raOTSHsaa "WWS'Ss -"x THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH. MONDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1890. AHOKG THE BEDOUINS Unabated Interest in Key. Dr. Tal mase's Almost Realistic SERMOXS UPON THE HOLY LAND. Lessons to be Drawn From a Tisit to Jacob's Famous Well. THE BATTLE FOR TOE WOODEN CROSS rSFECIAL TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCH.! Brooklyn, November 1G. This morn ins in the Academy of Music iu this city, and this evening at the service in the New York Academy of Music, Dr. Talmage preached the eighth of the series of sermons he is giving on his tour in Palestine. At both services the respective buildings were crowded to tneir utmost capacity in five minutes after the doors were opened, and all who came later were unable to get in. Dr. Talmage's subject was "Among the Be douins, and his text, lumbers 10:31: "For asmuch as thou kuowest how we are to en camp in the wilderness." He said: Night after night we have slept in tent in Palestine. There are large villages of Bedouins without a house, and for three thousand ears the people of those places have lived in black tents, made out of dj-cd skins, and when the winds and storms wore out and tore lose those coverings, others of the same kind took their places. Noah lived in a tent. Abraham in a tent. Jacob pitched his tent on the mountain. Isaac pitched his tent in the Talley. Lot pitched his tent toward tiodom. In a tent the woman Jael nailed Siscra, the General, to the ground, first having given him sour milk called "leben" as a soporific to make him soundly sleep, that being the effect of such nutrition, as modern travelers can testify. The S3Tian army in a tent. The ancient battle shout was "To your tents, O Israel!" Paul was a tent-maker. In deed, Isaiah, magnificently poetic, indicates that all the human race live under a blue tent wben he says that God "btretcheth out the heavens as a curtain and spreadeth them out as a tent to dwell in. 'and Hezekiah compares death to the striking of a tent, a Inc "Jly age is removed from me as a shepherd's tent." AN ILLUSTRATION EXPLAINED. Nothing surprised me S3 much ao the per sistence or everything. A sheep or horse tails dead and, though the sky may one minute be fore be clear of all wings, in five minutes after the skies are black with eagles cawing, scream ing, plunging, fighting for room, contending tor largest morsels of the cxlinct quadruped. Ah, con 1 understand the force of Christ's illustra tion when He said: "Wheresoever the carcase is there will the eagles be gathered together." The longevity of those eagles is wonderful. Thej live 50 or 60 and sometimes 100 ears. Ah, that explains w hat David meant when he says, Thy outh is renewed like the eagle's." I saw a shepherd with the folds of his coat far bent outward and 1 wondered what was contained in that amptituue of apparel and 1 said to the dragoman. "What has that shepherd got under his coat?" And the dragoman said: "It is a very oung lamb he is carrying: it is too young ani too weak and too cold to keep up with the flock." At that monent I saw the lamb put its head out from the shepherd's bosom and I said, "There it is now. Isaiah's description of the tenderness of God 'He shall gather the lambs with His arm and carry them in His bosom.' " Pa-sing bv a village home, in the Holy Land, about noon, I saw u creat crowd in and around a private house, and said to the dragoman: "David, what is going on there?" He said: "Somebody has recently died there and their neighbors go in for several days after to sit down and weep with the bereaved." There it is. I said, the old scriptural custom: "And many of the Jens came to Martha and Mary, to comfort them concerning their brother." Early in the morning passing by a cemetery in the Holy Land, I saw among the graes about 50 women dressed m black, and thevwere crying: "Oh, ray child!" "Oh. mv husband!" "Oh, my fatherl" Oh. my mother!" Our dragoman told us that eiery morning very early for three mornings after a burial, the women go to the sepulchre.and after that every week very early foraear. As I taw this group just after day break, I said: There it i again, tne same old custom referred to in Luke, the evangelist. wueie us sajs: certain women wnicn were early at the sepulchre." a historic sror. But here we found ourselves at Jacob's well, the most famous well in history, most dis tinguished for two things, bocause it 'belonged to the old patriarch after whom it was named, and for the w onderf ul things which Christ said, seated on this well curb, to the Samaritan woman. We dismount from our horses in a drizzling rain, and our dragoman, climbing up to tne well over the slippery stones, stumbles and frightens us all by neatly falling into it. I measured the well at the top and found it six feet from edge to edge. Some grass and weeds and thorny growths overhang it. In one place the roof is broken through. Larce stones em bank the wall on all sides. Ourdragoinan took pebbles and dropped thi-m in. and from the lime they left his hand to the instant they clicked on the bottom you could hear it was deep, though noi as deep as once, for every day travelers are applwng the same test, and though in the time of Maundrell, the traveler, the well was 165 feet deep, now it is only 75. So great is the ennosit of the world to know about that well, that uuring the dry season a Captain Andersun descended into this well: at one place the sides w ere so close hehadtoputhis bands over his bead in order to get through, and then he fainted away and lav at the bottom of the well as though dead, until Hours after recovery, when he came to the snrface. It is not like other wells digged down to a fonntatn that fills it, but a reservoir to catch the tailing rains and to that Christ refers when speaking to the Samaritan woman about a spiritual supply: he said that he would, if askod, have given ner "living water:" that Is. water from a flowing spring in distinction from the water of that well which was rain water. But why did Jacob make a reservoir there when there is plenty of water all around and abund ance of springs and fountains and seemingly no need of that reservoir? Why did Jacob go to the vast expense of boring and digging a well perhaps 200 feet deep as first completed, when, by going a little way off he could have water from other fountains at little or no ex pense? Ah, Jacob was wise. He wanted his own well. Quarrels and wars might arise with other tribes and the supply of water might be cut off, so the shovels mid pick-axs and boring instruments were ordered and the well of nearly 4,000 years ago was sunk through the solid rock. THE LESSOX TO BE DRAW". "When Jacob thus wisely insisted on having bis own well he taught us not to be unneces sary dependent on others. Independence of business character. Independence cf religious character. Have your own well of grace, your own well of courage, your own well of divine supply. If you are an invalid von have a right to be dependent on others. But if God has given you health, common sense, and two eyes, and two ears, and in a Hand, and two feet. He equipped j ou for independence of all the uni verse except Himself. If He had meant vou to be dependent on others you uould have been built with a cord around" jour waist to tie fast to somebody el-e. No; you are built with com mon sene to lashionour own opinions, with eyes to find our onn way, with ears to select your own mnsic with hands to fight your own battles. Tuere is only one being in the universe whose advice you need and that is God. Have our own well and the Lord will fill it. Dig if need be through 200 feet of solid rock. Dig it with your pen, or dig it with your yard-stick, or dig it with jour shovel, or dig it with your Bible. In my small wav I never accomplished any. thing for God or the church, or the world, or my family, or myself except in contradiction to buman advice and in obedience to divine coun sel. God knows everything, and what is the use of going for advice to human beings who know so little that no one but the all-seeing God can realize how little it is. I suppose that when Jacob began to dig this w ell on which we are sitting this noontide, people gathered around and satu: "What a useless expense you arc going to. when rolling down from yonder Mount Genzim and down from yonder Mount Ebal. and out vonder in the valley is plenty of wat-rr' "Ob," replied Jacob, "that is all true, but suppose my neighbors should get angered against me and cut off my supply of mountain beverage, what would I do, and what would my familv do, and what would my flocks and herds do? Forward, ye bngide of pick-axs and crow bars, and go donn into the uenths of these rocks, and make me independent of all except Him who fills the bottles of the clouds! I must have my own welir ADVICE TO TOUNG HEX. Young man. drop cigars, and cigarettes, and wine cups, and Sunday excursions and build your own bouse and have your own wardrobe and be your owu capitalist! "Why, I have only $500 income a year!" says some one. Then spend 100 of it in living and 10 per cent of it or S50 in benevolence and the other S50 in be ginning to dig your own well. Or. if you have J1.00U a year, spend 5800 of it iu living 10 per cent or 5100 in benevolence, and the remaining $100 in beginning to dig your own well. The largest bird that ever flew through the air was hotpiiAd not of one ezz and the rreatest es tate was brooded oat of one dollar. I Much it said about "good luck," but people I who are industrious and self-denying almost always have good luck. You can afford to be laughed ,at because of your application and economy, for when you get your well dug, and filled, it will be your turn to laugh. But look up from this' famous well, and see two mountains and the plains between them on which was gathered the largest religions audience that ever assembled on earth, about 00.000 people. Mount Gerizim, about 800 feet high, ou one side, and on the other Mount Ebal, the Jormer called the Mount of Blessing and the latter the Mount of Cursing. At Josh ua's command six tribes stood on Mount Gerizim and read the blessings lor koeping the law, and six tribes stood on Mount Ebal read ing the curses for breaking the law, while the 500,000 pcoplo on the plain cried Amen with an emphasis that must have made the earth tremble. "I do not believe that," says some one, "for those mountain tops are two miles apart, and how could a voice be heard from top to top?" My answer is that while the tops are tno miles apart, the bases of the mountains are only half a mile apart, and the tribes stood on the sides of the mountains, and the air is so cleat, and the acoustic qualities of this great natural amphitheater so perfect that voices can be distinctly heard from mountain to mountain as has been demonstrated by travelers 50 times in the last b0 years. SORROWING PARENTS. On and on we ride until now, we have come to Shilob, a dead city on a hill surrounded by rocks, sheep, goats, olive gardens and vine yards. Here good Eli fell backward and broke his neck, and lay dead at the newsfrom his bad boys Phineas and Hophni; and life is not worth living after one's children have turned out badly, and more fortunate was Eli, instantly expiring under such tidings, than those parents who, their children recreant and profligate, live on with broken hearts to see them going down into deeper and deeper plunge. Thero are fathers and mothe'S here to-day to whom death would be happy release because of their recreant sons. And if there be recreant sous here present, and vnnr parents be far away. why not bow your bead in lepentance, and at tne close oi mis service go to tne teicgrapn office and put it on the wins of the licbtning that you have turned from your evil ways? lieloro anotner 24 hours nave passed take vour feet off the sad hearts at the old homestead. Home to thy God, O prodigal! Many, many letters do I get in purport say ing: My sou is in your cities, we have not heard from him for some time; we fear something is wrong: hunt him np and say a good word to him; his mother is almost crazy about him; he is a child of many prayers. But how can I hunt him up unless he be in this audience? Where are you, my boy? On the main floor, or on this platform, or in these boxes, or in these great galleries? Where are you? Lift your right hand. I have a message from home. Your father is anxious about yon, your mother is praying for you. Your God is calling for you. Or will you wait until Eli falls back lifeless, and the heart against which you lay in infancy ceases to beat? What a"story to tell in eternity that you killed her? My God! Avert that catas trophe. A WELCOME CHANGE. But I turn from this Shiloh of Eli's sudden, deceaso under bad news from bis boys, and find close by what is called the "Meadow of the Feast." While this ancient city was in the height of its prosperity, on this "Meadow of the Feast" there was an annual ball, where the maidens of the city amid clapping cymbals and a blare of trumpets danced in a glee, upon w hich thousands of spectators gazed. But no dance since the world stood ever broke up in such a strange way as the one the Bible de scribes. One nightwhile by the light of the lamps and torches these gayeties went on, 200 Benjamites, who had been hidden behind the rocks and among the trees, dashed upon the scene. They came, not to injnre or destroy, but wishing to set up households of their own, the women of their owu land having been slain in battle, and bv preconcerted arrangement each one of the 200 Benjamites 86ized the one whom be chose for the queen of his home, and carried her away to large estato and beautiful residence, for these 200 Benjamites had inher ited the wealth of a nation. As to-day near Shiloh we look at the "Meadow of the Feast," where the maidens danced that night and at the mountain gorge np which the Benjamites carried their brides, we bethink ourselves of the better land and the better times in which we live, when such scenes are an impossibility, and amid orderly groups and with prayer and benediction, and breath of orange blossoms and the roll of the wedding march, marriage is solemnized, and with oath recorded in heaven, two mortals start arm in arm on a journey, to last until death do them part. Upon every such marriage altar may there come the blessing of Him "who setteth the solitarv in families." Side by side on the path of life! Side by side in their graves! Side by side In heaven! But we must this afternoon, our last day be fore reaching Nazareth, pitch our tent on the most famous battlefield of all time the plain of Esdraelon. What must have been the feel ings of the Prince of Peace as he crossed it on the way from Jerusalem to Nazareth! Not a flower blooms there but has in its veins the in herited blood of flowers that drank the blood of fallen armies. AX ABSORBING SCENE. To me the plain was the mor absorbing be cause of the desperate battles here and in re gions round in which the Holy Cross, the very two pieces of wood on which Jesus was sup posed to have been crucified, was carried as a standard at the head of the Christian, host: and that night, closing my eyes in my tent on the plains of Esdraelon for there are some things we can see better with eyes shut than open the scenes of that ancient war come before me. The twelfth century was closing, and Saladin at the head of 80,000 mounted troops n as cry ing: "Ho for Jerusalem! Ho for all Palestine!" and before them everything went down, but not without unparalleled resistance. In one place ISO Christians were surrounded bv many thousands of furious Mohammedans. For one whole day the 130 held out against these thousands. Tennyson's "six hundred" when "some one had blundered" were eclipsed by these 130 fighting for the Holv Cross. They took bold the lances which had pierced them with death wounds, and, pulling them out of their own breasts and sides, hurled them back again at the enemy. On went the fight until all but one Christian bad fallen and be. mounted on the last bor.e, wielded his battle-ax right and left till his horse fell under the plunge of the javelins and the rider, making the sign of the cross toward the sky, gave up his life on the point of a score of spears. But soon after, the last battlo came. History portravs it, poetry chants it. painting colors it, and all ages admire that last struggle to keep in possession the wooden cross on which Jesus was said to have expired. It was a battle In which mingled the fury of devils and the grandeur of angels. Thousands of dead Christians on this side. Thousands of dead Mohammedans on the other side. The battle was hottest close around the wooden cross upheld by the Bishop of Ptolemais. him self wounded and dying. And when the Bishop of Ptolemais dropped dead, the Bishop of Lydda seized the cross and again lifted it, car rying it onward into a wilder and fiercer fight, and with sword against javelin, and battle-ax upon helmet, and piercing spear against splint ering shield, horses and men tumbled into het erogeneous death. ONLY A SEEMING DEFEAT. Now, the wooden cross, on which the armies of Christians had kept their eye, begins to waver, begins to descend. It falls! and the wailing of the Christain host at its disappear ance drowns the huzzah of the victorious Mos lems. But that standard of the cross only seemed to fall. It rides the sky to-day in tri umph. Fire hundred million souls, the might iest army of the ages, are following it, and where that goes they will go, across the earth and up the mighty steeps of the heavens. In the twelfth century It seemed to go down, but in tbe nineteenth century it is the mightiest symbol of glory and triumph, and means more than any other standard, whether inscribed with eagle, or lion, or bear, or star, or crescent. That which Saladin trampled on the plain of Esdraelon. I lift to-day for yonr marshalling. The cross! The cross! The foot of it planted in the earth it saves, tbe top of it pointing to tbe heavens, to which it will take you, and tbe out-spread beam of it like outstretched arms of invitation to all nations. Kneel at its foot. Lift your eye to its victim. Swear eternal allegiance to its power. And as that mighty symbol of pain and triumph is kept before us, "we will realize how insignificant are the little crosses we are called to. bear, and will more cheerfully carry them. And then I hear the wild rush as of millions of troops in retreat, and then tbe shout of vic tory as lrom 1,400,000,000 throats, and then a song as though all the armies of earth and heaven weie joining it. clapping cymbals beat ing the time "The kingdoms of the world are become tbe kingdoms of our Lord and of His Christ, and He shall reign forever and ever." A Toothpick Factory Burned. Olean, November 16. Fire this morn ing destroyed the works of the Olean tooth pick and basket factory, which was tbe sec ond largest of the kind in the United States, making millions of wooden toothpicks an nually. Loss, $10,000. The River News. The river last evening registered 9 feet 8 inches and is slowly falling. Tbe packet boats have been late several days on account of the fog. The Congo got in yesterday morning and lelt for Cincinnati last night. Progress. It Is very important In this age of vast mate rial progress that a remedy be pleasing to tbe taste and to the eye, easily taken, acceptable to tbe stomach and healthy In IU nature and effects. Possessing these qualities. Syrup of Figs is the one perfect laxative and most gentle diuretic known. FEATURES OF TEADE. Tanners and Bide Dealers Agree on Lower Prices of Hides. CALFSKINS WKAK BUT UNCHANGED Country- Batter Goes Begjjinc for Buyers, and Oleo Booming. i CANADA POTATOES TO THE FB0NT office of The PrrrsBtmo Dispatch, SATUEDAT. November 15. 1890. 1 The tanners and hide dealers of Pittsburg and Allegheny have agreed on a new scale of prices, to go into effect on Monday, No vember 17. There is a drop all along the line, with the exception of calfskins, which are weak. Price of light hides is now within lc of the lowest point reached a year ago, when hides were lower than they had been since the war. Some dealers are of the opin ion tnat another drop may come, as mark ets are weak at the decline, which has been in practical operation for a week or two past. Following Is the classification of hides and scale of prices as agreed on by tanners and dealers of the two cities: Green steer hides, trimmed, 75 pounds and up, 7 cents per pound. Green steer hides, trimmed, 60 to 76 pounds, 7JS cents per pound. tireen steer hides, trimmed, under 60 pounds, 5 cents per pound. Green cow and hclfcr hides, trimmed, all weights, 5 cents per sound. tireen bull hides, trimmed, all welchts, 4 cents per pound. tireen steer hides, with one or more grubs, 1 cents per pound less. Green cow bidet, with one or more grubs, IS cents per pound less. tireen bull hides, with one or more grabs, 1 cent per pmind less. Green calfaklhs, 7 cents per pound for No. 1. Green calfskins, 5 cents per pound for No. 2. Harness Leather. Trade in this line continues quiet, but there is no more accumulation of stock in tbe bands of tanners than is customary at this season of tbe year. Prices of harness leather are not changed, but a new classification has been adopted by the Allegheny tanners, which is given below. - Prices of oak harness leather, taking effect No vember 11, 18 (ten sides to the roll): No. 1. B. No. 2. Extra heavy harness, 200 lbs. and over 33 00 31 00 $3 00 Ilcavy harness, 160 to 100 lbs 32 00 30 00 28 00 Trace leather 30 00 34 00 Butter vs Oleo. The butter question is one of great perplex ity to a market editor at this date. Commis sion men report that they can sell a good article of country butter at 15c per pound and less, and find it heavy stock even at these low figures. On the other band, tbe retail gro cer reports that he cannot get such country rolls as his customers want under 25c to 28c, and consumers are charged 35c per pound. Jobbers of dairy products report that they discourage shipments of country butter because it is bard to sell at any price. Said a leading jobber to-day: "Oleo is pushing out the creamery and country butter trade in this city. Fully four-fifths of all that is sold here is oleo. Our trade in creamerv butter has been steadily on the de cline of late, and as to country butter, we can hardlv sell it at any price. The imitations of butter have tbe field in spite of the law. which makes it criminal to manufacture or sell oleo in Pennsylvania." It is one of tbe unexplainable features of trado that country bntter should go begging for customers at 15c per ponnd, while fancy Elgin creamery cannot now be laid down in Pittsburg at less than Sic per pound. In the past week Elgin creamery has been advanced 3c per pound, and stilt jobbers of dairy products are reluctant to accept shipments of country but ter called good at less than half these figures. Canada Potatoes. By reference to domestic market column, it will be seen that Canada potatoes are now com ing to Pittsburg. A commission merchant re ports receipts of three car-loads from that 'source, on which tbe duty was 1500, or 25 cenls per bushel. With freight added in 40 cents per bushel was added to lay-down cost. Cana dian consumers aro paying less than one-half the Pittsburg prices of potatoes this season. This, .however, is an exception, and it is a rare thing that this country needs to call on her .Northern neighbor for products of garden and farm. MARKETS BY WIRE, i An Elciting Day In the Chicago Wheat Fit The Longs to Unload, Resulting in a Tremendous Slaughter of Values. CHICAGO The wheat market exhibited all the symptoms of a true case of panic before trading bad been in progress over an hour to day, but the spasms, though violent, were not of long continuance, and during the last hour there was a recovery of nearly 2c from the lowest prices of the day, with the closing figures showing a decline since yesterday of n in De cember and fie in May. Corn and oats were dragged down, while wheat appeared to be in the throes of dissolution, but came up again like corks when tbe weight of the wheat panic lifted, and each closed with moderate gains. Provisions were dull, and, while averaging lower, closed with very little loss since yester day. Pork Rather active at irregular prices. Opening sales were made at about the closing figures of Friday and a reduction of 5c was quickly Submitted to. Later, prices rallied 7 f 10c, but more pressure to sell caused a weak feeling and prices receded 1720c. Toward the close prices rallied 7X&UUC and closed quiet. Lard Trading was moderately active. Puces declined 5Q7c and closed steady at outside figures. Short Rib Sides A fairly active business was transacted. Prices ruled 25c lower and closed steady at outside figures. The leading futures ranged as follows, as cor rected by John M. Oakley & Co., 45 Sixth street, members Chicago Board of Trade: Open- High- Low- Clos- , Articles. Iuz. cat. est. ing. WHXAT. NO. 2 November t 94 HH f SIM I 9IW December W 94H 90J4 93 May 101 101.S 98H 100?i CO UK, NO. 2 November 49 ni 43 49U December 48 49 43 49 May 41), 82 to 61 OAT8, NO. 2 November 41 41 ij 41 fj December 41 41 40! i 4IK May...... 44 44X 42J, 4i Miss 1'okk. December. 900 900 900 900 January 1160 II 65 1145 1155 May 12 45 12 45 12 25 12 85 I.ABl). December. 6 07)$ 6 07Jj 6 00 6 02 January 6127,4 6 3 6 22K 6 274 May 6 75 6 77X tKJj 6 75 SHOBT KIBS. December 530 530 530 530, January 5 70 70 i 62K 5 67 K M7 6 17), 17) 6 12)a 6TTh Cash quotations were as follows: flour steady; winter patents, M 70SJ5 00; spring patents, 4 S05 10: bakers', fi 00&3 80. No. 2 spring wheat, "lUc: No. 3 spring wheat. 086c: No. 2 red, 81Jc. No, 2 corn. 49K 49c. No. 2 oats. 41llWc. No. 2 rye. 60c No. 2 barley, 7b79c No. 1 flaxseed, $1 20K. Prime timothy seed, SI 21 Mess pork, per bbl. J9 O09 25. Lard, per 100 lbs. S6 0U Short-rib sides (loose), to 3o5 40; dry salted shoulders (boxed). So 255 37; short clear sides, boxed, 85 655 70. Sugars quiet and unchanged. No. 2 white oats, 4515iic; No. 3 white do. 430 43Jc No. 3 barley. f. o. b.. C073c; No. 4 do., 6163c On the Produce Exchange to-day the butter market was unchanged. Eggs, 22 23c. NEW YORK Flour Receipts. 1.525 pack ages; exports 14,274 barrels, 2,830 sacks; unset tled and demoralized; sales 15,100 barrels. Corn meal dull and weak; yellow Western, $2 60 3 6a Wheat Receipts. SO.SOObnshels; exports, none; sales 8,736,000 busuels; futures none; spot market nominally lower and un settled, closing firmer with options: No. 2 red, 9Sc in elevator. Jl 00V afloat. 99cB jl 01 f. o. b.;No. 3 red.a2ffi92,c;No. 2 Northern. J100; No. 1 hard, Jl 05; options opened c up, as a recotery from tbe depression of yesterday, but when the London financial news came along there was much pressure to sell, and prices broke 2J2c; there were extensive realizings; toward the close there was a slight recovery of tone and tbe latest sles show prices lVc under last night; No. 2 red. November, closing at 9S)c; December. 9SJca$l 01, closing at Wic; Januarv. (1 001 02, closing at 81 01: Feb ruary. $1 01 H1 fPA. closing at 1 WM: March. 81 03K105J4, closing at Jl 03K; Mav. 81 04Q uui. uuwus iu vya; July, gi yijiBl r-4, closing at 81 01K- Rye quiet and firm; West, em. 74S76C BarleV weaker- Kn. 2 MilwanVen. 8081e; ungraded Western. 8798c; Canada No. j, oi;vx uu. uaiicjt malt arm; uanaaa, country made. 81 0001 15. Corn Receints. 114.600 bush els; exports, 21053 busbels; sales, 1,880,000 bnsb- msiiutures. ioi.uuu ousneis spot: spot market lower,moderatelyactlve:No.2.5665"Jcinele. vator; ungraded mixed, G6Ji?58c: options felt the denression on wheat, i-oltl off ?ilc, but closed firmer after a reaction of c: November closed at 6c; December, 6KOS72c, closing at 67c; January closing at o7Jic: May, BTii 58c closing at SXc Oats-Receipts, 65,100 J bushels; exports. 2.061 busbels; sales. 170,000 bushels futures; 65.000 bushels Bpot: spot mar ket unsettled and lower; options weaker: No vember. 4646c closing at 46c; December, 46Kic. closing at 40c; Slav. 49R50e. cliiiig at 4IJWc; spot white. 4950c; uiixco. Western. 44g50c: white do. 50i257c: No. 2 Chi cago, 47Kc Hay quiet and steady; shipping. 40 4oc; good to choice, 50070c. Hops dull and steady. Coffee Options opened barely steady. 10 points down to 5 points up, and closed weak 2535 points down: sales, 24,0i0 bags, including November, 17.0017.05c: December, 16.75 17.05c: January. 15.8516.10c; February, 15 25 15.45c; March. 15.0015.20c: April. 15.10c; May, 15.05il5.10c; spot Rio dull: fair cargoes, 10J.Jc; No. 7, 17c Sugar Raw steady and unlet; refined quiet and steady. Molasses no.-jilnal for foreign; New Orleans dull and easy; common to fancy. 3847c Rice fairly active and steadv: domestic, fair to extra. 56Jc; Japan, 6Je06c Cottonseed oil steady anil quiet; crude, 2sc; yellow, 3445c Tallow quieg and weak; $2 00 for packages. Rosin steadyi strained, common to good, SI 45 1 5a Turpentine dull at 4040Kc Eggs qulec and firm: Western. 2526c; receipts, 3.330 package. Pork quiet and steady: mess. 811 2511 50; extra prime. 810 50I1 00. Cut meats steady: pickled bellies, 55c: do shoulders, 6jc; do hams, 8ac: middles quiet and weak: short clear, 6c Lard lower and Jmuary, 86 436 52, closing at 86 48; February, 86 6L closing at 86 60; May, 86 946 95, closing at 86 95. Butter fairly active and lower: West ern dairy, l!20c; do creamery, 2028c; do factory, 620e: Elgin, 29c. Cheese dull and aliont steady; light skims, 47c: Ohio flats, 6X9c ST. LOUIS Flour dull and unchanged, wheat The market opened a down for De cember and Jc up for May, rnled quiet for some time with but slight fluctuations, weak ened, and prices broke sharply, with active trading. Later there was a recovery, and the market became quieter and continued firm to the close, which was at a decline of lc from yesterday's latest sales; No. 2 cash 80-92c; December, 915c; January, 93Kc; May, 99c; July. 89e: August, 88c Corn Though the opening was Yta up there was soon a weakness. In sympathy with wheat, and the mar ket was feverish and tbe tendency rapidly down. A slight reaction fol lowed, but tt-e. demand dropped off, and trading became quiet. Later and near tbe close values strongthed and were firm and o above yesterday's final figures; No. 2 cash, 52c; December, 4Sc: Mav, 49Jic Oats irregular but weaker; No. 2 cash. 46&C: May, 41JJc Rye Nothing doing. Barley weak and tendency downward: MiLuesota, 76c. Hay quiet and unchanged. Bran dull and unsettled; sacked, f. o. b. boat, 84c Flaxseed dull and lower; offered, 81 21KgH 22 bid. Butter unchanced. Eggs at 20c Coimmeal easy at 82 652 70. Pro visions dull aud drooping; moderate spot busi ness only. Pork. 811 00. Lard, 85 80. Dry boxed rnats Dried shoulders, So 12M; longs, 85 655 73; ribs, Jo 70; clear, 85 85. Bacon Boxed honldrs. 85 50; lonsts and ribs, $6 20; clear, 86 356 37k. Sugar-cured hams, 810 50 12 50. MINNEAPOLIS The demand for spot wheat was moderate to-diir, and it was hard to sell, owing to the unsettled state of general mar kets. About the time the cars of fresh arriv als came ill, tbe futures broke 3c a bushel, and until there was a rally it was out of the ques tion tii sell spot. A later rally brought in buy ers that needed wheat for present use, who bought sparingly. Receipts were large and the slow buying made it late before much had been sold. Closingquotations: No. 1 hard, Novem ber and December, on tracie, 90c: No. 1 Northern, November, 86&6ic: December. S8)c; May. 5Xc; on track, 86c; No. 2 Northern November and December on track, 80c BALTIMORE Whitat Western unsettled; No. 2, winter, red. spot and November, 91 91Vic; December, 94,(i92ic; January, WA 91Jc;May, 81011 01;'. Corn Western quiet; mixed, spot and Nnvumber, 57c bid: vear, 56564c; January, 5555c; May, 5656:. Oats dull andv lower; Western white. 6051c; do mixed, 4So0c; graded, No. 2 white, 51c Rye firm: prime to choice, 7677c: good to fair, 7072c Hay easier; prime to choice tim othy, 810 0011 00. - Provisions firm. Butler steady. Eggs firm, at 25c PHILADELPHIA Flour weak and unsettled. Wheat lower and closed nominal: No. 2 red, November. 5555: December. 9696Kc; Janu ary. 9S98c: February, 81.001 00M. Corn Options dull, unsettled and nominally lc lower; No. 2 mixed, November, 6061c: December, 5558c; January. 5556c; February, 541255c Oats unsettled, closing about lc lower; No. 2 white, November and December, 5960c; January. 6050Xc; February, 5I51Kc Eggs scarce and firm; Pennsylvania firsts. 27c CINCINNATI Flour steady. Wheat weakand lower; No. 2 red, 94c Corn More ample supply and lower; No. 2 mixed, new, 63c. Oats Offer ings steady. Rye dull; No. 2, 71c Pork dull at 111 12. Lard irregular and lower at 85 808 CO. Bulk meats and bacon quiet. Butter heavy. Sugar dnll and weak. Eggs scarce and firm at 21c Cheese slow, but steady at 55c MILWAUKEE Flour steady. Wheat lower; No. 2 spring, on track, cash, 88S9e; De cember, 88c ; No. 1 Northern, 90c Corn firm: No. 3. on track. 64c Oats easier; No. 2 white, on track, 4546. Barley easier: No. 2. in store. 69c Rye easier; No. 1. in store, 67c. Provisions quiet. Pork. 811 47$. Lard, 16 25. KANSAS CITY Wheat easier: No. 2 hard, casn,-.80c bid, 81c asked; November. 81c asked; No. 2 red, cash, no bids nor offers. Corn weaker; No. 2. cash, 41H50Ko asked; Novem ber, 50Jc Oats easier; No. 2, cash, iKia bid. 44c asked; November, 44Kc. DULUTH Wheat opened at 93c for Dec ember, and within an hour sold (town to 00c, followed by a later recovery of lc. Closing quotations: December, 91Jjc; Maj 81 00: No 1 hard; 90Kc: No. 1 Northern, 85?ic; No, 2 Northern, 77Jc TOLEDO Wheat active and firmer; cash and November, 93c: December, 94c: Mav. 81 O0K Corn dull and steady; cash, 54cs Ma v, 52Jc Oats quiet; cash. 37c; May. 44kc Cloverseed dnll; cash, 84 25; December, 84 27; February, S4 37. LIVE STOCK MARKET, Condition of Trade at the East Liberty Stock Yards. Office of Pittsburg Dispatcii. i Saturday. November 15, 189a Cattle Receipts, 1,019 bead; shipments, 741 head: market nothing doing, all through con signments; 2 cars cattle shipped to New York to-day. Hogs Receipts, 2,800 head: shipments. 4,500 bead: market slow; Phlladelphias, 84 0004 10; mixed. S3 80S 90: hravy Yorkers. 83 503 75; light Yorkers. 83 253 40; 3 cars of hoes shipped to New York to-day. Sheep Receipts, 800 head; shipments, LOOO head; market slow at unchanged prices. By Telegraph. OMAHA Cattle Receipts, 800 head; market strouger on better grades, others steadv at yes terday's decline, but choice stock unchanged: feeders slow and weak; fancy, 1,400 to 1,600 pound steers, of which there are none on the market, are quoted nominally at 84 50iS4 90; prime, 1.200 to 1,475 pound steers, 83 854 55; fair to good, 1,050 to 1.350 pound steers, 82 SO 3 95. Hogs Receipts, 8,000 head; market opened active and firm on good heavy and barelv steady on others, closing weak: range, 83 003 95: bulk. 83 753 85: light. 83000350: heavy. $3 6003 95: mixed, $335;) 60. Sheep Receipts, 800 head; market easier; natives. 82 304 15; Westerns. 82 0004 00. CINCINNATI Hogs Receipts, less liberal; market easier; common and light, 82 50ffi3 60: packing and butchers'. S3 6003 90; receints, 3,502 head: shipments, 2.608 heads Cattle In 'lieht de mand; market steady; common, 81 001 75; fair to choice butcher grades, 82 00J23 65: prime to choice shippers, 83 7504 25. Sheep Offer ings light: market steady; common to choice. 82 503 75; stock wethers and ewes. $4 2504 75: extra fat wethers and yearlings, 84 7505 oa Lambs Spring in good demnnd and firm: good to choice shipping. 85 2505 75; common to choice butcheis', 84 0005 75 per 100 pounds. CHICAGO Tbe Evening Journal reports: Cattle Receipts, 2.500; shipments 1.000 head; market dull and wpak; steers. S3 7505 15; Tex ans, rangers and butchers' stock down to low est prices of the season. Hogs Receipts, 24, 000 head; shipments, 5.000 bead: market lower; rough and common, S3 6003 75; prime heavv and butcber weights, 83 9004 00: light, 83 750 3 90; pigs, 82 5003 25. Sheep Receipts. LOOO; shipmoius, 600: market slow and unchanged; natives, ?4 0001 90; Westerns. $4 0004 30: Tex ans. S3 7504 30; lambs, 1 7505 25. ST. LOUIS Cattle Receipts. 1,560 head: ship ments 1,000 head: market steadv; good to fancy native steers, 84 3505 00; rair to good, 83 90 4 50: stockers and feeders. 82 1002 90 Texans and Indian steers, 82 3003 6U Hogs Re ceipts, LOOO head; shipments, 2,800 hpnri: market stronger: fair to choice heavy, 83 800 4 00; mixed grades, 83 4003 80: light, fair to best. S3 oO03 65. Sheep Receipts. 300 head; shipments. 1.300 head; market steady: cood to choice, 84 0005 25. ,,f KANSAS CITY Cattle Receipts, 2.760 head; shipments. 1,450 head; market dull and weak; steers, 83 2504 65: cows, 81 3002 65; stockers and feeders, $2 0003 25. Hogs Receipts. 9,370 head: shipments, 720 head: market strong to 5c higher; all grades, 83 0004 05. Sheep Re ceipts, 2.700 head; shipments, 1,110 head; mar ket steady and unchanged. BUFFALO Cattle steady; receipts. 99 car loads through; 2 sale. Sheep and lambs Top grades higher: receipts, 8 loads through; 25 sale. Sheep Choice to extra, 85 0005 25: good S? Illilf?'." 70 Lambs Choice to extra, 85 8006 10; good to choice, 85 4505 75. Hogs dull and lower. , When baby was sick, we gave her Castorla, When she was a Child, she cried for Castorla, When she became Miss, she clung to Castorla, When she had Children.she gave them Castorla p9-77-XTTTSa DOMESTIC MARKETS. An Over Supply of Poultry and Prices Are Tending Lower. STRICTLY FRESH EGGS SCARCE. Oats Lower, Corn Weaker and Other Cereals Barely Steady. SUGAR AND SUGAINCURED HAMS OFF Office of Pittsburg Dispatch, ) Saturday, November 15. 1890. J Country Produce Jobbing Prices. Prices are not essentially changed. Strictly fresh eggs are very scarce, and would readily Drlng more than outside quotations. Fancy creamery butter is very firm. Cheese it quiet. Markets are overstocked with poultry, and prices show a downward tendency. Apples are in good supply, and fancy stock Is in good de mand at outside prices. Tropical fruits go slow, particularly bananas aud are likely to do so until the abundant grape crop is worked off. The first installment of potatoes from Canada was received by a Liberty street commission man within a day or two. Vegetables are quiet, with the exception of potatoes. APPLES S3 5001 60 a barrel. BUTTER Creamery, Elgin. 31032c; Ohio do, 27028c; common country bntter, 1015c; choice country rolls, 18020c; fancy country rolls, 23025c Fruits Grapes Concords, 20025c a basket: Catawbas, ,30 toe; cranberries, S3 00 a box; California quinces. 82 75 a box. Beaks New crop Deans, 82 5002 65; marrow fat, 82 6002 75: Lima beans, 66Jic. Beeswax 28030c ?1 E for choice: low grade, 22023c. Cider Sand refined. 89 00010 00; common. So 0005 50; crab cider, 812 00013 00 ? barrel; cider vinegar, 11015c gallon. Cheese Ohio cheese. September make, lOKc: New York cheese, lOK011c: Limburger, 1213Kc; domestic Swcuzur, 13Hc; Wis consin brick Sweitzer, 14c; imported Sweitzer, 27c Logs 22023c for Western stock: 2526c for strictly fresn nearby eggs. Feathers Extra live geee. 50S60c; No. 1 4045c; mixed lots, 30035c ?1 tt. Game Mallard ducks, 85 0005 50 a dozen. Butter ducks, 82 0002 50 a dozen; pheasants; 85 0005 50 a dozen; squirrels, 81 7502 00 a dozen; woodcocks. 84 2504 50 a dozen; quail, 75cSl 00; rabDits, 25030c a pair; venison saddles, 15018c a pound; wnole venison, 1012c a pound. Honey New crop white clover, 20022c Tp ft. Maple syrup 75095c a can; maple sugar, 9010c ft. Nuts Chestnuts, 83 6004 00 a bushel; wal nuts, 70075c a bushel; shell bark hickory nuts, 81 5001 75 a bushel. Poultry spring chickens. 4050c a pair; old, 65070c a pair; dressed. 11013 a pound; ducks, 50070c a pair; dressed ducks, 12014c a pound: live turkeys, 10011c a pound; dressed turkeys. 14016c: live geese. 60065c apiece; dressed geese, 9010c a pound. Taelow Country, 4c: city rendered, 5c. Seeds Recleaced Western clover, 85 000 6 25; cnuntrv medium clover, 14 0004 25; tim othy, SI 5001" 65; blue grass, 82 8503 00; orchard grass, 81 50; millet. 70075c Tropical Fruits Lemons, choice, 85 50 6 50; fancy, $7 0007 50; Jamaica oranges, $6 00 06 50 a barrel; Florida oranges. 84 0004 60 a box: bananas, 81 60 firsts, 81 00 cood neconds, 1 bunch; California peaches-, 82 0002 50 ft box; Malaga grapes, 85 6008 50 a halt barrel, ac cording to quality; California plums. 82 0002 25 t box; California pears. S4 000460 ) box; figs, 17c fl ft; dates. 506Kc V VEGETABLES Potatoes. 90cSl 00 l bushel; Southern sweets, 82 2502 75 f) barrel; Jersey, S3 5004 00; cabbage, 84 0005 00 ft hundred; onions, S3 00 a barrel: celery, 25030c a dozen bunches; tomatoes, $1 50 ft bushel: parsnips, 35c a dozen; carrots, 30c a dozen; green onious, 25c a dozen; lettuce. 25c a dozen: parsley, 10c a dozen: spinach, 35c a bushel; horseradish, 500 75c a dozen. Groceries. Sugars have declined a second time this week, and our quotations are lowered again in accordance with facts. Other staples keep on In tbe old ruts. Coffee is fairly steady. Canned goods are firm. Gree Coffee Fancy Rio, 24J025Kc; choice Rio, 22023Kc; primo R0, 23c; low grade Rio, 20&21c; old Government Java, 2903Oc; Maracaibo, 2527c; -Mocha, 800 32r; Santos. 2226c; Caracas. 25027c; La Guayra, 26027c Roasted (in papers) Standard brands, 25c; high grades. 2830c;o!d Goverument Java, bulk, 33034Kc; Maracaibo, 28029c; Sautos, 260 30c; peaberry, 30c; choice Rio, 26c; prime Rio, 25c; good Rio, 24c; ordinary, 21J22Kc. Spices (whole) Cloves, 15016c: allspice, 10c; cassia", 8c; pepper, 13c; nutmeg, 75080c. Petroleum (jobbers prices) 110 test, 7Jc; Ohio. 120 8c: beadlieht. 150, 8Uc; water white, 10Kc: globe. 14014'ic; elaine. 14c: car nadine, llc; royaline, 14c; red oil, 11011; purity. 14c Miners' Oil No. 1 winter strained, 43045c ft gallon; summer, 38040c; lard oil, 55058c. Syrup Corn syrup, 34036c; choice sugar; syrup. 38043c; prime sugar syrup, 32033c strictly prime, S536c N. O. Molasses Fancy, new crop, 49059c: fancy old. 4647c; choice, 49c; medium, 38043c: mixed. 40042c SODA Bi-carb in kegs, 3K3c; bi-carb in K'. 5c; bi-carb assorted packages. 606c: sal soda in kegs, lr; do granulated, 2c Candles star, full weight, 9c: stearine, ft set, 8c: paraffine. ll12c. RICE Head Carolina, 707c: choice, 6 6c; prime, 606c: Louisiana, 56c starch Pearl, 4c; corn starch, b06Kc; gloss starch. 67c Foreign Fruits Layer raisins, 82 65; Lon don layers, 82 75; Mucatels, 82 50; California Muscatels, 82 40; Valencia, 75i7Kc: Oudara Valencia, S3Xc: sultana, ls20e; currants, 6J405Me; Turkey prunes, 7Ji08c; French prune, HJ013c; Salonica prunes, in 2B pack ages. 9c; cocoanuts, ft 100, S6; almonds, Lan., ft 2b. 29c; do Ivica, 17c; do shelled, 40c: walnuts, nap.. 13014c; Sicilv filbert, 12c: Smyrna figs, 15017c: new dates. 66Xc; Brazil nuts. 18c; pecans. 14U16c; citron, ft a, 19020c; lemon peel, 12c ft ft: orange peel. 12c Dried Fruits Apples, sliced, per ft. 10c; apples, evaporated, 14K15c; peaches, evapo rated, pared, 28030 ; peaches, California, evap orated, unpared, 2223c; cherries, pitted. 31c; cherries. nnpltl.ed. l't13ic; raspberries, evap orated, 34035c; blackberries, 10011c; huckle berries, 15c Sugars Cubes, 6c; powdered, 6c; granu lated, 6c: confectioners' A, 6c; standard A, 6Vn; sott wbite, 506!e; yellow, choice, 5i0 SJic; yellow, good, 605c; yellow, fair, b 5Kc; yellow, dark, 5ic PICKELS Medium, huls. (1,200), 88 60; me dium, half bbls. (600). 84 75. Salt No. 1. ft bb!., 95c: No. 1 ex.. ft bbl., 81 00; dairy, ft bbl. 81 20: coaree crystal, ft bbl.. SI 20: Higgins' Eureka, 4-bu. sacks, $2 80; Big gins' Eureka. 16-14 ft packets, S3 00. Canned Goods Standard peaches. S2 800 2 90; 2nds, 82 5002 60; extra peaches, S3 0003 10; pie peaches. S2 00; finest corn, 81 3501 50; Hfd. Co. corn. 95cSl 15; red cherries. SI 4001 5'); Lima beans, SI 20; soaked do, 80c: string uo. 75 90c; marrowfat peas, SI 1001 25; soaked nea, 7u8Cc; pineapples. 81 3001 40: Bahama do. 82 55: damson plums, SI 10; greengages, 81 50; egg plums, S2 20; California apricots. S2 50j2 60; California pears. S2 75: do greengages, SI 00: do egg plums, S2 00: extra white cherriex. 82 85; raspberries, SI 4001 45; strawberries. SI 3001 40; gooseberries.Sl 1001 15; tomatoes, 9Oc095c; sal mon, 1-ft, 81 3001 80; blackberries, 81 IU: succo tash, 2-ft cans sojked, 90c; do green. 2-ft, 81 25 01 60; corn beef. 2-1 n cans. S2 00; 14-ft cans, 814; baked beans, 81 401 50; lobster, 1-ft, 82 25; mackerel, 1-ft cans, broiled, 81 50; sardines, do mestic, Jis, $4 2504 35; sardines, domestic. s, SO 50; sardines, imported. Js, SU 5001 250; sar dines, imported, s, 818: sardines, mustard, S3 85; sardines, spiced, S4 25. FISH Extra No. 1 bloater, mackerel, 820 ft bbl.: extra No. 1 do mess, $2S 50; extra No. 1 mackerel, shore, S24 00; No. 2 shore mackerel, 822: large 3's, $20. Codfish Whole, pollock, 5c ft ft; do medium, George's cod, 5c; do large, 7c; boneless hakes. In strips, 5c; do George's cod,in blocks, 6liT4c Herring Round shore, 85 50 ft bbl; split, S6 60; lake, 83 25 ft 100-ft bbl; White fish. 86 50 ft 100-ft half bbl. Lak- trout, 85 50 ft half bbl. Finnau haddles. 10c ft ft. Ice land halibut, 13e ft ft. Pickerel, half bbl. S3: quarter bbl,Sl 35. Holland herring,70c; Walkoff herring, 90c Oatmeal 8707 25fl bbL Grain, Flour and Feed. Sales on call at the Grain Exchange, 1 car No. 2 yellow car corn, now, 59c 5 day 1 car No. 3 yellow shelled corn. 61c 10 days; 2 cars No. 3 yellow shelled corn, 60c, 10 days. Re ceipts as bulletined, 31 cars, of which 16 cars were received by Igttsburg. Ft. Wayne and Chicago Rallwajr, as follows: 3 cars of corn, 1 of feed, 2 of middlings, 2 of hay, 1 of shorts, 1 of malt, 1 of bran, 5" of flour. By Pittsburg. Cincinnati and St. Louis. 1 car of bran, 7 of oats, 3 of corn, 1 of hay. By Baltimore and Ohio. 1 car of hay. By Pittsburg and Lake Erie, 1 car of rye. By Pittsburg and Western, 1 car of hay. Receipts for the week, 310 cars against 292 last week, and 301 for the corre sponding week last year. Oat3are lower and weak. Corn also shows drooping tendencies. Millfeed is scarce and firm. Spring patent flouris a shade lower. Prices are for carload lots on track: Wheat No 2 red, 81 0201 03; No. 8, 98c0 VOKX No. 2 yellow ear, old. 70071c new ear. 58059c: high mixed ear. old, 68069c: N. 2 yel low. Shelled. 62ffifflV( hlh Tr,l-rrl lint!.rt Mm ,61K62c , uats no. I.o52Jc: No. 2 white. 50051c: extra. No. 3, 49i9c: mixed oats, 47Hc RYE No. 1 Pennsylvania and Ohio, 76077c; jo. a wcaiero, V4970C. I Flour Jobbing prices Fancy spring and I winter patent flp nr, W,008 25; ttnej straight J winter, 85 2505 60; fancy straight sprine. So 25 85 SO; clear winter, S3 0005 25; straight XXXX bakers', S4 7505 00. Rye flour, 84 2504 60 Buckwheat flour, 23Kc V fi- Millfeed No. 1 white middlings, 825 OC0 26 00 ft ton; No. 2 white middlings. 824 000 25 00; brown middlings, 821 00022 00; winter wheat bran. 819 0O19 60. HAY Baled timothy No. 1, 810 00010 25: No. 2 do, 88 5009 00: loose from wagon, 810 00012 00, according to quality: No. 2 prairie hay, 87 253 7 W); packing do. 86 7507 00. Straw Oat, 86 6007 00; wheat and rye, 86 00 06 50. Provisions. Sugar-cured bams and shoulders are off a c per lb. Other things in provision line aro un changed. Sugar-cured hams, large, 10e; sugar-cured hams, medium, lOKc; sugar-cured hams, small, 10c; sugar-cured breakfast bacon, &c: sugar cured shoulders, 7c; sugar-cured boneless shoulders, 8c: skinned shoulders, 8c; skinned hams, 12c: sugar-cured California hams, 7c: sugar-cured dried neef flats, 9Xc: sngar-cu-ed dried beef sets. 10c; sogar-cured dried beef rounds. 12Kc: bacou, shoulders. c: bacon, clear sides c; bacon, clear bellies, 6c: dry salt shoulders, GJic: drv salt clear sides. 6K Mess pork heavv, $12 50; mess pork, family, 812 50. Lard Refined, in tierces. 5Jc; half barrels, 5c:60-ft tubs, 5c;20-ft pails, 6c:50-& tic cans. 6c;3-ft tin palls, 6c; 5-ft tin palls, Cc; 10 ft-tin palls, 5c Smoked sausage, long, 5c; large. 5c Fresh pork, links, 9c Boneless hams, 10c Pics feet, half-barrels, 84 00; quarter-barrels, $2 15. NEW YORK STOCKS. Baring Brothers' Troubles Have a Tre mendous Effect on Stocks An Im provement Toward the Close, but Losses Aro Not Made Good. - New York, November 15. The stock mar ket to-day for the two hours' session was the liveliest we have had since the great slump of December 15, 18S6, and for an honr or more there existed a perfect panic amongtbe holders of securities, especially railroad stocks, and the declines established during that time were greater than ever before seen in tbe same time. The only cause of tbe excitement was the announcement from London that tbe great firm of Baring Brothers had been forced to seek assistance to tide tbem over the present financial crisis, and tbe hold ers of stocks became panic-stricken over the news, without reflecting that the danger had really already passed when the Bank of En gland and the Rothschilds came to the rescue Reflection, however, is tbe last thing a man thinks of when his pocketoook is in- danger, and everyone went in to save as much out of the wreck as possible by selling out in the quickest time. The early advices from London were reassur ing, and tbe crisis was represented as over there, and, continuing the improvement begun yesterday, first prices were generally fraction ally higher than yesterday's figures, with Northern Pacific preferred up 2 per cent to 69. The announcement about tbe Barings was thrown at the market immediately, how ever, and the good feeling disappeared in an instant, and from prospective buyers tbo whole room became sellers at tbe best prices obtainable. -The force of the decline maybe gathered from tbe fact that in an hour Lacka wanna had dropped away 9'i per cent to 123; Jersey Central. 7K to 9S: Atchison, 5Ji to Et4,; Pullman, 5 to 175; Canada Southern, b to 42; Burlington, to 80: Rock Island. 6 to 63. and tbe other leading stocks from 2 to 5 pet cent. The final losses are very material, and Lacks wanna is off 4; Jersey Central, 1.5; Rock Island, 4; Missouri Pacific, 3; Atchison and Chicago Gas, each 3: Burlington, 2; Cleve land, Chicago, Columbus and St. Louis, 2: Silver certificates, 2; Northwestern and Canada Southern each, 1; Western Onion, 1; New England, IK: W Heeling ana Lake Erie. 1; Texas Pacmc IK'- Lak Shore, 1 and Sugar Refineries, 1 per cent. Railroad bonds were active, but showed none of the excitement or animation of stocks, and while the sales of all issues reached 81.484,000. tbe final changes of note were comparatively few. The active issues comprised Atchison in comes,' with 8191,000: Northern Pacific 6s, with 8178,000; Texas Pacific 2s. 8151,000. and tbe Kan sas ' nd Texas 4-), with 8126.000. Prices to-night are naturally loirer, and Atchison incomes lost 2 at 48. and Wabash 2s 2 ai 70. The following table shows the prices of active stocks on the .New York Stock Exchange yester day. Corrected dally for The Uisfatcm by Wiutxxt A Steitiekbo.v. oldest 1'lttsburg- mem bers of Mew York Stock xchana:e, 97 Fourth avenue: .1os-Open- High- Low- injr Inc. est. est Kid. Am. Cotton Oil n iZH It 12 Am. Cotton on m-er. 34$ Am. Cotton Oil Trait.. JoH 1SH V-M 15 Atch.. Ton. A U. T 29 IS 23! 15 Onaaianl'acltlc 72 72 7ij 7IH Canada Southern 48 43 41 4M Central of MewJersey.101), 101t 98 loot Central Paclnc 28 28 27X 27k Chesapeake & Ohio ... 17 JVi 1SH lt)f Chicago Uas Trust 3714 274 32 JU4 C. Bur. 4 Oulncy 37 87K SO 83 ' C MIL & St. Paul.. . 47J H 44 46 0.. 4111. & St. P.. pr.. 102'4 HEi 100)4 lKh U.. rtock i. A 1. b8H 6S1 83 6) c at. l. & Pitts vz i: i: 12 C Bt. P.. M. AO 22tf 22!f W'i 104 C, St. P.. il. O. PI. 74 7S Ta 7S C A .Northwestern ....I0SK iSHU WIH 103 C. &'. W.nl 139 139 13) IU C. c. c. a 1 59 :ni kh m U., C, C. & I. pref.... 9lii 9IJi 90 M Col. Coal A Iron o3,7a 33,a 32 34 Col. A llockln Valley ZVi Ches. & Ohio 1st pref.. 43 4J 38 38 Ches. ft Ohio 2d prer.. 28 28 2Sf 26 Del.. Lack 4 West lTJ, 132 lMj K1H Del, & Hudson 129 Uen. AKlo Grande.... IS 1G IS 1VJ Hen. A Rio Uraude, pi. 52 SI 51 51 K. T.. Va. &oa 7! 7!4" 6J4 6f Illinois Central 9-1 93 91 93 Luke Krle & West II 12!4 10 ll! iake Erie A West pf.. 54 My, 54 50- Lake Shore A Jl. s 104) 104 ioz'4 103)? Louisville Nashville. 70 711 6 C9!4 Mlcnican Central 83 88 MX 85S KoDlle Ohio 24S 24jf 24J4 23 Missouri t'acinc MM 6! S')H' el National Lead Trust... 1! 6l Hij 15H .New KorE Central 99 99J 97 97)4 S.Y., C.A St. L n H. V.. L.. E. A W...... 1SK l'a 17f 1K H.t.&H.K. 32Si KH 28 JIH SJ. I.. O. A W 15 15 1 14H Norfolk A Western.... 15 15 14 13 Norfolk A Western Df. 51 il 51 51 Northern Pacific W-i Vi'A Wi 191s Northern Faclfle or.... 59 59 57 17 X Ohio A Mississippi KM 17!4 17 17 Orciron Improvement. 22 22 20 19 Paclnc Alall 32M 32'J 3D 32 Peo.. Deo. A Evans.... 14 14 13 13 Pnlladel. AKeadlntr... SOX 30 28 29J4 Pullman Palace Car... IM 180 175 175 Klchmond A W. P. T . 15 15 13 14 Richmond Atr.lvi.nl CT s7 65 65 St. P.. Minn. A Man.. 99 100 9 99 St. L A San JC. 1st PL. 70 70 M 65 buzar Trust &s 53 50 52)4 Texas Paclnc 15,' 15V 13J 14 Union PaclPc 46 46 43 45M Wabash S 9 8 S W.ibasn preferred 18 18 15 17 Western Union 77V 77V 74 78 Wheeling A U K. 2!! 29 27 ZVA Whcellnz A L.K. prer. 68 6sM 67 66 North American Co... 11 11M IU 103 Philadelphia Stocks. Closlne quotation of Philadelphia stocks, fur nished bv Whitney A Stephenson, brokers. No. 57 N li.:.-- .Hi "JO I r, ,r'i xJ 1 f)j)iiiiPD - C.'f TJ I'll I V-s- UflW Jl sf-(3sSr-J 11 C.V- T- 'AJHi&W j sgy" -ox?. "WHY, ARE YOU SICK?" "I know precisely how you feel; it is that nervous, irritable feel ing,, your back troubles you, and when you try to read a little, your head aches. Isn't that so? I knew It. Oh, bother the doctor 1 Get a bottle of Vegetable Compound, and take it faithfully, as I have done. I've been through this thingmyself.butamnevertroublednow. Doasltell you, dear." Prudent women -who best understand their ailments, find in the Com pound a remedy for all those distressing ills that require prompt and effective treatment as a guaranty to good health. Send stamp for " Guide to Health and Etiquette," a beautiful Illustrated book. LYD1A E. PINKHAM'S vegetable Is the onlv Positive Care and legitimate Remedy COMPOUND IOr tile petUl." m.i.oow uu 04UUCUH Vt WUU1CU. " " 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 Organic Diseases of the Uterus or Womb, and Is invaluable to the Change of Life. Dis solves and expels Tumors from the Uterus at an early stage, aud checks any tendency to Cancerous Humor. Subdues Falntness, Excitability, Nervous rrostratlon, Kxliaustion, and strengthens and tones the Stomach. Cures Headache, General Debility, Indigestion, etc., and invigorates the wholeystem. For the cure of Kidney Complaints of either sex, the Compound baa no rival. J 11 Druggists ell it as a atandard article, or sent by mail. In form of Pills or Lozenges, on receipt of l.QO. LYDIA E. PINKHAM MED. CO- LYNN. MASS. I JO-3old In Pltubnrav xa. oy Joseph nemlajj W Fourth avenue. Members New Tore Stock Ex changer BM. Asked. 1'ennsvlvanla ltallroad ,. 47V 43 Keartln 14 14 11-16 Buffalo. Pittsburg A Western 7 8 Lenlih Vailev 487, 49 Lehlffh Navigation 49 49. Philadelphia and Erie 32 Nortnurn .Paclnc 13 IVS Northern Pacific preferred 57? ii Closing Bond Quotations. U. S. 4s. re 122 U.S. 4s, coop 122 lT. s. 4s, nr. 103 V. S. 46, coup 104 Pacillcttsor '95 113 l.oulslanastampcdls 92 Missouri 6s Tenn. new set. 6s... .103 Tenn. newstt. 5s..l04 Tenn. newset. 3s.... 70 Canada So. 2ds 95 Central Pacific Isti.llu Den. A K. G. lsts...!16 Den.' A It. O. 4s..... 60. U.AK. G. AVestlsts. Krieidi 97 M. K. T. Hen. 6i.. 71. M. K. AT. Uen. Ss.. 28 Mntual Union GS....10" N.J. U. Int. Cert...liO Northern Pac. lsts..H4 Northern Pac 2ds..IC Nortlnr't'n con.ioln.J3S Nortw'n lichen's 53.104 Oregon A Trans. 6s. :ft.I.AI.M. Gen. 5s. 88 St.L. &a.F. Gen.M.lll St. Paul consols. ....125 St. P. ClilAPc.nts.I15 Tx., re L.G.Tr.Hs. S1H Tx Pc.K G.Tr.lU. 32 Union Pacificists.. .110 Wen Snore 101 Boston Stocks. Atch. A Top Boston A Albany..., Boston A Maine...., C B. AQ CIn San. A Clev... FltclihurirK. K.. .., Mass. Central Mex. Ccn. com , N. Y. AN. Eng..... Old Colony .......... Wis. Cen. common. Allouei 1e. Co Atlantic , Boston A Mont , 25V 196V 196 SS 22) 84 16 ,17 31 167 15 4 16 Calnmet AHecla.... 260 ,16 , 13 as . 90 40 160 C IT .22. .210 , 28 , 3 15 Franklin Kearsarxe Osceola Qulncy Santa Fe copper .... Tamarack Boston Land Co... , San Diego Land Co, west End Lana uo, Belt Telephone...... Lamson Store 3.... Water Power Centennial Mining. DOWH AST) UP. Stocks Given a Number of Sensational Twists During the Week. The past week witnessed quite a flurry In New York, and to some extent in Pittsburg. Realizing assumed the 'proportions of a craze, and cheap stuff Was to be found everywhere. The slump was due. to tight money at tbe speculative centers. The storm broke on Monday, causing a de cline all round. On Tuesdav the disturbance was at Its height and values vanished like dis solving views. On Wednesday thero were symptoms of a reaction, which became quite manifest tbe following day. The recovery was as rapid and pronounced as tbe break, and the opinion was very generally entertained that everything was on its feet again. Yesterday, however, advices from London of-the embar rassment of the creat house of Barings, with connections in New Yore, gave Wall street another twist and stocks again went off. rally ing, however, at the close. The news was re ceived too late to affect local stocks, and the entire list closed at about the best prices of the week. Local trading was quite heavy on both tbe decline and rally. Total sales for the week were 2,430 shares, of which Electric furnished 996: Philadelphia Gas, 590, and Pleasant Valley, 36o. Saturday's sales were 10 shares of Switch and Signal at 15 15 Luster at 20 and 7 .Electric at 28C. H0HK CAPITAL. Nothing Wrong With the Money Market Business In Good Shape. In spite of the upheaval in Wall street and financial troubles abroad, Pittsburg held tbe fort last week, coming out with a splendid record and nothing in sight to cause appre hensions for the future. There is more than usual significance in this. It shows clearly that legitimate interests and values are beyond the reach of panics. Tbe Clearing House report is a very satisfac tory document. It shows that bank clearings for tbe week were nearly 83,000,000 greater than for the corresponding time laxt year, and more than S1.000.000 In excess of those for tbe previous week. The gain over 1SS9 to date is 8157,760, 699 75. In detail the report shows: Saturday's exchanges saturdav's balances Week's exchanges Week's balances Prevlons week's exchanges., Kxchances week of 1889 Balances for week of 1889 .... Gain over 1889. lodatc , .8 2,816.108 36 297.214 28 . 18.S47.13 11 . 1.974,590 70 . 15.554.124 67 . 13,870,941 03 . 2.250,368 41 . 157.7b0.699 74 Bankers reported a fair working sunply of loanable funds and a good demand at 67 per cant as tbe extremes, but they were conserva tive In extending accommodations, so as to pro tect home Interests. Mining Quotations. New York, November 15. Alice, 200; Consolidated California and Virginia, 300; Deadwood T., 100: Eureka, 325; Hale and Nor cross, 210; Gonltl and Currv. 180; Horn Silver. 300; Mexican, 230: Mount Diablo. 200: N. Belle Isle. 110; Ontario. 37.50: Savage, 230; Sierra Nevada, 220; Sutter Creek. 100. THE WEEK JJT OIL. Continuation of the Downward Movement! With Very Light Trading. Tbe oil market wa m its usual comatose condition yesterday, trades being few and far apart. A few jags cbanged hands at 72c, after which the price dropped to 71c, aud closed with 71Jio bid. Tbe week's record is no better. Tbe highest point, 754c, was reached on Monday, and the lowest, 71c. yesterday. The net loss for the week is 3Jc On Wednesday there were no sales. Clearings for five days wero 196,000 bar rels, fluctuations for tbe week are appended: Open- lllzh- Low- Clos lne. est. est. ing. 31onday. 75 75 75 75 Tuesday 75 . 73 7.1 Wednesday 7I 73, 73 73 Thursday .... .... .... Friday 73 73 73 73 Saturday 72J Tl( 71J4 71)f Judgement should be displayed in buying medi cine above all things. In selecting a remedy for any disease, you should be positive that it contains nothing inju rious to the health. Many remedies on the market leave the patient in a much worse condition, than before taking them. o o o is purely vegetable, and perfectly harmless; the most delicate child can takoitwithabsolute safety. It contains no mercury or minerals of any kind, and yet it never fails to cure the dis eases it is recommended for? Book on Blood and Skin diseases free. Swift Specific Co., Atlanta, Ga I'll! Mil bhm MR. HAAGSTROUBLE. chronic cougSTapproaching CONSUMPTION Permanently Cured Four Months Ago at the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute, 323 Penn Avenue, INDUCES HIS MOTHER TO TAKE TREATMENT. Among the three thousand patients who have, during the past two years, applied for treatment at the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Insti tute is that of Mr. Charles O. Haag. formerly a resident of Allegheny, but who now lives at 1121 Parade street. Erie. Fa. The catarrh which bail troubled bim so lone E Jlr. Charles G. Uaag. rapidly grew worse and would certainly hart terminated in consumption bad he allowed the disease to further advance. He bad pain over his eves, ringing sounds in his ears, and his hearingbecame impaired. His nose was con-" tinnally stopped up, and the toutrb, ropvmuens that gathered in his throat extended to bis lnngs, setting up a cough that caused him much alarm. It is now over four months since he be came cured. He says: "This is to certify that I have been cured as above stated. Siened "CHARLES G. HAAG." His mother, becoming fully convinced of her son's permanent cure, is now receiving treatment trom these specialists, that she may be cured of that dreaded disease, catarrh. Office hours. 10 A. jr. to i p. M. and 6 to 8 P. M. I Sundays. 12 to i p. m. Consultation free to all. Patients treated successfully 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 Ara.. Pittsburg, Pa. noll-D WHOLESALE -:- HOUSE, Embroidery and WbJte Goods Department-, direct importation from tbe best manufac turers of St. Gall. In Swiss and Cambric Edg ings Flouneings, Skirt Widths and Allovers. Hemstitched Edgings and Flouneings. Buyers will rind 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 spnn 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. Toll Du Kords, Cbalon Cloths Bath Seersuck ers, Imperial Suiting. Heather Renfrew Dress Ginghams. Fine Zephyr Ginghams. Wholesale Exclusively. Jal3-P FIDELITY TITLE AND TRUST CO., 121 and 123 Fourth are. Capital S5OU.00O, Full paid. INSURES TITLES TO REAL ESTATE. Acts in all fiduciary capacities. Deals in reli able investment securities. Rents boxes in Its superior vault from J5 per annum upward. Receives deposits and loans only on mort gages and approved collaterals. JOHN B. JACKSON. Pres't. JAMES J DONNELL. Vice-Pres't. no4-57-M C. B. McVAY. See" v and Treas. BROKEKS- FINANCIAL. Whitney & Stephenson, 57 Fourth Avenue. myl PFOPTP'1 SAVINGS BANK. rriurjjEj .1 i Fouitrn avenue. Capital. JSOO.OnO. Surplus. Sol.670 29. D. McK. LLOYD. EDWARD E. DUFF, 4 President, Asst. Sec Treas. percent Interest allowed on time deposits. OC15-40-D JOHN H. OAKLEY & CO, BANKERS AND BROKERS. Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Petroleum. Private wire to New York and Chicago. 16BIXTH ST., Pittsbure. OC22-53 MEDICAL. DOCTOR WHITTIER 814 PKN.i AVJJNUE. I'JTTsBUrtt:. tM. As old residents know and back flies of Pitt burg papers prove, is tbe oldest establliho and most prominent physician in the city, da voting special attention to all chronic diseases SbiemPre3nDsN0FEEUNTILCURED MCDWrillQ and mental diseases, physical llL.ll V UUO decay.nervous debility, lack of energy, ambition and hope, impaired memory, disordered sight, self distrust, bathfulness. 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, safelv and privately cured. BLOOD AND SKIN sdtig?rereusp!ionil blotches, falling hair, bones, pains, glandular, swellings, ulcerations of tongue, mouth, throat, nlcets, old sores, are cured for life, and blood poisons thoroughly eradicated from the system. 1 1 Rl M A R V kidney and bladder derange UlllllA'S I j menu, weak back, gravel, ca tarrhal discbarges; inflammation and other painful symptoms receive searching treatment, prompt relief and real cures. Dr. Whittier's life-long, extensive nxperiencs insures scientific and reliable treatment on common-sense principles. Consultation free. Patients ata distance as carefully treated as it here. Office hours. 9 a. m. to 8 p. jr. Sunday, 10 A. if. to 1 P. M. only. DK. WHITTIER. Sli Penn avenue. Pittsburg; Pa, jy3-12-DSnwK DOCTORS LAKE SPECIALISTS in all cases re. quiring scientific aud confiden tial treatment! Dr. S.K'Lake. -11. R. C P. a. is the oldest and most experienced specialist in the city. Consultation free aud strictly confidential. Office hoars 9 to 4 and 7 to 8 P. M.: Sundays, 2 to 4 P. It Consult tbem personally, or write. Docrona Lake. cor. Penn are. and 4th st Pittsburg, Pa. je3-72.DWk GRAY'S SPECIFIC MEDICINE CURES NERVOUS DEBILI TV. LOST VIGOR. LOSS OF MEMORY. rull particulars In pamphlet sent free. The geuulna Gray's bpeclnc sold by druzxlsts only la yellow wrapper. Price, Jl per package, or six for S3, or by null -s-s-sSSii r on receipt of price, by auure- lus THE OKAY MEDICINE CO, BaUalo, . X Sold la Pittsburg by 3. 3. HOLLAS t. corner Emlthllelil and Liberty iu mhiT-W-nwlt Wood's Isla.os5l.ocli33.0- Ann untiAi munuuim.'m-.. , TJsed for 35 years' by thousands uc vessfnlty. Guar anteed to cure all forms of Nervous ior jrouinrm rouy Weakness, imls-' rhea. ImDotcucr. tVlAVLUrl n,i n thl.fr.nl FI.010 from lire. JOSEPH HOME & CO. ana toe excesses s rf later years. B G tmnediatc wM itrenjth an&vtg Ml or.JMKdrarttlsu H for Wood's Phot- ml nhodlnettakenoi m 'subitltuteL Onn H package, tl; six. SS. by mail, yrite fprpamphlet. JKJ Address The.Wood Chemical Co.. 131 Woodward ..'JH t- Detroit, Mich. 9H3 4 - ' )' HggftggiHi '- '- -' --