .-. 735? National Lead Trust... 21 NewXork Central 107Ji n. r.. c. a at. l N. Y.. U E. A W 25K S--'A.E-W.pd..65 N. if. AN. E. ......... 43!- N. Y.. O. AW. ... IB Norfolk A Western Norfolk A Western pf. .... Northern Pacific....... 33X Jfortn.Flllcor.... 82X Ohio A Mississippi Oregon Improvement. .... gron Transcon 47Jf Pacific Mall 3 Peo. Dec. A Evans Phlladel. A Reading... 45 Pullman Palace Car...2M Klchmond A W. P. T. 22X KiehmondAW.P.T.pf .... St. Paul A Ouluth..... .... St. Paul A Dulutb pr. S1 p 4Hnn. A Man. .109 Sugar Trust 75K Texas Pacin 20S Union Pacific s2j? Wabash ....." .. Wabash nrererred 26 Western Union 83V Wheeling A L. K 38M Wheeling A L. E.pref. 75 111X 7i)i si" taii H7X 167M K,H MM 23 116 23 IIS 1C9 88 2I4 KH 21 IMS 85H 21X 72)4 2m 2SX 60 48H 19 an 474 19 33JS, 82)4 ' S5K Sla 47 46 1 46M 45'i ) 2MH 22). 45X 109 78i 20 62 is'" 83 3SH KH 109 74 20X 82 uk 8.T 37 75H Boston Stocks. Atch. A Ton 44V Boston A Albany... .228 Boston A Maine.. ...203 ;. B-AQ I06V Clnu.. San. A Clev.. 28 Eastern K.K. 167 FltchburR, R. 90 Flint A Fere M 28X Flint APereM. pre. 87 Mass. Central 2IH Mex. Central com... 2o!4 N. Y. 4 N.Eng..... 48H Old Colony. 173U Rutland preferred.. 70 " Wis. Central com... 28! AllouezMg. Co 9 Atlantic 23J4 Boston A Mont 81M Calumet A Hec!a....80S Franklin 28 Huron Hi Kearsarge 24 usceola 44 Pewabic (new) 10 Onincy 126 Santa Fe Conner 70 Tamarack .....211 Boston Land 00 H San Diego Land Co. 23 West End Land Co.. VM Bell Telephone 227K Lamson Stores 32 Water Power 6 Centennial Mining. 33 Philadelphia Stocks. Closing quotations or Philadelphia stocks, fur nished bv Whitney A Stephenson, brokers. No. 57 Fourth avenue. Members New XerK btocE Ex change! Bid. Asked. Pennsylvania Kallroad S3K 53V Beading 22 9-1 22 jsuuaio, ntisDurg A western lu Lehigh Vallay 62 C.. HockL AP 90X 0H C.. St.L.&Ftts .?. .. C., St. L. 4 Pitts., pf.. 45 C. St. P.. M M 10 11 52K 82V 82 52H 3( 35X zm, Ki HX 82 benign navigation Philadelphia and Erie N ortharn pacific Northern Pacific preferred...., Mlnlnc Stocks. NkW Yobe, July 28. The official clos ing quotations for mining stocks to-day were as follows: Alice, 250; Adams Consolidated, 100; Caledonia, B. H.. 190: Deadwood Territory, 125; Eureka Consolidated. 375: Gould & Curry. 250; Hale ANorcross, 270; Homestake. 10.00: Horn silver. 345: Ironsllver, 175; Mexican, 320; Mt, Diablo.. 190; N. Belle Isle, 110; Ontario. 41.00; Occidental, 110; Phcenix. Arizona, 120; Savage, 350; Sierra Nevada, 300. LATE MEWS IS BEIEP. Bismarck has postponed his visit to En gland. Fears of a revolution at Zanzibar are en tertained. A Chicago woman dies from drinking a pint of paregoric. Ft, Worth suffered a $10,000 Are, A One residence with all its contents. Tho Wei 8 h railroaders, miners and dock men, are on the ere of a strike. An insane girl at Berlin kills her mother while sleeping and then fires the house. Fire at Pilloy's Island, N. F entirely de stroyed the village and 600 are homeless. Emperor William has returned to Berlin from his trip to Norwegian waters much im proved in health. John Wesley Meyers, a well-known colored man of Baltimore, was found murdered near the city yesterday. Fears are entertained for the recovery of the Crown Princess of Greece, who recently gave birth to a son. The third annual meeting of the National Bar Association will be held la Inaianapolis,be ginning Wednesday. Tbe Georgia Supreme Court has refused a unen inai 10 xoeu wuuuur&, wuumuruerea nine people in Bibb county. While Miss Eastlake. the actress, was voy aging from New York to England, she was re lieved of $500 worth of jewels. The cattlemen accused of stealing beer while on their return from England on the steamer Chicago have been held. While boatrldlng in company with two young men. on the Desplaines river, near Chi cago, Miss Lena Jennings was drowned. Frank Ward, of Newburg, N. Y., who has been missing for some time, turned up yester day in Chicago. Claimed that he is insane. One Chinaman in El Paso accused another of being a Highbinder and stabbed him to death with a dagger. The murderer is in jail. The German soldiers are collecting a fund with which to defray tbe expenses of celebra tion In bonorof Count Von Moltke's ninetieth birthday. Tbo town of Wallace. Idaho, the great min ing camp of the Coeur d'Alene mining district, has been destroyed by fire. Fully L600 persons are homeless. The balance of the locked-out New York cloakmakers returned to work yesterday under the new agreement, and the troubles Detween the employers and tne men are ended. A well-connected registry clerk who has been in the Galveston Postoffice for six years is under arrest for rifling registered letters to the amount of about $1,000. He denies tbe charge. Tbe secretary of the Knapp, Stout t Co. lumber firm, of St. Louis, is under arrest for killing a workman by striking him over the head, for breaking a valuable piece of timber. Owing to discriminating between white and colored customers, George Hughes, an old col&red man, who bad a stand on the Baltimore postoffice steps for 20 years, was ordered re moved. -It is thought First Lord of the Treasury, the Right Hon. W. H. Smith, will be obliged to resign his seat in Parliament on account of failing health. He fainted at a dinner party on Saturday last. , Mrs. Margaret C. C. Steele, eldest sister of the late Roscoe Conkling. is dangerously ill at her home in Brooklyn. She is 76 years old, and was for 20 years an inspectress in tbe New York custom House. Six of the victims of the Lawrence cyclone have been buried and anotber funeral will oc cur to-day. Four thousand dollars' relief fund was raised up to yesterday and the amount largely increased last night, It3 Is said the Mormon Church has from $5,000,000 to $8,000,000 invested in California real estate in tbe names of various members of tbe church, so that It would not be subject to con fiscation by the United States Government. By throwing off a ponch of mail from a fast train at KJIbonrn, Wis., a truck was knocked under the train, derailing one car. The train was stopped before the bridge was reached, where a serious calamity must bare occurred. A riot ensued In a cathedral at Constanti nople, when tbe Patriarch of tbe Armenian Church was' dragged from the pulpit by a mob. The Turkish troops were brougbt out to quell the riot and several soldiers were killed, From a small cloud in an otherwise clear sky a single vivid flash of lightning descended at New Florence, Mo., striking two men who were standing against a barbed wire fence, in stantly killing one and paralyzing the other from the waist downward. Near Springfield, Mo., the body ot John B, Carpenter, aged 60, was found hanging to a tree. He left a letter in his bat, complaining of his children mistreating him. Had bad noth ing to eat for four days. It is claimed he was once a Congressman from Ohio. By colliding with a horse that had fallen through a trestle a Louisville and Nashville freight train of engine and 12 cars were ditched near Uulpbnr, Ky. Tbe firemanwas instantly killed by tbe engine falling on him, tbe engi neer bad both legs broken and a brakeman was badly hurt, - Hnmburr Piss for the Liver. Habitual cons pa ion and torpidity of the liver are function- .erangements which shonld not be so long neglected as to generate actual disease. Hamburg Figs should be tagen, and tbe deranged organs restored to health. 25 cents. Dose, one ng. At all druggists. 'ttssu Mack dbuo Co., N. Y. SICK HEADACHE. SICK HEADACHE. SICK HEADACHE '-Carter's Little Lvler Pills. '-Carter's Little Liver Pills. '-Carter's Little Liver Pills. SICK HEADACHE '-CarWr's Llttla Liver PiUs. BoM-cr-XTM DOMESTIC MARKETS. Monday's Produce Trade Superseded by Barnum and Bailey. CHOICE DAIRY PRODUCTS FIRM. Com and Hillfeed Advancing and ire a Shade Lower. Oats GENERAL GEOCEEIES ABE UNCHANGED OFFICE Of PITTSBURG DISPATCH, 1 Monday, Jnly 28. 1890. J Country Produce Jobbing Prices. A circus Monday is not favorable, as a rule. to jobbing trade. At the produce commission houses trade was reported quiet. One com mission man was discovered, however, who had placed three carloads of stuff with the circus people and feft very comfortable over to-day's business. There are 80 people connected with tne show, not to speak of the lions, tigers, ele phants, horses, etc., who must be provided for these two days of their sojourn with us. Prices I of vegetables have not materially changed since our last report. There are very lew berries on tbe market. Their day Is nearly over for this season. All high grade dairy products are steady, but low grades drag. In New York all desirable cheese found ready markets last week. There were 67,295 boxes exported to Liverpool and 6,000 to Glasgow. At the cheese factories there is a disposition to withhold stock in the faith of better prices. The general view cf jobbers is that bottom has been reacbed. Apples SI 005 00 a barrel. BUTT.EB Creamery, Elgin. 1819c; Ohio do, 17c: fresh dairy packed, 1012c; country rolls, 79c. Berries Blackberries, $1 25451 35 a bucket: currants, $9 00 a stand: huckleberries, $1 60 a pail; Ives grapes" 1012c fi. Beans Navy hand-picked beans, $2 0062 10. Beeswax 2830c 9 Si for choice: low grade, 2022c. CANTAtouiES Ann Arundel, $2 603 00 fl crate; nutmegs, $2 50 fl crate; watermelons. $25 0O35 00 a hundred. Cider Saad refined, $7 60; common, $3 00 4 00: crab cider. $7 5008 00 fl barrel; cider vin egar, 1012c 1 gallon. Cheese New Ohio cheese, 77Jjc: New Sork cheese, 89c: Llmberger, 10llc: do mestic Swettzer. 1313c: Wisconsin brick Sweitzer. H12Kc; imported Sweitzer, 24J$c- EOGS 820cp dozen for strictly fresh. Feathers Extra live geese, o060c; No, 1, do, 4045c; mixed lots. 3035c V Maple Stbbp 7595c a can; maple sugar, 10llc p ft. Hon et 15c B. Poultry Spring chickens. 40S75c a pair; dressed, ll12c a pound: ducks, 6575c a pair. Tallow Country, 3?c: city rendered. 4c Tropical Fruits Lemons, choice. $8 00 CC6 60; fancy, $7 007 50; Rodi oranges, $S 0O 0 60; Sorrento oranges, $5 00S 60; bananas, $2 002 50 firsts. $1 75 good seconds ?) bunch; pineapples, $79a hnndred;Caliiornia peaches, (2 002 50 ft box: California apricots. $2 25 2 50; California plums, $2 50 V box; California pears, $4 00 $) box. Vegetables New Southern potatoes, $3 25 63 50 barrel; sweet potatoes, $6 00 H barrel; home-grown cabbage, $2 002 50 $) barrel; onions, $3 754 00 a barrel: green onions, 2025c ft dozen; green beans, home grown, $1 001 15 basket; wax beans, home-grown, 65070c ft basket; cucumbers, $1 60 1 75 fl crate; tomatoes, 2550c a peck box; home-grown tomatoes, $3 003 50 a bushel;, celery, 40c a dozen. Groceries. Green Coffee Fancy Hio, 24K25Kc; choice Bio, 22K23Kc; prime Rio, 23c: low grade Rio, 20K21c; old Government Java. 2930c; Maracaibo, 25K27Kc; Mocha, SO 32c; Santos"222ec; Caracas, 2527c;La Gaayra, 2627c Roasted (In papers) Standard brands, 25c: high grades, 2830c; old Government Java, bulk, 333Jc; Maracaibo, 2829c: Santos. 26 30c; peaberry, 30c: choice Rio, 26c; prime Rio, 25c; good Rio. 24c: ordinary, 21022Xc ' Spices (whole) Cloves, 1718c: allspice, 10c; cassia, 8c: pepper, 15c; nutmeg. 7580c Petroleum Oobbers' prices) 110" test, 7Vc: Ohio, 120. 8Kc; headlight, 150, 8Jc; water white, 10c; globe, H14Uc; elaine, 14Kc; car nadlne, llc; royaline, lie; red oil, lHjJliKcf purity, 14c Miners' Oil No. 1 winter strained, 4345o $ gallon; summer, SS40c; lard oil, 5558c Sybup Corn syrup, 2830c; choice sugar syrup, 8838c; prime sugar syrup, S033c; strictly prime, 3335c; new maple syrup. 90c .n. u. .aioiAS3E3 r-aucy. Dew crop. 4souc; choice, 47c; medium, 3S43c: mixed. 4042c Soda Bicarb in kegs, 33c; bi-carb in K't 5c; bl-carb assorted packages, 56c; sal-soda in kegs, lc: do granulated, 2c Candles Star, full weight, Sc: stearlne, p set, 8Kc: parafflne, H12c Rice Head Carolina, 77c: choice, 6 6Jic; prime, 66c; Louisiana, 5?65c STAitciI Pejrl, 3Jc; cornstarch, 66c; gloss starch, 57c Foreign Fruits Layer raisins, $2 65; Lon don lavers,$275;MuscatelS.$250: California Mus catels.$240; Valencia,8Kc;Ondara Valencia. 10f (Sue; suitan, iukciic; currants, ot&ocz i:UT' key prunes,6Ji7c:D rench prunes, 912c:Saloo ica prunes, m 2-b packages. 9c: cocoanuts $1 100. 8; almonds. Lan., $) ft, 20c; do Ivlca. 17c: do shelled, 40c; walnuts, nap., 1314c; Sicily filberts, 12c; Smyrna figs, 1213c; new dates, 6 6c; Brazil nuts, 13c; pecans. 9K10c; citron, yi Ik. 1819c: lemon peel. 16c 9 &; oraugs peel. 17c. Dried Fruits Applet, sliced, per D., 6c; apples, evaporated, llUc: peaches, evapor ated, pared, 24J$26c: peaches, California, evap orated, unpared, 1718c: cherries, pitted, 15c; cherries, unpitted, 58C; raspberries, evapor ated. 32333c; blackberries. 77c; huckleber ries. 10312c Sugars Cubes, 6Jc; powdered, 6c; granu lated, 6c; confectioners' A, 6c; standard A, 6c; soft white. 6e6Jc: yellow, choice, 5 5Jic; yellow, good, 605c; yellow, fair, Ejf 6XC- vellow, dark. 55$ic Pickles Medium, bbls. (1,200), $9 00; me dium, half bbis. (600). $5 00. Salt-No. 1, $) bbl, 95c; No. 1 ex. bbl.$l 00! dairy, ?t bbl, $1 20; coarse crystal, bbl, $1 20: Higgins' Eureka. 4-bu sacks, $2 80; Higgius' Eureka. 16-14 ft packets, $3 00. Canned Goods Standard peaches. $3 504 2 65; 2ds, $2 25(22 35; extra peaches $2 752 90; pie peaches. $1 Co; finest corn, $1 S5l 50: Hfd Co. corn. 8095c; red cherries. $1 251 35; Lima beans, $1 20; soaked do. 80c; string do, 7590c; marrowfat peas. $1 101 25; soaked peas. 70Q 80c; pineapples, $1 301 40; Bahama do, $2 75; damson plums. $1 10; greengaces. $1 60: egg plums. $1 85; California pears. $2 60; do green gages, $1 95; do egg plums, $1 95; extra wbite cherries. a to;raspoerrles.siZoQl 3o: strawber ries. $1251 3o; gooseberries. Si'aiWc: tomatoes, 95cj$l; salmon, 1-ft, Jl S01 80; blackberries, $1 15: succotash, 2-ft cans, soaked, 90c; do green, 2-B, $1 251 50; corn beef, 2-ft cans, $210; 14-ft cans, $14; baked beans, $1401 60; lobster. 1-ft, $1 801 90; mackerel. 1-B cans, broiled, $1 50; sardines, domestic, Js, $1 855 00: sardines, do mestic. Us, $7 60; sardines, imported, s, $116012'o0; sardines, imported. s $18; sar dines, mustard. $460; sardines, spiced. S4 25. FISH Extra No, 1 bloater mackerel, $36 ?! bbl; extra No. 1 do. mes, $40: extra No. 1 mack erel, shore, $28; extra No. 1 do, mess, $32; No. 2 shore mackerel. $23. Codfish Whole pollock. 4K V B!- do medium, George's cod. So; do large, 7c; boneless bake. In strips, 4c; do George's cod in blocks, 6k7Kc Herring Round shore, 3 50 ?1 bbl; split. iS 60: lake, $3 25 100-ft bbl. Wbite fish, $3 60 W 100-ft half bbl. Lake trout, $5 60 W half bbl. Finnan haddock, 10c 5) ft. Iceland halibut, 13c ft ft. Pickerel, half bbl. $3 00; quarter bbl, $1 35: Potomac her ring, $3 60 bbl; $2 00 J? half bbl. , OATHEAL-13 60Q5 75 fl bbl. Grain, Flour and Feed. Bales on call at the Grain Exchange, 1 car packing hay, $6 SO. S days; 1 car high mixed corn, 60c, 10 days; 2 cars No. 2 white oats, 42c. Receipts as bulletined, 29 cars, ot which 18 were received by the Pittsburg, Ft Wayne and Chicago Railway, as follows: 2 cars of com, lof bran, 1 of bay, 1 of wheat, 1 of rye, S of oats, 2 of malt, 5 of flour. By Baltimore and Ohio, 1 car of oats, 1 of wheat, 1 of bran. By PittsDnrg, Cincinnati and St Louis, 8 cars of corn, 4 of oats, 1 of wheat Corn Is higher and firm at the advance. Millfeed also keeps mov ing upward, owing to great scarcity. Oats are not so strong as they were a week ago. Choice hay is steady. Wbeat and rye are both a shade higher, as quotations below will disclose. Prices are for carload lots on track: Wheat Mo. 2 red. 9495c; No. 8, 91Q92c; new wbeat. No. 2 red. SSgSOc. Cobn No. 2 yellow ear. 5455c; high mixed ear, 6354c: No. 2 yellow, shelled, 6253c; high mixed shelled corn. 50051c. Oats No. 2 white, 42fi!42Kci extra. No. 3, 40Qllc; mixed. 38039c. Rye Mo. 1 Pennsylvania and Ohio, 68S69C5 No. 1 Western. 6558c. Floue Jobbing prices Fancy winter and spring patents $o 605 75: winter straight, $5-005 25: clear winter, $4 755 00; straight XXXX bakers', $4 254 60. Rye flour, $3 60 3 75. MrLTEED Middlings, fancy fine white. $13 00 19 00 V ton; brown middlings, $15 60Q18 00; winter wbeat bran. $15 004215 60. Hay Baled timothy. No. 1, $11 00011 60; No. 2 do. $7 608 00; looso. from Wagon, f 14 00 18 00, according to quality: No. 2 prairie bay, $S 607 00; packing do, (S G07 00; clover hay, $5 606 00. Stba-w Oat, $8 757 00; wheat and rye, IS 00 6 25. Provisions. Sugar-cured hams, large, lie; sugar-cured lhiuna. medium, liXc; angar-hams, bbaLL 12c; sugar-cured breakfast bacon. 8c: sugar-cured shoulders. TJfc: sugar-cured boneless shoul ders, 8jc; skinned shonlders, Sc:. skinned hams.llc: sugar-cured California hams. 8Jc; sugar-cured dried beef flats, 0c; sugar-cured aried.beef sets, lie; sugar-cured dried beef rounds. 13c; bacon, shoulders. 6c; bacon, clear sides. T4.c; bacon, clear bellies. c: dry salt shoulders, 6Vc: dry salt clear sides, 6Wc Mess pork, heavy, $13 50: mess pork, family. $13 5a Lard Refined, in tierces, 6c; half-barrels, 6c; 60-6 tubs, 6Kc; 20-tt pails. 6c; 50-fi tin cans. 5c; 3-ft Un pails, 6c; 5-ft tin pails. 6c; 10-& tin pails, 6Vc Smoked sansage, long, 5c; large, 5c Fresh pork, links. 9c Boneless hams, 10c pigs' feet, half-barrels, $4 00; quarter-barrels. $2 15. Brnzlllnn Coffer. 8ANT0S, July 28. Coffee Good average, 7,450 reis per 10 kilos. Receipts during the week, 27.000 bags; purchases for United States. 4,000; clearances for do., 6,000: stock, 88,000 bags. Rio de Janeiro. Jnly 28. Coffee Regular first, 7.850 rels per 10 kilos; good second, 7,300 rels. Receipts during the week, 40.000 bags; purchases for United States. 42,000; clearances for do, 52,000; stock, 175,000 bags. Metal Market. New York. July 23. Pie Iron strong; Copper nominal; Lake. Julv, 17c Lead dull and easier: domestic, $1 42J Tin dull and steady; straits, $20 90. COMPLEXION POWDER Is an absolute necessity of a refined toilet in this climate MEDICATED S " a str 1 Combines every element of beauty and purity. A WORLD OF TRIUMPH Has been achieved by the physicians of the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute, at 323 Penn avenue, in the hundreds of permanent cures made since the commencement two years ago of their now immense practice. As they give their whole time and attention to the exclusive treatment of catarrh and dyspepsia hence, their success in making cures. Every day patients apply at this medical in stitution for treatment who have spent years of time and vast sums of money with doctors and medicines to no avail. The most of the patients received for treatment at tbe Catarrh and Dys pensia Institute, and all of the testimonials published from patients enred. are from this class, and who bad suffered from catarrh or dyspepsia in its worst form. ANOTHER LIVING TESTIMONIAL. Mr. Charles G. Haag, corner Bid well and Franklin streets, Allegheny, is anotber living testimonial to a permanent cure made by these specialists. He had ringing sounds in his ears. His nose was continually stopped np, so that ho had to breathe through his moutb. He had pain over and about his eyes. It was with great difficulty that he could clear his throat of tbe tenaceous mucus that dropped down from his bead. In fact his throat became so much involved that bis neck became stiff, producing cracking sounds when be turned his head. His sense of hearing began to faiL and he gradually grew worse until a cough set in. Reading in the papers of. the success of the catarrh specialists at 323 Penn avenue, in mak ing cures ue iook a course oi treatment ana became cured. He adds: "This is to certify that I have been cured as above stated. I hereby sign my name. "Chabi.es G. HAao." Remember tbe place, 323 Penn avenue. Office hours, 10a.m. to4P.l&, and 6 to 8 P.M. Sundays, 12 to 4 P. M. Consultation free toalL Patients treated sue cessfully at home by correspondence. Send two 2-cent stamps for question blank and ad dress all letters to the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute. 323 Penn avenue. Pittsburg. WHOLESALE -:- HOUSE, Embroidery and White Goods Department direct importation from the best manufac turers of St Gall. In Swiss and Cambric Edg ings. Flouuclngs, Skirt Widths and Allovers. Hemstitched Edgings and Flouncings. Buyers will find these goods attractive both in price and novelties of design. Full lines of New Laces and White Goods. UPHOLSTERY DE PARTMENT Best makes Window Shades in 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. The largest variety from which to select TollDuNords, Chalon Cloths, Bath Seersuck ers, Imperial Suitings, Heather A Renfrew Dress Ginghams. Fine Zephyr Ginghams. Wholesale Exclusively. Jal3-D in J S S S Hi 1 p pnupi pyiiiH wW JOSEPH HORNE & CO. B4 BOTTLES Cured me of Consti pation. Tbe most ef fectual medicine for this disease. Feed. Coitway, Haver straw, Rockland Co N.Y. liUOKEES- FINANCIAL. Whitney & Stephenson, . 57 Fourth Avenue. my JOHN M. OAKLEY & CO, '45 SIXTH ST., AUTHORIZED AGENTS. Leading1 English Investment Syndicates have money to in v vest in American manufac tories in large amounts only. Je?57i JOHN M. OAKLEY & CO., BANKBHa AND BBOKEBa Stocks, Aonds, Grain, Fetrolenm. Private wire to New York and Chisago, 46 SIXTH ST, Pittsbnrg. Bja MEDICAL. DOCTOR WH.TTiER S14 PENS AVENUE. PITTssBUKO. PA. As old residents know and back files of Pitts bnrg papers prove, is tbe oldest established and most prominent physician in the city, de voting special attention to all chronic diseases. ersCsNOFEEUNTILCURED MCDni IQ and mental diseases, physical IlLllVUUO decay.nervous debility, lack of energy, ambition and hope, impaired memory, disordered sight, self distrust, bashfuluess, dizziness, sleeplessness, pimples, eruptions, im poverished blood, failing powersorganic weak ness, dyspepsia, constipation, consumption, un fitting the person for business, society and mar riage, permanently, safely and privately cured. BLOOD AND SKIN aaKKp&S. blotches, falling hair, bones, pains, glandular, swellings, ulcerations ot tongue, mouth, throat, ulcers, old sores, are cured for life, and blood poisons tborongbly eradicated from the system. 1 1 R I M A R V kidney and bladder derange U II 1 1 lrtn 1 1 meats, weak back, gravel, ca tarrhal discharges, inflammation and other painful symptoms receive searching treatment, prompt relief and real cures. Dr. WhittiePs life-long, extensive experience insures scientific and reliable treatment on common-sense principles. Consultation free. Patients at a distance as carefully treated as it here. Office hours, 9 A. at. to 8 p. jr. Sunday. 10A.M. to 1 P.M. only. DR. WH1TTIEK, 814 Penn avenue, Pittsburg. Pa. jy0-12-Dsuwk know thyself; O-'AA-W SCXEHC'Jll OS T.l WW A Scientific and Standard Popular Medical Treatise oa the Errors of Youth, Premature Decline, Nervoua ana r nysicai ueouity , impurities of the Blood, Resulting from Folly, Vice, lgnorsnca. Ex cesses or Overtaxation, Enervating and unfit ting the victim for Work, Business, tho Mar riage or Social Relations. Avoid unskillful pretenders. Possess this great work. It contains 300 pages, royal 8ro. Beautiful binding, embossed, full gilt Pflee. only $1 by mail, postpaid, concealed in plain wrapper. Illustrative Prospectus Free, If yoa apply now. The distinguished author. Wm.ll. Parker. M. D., received the GOLD ANO JEW. ELED MEDAL from the National Medical As. sociation, for this PRIZE ESSAY on NERVOUS and PHYSICAL DEBILITY. Dr. Parker and a corps of Assistant Physicians may be on suited, confidentially, by mail or In person, as the office of THE PEABODY MEDICAL IN. SriTUTE, No. 4 BulHnch SL, Boston, Mass., to whom all orders for books or letters for advice should be directed as above aulS-67-TuFSuwl; DOCTORS LAKE SPECIALISTS in all cases re quiring scientific aud confiden tial treatment! Dr. S. K Lake, M. R. C. P. S.. Is tbe oldest and most experienced specialist in. tbe city. Consultation free and strictly confidential. Office) houTS 9 to 4 and 7 to s P. M.: sunaays, z to r. m. Consult them personally, or write Doctor Lake. cor. Penn ave. and 4th st, Pittsburg, Pa. jeS-72.DWk look's Ccrtrtoaa. KOOtJ COMPOUND . -.... rrtfrt., "RrtOt TflW fITll? Pennyroyal a recent discovery by an r,H nhnirtax. Is frUCCCSlfUUll USCd -. c. trfrjui,,,..! TH 1 hr mnll- sealed. Ladies, ask your druggist for Cpok'a Cotton Root Compound and take no substitute, or Inclose 2 stamps for sealed particulars. Ad dress FOND LILY COMPANY, No. 3 Fisher Block, 131 Woodward ave., Detroit, Mich. " .-Sold In Pittsburg. Pa- by Joseph Flem ing & Son. Diamond and Market sts. 8e26-23-TT3nwkEOWg ELECTRIC BELT TOB IWEAMES 536f3 itiTMg!y inMENdebUItated Tina mi m utiici " aa t u GUARANTEE to CUKgby this . New IMPROVED ELECTHIC BELT or KEFUND MONEY. Made for this specific purpose. Cure of Physical , Weak ness, giving Freely. Jiiia, aoowunjr. Linniauuui Currents of Electricity throagh all weak parti. restoring mem to nr.smi.i - ... bTKENGTH. Electric current felt instantly, or we forfeltSiOOO in cash. BELT Complete JS and np. Worst cases Permanently Cured in three months. Sealed pamphlets free. Call on or ad dress SANDEN ELECTRIC CO.. 819 Broadway, Mew York. my22-tt-TT38a CHICHESTER'S ENGLISH PENNYROYAL PILLS RED CROSS DIAMOND BRAND.AX Safe ud ftlv&rs reliable. LadJe, j tik Dnitirt for Diamond BrandSfiJgJ la red meume taxes, ieta wiw yj bine ribbon- Take no other. AU V rJll la sutetMara boxes with elnkims- ners trfl danrmtiiaiirjtrTelt. SeoVl 4c. (at&mp for particular, testimonials anil "JUllef for Ladles," fatter, b return mail. xamrapr. CUaetr Che'l Cak, JUdboa Sa, FkUa Fn. OC5-7I-TTS ERVES! Stron?, brave, successful men and women win half their Ufa battles on their nerve. N exvb Bxans cure Nerroas Dobilllx, Mental Depression, Weak Back, Sleeplessness, Loss of Appe tite, Hysteria, Numbness, Trembling, Bad Dreams and all Nerrous Diseases. t per box, postpaid. Pamphlet sent free. Address Nerre Bean Co., Buffalo, N- Y. At Josepa Fleming & Son's, 4X3 Market Sc, and all leading druggists. 1 (WILCOX'S COMPOUND), Safe, Certain and EffeetuL At Druggists' everywhere or by mall. 8end4ets.fi, Boot,;" WOMAN'S SAFE-GUARD" sealed. WILCOX SPECIFIC CO., PhiU, Pa. m.-OO-TTSWK FEMALE BEANS' Absolutely reliable, perfectly safe, most powerful f emala renlator kno wn ; nerer fail it J a box, postpaid ; one box samcient. Address LION' DRUO CO .BnffaloN. T. Sold by J03. n.BMTSO SOS, 112 Market St. apl"-40-TT 8.E.P. WEST'S NERVE. AND BRAIN TREATMENT Spedflc for Hysteria, Dtxzines.Fiti, Kenrulgia, Wi fulness. Mental Depression. Softening of the Brain, re sulting' In insanity and leading1 to misery decar and death. Premature Old Age. Barrenness. Loss ot Power In either sex, Inroluntary Losses, and Spermatorrhoeas caused by over-exertion of the brain, self-abuse or" OTer-lndnl fence. Each box contains one month's treat merit. 31 a box, or six for &J, sent by mail prepaid, with each order for six boxes vlll send purchaser guarantee to refund coney if the treatment fails to rare. Uuarntees issued and genuine sold only by EMILG.STUCKY, Druggist, 1701 and 2401 Penn ave.. and Corner Wylie and Fnlton sc, PITTSBURG, PA. myl5-51-TT3Sn FOR MEN ONLY! A PDSJT1VF ArlOSTor7AHVnrOK-THOODt WrUOl IIBC General aadHERVOUSDldlUTTi f TT "D TC 'Weaknesi of Eody and Mind; Effect J J JAt4 ofErTorsorExcwseiinOldorYonig', Itofcost, ICoble niJUOOD rollr Rntond. How t Ealsnn & simian nut, cxsrmopiiDoitaixsjkPjKTS or Boor. aboolntetrnrtlllac IIOJIK TRUTJCn'-Braeats la a 4'T Btm tot! Irjr Tnm 4 J State sad Foreign ttraotrfco. Ton ea wrl t. then. Book, fotloxpUMtloa, an4 proofs Mailed (aralcd) free AddreaaERIE MEOICALCO., BUFFALO, N. Y. my3-06-TTS3o ABOQKFORTHruiLLIOH FBEET' QME TREATMENT i, WITH MEDICAL ELECTRICnr Tor all CHRONIC, OSOAKIO and K&V0G3 diseases is DOtfl leiea, Rdh R.lt till Tun read tall tank--AddrMfl THE PERU CHEMICAL CO., MILWAUlEE.WIS my22-U-TTS3a TO WEAK mEN Bafferlns from the effect ot youthful errors, early ecay, wasting weakness, lost manhood, etc, I will end a valuable treatise (sealed) containing full particulars for home cure. FREE of charge. A splendid medical work: should be read by every man who la cerrous and debilitated. Address, FroC F, C. FOWLS, OToodB,CoHJU ecl543-2SuirlC How Lost! How Regained, maSSst' MPS IPs 33 STrS vl f? 1 vl i j