Pittsburg dispatch. (Pittsburg [Pa.]) 1880-1923, February 29, 1892, Page 7, Image 7

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.-THE ' PECTSBTJEG DISPATCH,' MONDAY,. FEBRUARY " 29. " 1892.
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THE GREAT SUKPKISE.
Dr. Talma?e Discourses on the Won
derful Glories of Solomon.
LIKE THE CHRISTIAN EELIGIOff.
VHxj Women Are the First to Surrender to
God and the Church. ,
A LESSON FKOM THE QUEEN OF SHIBA
rSTECIAI. TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCH.!
Brooklyn, Feb. 28. The congregation
at the Tabernacle this morning listened to a
giowing description of the magnificence of
Solomon which Dr. Talmage likened to the
glories of the Christian religion. His text
was: L Kings x., 7. "Behold, the half was
not told me."
Solomon had resolved that Jerusalem
should be the center of all sacred, regal, and
commercial magnificence. He set himself
tcfwork, and monopolized the surrounding
desert as a highway for his caravans. He
built the city of Palmyra around one of the
principal wells of the East, so that all the
lone; trains of merchandise from the .East
were obliged to stop there, pay toll, and
leave part of their wealth m the hands of
Solomon's merchants.
He manned the fortress Thapsacus at the
chief ford of the Euphrates, and put under
guard -everything that passed there. The
three great products of Palestine wine
pressed lrom the richest clusters and cele
brated all the world over; oil which in that
hot country is the entire substitute for but
ter and lard, and was pressed from the olive
branches until every tree in the country be
came an oil well; and honey which was the
entire substitute for sugar these three
great products of the country Solomon ex
ported, and received in return fruits and
precious woods and the animals of every
clime.
vSome of the Works of Solomon.
He went down to Ezion-geber and ordered
a fleet of ships to be constructed, oversaw
the w orkmen, and watched the launching of
the flotilla which was to go out on more
than a year's voyage, to bring home the
wealth of the then known world. He heard
that the Egyptian horses were large and
swift, and long-maued and round-limbed,
and he resolved to purchase them, giving
$S5 a piece for them, putting the best of these
horses in his own stall, and selling the sur
plus to foreign potentates at great profit.
He heard that there was the best of timber
on Mount Lebanon, and he sent out 1S0.OO0
men to hew down the forest and drag the
imiuer iiiruugn tne mountain gorges, to con
struct it into rafts to be floated to Joppa,
and lrom tlience to be drawn by ox-teams
25 miles across the land to Jerusalem. He
heaidthat theie were beautiful flowers In
other lands. He sent for them, planted
them in Ins on gardens, and to this very
day theie are flow ers found in the ruins of
that citv sucli as are to be found in no other
part or Palestine, the lineal descendants of
the very flowers that Solomon planted. He
heard that in foreign groves there were
birds of richest voice and most luxuiiant
w in" He sent out people to catch them
and bring them there, and he put them into
his cage.
Stand back and and see this long train of
camels coming. Hark to the orchestra!
Gaze upon the dance! Pass up to Solomon's
palace!
A Collection of Jerusalem Buildings.
Here we find ourtelves amid a collection
of buildings on which the king had lavished
the wealth of many empires. The genius of
Hiram, the architect, and of the other
artists is here seen In the long line of cor
ridors and the suspended gallery and the
approach to the throne. A laver capable of
holding 500 barrels of water on GOO brazen
ox-heads, which gushed with water and
filled the whole place with coolness and
crystalline brightness and musical splash.
bolomcu sat on a throne of ivory. At the
seating-place on the throne, on each end of
the steps, a brazen lion Why, mv friends,
in that place, they trimmed their candles
wiin snunersoi gold, and they cut their
fruits with knives of gold, and they washed
their faces in basins of gold, and tney
scooped out the ashes with shovels of gold,
and they stirred the altar fires with tongs
of gold. Gold reflected in the water! -Gold
flashing from the apparel! Gold blazing In
the crown!
or course the news or the affluence of that
place went out everywhere by every cara
i an and by wing of every ship, nntU soon
the streets of Jerusalem are crow ded with
curiosity seekers. What Is that long pro
cession approaching Jerusalem? I think
from the pomp of it there must be royalty
in the train. I smell the breath of the spicfes
which aie brought as presents, and I hear
the about of the drivers.
Tim Visit of Hie Queen or Sheba.
Cry the liews up to the palace. The Queen
of Sheba advances. Let all the people come
out to see Let the mighty men of the land
come out on the palace corridors. Let Solo
mon come down the stairs of the palace be
fore the Queen has alighted. Shake out the
cinnamon and the saffron and the calamus
and the frankincense, and pass it into the
treasure house. Take up the diamonds un
til tlicv glitter in the sun.
The Queen or Sheba alights. She enters
the palace. She washes at the bath. She sits
down at the banquet. The cupbearers bow.
The meat smokes. You hear the dash "of
wateis from the molten sea. Then she rises
from the banquet, and walks through the
conservatories, and gazes on the architec
ture, and fehe asks Solomon many strange
questions and she learns about the religion
of the Hebrews. and she then and there
becomes a servant of the Lord God.
She is overwhelmed. She begins to think
that all the spices nhe brought, and all .the
precious woods which are intended to be
turned into harps and psalteries and
into railings for the causeway be
tween the temple and the pal
aceshe begins to think that all
xnese presents amount to nothing in such a
puce.and she is almost ashamed that she has
uiougiu mem, ana sne says within herself:
"I heard a great deal about this wonderful
religion of the Hebrews, but I find It far be
jond my highest anticipations. I must add
moictlun 50 per cent to what has been
related It exceeds everything that I could
have expected. The half the half was not
IU1U IUC.
tl hy Women Embrace Religion.
Learn from this subject what a beautiful
thing it is when social position and wealth
surrender themselves to God. When re
ligion comes to a neighborhood, the first to
leceiveit are the women Some men sav It
is because thej are weak-minded. I say it
is because thej have quicker perception or
what is light, uioit ardent affection and ca
pacitv for lubllnicr emotion. Alter the
women have recen ed the gospel then all
the distressed and the poor ot both sexes,
those who ha e no iriends, accept Jesus.
La--t of all come the people of affluence and
high social position. Alas, tliat it Is so!
If there are thoc here to-day who have
been lavored of fortune, or, as I might bet
ter put it, favored or God, surrender all you
have and all you expect to be to the Lord
w ho blessed this Queen of Sheba,
I am glad that Christ has nad His Imperial
friends in all ages. I bless God that the day
is coming when rojalty will bring all its
thrones, and music all its harmonies, and
painting all its pictures, and sculpture all if
f-tatuarv. and architecture nil ft niiir onrt
conquest all its scepters; and the queens of
the earth in long lino of advance Irankin
cense filling the air and the camels laden
.T 5 d' s,na,1,1 aPP'-oacli Jerusalem, and
the gates shall be hoisted, and the great
burden of splendoi shall be lifted into the
palace or this greater than Solomon.
A Long Journey After the Troth.
Again, my subject teaches me what Is
earnestness in the search of truth. Do you
know where Sheba wast It was in Abys
sinia, or some say in tne southern part of
Arabia Felix. In either case it was a eieat
wav off from Jerusalem. To get from there
tQ Jerusalem she had to cross a country in
fested with bandits, and go across bhsterin
deserts. hy did not the Queen of Sheba
stay at home and send a committee to in
quire about this new religion, and have the
delegates report in regard to that religion
and wealth of Klug Solomon?
She wanted to see Tor herself, and hear for
herselr. She felt ihe had a soul worth 10 000
kingdoms like fclieba, and she wanted a lobe
richer than any woven by Oriental shuttles,
and she w anted a crown set w ith the Jewels
of eternity. There is an earnest seeker arter
the truth.
But there arc a great many of yon, my
friends, who do not act in that way. You all
want to get the truth, but you want the
ti uth to come to you; you do not want to go
to it. There are people who fold their arms
and say, "I am ready to become a Christian
at any time: ir I am to be saved I shall be
sived. and if I am ioIir lnst T siiuii Iia in..
All! Jeiuaftlem will never come to you; you
must go to Jerusalem. The religion or the
Lord Jesus Christ will not come to you: you
must go and gef religion.
Invoking the Queen's Condemnation.
The Bible declares it: "Tho Queea of the
South" that Is, this very woman I am
speaking of "tho Queen ot the South shall
rise up In Judgment against this generation
and condemn it; for she came from the ut
termost part of the earth to hear the wisdom
of Solomon; and, behold a greater than Solo
mon Is here." ,
God help me to breakup tho infatuation
or those people who are sitting down In
Idleness expecting to be saved. "Strive to
enter in at the strait gate. Ask, and it shall
bo given you: seek, and ve shall find; knock,
and it shall be openedto you." Take the
Kingdom of Heaven by violence. Urge on
the camels!
Again, my subject impresses me with tho
fact that religion is a surprise to any one
that gets It. This storv of the new religion
In Jersalem, aad of the glory of King Solo
mon, who was the typo of Christ that Story
rolls on and on, and Is told by every tra
veler coming back from Jerusalem.
Beligionls always a surprise to any one
that gets It The story of grace an old
story. Apostles preached It with rattle of
chain; martyrs declared It with arm or fire;
death-beds have afllrmed It wltU visions of
glory, and ministers ot religion have
sounded it through the lanes, and the high
ways, and the chapels, and the cathedrals.
It has been cut into stone with chisel, and
spread out the canvas with pencil; and It
Ins been recited In the doxology of great
congregations. , (
Appealing to One's Own Experience.
I appeal to those in this house who are
Christians. Compare tho idea you had of
the Joy or the Christian lire before you-be-came
a Christian with the appreciation or
that Joy yon have now, since you have be
come a Christian, and you are willing to
attest before angels and meu that you never
in the days of your spiritual bondage had
any appreciation of what was to come. You
are ready to-day to answer, and If I gave you
an opportunity in the midst of this assem
blage," you would speak out and say in re
gard to the discoveries you have made of
the mercy and the grace and the goodness
of God: "The half-the half was not told
me!"
Well, wo hear a good deal about the good
time that is coming to this world, when it is
to be girded with salvation. Holiness on the
bells of the horses. The lion's mane patted
Dy toe hand or a babe.
It Is the old story. Everybody tells it.
Isaiah told it, John told it, Paul told It,
Ezekiel told It, Luther told it, Calvin told it,
John Milton told It everybody tells it; and
yet and yet when the midnight shall fly the
hills, and Christ shall marshal bis great
army, and China, dashing her Idols Into the
dust, shall hear the voice of God and wheel
into line: and India destroying her Jugger
naut and snatching up herllttle children
from the Ganges, shall hear the voice of Gpd
and w heel into line; and vine-covered Italy
and all the nations of the earth shall hear
the voice of God and fall Into line
then the Church which has been tolling
and struggling through the centuries, robed
and garlanded like a bride adorned for her
husband, shall put aside her veil and look
up into the face of her Lord and King, and
say: "The half the half was not told me!"
The Greatest Surprise or All.
Well, there Is coming a greater surprise to
every Christian a greater surprise than
anything I have depicted. Heaven is an old
story. Everybody talks about it. There is
hardly a hymn in the hymn book that does
net refer to it. Children read about it in
their Sabbath school book. Aged men put
on their spectacles to study it. We say it Is
a harbor from the storm. We call it our
borne. We say it Is the house of many man
sions. We weave together all sweet, beautl'
ful, delicate, exhllarant words; we weave
them into letters, and then we spell it outin
rose and Illy and amaranth.
And yet that place is going to be a sur
prise to the most intelligent Christian. Like
the Queen or Sheba, the report has come to
us from the rar country, and many of us
have started. It is a desert march, but we
urge on the camels. What though our feet
be blistered by the way? We are hastening
to the jialace. We take all our loves and
hopes and Christian ambitions, as frank
incense and myrrh and Cdbsia to the great
King.
When Heaven Bursts Upon Cs.
We must not rest, We must not halt. The
night Is coming on, and It 13 not safe out
here in the desert. TJrgo on the camels. I
see the domes against the sky, and the
houses of Lebanon, and the temples and the
gardens. See the fountains dance in the
sun, and the gates flasii as they open to let
In the poor pilgrims.
Send the word up to the palace that we
are coming, and that we are weary of the
march of the desert. The King will come
outandsay; "Welcome to the p.tlace; bathe
in these waters, reclineon these banks. Take
this cinnamon and frankincense and myrrh
and put it upon a censer and swing it before
tne auar."
And yet, my friends, when heaven bursts
upon us it will be a greater surprise than
mat tjusiison me luroneanu we maue nice
Him! AH our Christian Iriends surrounding
us in glory! All our sorrows and tears and
sins gone by forever! The thousands of
thousands, the one hundred and fortv-and-
lour thousand, the great multitudes that no
man can number, will cry, world without
end:
me uau tne uaii was not tola us!"
HOME SECURITIES.
The Week on 'Change Brings Forward New
Features.
The past week was a cood one on the
Stock Exchange. Trading was not quite so
heavy as cailier in the mouth, but prices
were stronger and better sustained and the
field of operations broader.
With three exceptions, changes for the
week in the active shares were advances.
Closing prices yesterday as compared with
those of the previous Saturday show these
results: Exchange membeishlns advanced
$50, Pipeage, ; Philadelphia Gas, Citi
zens' Traction, H, Pittsburg Traction, 1;
Electric, Switch and Signal, ; Airbrake,
L Underground Cable, Luster and Central
Traction weretheonly weak spots, and they
only by comparison. The jumps in mem
berships wasexused by heavy traylng by
Whitney & Stephenson, and the prospective
sale of the building to them.
Sales yesterday were 1,923 shares and $1,000
bonds, as follows: Two memberships at
$500, $1,000 Duquesne bond at 100, 39 Switch
and Signal at2CVf, 279 Birmin;(uam Traction
at24K. 125Duquesne Traction at 23,150 at
24, 25 First National jlank at 181. 200 Phila
delphia Gas at 16, 100 Citizens' Traction at
6 150 Manchester at 40, 50 at39, 300 La
Nona at 29, 200 at 30, lie lore call 209 .Man
chester at 39, 50 Duquesne at 23. Sales for
the week were 3,635 shares and $66,000 bonds.
At the close ot the call the unlisted trac
tions were quoted: Birmingham, 24V bid,
offered at 24: Manchester, 33 bid, offered
ac 404; Dnqnesne, 24 bid. offered af24V.
A block of 500 shares Switch and Signal was
offered at 21, and it was probably taken dur-
inir me alteration. &
There Is little that is new to be said of the
local monetary situation the past week. In
general terms it maintained the same posi
tion as noted a week ago, with tills excep
tion that the call for loans increased to some
extent by the neater approach of spring.
Depositing maintained a high level and
checking was fair. The surplus at theend
of the week was larger than at the begin
ning, but the increase was less marked than
that of the week before. The Clearing House
report follow s: .-
Saturday's exchanges..
batnrdar'd balances .... ....
Exchanges for week ,
ltalanci'8 for the week.. .........
Kxchanxes pretlous week
Exchanges week lail ,
Total exchanges ltX to date
.?
118,532 49
2.678 41
13,00.1,(81 si;
2.CJ4.11S 13
13.761,600 33
11,784,8.57 08
1(17,689,457 2S
Turpentine Markets.
Savaksab Turpentine firm at 41c Rosin
firm at $1 351 40.
Charleston Turpentine steady at 41c.
Rosin firm; good strained, $1 30.
New York Rosin inactlvo but steady;
strained, common to good, $1 301 32K. Tur
pentine nrm out quiet at zxt43c.
WiLMixciToir Spirits of turpentine firm at
40c Rosin firm; strained, $1 15; good strained,
$1 20. Tar steady at $1 30 Crude turpentine
steady; hard, $1 00; yellow dip, $1 90; Virginia,
$190.
Tho Coffee Markets.
Baltimore. Feb. 27. Coffee steady; Rio car
goes, fair, 17Jc; No. 7, 15c
New York, Feb. 27. Coffee options opened
barely steady, 10 to 20 points down; closed
steady, 5 to 20 down. Sales, 14.500 bags, in
cluding: March. 13.65gU.75c; April. 13.20
13.25c; May, 12.8312.95o: June, 12.6012.65c;
July, 12.55c; September. 13.65c; December,
12.05c 'boot Rio dull and nominal; No. 7, 15c.
. Wool Markets.
St. Louis Wool Receipts none: ship
ments, 26,000 pounds; the coarser grades of
bright wool still continue to be most
wanted, but there is little doing in any
grades; bright medium ranges 1922fc;
braid to coarse. 1420c; fine light, loilc:
line heavy, 13tSlSc
MCK HEADACHECarter,f utile Liver Full.
SICK HEADACHE.
SICK HEADACHE
'Carter's Little Liver Plus.
'Carter's Little Liver Pill.
MCK HEADACHE-Carter,, UHIt LlTer Pllu.
del-40-irwrsu
FEATURES OF TRADE.
The Week's Volume of Business in
Produce.Lines Very Light.
HEAVY LOSSES OP EGG DEALERS.
Calfskins and Sheepskins in Active Demand
and Hides Dull.
BOSTON VIEW OF F00TWEAB TEADE
Office of The DisrATCH. I
Pittsburg, Satubdat, February W. t
In general produce lines there have been
few new developments In the past week.
Vegetables of all kinds are slow ac about
the same prices as hare prevailed for a
month or more, and are lower than they
have been these many years at this season.
A year ago potatoes, apples and cabbage
were In brisk demand at more than double
present prices. During the week past game
has disappeared fiom the market, and sup
ply, of poultry has been scarcoly up to de
mand, with prices a shado higher.
Tropical fruits are in better demand than
they were a week ago, and prices are also
better,, particularly i for' fancy Florida
oranges. At'the beginning of tho week the
egg market was completely demoralized
owing to large receipts from the Ohio Val
ley and Tennessee. There were sales for a
day or two below15c per dozen in job lots.
The dealer who bought a week ago at 20c
per dozen. and upward must have lost at
least 5c per dozen, and some dealers report
much larger losses. In the past two or three
days the tide has turned, and sales were
made to-day (Saturday) at 4c per dozen
above the lowest point, and still eggs are not
apove one-nair the price reacueu'in me
early part of February. . j
In the Cereal Lines.
It will be seen by reference to the home
market Column that receipts of grain and
hay for the week past have been unusually
heavy. There were received during "the
week 3C5 carloads, or an Increase of 2 cars
over receipts of the previous week. The
transactions on call at the Grain Exchange
for the week amounted to the sale of a single
carload. With such large receipts it was a
natural consequencerthat markets should be
heavy and slow with the field in favor of
the buyer. i
Corn and oats are a shade "lower than they
were at the beginning of the week and are
weak at the decline. Mlllfeed has also
reached a lower level. Wheat and flour are
steady and rye brings a shade better prices
than it aid a. week arro. Receints of hay con
tinue to be In excess of demand and maikets
are quiet.
Hides and Calfskins. ,
We have to report continued dullness in
this department of trade. While prices re
main nominally the same as a week ago, the
seller Is more eager, as a rule, than the
buyer. Calfskins are moving freely and
stock in hands of dealers is unusually light.
Sheepskins are also In active demand and
aie picked up as fast as they arrive. -
Following are prices paid by dealers and
tanners for stock delivered here:
No. 1 green salted steers, 60 lbs and over,
o. 1 green salted cows, all weights ,
No. 1 green sailed hides, 40 to 60 Ibi
No. 1 green salted hides, 25 to 40 lbs
No. 1 green salted bulls ,
No. 1 green salted calfskins
No. 1 green salted Teal kips
No. 1 green salted runner kips
Sheepskins
Tallow, prime
4
4
7
5
4
2575c
Reduction for No. 2 stock, 1 cents per lb
on steei-s and light hides; 1 cent on bulls and
2 cents on calfskins. -
Footwear in Boston.
Following is the Boston HertMCa resume of
the boot and shoe trade for the week:
The movement in boots and shoes Is im
proving noticeably, though this improve
ment is rather slow. There is a good vol
ume of trade here In person, and this trade
Is taking samples of fall goods. It is also
buying case lots of boots for the trade of
next season, or, rather, placing orders for
them. But the trade Is working very con
servatively, and buying only where it Is
certain that the bottom of the market is
reached. It is believed that the lowest
point of the depression has been reached,
however, and that there is some improve
ment, though coming very gradually..
The above is the position or the trade here,
and it also extends into the West and down
into the Southwest, till the cotton belt is
reached. In the cotton States salesmen find
the trade especially poor, with the financial
condition ot those who iwould' be buyers
rather bad. The features' of the enormous
cotton crop a ci op forwhlch there is no
market, except at figures that aie ruinous
to the glowers are to blame tor this de
pressed condition or the southern market
lor boots and shoes. Bnt even In the South
the reeling is that the worst Is known, and
its effect has already been .discounted. So
that any turn In the maiket, even In that
part of the country, will be for the better
lrom this time out.
In New England, the manufacturers of
special goods are having the best ot the
trade. These goods they are contracting tp
make at low prices, and their factories are
running. Above all, a small profit can be
seen. On such a principle the trade of this
year will have a run.
SATURDAY'S PRODUCE MARKETS
CHICAGO The wheat market had a
weak tendency to-day. Wheat opened ex
tremely dull. For a time prices held quite
steady to the closing figures of yesterday,
but the feeling gradually grew weak, and
when a few items of bearish news came in
the bulls stampeded and prices dropped.
Cables were somewhat conflicting. The
trade seemed hesitating and cautious. Longs
seemed to feel uncertain of their ground.
Pork had a sharp break and showed a loss
of 25c at the close. Wheat was pattlv re
sponsible for this, but a sudden raid by a
piomlnent speculator in the latter part ot
the session aided in the depression. There
were one or two feeble rallies. Lard and
ribs were less affected and show only Imma
terial declines.
The leading lutures ranged as follows, as cor
rected by John M." Oakley & Co.. 45 Sixth street,
members of the Chicago Board of Trade:
Open- High- Low- Clos-
Abticles. ing. est. est. log.
Wheat, No. 2.
February f 89)i f 89 $ 88 t 88
May 82 92X J0X 80
Corn. KO. 2.
February. .. 41 41 40H 40X
Mrch 4 4H 41 41
May 42X 42X 41A 42
Oatr. No. 2.
February 29 S8V 28V :8W
Mar- ,. 3l 31H a)K S30JJ
Mess Pork.
February 11 25 11 27j n 02 "11 0o"
May..- 1150 1152) 11 27j 1130
Lard.
February 8 40 6 42 tZIU 6 40
May 6 72!f 6 55 6 50 B 52
SHORT KIRS.
February S 77& S 80 5 72 8 75
May 5 90 5 92f 5 85 5 87Jf
Cash quotations were as follows: Flour
steady and unchanged; No. 2 spring
wheat, 88c; No. 3 spring wheat, 82c:
No. 2 red, 92c; No. 2 corn, 405c;
No. 2 oats. 28Jic; No. 2 white, SOKc: No.
3 white. 29c: No. 2 rye, 84Vc; JJo. 2 bar
ley, 565Sc; No. 3, r. o. b., 352c: No. 4, f.
o. b., 3:40o; No. 1 flaxseed, 99c: -prime
timothy seed, $1 20I 23. Mess pork, per
barrel, $11 05. Lard, per 100 lbs, $6 40.,
Short ribs sides, (loose) $5 72J5 75; dry'
salted shoulders, (boxed) $4 755 50; short
clear sides (boxed). $6 25. Whisky Dis
tillers' finished goods, per gal.. $1 14. Sugars
Cutloaf, 55JJc; granulated, 4Jc; standard
A4c
On the produce exchange to-day the bntter
market was steady: fancy creamery, 27K
28fc; fine Western, 2527c; ordinary, 2124c;
selected dairies, 2225c; oidlnary, 1821c
Eggs, 1616Jc.
NF.W YORK Flonr dull andheaw; sulns
16,450 barrels. Cornmeal dull: yellow West
ern, 2631c Wheat Spot Irregular, weak
and quiet: No. 2 led,. $1 04J1 ao store
and elevator, $1 C7J1 oSVo afloat,
$1 07Vi o- b.; No. S Ted,$l 00 1 00VT; un
graded red. 82VJc$l 06; No. 1 Nortnern,
$1 051 06J6 No-1 hard, $1 07&1 0 No!
2 Nortnern, $1 0 Options No. 2 red, Feb
ruaiy,$l 04; March, $1 04l 04, tlosing
nt $1 04U: April, $l 04i 04. closing at
$1 04$ May, $1 02 13-lbl 03V, closing at
$1 0; June. $1 OlJgl 01, closing, $1 01U:
Jnly, 99994c, closing, 99c. Rye firm and
quiet; Western, 97ffi97c Barley dull; No. 2
Milwaukee, 6670c Corn Spot, firmer and
moderately active: No. 2, 49o. elevator;
60c. afloat: ungraded mixed, S52c; No.
3, 4849c; steamer mixed, 4SJ4c Op
tions unchanged to o np. dull, closing
steady; February, 49Wc; March, 49V49c,
closing, 49c: April, 4913-1650c. closing
May, 49e!c, closing, 49Jc; July,
closing, 43Jic Oats Spot, dull
Mia weaker, options dull and easier;
Febrnarv, 36):c; March, 3G)c; ,May, 37c;
No. 2 white, March, 38Vc; mixed Western,
3637Kc; white do. S741c Hay quiet ana
film: snipping, 65cgoou to choice, 7590c
Hops dull mid weak; State, common to
choice, 2025c; Paclflo coast, 1925c Tallow
steady; city ($1 for packages). 4 11-16C Eggs
quiet and weak; Western, 16l7c. Hides
in moderate demand and steady; wet salted
New Orleans selected, 4575 -ponnrts, 68c;
Texas selected, 50060 pounds. 68c. Pork
active and Ann; mess, 9 5010 50: extra
prime, $10 00; cut meats dull and steady;
pickled bellies, 6J6Xc; do shoulders, 5c;
hams, 9c; middles, dull short clear, $6 70.
Lard lower and dull; Western steam op
tions, March, $8 74; May, $0 826 83, closing
at $6 84; July, IS 9. Butter In moderate de
mand, steady; Western dairy, 1823c; do
creamerv, 21S0V$c; do factory, 162Je; El
gin, 3031c. Cheese In fair demand and
strong; pan skims, 610Kc; full skims,
35c.
PHILADELPHIA Flour Prices steady,
but quiet. Wheat opened lower; No. 2 red,
elevator, $1 02V; No. 2 led, February, March
and April, $1 0K1 02V: May. $1 011 OIK.
Corn Market llim; So. 4 mixed, track, 46c;
No. 3 mixed, track. 4Sc: steamer, in export
I elevator, 4SJc; No. 2 high mixed, In grain
uopuc, ouc;no. amixeu, in export emvnwr,
49c: No. 2 mixed, February, t9Vi9Kc:
March, 49&49c: April and May, 419Kc.
Oats Carlotaquiet;No.2 mixed, 34c; No. 3
white, 36Vc; No. 2 white, 37c: No. 2 white,
February, 3737Mc; March, 37338c; April
and Mav, 33Xe36c. Eggs dull and weak;
Pennsylvania flists, 17c. ,
BALTIMORE Wheat weak; No. 2 red
spot, $1 Oiei 02Jjf the month, March and
May, $1 aiQl tol June, $1 01i asked;
steamer No 2 red, 98o bid. Corn ensy;
inlxod spot, the month and March, 4949Vfc:
April and May, 4949lic: steamer mixed, 47
7Kc. Oats dull: No. 2 whlte'Western, i7K
.J8c; No. 2 mixed Western. :i636Kc Kj a
quiet and teadv;-No. 2, 96K97c. lfav very
Him; good to choice timothy. $13 5014 50.
Provisions steady and unchanged. Butter
steady and unchanged. Eggs .firm, 16c
Buffalo Cattle Receipts, 171 loads
through. 3 sales: market steady for good
butchers' grades, others dull. Hois Re
ceipts, 71 loads through, 20 sales: market
dull but steady: heavy grades, $5 055 10;
packers and medium grade9, $5 0065 05.
Sheep and lamb; Receipts, 40 loads through,
12 sales; maiket strong and firm; sheep,
extra Jancy, $5 756 20: good to choice, $5 40
5 65: fair to good$4 755 40. Lambs, good
to extra native, $7 057 25; fair to good do $6;
April, $9.
NEW OKLEANS-Suear steady: open ket
tle fnlly fair at215-16g3c; fair to good fair;2J
2c: common to good
centrifugals off white.
common, iW(B"W
3 13-1623c; cuoice
yellow clarified. 33 11-16: prune do. 3U
3 9-16c; off do, 3i 7-16c; second, 2K03kc
Molasses Open Kettle, no sound goods offer
ing; fermenting, 1522c; centrifugals steady;
strictly prime, 19c; good prime, 15617c; fair
to prime, 1013c; common to good common,
ST. LOUIS Flour dull and unchanged.
Wheat No. 2 red, cash, 92o; May closed at
925c; Julv. 85e. Corn No. 2 cash, S52c;
Maich, 36Kc; May, 3737Jo. Oats
lower; No. 2 cash, 30c; May, aijic. Bar
ley dull; samDle lots of Iowa sold at 56c.
Butter unchanged. Eggs lower at 13c. Pro
visions dull and easy. Pork. $11 50 for new,
$9 25 for old. Lard, $6 30Q6 35.
CINCINNATI Flour In moderate demand.
Wheat easier; No. 2 red, 96Kc Corn steady;
No. mixed, 41o. Oats easier; No. 2 mixed,
32J433e. live easier and lower: No. 2, 89
91c. Pork dull at $11 50. Laid dull and
weaker at $6 25. 'Balk meats 'neglected at
$5 7505 85. Bacon easy at $8 69K- Butter in
lair uemarjd. Cheese in light demand.
MILWAUKEE Flour neglected. Wheat
weak; No. 2 spring, 85c; No. 1 Northern, 91c.
Corn almost nominal; No. 3, 37. Oats eas
ier; No. 2 white, 31c. Bailey Arm; No. 2, 63c:
sample, S853c. Rye steady; No. 1, 85c. Pio
Visionsdull. Pork, $11 32. Lard, $6 50.
DULUTH-Wheat No. lhard cash, 85c;
February, 85Vc; Mav, 90Jc; No. 1 Northern,
cash, 84Kc; February, 84c: May, SSTo: No. 2
Northern cash, 77c: No. 3 Northern, 72c: re
jected, 60c: on track No. 1 hard, 86$c; No. 1
.nortuern, tjytc.
TOLtSDO Wheat active and lower; No. 2
cash, 95c: February, 95c; May.:95Kc, July,
90c: Corn dull and steady; cash, 40c; May,
43!c. Oats quiet; cash, 32c Rye dull; cash,
86c.
MINNE FOLIS Wheat February closed
at S4e: May. opening 87c, highest 8lr, low
est 85e, closing 85c; on track No. 1 hai d.
S6c; No. 1 Koithern, 85c; No. 2 Northern, 79
82c.
.KANSAS CITT Wheat, corn and oats
nothing doing: no sales. Esgs Moderate
supply and steady at 13c. Butter scarce;
advancing; creamery, 2228c; roll, 1420c.
WALL STREET'S CLOSE.
The General List Dull Some Effects of the
Richmond and West Point Reorganiza
tion A Sympathetic Bis In Jersey Cen
tral Railroad Bonds Active.
New York, Feb.. 27. The stock market in
the main was strong to-day, but remained
very dull for the general list, and there were
only four active stocks St. Paul, Reading,
Delaw are and Hudson and Denver and Rio
Grande preferred, whose combined opera
tions were over one-half jor the total busi
ness transacted. The strength in the last
two was, also, the one feature of the market,
though the other Coalers were In close sym
pathy, and the Grangers, while dull, pre
sented a very firm front.
The continued evening-up of short con
tracts accounted for the strength of the gen
eral list, but there was new buying of a
most pronounced sort in tho two stocks,
which gave character to the trading. Dela
ware and Hudson scored a remarkable gain,
rising from 133 to 13S4 and closing at the top
figure, while Denver and Rio Grande, pre
lerred, which was bought by interests
which have been bulling the stock
f6r some time, rose from 49 to 51,
also closing at the best price.
Jersey Central responded to the strengtn in
Delaware and Hudson by rising again
above UO.and Lackawannaand Reading n ere
hot so strong. Rumors in i egard to the re
organization sent Richmond and West
Point preferred up 1 per cent, and affected
the bonds favorably; hut the stocks were
very dull with the rest or the market.
The general list opened with irregular but
slight changes from last night's figures, and
a slow but'steady improvement occurred up
to tli 6 time of the publication or the bank
statement, which showed a heavy loss in
specie and the surplus reserve, though its
influence was momentary. The close' was
active and strong nt the best prices of the
day. The final changes are generally small
fractional gains, but Delaware and Hudson
is np5Vi, Denver and Rio Grande preferred
2, Jersey Central 1H and Lackawanna 1 per
cent.
The following table shows the prices of active
stocks on thelNew York Stock Exchange vesterday.
Corrected dailyforTHE DrsPATCH by Whitney A
STEPHENSON, oldest Pittsburg members of the
New York Stock Exchange. 57 Fourth avenue:
Clos
ing bid.
Open
lug.
HIKh
Low
est.
est.
Am. Cotton Oil
Am. Cotton Oil. Did....
34X
"sai
".isii
34K
"83Ji
34J4
3IJ
65S
83
92V
90
Wi
MUX
Am. Surar Rennlne Co
83tf
"3SH
Am. Sugar ReanlnKCo.,pfd:
Atch.. Top. AS. F... ......
39J4
90
60 H
Canadian Paclflc.
Canada Southern
Central of lcw Jersey ....
Chesapeake and Ohio
C. &0., istpfd
C. AO.. Mpfd
Chicago Gas Trust.
C, Bur. AUuincT
C, MII. ASt. Paul
a. Mil. ASt. Paul, pfd....
0., Rock LAP
a, St. P.M. A O.
C. A Northwestern
C. A Northwestern, pfd...
c; a, c. a i :
C. C C. AI. pfd
Col. Coal A Iron
Col. A Hocking Val
Del., Lack. A West
Del. A Hudson
Denver A Rio Grande
Den. A Hlo Grande, pfd....
f 11 tT i
su
ton
eon
!
"UX
ion
24,
61
61
"78
"105
78?4
127H
HSU
47V
H6
"roii
61
"78-
01
42
78
10m
7SH
126
BSH
47H
116
144
70S
96
36
31fc,
KV4
138)a
18
511s
V4
105
26 54
76S
1235
13K
106
39
614
MJi
107
19
113V
185?
74
104 H
78X
127H
ma
73
12s
so
47
88U
47H
116 H
76
lie
"ibh
31 S
180M
31 h
15DH
1MJ4
143
133M
IS5S
blh
7!4
105J4
26H
"th
-.ft"
"46"
6IK
93S
107X
hi"
133
17
49 S
17
49)i
lliinols Central.. '.!.""""
t'A
105U
105
2S
76K
"tin
"ivi
eH
9U
1OT,S
iiYii
Lake Krle A western
Lake Erie A Western, pfd.
Lake Shore A M. S
Louisville A Nashville
Michigan Central
Mobile A Ohio
Missouri Pacific
National Cordage Co
National Cordage Co., pfd.
National Lead Trust
New York Central
N. Y., CAM. L
N. Y.. C. A St. L., istpfd.
N.-Y., C. ASt. I,., 2d pld.
N.Y.. L. E. AW
26K
llili
33S
61
94?
WW
iii"
V40
31K
31
73
49i
aw
31
3154
N. Y..L. E. AW.,pref.
N.Y.AN. E
N. Y.. O. AW,
.Norfolk A Weitern
73
721,
4954
,2J4
72V
49H'
20H
14
49
IMi
678
22
21
37V
MX
25
62
188
1654"
431
103),
112
105
VH
13U
29
m
37H
76i
49
33
82,
4i
20,
Norfolk A Western, pfd
North American Co
Ndrthem Pacific
Northern Paclflc pfd..,
Ohio Mississippi....?..
V7i
231,
67K
15
.23
23M
67M
.22J4
Bin
22J4
Oregon Improvement
racincJiall
Philadelphia A Reading.
P.. C'., C. A St. I,
P., CC. A St. L.. pfd...
Pullman Palace Car
Richmond A H. P. T...
681,
69X
58
1S8K
1BH
lfS'i
77
16M
76
id3
112
14
46J
MM
87,
37
nyi
60
32K
&
Richmond A W. P. T., ofd
70
'ifi'sj
1UH
VH
46
ai
87H
37
76J4
50
325S
tax
oi, laut si'uium ,
St. Paul A Duluth, pfd...,
St. Panl., Minn, A Man..
Texas Paclflc ,
Union Pacific
"U abash
Wabash, jird ,
Western Union
Wheeling AL.iE
Wheeling A L. E.,pfd
DIs.'A Cattle Fd. Trust...,
National Lead Co
National Lead Co., pfd....
103541
li-'Jn
VH
46)
"aji
88
37K
7
MM
33
82M
Metal Markets.
New York, Feb. 27. Pie iron quiet and
easy; American. $15 7517 75. Copper" quiet;
lake, $10 60 10 65. Lead dull but firm; do
mestic, $ 2ct 25. Tin quiet and easy.
Straits, $19 6019 05.
THE HOME MARKETS.
Eggs and Elgin Creamery Butter Are
' Still Tending Upward.
POULTETIS SCAECEAND FIRMEB.
Receipts of Grain and Ilaj Exceed Demand
and Markets Weak.
COFFEE AND CANNED GOODS STRONG
Officj: of. The Dispatch,
PiTTSBPEo, Saturday, February 27.
CorramtY Produce Jobbing prices Eggs
are again advanced lo per dozen, and
job lots sell readily at 18c, against '15o
per dozen in the early part of the week. 'All
signs point to a still further advance the
week to come. Choice Elgin creamery but
ter and high grade cheese are firmly held
and future changes are likely to be toward a
higher level. General produce Is still slug
gish, with prices nominally unchanged.
Poultry Is In short supply of late, but tho
demand is 'not at all brisk, so that prices
stand as they have been for the week past.
There is a steady Improvement in the de
mand lor seeds, and prices aie firm at our
quotations.
APPLES-tl T32 50 per barrel.
Butter Creamery Elgin, 33c: 0S brands. 28
30c: eoinmnn country batter, 17l8c; choice coun-'
trv roll. 23aiic.
BEASE-New York and Michigan pea. 1 00(32 00;
marrowfat. t2 1S2 25; Lima beans, 44KcID;
hand picked medium, tl 8'1 !K.
Beeswax Choice, 3032clu: low grades, 223
,25c. .
Buckwheat Flour-Ncw, 2W63Kc -a m.
CuiESE-Ohlo cholee; HMl-c; New York
cheese, 1212Kci Ltmburger, l313c: Wisconsin
swelt7er, full cream, 13$iai4$c; Imported sweltzer,
2623c
ClDER-CountrvcIder,$3505 0O per barrel; sand.
rennea, & u-Jtqw ou: crao ciuer. ? og w.
Cranberries Per box, : ou2 60: per barrel.
f MOM w.
EGOS Strletlv fresh nearhv stock. 1SS19C.
Feathers Extra live geese, 5758c: No. 1, 48
50c ? lb: mixed lots. 3940c. ,
Dried Fruits Peaches, halves, 5$c: evapo
rated annlpg. Hft9n anrlrots. fv&llc: blackberries.
!56c: raspberries. lS(a)185c; huckleberries, 7c; Cal-
liornia peaches, 7si9c
IIo-jet J. ew crop, white clover, llVc; Cali
fornia honey. 1213c W lb.
Maple syrup 75Soc j gallon. " ,
Maple sue .r-10c f, lb.
Poultry Alive Chickens, 703130c a nair: large,
6570-, medium: live turkeys. Hl2c ? lb; ducks.
KHasSc a pair: live geese, tl 15 a pair: dressed
chickens, 12lSc 5 ft; dressed turkeys, 1718c ? lb ;
urr-sseu nucks, lomiisc e ID,
Potatoes Carload lots, on track, 3540c: from
store, 4045c a bushel: Southern sweets, si 501 75
a barrel: Jersevs, $3 0033 25.
SjEEDS Western recleanedmedlum clover, job
bing atS6 25; inara noth at $6 40; tlmothv, SI 50 for
prime and fl 55 for choice; blue grass. $2 652 80:
orchard grass, II 75; millet, $1 00: German, tl 25;
Hungarian. 31 lo: flue lawn, 25c & lb; seed buck
wheat. $1 40(31 50.
Tallow Country. 4c; city rendered, 5c.
Tropical Fruits Lemons, fancv, Messina,
$3 7o4 00( Florida oranges, 2 252 75 a box;
Valencia oranges. (4 004 50 a box; bananas, fl 50
I 75 firsts, 31 00(31 25 good seconds, per bunch:
Malaga grapes, $8 00(310 00 a half barrel; pineapples.
icjo,jjc apiece: l'erbianxiates. 44oc per pouna;
laver figs, 1214c per pound
Veoetahlks Cabbage. t3 0C5 00 a hundred;
yellow Danver onions. $2 25(32 50 a barrel; toma
toes. $3 00(33 25a crate: celery, ij30c per dozen;
turnips. 9Ck'(S41 00 a barrel; new Bermuda potatoes,
$3 00 a barrel
Groceries.
1 The movement in this line shows some im
provement of late, but prices fail to improve.
Coffee and canned goods aro the firm factors
of trade.
Green COFTEE-Fancy, 2223c: choice Rio, 21K
224c; prime. 20c; low grade Rio. 18lc: old
Government Java, 2729c: Maracalbo, 2!225c:
Mocha, 2329c: Santos. 215(322)c; Caracas, ZSH
245c; La Guavra, 21.422)ic.
Roasted (In papers) Standard brands, 19.65c;
high grades. 23.40265c: old Government Java,
bulk, 3153333c; Maracalbo. 2224c: Santos. 19K3
25c: pcaberry. 26Kc; choice Rio, 2l5?c: prime Rio,
20Sc; goodltlo. 195$c: ordlnarv. 1718c.
Spices (whole) Cloves. 1012c: allspice. 10c;
cassia. 8c; pepper, lie: nutmeg. 70S0c. '
Petroleum (Jobbers' prices) 110 test. 6c:
Ohio, 120. 7sc: headlight. 150 test, 6!c: water
white, 7i(38c; globe, 14314c: elalne. 13c; carna
dlne, lie; rovatlue, 14c: red oil, 10)illc; purity,
14c: olelne, 12c.
Miners' Oil No. 1 winter, strained, 39Wc per
gal.: summer, 35(337c; lard oil, 53355c.
Syrup Corn syrup, 2528c; choice sugar syrup,
34ffiW6c; prime sugar syrup, 3032c; strictly prime,
2830C.
jn. O. Molasses Fancy new crop. 40(342c!
choice, 4041c; old crop, 3C38c; N. O. syrup.
44ffi0c.
Soda Bi-carb, in kegs, 353-lc: bl-carb. In Ks,"
55,c; bl-carb. assorted packages, 5&6c; sal soda,
in kegs. l4c; do granulated, 2c.
CA3DLES-Star. lull weight, 9c; stearlne. per
set. 8Xc;parafnne ll(312c.
Rice Head Carolina, 6)63,'c; choice, SJffjMXc;
Louisiana, 535Yc.
Starch Pearl, 4c: corn starch. 5X6!c; gloss
starch. WSi'fc.
Foreign Fruits Laver raisins. $2 00; London
layers. $2 25: Muscatels. 41 75; California Muscatels,
$1 40(31 60; Valencia, 56c; Ondara Valencia. 6
7c; sultana. 8(3I3c: currants, 345c: Turkey
prunes. 445)ic;"French prunes, 339Sc:cocoanut8,
100, 36 00; almonds. Lan., ? 11), 20c; do Ivlca, 17c;
do shelled, 50c; walnuts. Nap.. 13I4c; Slcllv Al
berts. He; Smyrna figs, 12Y313C; new dites, 55Jic:
Brazil nuts. 7c: necansl3(314c: citron. rh. 21rt7l2-2e i
leuiuu peri, iuc y 10; orauge peel, izc.
' Tlnrvn T,tt.. k ....Iha .lf..1 ,1001.. 1....
evaporated. 6$(38c; jieaches, evaporated, pared,
l&3)c: neaches. California, cvanorated. nnnared.
8W9)ic: cherries, pitted, l!c: cherries, unpltted,
6c; raspberries, evaporatad. 17(318c; blackberries,
445jc; huckleberries, 7c.
Sugars Cubes, 4'c: powdered, 4fc: granulated.
4Mc; confectioners', 4Jc: soft white.37iii34c; vel
low, choice. 363Kc; yellow, good, 3)3$c; yel
low, fair, 3(3354c.
Pickles Medium, bbls (1,200), $4 25; medium,
half bbls (600). $2 65.
SALT-No. 1 ?!bbl. $1 20; No. L extra, U bbl,
$1 10; dairy, "$ bbl, $1 a); coarso crvstal, per bbk
1 20: Higglns' Eureka. 4-bu sacks, 32 80; Hlgglns'
Eureka, 16 14-lb packets. $3 00.
Canned Goods Standard peaches, $1 7S1 90;
Ms. $1 30(31 40: extra peaches. f2 0 2 10: pie
peaches, 85J0c; finest corn, Jl 25(31 50; Hfd. Co.
corn, tl aSl 10: red cherries. $1 031 10; Lima
beans, tl 35; soaked do. 85c; stringed do, 80i3S5c;
marrowfat peas. 90c(3;$l 10; soaked peas. 6075c;
pineapples, fl 2031 30; Bahama do, $2 00: damson
Slums, f 1 00: green gages, tl 35; egg plums, f 1 00;
allfornia apricots, $1 852 CO: California pears,
t21O32 30;do greengages, $18-5: do egg plums,
fl 85: extra white cherries. t2 75(32 85; raspberries;
tl 15(31 25; strawberries. 95cl 10; gooseberries,
fl 00(31 05: tomatoes. 9095c; salmon, l-Ib 'cans,
fl 30(&l SO; blackberries. 8Jc: succotash. 2-lb caus.
soaked, 90c ; do green, 2-IB cans, fl 25(31 50; corn
beer, 2-lt cans, tl 65(31 70; 1-tb cans, fl 20; baked
beans, fl 401 55: loostcrs, 1-lb cans, f2 25: mack
erel, 1-tb cans, boiled, fl 50: sardines, domestic,
'as. ft bifl 10: Hs. $3 50; sardines. Imported, Ms.
fl 50(31 CO: sardines. Imported, Us, fi8 00; sar
dines, mustard, 33 40; sardines, spiced, $3 50.
Fish Extra No. 1 bloater mackerel, f24 CO per
bbl: extra No. ldo. mess. t20 00: No. 2shorcmack-
erel, 518 00: No. 2 large mackerel, 117 00; No. 3
large mackerel, f 15 50 : 2i o. 3 small mackerel. flO 00.
Herrings-Spilt. $6 50; lake, S3 05 a 100-Ib bbl.
White fish, f 5 00 100-Ib half bbl. Lake trout,
to 50? half bbl. Finnan baddies, 10c H lb. Ice
land Halibut. 12c J5 lb. Pickerel, halt bbl. f 4 00:
quarter bbl. f I 60. IlolUud herring, 75c. Walkoff
herring. 90c.
IIATMLAL $4 755 00.
Grain, Flour and Feed.
There were no sales on Saturday's call at
the Grain Exchange. Recclpts.as bulletined,
17 cars. By Pittsbuip, Fort Wayne and Chi
cago Railway 1 car of ear corn, 3 of oats, 5
of hay, 3 of flour, 1 of barley. By Pittsburg,
Cincinnati and St. Louis 3 cars of hay, 1 of
flour. By Baltimore and Ohio 1 car of corn,
3 of hay. By Pittsburg and Lake Eri6 1 car
of oats, 1 of wheat, 1 of 'malt. By Pittsburg
and Western 1 car of wheat, 1 of flour, I or
hay. Receipts for the week ending Febru
ary 26. 365 cars, against 283 cars the previous
week. In this week's receipts wheat had k
the lead, the total amount bulletined being
82 carloads. Hay was next.in the list, witn
a. total of 69 cars. The cereal situation Is
quiet all along the line, with markets In buy
ers' favor.
Following quotations are for carload -lots on
track. Dealers charge an advance on these prices
iruin siurei
AVheat No. 2 red. 99c to fl 00; No. 3 red. 94c to
Coun No. 2 yellow ear, 47(348c; high mixed
ear, 465447cr mixed ear. 4543c: No. 2 yellow
shell. 444(345c; nigh mixed shelled, 434lc; mixed
shelled, 4343Mc.
OATS No. 1 oats.35.'336Kc; No. 2white, 3536c;
extra No. 3 oats, 353c: mixed oats, 3l.J4Jc.
1 Western. 911392c.
flLOUB (loouing prices ranci rpnn
line prices ranci tnrlno- natenb.
istents.
(5 25(35 50: fancy winter patent. $3 25(3? 50: fancy
ntralirht winter. S5 0Qr35 3i: fanrY Atmirht snrlntr
S3 15f&i 40; clear winter. $4 75(35 00; stralgnt
XXXX bakers', fl 60(31 85. Itve flour, fl 75(35 00.
MILLFFED No. 1 white middlings. $19 0U320 00
per tou: No. 2 white middlings. $17 Jftgla CO: brown
middlings, f 16 00(317 00: winter wheat bran, f 17 003
17 60: Chop teed. I7 0020 00.
HAY-Baled timothy, choice, $13 00U 25; No, 1.
fl2 0012 a: No. 2, flO 5(U 00: clover hay, fll50
12 CO: loose from wagon. $13 00(315 00, accoidlng
to quality: packing hav, S3 00(39 5u,
Stka-w Oats, f7 007 5u; wneat, (3 00(3050; rye,
Provisions. .
The expected rise In hog products failed
to materialize, -though beg continue firm
and are .relatively much, higher than pi od
nets. Skinned hams are a shade lower, ac
cording tb the action of pork packers at the
Saturday meeting, and beef fiats are ad
vanced lc, as quotations will disclose.
Sngar cured hams, large
Sugar cured hams, medium
Sugar cured haras, small
Sugar cured Calliornla hams....
Sugar cured b. bacon
Sugar cured skinned hams, large
Sugar cured skinned hams, medium. ,
Sugar cured shoulders... , ,,..,
Sugar cured boneless shoulders
Sugar cured skinned shoulders
Sugar cured bacon shoulders
Sugar cured dry-salt shoulders
Sugar cured,' beef, xounds
Buxar cured, beef, setts,..,.,
10.
9)1
10
10
7
8
IX
6H
V
.Sugar cured, beef, flats
H.icon, clear sides, 301b
Bacon, clear bellies, 201bs
Dry salt clear sides, 3016s ave'g
Dry salt clear s Hies, ;o lbs ave'g
Mesa pork, heavy
Mess pork, family
Lard, refined in tierces
Lard, reflned In one-half bbls ,
Lard, reflned In 60-lb talis .'.
Lard, reflned In 2u-tbpall3.
Lard, reflned in 50-lb cans..... ,
Lard, refined In 3-lb tin palls...'.....
Lard, reflned la 6-1 b tin palls
Lard, refined in 10-lb tin palls
6V
in
3 0i
13 00
Mi
5.
5a
5
as
ex
6
LIVE STOCK MARKETS.
Receipts and Shipments at East Liberty and
AH Other Stock Yards,
Officf. of The Dispatch, 1
PrrrsBUna, Saturday; February 27.
Cattle Receipts, -LOOS head; shipmehts,
729 head; nothing doing; all through con
signments; no cattle shipped to New York
to-day. '
Hoos Receipts, 3,250 head; shipments, 2,600
head; market slow; all grades. $4 905 20;
eight cars hogs shipped to New York to-day.
Sheep Receipts, 1,200 head; shipments, 600
head; market slow at yesterday's prices.
, , By Teletrraph.
Chicago Cattle Receipts, 2.500 head; ship
ments, 1,500 head; market steady at yesrer.
dnv's nuotntlons. nosrs Receipts. 25.000
head; shipments, 10,000 head; market slower;.
heavy and butchers' weights. $4 75Q4 80;
light, $4 40465. Sheep Receipts, 1,000 nead;
suininnnts, ,1WU ncnu: mai set sieuuy: rwe.
$3 504 40; mixed, $4 604 90; wethers. $4 50
4 75; Westerns, $4 855 40; lambs, $5 606 50.
St. Lonls Cattle Receipts, 600 head; ship
ments, 600 head: market steady; fair to good
native steers, $2 80t 40; lair to good Inditm
and Texas steeis,$3 004 10. Hogs Receipts.
2,400 head: shipments, 2,200: market weak;
lair to prime heavy, $4 t04 80; mixed or
dinary to good, $4 104 70; light fair to best,
$4 504 75. Sheep Receipts, 1,300 head;ship
ments, none; market steady; fair to desirable
muttons, $4 005 75.
Omaha Cattlo Receipts, 2,250 head. The
week closes with market weak to 510o
lower; common to fancy steers, $3 755 00:
Westerns. $2 753 50. Hogs Receipts, 6,000
head; market weak and lower: light. $4 50
4 65; heavy, $4 454 60; mixed, $4 504 55.
Sheep Receipts, none: market strong;
natives, $4 255 40; Westerns. $4 005 25;
common, $2 50i 75; lambs, $4 255 00.
Kansas Citv Cattle Receipts, 2,000 head;
shipments, 1,803 head;v steers steady to
stiong; cows steady; feeders quiet; steers.
$3 654 00; cows, $1 303 40: feeders, $3 85
4 65. Hogs Receints, 6.2J0 head, shipments,
3,100 headiinarket dull and 10c lower; ranged
$3 9004 65: bulk, $1 354 50. Sheen Re
ceipts, 1,500 head; shipments, 100 head;T mar
ket unchanged.
Cincinnati Hogs In light demand and
lower: common and light, $3 404 75; pack
ing and butchers', $4 504 90; receipts, L700
head; shipments, 2,570 head. Cattle easy; re
.. ocnvinnd. shinments. 140 head. Sheen.
steady; receipts, ISO head; shipments, 110
head. Lambs steady: common
$5 006 50 per 101 pounds.
to choice,
GIVES
New Strength,
New Life,
. New Health
To the whole system. It posi
tively lures Rheumatism antj
Neuralgia. . . -
fe27-88-u
"All she' lacks.or beauty
is a little plumpness."
This is a freijiient thought,
and a wholesome one.
All of a baby's beauty is
due to fat, and nearly all of a
woman's we know ,it as
curves and dimples.
What plumpness has to do
with health is told in a little
book on careful living; sent
free. .
Would you rathe"r be
healthy or beautiful? "Both"
is the proper answer.
..ScoJ7tf Bwm,ChemUts,ri3aSouth 5th Avenue!
New York.
Your druggist keeps Scott's Emulsion of cod-liver
oil all druggists everywhere do. $1.
. as
BROKERS FINANCIAL.
Whitney & Stephenson;
57 Fourth Avenue.
apSO-St
bTnOIPC SAVINGS BANK.
itUlLt D 81 FOURTH AVENUE.
Capital. $300,009. Surplus and undivided
profits. $111,830 3U
D. MoK. LLOY D. EDWARD E. DUFF.
4 President. Sec. Treat
per cent Interest allowed on time da
posits. OC24-64-D
ESTABLISHED 18S4.
John M. Oakley Sd Co.,
BANKERS AND BROKERS.
45 SIXTH ST.
Direct private wire toXewYork and Chi
cago. Member New York, Chicago arid Pitts
burg Exchanges. Only Pittsburg member
Chicago Board of Trade.
Local securities bought and sold for cash
or carried on liberal margins.
Investments made at our discretion. and
dividends paid quarterly.
Interest paid on balance (since 1835).
Money to loan on call.
Information books on all markets mailed
on application. ie7
RAILROADS.
PrrrsBURG and lake erie raibroad
Company; schedule In effect November 15.
1891, Central time. P. JE L. K. R. R. Depart
For Cleveland. '8:00 a. m.. li50. 4:20, "Oils p. m.
For Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis, mo, 9:45
p. m. For Buffalo. 8:00 a. m.. 4:20. "9:-.5 p. m.
For Salamanca, 8:0fl a. m., '1-50, 9:45p. in. For
Yonngstown and New Castle. 6:00. "StfO, 9;M a.
m., '1:50. 'i-.ZK 9:45p". m. For Beaver Falls. 6:00,
7:00, 8:00, 9:55 n. m.. I:50, 3;10, 4:20, 5:20. 9:15 p.
m. For Chartlers, ",o:11. 5:B, 6:00. H6:55, 7:00,
7:15, 1iV, 8:35. "9:10, 9:55. Visa p. m., 12:10. luo,
1i5a. 3:J0. 3:45, K4U0, "4:J5, 5:10, 5.20. "8:00. 119:45,
10:30 p. m.
Abbivk From Cleveland, 6:30 a. m., 12:3
5:15, 7:30 p. m. From Cincinnati. Chicago and
St.-- Louis. 6:30 a. m.. '11:30, 7:30p. m. From
Buffalo, 6:30 a. m 12:30. 9: JO d. m. From Sala
manca. B:), "10:00 a. m., 7:30 p. m. From
Youngstown and New Castle. 6:30. 'lO:! a. m.,
12:30.?5:15, 7:30, 9:30 p. m. From Beaver Falls.
6:20, .6:15, 7:20, '10:00 a.m., 12:30, 1:20, 5:15, 7:30,
9:30 p. m.
P.. C. A Y. trains for Mansfield. 7:33 a. m..
12:10.,3:45p. m. For Esplen and Beechmont, 1:35
a. m,, 3:45 p. ra.
P. C. & Y. trains from Mansfield. 7:05. 11:39 a.
m 3:35 p.m. From Beechmont. 7:05, 11:59 a. m.
P., McK. 4 Y. B.R. DEPAUT-For New Haven,
8:20. 3.00 p. m. For West-Newton, '3:20, 3W,
5:25 p. In.
ARRIVE From New Haven, !): a. m '4:05 p.
m. From West Newton. 6:15, 9:00 a. in., i-M
p. m.
For MeKeesport, Elizabeth. Monongahela City
and Belle Vernon, 6:45, 11:05 a. m.. N;00p. m.
From Belle Vernon, Monongahela Citv. Eliza
beth and MeKeesport, VM a. m.. 1:20, 'i:05 p. in.
Daily. Sundays only.
City ticket office, 639 Smlthfleld It,
9
When Baby was sick, we gave her Costoria.
When she was s Child, she cried for Castori.
When she became Hiss,' she clung to Castoria.
When ihe had Children, the gave them Caatori
RAILROADS.
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD.
Schedule ix xrrxcr December 20, isti.
Trains will leavp Union Station, rltubur
as follows (Eastern Standard Time):
MAIN LHEEAMlVARD.
Pennsylvania Limited of Pnllman Vestibule Cars
dxliy at7:15a. m., arriving at Harrlsburgatl:55
p.m., Philadelphia at 4:45 p. m., New York 7:00
p. m., Baltimore 4:40 p. m Washington 5:55
p.m.
Erritone ExpreJS dally at 1:20 a.m.. arriving at
Harrisburg 1:25 a.m.. Philadelphia 11:25 a.m.,
New York 2:00 p. m.
Atlantic Express dally at 3:30 a.m.. arriving at
Harrtaburg 10:30 a.m , Philadelphia 1:25 p. m..
New York 3:50 p. m.. Baltimore 1:15 p. m.,
Washington 2:20 p. m.
Harrisburg Accommodation dally, except Sunday.
5:25 a. m.. arriving at Harrisburg 2:50 p. m.
Day Express dally at StfO a. rn.. arriving at
Harrisburg 3:20 p. m.. Philadelphia 6:50 n. m..
New York 9:35 p. m., Baltimore 6:43 p. m.. Wash
ington 8:15 p. m.
Mall train Sunday onlr, 8:40 a. m.. arrives Harrls
burr7:00p. m.. Philadelphia 10:55 p.m.
Mall Express dally at 1:00 p. m.. arriving at Harris
burg 10:30 p. m.. connecting at Harrisburg with
Philadelphia Express.
Philadelphia Express daily at 4:30pjmrf arriving
atllarrlshnrg 1:00 a. m Philadelphia 4:25 a. m
and New York 7:10 a. m.
Eastern Express at 7:15 p. m. dally. arrtvlngHar
risburg 2:25a.m.. Baltimore 6:X a.m., Wash
ington 7:30 a. m.. Philadelphia 5:3 a. n. and
New Tork 8:00 a.m.
Fast Line dally, at 8:10 p. m., arriving at Harris
burg 1:30 a. m., Philadelphia 6:50 a. xn.. New
York. 9:30 a. m Baltimore 6:23 a. m., Washing
ton 7:30a. m.
All through trains connect at Jersev City with
boats of "Brooklyn Annex," for Brooklyn, N. Y..
avoiding double ferriage and journey throura
New York City.
Johnstown Accom., except Sunday. 3:40 p. m.
Greensburg Accora.. 11:30 p. m, week-days. 10:30
p. m. Sundays. Greensburg Express 3:15 p. m..
except Bncday. Deny Express 11:00 a. m ex-
cepi sunuav.
Wall Accom. 5:25, 6:00, 7:40, 8:35. 8:50, 9:40. 10:30,
11:03 a. m., 12:15. 1:00,-1:20. 2:30, 3:40. 4:00, 4:50.
6:15. 6:00. 6:45. 7:35,-9:00. 10:20, 11:30. p. m.. 12:10
night, except Monday. Sunday. 8:40, 10:30 a.
m.. 12:25, 1:09. 2:30. 4:30. 3:30, 7:2), 9:20, 10:30
P.m.
WllKInsburg Accom. 3:25. 6:00, :15, 6:45. 7:00. 7:2S.
7:40, 8:10, 8:35. 8:50. 9:40. 10:30. 11:00. 11:10 a. m..
12:01, 12:15, 12:30. 1:00. 1:20, 1:30, 2.00, 2.30. 3:13,
3:40, 4:00. 4:10. 4:25. 4:35, 4:50, 5:00, 5:15, 5:30,
3:45. 6:00, 6:20. 6:45. 7:3). lOi, 8:25, 9.00; 9:45.
10:20, 11:00, 11:30. and 11:10 night, except Monday.
Sunday. 5:30. 8:40. 10:30, a. m 12:25, 1:00, 1:30.
I JO. 4:30, 5:30, 7:20, 9:00, 9:30, 10:3O p. m.
Braddock Accom.. 5:25. 6:00. 6:15. ft:45, 7:00. 7:25
7:40, 8:00. 8:10, 8:35, 8:50. 9:40, 10:30, 11:C0. 11:10.
a. m.. 12:01. 11:15. 12:30, Iron. 1:20. 1:30. 2:00. 2:30
3:15, 3:40. 4:00, 4:10. 4 :2i. 4:30, - 4:50, 5:00, 5:15.
5:30, 5:43. 6:00, 6:20, 6:15. 7:20, 7:35, 8:25. 9:00. 9:45,
10:20. 11:03. 11:30 p.m.. and 12:1C night, except
Monday. Sunday, 5:30, 8,00, 1:40, 10:30 a. m
10:30 n. m.
sbDTH.WEST PENN RAILWAY.
For Unlontown, 5:25 and 8:35 a. m., 1:20 and 4:3
week days.
MONONGAHELA DIVISION
12:25. 1:00. 1:30, 2:30. 4:30. 5:30. 7:20. 9:00, 9:10.
On and after Mat 23. 1891.
For Monongabela City, West Brownsville and
Unlontown. 10:40 a. in. For Monongahela City
and West Brownsville, 7:SS and 10 no a. m. and
4:50 p. m. On Sunday, 8:5a a. ra. and 1:01 p. m.
For Monongahela Cirr only. 1:01 and 550 p. m.
week days. Dravosburg accom.. 6:00 a. m. and
2:20 p. m. week days. West Elizabeth accom..
8:35 a. a., 4:15, 6:30 and 11:35 p. m. Sunday, 9:40
"WEST PEHNSYLVANIA DIVISION.
OX AND AFTER NOVEMBER 18, 1891.
From FEDERAL STREET STATION, Allegheny
City- r
For Sprtngdale. week-davs. 6:20. 8:23, 3:50. 10:40,
11:50 a. m.. 2:25, 4:19, 5:00. 5:40, 6:10. 6:20. 8:10.
lt.30 and 11:40 p. m. Sundays, 12:35 and 9:30
p. m.
For Butler, week-days. 6:55, f ao, 10:40 a. m., 3:13
and 6:10 p.m.
Far Freeport, week-days. 6:55, 8:50. 10:40 a. m.,
3:15, 4:1$. 5.:40. 8:10, 10:30 and 11:40 p. a. Sundays.
12:35.and 9:30 p.m.
For Apollo, week-days. 10:40 a. rn.. and 3:40 p. m.
For Paulton and Blairsvllle, week-days. 6:55 a. m.,
3:15 and 10:30 p.m.
J-The Excelsior Baggage Express Company
will call for and check baggage from hotels and
residences. Time cards and full Information can
be obtained at the ticket offices N. lis Fifth ave
nue, corner Fourth avenue and Try street, and
Union station.
CHAS. E. PUGH, J. B. WOOD,
General Manager Gen'l Pais'r Agent.
From Pittsburgh Union Station.
ennsy Ivan ia Lines.
Trains Sun by Central Time.
Nor Unrest System Fort Wayne Ronte
Dbtakt for Chicago, points intermediate and beyoad:
L30 a.m., 7.10 a.m., '12.20 p.m., 1.00 p.m., 8.45
p. m., lll.SO p.m. Aaxivx from same points ; 12.06
a.m.. ILK ajn.. 6JM.a.in., &35 a.ra., S 00p.m.,
6.50 p.m. .
DarAaT for Toledo, points iitermediale and beyond:
7.10a.m.,lZ20p.m.,lJp.m.,JHJ0p.m. Aiuuvx
froaa same points: fL15a.m., 6J35zja., 6.00pjn
659 p.m.
DarAKT for Qeveland, points intermediate and
beyond: -fWO a.m., 7J0 a.m., H2.45 pjn
11.05 p.m. Asarvz from same poiats: '5i0a.ii.,
42.15 p.m., 6.00 p.m., f7.00 p.m.
Detaxt for New Castle, Ene, Youngstown, Ashta
bula, points intermediate and beyond: 17.20 aa
tl220 pjn. Akkiye from same points: 415 pan..
pj.00p.rn.
Detart for New Castle, Jamestowa, Yonogstowm
and Nlles, f3.45 p.m. ArVivk from same points :
tB.10a.m.
DsrAKT for Youngstowa, li20 pja, Aum froaa
Youngstosra, 60 p.m. a
Noatbweat Systena-Pasi BaadleHonte
Dbpaxt for Columbas. Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St.
Louis, points intermediate and beyond: 1.J0 a.m.,
7.00 a.m., 8.45pjn11.15 p.m. Aaxrva from same
youiu: 120a.m. , 6.00 a.m.. 55p.ra.
DiTAirr for Columbus, Chicago, pomts intermediate
and beyond: 1.20 a.m., f 12.05 p.m. Awv from
same points: 2J0 a.m.fS.06 p.m.
Detaxt for Washmgten, f6.15 a. m., -fS.35 a.m.,
fl.Sop. m.,t3.30p.m.,t4.45p.m.,'f4i0p.m. Aaxm
from Washmgton. 465 a.m., f7.50 a.m., 8M a.m.,
fl0.25a. m..fi 35p.m., t6.2Sp.m.
DsrAKT for Wheeling, f7.00 a. m.,- H2 05 n'n.,
f2.45 p. m.. 'hS.lO p. m. Ajuiivk from Wheeling,
2.20 a.m., 8.45 a. m., 3 05 p. m , 55 p. m.
PULLMAH SlIETISG CASS AMD PCIXMAM Dnf0
Cars run through. East and West, on principal traia
of both Systems.
Local Susmng Cars ranabg to Coluraaus, Cin
cinnati, Indianapolis, Cleveland, Toledo and Chicago
are ready for occupancy at Pittsburzh Union Stauon
at o o'clock p. m.
tion Trains of either system, not mentioned above, caa
be obtained at HO Fifth Avenue and Union Station,
Pittsburgh, and at principal ticket offices of the Feast,
sylvaaia Lines West of Pittsburgh.
Daily. tEx.8audar. tx,Saturdar. lEx. Monday.
JOSEPH WOOD, E. A. FORD,
Geiirsl Xuittr. eestrtl tuscarar Iraat
BALTIMORE AND OHIO RAILBOAD.
Schedule In effect December 20. 1891. Eastern
lme.
ForWashlngton. T. C.
Baltlmore.Plilladelphia and
New York, '3:00 a, m. and
9:20 p.m.
For Cumberland. '6:$0,
3:00 a. m., tino. 9:2t p. m.
For ConnellsvlUe. 650.
8:00 58:30 a.m.. $1:10, t4:15.
J5:00and 9:a)D.
j; or unlontown.
tS-M.
8:10. 58:30 a. m,
1:10. $4:15
ann:uup. m.
For 31 1. Pleasant.
$6:50
4:00.
and $8:00 a. m., $1:15, $4:15 and $5:00 p. m.
For Washington. Pa.. "7:3) and $9-30 a. m..
14H5: nno anil 111:55 D.vm.
,,-..,. : .A u..
or v neeuug, -i im, jiju a. m..
4a T7:30and
lii:aon. m.
For Cincinnati and St. Louis, "7i a. jn., 17:30
p.m.
For Cincinnati 11 :55 n. m. (Saturday onlv.l
For Columbus. 7:3) a. m.. :D) and 111:5.5 p. m.
For Newark. 7:20a. m.,7:30 and 1115 p.m.
ForChicagQ. "7:20 a. m. and 7:T0p. m.
Trains arrive from New York, Philadelphia. Bal
timore aud Washington. 6i20 a. m.. 80p. m.
From Columbus, Cincinnati and Chicago. '3:50 a.
m., "8i50 p. m. From Wheeling, 3:50. '10:45 a. m
$4:15, '30 p.m.
Parlor and sleeping cars to Baltimore, Washing
ton, Cincinnati and Chicago.
Dally. $Dally except Sunday. 5Sunday only.
ISaturday only. TDally except Saturday.
Tho Pittsburg Transfer Company will call for
and check baggage from hotels and residences
upon orders lelt at B. O. ticket office, corner
Fifth avenue and Wood street. 637 and 639 Smith
Held street.
J. T. ODELL. CHAS. O. SCULL.
General Manager. Gen. Pass. Agent.
ALLEGHENY VALLEY RAILROAD-ON
and after Sunday. Jnne 29. IKil. trains will
leave and arrive at Union station. Pittsburg, east
ern standard time: Buffalo express leaves at 8:30
a. m 8:45 p. m. (arriving at Buffalo at 5:45 p. m"
and7:20a. m.);arrlresat7:I0a. m.. 6:25 p. m. OU
City and DuBols express Leaves 8:20 a. in.. 1:30 p.
m.: arrives 1:00, 6:25. 10;00p. in. East Brady
Leaves at 65 a. m. Kittannlng Leaves 9:05 a.
in., 3:55, 5:30 p. m. ; arrives 8:55, 10:00 a. m.. 5:55 p.
m. Braeburn Leaves 45,6:15 p. ra.: arrives8:0.
a. m.. 7:40 p. m. Valley Camp Leaves 10:15 a. ra.S
12:05, 2:i5, 11:30 p. to.: arrives 6:40a. m.. 12:30. 2:15
4:40 p. m. Hulton Leaves 3:00. 0:50 p. m.. arrives
7:35. 11:20 p.m. Forty-thlnt street-Arrives 3:25.
8:20 p.m. Sunday trains Buffalo express Leaves
8:20 a. m.. 845 p. m.; arrives 7:10 a. in.. 6:25 p. m.
Emlen ton Leaves 9:05a. ra.; arrives 9:15 p. m.
Kittannlng Leaves 12:40 p. m. : arrives 10:15 p. m.
Braeburn Leaves 9:50 p. ra.: arrives 7:10 p. m.
Pullman parlor buffet car on day trains and Pull
man sleeping car on night trains between Pittsburg
and Buffalo. Ticket offices. No. 110 Fifth avenue
and Union station. DAVID M'OABGO, General
Superintendent. JAMES P. ANDERSON, Gen
eral Ticket Agent.
"PITTSBURG AND WESTERN RAILWAY
X Trains (C'tl Stan'd time).
Leave.
Arrive.
Mai', Butler, Clarion, Kane. ..
Akron and Erie
Butler Accommodation........
Newcastle Accommodation.,
Chicago Express (dally).......,
Zellenople and Foxburg
6:40am 11:30am
7:30 am
7:05 nm
o:35am
3:50 pm
9:00am
12:03 pm
5:30 am
3:10 pin
2:00pm
4:23 pm
5:45 pm
jsuiier Accommoaauon .
7:00 am'
flnti-alaaa f i . 1hliA.a. . 1 rl If CI - .
$5 e0. Pullman Bullet IeeplBjtcr to Cbicsxo dally
MEDICAL.
DOCTOR
WHITTIER
814 trtOsX AVENLE. I'HTallUliO. VA.
As old residents know and hack flies of- T.-f5
Pittsburg papers prove. Is the oldest estab-t
lished and most prominent physician In tlia?"4g
city.devotlnz special attention toallchronle, si
diseases. In rrr IIMTII n Irlrni A3
xi vii rrr iiiuiii . nr i"i
fluui ICIIV I L- Wll I li. UWIIfc-V
sponsible fiCDnilQ ana mental dls-
persons iiin 1 uuu eases, pnysicaiae-
cay, nervous debility, lack of energy, ambi
tion and hope, impaired memory, disordered, 1
sight, self distrust, imsh fulness, dizziness,
sleeplessness, pimples, eruptions, impover
ished Wood, falling powers, organic weak
ness, dyspepsia, constipation, consumption,
unfitting the person forbusiness.soclety and,,
marriage, permanently, safely and privately
icnnroadnBL00D AND SKINftE?"
eruptions, blotches.fallin-r hair.bones.palns,
glandular swellings, ulcerations of tha
tongue, month, throat, ulcers, old sores, are
cured forllfe, and blood poison thoroughly
eradicated froml IDIM A DV kidney and"
the system. UnllMnn I ibladder de
rangements, weak baok, gravel, catarrhal '.
discharges, inflammation and otberpalnfnl
symptoms receive searching treament,
prompt relief and real cures.
Dr. whittier's lirp-long extensive experi
ence insures scientific and reliable treat
ment on common sense principles. Consult- ,
tlon free. Patients at a distance as carefully
tieatedasif here! Office hours, 9 a. m. to i
p.m. Sunday, 10a.m. to 1 p. m. only. DR
WHITT1 LB, 811 Penn avenue, Pittsburg, Pa.
jaS-49-DSuwk
MANHOOD RESTORED.
"SANATIVO," the
Wonderful Spanish
Remedy. Is sold with a
Written Cuarantea
to cure all Nervous Dis
eases, such as Weak
Memory, Loss of Brala
Power, Headache,
Wakefulnes, Lost Man
hood, Nervousness, Las
situde, all drains ad.
loss of power of-tb
Generative Organs la
either sex, caused by
Before & After Use,
Photographed from life
over-exertion, youthful Indiscretions, or the excessive
use 01 tooacco, opium, or stimulants, wnicu wumawiy ,
lead to Infirmity, Consumption and Insanity. Putup
In convenient form to carry In the vest pocket. Price
f 1 a package, or 6 for $5. With every $5 order we rive a
written guarantee to cure or refund tha
m o n ex. sent by mail to any address. Circular lje
in plain envelope. Mention this paper. Address,
MADRID CHEMICAL CO.. Branch Office for U. 8. A.
S53 Dearborn Street, CHICAGO. ILL,
FOR SALE IN PITTSBURGH. PA, BY
Jos. Fleming & Son, 410 MatkesftSt.
Duquesne Pharmacy, 51S Smithfield St
A. J, Kaercher. 39 Federal St, Allegheny CityT x "
WEAK MEN
YOUR ATTENTION
'! CALLED TO THE
GREAT XSOLI8K RXMXDT,
TZXeCMAXZTSACt
4 Gray's Specific Medicini, -5
S JEY.Q.U.SUEEER $1
Mi
:nnsa. imaTioaand 31Ind. dnermatorrhea. and
lmpotency, and all diseases that arise from over
Indulgence and self-abuse, as Loss of Memory and
Power. Dimness of Vision. Premature Old Age,
and many other diseases that lead to Insanity or
Consumption and an early grave, write for ou
pamphlet.
Address GRAY MEDICINE CO., Buffalo. N.'T.
The Speclflc Medicine- Is sold by all druggists at ft
per package, or six packages for 35. or sent by mall
Sa"w1ff Vr&WE.GUARANTEE.
order a cure or money refunded.
M3On account of counterfeits we have adopted,
the Yellow Wrapper, the only genulse. Sold tat
Pittsburg by S. S. HOLLAND, cor. Smlthfleld and
Liberty kis. ltS-91-Mwreoia '
in cotton eoor
COMPOUND.
A recent discovery by an old
physician. Successfully used
montblybjthoiisandsoriadies.
Is the only perfectly safe and
reliable medlelne discovered.
Beware cf unprincipled drug
gists who offer Inferior medi
cines In nlaee of this. Ask for
cook's uottox KOT uoMForXD. take no substi
tute, or Inclose fl and 6 cents in postage in letter,
and we will send, sealed, hy return mall. Full
sealed particulars In plain envelope, to ladles onlr.
2stamps. Address POND LILY COMPANY.
No. I Fisher Block. Detroit. Mich.
Sold In Pittsburg by Jos. Fleming & Son-, 111
Market street. del7-51-eodwk
DR. E. C. WEST'S
NERVE & BRAIN
Treatment, a guaranteed speclHc for Hysterls,
Dizziness. Convulsions, Fits, Nervous Neuralgia.
Headache. Nervous Prostration caused by the use
of alcohol or tobacco. Wakefulness. Mental Do
presslon. Softening (if the Brain resulting In In
sanity, decay and death. Premature Old Age. Loss
or Power In either sex. Involuntary Losses and
SDermatorrluea caused by oTer-exertlon of the
brain, self-abuse or over-indulgence. Each box
contains one month's treatment, $1.00 a box. or
six for $5.00, by mall.
1VE GUARANTEE SIX BOXE3
To cure any case. With each order received for
six boxes we will send the purchaser our written
guarantee to refund the money If tho treatment
does not cure. Guarantees Issued only by EMIL
G. hTUCKY. Druggist. Sole Agent. Nos. 2401 and
1701 Penn avenue, corner Wylle avenue and Fulton
street. Pittsburg. Pa. Use Stu cky's Dlarrho?
Cramp Cure. 25 and 50 cts. . Ja-182-eoda
LOSTMANHOOD RESTORED
SPAHlSTt.
NEKVEJEi
The great Span
ish Remedy; la
sold WITH A
WRITTEN
GUARANTEE,
to cure all nerv
ous diseases, such
'as WeakMemorv
BXroREANDATTXEUSrso. Loss of Brain Powers
wakefulness. Lost Manhood. Nightly Emissions, ,
nervousness. Lassitude, all drains and loss of power
of the Generative Organs In either sex caused by
over-exertion, youthful errors, r excessive nse of
tobacco, opium or stlmnlants. f 1 per package by
mailrB forf5. With every $5' order we GIVE A
WRITTEN GUARANTEE TO CUBEorBEFUNS
MONEY. Spanish Medicine Co., Madrid. Spain,
and Detroit. Mich. For sale by JOS. FLEMINGS
SON. PUttburg. oe2S-26-MTTS '
Manhood Restored!
"SEKTI SEEDS,"
the wonderful remedy,
is sold with a written
guarantee to cure all
nervous diseases, such
as WeakMemory.Loai
of Brain Power, Head,
ache. Wakefulness,
Lost Manhood, Night,
ly Emissions, Nervous,
ness. Lassitude, all
drains and loss of nnv.
BXrOSE A.TD ATTZa USX5 O.
er of the Generative organs In either sex caused by
over exertion, youthful errors, or excessive use ox
tobacco, opium or stimulants which soon lead to
Infirmity, Consumption and Insanity. Put np con
venlent to carry In vest pocket. SI per package by
mall: 6 for 35. With every 35 order we tve a written'
guarantee to cure or refundthe money. Circular zVea.
fit-., y ,r- ,-h. Ilt
For sale In Pittsburg by Jos. Fleming J .
Son, Druggists, 110 and 4U Market gc
no6-50-xnr3
I I Mr
If H Jf'M
VIGOR OF MEN "
Easily, Quickly, Permanently RESTORED,
WEAKNESS, NERVOUSNESS. DEBILITT.",- -and
all the train of evils, the results of over
work, sickness, worry, etc Full strength.
development, and tone guaranteed In all
cases. Simple, natural methods. Immedi
ate improvement seen. Failure impossible .-.
2,090 references. Book, explanations and. . .
proofs mailed (sealed) free. Address
ERIE MEDICAL CO., BUFFALO, N. T. ''
Jel0-4a
DOCTORS LAKE
SPECIALISTS in all cases rs
3riirlng scientific and confl
entlal treatment. Dr. S. K..
Lake, M. R. C,P. 8 la the old- '
est and most experienced spe--,
oiallatin the city. Consrltsvf
tlnn freo and strletlv confi
dential Offlee-hours, 9 to 4 aud.7 to 8 tvx.;
Sundays, 2 to 4 r. x. Consult them person
ally, or write. Doctors Lake, cor. Penn av.
and Fonrr pr.PJtiisbn Pi Je3-72-Dwfc
uaeeRMSTREneTH
Thoroughly, Rapidly, Permanently Restored.
If yon are superior from ITervousnesa, Debility, Lost Ot
falling Manhood, lmpotency. Stunted Development ot
any ot the parov Weakness of Body and JCmd. Worry
Errors of Tooth or Later Sxcessav
DO NOT DESPAIR.
Here is Hone far alL Tow, Hiile m ail oil la
mots tins or tuk worst cisis iutk Tiimnn to on
exiixsivk MiTiions or iioie tbiatxeit.
HOST BdENTOTC d SUCCESafUI, EVE1- K2JOWIT
Absomtely Unfailing. Kwlorsed bj (he leadlag Uedleal
Fnternity. IZ4VST10AT. Book, .xplanfttioai, tnitlme
alsl. and endoriexneats maned (oesledl FREE.
ISS AH3ILC3 KZSICAL HSICTII2 C5.. Cuiea. 0.
( Jn757-eod
IU WCillmmyttoanTSTor,
early decay, wasting weakness, lost manhood, etc.
1 will send a valuable treatise (sealed! vntfitnin
fall particulars for home dire, FREE ot charge. -A
splendid medical work ; should be read by every i
UIOU njiw u. uilDUl ItlUl UCUUiUKU. AOaTetM.'
ProL F. C. FOWLES. Moodaa, Counl
ael-41-DSuwk
WEAK il-N
Ete. We Will send von a vain
Je)
of charge, costalnlnc fall particulars for a speedy ana.
ptw-SentairejAddressi H A.N MATEO JME0.Ce
P Wet.gt.Loolf.Mo.v .s.SS
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