BEST OF THE VANDERB1LTS. mm the Cnban Orphan Fnnd started out to do. Miss Laura D. Gill was seleoted as best fitted to represent tbe trustees of the fnnd In Cabs. She has two assistants, Miss Levy and ADVANCED F.NOMSlt O.ASS. It often hasboen said that the late Cornelius Vandorbilt was the "best of the Vanderbilts." By that was meant that he was the hardest worker, the most generous hearted, the most publie spirited and the most lovable of the nnmerons and enormously rich family which benr that name. Though the aon and grandson of men of immense wealth, Mr. Vandorbilt began as a bank clerk after a common school education, and underwent a nseful training in industry and independence. His fortnne is estimated at 8120,000, 000. though it is impossible to know the exaot amonnt. The total inheritance tax to be paid to the Nation and State out of the Vanderbilt estate has been esti mated at from (3,500,000 to $5,000,000. 30000000000000000000000000 WHAT NOBLE MEN AND 8 WOMEN ARE DOING FOR THE CUBAN REPUBLIC. X 5000000000000O00OO0O00O0O0 The Cuban Orphan Fnnd, which in now fully started and doing good work among the orphaned children of the "reconcentrados" of Cuba, is really tbe outcome of the American Commission to Cuba last fall, prior to the raising of the American flag over tbe island. The organization is entirely non eeot avian; the children are cared for physically and mentally, entirely ir respective of any religious sect. Their condition is pitiable, aud the neces sity for bettering it is imperative. The men at the head of the fund are men who have personally come in contact with the miBery, poverty and ntter destitution of the children of Cuba. 1 These men are intelligent, farsee Ing, and fully appreciative of the benefit whioh must eventually acorue to the United States if these orphans re properly educated and trained. There is to be no attempt made to ItISS LEVY; AND HER BUN-BURNED FETH. proselytize them, beyond teaching them to be moral and honest, i, To hotter understand the terrible condition of the peasants of Cuba, who are the ones now being boneflted, a few quotations from the report of one of the American Commission sets the fuots more plainly before the pub lic. He says: , "Cuba was not suffering from a commercial or financial panic. It was in a state of uttor prostration and col lapse. Business and agricultural life bad long ceased. The whole islaud Was dead. f "Even now the result of Weyler's order of reoonoentration is not under- and not see one cow, not one chicken, not one farm house, not one man working in the fields, it would be something similar to tbe result of General veyler s reconcentration ol der in Cuba. Miss Wilson, and these the brave women, to use the words of one of the prominent members of the fund, "are doing ns true missionary work as any ever iiid. Miss Gill write: "In Hnneti Hpiritns we found a condition of suffering whioh is niueli more serions than anything which we have seen before. There are over four hundred children who need to be taken care of right awny, and the town has only been ablo to provide for twenty-five little girls, who were selected borauso they wore physicnlly worse off than anybody else in town. Although thoy have now been cared for nearly six weeks, thoy are still mere little skeletons, and almost make one doubt whether it was any kindness to help them to live a few years longer." Miss Gill's last report gives most encouraging news: "We may now count that the Santa Maria del liosnriowork is established. It is, as you know, of a purely settle ment character, with headquarters in a house rented from ex-Governor Mora, in which Miss Levy and Mrs. Barsaga, her Cuban assistant, reside and in which the kindergarten will be held for the present. "The house has been furnished, and the women are thoroughly installed in their new home. The boys of the town have come in quite large nnm bers, requesting instruction, and sev eral women have been in to ask if they might be taught to sew and clean and work according to our American methods. The little children simply 1 fli rrwftfw mi 1 " n?T-r i i... i -ibmi ivTTIfT I .111 11 It'lMrHJaw ; r t mill Mjr, 't-TI 1 WW school ron advanced girls. "The whole rural life of three great provinces Havana, Matanzas and Santa Clara was absolutely blotted ont. Occasionally a clump of banana trees, whose roots had escaped the fire, or a scarlet creeper, would show where farm honse had stood; but the tropical growth quickly-covered the ruins. It was inconceivable that in the midst of this teeming vegeta tion the oonntry should be a desert, for no sign of human life appeared. "On the contrary, every town and oity visited was thronged with beg gars, many of them emaciated and gaunt; women, children, cripples and a few broken-spirited men; and the dreadful odor of every placo occupied by Spanish soldiers. There was no decency, there was no sanitation; in our sense of the word, indeed, there was no discipline. It was a wanton and profligate devastation in the time of peace." Amid all this misery, and herding together like cattle, were the little children, the future citizens of Cnba, whether as a repnblio or as a part of the United States. And it was for the upbringing and developing of the future generation of the island that the Cuban Orphan Boliof Fund was started. Mr, Charles W. Gould," who is very prominently connected with the fund, made a remark a few days ago which corroborates a statement made by a Catholio priost, who bad just returned from Havana, as to the patriarchal system in Cuba. Mr. Gould said: "1 nover saw anythiug to equal the i A CUBAN KINDERGARTEN. stood or appreciated in this country. Should tbe commanding general in the Amerioan Army issue an order the ro Mult of whioh would ba that one could .vol from New York to Rochester love and sacrifice of tbe Cuban parents. The men died first, the women followed, and it is the children who are left" These remark civ an idea of what swarm around the house, The Mayor, General Boze, of the Cuban army, will have a tract of mnnioipal land plowed np for them with the town oxen, and Miss Levy is going to give them seeds and simple little tools and arrange for a man to advise them about simple crops, hoping that in this way she may come to intluence their diet and, to some extont, their housekeep ing idoas." It has been urged by many that the directors of the Cuban Orphan Fund are wasting an unnecessary amount of money on their plant i. e., the pur chase of buildings for homes, orphan asylums and schools. This is not the case, as the buildings which are set tlod and nsed for this purpose areprac ticully given for the purpose. The pictures here presented wore all taken on the spot, and show the practical good which is being done by tbe representatives of tbe fund. Angling In Lapland. Enthusiasts in the gentle art of angling will be interested in tbe reo ords of a recent expedition to Lapland It is au uncomfortable and expensive voyage, and tbe entire absence of any proper food in tho country renders it necessary to take everything which tbe ordinary civilized being may ro quire. But in these days of condonsed nourishment of all kinds that is not very formidable matter. On arriv ing at their destination the party of two rods and their followers found the river frozen so that they had to sit down patiently on tbe banks and wait for a thaw. When that came there was loo much water, and fishing was au impossibility. But when the river got into condition they had graud Bpnrt. They fished for eleven days, and during that time the two rods got a total of 282 salmon and loo grilse, in all weighing nearly 5000 pounds, The best day's catch for one rod was thirty-three salmon and twenty-two grilse, weighing G53 pounds in all. London Telegraph. Halting ltetmlear Fur Canning. At Telemarken, in Eastern Norway, a company has just secured a traot of mountain laud liny miles square for breeding aud raising reindeer. As a start 2100 head of deer have been bought, aud it is intended that tbe number shall be increased by birth and buying to something like 4000 head, 1000 of whioh will be killed every year. In addition to the send ing out of venison in the carcass re Ingerator oars and chambers on ves- sela a quantity will be put np in tine to prevent glutting of the markets ia tut winter, SCIENCE AND INDUSTRY. Mr. Borkedal of Norway announce! that the sun is burning out move rap idly than is usually believed, and that unless something interferes our grand- nihil en will see its extinction. Mr. Molin, also of Norway, has checked Mr. Rorkeduls calculations and Units them correct. Bei'ent researches with tho aid of Ttnutiien lavs ou tbe movements of tho Rtoniach of a eat during the diges tion of a meal showed in a most strik ing manner that any slight vexation of he animal stopped with surprising promptness and invariability gastrin contractions aud movements of every sort. Thn frtmmnn Imlief Hint ntnnl mill iron liue.niiM lii'lttlA mill liinl-A linliln to break when subjected to great cold is contriidii'ted by tho results of expe riments mude at Cornell University. It has been shown there thnt tho strength of steel and wrought iron is least at a temperature oi ni uegreos Inlirenhcit. and that, it increases w hen the temperature either rises or falls from that point. At 000 degrees above zero and nt fill degrees bolow zero the strength is Increased nuoiit Oil nor nntit. Ttm pliiHtii limit, nlso rii-cs slightly with incrense of cold. Major-General Schnw has suggested. before the Institution of Miniug Kn gineers in London, the substituting of wntar for gunpowder in blasting cartridges used in coa'.-inines. His plan is to fill tbe cartridge with pure water, insert it in the drill-hole, and then turn the water into high pressure stenm by means of an electric current of low teusiou. A cartridge made to resist a pressure of 150 pounds per square inch could be ennsed to burst, according to General Schaw's calcula tions, within abont one minute after the turning ou of the current. A new paper product is the result of the enterprise of one of the Jap anese paper companies. It is a sub stitute for ordinary shingles, made of thick, tarred pasteboard. The paper shingles have met with a quick aud large demand, selling for about one half the price of wooden shiugles and being much easier to manipulate. ilicy economize the labor of me chanics, and are said to be as proof against rain and tire as tbe ordinary nrticles. Taper shingles have been adopted fur the sub-rooting of tbe new Tokio Chamber of Coninierco aud Imperial Tokio university buildings. The nice adjustment necessary in the various parts of immense engines now employed for some of the trains on our great railway liners may be indicated by a few data of the work performed by these parts when the locomotive is worked nt high speed. Thus, in the ense of a passeuger en gine at sixty miles au hour, a driving wheel or live and one-hnll feet diam eter revolves five times every second, and, this being so. the reciprocating parts of each cylinder, including one piston rod, crosshead and connecting rod, weighing about six hundred and fifty pounds, must move back and forth a distance equal to the stroke, say two feet, every time the wheel revolves, or in the fifth of a second; this weight starts from a state of re t at the eud of each stroke of the piston aud must acquire a velocity of thirty two feet per second iu one-twentieth of a second, and must be brought to a state of rest in the same period of time. A piston eighteen inches in diameter has au area of 254 1-2 square inches; steam of one hundred and fifty pounds pressure per square inch would therefore exert a force on the piston equal to !I8, 175 pounds, whioh force is appliod alternately on each side of the piston ten times in a second. KEYSTONE SlllE B Mil SHOT FIVE TIMES. Stevs Hatpin, an Ennlnoer, Wounded bj George Haldomm, a Wealthy Oil Producer. May Recover. DYING REPORTER'S HEROIC ACT. lturns Hi Collection of Mean Buying! A limit liHt I'nlillo 31 mi. "Clippings are one of the most valuable aud sometimes one of the meauest aids to a newspaper man," remarked a veteran editor, runuiug his eye over the mortuary index of the utliee cuppings. "A few years ago a political repor ter on a Chicago papor roceived his last assignment. It was au order from high authority for him to cross the river Styx, lie was a man of a great deal of force, and he kuev just where to stick his pen to run its poison deep est. Withal he was a good fellow, as newspaper I Uriahs go, and everybody in the omce liked him. ilici manag ing editor hurried ont to tbe dyiug man s side. "Kigsby," said the old reporter, "I've been a very bad man." "Oh, no.you haven't," his chief as sured him. "Just like the ordinary run of us. "You'll feel differently when you got better. But the old political reporter shook his head. "itigsby," he said, "you know that collection of cuppings I ve got? It contains all the low, mean, dumaging tbiugs that have been said about pro iniuent politicians in the last twenty five years. It's the most complete and tbe most villainous collection of stuff iu tbe o iuutry. It's worth a lot of money." "Yes," said the managing editor. "It's meau, aud it's worth a lot money." "Iiigsby," the feeble voice went on. "I waut you to nnlock my desk and take out those newspaper slips aud burn them right hare before my eyes. I'll do that much for humanity auy- how. Bigsby got out the papers, and he and tbe dyiug man made a boutire of them, and watched it die to ashes. It was a very heroic tuinx to do. Chic ago Inter-Ocean. Steve Ilnlpln, enr;!n.er on the Char tiers railroad, in li.u; ut Ids hom in WushliiKlim with i..i.-e linnet holes In his body and In In a m-tl.ius condition. The man who Is nl.ined to have tlnd the shots was Ueume Hnldi'tnan, a wellknown oil leaser and pro Ulcer; iim very wealthy. He lives at North WashtiiKton. The shooting; Is said to have taken plnie at the rooms of the VVnKhliiRton cluh Inst Friday. Thn story goes thnt Ilnlpln and lliililenuin jrot Into n iiunrrel nt the clulirooins. llaldemnn left the clulirooms, returned shortly Hfterwnnls with a revolver and, upproiiehlng Hnlpln, ijhot live tlmen at him. Halpln was lylni? nn a eourh ap parently asleep' when Hnldemun en tered. He received one bullet In the smnll of the hack, two In th l"ft arm, while two others grazed Ills hip. Hnl pln wan tnken to his home on J- (Tor son avenue, where physicians were nummoned. Three tuillits were tuk-n out of his body and the marks of two others were found on the hip. The bul let which entered his back lodged In the right side and the wound Is a ser Iouh one. There lire some hopes of re covery. The following pensions were Issued Inst week: Joseph It. Hutchinson, Knst McKeesport, $12; Jolnh, Adanisliurg. J to $S; William Decker, Irwin, $ to IS; Charles Hums, Tldloute, $1-' to $14; John K. (1111, Hnltsliiirg, JB to $; Wil liam Kmlnhtser, Mllesburg, $8 to $12: Unlthaser Welx, I'lMsburg, $8 to $; John H. Nleodemus, Mnrtlnshui g, $6 to $10; David Kplsl, l-nughtown, $17; Jacob Jt. Hone, State College, $6; Karl tk'hafer. dead, Wall Hose. $8 to $12: Pnmuel It. llnrnnrd, Washington, $; Henry E. Swisher, Altoona, $10 to $12: Ultner Cramer, Hlnlrsvllle, $8 to $10; Matthew Iaughlln, Woodville, $6 to $8; Henry M. Thylng, DuHols, $3 to $10: David H. Hmteett, Johnstown, i to $10; Joseph Holsmnn, Mllllganstown, $8 to $10; Blmon Hexter. Tlttsburg, $6 to $10; John C. Plntt, DuRols, $8 to $10; William D. White, Northeast. $6 to $10; David Williams, (Irahnmstown, $6 to $10; Dnnlel M. Smith, Heaver Center, $12; Rharnh Clark, Allegheny, $8; Anna M. Rchaeffer, Wall Hose, $8; Elizabeth C. Heaty. Decknrd, $8; William Haltey, dead, Alans Choice, $12; Andrew K nn DP, Aleppo, $8 to $10; John Coyle, Pcottdale, $8 to $10; Isaac Mauk, Hollsdale, $10 to $12: John D. Lines. Patton. $8 to $12:, Jacob Hllehey, Newry. $10; Wil liam West. Kile, $2S; Susan Halle-, Mnns Choice. $8; KUza A. Smith, K Mn horo, $8; I.ouls Hatt, mother. New Castle, $12. An' application for a preliminary In junction made by James Randall, of Haxelhurst, to restrain the liradford Ulass Company from disposing of Its plant to the American Window Glass Company, known as the glass trut, has been granted by Judge Morrison. t is claimed that a contract with citi zens of Hazelhui'st bound the liradford Glass Company to conduct a glass manufacturing plant for a stipulated number of years In consideration of the layment of J.000 bonus. The contract. it is said, prevents the liradford Glass Company from disponing of the prop erty in the manner complained of. Tne suit will doubtless be very Intersting. Hearing on the question Is llxed fur Uc- looer i next. Kile llenefelt, 7 years old, met with a terlble death the oirer day. He and other children were playing in a room in llcnelelt s home. In Greentre bor ough, near Pittsburg. They were throwing a string around the room. Hi some way the string caught In a hang ing lamp and the lamp fell on the little fellow. The oil spread over his clothes and Ignited. The lad, ablaze, rushed from the house before anybady could come to his rescue. As he ran down the road his little body, enveloped In Humes, stood out boldly. Mr. Schaffer was the llrst to reach him. He puneu the burning rlothci from him and at lust sueceded In extinguishing the llames, but the boy died. The big bell In the tower or hlstnris Independence bell at Philadelphia rang out a snlute last Wednesday afternoon In honor of Admiral Dewey s arrival home. Wren the news of the admiral's arrival in New Yorb was received Mayor Ashhridge ordered the ringing of the bell, and 17 strokes, the admlr- l s salute, wer tolled. At Reading, when Admiral Dewey's arrival wos an- nounced, the whistles on all tho Indus trial establishments shrieked a wel come and a salute was fired. When the news of Dewey's arrival reached Al toona, the bells began to ring in church and school house steeples and hun dreds of locomotive whistles tooted a merry welcome. Hutler county will celebrate its one hundredth anniversary next summer, the preliminary steps having been taken at a meeting of citizens held a few days ago. John H. Negley presid ed at the meeting and Charles M. Helneman and James M. Maxwell were made secretaries. The chair was auth orized to appoint a permanent execu tive committee of ten which shall have power to add to Its membership by thn appointment of two persons frum each town and township In the county, the whole to constitute a committee which shall fix the date of the celebration and make other preliminary arrange ments. Kxtenslve arrangements are being mado at Altoona for the forthcoming celebration In connection with the un veiling of a monument to Prince Gal litzin at Loretto, Cambria county, Oc tober 12. A bronze statue of Prince Gallitzln on the pedestal over his re mains is to be placed as a gift of Chas. M. Hchwab, of Pittsburg. The celebra tion promlHes to be one of the most widely attended affairs In the history of the Btuie, representatives coming from all directions. Congressman K. F. Acreson has filed a petition asking for the establishment of a rural free delivery system at Hackney, on the Waynesburg & Wash ington railroad. There are 225 dwell ings on the routes and more than 800 people will be accommodated If the pe tition is granted. The postoince de partment has promised to send an In spector to examine the routes. A Lehigh Valley passenger train ran Into a landslide one-half mile west of Redlnstcn, near Easton, the other night. The engine and two passenger coaches were derailed and the tracks were blocked all night. Jacob Dlehl. engineer, und Harry Renthimer, of Philadelphia, who mas riding In the engine, wer severely injured. 'lUJjs.ts ujaiuno ati) u uoapap Sq joj pean-uoj iuai uSUii) ixijduon x.u JullV B,quino. ib 'n.unq.) u.umdJif. prfliuu ei ;o JUdjd;uuo Bu..uuaj lUliy t JO UOHSdS ,taJAV )uu IV 'ejsjjHui J4U, inoqn puo)jj auiuat Jail-M n JlJ imu 'bu joiiy ;o Sjnqns 'siuiunr ) jXo -HI dujliuj -tupi 'JdiyS jail jo auiou. oi; u ma vAv awj psap paddojp 'Xda eiuuv 'saw 'JJa u jo epjq V ap Xieqojd H.u H "uiwaq Huilim qi uiojj a)BiuXd anonaj o) uiXj) u Xuifui uil pa.Maoaj H vSpuq uiojj Uuiiiui muaq XAVau Xq uuaxa jsioo sq) pajnianjj pnit m pq uui lutMnvinaj J1HH 11 11" B T H J uoe 'Po tun i mtiua Jo THK I- ArrKtfd. MTlii flfj. flmln, Flour and p WnEA" .Id. a red tVIIKA'l Au. 1 new. COllN No lyellow, enr.,..v. lo. I i.ow, Snellen MIxqiI cxr OATH No. 1 white No. S whltn FLOCK Winter patents fancy stringm winter live No. -i IIAV-No. 1 timothy Clover, No, 1 I'EI'.D No. 1 while mid., ton.. llrown inludlliiiis Il.nn I... 1 1. Bill AW Wheat. tint PKi::S Kane; lihin (Irass.... imiottiv. prime lnlry Product BUTIEn Elgin creamery..... tuiio erentnery, Fnm v coniitrv roll Clll:lK Ohio, new New lork, new PEANF Oroen V bn IOTA IOKS Knney White! bit CAIlHAaE-1'er barrel ONIONS per bu Poultry, :tc HENH-pnr pair CIllCKr NS dresned TCIIKEl H dresRcd EGGS la. and Ohio, trib.... BALTIMORE. FLOl'Il WHEAT No. il rod COHN-Mlxed OATH EOGH UUTTEll Ohio creamery.. .. I rli$ tl 6 70 ft 43 8'J 40 87 8 29 80 28 - 29 4 10 4 15 8 40 8 80 as 8 n oo is to II 110 11 33 14 00 IS (HI 15 78 M 00 14 21 14 tO 6 03 8 2t 6(0 25 1 25 i 60 1 2J 1 40 I 25H 26 22 ' 23 HI 17 11 12 12 13 rt I 5019 75 14 61) 1 15 1 25 4'J 50 65 70 13 14 15 16 17 18 I 9 75'$ 4 00 73 74 88 89 38 29 i7 18 83 24 I 8 54 8 7.1 73 74 88 89 81 82 22 23 17 2D PHILADELPHIA Fi.orn i wheat-no. and COItN No. 2 mixed OATH Na 3 white BCTTEll C'renmery, extra.... EQGtt Pennsylvania firsts.... MEff VOltK. FLOVft ratents t 8 90 4 10 WHEAT Na 2 red 76 COHN-No. 2 40 OAT8 W bite Western 28 HUTTER C'renmery. M. 17 23 LOGS Htatsofl'enn 13 18 LI VIE STOCK. Central Stock Tarda, East Liberty, Pa. CATTLB. rrlme. 1.800 to 1400 ths 8 509 0 CO Good, 1200 to 1800 lts 5 15 5 49 Tidy. 1000 to 11601b 8 00 Fair light steers. (OK) to 1000 lbs 4 00 Common, 100 to 900 It. 8 80 . Boos. Medium 4 60 Heavy..., 4 60 Houghs and stags 8 75 SBIEF. Trlme, 95 to 105 lbs 4 85 Good, 80 to W lbs 4 00 Fair, 70 to B0 lbs 4 60 t 15 4 H5 4 00 4 95 4 75 4 00 4 50 4 26 5 00 4 00 7 2J Common 8 89 Veal Calves 6 03. LAMBS. (Springer, extra 5 60? 5 75 Kprlnger, good to choice 6 00 t 10 Common to fair 4 00 6 CO Extra ytarlliigs, light '4 75 6 00 Good to choice yearlings. , 4 50 4 75 Medlnm 4 00 4 25 Common. 8 09 4 00 REVIEW OF TRADE. Iron Consumption Now Amounts lo 1,200,000 Tom Per Monlh. It. O. Dun & Co.'s weekly review of trade reports as follows for last week: September Is the twelfth consecutive month In which the volume of busi ness, both at New York and outside New York,, has been greater than In the same month of any previous year. In these 12 months payments through the clearing house have been IS9.00U, 000,000, against t1. 200,000,000 In the 12 montns ending with September, 1892, an Increase of f28,loo,000,000, or over 48 per cent. When the tremendous expansion be gan men called It replenishment of ong depleted stocks: then for a time it was culled a crazy outbur.it, of spec ulation, anu when demand still ex panded, some permanent Increase of business .was recognized as a result of Increased population earning better wages. Hut the demnnd still grows, now ranging about 6') per cent greater thun In 1KM, while population accord ing to treasury estimates is 16 per cent greater and wages are not. over 10 per cent greater. A reconstruction of business and Industries, of produc ing and transporting forcen. Is in progress throughout the land with re sults which none can now measure. Iron consumption, instead of 760,00) tons per month in 1S92, Is now over 1, 200,000 tons per 'month, and yet is - so far behind the demund for products that the capuclty of most work is Bold fnr on Into next year. With sales of 20,000 tons nt Pittsburg, bessemer pig rose to fZ'i 50. Chicago coke and southern pig ngnln rose $1 and new furnaces are sold many months ahead before they begin work. liars are hard to get at any price, the whole output of the Republic Company be ing sold to January, nnd S3 2u U quot ed for common nt Pittsburg, while at Chicago the great demund for car building falls on works overcrowded. Contracts for S.oflO tons plates have been placed at Pittsburg, and at all points the price Is rising with aston ishing demand. HhcctH are also high er, with the demand intensified by re newed efforts for consolidation. The wool market is active, with a general advance averaging about half a cent on washed fleece combing und some unwashed: the entire lint quoted by Coates Ilros. probably averages about one-quurter cent higher. Heavy weight woolens are well cleaned up and of spring worsteds many lines are withdrawn, the clays being nominally advanced to tl 45, with some fancy worsteds 5 per cent higher. Stronger demnnd for cotton staples causes an advance of c In brown sheetings and drills and Vjc In some bleached goods. A broader selling arrangement at Fall River seems likely to prevent the pro posed consolidation. Cotton opened the crop year at 640 and has risen to 6.87c, although about a quarter more has come Into sight than last year from the greatest crop on record, and stocks here and abroad, commercial and mill, are 6S8, 000 bales greater than a year ago. Hut belief In serious loss by droughts gains ground, und also belief In largely In creased manufacture. Wheat exports from Atlantic and Pacific ports have been 4,294, 3&6 bushels for the week, flour included, against 4,861,02 bushels Inst year, and In four weeks 12.951.263 bushels, against 16. 061,864 bushels Inst year. The foreign demand has aided to sustain prices, whSil closed Tko higher thun last week, although western receipts have been 29,129,518 bushels In the past four weeks, against 31,930,673 bushels last year. Corn Is unchanged In price and still in large foreign demand, exports having bsen In four weeks 12.155,904 bushels, against 15,319,293 bushels last
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers