gfffw9w THE PZCTSBimG. DISPATCH, MONDAY, JHNE 15, 1891. 'TALBAGE OS CBEEDS. Best Iot lo Interfere in Theological Disputes of the Pay. ' THE! AHE THE WORK OP THE PEYIL Enough certitudes to Tender Without Delv ing in Hysterics. ,- A TDIE TO STOP RELIGIOUS STRIFE IHTXIAL TELECHOI TO THE DISPATCH. "i w York, June 14 The topic of Dr. Tilmace's timelj sermon this morning ias The llattlc of Creeds" His teit uab taken Irum Proverbs xxvi., 17: "He that j.iset!i In ami ineihHoth with strife bclons; jn not to him is like one that takcth a dog l the ear." -olomon hero deplores the habit of rush in. m ltctnccn contestants, of t.ikinjr jiart lh he aiifcuroiiisins of others, of joining in it-uliirh they ouslil to -lnm Thej do n i ood to other-ami set damage foi them l -. He compiles it to the experiment of ixinjra do;; b the en- Nothing so lrn-li'v-the caniiie- a- being clutched by the 'm;- 'o," ki- Vilomon, "you po into ' i Mrrel-or ontro er-ie- that are not jours nd a on ill get lacerated and torn and bit iei Tin-is a time of re-oundirg ecclesiastical quarrel. Ncer within jour memory or mine has the air been so full of mi lie- The re-b tciian (. lmreh ha- on hand a contro tr-j (-o great that it find- it prudent to lM.-tnoue it- settlement for at lea-t onemoie i u, hoping that something will turnup, fvnmbodj might die or a nei CJencnil Vs. .mll may haae grace to hindle theexcit '! i,ue-tion-. Troubles llendiug "H.un Sects. Tne Episcopal Chuich ha- cast out ome rn il ltraut- and it- die-tive organs arc t i ed to tile utmo-t m t ina to a ululate otn- '-shall women pi each" "Or be sent - delegate- to Coiifeience" are questions !nt haae put many of our Methodist breth 't u 0:1 the "anxious -eat" Vnd the water in - one of the great b lpti-tric- are troubled w iters l!ccau"e ot the contro er-ie-tliumhont Christendom thean l-now like i t14u-T afternoon about 5 o'clock when .1 li 1- lieeu steaming hot all daj, and clouds an - ii lit ring, and there arc lions of thunder tli scrambling aoieos and lta-liing eyes uin-i lorth lnmi their cloudy lairs, and , 1 ' art waiting lor the lull burst ot the 1 ilx-t I not mm. 11 01 a weather prophet, but 1 loud- look to me mo-th like wind nuii- It ma be u big blow but I hope it mi l-iiibci)U'i In reg-nd to the Battle of I i I reeds, I am o erj d ij asked w hat I 1 in alwiut it. 1 want to make so plain 1' 1-morning what 1 think that 110 one will 1 er a-k again Ijp tln-e who, are jurvmen in the ca"c, I mi an tho-e w ho m the different ecelesia-ti e I ourts ha e the questions put clirectla l lore them, weigh and decide Let the le-t 01 11- keep oat Tin mo-t d imaging thing hi "irth 1- teligiou- controcr-. No one mi comes out ol it a- good a liiau as he -ye - m I -spot ies of Moral Hydrophobia. Simc I the ministers, in all denomina- in- who, before the present acerbity were od and kind and u-eful, now seem almost -wearing :mail Tht-e biethren I notice al w a - open their aiolent meetings with- jii ier lielore deouring each other, thus -i 114 grace before meat Thej hae a mm 1 1 hydrophobia tint make- us think i'ir lne taken a dogb the ears Thcv in 1 1 l-ead the imprecaton i)-alins of Iaid mil -in li e-i i--mie the llnggs and N ew - 11 ind Mu(iueai and liriilgmau and 1 ro k-iiie-t.itn-got into full swing. Liy im iiiasol the sheeplold -oon hae their liuMi- -awed off i ioie the ontroA ersies are settled, a id uijun. mini-tcis will, thiough what e 1 ill liberalism, be landed into practi 1 mfhlclita, and other- through w hat they 1 II 1 on-e-ati-ni, w ill shrink up into bigots 1 -hi ai d bard a- the mummies ot Egipt nib got thiough their controversies .1,000 ii u - iro 1 1-trouble throughout Christendom t as tiii'itl 111-juredof s.itan. He saw that too in 1 good was being done Recruits w ere ' n iihc-ed bi hundreds ot thousands to --pel standard. Theiictones foi God 1 I i!n .ruthueretoo neai together Too a huixhe- weie being dedicated. Too u 111 imm-ter- were being ordained Too 'iiinx phiHnthropie- were being fostered. 1 no main -ouls were being saed It had l 111 a dull time 111 the netherworld, and the ui rivals were too few. Satan's wiiiding Hand Viable. to saian one da rose upon his tnrone and sud, ' le power-of darkncs-, hear'" And ill up and down the caerns the crj-was: ' 11 tr' Ileal" sat.m said "There is that Vim 1 11 an Iioud of Commissioners for loieign Mis-ions It must either be de liiuhslitd or cripided, or the first thing jou know thet will haeall nations brought to ijnd pollyon the 1 oungcr' "iougoupto 1 ln ti and iret the prole-sors discussing t . 1 tin 1 the heathen can be saed without I 10 o-peL IMcrr them from the work of II 1--1 11-and get them in angrj com cntion III loom at ioung's Hotel, Boston, and b t'i time thej adiourn the eau-eof foieigh 1111 ion-will be gloriou-lj and magmficent 1 Mijuied I ibolus, the lounger' lougo up and gft 1 nion Theological !?emliian of New irk ind General ssemblj of tlie Pi-esby- nun Church at Ketroit at words" po nts ' I nerted from the work ol making en- -' ininistei-of 1 eligion, and turn than i ! 1 resl ttcnan Church, which has been i inv u- out ot customer- for bundled- of i 1 - into a splendid pandemonium on a -n til - ule Vu'tdon the Third' You go up and as--1 ilt r lat old l.pi-copal Chuich, whici ha3 i 11 -'iirtning the hcaeus tor centuries i 'i lie-ublime-t lingers that were cer 1 t ie 1 ehurcUof Bi-hop Leicliton, Ihshop iint-and Bi-ho) "Icllaine, and get that it immi latioii di-eussing men instead of dis t ins the eternities Vbaddon the 1 0111 th' 1 hi go up to that old Jlcthodist Church, wlm h ha-, thiough her revivals, sent million- to iieaei. The H orld Tull of Moral IJemedifs. Here 1-Unsold world, and it is off track. 1 . iid sorrow hac coIlidedwtl.it. The 1 in and agon i- fourteen hundred mill- r oieed Ood has opened for relief and ui 1 great sanitarium, a great House of Mi 11 aud all its sheles ate filled with il-ims, with catholicon-, with help, glo- 1 u- ! lp, tremendous help, help so easily uuuiiiiisie'-eu mat jou. neea not get upon Vin stcpladdir to leaehit Vouean reach 1 11 oui kuee--ind then lund it to all tho -l li ring and the sinning .ind the dving I. hi while the world is niedmg the relief id petislnng tor latk 01 it, what of the e iii h "it iiv, it is lull of fighting doctors, on the topslielfare some old bottles which - .ial hundn-d jeai-s ago CaUm or Ar ninius or the inenibi . of the sy nod of iuit or the loimetiot the Nicene creed ail 1 with hoK nivtuie-, anduntil we get a 1 1 -ion ot the-i old bottles and find out .tin mil we must take a teaspoonful or a 1 bli -1 mt':l, .nil whether befo.e 01 after an .11- let the nations sutler and groan, and dii s,nethe botths b all me.uis. if 1011 taiiiKH save anything else' Now what put shall von and I take in 'th - iutrovers which fill-all Llmstciid m w mi nijor il adiee 1- Take no part. 1 1 hi 1 of riot :'ll Majors of cities advise "ii ' c iti7ens to sta at home or in their ii ol I'U-mcs- and 111 this time of re- i-norl adi-e ou to go about jour r. 1I1 noil. u,r God. Hon't Explore Intricate Doctrines. 1 '1 1 e the bottles on tlio higher shelves for t 11 s l0 fight about and take the two bot- li - on the shelf within easjr reach, the two 11 u - w Inch are all this dmg world needs; the one tilled with a potion which is for tho 1 1 using ot all "in, tho othci filled with a mi winch is lor the soothing of all suf- ! 1 i tin 1st nued them out of His own 1 - and blood In them Is no human i I 1 11. urc. sperni no time on tho mjs- T 1 11 - 11 a iiuan onlv llo or six feet high, oiulit not trj to wade an ocean 1,000 leet tlit i M own expeiiencc has been i id. 3 vtif'dthe most of mv tune foi jears in ti in' to understand God's eternal deciee-, iiml 1 is 1I1 teniimed to find "out w hj tho JiokI 1 t -income into the world, andI -ct out to cnlorc the doctrine of the Trinitv, Mii.lwith i utdstick to measure the throne i th Infinite As w lth all ui predeee-sois, tin itu 'npt was a dead failuic. lor the i-t h)ii tisl hje not spent two minutes in staining the controteited pomtsof the ' olog,andit I In uSO j ears longer I will not -p ud tue thou- indtfi pait ot a -econd in -iicli oxploration I know two things, and these 1 w dl dt ote all the years of mv lite ' 111 proclaiming Gnil will, through Jesus -jVbust, jiuxlon sm, and Ho will comfort J-trouble ( iteds have their use, but just now tho church is creeded to death. The j oung men - cntenng the ministry are going to be launched in tho thickest fog that ever set tled 011 the coasts. A L'seless IVaste of Precious Time. Tho questions our doctors of di initj aro trying to settle w ill not be settled until the daj- after tho Paj of Judgment. It is such a poor economj of time to spend .-J ears and j ears in trj mg to fathom tho unfathomable, when in fie minutes in heaven we will know all w e w ant to know. It is useless for ants 011 different sides ofa mole hill to trj' to discuss the comparatiN e heights of Mount Blanc and Mount 'Washington. The world is sick to regurgitation w lth the modern quacks in religion. The world has been sw inging off from the old gospel but it w ill sw ing back, and bj the tnno j ou young men go into the pulpits the crj- w ill.be coming up from all the millions of mankind, "Cue us the bread of life; no sweetened bread.no bread with sicklx rai-ins stuck here and theie into it, but old fashioned bread as God our Mother mixed it and baked it!" Our theological semmiries are doing glor ious work, but it e er such theological seim naiics shall cease to prepare j oung men lor tins plain gospql adocacj-, and shall be come mere philosophical schools for guess ing about God, and guessing about the Bible, and guessing about the soul thej- w ill cease their usefulness, and j oung men, as in olden time, when thej would studj- for the gospel ministi j, will put thcmseHes under the care of some intelligent and warm hearted pastor and kneel w lth him in 1am ilj prajerat the pirsoilage, and go with him into tho room of the sicfc and the d ing, ami see what ictories the grace of God can gain w hen the couch of the dj ing saint I thc Marathon All the Creed That's Necessary. Xow , w hat is the simple fact that j ou in the pew and Sabbath school class andre formatorj association and we in the pulpits ha c to deal with It is this- that God has somewhere, and it matters not where, but somew here, pro ided a great hea en, great for quietness for thoo w ho w ant quiet, great for i ast as-cmblage for those w ho like mul titudes, great for architecture for those w ho like architecture, great for beautiful land scape for those who like beautiful landscape, great lor music for tho-e w ho like music, great lor processious for those who liko armies ou white hoies and great loranj thing that one especially desites 111 such a rapturous dominion: and tin ough the doings of tine who was born about fle miles south of Jerusalem and died about ten minutes' walk tiom its eastern gate, all maj enter that gi eat heaven for the earnest and heait felt asking Is that all? That is all. What, then, is your w ork and mine? Our work is to per smdc people to face that waj and start thitherward and finall go in. But has not religion something to do with this world as well as the next? Oh, jes but do jou not see that if the people start for hea en, on their waj- theie thej will do all thegood thej can? Thej- w ill at the -v crj start ot the journej get so much of the spirit of Clmst, w Inch is a spirit of kindness and self-sacrifice and geuerositj and buidcn bearing and helpfulness, that e crj step tlurv take will resound w ith good deeds. Get Oft Your Theological Stilts. Oh, get your religion Off of stilts! Get it down out of the high towers' Get it on a le el with the wants and woes of our poor human race! Get it out of the dustj-theological books that few people read and put it in their hearts and lives. Good thing is it to piofess leligion when j-ou join the chnrch, but e ci j day somehow w o ought to profess religion. V peculiar patchwork quilt was, during the Ci ii lVar, made bj a ladj- and sent to the hospitals at the fiont. Shehadaboj in the arms, and was naturallj interested 111 the w elf ire of soldiers. But what a patch work quilt she -cut! On eferj- block of the quilt was a passage of Scripture or a erse of a liMim The months and jears of the war wentbj'. On that quilt many a wounded m in had lain atid suffered and died. But one morning the hospital nurse saw a patient under that blanket kissing the figuie of a leaf in tho quilt and the nurse supposed hewasonlj wandctingm his mind But no, he was the son of the mother who had made the quilt and he recognized that figure of a leaf a- part ofa gown his mother used to wear, and it reminded him of home. "Ho jou know where this quilt came fi 0111?' ho asked. The nurse answered. "I can find out, foi there was a card pinned fast to it, and I will find that "' sure enough, it confirmed w hat he thought. Then the nurse pointed to a passage of Scripture in the block of the quilt, the passage which saj-s: "When he was j eta great way off his lather saw him and ran and fell on his neckand kissed him." "Yes," said the dj mg soldier, "I was a great ii.il off, but God has met me and had com passion on me." eedless to DeHe In Hidden Mj-steries. Do you suppose that woman who mado that quilt and filled it w ith Scripture pas- sages had anj- troublo about who Meleluz cdek was or how the doctrine of God's so ereigntj can be harmonized with man's free agencj-, or who w rote the Pentateuch, or the inconsistencies of the Xicene creed? o, no; go to w ork for God and suffering hu-mamtj-and all j our doubts and fears and injstcnes and unbeliefs put together will not be heavy enough to stir the chemist's scales, which is accustomed to weighing one fiftieth part of a grain of chatnoniilo flow er-. Why stop a moment to understand the masteries when there are so many certi tudes Why spend our timo exploring the dark ganets and coal holes ofa gieat palace w Inch has aboi e ground one hundred rooms flooded w ith sunshine? It takes all mv timo to absorb w hat has been revealed, so"that I hae no tunc to upturn and loot out and drag forth what has not been revealed. The most of the effort to sol e mj steries and explore the inexplicable and hamonizo things is an attempt to help theXord out of theological difficulties. Good enough inten tion, mj brother, no doubt; but the Lord is not anxious to haie j-ou help him. Ho will keep His throne without joui assistance. Don't be afraid that the Bible w ill fall apait lrom inconsistencies. It hung together man) centuries before jou weie born, and jourfuneral sermon will be preached from a text taken from its undisturbed authen ticity. Time to Stop Religious Strife. Doj'ou know that I think that if all min isters in all denominations would stop this nonsense of ecclesiastical strife and take hold the word of God, the only question w ith each of us being how manj- souls w e can bring to Christ and m how short a time, the Lord would soon appeai"for the salva tion of all nations? Do jou know that I think that 0111 King would land if wc weieoulj leadj-toreceno him? Whv not call to him fiom all our churches, fiori all our hospitals, from all oui homes? 1 lij not all at once light all tho torches of gospel invitation? Whv not ring all the bells of welcouie? Whv not liirht nil the lone nieht of the world's sin and suffering with bonfiies of victorj' Why not unlunber all the gospel batteries, and let them boom across the earth, and boom into the pal ting hea ens. Befoie w c die let us behold thy hands that weie spiked, spi cad out in benediction for a lost mce And why not let us, with our mortal cars, hear tliat loice that spoke neace as Thou didst iro un. SDeak nardon and emancipation and love and holiness and Joi to all nations as Thou comest dow 11? But the skies do not part I he 11 no rum bling of chariot w heels coming dow noicr the s ipphire Theicis no swoop ot wings. I sec no flash ol angelic appearances. All is -till. I hear nothing but the tramp ot mj 01111 heart as I pause between these utter ances. The King does not land because the world is not read, and tho chuich is not l-eadj. Christos! Sympatlij- and Cheer. To clear the waj' for the Lord's coming let us devote all oujfcncrgies of bodj-, muid and soul. A HussiaV general ildiug oer the f battlefield, his horse treading amid the dj ing and dead, a wounded soldier asked him lor water, hut the officer did not under stand his language and knew not what tho pool fellow wanted. Then the soldier cued out "Christos,"' and that w ord meant sj 11111a thv and help, and the Itii lan officer dis mounted and put to the lips ot the sufferer a cooling draught. Be that the charmed woid with which wo go loith to do our w hole dut . In main languages it has onlj- a littlo difference of termination. Chustos! It stands for sjtii pathj. It stands for help It stands for pardon. It stands for hope. It stands for lieaien Cluistos! In that name we were baptized. In that name we took our first sacrament. Th it w ill be the battle shout that w ill win the whole world for God. Christos! But it on our banners w lieu we maieh! Put it on our lips when we die! Put it in the funeral psalm atom obsequies' Put it on the plain slab oerour graic! Christos' Blessed be His glorious name forei er! Amen! Turpentine Markets. Ntw Iork Kosin quiet and steady; strained, common to good, $1 451 50. Tur pentine dull at 3St433c. Savamah Turpentine Uosin firm nt$l 251 30. Arm at 35Kc. Chatilestoii Turpentine steady at 35c bid. Bosin firm; good strained, $1 30. Wilvixoto spirits of turpentine firm at Sac. Uosiu firm: strained, $1 17U; good strained, $1 2K Tar firm at $1 5tf. Crude turpentine firm: hard, $1 40. jellow dip, $2 40: virgin, $2 40 ' Metal JIarkets. New York, June 18. pig iron dull: Aineri cao.tf 0l13 25. FEATUEES OF TRADE. One Was the Old Potato famine and the Boom in Prices. FRUITS Am VEGETABLES PLENTY The Light Hides and Calfskin Markets Still Depressed, and TANNERS ARE BUYING SPARINGLY. OprrcE op PtTTSBcna Dispatch, ) Satummy, June 13. Tho feature of produce markets developed in the week past w as the scarcit y and up ward movement of choice old potatoes! In tneearlj-pait of this w eek a famine m this line w as threatened, and, as a lesult of short supplj , there w etc sales at $3 per bushel and e en more, for one or tw o daj s. It is doubt ful if as high prices were paidanywheiem the countrj- as here. The lemedy, how e er, has come w ltliin a daj- or tw o through hea y receipts, and prices are now w hat they w ere at this time last w eek. In the line of dairj- products we note an impioi ed demand and slightlj- better piices for choice cieamerj- butter, together w ith an excessn c supplj and low er prices of cheese. Tlieiednction on prices of cheese during the w eek has been equnalent tol cent pet pound, while there has been as much ad vance on good grades of creamciy butter. Eggs have declined about 2 cents per dozen dunngthe week, a tact attributed by dealer- to large receipts of held 01 er stock, from the Ohio Millej'. Heaiy Kocelpts of Fruits. Troduce commission men report heavy re ceipts of fruits and 1 egetables lor the w eek, with actne demand for all good stock offered. There has as jet been nothing equivalent to a glut in our markets in air line of the products of tho earth, a thing w Inch is ot fiequent occuncncoat this sea son of the j'eai. Shippers so far hae not o crrated the absoibing capaeitj of Pitts burg markets. In cereal lines the week has been thoroughly disappointing to all dealers in clined to the bull side. Xot a crumb ot com tort has come to operators, w ho a month or tw o ago banked on 80-cent corn. It w as tho general hope a week ago that prices were down tohaidpaii. But a lower depth has been reached, and even at the decline buyers are. slow to in est. ' There is no longer anj heait to dealei sin futures, and the grain trade is in a condition of suspended animation. Hides and Calfskins. Light hides and calfskins are still de pressed. The dullness of niatkets reported a week ago is now even mote pronounced than it was then. The fact is that there has been little or no bujmg in this market the past week. Tanners naturallj-refrain from buying when muikets aie on tho down grade, and 110 actn itj can be looked for until it is assuied that bottom has been leached. A Boston correspondent of one of our leading hide dealers, under date of June 10, Ins this to sa ot the situation there: "Markets are quieter than thej haiebeen for manj a long day. The demand for leather is unusuallj- light, and the manj big shoe failures hae biought abouf such au uncertain condition of things that mauu factuicrs do not know to whom to sell. Tan ners are holding off for the reason that they anticipate low ei rates" The entire situation in lines of buff hides and calfskins stands e en more in bujers' fav or than it did a w eek ago. Home Stock Quotations. Following aie the prices paid by dealers nnil tnnidPB ftir clniV ilnlivm oil lisr so. 1 green salted steers, 60 pounds and over 7S4 No. lgrce-i salted cows, all weights 5 So. 1 green saltid bides, 40 to (i0 pounds .. 5 ?o. 1 green taltcil hides, 2a to 40 pounds.... 5 Vo. I green s-iltc I bulls 5 No. 1 green salted calfskins 7 No. I green salted veal Kips 5 No, 1 grcei salted runner kips 4 No. 1 green steers, 60 pouads and over 7 No. 1 preen cow s, all n tights i No. 1 green bulla 4s, No. 1 green hides, 40 to CO pounds 4 N'o. 1 green hides, 25 to 40 pounds ......... 4l No. 1 green calfskius G No. 1 green leal kins 5 No. l green runner kips 4 These prices subject to change without notice, lteduction for N o. 2 stork ljfc per pound on steers and light hides; c on bulls and c on calfskins. LIVE STOCK MARKETS. Receipts, Shipments and Prices at East Libert- and All Other Yards. Office op Pittsburg IlisrATcii, ) Saturday, JunelA , Cattle Receipts, 003 head; shipments, 819 head. Slarket Nothing doing, all through consignments; no cattle shipped to New i orK to-uay. Hogs Receipts, 3,100 head; shipments, 4,000 head. 3Iaiket Arm; Philadelphia, S4 80i) 4-85. best Yoikcrs and mixed, $4 Wl 75. common Yorkers, $4 504 W: pigs, $4 254 50, 7 cars hogs shipped to New York to-da Sheep Receipts, 2,500 head; shipments, 1,800 head. Market slow at yesterdaj- s prices. IJy Telegraph. Omaha Cattle Receipts, 1,200 head; mar ket was actn c and 5c higher for beeves and bushels stock; less desirable grades wcio slow and steadj: feeders were 510c slow; fancy 1,350 to 1,000 pound steers, $5 255 35: prime 1,250 to 1,475-pound steer, $4 C55 45; good to choice 1,150 to 1,350-pouna steers, $4 2S5 00. butchers steadj", 1,050 to 1,300 pound, $3 75(?4 SO. Hogs Receipts, 4,500 head: the market was actn c and 5c higher; the range of 7irice was $4 20i?l4 40, the bulk selbng at J4 254 35, light, $4 264 30; hea j', $4 304 45: mixed, J4 J04 35 Sheep .Re ceipts, 211 head: nniket active and steadj; natnes, $3 00Q5 25, Westerns, $2 755 25. Chicago Cattle Receipts, 2,000 head; ship ments, 500 head: maiket steadj-; prime to extra steers, $3 750 20. good to choice, $5 65 5 75, otheis, $4 505 50, Texans, J2 SOvffj 00; cow s, $1 503 25 Hogs Receipts, 13,000 head; shipments, 6.000 head; maiket steady: rough and commop, $4 004 10, packers, $4 304 45: rnme heavy and butchers' weights, $4 50 55; light, S4 504 55 Sheep Receipts 500 head: no shipments maiket steadj; Texans, $3 504 85, natives, $4 505 50; Westerns, $4 65 (go so; mm us, js ouifit uu. Cincinnati Hogs in light supplv, slow and easv: common and light, $3 754 45; packing and butchers', $4 35)4 70, receipts, 190 head; shipments, 3,840 head. Cattle in light de mand and quiet; common, $1 500)3 00; fair to choice butcher grades, $3 505 00. choico shippers, $4 404 50, lecoipts, 5,500 head; shipments, 3,100 head. Sheep in fair demand; extra fat wethers, $5 25; receipts, 4,700 heart; shipments, 30,200 head. Lambs Supplv large and easj : common to choice, $4 256 75 per 100 pounds. St. touis Cattle Receipts, 200 head; ship ments, 1,500 head; maiket highei: good to fancy native steers, $5 106 00, fair to good natii e steers, $J floras 25. Texans and Indians, $2 905 00 Hogs Receipts, 1,100 head; ship ments, 4,900 head; market Aim: fair to ehoi'-o heavy, H 40g4 50, mixed grades, $4 004 45; light lair to best, $4 25Q4 45 sheep Re ceipts, 1,600 head: shipments, 2 500 head; mar ket stiomr; fair to fancj-, $3 25g5 00. Kansas Cit Cattle Receipts, 1,810 head shipments, 6,000head, marketsteady: natives steadj' to strong: Texnns steadj ; steers, $3 25 6 00 cow s, $1 904 00. stockcrs and feeders, $2 604 25 Hogs Receipts, 3,990 head; ship ments, 3,780 head; maiket 5c higher: bulk, $4 204 30, all grades, $3 8003 85 Sheep Re ceipts, 90 head; shipments, 470 head; market steadj'. KuffiUo Cattle slow: receints. 101 loads through, 4 on sale. Hogs Strong and firmer lor 3. orkers; others steadj ; receipts, 44 loads through, 8 on sale; sales good Yorkers, $4 704 SO: mediums, $4 704 75. Sheep and Limbs-blow but steady, at foi merpuces; icceipts, 11 loads thiough, 7 on sale. HOME SECURITIES. Market Weak in Spots, but the General Trend Upward Gains and Losses. While there was no pronounced sentiment for good or bad in the local stock market Satuiday, theie ivas a notable absence of buoyancy and a vv eak undertone. Specula tion was confined to a few traders and active bull operatois were invisible Thej' were absent in body as well as spirit. Sales for tho week wcio less than 1,000 shales. The event of the week was the bale bj' Commo dore Kountz or 5,000 shares of Manchester Traction at S8 and the settlement of the suits which have long blocked the way to tho reorganization of the company. While, as stated, w eakness characterized the market j esterdaj-, tho tone of prices for the week was upward, as final quotations, compared w ith those of tho prev iou1 Satur day, show. Arsenal Bank gnined $1, Liberty National Bank , Jlanufacturers' Gas $2, Pipeago , Wheeling Gas , Airbrake li, dole $L Chartiers Gas lost , Philadelphia Gas , Central Tractioir K, Pleasant Valley H, Luster i. Electric yh. Other changes weie nominal. Miles on call Saturdaj- were 20 Central Traction at 17, 100 at 17, 5 Liberty National Bank nt 103 30 New York and Cleveland Gas Coal at 37, 10 Philadelphia Gas at U&. iiuuv uiunuv was eaby uuiim the -week. there was a bettor demand for it ';aIJfoJ" merly and several of tho banks added ma teiially to their loans. The demand was largoly from tho commeicial and manu facturing inteiests, spcoulators not being in, it to anj great extent. Inteiestratcs, wnicn seldom change in Pittsburg, were steady on tho basis of 57 per cent, according to timo to run. Currencv was abundant an weekend exchango difficult to get. ino Clearing House statement for the day ana week lollows: Siturday's cxchinges Siturday's balances Week's exchanges 1'rei ious week's exchanges.. Exchanges week of 1800 Balanceswcek of 1890 ....51,93,32717 4W.G01 49 "" 13.2fi,2H 69 . 13 'KB. 449 14.Tllt.164 51 '".' 1W.311C1 MARKETS BY WIRE. CHICAGO For tho first few minutes after tho opening Satuiday the leading maikcts gave eciy indication of stiength. Theie was good buying and considerable acthity, and a quick advance wasmadefn all the pits. But after thcliist half hour tho buying slackened, confidence became im parled, earlj-'purchasers began to sellout, and there was a sharp diop all along tho line. The leading futures ranged as follow', as corrected by John 31. Oaklev & Co , 43 Sixth stieet, members of Chicago Boat d ol Trade: Open- High- bow- Clos- AimcLFS. ing. est. st. mg- Wheat, No. I. I June 17 97 9.V ''b Julj 9.W M 11 94 August 93 93'" SI 92 Conv, o. 2. June 53 HH E6"i Md July 55 U'a 54 S August 54' 547a 527a 53'6 OATS, NO. 2. June 41V 42 39V 40 , Julr 400, tl'4 39 39M Aiucust 34S MM 33 34 Mess Pokk. Jllll lfflO 10 25 10 05 10 07S September 10 37 V 10 45 10 X 10 30 Lard. Jul 6 15 6 15 612 6 12' September 6 35 6 40 6 Si's 6 37'i SHORT Kibs. Jull 5 85 5 87M 5 82J 5 824 September 6 10 6 121 6 07. 6 07Ji Cash quotations were as follows Flour dull; spring patents, $1 905 40, winter patents, $4 80i 15: bakeis', $4 I04 25 No 2 snung w heat, !K!c: No. 3spung w heat, 92fi:93c: No. 2 red, S6inslc; No 2 corn, 571(c. No. 2 oats, 3940c: No. 2 white, 42J444c: No. 3 white do, 41;42c: No. 2 rj e. 81c; No. 2 bai lej , nominal; No. 3 f. o b , U3igG5c: No. 4 f o b , COc: No 1 flaxseed, $1 10, pnme timothv seed, $1 2751 28; mess pork, per barrel, $10 00. lard, per 100 pounds, $b 056 07: short rib sides (loose), :f5 759 bO, dry salted shouldeis (boxed), $5 005 10, short clearsides (boxed), $6 25C 30 Susars Cut loaf unchanged. On the Produce Exchange to-dav the but ter market was unchanged; eggs, llgjlae. NEW YORK Flour dull and heavy. Corn meal steadj- and dull; yellow Western, $3 25 3 85. Wheat Spot market w eaker and quiet: No 2 red, $1 0731 OS, stole and debi tor; $1 09 afloat: $1 OSJJiHU lO-Jf. f- o b.; un graded, $1 -WW 1 09: No 1 Northern, to ai m e, $1 10i; No 1 hard, to arm e, $1 3J; No. 2 Chicago, $1 07; options changed only slightlj- and whollj- fiom local specu lation, declining early Kc, re acting JKe, closing weak at i Jfc under j esterdaj-; No 2 red June, clos ing at $1 07K; Julv, $ 1 05JB1 05, closing at $1 0iiJ: August, $1 01 5-lbl 02, closing at 11 01: September, $1 00Jil 01W, closing at $1 00V- October, $1 01J1 0 closing at $1 01k: November, closing at $1 01J; Decem ber $1 021 03 5 1G, closing at $1 02;; JIaj-, r-JB, $1 06gi my, closing at $1 00. Rvo quiet and steadj-. Coin Spot market steady and faulj active: No 2, 6GJ4c m elevator, 67c afloat; ungraded mixed", 65b7Uc; op tions opened c low or, advanced Xic but closed weak at J4jc under jestcrday's wholK through local manipulation; Julv, 61 13 1662 9-lc, closing at 61c; August, Uii ?J61c, closing at 60c; September, 60K b0c, closing at 60c. Oats Spot market dull and heavy; options dull, lower and weak, June closing at 46Uc; Julj-, 46V46e, dosing at 46Vc; August, 4041c, closing at 40c: September, 373Sc, closing at 37c: snot No 2 w bite. 49le- mixed Western. &fh 49c; white do, 506Sc; No 2 Chicago, 47c. Hav stead-) ; shipping, $45 0055 00; good to choice, $55 75 Hops dull; State, com mon to choice, $25 0032 00; Pacific coast, $25 0032 00. Tallow steady and quiet; Kggs quiet, steady: Western, 1G16C. Hides dull, firm; wet salted New Orleans selected, 4575 fts, 68c; Texas, selected, 50 b0 fcs, 68c. Pork quiet, stead: old mess, $1' 0011 50 new mess, $12 00gl2 50, extra prime, $11 00 Cut meats dull, steady; pick led bellies, 5c: do shoulders, 4c; do hams, 9Jfi:9c: middles dull, weak; short clear, $fi 40 Ijitd stronger, moderate demand; Western steam, $6 &iy2: July $6 336 36, clos ing, $6 34 bid; August, $0 48; September, $6 57 6 62, closing. $6 61 bid, October, $6 72. But ter quiet, easj-; Western dairv, ll15c; do creamery, 18c: do factory, ll14c; Elgin, vsyiv. uiieese quiet, weaK: part skiiis, 5gc. ST. LOUIS Flour unchanged. Wheat at tho opening was weak andjjc lower, hut there was soon some i ecoverj and while the fluctuations were confined to a narrow range the tendency was to higher prices un til noon, when pi Ices sagged. Thero was a reco erj- near the close, but final prices w ere c below vcaterday; No. 2 cish, 99Kc $1 00, July, 9091c, closing at 9191Jc; Au gust, S9S90Xe, closirtg at 89c; September, 9091c, closing at OO&c; December, 93(591c, closintr at 93!c. Corn after onenni!r?i;c off. had a strong "reaction and advanced ytc, but w eakened on" later. The w eakness in wheat sympathetically affected the market and prices dropped lc moie, recoering onlj J.cof the loss and finally closed le below j esterdaj ; N o. 2 cash, 5-54c; July, 51 o3, closing at 52c bid; September, 50k 51c, closing at 50c. Oats lower, but active; No. 2 cash, 45&4GJc; Julj-, 373Kc, closing at 37c;Augpst, 3"432c. closing at 3IKc; September, 31Mc, closing at 31c. Rye neglected. Hay Timothy steady at $13 00 17 00 Eggs, 12c. Cornmeal firm at $2 95 3 00 Provisions Market firmer for dry salt meats and laid, quiet and unchanged for pork and bacon. PHILADELPHIA Flour quiet. Wheat Options quiet and prices largely nominal; desirable nulling grades in small supplj- and puces firm; sales lancy ungraded on track, $1 IS- No 2 red. in elevntor (for milling), $1 09 No. 2 red, June, $1 061 07; Julv, $1 04 1 05; August, $1 011 01; spot, $1 XK 1 0L Corn Options inactive and closed a shade lower; local trade demand light, but supphos w ere limited and prices unchanged; No i mixed, elevator, 6bc: No.2 high mixed and j ellow, in grain depot, 66c:- No. 2 mixed, June, 6364c: Julv,62Kgb3Jc; August, 61G2c; September, bOK01Kc. Oats Catlots quiet; options steady but quiot; sales ungraded white, 4sc; No. 3 white, 48c; No. 2 white, 49c; No. 2 white, June, 4849c: Julv, 4S48i,c; August, 4243c; beptembei, 3940c. Eggs quiet and easy; Pcnnsj 1 ania firsts, 17c. BALTIMORE Wheat No. 2 led weak; spot, $1 0CX1 06; June, $1 05iX(3l WK; Julj-, $1 03Jil 0: August, $1 Olifl 018; Sep tember, $1 00K1 004; Steamer No. 2 red, $1 QSy Corn, mixed easj; spot, 63K64c; Julv, 6162c: spot. No. 2 white, OIKc. Oats dull; No. 2 white Western, 5253c; No. 2 mixed do, 52c asked. Rye nominal; No. 2, 95c; icceipts, 600 bushels; shipments, none; stock, 4,375. Hav firm; gdod to choice timothy, $12 0013 50. Pi ovisious unchanged. Butter w eak and unchanged. Eggs at 16e. vusvvisai:i iour uemana moderate; w inter patent stendv at $3 005 35; fancj-, $4 704 80, family, $4 lo4 35 Wheat Light demand; Xo. 2 winter red, $1 01. Corn Light demand; No. 2 mixed, 5S(S60e. Oats dull and low; Ho. 2 mixed, 47c. Rje dull and noinmal'at 85c on track. Pork Light de mand but firm at $10 70. Laid Demand fair at $5 80 Bulk meats steady; short ribs, $5 95. Bacon steadj-and unchanged. Butter steady. Eggs dull at 13c in round lots. Cheese easj ;Tpntue Ohio flats, 80c. demand; Xo. 2 winter red, $101. Corn N WKc: 3, on track, 5Sc. Oats easier; No. 2 white, on track, 43c. Bailey easy; No. 2, in store, 72c. Rvo iv eak; No. 2, m stoio. biiic. Provisions ii nnlr iTs!- It! it will iiti Pork Julj-, $10 07. Laid Julj-, $6 vy. TOLEDO- AVheat active and lower; closed firmer: cash and July, $1 02: Julj-, 9CWc; Aug ust, i$c; septemuer, v6o; uecemiiei, 'Jic. Com dull and firm: cash and June. 00c. Oats quiet; cash, IGc. Cloverseed dull; cash, $4 20. KANSAS CITY Wheat quiet; No. 2 hard, raih. S7JgSSc; June, 85c bid; No. 2 red, cash, S)Q90c. "Corn in good demand; No. 2 cash, 50-gC bid; June, 50Je bid. Oats quiet; No. 2 cash, 48Jjc; June, 4142c. Eggs firm at llc. DULUTII Wheat was weaker to daj-, closing 3c under yesterday's last prices; closing quotations: Julj-, $1 01; No. 1 North ern, cash, $1 00; No. 2 Northern, cash, 96c. MESNE POLIS No. 1 hard, June, $1 02; on track, $1 021 02 No. I Northern, June, m8'X)4c; September, 89e; on track, 99K 99ic; No. 2 Not them, on track, 98c. Coflee Markets. New Yobk, June 13. Coffee options opened steadj and unchanged to 10 points down, cl sod barely steadj, 5 down to 10 up: sales, 2G.750 bags, including July, 10 1010 20c; Au gust, 15o.)15 70c; September, 15 0515 20c; October, 14 5514.65c; Novembei, 14 30c; De cember, 14 00'14 05e: spot Rio steady; fair cargoes, 19c: No. 7, 17J17Kc. Baltimore, June 13 Coffee unchanged. "Whisky Markets. CncrKKATi W liisky steadj'; sales finished goods, 883 bbls, on a basis of $1 16. St. Louis Whisky steady at $1 16. PtoniA Whisky firm: wines, $1 17; spirits, $1 19. . Chicago Distilleis' finished goods per gal lon, $1 16. Wool Markets. St. Lotus Wool Receipts, 202,731 pounds; maiket steady and unchanged. CHEESE' pECLfflNEL Southern Vegetables Plenty Markets Drift Lower. and CHOICE POTATOES STILL STEADY. The DoTnnvard Movement of Cereals Holds on Ks Course. GROCERIES A'RE ACTIVE AT OLD PRICES Office of Phtsbcho Dispatch, ) Saturday, June 13. ( Country PitoDircE (Jobbing Prices) Re ceipts of Ohiohceso hao beonvery large of late, and prices have found a low er level, as our quotations will disclose. High grades of creamery butter are mo ing more freely, and markets aro a shade better. Poultry and eggs arc weak, with a downward incli nation. Eggs, however, that are entirely f l ee from suspicion are in fair demand, and bujersaio willing to pay the price. Choico potatoes are steady at quotations, and Ber muda onions aro scarco and firm at a slight advance. In general. South ern -v egetables are m bountitul supyly, and markets nio weakening. Peas aro es pecially weak. Radishes have onlj- a nom inal value, as markets aro glutted in this lino for a lew daj s past. Receipts of straw hemes, both Southern and home-grown, were - erj- laige to-day, but none too largo for tho absorbing capacity of our market. Apples Fancy, $7 007 40 per barrel. 1M ttfk Creamery, Elgin, 2::Ec, Ohio brands, 1&51c; common country butter, 12c; choice coun try rolls, 15c. Bea,s Navv. $2 302 33; marrows, $2S52 40: Lima beans, 555c. Berries btran berries, 712c a quart; $2 002 25 a cr ite; cherries, 710c a box; gooseberries, $2 00 a bushel. Beeswax 3032c Hlb for choice: low grade, 22 23c. Cider Sand refined. $9 SOfflO 00; common, $550 6 00;crahclder. $12 00li 001 birrel; cider vine gtr, 14ffll5c 9 gallon. CllLLst Ohio clui'se. new, eJ)c: New York cheese, new, 99c; I.inilmrger, lii11c; domestic SweiUer, ICc; A isconsin brick. Swcitcr, 12)c: Im ported Sweltzcr, 27n.Sc. Loos 17l7ii;e lor btrictly fnsh nearby stock; Southern and Western eggs, 16X17c; duck eggs, 20f?22c FEATIIFRS-Extra live geese, 5060c; No. 1, 40 45c; mixta lots, 30a3JC3lD. Honei New crnti while clover, 1820c 3 lb; California hone), lJSloc lb. Jl U'LE si rl p N lit, 8.a Hie gallon. New JlAfLt sugar lOc lb. Pot'LTin Alive Chickens, C070c a pair; spring chickens, SOfflfiic ap-iir. I)res-ed Turkiys, 16c lb: ducks, l2tSlTc fb; cliickcns,1314c Bib; spring chickens 1822c lb 4'$c: city renueri a, smc. Jcsttrn ckner. S3 OOSW 20: btKDS tlmothj, SI 50 blue grass, 3 50: orchard grass. fi 7o: miuu, SI 00: lawn irmss. ?l)c'ft lb TllOl'ICI. tRLITS T.eiiuins. S. tHUSlS SO: fancv. $5 50 00; Jlesslna oringcs, fo 005 25 a box: Cali lornl i oraiigis. 4 Sdto.j no a box; apricots, S3 00 -i box; ban in is. $2 7o hrsts, ?2 CO good seconds, bunch; tigs, lj&JOc $ lb: dates, o6c lb; pine apples, $10 C0l5 00 a hundred; sugar loif plni apples, SJ3 00 per hundred: Calitornia chcrries,$2 50 2 75 bo. VEOtTABLFs Potatoes,?! 73(311 80 ? bushel; cab bage, SI 50J 00a barrel; beets, oc a dozen; apir agu, 3ac to oOc a dozen; Rtriuiula onions, Si 00 a bushel, Bermuda potatois, fb 507 00 barrel; southern potatoes, ?8 006 50 bushel; tomatoes, SI O0l 25 for small box, $2 75(23 25 a bushel; let tuce, o0i i dozen; ridislies, 20(g,2oc a dozen: rhu barb. 2,j(5aoc a dozen; cucumber. 50((WiOc a dozeir, onions, iya20c a dozen; neap, SI 501 75 a box: to matoes, S3 003 Wi a box; wax beans, f2 502 75; beans, SI 502 00 a box. Groceries. The situation is this department is un changed. A use in sugar is genorallj' antic ipated by dealers within the next ten days. Cotfee, however, inclines to tho other dnec tion, owing to favorable reports of tho in coming crop, tho first fruits of w hich will be due about the last of this month. Greex Coffee Fancv, 2425c; choice Rio, 22" ZZc: prime Rio, 22c: Ion graile Rio, 20i21Mc; old Government ,Ta-i, 2930c; Maracalbo, 2527c; Mocha. 2931c; bantos 21H23ic; Caracas. 24' XHc; LaGuayra, 25V3Ge. v Roasted (in pipers) Standard brands, 25c: high grades. 2G"30c; old Government Java, bulk, 31 33)ic: Maracalbo. Z7H(&Z0Vs: Santos, 232Dsc: peaberry, 30c; choice Kio, 2oc; prime Kio, 24!c; good Rio, 23Sc; ordinary, 21(?22( . SPICKS (whole) Cldves, 15lbc; allspice, 10c; cassia, 8c; pepper, 3e: nutmeg, 75080c. i ;iKoi.iii'3i ijoooirs' prices) iiu" test, b4C -110 test. Ohio, 120J. 7c:beadHglit, 150. 7c; water white. Kc: ulobe. 140140. claine. 15c: carnadinc. lie: rojallne, lie: redoil, WiOUc; purltj, 14c; olelne, 14c. Mixers' Oil No. 1 water stained. 4214c per gallon: summer, 3537c; lard oiL 5558c, Strup Corns j run. 30333c: choice sugar evrup. 37(t?30c; prime sugar sj rup, 3435c; strictly prime, 3537c. N. O. Molasses Fancj , new crop. 45c; choice, 42ian3c; medium, 3810c: mixed. 3o38c. Soda Bl-carb. iiikegs, 3C(xl31C: bl-earb. in 3, 5i4c; bl-carb., assorted packages, 56c; sal soda In kegs, ljjc; Io granuHtcd. 2c. Candles Star, full weight, 9c; stcarine, per set, SVr; parafflne, ll12c. RICE Head Carolina, 7l7Mc; choice, 634'c; prime, 6tjkc; Louisiana, 5bc. Starch Pearl, 4c; corn starch, 66c; gloss starch, C7c. Foheiov Fruits Laver raisins. 92 5tv T.ondnn layers. $2 75: Muscatels $1 75; California MucateK ?1 601 75; Valencia, 6CC; Ondara Valencia, 7 7'4e: sultana, 1015c; currants, 5'ii'ic; Turkey prunes, 7ic; French prunes, ingioSc; Salonlca prunes, in 2-lb packases, 9c: cocoanuts, 100, $6: almonds, Lan., $ lb, 2ic: do Ivica, 17c: do shelled. 40c; walnuts, nap , 1114c: Sicil filberts, 12c; Snijrna figs, 13(314c: new dates.5kbc: Brazil nuts. 10c: pec-nis, limbic: citron. lb, 1718c; lemon peel, 12c ? lb; orange peel, 12c. Dried FRUiTS-,AppIe, sliced, fl lb, lie; apples, evaporated, 1314c : peaches, evaporated, pared, 20f21c; peaches, California, evaporated, unpareei. 13lec; cherries, pitted 25c; cherries, unpitted, 8c: raspberries, oanorated, 232tc; blackberries, 6S 7c: huckleberries 8c. SUGARS Cubes, 47c; powdered, 4c; granulated, 4Hc; conlectiouers1 A, 4'4c; soft white. 44'c; yellow, choice. 3lc;yelIow, good, 33c; jel low. fair. 3(ffl3iC Pickles Medium, bbls (1,200), $7 00: medium, half bbls (600). S4 00. Salt No. 1. 19 bbl. 81 00: No. 1 eitrc 33 hhi 11 10; dairy, ? bbl, SI 20; coarse enstil, ? bbl. SI 20; Hlgglns' Eureka, 4-bu sacks, S2S0; HIggins' Eureka, lb 14-lb packets, S3 CO. CAED GOODS Standard peaches, $2 502 Go; 2nIs, S2 152 50: extra peaches, ?2 602 70: pie peaches. SI b5l 70- finest corn. SI 3501 5n': Hid. Co. corn, SI O0l 15; red cherries. SI j1 40; Lima beans, SI 3o; soaked do, 80c; string do, 70y?.soc: marrowfat peas, $1 lOSTl 25: soaked peas, 657oc pineapples, Jl 501 60; Bahama do, $2 55; damson plums, SI 10: giecngages, $1 50: egg plums, ?2 90; California apricots, $2 002 30; California pears, $2 402 60; do greengages, 31 90; do egg plums, $1 90; extra white cherries, 2 65; raspner- rlcs. 31 35TS11 45: strawberries. ;i .tiil 40 goose- bcrrlet, 51 10(S1 15; tomatoes, 93cil 00; salmon. 1-lb, ?1 301 80: blackberries, 90c; succotash. 2-tb cans, soaked, 99c; do green, 2-Ib cans, 1 251 50; corn beef, 2-tb cans, fi 202 25; 1-lb c ins, 81 30; baked beans, SI 401 50; lobster. l-lt cans, 82 25: mackerel, 1-lb cans, broiled, 1 50; sardines, do mestic, Ms, S4 404 50; ia, $7 CO; sardines. Im iiortcd, Ms, ?11 505i12 50: sardines, imported. is, 18 00; sardines, mustard, S4 50; sardines, spiced. Fish Extra No. 1 bloater mackerel, $2000 bbl; extra No. 1 do mess, $28 50; extra No. 1 mackerel, shore. S24 00: No. 2 shore mackerel, 8 00: large 3s, 820 00. Codfish Whole pollock, 5c lb; do medium, George's cod, 5c; do large, 7c; boneless bakes, in strips, 5c: George's cod, in blocks, 6A 7s(c. Herring Bound shore. 85 50 bbl: snllt. 80 50; lake, 83 25 $1 100-16 bbl. White fish, $7 00 "i iuuiD iiitu uui. iisui eroui, so oo f! nail ddi. Fln- nin hnririlpa 1(V 1 Iti. I, nlnnrl hullhiir 13S!H .Pickerel, half bbl. S4 00: nuarter Mil. si 60. llol- laim iierrui, iou iviUKtiu iiernnjf, we. Oatmeal J7 507 75 ? bbl. Grain, Ploor and Feed. There was a single sale on call at the Grain Exchange to-day, namely, a car of packing hay, $8 00, Pittsburg and Lako Erie. Receipts as bulletined 28 cars, of which one half were by Pittsburg, Ft. Wayno and Chi cago Railway, as follows: 1 car of oats, 3 of haj-, 1 of straw, 1 of ear corn, 1 of wheat, 1 of malt, 6 of flour. By Pittsburg, Cincinnati and St. Louis, 3 cars of hay, 2 of corn, 1 of bran and shorts. By Pittsburg and Lako Eiie, 1 ear of oats, 2 of hay, 2 of rye, 1 of flout. Bj-Baltimore and Ohio, 1 car of feed, 1 of oats. Receipts for the week, 204 cars, against 233 cais last week. Cereal maikets continue to show great weakness, and in some lines prices aro lower. With such a depressed condition of trade as has been experienced for the past few days, retailers buy only for actual needs. WHEAT No. 2 red. Jl 071 OS; No. 3, jl 0331 01. Corn No. 1 jellow shell, 6768c; No. 2 yellow shell. 0667c: high mixed, 65f6c; mixed shell, 6465c; No. 2 yellow car, 7071c; high mixed ear,' 6&a69c: mixed ear. 6b(367c. Oats No. 1, 49tM)ic: No. 2 white. 48K49c; extra. No. 3, 4&48)jC; mixed oats, 4743c. RYi. No 1 Pennsvlvanla arid Michigan, 93c ?l oo.N'o. 1 Western. 9899c. Flour .lobbing prices Fancy spring and win ter patent flour, fit 006 25; fancy straight winter, Si 505 75; fancj straight spring, ) 50(ij5 75; clear ii inter. $5 25o 00; straight, XXVV bakers', 85 25 5 50. Ric flour, 7o5 00. Buckwheat flour, 2M 2Uclb. MlLLPtED No. 1 white middlings, fs 0025T 33 ton; No. 2 unite middlings, $23 0023 50; brown middlings, ?18 0019 00; winter wheat bran, ?17 50 18 CO. Haa Baled timothv. choice. ?12 0M)12 50: No. 1, fll-25ll 50;No. 2do,9 009 50; loose lrom wagon, ?12 00115 00. accordingtonualitv ; o. 2-prairic hay, $9 ami 50; packing do, fi O08 50. Straw Oate, ts O08 25; wheat and rye, 7 50 7 7a. Provisions. The only change in provision lines is a dr,6p of 50 in lard, w hich goes into effect Monday, June 15. Sugar cured hams, large Sugar cured hams, medium Sugar cured hams, small , Sugar cured California hams bugarcuredb. bacon Sugar cured skinned hams, large Sugariiired skinned hams, medium., bugar cured shoulders Sugar cured boneless shoulders ...... bugar cured skinned shoulders ..3 6H 6M 14 12 11 75f l'ry saltcleir sides, lO-Ibave'g- Messpork, Iieaw i .' 13 00 Mess nork. f.imifv . . 13 00 bV e 7 6V V 7 Lard, refined, hi tierces , Lard, refliicd.Mn half barrels Lard, refined, InMMbtubs Lard, refined, ln'JO-lbpiib Lard, refined, inSO-ibtin cans Lard, refined, in Wb tin palls Lard, refined, in 5-lb tin pails Lard, refined, in 10-lb palls STOCKS AND BONDS. SHAKES MORE ACTIVE AJTD STROXG THAJi rOK SEVERAL DAYS. Gold Shipments Played Out A Fino Bank Statement Has a Good Effect on the Market Grangers and Industrials the leaders Bonds Active. New York, June 13. Tho stock market to day displayed more activity and strength during the two hours of business than nt any previous time during the week, and prices at the 61ose were generally at the highest points sincethe close of last week. The sen timent that the drain of gold of the country lias entirely ended, at least for the present, hascieateda moie confident feeling. The expectation that the bank statement should show a material increase in the surplus re serve was not disappointed, and a gain of over $3,000,000 puts that item at over $10, 000,000. The dealings in the market, however, pre sented no marked change from those of the previous days of this" week, and were still confined principally to the Grangers, Indus trials and a few other stocks which have an international market, though the foreign operations w ere insignificant. The demand from the shorts was sufficient to make a rather sharp upward movement in the first hour, Union Pacific leading the advance, but follow ed closelv bj- St. Paul, Burlington, Rock Island and Pacific Mall Tho general list also de eloped some special features, and Jersey Central, Evansville and Terre Haute and one or two others made sharp gains on small transactions. While there was no further material up ward movement, the best prices were well held, and the closo wns made at the highest figures, .though quiet. The final changes show gams along tho line of large trac tions, and Jcisej Central and Union Pacific are up 1 per cent, and Pacific Mail 1 per cent. Railroad bonds were comparatively active and retained the firm tone de eloped yes terday, with a revivnl of interest in the Atchison incomes, though there was, as usual, no material changes in quotations es tablished among the active issues. The trailing for the two hours reached $310,000, which was well and widely distributed. Tho Close at New York. The following table shows the prices of active Flocks on the J tw York Stock Exchango vestenlay. Corrected dally for THETJrsPATCH by WlIITNFY Jfc Stephenson, olde it Pittsburg members of the 2ew York Stock Lxchange, 27 Fourth avenue: Am. Sutru Refinin? Co... 8b Sl 86' 87 43 32'8' 78'f 49V 110V 30 53? sax ts'i VVA 73 25 MM 106' 132S4 63 91 tK 252 4SJ 28V 135 129 W 53 Z 6' 97'A 'iioii 74)4 90 "tin 100! 133o 65 Am. Sugar KefinlngCo.pfd A.m. 1 011011 un .. Am. Cotton Oil, nfd Atch.Top its F Can tdlanPacllle Canadian Southern Central of New Jerej .... Central Pacific Clies ipeakc and Ohio ChiciKoGas Trust C, Bur. & Quincj C .Mil A, St. Paul C , Mil &St Piul. pfd... C , Koekl P C.SI. P.M. .t O C. St. P. M. i. O ,pfd.... C. X Northwern C. & Northwestern, pfd.., C, C , C ii C. C, C. A-1, prer. Col Coal & Iron Col. & Hocking Val C. 4.0:. 1st pref. O. & O., 2d pref. Del., Lack. & West Del. & Hudson Den. & Kio Grande Den. & ltlo Grinde pref.. E. T.. Va.iS.Ga Illinois Central Lake Erie A West Lake shore AM. S LouisiillcA Nashville.... Michigan Central Mobile A Ohio Missouri Pacific National Lead Trust New YorkCentral N. Y., C. A St. L N. Y., C. ASt. L., 1st pf. N. Y C. A St. L., 2d pf. N. Y , L. E. A W N.Y..L.E. AAV., pref.. N. Y. A N. E N. Y.. O AJV Norfolk A Western Norfolk A " estcrn, pref. Northern Pacific Northern Pacific, pref.... Pacific JIall Peo., Dec A Evans Philadelphia A Beading .. Pullman Palace Car Richmond A W. P. T 32 no 33 "49 V 32 49V 111 110 17 54 ?6 89-a 643, '"fi" 25 83 'i 1057a 132 62 "35 & "49" 17M; I7H 53' 89' 64 MS; 89 65 "73 "73' 25 81 ,& lOfiM: JlB 1K4 VJZ tfcf C2H "k's 35 "49' "48 135V ra 135 123 "54' "os" 128 "54' "93" 03M "97'i 1VI 110'f; no'4 iioii in 74i 'ii' 69'i 13M inoti, 13T, 69S ran 18 S loosi 13)i lll 10OW 27 19' 50 34Srf lti 14V 52 24"s 68 3bV 18 31," 181 153 69' 31 95 103 64 U( 46H 10'4 23 81 3SV 7V 1V4 VM 5S 1025i 103 S 20 19 34 35 34V 16 'ivi 24), 67 36M 'izi 24K 68: 3b 36M '31& 31J '15 "32" 'ii' "32' 'i5 '3l" Kichmond A, w 1'. T.. nre IIL, X ilUl ,K I'UIULII ..... ... St. i-aui A iiuiuth, prcr.... St. Paul. Minn. A Man.... Stfc L. A San Fran 1st pref. Texas Pacific Union Pacific "W abash.... Wabash, pref. Western Union Wheeling A L. E Wheeling A L. E., pref.... North American Co P. C. C. A St. L P. C. C. A St. L . pref. National Cordage Co National Cordage Co., pre 45 n 81 3.V$ 454 10"6 23 81 35 75 '2 11 81 J. 36Vf 7ovi 15?o lb'A 15; 101S 102J 101& Philadelphia Stocks. Closing qnotations of Philadelphia stocks, fur nished bj Whitney & Stephenson, brokers. o 37 Fourth avenue, members New York Stock Exchange: Sug-ir cured bacon shoulders. Sugar cured dry salt shoulders. Sugarcurcdd. beef rounds Sugar cured d. beef sets Sugar curedd. beef flats Bacon clear sides , Bacon erearhellli s Bid. Asked. 50 50'fi 15 13-18 15's 7 46V 46 24H 24'J 63 63'i 46 ..." 1 Hccla....248 17M 2H 36 Pennsylvania Railroad Heading Buffalo, New York and Phlladcl'a. Lehigh Vallci Northern Pacific common Northern Pacific preferred Lehigh Navigation Boston Stocks. Atch. &Topeka 33 Boston &. Albany.... 201 Boston A 3Iatne.... 115 C B. &Q 89? Fitchburg R I! 78 Flint .1, l'ere 31., pf.. 78 Franklin Huron.... Osceola .. Ouinrv lnf7 frantaFc Copper.... 52' Tamarack 152 M iss. Central IS 31cx Cen com.. .. 19nsUn Diego Land Co. 18 N. Y. &, N. Eug, Old Colony ,16! Rutland preferred... 64 "Wis. Cen. com 19 "B, i est uiu ijanu CO.. jul BellTelenhone. 200 I.-imson Stores Water IDwer Centennial MIn. . N. E. T. S. T Butte & Boston Cop. 16 if 50 15 Allouez 31. Co (new) 3'4 Atlantic 15S Boston Jfc Mont 43 Electric Stocks. Bid. Eastern Electric Cable Co., pfd 50 00 Asked. 50 00 43 50 25 62 12 25 13 25 Thomson-Houston Electric Co.. 42 62 pfd.25 50 Thomson-Houston Llectric Co.. Ft. Wavnc Electric Co .1- uu ,12 87 ,60 00 "W estinghousc Electric Co European, Welding Co Mining Stock Quotations. New "i obk, June 13. Alice, 160: Adams Con solidated, 180; Aspen, 200; Chellar, 220: Crow n Point, 140; Colorado Consolidated, 100; Con solidated California and Virginia, 850: Dead wood, UO; Eureka Consolidated, 350; Hale and Norcross, 180; Homestake, 1000; "Horn Silver. 340: Iron Silver. 100: Mexican. 255: Ontario, 3800; Ophir, 380; bavage, 180; Sierra iictuun, iaji xijiuuuiu, iui uuiuu vunsoil- dated, 190; Y'ellow Jacket, 200. THE EAVAQES OF HYDROPHOBIA, Near Marslialltown, Iowa, Causes a Panic Among tho People. Marshalltown, IA., June 14. Great alarm prevails in the community a few miles east dfDunlap, over the ravages of hvdrophobia among the dogs and cattle. "Within the past few clays 13 cattle affected with, this malady have been shot, and others are eipected to be stricken. Twenty dogs have already been killed. A little child of James Fantz shows de cided symptoms of hydrophobia from drink ing milk from a cow affected with rabies. One man had a hair breadth escape from a mad ox, being chased nearly halt a mile by the brute, through wire fences and timber". Extract of TTeci"fcy ALL GOOD COOKS Send to ARMOUR & CO., ChloagO. for Cook Book showing use of Armour'8 Extract in Soups and Sauces. Mailed free. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. A RECORD OF A LIFE'S WORK. The entire facts connected with every cast) ever treated by Mrs. Pinkham are on record. With the assistance , of lady clerks writing at her dictation, over one hundred letters per day have been disposed of, tho answers going to ladies in all part of the world, and the facts compiled in a Library of Eeferenco for the benefit of suffer ing women. For the euro of Kidney Complaints, either sex, the Compound has no rival. LYDIAE.PINKHAM,ScvXbn'a is the only Positive Cure and Legiti mate Remedy for those weaknesses and ailments peculiar to women. Sold by all Druggists as a standard article, or sent by mail, in form of Pills or Lozenges, on receipt of 51.00. Send stamp for "Guide to Health and Etiquette," a beautiful Illustrated book. Mrs. Pintham freely answers letters of inquiry. Enclose stamp for reply. Lydia E. Pinkham Med. Co.. Lynn. Mass. FIDELITY TITLE AND TRUST CO., 121 and 123 Fourth avc. Before leaving town send your silverware and valuables to us for safe keeping. je3-M BROKERS FINANCIAL. Whitney & Stephenson, 57 Fourth Avenue. ap30-35 DLT1DI C'C SAVINGS BANK, rtUrLt 0 81 FOURTH AVENUE. Capital, $300,000. Surplus $31,670 20. D. JIcK. LLOYD. EDWARD E. BUFF. 4 President. Asst. Sec. Treas. per cent interest allowed on time de posits. ocl3-40-D Pittsburg, Allegheny and Manchester Traction Company 40-year 5 per cent bonds, free of tar, for sale at 103 and interest. FIDELII! TITLE I TRUST CO., 121 AND 123 FOURTH AVENUE. fell-43-MWT John M. Oakley & Co,, BANKERS AND BROKERS. Stocks, Bonds, Grain, Petroleum. Private wire to New York and Chicago, 43 SIXTH ST., Pittsburz. KAJXKOADS. From Pittsburgh Union Station. ennsylvania Lines. Trains Run by Central Time. Sontbwcst System-Pnn-lInndlcRonte Depart for Columbus, CincinnaU, Indianapolis, St Louis, points intermediate and beyord : 1.15 a m., 700am ,8.45p.m.,11.15p.m Arrive from same points- 2.10a m.,6.00a m.,'5Aip.m. Depart for Columbus, Chicago, points intermediate and beyond: 1.15a.m., fl2.05 p m Arrive from same points: 2.10 a.m ,f3.05 p.m. Northwest System Fort Wayne Ron to Depart for Chicago, points intermediate and beyond; 3.5oa.m., 7.10 a.m., 1Z20 p.m , I.C0 p.m., 111.21 p m. Arrive from same points . 12.05 a m., 12.40 a.m , 6.35 a.m., . 5i p m., SCOpm. The Pennsylvania Limited departs for Chicago 8.45 p m Arrives from Chicago 6.00 a.m Depart for Toledo, points intermediate and beyond 7.10a m. 120D.m..1.00D.m..lll0p.m. Irrife from same points: 1fl2.40 a.m.,b.35 a.m oSi p m 6.50p m. Depart for Cleveland, points intermediate and beyond: p3.10 a m , J7J0 a m , fl2.45 p.m., 1105pm. A mie from same points: a50a.m., t2.15p.m.,t7.00p.m. Pullman Sleeping Cars and Pullman Dining Cars run through. East and West, on principal trains of both Systems. Time Tables of Through and Local Accommoda tion Trains of either system, not mentioned abov e, can be obtained at 110 Fifth Avenue and Union Station, Pittsburgh and at principal ticket offices of the Penn sylvania Lines West of Pittsburgh. Daily. tEi. Sunday. Ex. Saturday. HEx. Monday. JOSEPH "WOOD, E. A. FORD, General Hng-, General Eusenger lm Pittsburgh, Penn'a. PITTSBURG AND LAKE ERIE RAILROAD COJIPANY-bchedule In effect June 14. 1891. central time P. Jt L. E. R. R- Depart For Cleveland. 4.30, "8 00 a. m.. "1.50. 4.20. 9.4i p. m. For Cincinnati. Chicago and St. Louis. 4.30 a. in.. "1 .50, "9.45 p. in. For Buffalo, 8.00 a. m.. 4 20. "9.45 p. m. For Salamanca, "8 00 a. m., "1:50, "9.45 p.m. For Youngstown and New Castle. 4.30, "8.00. 9 55 a.m.. "1:50. "4.20. "9.45 p. in. For Beaver Falls, 4 30. 7 00, "8100, 9-55 a. m.. "1 JO. 3 30, "4-20. 5 20. 9.45 p.m. J or Chartiers, 4 30. 115:30, 5:35, "6:55, 7 00, 7.3. "7 .50. S.0O. 8:45. "9.10. 9-55 a. m., 12.10, .l 45, 1.30. law. 3 30. 4.25, 114.30, 4:35, 5 20, "5-30. 6 25. "8 00. T9 45, 10 10 p m. ARRIVE From Cleveland. "6-40 a. m., 12:'50. 5-40. "7.50 p. m. From Cincinnati. Chicago and St. Louis. "6.40 a. in.. "12:30. "7:50 p. m? From Iluflalo, "6.40 a. m.. 12.30. lO.eb p.m. lrom Sala manoa, "10 00 a. m., "7 .50 p. m. From Youngs towd and New Castle, "S.40. "10:00 a. m "12.10, 5-40. "7.50, 10 05 p. m. From Beaver Falls. 5:20. 6:40, 7.20. '10 00 a. m., "12.30, 1:20, 5.40, "7 JO, 10 05 p. m. . P.. C. & Y. trains for Mansfleld. 7:35 a. m.. 12.10 4:35 p. m. For Esplen and Beechmont. 7:35 a. m., 'P. C. &Y. trains from Mansfleld, 7:05, 11 .59 a. m. ,4 25 p.m. From Beechmont. 7.05. 11 .59 a. m. P., McK. & Y. R. K. Depart For New Haven, T8.20, 10.10 a. m., "3 00 p. m. For West Newton. 8 20. 10.10 a. m., "3 OO. o.25p. m. Arrive From New Haven. "9.00 a. m., "5.20 p.m. From West Newton, 6:15, "9 00 a. m., 3-20 p. m. For McKcesport. Elizabeth, Ifononpahela City and Belle Vernon, 6:45. 11.05 a. m.. "4 CO p. m. From Belle Vernon. Monongahela Citv, FUzabetb. and McKcesport, t6.20. "7.40 a. m., 1.20, 4.05 p. m. Dallv. sJundaysnnly. City ticket office, 639 Sinithflold street. 1 1 J. Tralus have Union station (Eastern Standard time): t-ast Bradr Ac, 6.55 a. ni.; Niagara Ex., dailv. 8:15a. in. (Arriving at Buffalo at 5.45 p. m.): Ivittannlng Ac, 9.00 a. m.; Hulton Ac, 10.10 a. m.: Valley Camp Ac, 12-05 p. m.: Oil City and Dubois Express, 1.30 p. m.:lIulton Ac. 3.00 p. m.: Kittannlng Ac, 3 55 p. m.; Braeburn Ex., 4,55 p. m.: Klttannlng Ac, 5.S0 p. m.; Braeburn Ac, fi.30 n- m. : Hulton Ac. 8.00 n.m.: Buffalo Ex.. daily. 8:45 p. m. (Arriving at Buffalo 7:20 a.m.); Hulton Ac, 9.40 p. m.: valley uamp ac, 11:30 p. m. Churcu trains tmienton, s m.: Kit m. PuII- lanulng, 12.10 p. m.: Braeburn, 9.40 p. ian Parlor Cars on d&r trains and Slernlnr Car on iilxlit trains lictween Pittoburgand Buifalo. .IAS. P. ANDERSON. G. T. Agt.;TAVlD McCARGO, Uen. supt. PITTSBURG AND CASTLE SHANNON R. R. Summer Time Tabic. On ami after June 7, 1891, until further notice, trains will run as fol lows on cverj day, except Sundav. Eastern standard time: Leaving Pittsburg 6:25 am. 7:15a m, 8:00am. 9:35a m.llJOam, 1:45 pm, 3:&pui, 5:10 p 111, 3..V pra, 6:3) pm, 9,30 p m. ll:!0pm. Arlington 5:40 am, tijiOa nv,7;10a m. 8.00am, 10:2Sam. 1:00pm. 2.40pm. 4:20 pm, 5:00pm. 5:50 pm, 7:15 pin, 10) pm. Sundav trains, leaving 1 lltsourg lu.iu a 111, i.m p 111, .. pin, o;iv p m, 9:30 Dm. Arnneion a.io a m. 1:10 am. 12:10 p m. 1-50 p m, O. A. ROGERS. Supt. 4:20pm, 6.30pnn THTTSBTTRG AND WESTERN RAILWAY i Trains tci'iBtanaa umej, Mail. Butler. Clalron. Kane... Akron, Toledo and Greenville. ltntlpr Arrnllimodatloil Leave. I Arrive. 6-50 a m 11:20 a m 7:30 a 111! 7:30 pm 9.00 a ml 3.35 p m 1:40 pin' 9:15 a m 12:45 p in 12:10 p m 4:25 pm 5:30 a m 5:30 pm 7rJ)a m Greenville, Newcastle, Clarion Chicago fcxpresi luauy;... Zellenoplc and Butler Rntler Accommodation.... First class fare to Chicago, $10 50. Second class, to o0. Pullman buffet sleeping c ar to Chicago dally RAIUKOADS. 7 PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD. Schedule In effect 12-01 p. 111., June 7. 1891. Trains will leao Union Station. Pittsburg", As follows f Kaitr rn Standard Time)! aiAIN LINE KASTWAIJD. New York and Chicago Limited of Pullman Vesti bule Cars d lily at 7.15 a 111.. arriving atllarrU burg at 1:55 p. m.. Philadelphia 4:45 p. m . ew York 7:00 p. 111,, Baltimore 4.40 p. m., Washing ton 5.55 p 111. Kerstone Expreis dally at ljo a m . arriving at Harrislmrg i,-25 a.m., Philadelphia 11:25a, in., N ew York 2 00 p. m. Atlantic Fjipress dally at 3.20 a.m., arriving at Harrisburg at 10.30 a. in., Philadelphia 1 S3 p.m , New York 4.00 p. m., Baltimore 1:15 p.m., n ash lngton 2:25 p. ni. Mall train daily, except Sunday. 5:30 a. m.. ar rivlngat Harrisburg at 7.C0p. in., l'hliadelphl-i 10,55 p.m.. Baltimore- 10. 10 p m. Sunday Jiall 8:40 a.m. Day Kxpress daily at 8 00 a. m . arriving at Harri hurg 3.20 p. m., Philadelphia 6-50 p. m.. New York 9.33 p. in., Baltimore 6:45 p. m., t ashlng ton 8 15 p. in. 31all Express dally at 12:50 p. m.. arriving at Har- risburtr iu uu p. in., e-uiiueciiii? 21 iiarnsourir wnn i-niiauelpl Philadi lphia Ex iiii - fress dally at 4:30 p. in., arriving 00 a. m.. Philailelnhla 4iS a m . at Harrisburg aim .. ew ork i :iu a. -. -..v. Eastern Express at 7.15 p. m. dailv. arrivinz Har risburg 2:25 a. in.. Baltimore G.i) a. m.. Wash ington 7 TO a. in.. Philadelphia 3:25 a m. and New York's 00 a. m. Fast Line iFilly. at 8 10 p. in., arriving at Harris burg V30 a. m.. Philadelphia 6,50 a. in.. New York 9.30 a. m., Baltimore 6:20a in., Washing ton 7:30 a.m. All through trains connect at .Ierer Cltr with boats of "Broeikhn Annex," for Brooklvn, N. Y.. avoiding double ferriage ami lourney through N ew York City. Johnstown Accom.. except Sunday. 3.40 p. m. Greensburg Accom., ll.lp. m. week-divs. 10.30 p. m Siimlty". (rrceiisbiirgEtpre-is5.10p.nl.. etcept Sunday. Derry Express 11.00 a.m., ex cept Sunday. Wall's Arcom 6 00, 7. 9 00. 10 JO a. m.. 12.'5. 2 00. 3.20. 4,55, 5:40. 6:25. r.40, 9.40 p. m. and 12.10 a in. (except Mondar). Sunday, 10.30 a. m . 12.25. 2 30. 5.30, 7iB and 9-40 p. m. ilkinshurg Accom. 6 10. 0.40. 7.20 a. m.. 12.01. 40. 4 J5. 5 20. 5.30. 5,50. b 10, 10:10 and 11:40 p. m. Sundav, 1:30 and 9.15 p. in. Braddock Accom. 5:50. 6.55. 7:45, 8:10. 9,50, 11:15 a. m.. 12,30. 1:25. 2,50. 4-10, 6.O0, 0U 7:20. 833, 9.00 and 10 45 n. m. week davs. Mind iv.5-3 a.m. SOLTHYVkST PENN KAUTWAV. For Uniontown 5,30 and 8:35a. m., 1:45 and 4.23 p. m. week davs. aiONONGAIIEtA DmSIOX. O V A I AFTHl 31 VY 25. 1391 For Jlonongahcla City. West Brownsi illc and Un iontown. 10 40a. in. For Alonongahela titr and West Browiiovllle, 7iX and 10. 10 a m. and 4 JO p. m. OuStinihn. 8,55 a. m. and 1-01 p. ni. ForMonongaheli tltvonh. l.Ot and 5,50 p. m. wi e k davs. Ilravo-ilmrg Acroni . 6 00 i. in and 3 20 p.m. week diyi. Aist Elialx.tll Aceom.. 8M5a. m., 4:15. U,.mil 11.3")p. nf. Sunday. 9.40 p.m. WEST PENNSYLVANIA DIVISION. )- AND AlTEK 31 VI 25. 1S91. FromFEDEltALSTltLET STATION, Allegheny City: ' i or springdale. week dav. 6.20, R.23. 8,50. 10:40. 11,50a. Ill . 2.25. 4.19. 5 00. 6.05. 1..-20. 8 lO.lOJOaml ll:40p. m. sumUvjs, Ij,t5and9.p. m. ForButler. week days, 6,13,80,10.40 a. m., 3.15 and 6.05 p. m. For Freeport, week dav 65, 8,50, 10.40 a. m.. 3.15. 4rl9. 5.00. 8.10. 10:30. and 11:40 p. m. Sun- dnvs. 125 and 9 TO p. m. For Apollo, week daj s. 10 40 a. m.. anil 5 00 p. m. For ltlalrsville, week days. 6.55 a. m.. 3.1a and 10,30 p. m. C5-rhc Excelsior Baggagf Express Companv will call for anil check baggage from hotels ami residences Time cards and full information can be obtained at the Ticket Offices No. 110 lifth avenue, comer Fourth avenne and Trv street, and Union station. .1. It. 3 001. C1IAS. E. l'UGH, Gcn'l Pass'r Agent. General 3Ianagcr. BALTIMORE AND OniO KAILROAD. bcheilnle In effect May 10. MM. Eastern time. ror vrasuIngton. D. C.. Baltimore. Philadelphia, and New York. S.15a.m. anil "9 ao p.m. For Cumberland. "3.15 a. m..;i:10, 9:2)p. m. For ConnellsvIIIe. J6;40. 8 15a.m.. tl:10, Jl:15 anil 9:20p.m. For Uniontoivn. t6.40, 8:15 a. in.. 1:10 and 4.15 p. m. For Connellsvllle and Uniontown. 8 35 a. m.. Sunday only. For lit. Pleasant, 6:40 a. m. and 3.15 a. m. and 1 lOand 4.15 p.m. For "Washington. Pa.. 7.20, 53 JO, 9 JO a. m.. 4 00, 5 30. and "7-45 p. 111. For Wheeling, 7.20. 53.30, 9.30 a. m.. '4:00, -7:45 p. ni. 1 or.Cincinnatl and St. Louis. 7.20 a. m. "7:45 p. m. For Columbus. "7.20 a. m. "7:45 p. m. For Newark, "7.20 a. m.. "7:45 p. m. ' For Chicago, "7.20 1. ni. and "7:15 p. m. Trains arriie from New York. Philadelphia, Baltimore anil Washington. "6.20 a. m.. "7.35 p. m. From Columbus. Cincinnati and Chlcaaro, "8.23 a. in.. "S-iOp. in. From Wheeling. "8.25, "10.45 a. m., 4.40, "8,50. 59.35 p. m. Dim. Daily except Sunday. Sunday only. ISaturd ly onlv. i;Daily except batunlay. Parlor and sleeping c irs to Baltimore. Washlng--ton. Cincinnati anil Chicago. The Pittsburg Transfer Companv will call for and check baggage from hotels and residences upon orders left at B. & O. tlcketofllce, corner Fifth avenue and ood street, or 401 and 633 Smlthneia street. J. T. ODET.L. CHAS. O. SCULL, flenei-il Mtnager. Gen. Pass. Aifent. 3IEDICAL. DOCTOR WHITTIER 814 PENN AVENUE, PITTSIJUItG, PA. At old residents know and back flies ot Pittbunr papers prove, 13 the oldest estab lished and moot prominent physician in the city, devoting special attention to ail chronio Fr'oe,.rre-N0 FEE UNTIL CURED sponsible MCDni IQ and mental di3 persons. 1 1 Lll V U UO eases, plij sical de cay, nervous debilitj, lack of energy, ambi tion and hope, impaired memory, disordered sight, self distrust, bashfnlncss, dizziness sleeplessness, pimples, eruptions, impover ished blood, failing powers, organic weak ness, dyspepsia, constipation, consumption, unfitting the person for lusines society and marriage, permanentlj', safely and privately iTai-i BLOOD AND SKIN, Hat-! eruptions, blotches, tailing hair, bones pains glandular swellings, ulceration ot tha tongue, mouth, throat, ulcers, old s-ores are cured ior life, and blood poisons thoroughly eradicated from 1 1 Dl M A DV kidnej and the system. U III IMA 11 I f bladder de rangements', weak back, gravel, catarrhal dicl.arges, inflammation and other p-iinful sjiuptoms receive searching treatment, prompt relief and real cures. Dr. Wiiittier's life-long, extensive experi ence insures scientific and leliable treatment; on common sense principles. Consultation free. Patients at a distance as carefnllvr treated as if here. Oflice hours, 9 a. m. to 8 p. m. Sundaj, 10 a. M.tolr.11. only. DR. WHITTIER, 811 Penn a enue, Pittsburg, Pa. jaS-19-DSUwlc MANHOOD RESTORED. "SA TIVO," tha Wondrrful Spanish Remedy. Is sold with a WrittenGuarantee to cure all Nervous Dis eases, snch as Weak Memory. Loss of Brain Power, Headache. Wakefulness. Lost Man hood. Nervousness, las situde, all drains and Ios of power ot tha Generative Organs, la !ther sex. caused br Before & After Use, Photographed from life. over-exertion, youthful indescretlons. or the excessive use of tobacco, opium, or stimulants, which ultimately lead to Inflrmlty, Consumption and Insanity. Put up In convenient form to carry in the vest pocket. Prica Jl a package, or 6 tor 15. With every 15 order we giro a written guarantee to cure or refund tho money. Sent by mail to any address. Circular free. Mention this paper. Address. MADRID CHEMICAL C0.V J? Offlce for U. S. A, 417 Dearborn Street. THICAGO. ILL. FOR SALE IN PITTSc DRGH, PA BX Jos. Fleming 4. Son. 410 MarA " St. Duquesne Pharmacy, 518 Smita, sld St. A. J. Kaercher, 59 Federal St., llegheny City, fe28-Th DOCTORS LAKE SPECIALISTS in all cases re Suiring scientific and confl ential treatment. Dr. S. K. Lake. 31. R. C. P. S . is the old est and most experienced spe cialist ia uie vibjr. wjuoiuihf Hon free and strictly confi dential. Office hours 2 to -t and 7 to 8 p. M.; Sundays. 2 to i t. st. Consult them person ally, or write. Doctors Lake, cor. Penn av. and lth St., Pittsburg, Pa. J e3-72-nwk VIGOR OF MEN Easily, Quickly, Permanently RESTORED. WEAKNESS. NERVOUaNEsS. DEBILITY, and all the train or evils, the resiPts or overwork, sickness, worrr. etc. t nil strength, development, and tone guaranteed In all eaes. Simple, natural methods. Immediate improvement seen. Failure impossible. 2.000 references. Book, explanations and proofs malted (sealed) free- Address ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, N". T. jelO-4S Suffering froa the effects 01 youthful errors early decay, wasting weakness, lost manhood, etc 1 will send a valuable treatise (scaled) ctalnlns full particulars for home cure, FREE of charge. A splendid medical work; should be read by every man who la nervous and debilitated. Address. FroC F. C. FOWLER, JUoodos, Const de-2-Sl-nsuwk ifyriMtmkvk cAsVn M M A B IUrAi TU's'rarrantedto K rt II I fjntMUl nnew youthful color k and Ufa to GRAY Hub-. Usaonly BR. HAIS HAIR HEALTH. Most w&aactorrHau-srrower. 60c. London Susplr Co.,.'! B'dway, K.T. Hair boole fro HATS' X1LL CO 13. Dt Cl'RI t.r Cor.H Bulla, ZtlM. it. Sold by JU3. 1'LEitLNG & SONS and drug, gists. my2t3i-aTQ-X03U i H t
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers