- - - ' ' 1 5 '&Z&fin&OB& mkTCmmlZCTOBERmrom r 3 ";" y. j.r -" THE MOVING PARABLE Of the Good Samaritan Explained and Amplified in the Kegnlar STODAT DISCOURSE OP TALMAGE. A llescripUon of the Scene of the Savior's Famous Story. THE DOCTOR'S TOUK OP THE HOLT LAND rerECIAL TELEOUAM TO THE DISPATCII.1 Brooklyn, October 19. The wide spread and absorbing interest in Dr. TaJ inage's course of seimons ou the Holy Land ani adjoining countries is demonstrated by tbe thousands who are turned away Jrom the doors of the Brooklyn Academy of Music on Sunday mornings and from services in the Xew York Academy of Music on Sunday evenings, unable to gain even standing room in those immense au ditoriums. To-dav the fourth sermon ot tbe series was preached, as beiore, in this city in tbe morning and in New York at night Having announced as his text Luke 10:30, "A certain man went down from Jerusalem to Jericho," Dr. Talmage said: It is tuc morning or ueccmoero, in jernsa lem and we take stirrup- for the road along which tlie wayfarer of old fell anions thieves who left bun wounded and half dead. Job's picture if tl horse iu the Orient as baing neck "clothed with thunder" is not truo of most horses now in Palestine. There is no thun deron their neck, though i here is some light ring in their heels. Poorly fed and unmerci fully whacked, they sometimes retort. ,To Americans and English, who are accustomed to guide hors-s by tbe bridle, these nurses of the Orient, guided only by foot and voice, make equestrianism an uncertainty, and the poll on the bridle that you intend for slowing up of the pace maj be mistaken for a bint that you want to out-gallop tne wind or wheel in swift circle like the haw k. liutthcj can climb steeps and descend preci pices with skilled foot, and the one I choose lor our journ in Pale-tine shill have the praise of going for weeks without one stum bling 6tcp. aim J rocky steeps where an ordi nary burse would not fr an h ur maintain surc-tnotedne There were IS of our party, and 22 beasf oj burden carried our camp equipment Wc were led by an Arab sbeik with his bl- - Nubian servant carrying a loaded cur in full sight, but it is the fact that thisheik represints tl'e Turkish Government which assures tl-c safety of tbe caravan. THE iCESX OP A PARABLE. With the fresh memory of some recent vio lence in their minds, Christ tells the people of the good bamaritau who came along that way and took care of a poor fellow that bad been set upo. by villainous Arabs and robbed, and pounded and cut. We encamped fir lunch that noon close by an old stone building, said to be the tavern wher? the scene spoken of in the liible culminated Tumbling in the du"l andgbastU with wounds, the victim of this highway robbery lay in the middle ot the road a tact of w Inch I am certain. bcauo tho Lible ras the people passed by on either side. There were 12,000 priests liting at Jericho and they had to go to Jerusalem to olhciate at the tem ple. And one of these minister? of religion, I suppose, was on his way to the temple service and he is startled as he ccs this bleed ing victim m the middle of the road. "On," he says, "here is a man that has been attacked nl thief cs. "Why don't you go home?" says the minister. The man in a comttosc state n.al.es no aifwer or, with a half-dazed look, pots his wounded hand to his gashed forehead and drawls out "What?" "Well." sas the minister, "I must hurry on to my duties at Jerusalem. I have to kill a lamb and two pigeons in sacrihe to-day. I cannot sneud any mor time with this unfortunate. I guess somebodi else will take cire ot him. But this is one of the things that cannot be helped, any how. Beside that, my business is with souls and not with oodles. Good morning! When you get well enough to sit np. I will be glad to sec jou at the Temple." And tbe minister curves his way out toward the overhanging sides of the road and passes. You hj pocritc! One of the chief unices ot re ligion is to heal wounds. Yon might have done here a kindness that would have been more ac ceptable to God than all tl.e incense that will smoke up from jour censer for the next three weeks and uu unseed the chance. Go on your wayl Execrated by the centuries. TOO BUSY FOE MCKCY. Soon afterward a Lcvito came upon tho scene. Tho Invites looked after tho music of the temple and waited upon the priests and iiroided the supplies of the temple. This Xicvite, passing alone this road where wo arc to-day, took a look at the mass ot bruises and laceration in tho middle of the road, "My! nn!" uavs the Lievite, "this man is awfully hurt and lie ought to be helped. But my business is to sing in the choir at the temple. If I am not there no one will carry my part. Beside that, there may not he enough frankincense for the censers and tbe wine or oil may have given out, and wha a fcarlul balk m tbe service that would make. Then one of the priests might get his breast-plate on crooked. But it seems too bad to leave this man in this condition. Perhaps I had better trv to stanch this bleeding and give him a little stimulant. But, no! Toe ceremonj at Jeru salem is of more importance than taking care of the wounusof a man who will probably soon be dead, anyhow. '1 his highway robbery ought to be stopped. lor it hinders us Levitcs on our way up to the temple. There, I have lost five minutes alreadj! Go along, you beast!" he shouts, as be strikes bis heels into the sides of the animal carrying him. and the dust lising from the road soon hides the beard-hearted of ficial. But a third person is coming along this road. You cannot expect him to do anjihing by way of alleviation, because be and the wounded man belong to different nations which bare abominated caci. other for centuries. The wounded man is an Israelite, and the stranger now coining on this scene of suffering is a Samaritan. They belong to nations which hated each other with a objurgation and male diction diabolic. They had onposition temples, ne on Mount Genzim and the other on Mount JUoriali. and I gues this Samaritan when he comes up will give the fallen Israelite another clip and say: "Good for you! I will just finish the work these bandits began, and give yon one more kick thatwill pat jou out of our misery. And here is a rag of your coit that they did not steal, and I will take'that. What! Po vou dare to appeal to me for mercy? Hush'up! Why. jour ancestors wor-bipped at Jeru-alem when they ought to have worshipped at Geri zim. Now take that! And that! And that!" will say the Samaritan as he pounds the fallen Israelite. THE GOOD SAMARITAN. No: the Samaritan rides up to tbe scene of suffering, gets of the beast and steps down and looks into the face of tbe woundefi man and sajs: This poor fellow does not belong to my nation, and our ancestors worshipped in differ, ent places, but he is a man, and that makes us brothers. God pity lmn, as I do!" Audbeg-ts down on his knees and begins to examine his wounds, and straightened out his limbs io see if any of bis bones are broken, and savs: "Jly dear fellon, cheer up, jou need have no more care about yourselt. for 1 am going to take caro ofjou. Let me fed of your pulse! Let me listen to jou breathing! I have in these bottles two liquids that will help you. The one is oil and that will soothe the pain or these wounds and the other is wine, and vour pulsi- is feeble and jou feel faint, and that will stimulate you. Now I must get j-ou to the nearest tavern." "Oh. mi;" says the UMn, "I can't walk; letme stay here and die." Nonsense!" says the Samaritan, "You are not g ung to die, I am going to put jou on this beast, and I will hold you on till I get jou to a place where jou can hae a soft niai tress and an easy pillow." Now the Samaritan has got the wounded man on his feet, and with much tugging and lifting Dnts him on tbe Ie.ist. for it is a-tonlsbing tow strong the spirit of kindness will make one, as you hate seen a mother after three weeks of sleepless watching of her bov down with scar let lever lift that hair-gronn boy, heavier than herself, from couch to lounge. And so this sympathetic SainanUn nas, unaided, put the wounded man in be saddle, and at slow pace tbe extemporized ambulance is moving toward thetHVern. "You feel belter now, 1 think," saj-s the Samaritan to the Hebrew. "Yes," he savs, "I do feel Detter." "Halloo, you landlord! help me carry this man in and mate him -nm. fortable." Ibat nisht the Samaritan gat up with the Jeu. giving him water whenever he telt thirsty and turning bis pillow when it got hot, and in the morning before the Samari tan started on Ids journey he said, "Landlord, now I am obliged to go. Take good care of this man and I will be along here soon again and pay you for all you do ror him. Meanwhile, here is something to meet present expenses." The "two pence" he gave the landlord sounds small, but it was as much as 510 here, and now considering what it would be there, and then buy of food and lodging. A TALK WITH GLADSTONE. I saw in London the vast procession which one day last January moved to St. Paul's Cathedral at the burial of that Christian hero. Lord Napier. The day after at Hanarden, In conversation on various themes, I asked Mr. Gladstone if he did not think that many who were under the shadow of false religions might not nevertheless be at heart really Chriv tians. Mr. Gladstone replied: "Yes; my old friend, Lord Napier, who was yesterday buried, after he returned Irom ius Abyssinian cam paign, visited us here at Hawarden and, walk ing in this nark where we are now walking, he told me a very beautiful incident. He said:. 'After tbe war in Arnca was over, we were on the march and we had a soldier with a broken leg who was not strong enoueb to go along with ns and we did not dare to leave him to be taken care of by savages, bnt we found we were compelled to leave him and we went into the bouse of a woman w bo was said to be a very kind woman, though of tbe race of savages, and we said: "HereJs a sick man, and it you will take care of him till he gets well we will pay you very largely," and then wi- offered ber five times that which would ordinarily be offered, hoping by the excess of pay to secure for bim great kindness. The woman replied: "I will not take care of him lor the money you offer. I do not want jour money. But leave him here, atid I will take care of him for the sake of tbe love of God." ' " Mr. Gladstone turned to me and said: "Dr. Talmage, don't you think that though she be longed to a race of savages, that was pure re ligion!" And I answered: "Ido:I do." May God multiply all the world over tbe number of good Samaritans! But our procession of sight-seers Is again In line, and berc wo pass through a deep ravine, and I ciy to the dragoman: David, wnat place do you call this?" and he replied: 'This is the brook Uberith, where Elijah was fed by the ravens." And In that answer he overthrew my lile-long notions of tbe place where Elijah was waited on by tbe black servants of the sky. A brook to me had meant a slight depression of ground, and a stream fordablp, and perhaps 15 leet wide. But here was a chasm that an earthquake must have scooped out with its biggest shovel or split witb its mightiest battle axe. Six hundred feet deep is it. and the brook Cbenth Is a river, which, when in full lorce, is a silver wedge, splitting the mountains into precipices. Tho feathered descendants at Elijah's ravens still wiug their way across this ravine, but are not like the crows we supposed tbem to be. They are as large as eagles, and one of them could carry in its beak and clinched claw- at once enough food for a half-dozen Elijahs. MORE ElirHASIS OK MUSIC. Seated by the warmth of our camp-fires that evening of December 6, amid the bricks and debris of Jericho, and thinking what poor music has dune and what mightier things could be accomplished by the blessings of God on good music I said to myself: Ministers have been doing a grand work, and sermons have been blessed, but wonld It not be well for us to put more emphasis on music? Oh, for a cam paign of Old Hundred! Oh, for a brigade of Mount Pigabs! Oh, for a cavalry charge of Coronations! Oh, for an army of .Ynflochs and bt. Martins and Anels! Oh, for enough orches tral batons lifted, to marshal all nations! As Jericho was surrounded by poor music for seven days and was conquered, so let our earth be surrounded seven days by good gospel music, and the round planet will all be taken for God. Not. a wall of opposition, not a throne of tyranny, not a palace of sin, not an enterprise of unright eousness could stand the mighty throb of such atmospheric pulsation. Mnsicl It sonnded at the laying of creation's corner-stone when the morning stars sang together.' Music! It will be tbe last reverberation, when tbe archangel's trumpet shall wake the dead. Music! Let its full power be now tested to comfort ana bless and arouse and save. While our evening meal is being prepared in the tents, we walk out for a moment to tbe "fountain of Elisha," the one into which the prophet threw the salt, because the waters were poisonous and bitter, and lo! they became sweet and healthy; and ever since, with gurgle and laughter, they have rushed down the hill, and leaped from the rocks, the only cheerful object iu all that region being these waters. Now on this plain of Jericho tbe sun Is set ting, making the mountains look like bal ustrades and battlements of amber and maroon and gold: and tbe moon, iust above the crests. seems to be a window of heaven through which immortals might be looking down upon the scene. Three Arabs as watchmen sit beside the campfire at the door of my tent, their low conversation in a strange languag all night long a soothing rattier than an interruption. 1 had a dream : hat night never to be forgotten, that dream amid the complete ruins of Jericho. Its past grandeur returned, and I saw the city as it was when Mark Antony gave it to Cleo patra and Herod bought it from her. And I beard the hoofs of its swift steeds, and the rumbling of its chariots and the shouts of ex cited spectators in its amphitheater. A REALISTIC DREAM. The region round about the city walls seemed to me white with cotton such as Thcnius de scribes as onco growing there, and sweet with sugar cane, and luscious with orange and figs and pomegranates, and redolent wit b such flora as can only grow where a tropical sUn kisses the earth. And tbe hour came back to me when in the midst of all that splendor Herod died, com manding his sister Salome immediately after bis deatn to secure the assassination of all tho chief Jens whom he had brought to the city, and shut up in a circus for that purpose, and the news came to the audience in tbe theater as some one took tbe tage. and announced to the excited multitude: "Herod is dead! Herod is deadr' Then in my dream, all the pom j of Jericho-vanished and gloom was added to gloom, and desolation to desola tion, and woe to woe, until, perhaps the rippling waters of the Fountain of Elisba suggesting it as sounds will sometimes give direction to a dream I tbougbt that the waters of Christ's salvation and tbe fountains "open for sin and uncleanness," were rolling through that plain and rolling across that continent, and rolling round the earth, until on either side of their banks all the thorns becime flow ers, and all the deserts gardens, and all the hovels mansions, and all the funerals bridal processions, and all the blood of war was turned into dahlias, and all tbe groans became anthems, and Dante's In ferno became Dante's Dtvina Commedia, and Paradise Lost was submerged by Paradise Re gained, and tears became "crystals, and cruel swords came out of foundries glistening ploughshares, and. Iu my dream, at the blast of a trumpet tbe prostrated walls of Jericho rose again. And some one told me that as these walls in Joshua's time, at the sounding trumpets of doom went down, now at the sounding trum pet oi the gospel they come up again. And I thought a man appeared at the door of my tent, and I said: "Who are vou and from whence have you come?" and "he said, "I am the Samaritan you heard of at the tavern on the road from Jerusalem to Jericho, as taking care of the man who fell among thieves, and I have jnst come from healing the last wound of tbe last unfortunate in all tbe earth." And I rose from my pillow in the tent to greet him, and my dream broke, and i realized it was only adream.bat a dream which shall become a glorious reality as surely as God is true and Christ's gospel is tbe world's Catholicon. "Glory be to the Father, and to tbe Son. and to the Holy Ghost, as it was in tho beginning, is now, and ever shall be, world without end. Amen." OVEE OH THE SOTTTHSIDE. The Republicans Hold an Enthusiastic Sleet ing at Salisbury Hull. The Republican mass meeting in South side Market Hall Saturday night was well attended. Salisbury Hall was filled with an audience composed largely ot workingmen. Jenkin Jones, of Jones, Cavitt & Co., pre sided, and announced a long list o Vice President, among whom were James Catuu bell, ex-President of the Window Glass "Workers' Association; William HarumeU, Treasurer of the same organization; James Penny, Treasurer of the Amalga mated Association; John Bradley, County Prothonotary; Ecbert Mercer, County Commissioner. Alderman David McGearr. Magistrate Succop, Select Councilman John Paul. John Binder, D. X. McDonald, J. N. Jarrett, Philip Shuchman, Charles G. Mil ler, Thoma Evans, J.irues Pelker, David Weaver, Adam Weidman, P. N. Pfeil, David Deacon, John P. Schneider, John Benz, John M. Clark, William C. Lovitt, James Hunter, Samuel Benz, Clarence Bur lei.'h, Enimett Cotton, Dr A. J. Burch field, W. T. Powell and H. J. Weimar. Many of these occupied chairs on the stage. Mayor Gourley was also present. The first speaker was W. S. Shaefer, of Chester, who was introduced by Chairman Jones. His address was brief. General George A. Sheridan, of New York, folbwed in a speech lasting nearly two hours. He spoke mainly about the tariff, showing how protection has saved $2,600,000 to America, on steel rails alone. In discussing the two leading political parties General Sheridan said the Republican party had fulfilled every promise it eyer made, while the Democratic party never made a promise they did not break. rOR TIRED BRAIN Use llorsford's Acid Phosphate. Dr. O. C Stout. Syracuse, N. Y says: "I gave it to one patient who was unable to trans act the most ordinary business, because his brain was tired and confused' upon the least mental .exertion. Immediate benefit, and ulti mate recovery followed." S. W. Hill, Pittsburg Meat Supply Companv,.corner ol" Church avenue, Ander son street and P., FL W. & C. B. W., Al legheny, P.i., sold for Messrs. Nelson, Morris & Co., of Chic-ico, III., for tbe week ending October 18, 1890, 158 carcasses of beef, average weight, 625 pounds; average price, $5 61 per hundred pounds. B.&B. ' 27-inch silk-warp crepe Indien cream white, 25 cents to-day. Boggs & Bohl. FEATURES OF TRADE. Cereals Are on the Advance and Bides Tending Downward. GAEDEN STUFF A MUG IN MARKET Wet Weather and Bad Roads Adverse to Some Lines of Trade. POTATO SUPPLY NOT DP TO'THE DEMAND Office or Pittsburg Dispatch. 1 Saturday. October 18, 189a S In cereal lines it will be seen by reference to domestic market column that receipts of grain and hay for the week have been the largest of the season. During the week 372 car loads were bulletined at the Grain Ex change, making a daily average of 62 cars. Receipts of oats alone amounted to 106 car loads for the week. Notwithstanding heavy receipts oats advanced about 5c since Mon day, No. 1 selling readily at COc on Friday and Saturday. At this price sellers could not replace their stock.iShel) corn is very firm, and, in fact, all cereals show up stronger than at the beginning of the week. Hay is quiet and wonld be more so were it not for the wretched condition of country roads, which prevents the bringing of it to market. In Produce Xines. The situation has changed very little since last Saturday. Vegetables of all kinds con tinue dull and weak. Killing frosts have been withheld two weeks beyond tbe average time of appearance and tomatoes are unhurt. Turnips, carrots, onions cabbage and beets, pumpkins are a drng in the market and up tbe Allegheny Valley the numpkin crop is reported to be the largest on record. Potatoes have been in light supply all week, particularly choice stock. It has been next to impossible to get a good article of potatoes in our market for several davs. The commission bouses are bare of stock. Large quantities have been condemned in the railroad yards be cause of dry rot, and many shippers have not ncen auie to get enoiign to pay ireignt Dins. Full supplies from Michigan are on the way. Our home railed potatoes are not only small in size but few in tbe hill. The looked-for rise in grapes did not appear and they are plenty and cheap as ever. The first of the Catawba crop was received within a few davs and mark ets will be well stocked in this line for a few weeks. At one commission house it was learned that a carload of grapes was sold every day of the week. The tiist of the new Florida orange crop arrived within a day or two. Quality is very fine and demand good at $5 per box. in tne lines of dairy products we notice an increasing firmness as to New York cheese and fancy creainerv butter. Ohio cheese is unchanged and low grade creameiy butter is slow. There has been an improvement in de mand for country butter since tbe beginning of tbe week and prices are somewhat higher. Strictly fresh eggs are in very limited supply, and markets hare been tending upward for some days. Provisions and Groceries. At last tbe provision market feels tho effect of the heavy receipts and declining prices of hogs, and to-day the packers of Pittsburg agreed on lower priced hams, shoulders and lard. The wholesale grocery trade has been nuiet for the week pat and volnme of business lighter than nsuaL The fact is due in a measure to wet and bad roads. There has been no essen tial change in prices. It is not oftcn.that sugar continue so long without change as lias been the case tbe past few weeks. Teas are not so active of late, but prices continue firm. Hides and calf skins have declined from i to c per pound the past week. Prices of light hides are now only 2c per pound above the lo est point touched a year ago. Tbe declin ing market appears when quality is at its best for the year. Tbe lastmunth and the coming month cattle are in good shape, and the hides are clean and plump, and hence are most de sirable. In spite of this tbe situation is in favor ot the btner all along tbe line. The greatest decline has been in buff hides and calf skins. Heavy hides have, lion ever, joined in the downward movement, and are p lower than last Saturday. LIVE STOCK MARKETS Condition of Trade at tho East Liberty Stock Tards office of The Pittsbuko Dispatch. Saturday. October 18. 1890. Cattle Receipts, 1,070 head; shipments, 762 head; market, nothing doing; all through consignments; 18 cars of.cattle shipped to New York 10-dav. JJog.1 Receipts. 3,550 head: shipments, 3.200 head; market dracgv: Philadelphias, St G54 75; best Yorkers, J4 254 40; common and fair, S3 U04 15; 14 cars of hogs shipped to New York to-day. Sheep Receipts, 800 head; shipments. 400 head; market steady on good, slow on common. By Telegraph. OMAHA Cattle Receipts 2,200 head; qnality of receipts very good; best steers active and strong: common grades no better; butch ers' stock unchanged; feeders flat; about 600 feeders shipped out during the neck: fancy, 1.400 to 1,000 pound steeis, of which there are quite a number on the market are quoted at 84 451 85; prime, 1,200 to 1,475 pound steers. S3 904 50; fair to good, 1.050 to 1,350 pound steers. S3 0064 10. Hogs Receipts. 5,400 head: tbe market opened ste idy to 5c lower; all snlu: range. S3 404 20; the bnlfc sold at S3 854 15; light. S3 404 15; heavy. S3 854 20; mixed, S3 954 10. Sheep Receipts. 250 he 1: the sheep market was steady; natives S2 3a4 15; Westerns. S2 004 00. CINCINNATI Hogs demand good, market stronger; common and light, S3 OOgl 45: pack ing and butchers'. S4 104 50, Cattle Demand fair; market firm; common. 811 75; fair to choice butcher grades, $23 75; choice ship pers. S1Q4 25: receipts. 900 bead; shipments. 250 bead. Sheep Supplv light; market firm; common to choice. S2 504 75; stock wethers and ewes, SI 255 00: extra fit wethers and yearlings, U 755 00. Receipts, 225 head; shipments, 665 head. Lamb- Spring scarce; good demand; good to choice shipping. $5 506; common to choice butcheis, H 005 75 per 100 pounds. CHICAGO Tbe Evening Dioven' Journal reports: Cattle Receipts, 3.000 head: ship mets, 10,000 head: market steadv: comino'i to good cattle. S3 7501 85: Texans. S2 40ffl3 75; range steers. $3 2a Hogs Receipts. 17,000 bead; shipments. 9.0U0 head; market active and loner: mixed. S3 90SI4 35: nrhne linn anri butcher weights, $4 351 50: light, S3 954 25; pigs, S3 003 85. Sheep Receipts. &VO00 head; market Meady; native. SI 00fi!4 80: West erns $4 00425; Texans, S3 75;lambs, S4 754 85. KANSAS CITY Cattle Receipts, 4.720 head: shiDtuents. 2,010 head; market strong for best, weak for other-: steers. S3 401 75; cows SI 50 &2 65; stockersand feeders. 82 5i)3 25; ran-e seers. SI 65; range cows, SI 1001 90. Ho Receipts. 8,390 head; shipments. 3,140 held; market steady, bulk. $3 954 10: all grades S3 24(34 oa Sheep Receipts, 3,170 head; ship ments, 1,050 bead; market steady: lambs S4 70 4 75; good to choice muttons, S4 001 20; stockersand feeders. S2 504 60. ST. LOUIS Cattle Receipts. 1,000 head: shipments L100 bead; market steady: good to fancy native steers. S4 454 90; fair to good $3 804 50; stockers and feeders $2 OO&S 00: Texans and Indians, S2 403 4a Hogs Re ceipts, 1,700 head: shipment', 4100 head; luamcb uasv, i.m w i-niuce neavy, a juzq i 30; mixed grades, S3 904 20; light, fair to best, S4 104 Sa Sheep Receipts 100 head; shipments, bOO head; market steady: good to choice, S4 005 0a BUFFALO Cattle steady; receipts, 160 loads through, 6S sale. Sheep and lambs Receipts 10 loads through; steadv. Lambs Shade loner; choice top sheep, $4 75 to So; good to choice, S4 404 7a Lambs Choice to extra. $8 00S 6 25; good to choice. So 755 95. Hogs Active, shade higher: receipts 20 loads through, 35 sale; mediums and heavy, S4 604 70. ANGEY GLEHWOODITES Meet and Protest Against the Baltimore and Ohio Road Blocking Crossings. The residents of Glenwood have held a meeting to devise means to rid them selves of annoyances cansed by freight trains on the Baltimore and Ohio Railroad blocking the street crossings John T. Edmondson was made Chairman and J. A. White, Secretary. Mr. Edmund son, in stating the subject be "ore tbe meet ing, said that Lytle and Glaster streets, which are situated between the Baltimore and Ohio and the river, are monopolized by the railroad company, and the cross streets, Allegheny, Mansion, "Vespu sioui, Renova, etc., are rendered almost useless as thoroughfares by the frequent freight train blockades Five hundred or 600 families are at the mercy ol tbe railroad in this locality. A number of angry speeches were made against tbe action ot the railroad. Council man Emil Ertzman, of the ward, stated that he would endeavor to have the annoyance abated, and advised tbe residenU of tbe dis trict to interest members of Council In the matter. A committee of three was accord ingly appointed to place the matter before Dr. Evans, Select Councilman of the Twenty-third ward. The committee will make its report at a meeting to be held In the school home next Friday night. MABKETS BY WIRE. Revolution In the Wheat nt More Sellers Than Buyers The Change of Base Duo to Weak Cables Pork Steady. CHICAGO Wheat Only a fair business was transacted to-day, operators were generally disappointed at the change in tbe market. Tbe feeling was decidedly weaker, and, while yes terday there was a general disposition to buy, the reverse was tho fact to-day. Outside busi ness was only moderate. The opening was about the same as tbe closing yesterday, and under freo offerings, there being a good many selling orders on the market from the start, prices quickly declined and then the market hold steady for a while, prices recovering K c, but again took fie downward course and tnis time declined fc then followed numerous small fluctuations, and the closing was about yAa lower than yesterday. The weakness was partially due to the weaker tone of cable ad vices. The leading futures ranged as follows: Open- Hljrh- Low- Clos- Articlbs. Injr. et. est. lng. Wheat, No. 2 .,, October 1 02 f 1 02 f 1 01 S 1 01M December lo-l' 1 0S 103V 104,, .May .lcs, llWi 107s 10SK COIIX, NO. 2 October SIS 51H 50Ji 50& November Slij &2'4 SIM SI& Jlay H UK MX 53 OATS, NO. 2 October 42K 42 24 42 December , .... 43 43 42S 4276 Mav 4o KH 43.S Mess route. December. 10 17 10 17)4 10 10 1 ,0 January II 87jl 11 95 11 87 11 KJfi May 12 52 12 57 12 50 12 57i Lard. December. 6 S7J 6 40 6 37M 6 40 January 0S2! 6 53 6 52)1 655 May 695 6 05 692 695 SHORT KIBS. December 5 50 5 50 5 50 5 50 January ,... 5 77H 5 62,' 5 H 5 S2Jf May. 617 6K) 6 17H 6 20 Cash quotations were as follows: Klour steadv and unchanged. No. 2 spring wheat. SI 0I1 Olt No. 3 spring wheat, 9093c: No. 2 red, $1 01l 01K- No. a corn. 51a No. 2 oats, 42K& No. 2 rye, 65tKc No. 1 flaxseed,?! WA Prime timothy seed, SI 241 25. Mess pork, per bbl. 19 S!H. Lard, ner 100 lbs. S6 25. Sbort rib sldeSj loose. So 37; dry salted shoulders. -.-., vuwnHu ., .... ,.. ..uil -.,,. 50 755 80. No. 2 white oats. 4oI6c: No. 3 white .oats, 43!4ioic; No. 2 Barley 7678c; No, 3. f. o. b 60((j69c Butter unchanged. Egg, lS19c NEW YORK FIour-Eeceints, 23,351 pack ages; exports, 5.236 barrel-". 1?,851 sacks; fairly active; sales, 21,750 barrels. Cornmeal steady and quiet: vellow western. S2 503 20. Wheat Receipts, 71,500 bushels: sales, 1,461,000 bushels; 17,000 bushels spot; spot m-irket very quiet and easier; No. a SI 071 0SV in elevatonSl 09 afloat: $1 0SI ODJif. o. b.: No. 3 red, 9999c; ungraded red. SI 06K1 08;Io. 1 Northern, 51 10; No. 1 haid. 51 J6J4. Options fairly active on realizing c lower, closing weak: No. 2 red, October, SI 07K1 07k. closing at SI 07MT: November closing at S107-X: December. Si OfcKl 09, closing at SI 08; Januarv. $1 09 $1 09, closing at $1 09; May, SI 111 12J, closing at SI 1 Rye quiet and tlrm; west ern, 73c Barley quiet. Corn Receipts 180, 250 bnshels: exports 43,715 bushels: sales 520,000 bushels; futures, 102 busneles; 10.1,000 bushels spot. Snot market moder ately active, easier: No. 2, 58c in elevator. 58 HSc afloat: ungraded mixed, 560c. Op tions firm; Nov-mber. 5Sc: December, 58VO 59c, closing at 59c; Januari oSJc; May. 54 6DJic Oats R cipls,120,000busnels:exports,5()0 busbels;sales.bo.000bushels futures: ISO.OOOspot. Market dull. Options dull, piier, October closing at 47Kc; November, 4748c, closing at 48c; December. 49c: May, 61c; -pot No. 2 white. 50olc; mixed Western, 4149c; white do, 4Sfi!55c: No. 2 Chicago. 4S$04Sc. Hay quiet and flrin; shipping, 4045c:gond to choice. 6585c Coffee Options barely steady: 1U 20 points down; ales 2,625 bags, including No vember. 17.45i?17.50; December. 17.0517.10; Januarv, ia3516.45; February. laoO: March. 15.7015.S5: Mav. 15.50: spot Rio, quiet, fair cargoes 20c; No. 7. 18c. Sugar, raw quiet, firm. Refined dull, steady. Molasses firm. New Orleans, steadv, common to fancy, 2845c Kice active, firm; domestic, fair to extra. 56ic Cottunseed quiet. Talluweasyat44?. K"3in steady. Turpentironiminalat42c. Eggs quiet: fancy firm: Western. 2223c; receipts, 3,707 packages. Pork steady and fair demand; mess, Sll 5012 25: extra prime, S10 50il (XX Cut meats qnlet and weak: pickled bellles,67c; shoulders 5c; hams. 9c Middles quiet. Lard dull and firmer; Western steam, 56 50; Bales, 1,150 tierces. Options Sales 750 tierces; November, S6 52 asked; December, S6 60 bid; Januarv. $6 76; February, S6 85; March. S6 95; April, $7 05. Refined quiet ;continent,S6 606 90; S. A., S730. Butter in good demand and tlrm; Western dairy. 1015c: do creamery. 13024c; do factory, 6ClS13o: Elgin, 25c Cheese quiet: light skims 4X7Jc: Ohio flats 7Jc. ST. LOUIS .Wheat The market opened He higher, but broke sharply and declined and closed c below yesterday: No. 2 cash. MQ 99Jic; December. SI 01cbid; May, SI 07?ic asked; Jnlv, 93c Corn Tne opening was firm and K4"Ke higher. Th marketruled steady for some time, but later fluctuated within a small range: the close was tteady at yesterday's final figures; No. 2 cash, 4Sc; November, 48c; December, 4Sc; May. 50c. Oats firm but Suieter: No. 2 cash, 44s biu; Mav, 4444n bid. ;ye scarce and firm: No. 2. 62c bid. Barley dull; Iowa. 63Q72Kc; Nebraska. 5962c. Hay steady and quiet. Bran steady at 61c Flaxseed lower and dull at $142. -Butter steady and un changed, iiggi firm at 1616Kc Lead scarce and firm at $5 255 37. Cornmeal unchanged. Provisions .Market steady and firm, bur quiet; Southern orders fair. Pork, S10 25.-il.ard, S600 6 10. Dry saltmeats boxed shoulders So 50 5 75: longs 85 505 55; ribs, S5 555 65; cleir. So 655 80. Bacon, boxed sh-ulders, $6 12K; long-, SO 05S 10; sides S6 12K6 15: clear, 84 30 6 35. Sugar cured hams, Slu 5012 50. PHILADELPHIA Flour quiet. Wheat options opened a shade firmer, lint snhse. quentlv lnt the. improvement, and closed nominally o lower; choice milling grades scarce and stcidilv held: N-. 2 red. October. SI 0101 02; N-vember, 81 0201 02U: Decem- Der. mfi ws:- January, si 0Gl OUJJ. Corn Car lots firm; futures neglected and nomin ally unchanged; No. 2 mixed, In elevator, SS&c; No. 2 yellow. 59c Oats unsettled; No. 3 white 53JJC closing at 53c asked; choice No. 2 white, 5B-: regular do, 55c; No. 2 white, Oc tober. 5S54c; November. 5050c: December, 50K51c; January, 5051c Eggs firm and in good demand: prime firsts, 23Jc MINNEAPOLIS Receipts of wheat were 530 cars; shipments. 105 cars The export wheat market was unfavorably affected by the break in futures. When the futures were so strong in tho morning a few lots of cash wheat sold well up, but uhen,tlie break came In December wheat holders of cash lots continued to ask the same figures they got hatore. Closing quota tions: No. 1 hard. October, $1: on track. SI 01; No. 1 Northern. 95c; October and November. 96te:December.98i-: May. Si Hl4: on track. 98K 99c; No. 2 Northern. October, 92c; Decem ber, 91c: on track. 9391c BALTIMORE Wheat Western e-isy; No. 2 winter red. spot and October, SI OOKaifli: De cember. SI 0; May, si 10 bid. OTirn West ern quiet; mixed, soot and October 56c bid; vear. 65c bid; May,5s2c. Oit firm. Rve Quiet and steady. Hay fairly active. Pro vismns fairly active; mess pork. old. $11 50: new. $12 50. Bulk meats loose, shoulders, 6X 6c; Jong clear, 6c; clear rib side. 6Vc; 'ugar pickled shoulders &V; hams, li;12)?c Lard Refined, TJfe; crude. 6c Butter' active and firmer. Eggs fairly active at 22c MILWAUKEE Flour steadv. WhPit firm. W.. O ... ..!.. - -.-1. t n, .M. A.--. 4. oimi'i-.;, tin uaxii, caan, rofffyBc; De cember, 88c; No. 1 Northern. $1 0U Corn firm; No. 3, on track. 51c Oats, firm: No. 2 white, on traek.4540c parley higher; No. 2, in store. 6S608c Rye Arm: No. 1, In store, 67Jc Provisi-ins steadv. Pork January. S1192K- Lard-January," 86 55. CINCINNATI Flour In moderate demand. W heat in good demand and firm: No. 2 red, 51 0a Corn strong: No. 2 mixed, 53Jc Oats in good demand and strong; No. 2 mixed. 45c Rye quiet; No. 2, 68c Provisions firm. Butter firm. Sugar steady. Eggs active and uiui ai-iiu. .vneese arm. TOLEDO Wheat dull and lower; cash and October. SI 01K: December. $1 04; May. SI 0H. Corn dull; cash. 52c; Mav, 53c Oats quiet and firm; cash, 45c; No. 2 white. 46c Cloverseed active and steady: cash, 81 10; De cember, 84 2a DULUTH Wheat was dull and lower to-dav. Receipts were 198 ears. Closing prices: Octo ber, 81 04; December, 81 05; May. 81 10 No. 1 hard. $1 W; No. 1 Northern, 9SVc; No. 2 .Northern, 92c Dr goods Market. New Yobk. October 18. Trade in drygoods was fair for naturday. Some important buy ers from the Northwest were in the market, looking to purchase for shipment by water routes before close of navigation, and business of tnat character promises to become mors active. Demand for spi ing and summer goods continues on a liberal scale, inilnding both woolen, and cotton specialties. The market tone was firm and strong. Agents made the folloing price changs to market stock on hand: Ne York mill D and L cottonales 18c: do camlet jeans 15c; do light chicks, 13Je, and snmnten camlet Jeans 10c. Mining Quotations. New York. October 18. Mining quotations: Alice, 200: Boilte. 180; Homestake. 900; Horn Stiver; 325; North Commonwealth, 125; Occi dental, 150: Sutter Creek.-120. When baby was sick, we gave her Castorla, Wben she was a Child, she cried for Castorla, When she became Miss She clung to Castorla, When she hadChlldre'n.she gave them Castorla aD9-77-invysa DOMESTIC MARKETS. A Great Scarcity of G6od Potatoes, and Markets Very Firm. FLORIDA 0RAKGKS TO THE FH0NT. Receipts of Grain and Hay Are and Prices Strong;. Heavy rnoTisioss find a lowek level Office of Pittsburg Dispatch. ? SATURDAY. October 18, 1890. t Country Produce Jobbing Prices. Demand is good for all fruits and vegetables offered. Good potatoes are scarce and markets are Arm. Apples are coming in freely and markets are weak. Supply of turnips, cabbage and onions exceeds demand and markets aro dull and slow. Choice dairy products are steady. New York cheese and fancy creamery butter show a tendency upward. Fresh eggs' are firm at outside quotations The first Florida oranges of tbe season have put in an appearance within a few days. Bananas are plenty and cheap. Ripe stock has only a nomi nal price Apples S3 504 50 a barrel- Butter Creamery, Elgin, 2728c; Ohio do, 250126c; fresh dairy packed, 2022c; fancy coun try rolls. 2122c Berries Grapes Concords 2530c a basket; Delawares 3540c a basket; Catawbas, 3035c; cranberries. S2 503 25 a bushel: quinces, 85 00 6 50 a barrel. Beans New crop beans, S2 502 55; marrow fat, $2 602 75; Lima beans. 6&bc Beeswax 284$30c $? & for choice; low grade, 2225c Chestnuts S2 252 75 a bushel. Cider Sand refined, S9 0010 00; common. So 506 00; crab 'cider, 810 5001100 barrel; cider vinegar, 1213c gallon. Cheese Ohio cheese, mild, lie: New York cheese, 10XHc; Limburger. 12K13Kc: do mestic Sweitzer, 13KI5c: Wisconsin brick Sweitzer. 1314c imported Swei zer. 26$c Egos 23ffiJ4e J3 dozen for strictly fresh. Fuathers Extra live eeese, 5060c; No. 1 40045c: mixed lots, 3035c"tp ft. .mapi-ii syrup ioavoe a can; maple sugar, 810c If) ft. Honey 120122c 99 ft. Poultry Spring chickens. 40Q65O a pair; old, 6575c a pair; dressed, ll12c a pound; ducks, 5070c Tallow Country. 4Jc; city rendered. 4JJc. Seeds Recleaned Western clover, $5 00 5 25; conntry medium clover, $4 254 50; tim othy, SI C0165; bine grass 82 853 00; orchard grass 81 5C; mille-. 7073c Tropical Fruits Lemons, choice 85 50 650;fancy, 87 007 50; Jamaica oranges new crop. 86 00 a barrel; bananas, SI &01 75 firsts,. 81 001 25 good seconds, bunch; California peaches, 82 002 60 fl box; Tokay grapes, 84 50 5 00: California nlitms $2 00223 p box; Cali fornia pears. 84 004 50 3jt box: now figs, 17c $1 ft: dates 5S6Kc $ ft. Vegetables Potatoes, 7590c 1 bushel; Southern sweets. 82 002 25 ft barrel; Jersey, 830003 25: cabbage, 83 00o CO 1 hundred, onions, S2 763 25 a barrel; onions, 84 SOfor 180 ft basket; green beans, 40c fl basket; celerv. 2.l30c a dozen bunches: turnips, 81 502 25 ft barrel; peppers, 81 O0l 25 p bushel; tomatoes. 75c $1 bushel. Groceries. Trade is not so active tbe past few days as for some week's past. The condition ot country roads is the adverse factor to trade. Prices are unchanged. Canned goods and foreign fruits are firm at quotations and prospects are for higher prices at an early day. Green Coffee Fancy Rio. 24Ss25c; choice Rio. 22K23c; prime Rio, 23c; low grade Rio. 2021c; old Government Java, 29K30c; Maracalbo. 2527Kc; Mocha, 30 32c: Santos, 2226c; Caracas 2527c; La Guay-a, 2627c Roasted (in papers) Standard brands, 25c; high grades. 2S30Kc; old Government Java, bulk, 3334c; Maracalbo. 2829c; Santos, 26 30c: peaberry, SOc: choice Ri". 26-; pnmo Rio, 25c: good Rio. 24c; ordinary. 21J622Kc SPICES (whole) Cloves 15lbc: allspice, 10c; cassia, 8c; pepper, 13c; nutmeg, 75380c Petroleum (jobbers' price) 110 test, ?c: Ohio, 120. SKc; headlight, 150, 8Kc: water white, IOKc: globe, 1414Kc; elaine, liKp: car nadine. llc; royahne, 14c; red oil, llllc; puntv, 14c. Miners' Oil No. 1 winter strained. 4345c p gallon; summer, 3S40c; lard oil. 5558c Syrup Corn syrup. 3o37c; choice sugar syrup, 3843c: prime sugar syrup, 3233; strictly prime. 3536c. N. O. Molasses Fancy, new crop, 5052c; choice. 49c: medium, 3843c; mixed, 4012c Soda Bt-carU in kegs. 33Jic: bi cirb in JfS 5Jic; bl-carb assorted packages, 6J6c; sal soda in kegs, lc; do granulated, 2c ' Candles Star, full weight, 'SKc; stearins, $) set, 8Kc; paraffine, ll12c. Rice Head Carolina, 77c: choice, 6 6c; prime, 6bc; Louisiana, b6c Starch Petri, 4c; corn starch, 66c: glos starch, 67c Foreign Fruits Layer raisins, S2 65: Lon don layers, 82 75; Muscatels S2 50; California Muscatels?-! 40: Valencia, 77c; Ondara Va lencia, 910c: sultana, 10tlllc;currants.5 6c; Turkey prunes,77Jic; French pruneslOK 12c; -alonica prunes, in 2& packages. Or; cocoa i.uts, ? 100, $6; almonds I.an.,1? ft, 29c: do Ivica 17c; do shelled, 40c; walnuts, nap.. 1314c;Sicilv filberts, 12c: Smyrna figs. 12I3c:new dates, 6 6c: Biazil nuts, 14c: pecans, 10Kllc; citron, $t ft, 1819c; lemon peel, 15c jp ft; orauge pet), 15c Dried Fruits Apples sliced, per ft, 10c; apples evaporated, 15ffll6c; peaches, evapor ated, pared, 2S30c: peaches, California, eva porated, unpared, 2526c: cherries, pitted, 28c; cherries, nnpitted, 1212c; raspberries, eva porated, 353bc; blackberries, 10llc; huckle berries, 15c sugars Cubes, TJc; powdered, 7c; granu- 5Jic; yellow, dark. 5V53c Pickles .Medium, bbls. (1,200), JS 50: me diuni, hair bbK (600), $4 75. Salt-No. 1. f? bbl,95c;No.l ex., bbl.$l 00; dairy, IP bbl, $1 20; coarse crystal, $ bbl, $1 20: Higgins' Eureka, 4-bu. sacks, $2 SO; Higgins' Eureka. 16-14 lb packets, S3 00. Canned Goons Standard peaches, $2 80 2 90; 2cds, $250iffi2 CO; extra peaches $3 0C3 10; pie peaches $2 00; finest corn, $1 S5l 60; Hfd. Co. corn, 95c S1 15; red cherries, $1 401 60; Lima beans, $1 20; snaked do. SOc; string do, 75 90c; marrowfat peas $1 1001 25; so iced peas 7uS0c; pineapples. S130l 411; Bahama do. $2 55; damsor plum-, $1 10; greengages. 81 50: egg Plums, $2 20: California apricots, $2 5002 BO; California pears. $2 75; do greengages. $2 20; do egg plums, $2 20: extra white cherries $2 85: raspberries, $1 4001 45:strawberriesSI30I 40; gooseberries, SI 1U1 15; tomatoes. 95i 1: sal mon, 1-a, Si 3ul bu; blackberries, SI 15: succo tash, 2-5 cans, soaked, 90c; do green, 2-ft, $1 25 1 50; corn beet 2-ft ra s. $2 00; 14-ft cans, 511; baked beans, (1 401 60; lbster, 1-ft, 2 UO; mackeral. l&cans broiled, $1 50; sardines, do mestic, Jic $4 5U4 75; sardines, domestic. , 57 00; sardines, imported, ytt, $11 50012 50; sar dines imported, Xs $18; sardines, mustard, $4 25; sardines, snlced, $4 25. Fish Extra No. 1 bloater, mackerel, $30 -a bbl; extra No. 1 d". tne-, $23 60; extra No. 1 mackerel, shore. $19 60; No. 2 shore mackerel, $22: largo S's 20. Codfish Whole pollock. 5c ft: do medium, George's cod, 6c; do large, 7c; boneless bake, in strips, 6c; do George's cod, in blocks. 6K7Jfc. Herring Round shore. $5 50 $ bbl; snli . JO 50; lake, $3 25 f 100-JS bbl. White fish. $6501 lOO-B half bbl. Lake trout. $550 fl half bbl. Finnan baddies, 10c B. Iceland halibut. 13c ? . Pickerel, half bbl, $3 00: quarter bbl, SI 3o. Potomac her ring, $3 50$) bbl: $200 ? half bbl; Holland herrinc 70c: Walkoff herring. 90c, OAT3IKAL-J6 507 00 ijl bbl. . - Grain, Floor and Feed. There were no sales on.call at the Grain Ex change to-day. Receipts as bulletined, 55 cars of which 27 cars were received by Pittsburg, Ft. Wayne and Chicago Railway, as follows 4 cars of oats 1 of wheat, 2 of corn. 1 of feed, 1 of middlings, 6 of hay, 9 of a, ur, 2 of barley. 1 of rye. By Pitts Durg, Cincinnati and St, Louis 8 cars of corn, 2 of hay. 3 of oats, 1 of wheat. By Bilti more and Ohio, 1 car of oats 1 f corn, 1 ol hay. By Puisburir and Lake Erie, 1 car of corn, 3 of hay, 1 of malt, 3 of wheat, 1 of barley. By Pitts burg and Western. 1 car of oats, lot hay. Total receipts for tbe week 372 cars, against 311 car last week, and 291 cars for the corresponu. week of last year. Cereals are firm and drift f markets is upward. Hay is quiet and raarfci a lavor vie ouvor. Prices are for carload lots on track: WHEAT-No. 2 red, $1 03421 Hj No, 3, $1 00 Corn No. 2 yellow ear. 6162c: high mixed ear, 59360c: No.2yellow, shelled, 5859c; hlgti mixed shelled corn, 575Sc. OATS-No. , 6051c; No. 2 white. 1949c: extra. No. 3, 4848Hc; mixed oats 4&47c. RTE No. 1 Pennsylvania and Ohio, 69i70c: No. 1 Western,6768c. Flour Jobbing prices Fancv spring and winter patent flour. $6 006 25: fancy straight winter, $5 255 60, fancy straight pring,$5 25 5 50: clear winter, So 00S525; straight XXXX bakers', $4 7596 00. Rv- fluur, $1 25ai 60. Buckwheat flour, 44Vc it a. MnxrEED No. 1 white middlings $21 60JS 22 00 it ton; No. 2 white middling". $19 50 20 50; brown middlings $17 0018 00; winter wheat bran. $15 5016 (XX HAY-Baled timothy No. L $10 6011 00; No. 2 do, $8 09 00: loose from wagon,$ll 00013 00, according to quail t) : No. 2 prairie bay, 60 0 00; packing do, V 007 60. Straw Oat, $7 758 00: wheat and rye, 87 50 7 75. Provisions. Hams are Xc lower and sugar cured shoulders tc lower. California bams aro reducede per pound. Compound Western lard is Jc higher. Sugar-cured hams, large. 10c; sugar-cured hams medium. 10Jc; sugar-cured bams small, lie; sugar-cured breakfast bacon. 8c; sugar cured shoulders Kc: sugar-cured JJoneless shoulders 8c; skinned shoulders, 8c; skinned hams 12c; sugar-cured California bams, 7c; sngar-enred dried beef flat". lOXc; sugar-cured dried beeT sets, HXc: sugar-cured dried beef rounds, 13c: bacon, shoulders. 7c: bacon, clear sides, 7Kc: bacon, clear bellies. 6JJc: dry salt shoulders, 6c: dry salt clear sides GKc Mess pork hear. 812 50; mess pork, lamllv, 812 5a Lard Refined, in tierces 5c: balf barrels, &Jfc; CO-B tubs, 5Jje: 20-ft palls tAJc; 50-ft tin cans. 5c; 3-ft tin pails, 6c: 5-ft tin palls 6c; 10-ft tin nails, 5c Smoked sausage long. 5c; large 5c Frosli pork, links, 9c Boneless hams 10fc Pigs foet, half-barrels, 84 00: quarter-barrels, 12 15, HOME SECURITIES. Trading of Fair Proportions, but Talues Clipped Off a Trifle There was a fairly active movement in local securities during the week, but as the selling contingent showed np in strong force values of most of the usually active properties were cut down fractional amounts. Closing prices as compared with those of the previous Saturday, show concessions in Phila delphia Gas Central Traction, Pleasant Valley, New York and Cleveland Gas Coal, Electric and Switch and Signal. The only important advance was scored by Lus'er, which recovered nearly all tbe loss sustained by tbe raid. Pitts burg Traction also moved up a peg. The depression was not dne to tbe discovery of any weak spots in the interests handled, bnt was in sympathy with the apathy at all other speculative centers, occasioned in part by the employment of money in other directions and in part by the fact that investors have abont all the stocks they want to carry through the rest of the year. STTJBB0BK FACTS In the Shape of Figures Show Big Gains Over Last Year. Because Tom, Dick and Harry say that busi ness is solid and nourishing it does not neces sarily follow that such is tho case, but when the manager of the Clearing Uonse gives out figures backing up the statement there is no longer room for doubt. The bank clearings last week reached tbe large total of $17,142,624 22. against $15,464,262 25 tbe previous week, and 813,886,566 35 for tbe same week last year, snowinc a train of $3,256, 057 87 over 1880. There is no need to add any thing to this exhibit. There is bnsincss to show for the fignres or they would not be given nut. The gain over last vear to date is nearly $117,000,000. Saturday's exchanges ...8 2,747,0)4 98 376,024 35 ... 17.14i624 22 ... 2,409.430 19 ... 15.464,262 25 ... 13,886,568 33 ... 1.759,257 71 ... 631.725,435 13 ... 524.104,224 33 ... 116,621,210 38 Saturdays naianccs Week's exenanges Week's balances. Previous week's exchanges.., Kxclianee? week of 18SU Balances for week of 18S9 , Total exchanges to date, 1890 Total exchanges to date. 1889. (lain to date, 1890 Bankers reported asufflcient supply or money and a good demand, bnt with some discrimina tion in faor of regular borrowers. Rates were on the usual basis of 67 per cent for call and time loans. NEW YORK STOCKS. The Weekly Bank Statement Has bnt Little Effect on Manipulation of Stocks Movements in North American the Day's Feature. New York, October 18. The trading in the stock market to-day clearly demonstrated the independence of the manipulators of the street from any and all circumstances, which ought legitimately to have a bearing upon the real value of securities. It has been known for .some davs that tbe bank statement would show a further decrease in the surplus reserve, which for the past two or th.'ee months would have been sufficient warrant for a raid upon the list. But tbe temper of the street is so completely changed that notwithstanding a loss in the reserves of over $3,000,000 and the complete wiping out of the surplus, tho market to-day was strong from start to finish, closing with "material gains in many stocks The upward movement received also little, if any, aid from outside sources, the foreign pur chases being msigniticant, but the confidence which has so lately been developed was most noticeable, and all offerings were absorbed at advancing figures The traders were Inclined to discount tbe bank statement at the oDenimr. which was made on a very qniet business at irresular changes from last ulcht's figures witb a majority of losses which, however, were for slight fractions only. The strength of the speculation became apparent in May, however, and prices began to rise all over tbe list with thehrst sales, and before the end of tbe first half hour gains of per cent had been estab lished. North American leading tbe upward movement. Later there was a partial reaction, but the ad vance was soon resumed, ana tbe bank state ment, wben issued, had no more than a passing influence upon the course of quotations All tbe activity was in North American. The ad vances are very uniform in tbe active stocks, but tbe pronounced movement was in Citizens Gas, of Brooklyn, which, after retiring to 97, rose to 100, closing at a 100, a gain of 2 ner cent for tbe"Oay. The final changes with ex ceptions noted, were fractions only, but most invariably in the direction of higher prices The following table snows tne prices or active stocks on tho New York Stock .Exchange yester day. Corrected dally for TnE Dispatch by Whitsky Jfc bTErllENSOx. oldest Pittsburg mem bers of Heir York mock Isxchange, 57 Fourth avenue: Clos- Open- High- Low- ing Inc. est. est. liW Am. Cotton Oil 17 Am. Cotton Oil nrer. 4" Am. Cotton Oil Trust.. 18 19 18 19 Atch.. Ton. AS. P..... 35" 3b Z-, 3T, Canadian Pacific 76 76 76 7t, Canada Southern ii 53) S2i 53 Central ofNew Jersey 112 Central Pacinc 3D Chesapeake & Ohio 20 Chicago tras trust..... 44 44 4S 4Vx C. Bur. AOulncy..:. S21I 93 n; 924 C. Mil. & St. Paul.. .59V 60 59'4 60 c Aiu.jfc St. P.. nr.. 109 109 109 109 C Hocki. A P. 77; 77. 77,' 77 C. St, L. Pitts 13 C. St, L. & Pitts., nr.. 40 40 ) 39 C. at. r. At. Jto 273i C St, P.. il. S U- VI 85 C A Northwestern ....107' JOS 107V 108 C C O. Al 67, C7?i 67 67 Col. Coat A Iron 43 46 45 45 Col. A Hocklnjr Valley 3D 30 30 so dies. A Ohio 1st nrer.. 56 56 56 56VJ Clies. AOhloZd prer. 361i Del.. Lack A West m H4 H4 141 Del. & Hudson 137 137 13HS4 136U Deli. A UloCrandsnt. 54X 5V 54f W'4 E.T., V.i. A ta 8 Illinois Central icij LakeKrle A West i:.9b L.ace brieA West pr. 59 Lake Shore A M. o 107 107 107 107 LoulsvllleANaslivllle. 79 804 79 79 Michigan Central 92 -xffSSts 'IF WE ONLY Si r -. . .-Am .TV Bnt few words are needed to tell this tale. Two apparently perfect beings are brought together for life. They are surrounded with all that wealth can purchase. Every blessing has been showered upon them, save one, and cheerfully would they relinquish all for that blessinar a little child. Sterility is often the result of carelessness, or, to put it stronger, ignorance. Nine out of ten cases are curable, if treated understand ingly. The action of the Vegetable Compound in this direction has been phenomenal, and many a home, once desolate, has now " a bany." Send stamp for "Guide to Health and Etiquette," a beautiful Illustrated book. LYDIA E. PINKHAM'Svecetable Is the only Positive Core and legitimate Remedy COMPOU N D for the peculiar weaknesses and ailments of women. It cures the worst forms of Female Complaints, that Bearing-down Feeling, Weak Back, Falling and Displacement of the Womb, Inflammation, Ovarian Troubles, and all Orcaoic Diseases of the Uteres or Womb, and is Invaluable to the Change of Llf. nil solves and expels Tumors from tbe Uterus at an early stagt, and checks any tendency to Cancerous Humor Snbdues Falntness, Excitability, Nervous Prostration, Exhaustion, and strengthens and tones the Stomach. Cuius Headache, General Debility, Indigestion, etc., and invigorates the whole system. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sex. the Compound bus no rival. "" AH Drucststs sell it as a utandaril article, or sent b mail, in form of Plug nr Lozenges, on receipt of s)l.QO. LYDIA MO&iIe A Ohio 271,' Missouri Paeine 60 National i.eadTrost... -JH New York Central 103H n.y.. a St. 1. .V. Y.. L..E.S W..4... ZZX N. Y., L. E. W. pd.. S H. X. AM. . 42& N.Y.. O. A W ?. Norfolk 4 Western Noriolk & Western or. .... Northern Ficlflc Z1H Northern Paclflepr.... 7315 Ohio . Mississippi 22'4 Oreion Improvement. 38J4 I'acIfleMall 41 Fee. Dec. & Evans Pnlladel. & Keadlmr... S7U Pullman Palace Uar...I13! Ulchmond W. I. T.. 18 Richmond & W.P.T.nr W Surar Trust 74 Texas faclnc UH Union PaclPe Sim Wabash Ilfc; Wabash nrererred ;?, Western Union. .J .... 81 ", Wncellncft U K. ajsg Wheeling A I.. Kprer. ;: North American Co... 31 20 3)t ircii 27K 103 J 29 69 Slii 103 IS EX 17 17X &S 13 74 22i z: 5SJ 87 42J, CH an 0 74 73J MM Wi 374 36 41 41 hi 37M 3I3J4 21? 18 i8 75 74 V 741( 733 18 184 S3 o2j UK 11 21S 2iK 31 8! if 3: CM 71 73g Siii M 41 J7 . Z7H Z12V. 18 73 74 18 H S2 II 21 81. 32 73M 33 Closing Bond Quotations. V. S. 4s. res 131 U. ri. 4'. coup 1:3s U.S. 4s rec 10I U. s. 4js coup 104 fnciUcoaor '93 113 I.ouislanastampcdls 88 Missouri 6s, 100 Tenn. new set. 6s.. ..104 Tenn. new set. 5s. ...100 M. K. -ET. Gen. 53.. 69 .Mutual Union lis... .102" n.J. C Int. Cert...i;o Northern Pac. lsls..U6Jf Northern lac. Ids.. II I Northw't'n consols. 119 Morthw'n deben's 5slOSSi Oregon X Trans. 63.107 St.LAI.it. Gen. os. 92 bt.L. JtS.F. Uen.M.IIO lenn.ncwset.2j.... 2 Canada So. 2ds 90's.M. Paul consols.. ...I21U Central Pacific lsts.HOU St. P. Chi&Pc. lsts.lli Den. A It. U. Ists...ll9 Ix. re. 1..G.1T.KS. 9IK I... I I '' u- w Den. & i:. I). 4s 81 U.&R.O. Westlsts. Erie 2ds i00'4 M. K. T. Gen. 69.. 80 rx.. lc. it l..Tr.Ks Union Pacificists.. .112 West bnore. 1G3J Boston Stocks. Atch. & Top Boston .t Albany.. , 25 Itoston Mont.... Calumet & Hecla.. CatatDa , Franklin Ilnron .... Kearsare Osceola PewMblc (new)...., Santa Fe copper ... Tamar.ick , Anulstuu Land Co Boston Land Co... 1971 293 32 21 5 15 42 15 52 IS.! . 51! Boston & aiaine .w Cll.i(J 92 Cin., ban. Jt C'lev... CG Eastern K. It 169 Fltcl.trarjf IC. It pf. X.VK Flint &Pere it 25 Mass. Centr.il 19 .Mex. C'cn. com 24T4 N. Y. &X. Enir..... 42 JJ. Y. & N. Enir. 7s..l24'i Old Colony 167 Kntland preferred.. 65 Wis. Cen. common. 21 Wls.Centralpf 5.1 Allouez ilg. Co...., 5 Atlantic m.... 20 5 ban UIcco Land Co. IS West End 26 Bell Telephone 223 Lamson store S 29 Water Power 3 Centennial Jllnlns. 21 Philadelphia Stocks. Closlnjr quotations of Philadelphia- stocks, fur nished bv Whitney 4 Stephenson, brokers. No. 57 Fourth avenue. Members .New York stock Ex change: Bid. Asked. Pennsylvania Railroad 52K 52 Keartlnsr 18 18 11-W Buffalo, Pittsburg Western 8 Lenlph Vailjv 'SI Lehigh Navigation 52V 52'i Philadelphia and Erie 33j Jiortnern faclnc 2S 23'4 Northern faclnc preferred 74 74 Sale. Features of Saturday's Oil Market. Corrected daily by John M. Oakley & Co.. 45 Sixth street, members of the Pittsburg Petro leum Exchange: Barrels. Average charters .15.514 Average shipments 89.3T4 Average runs 83,117 Kenned. New YorK. 7.60c Keened. London. 5rf. Kenned, Antwerp. I6r. Kenned. Liverpool. 5l. Reflned. Bremen. 6.55m. A.B. McGrew. No. 115Fonrth avenue, quotes: Puts 81; calls 83. Wool Markets. St. Louis Wool R"ceipts. 113.836 pounds. Market strong and active but unchanged. "Whisky Markets. Cincinnati Whisky steady. FHANCHISE QUESTION DISPOSED OF. The Jackson Convention Completes an Im portant Portion of Its Task. Jackson, .Miss., October 18. The Fran chise Committee, of the Constitutional Con vention, scoied another victory to-day by securing the adoption of their re port and an ordinance. Among other pro visions, the report provides that suitable provision shall be made to correct improper registration and to secure franchise to those entitled to it. Persons who cannot read any section ot the Con stitution, bnt who are nevertheless qualified electors, shall not be registered wit iu four months next before any election. The term of all officers under tbe Constitution sball be rour years. Tbe ordinance provides that a general election shall be held on the first Tuesday alter the first Monday in Novem ber, 1891, for three Kailroad Commissioners, and for members of ttie Legislature, Dis trict Attorney and county officers, whose terms shall expire January "l, 1806. This seems to be a satisfactory settlement of a question that threatened to split the convention in twain. One party contended that it would be necessary to extend tbe terms of all the last named officers for two years; the other side opposed the scheme as a usurpation. There are many white soaps, each represented to be "just as good as the Ivory.' They are not, but like all counterfeits, they lack the peculiar and remarkable qualities of the genuine. Ask for Ivory Soap and insist upon havino- it. 'Tis sold everywhere. noJ-lOl-vwa HAD CHILDREN!" E. PINKHAM MED. CO.. LYNN. MASS. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ARE YOU SICK? It is well to remember that three-fourths of all diseases are traceable to bad blood -ALS0-S. S. S. never fails to remove all impurities and enable nature to restore lost health. Treatise on the blood mailed free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, GaJ WHOLESALE -:- HOUSE, JOSEPH WI f CO. Embroidery and White Goods Department direct importation from the test manufac turers of St. Gall, in Swiss and Cambric Edg ings, Flouncmgs Skirt Widths and Allovers. Hemstitched Edgings and Flouncings Buyer will rind these goods attractive both in nnca and novelties of design. Full Iine3 of New Laces and White Goods.. UPHOLSTEKY 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. wasii dkess fabrics. The larcest variety from which to select Toll Du Nords, Chalon Cloths Bath Seersuck ers. Imperial Suiting. Heather & Renfrew Oress Ginghams Fine Zephyr Ginghams. ' Wholesale Exclusively. Jal3-D EIDEL1TY TITLE AND TRUST CO., 121 and 123 Fourth ave. Capit il SoOO.OOO. Full paid. INSURES TITLES TO REAL ESTATR Acts in nil fiduciary canacities. Deals in reli able investment securities. Rents boxes in it Superior vault from So per annum upward. Receives deposits and loans only on mort Races and approved collaterals. JOHN a JACKSON. Pres't. JAMES J DONNELL. Vice-Pres't. je68-15M C. B. JlcVAY. Sec'yand Treas. GAIN ONE POUND A A GAIN OF A POUND A DAY IN THE CASE OF A MAN WHO. HAS BECOME "ALL RUN DOWN," AND HAS BEGUN TO TAKE THAT REMARKABLE FLESH PRODUCER, SCOTT'S OF PURE COD LIVER OIL WITH Hypophosphites of Lime & Soda IS NOTHING UNUSUAL. THIS FEAT has been performed over and over again. Palatable as milk. En dorsed by Physicians. Sold by all .DRUGGISTS. AVOID SUBSTITUTIONS AND IMITATIONS. ocl-2!-MWFSU BROKERS FINANCLVL. Whitney & Stephenson, 57 Fourth Avenue. r PEOPLE'S SAVINGS BANK. 81 FOURfH AVENUE. Capital. $300,000. Surnlus. S51.B70 29. D. SIcK. LLOYD, ED WARD Is. DUFF, 4 President, Asst. Sec TreaS percent interest allowed on time deposits oclo-IO-D JOHN M. OAKLEY & CO., BANKERS AND BROKERS. Stocks Bonds, Grain, Petroleum. Private wire to New York and Chicago. ii SIXTH ST., Pittsburg. mv23-8I MEDICAL. DOCTOR WHITTIER 814 PENn AVK.MJE. PITTsUUKU. VK. As old re-idents know and back HI es of Pitt bare papers piove, 13 tbe oldest establisho and most prominent physician in the city, da voting special attention to all chronic diseases fcTsNOFEEUNTILCURED MCRni IQ aDt' tnental diseases, physical I1L.1I V UUO decay.nervons debility. lack of. energy, ambition and hope, impaired memory, disordered sijht, self dLtrust, bashfulncsj. dizziness, sleeplessness, pimples, eruptions. Im poverished blood, failing powers, organic weak ness, dyspepsia, constipation, consumption, un fitting the person for business, society and mar riage, permanently, safely and privately cured. BLOOD AND SKIN ".& blotches, fallinc hair, bones, pains, glandular, swellings, ulcerations of tongue, month, tbroat, ulcers, old sores, are cured for life, and blood poisons tnorouzbly eradicated from the system. 1 1 pi M AD V kidney and bladder derange Unilittrj I j ments, weak back, graveL ca tarrhal discbarges, inflammation and other palnlnl symptoms receive searching treatment, prompt relief and real cures. Dr. WLittierNli re-Ions; extensive oxperienco insures scientific and reliable treatment on common-sense principles. Consultation free. Patieuts at a distance as carefully treated as It here. Office hours, 9 A. K. to 8 p. it. Sunday, 10 A. M. to 1 p. M. only. CIS. WI1ITTIEIC. all Penn avenue. Pittsburg; Pa. jyS-12-DSuwfc GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE CURES NERVOUS DE BI LI TY. LOST VIGOR. LOSS OF MEMORY. Pull particulars In pamphlet sent free. The genuine Gray's bpccltlc sold bv druzslsu only la yellow wranner. 1'rle" fl Dec package, or six for fi or br mall M' "von receipt of price, bv aadres. tat THE GKA.T .MEDICINE (Jo, lJnililo, X Sold in Pittsburg byS. 3. HOLLAND, corner BmithAeld and Liberty sts. mU.7-M-owk DOCTORS LAKE SPECIALISTS in all cases re quiring clentitic aud confiden tial treatment! Dr. S. K'Lake, M. R. C. V. a, is the oldest and nose experienced specialist la (lie city. Consultation free and strictlv- confidential. Office hours 9 to 4 and 7 to 8 P. M.: Sundays, 2 to 4 p. IL Consult them personally, or write. CoCTOBS Lake. cor. Penn ave. and 1th st., Pittsburg, Pa, je.T-73.DWk "Wood's :E:h.os:pi3-ocii3.o.. THE GREAT-TCVGLIsH KKMHUY. Used for 33 years' bytaousandsiuc-l of Youthful forty J HIIU UD CACV8SDB cessfullr. Gvar-i of later years; Gitu immedlata atrenath andvifu anraa to curt all forms of Nervous Weakness. Imli- tlniiL Sn.raiAtnp. or. Askdnxcztsut- for Wood's not- - . rh.. 1miMr.nM IK. - -I"". and all th .. Photo from Life. phoaine; ttxeno substitute. Ons package, $1; six, $5. by malL Write forpamnble. Address The Wood Chemical Co.. 131 WoodwanJ : ve Detroit. Midi. 5 W3old in Pittsburg; Pa- by Joseptl ritmlBJ Fmulsion Just WLJKL4K2U I ,fS wms ML oc-sa.itWTSwkowi;i, j 4 , 1 I