a SONG oF “ROSES, Bloom not tor her, ¢ O roses! Lean not to kiss her lps, Nor think In any red retreat To touch her r-rips. She cares fiot for your Kisses In gardens where you grow Cold ns the light that glimmers On Aipine heights of snow. Bloom not for her, O roses’ She cares not for the Hght That wove in fervid summ=rs Your dewy red and white, She cares not for your Kisses She does not hed or know: Cold as the starlight gleaxing On Alpine heights of snow. * What if a rose she gathers To grass her midnight hair? She cares not if it withers And weens for kisses thers! RR cares pot for fs kisses. Loring her red wih $0! Cold as thy cold lights gleamin- © On Alpine heights of snow. ; Weep not {or her, O roses! In fields her footsteps knew | There shall be hearts to love vou —~ Lips with a kiss for you! She enres not for your Kisses. Bhs will not heed orkaow; Gold as tha cold stars ploaming on Altes heights of snow! ~Feank L. Stanton, at Wh SAAR RTM KA ARS ORR PEACH TRAGEDY COMEDY? B® IY PLOREXCR A SIT. x ; HHMI HACE ES, I knew George Arbuth- not pretty well 1 bad known him, in fact, for | . two years—ever hed since he had A been married.— ' and considered him a rising fellow in the literary world, He had not done an very great, but his distinctly promising, and name wie gradually making itself n. Uulnakily he had married 2 1 § Bat my friend was not like some ~-he dill not whine and ory, he the best of it, though Phebus knows, he had enough to put up with. was not bad temper. It was jeal ==bitter, mean, incessant jeslousy ed him even his literary Agatha Arbuthnot was one of those little, pale blue-eyed women, tongue and a narrow who have ruined the career of ‘a sensitive man. She hated to ber husband's praises sonuded fernoon Agatha was slangiog ee gh a | ha e day before ashed, nud told her how fortun- 0 was to be the wife of such a ns. Her face was crimson ‘and her voice was very the tnimicked Lier callers, ~~ Mrs. Arbuthnot! How . you ninst be of your clever 1 He's quite a genias. How p you living with the man who | write such exquisite stories!” Then she stamped her foot, and sed savagely on Arbuthnot. “Clever! Exquirite! A genius! I MeYeT saw any genius in 3 ur siiy tales, Testy rot, I call them, to ness T'd married Haris is | of you. At any rate, : ‘wouldy' t have praised him up! in order to run me down, I know ean. Of course I'm y sud brainloss and silly. -not mongh for you tu wipe your OE hen Arbuthnot did the most possible. He walked room, aud locked his stady. Agatha, on High alin and guessin ot the tempest that surged i immediately went off into a Jorge's den’ wasn't much of a dy,” merely a smoke-begrimed furnished with a second-hand k Agatha called it! e's milking room,” but I knew the ouly haven of refuge Ar- buthnot could find in his own house. From that day Arbuthnot progressed | swiftly throagh the book that was to make his name. This was to be his misterpicce, wherein he would show hin best of brain and heart; and, as } weeks rolled on and the novel neared its end, Arbuthnot realized his work was good, and iu that knowledge and did live, | could afford to live, ithont Jove and sym: trath, he needed every support hat work and philo sophy could give a . Agatha’s con grew daily i shrewish and violent, aud ber loss fastidions Jn its choice of you've taken to locking your- Four sulking room,” she , when Arbuthnot kad boon compelled to answer her on his study deer. . when a husband sell up from his 5 my society's ot \ for such . b clever mai as thy. sutrol his own agen wanted to finish some work,” id, ealmly, looking at th» floor with loose sheets of paper [this room is hardly fit for a lady's y. Yon see, I have scarcely » that is anocenpied with books." ex, it’s a horrid hole,” said atha, curily; ‘but yon men who are more hke pigs than human Just look at the dust on that p sllamefal. And Sarah says loti her touch your papers, med of having sach a dirty 1y house; I'l come and dust {f to-morrow.’ these words Arbuthnot lost bis! ophical self-coutrol. 141 allow Sarah to brush «© later, : softly down stairs, papers on my desk,” he said, hastily. and dust | everything in the room bat my desk, | and that I attend to wmysell your pardon if I speak hastily,” said | Arbuthnot, ruefully contemplating | some wax fast crambling into balls; I've nearly tipished my book, and | these sheets of paper are rather val able ” Agatha threw table. “And this 15 to famons?' she asked, with bitter econ- tempt. ‘1 sappose, when i's pub- lished, every one will.come and envy me becanse I'm the wife of the genius, George Arbuthpot, i take yon to finish it%’ “I hope to Gnish it by next week” | said Arbathuot, trinoip haotly, “I've allowed Lorrimer, § | mau, to see some parts of it, and he's | expressed a very favorable opinion and thinks it's bound to be a success” Azatha's eves narrowed at the cor | ers CLoreimer'sa fool, the balis onto the aig “she satd angrily. It was one oold afternoon, ten days | Arbuthnot stood on his » | doorstep in the act of inserting his that | latehkey, smiling at some pleasing reminiscences of his recent talk with his publisher. i fronn the house, followed by seream tensity of anguish that Arbuthnot himself canght the infection of terror, and fumbled with trembling hands at the latehkey, and ranioto the hall. A fearful sight met his eye. From his stady door in writhing flames, and from there came piercing, agonized shrieks, As the draft from the open door blew fiercely down the corridor the flames leaped higher and higher round thew prey, nati! Arbuthnot's sickened gaze saw nothing but a brilliant ball of fire, (lod! it was Agatha! Mad with tor- tare, the flaming fignre rushed toward I beg sheets of paper which Agatha : LE: nt make you | i South Carolina and a few lantic States, ¢ Ronthern mills How long will 18 | the Weekly Review | . shifting year | States, i Arkansas was foo | Missouri and Kansas were supposed | | to be good ouly for corn and cattle, after screams, reiterated with such in- : Saddenly a wild, terrified ory broke | { tirely altered, | year 1t must be enlarged to inelnde | ¥ | naw lergitory where cotton flourishes | i abundantly, At last he managed to open the door | flew something—an object enveloped | Arbuthuot esught it in s tight em. brace, sud with all bis strength hurled | himself and the shrieking figure onto | the carpeted floor and rolled over and | over nutil at last the flames were beat en ont aud be knew the fire was con: querad, ; Three hours later the doelor came | He had used all | his akill to bring life back to the dis figured body that now lay motionless | on the bed. It was all in vain, | Agatha's injuries were beyond all | help, and she had lived only three hours after Arbnthnot had carried her | upstairs. ! Her husband Lad never left her side, and, though badly burned about the hands and face, had scarcely real ized his own injuries. As he looked | at that cruelly disfigured face, now swathed in bandages, « rash of tears | blinded his eyes, and he knew thst all past differences were swept away, and that Agatha would live henceforth in his memory only as the women whom hie had once loved with all his heart, Before iifs flickered out in that suffer ting boly, Agatha opened her eyes once and met her hnsband's gaze fixed with intense pity and love upon her face. To Arbuthuot it seemed that she pleaded dumbly for forgiveness, i but even ax he fooked the lids closed | again, and in a few moments Agatha's | spirit had slipped iat the great ut lonee, ! When ail was over, Arbuthnot’ stooped and kissed the cold, pale lips, Later in the evening lis went down | stairs to his stady, As he entered | the room a shudder ras through his body; he remembered the figure of flame that Lad leaped into his arms | but a few honrs ago, and his heart was torn at the thought of Agatha's suffer. ings. And yet it was a mystery how she bad caught fire. Presumably she had been warming herself in lus study, and her thin greusdine dinner dress bad swept too usar the flames. Afow dull red embers still burned in the grate, Arbuthnot Lt the lamp and sat down wechatieally to his desi. “Thatk God for work!” he sad, with a deep sigh. "At least I can forget for a hime.” He opened the deep drawer wherein bis pile of maanseript had lain ready for the printer's hand. oiaissions could eaxily be rec But the Hastily be No; that, weary heart and brain deawer stood empty. pulled out its counterpart. too, held nothing. With Lauds Le rommaged each gigeanhole, turted everything out of his burean, sought on the chairs, the tables, manuscript had disappeared’ A fearful thought darted into his brain. He ran to the fireplace—his | eye fell on some chisrred ashes in.the | fender, = Black and White, Shen IW 0 pe nA ASSO SS SAH Value of a Good Sneeze. We ak koow from actual experience that a good sueeze is 8 wonderful loos- ener of nasal-bronchial mucns. Sir Dyce Dackworthi comes forward in the | Practitioner with the suggestion that the induction of aneecing be resorted to for the purpose of raising bronchial mucus. The idea is a good one, and worthy of being placed in practical op- eration. It has been explained how vomiting causes au expulsion of mueas or membrane from the respiratory pas- quite efficient in doing this, Ordinary sunfl, or any of the many simple nasal irritants, suffice, and may be blown into the nose of even a child without any danger. Plow. snd Harrow in One, A combined plow and harrow has been patented, in which an extension arm is attached to the rear of the plow to follow it and support the weight of him snd threw ont its arms in agony. Oae or two | tified | now, aud the work would soothe his | . Ho . cider cotton distr The : ! other countries sages, bat sceezing appears to be ties, hat States, “I must ok you aot to touch Be TO0TTON BELT CHANGING. a MOMENTOUS DEVELOPMENT OF THE CREAT SOUTHERN INDUSTRY. Ite Centre Mas Moved Beyond the Wisste. sippi and Scientific Methods of Cnlture Have Been Adaptedalow Prices Keop awn Foreign Competition. North Carolina has already enough mills within ber borders to spin every bale of cotton raised io the State and a little to spare, and ina few rvears the same will be trae of Georgia, But now il is predicted that within ten vears theses great centre of cotton profasction as the . New England mills, when the distance | 1% measured by freight rates. The reason for this is not far to seek, entlon by year, tmik of onr cotton vears ago, but to-day abont seven tenths of the crop is raised beyond | that river The cotton belt was sup: posed originally to ran only throngh | the bast lands of Virginia, Georgia | | and the two Carolinas, with the edges | : overlapping parts of the contignous a Texas was not thonght of and far west, The map of the cotton belt ia en. and each firpessive Texas has forged ahead tn cotton raising so rapidly that grow ers wonder whers it will stop, Arkansas bas more recentiy started the apon =» similar carser, whila farmers of Kansas and Missouri are beginning to raise colton on wu large | At the present rate ¢f increase | scale. this great belt west of the Mississippi will soon be raising three fourths of | all our cotton. Then the mills of the | Routh, sround which so mmeh interest centres to-day, will have as great problem to solve as the New England mills are struggling with. It is estimated by the Department . of Agricaitare that cotton can be raised snecessially in nearlyone-third of the territory of the United States present the cotton beit covers | At gn four degrees of gS gitede and abont ten degrees of Igtitnde, but caly abont one-twentieth of the land is ac. . tually nsed for cotton growing. Thus the fhe 20, 000,000 acres of cotton planta tion# represent only a fraction of the Yas) empire of cotton soil that has never ben title I The fear that cotton growing has - reached its zenith, and that it mast coon decline, in view of the low prices received for it, looms np every season when the naw crop begins to come in, | but like similar nightmares, it fails to produce any permanent resalts The world has just begun to uss cotton Our invasion of the Japanese markets with this prodnet is but a promiss of what we may cxpéet oo 8 larrer scale nother quarters, There are over 1.500% O00 Ly beings SXisting on this globe, and of this pumber about half are saperfectly clad. They live in climates were Iit- tie protection is need, bat that protes tion mnst coma in the form of cotton slothes. The vast hordes of the BARS Orient, of the islands of the Pacific, sad of the great African continent, re quire cotton goods for clothing. To | ay they go without them caly be | canse they are not obtainable at prices | | start for Tientsin, - within their means. The world's yield of cotton | trebled in twenty-five years, aud i Las nearly donbled itself in the last) ten years. Oarown product has rep- resented a large percentags of this iu. CY ORNS, raise cotton on a large scale, too, but, with all their cheap labor, the Boath- ern planter can raise and the Ameri can manufacturer can work up ato salable goods our cotton and place it] in Eastern markets at prices lower than the natives can ever hope to ac eompliah. Cotton has steadily declined in price since tha sereage has been moreasing Planters Lave tought this No one ia sure = withoat aval C that the bottom has been reached yet. ! plenty who within austher decade. utterly inconceivable to! esproiaily in many of the ste, but so did 5 ton years ago. The! There are cent cotlon This seems ‘the growera, cent and f.cent aot . attempts to restrict the acreage of cot | feverish ton have crop falls below a certain point C world's supply there will be a corre: failed repeatedly. IH our! sponding increass in the acreags in English capital and ; brains are working hard in Egypt to control the cotton trade of! the Far! East, and any tendency to loosen our | hold upon the great cotton industry | would be the signal for the rapid ex- . tension of the cotton fields of Egypt. : India and even Coins and Japan. The law of supply and demand must rega- late the price. raise cotton to-day than many of the older regions. This is due to the bet. ter soil and climate. Texas forced prices for cotton down more than any other factor. In that princely domain | Kiug Cotton flourished so well that planters who had been struggling for years with indifferent cotton sol could | no longer compete in the open mar Ket. They were shoved to the wall | and forced to raise other products | Some of the counties in the eotion States partially or wholly broke away from cotton aud turned their attention more to grass, grainsand frurts. Others are sure to follow, and not only coun. cation that the cotton crop will be re. duced. The change is doe merely to the shifting of the cotton Bek, The South is meeting the same shift- the driver as it spread: the farrows. \ ing conditions that faced the Eastera oiler At will be as far from the The i belt has been changing and! The great | came from the | States east of the Mississippi twenty | e India, China and Egypt can | downwara i endency, individually and collectively, | prestiot 4 ia the Bat this 1» no indi the ons them. Bat after a decade or two they recovered from their surprise and fear, and, abandoning grains, they tarned their attention to fraits and dairying. Cotton farming is probably as primi. tive as any other branch of agrienl tars. ‘changing, Capital, seience and brains sre revolntioniving the indastry Fahiftine of the cotton belt from the east to the west of no greater impo: i methods of enitnrs which adopted. New and { are being developed § taree Yhan ‘he new are bing ; ; al Fu periny plants hi selection TE Pian roa Land intensive cultivation, hall farming system i+ being reduced by large plantations, systematically crganized and condacted old, Castor OF For Toothache, aig abont chraiess zn. | | eomapetont dostars, suid the captain, amuses me, heosuse the fellows who 1 has farmers bait a century 880. When | oat West opened up its marvel. | f lds of corn and srheat the East. | orn farmers were paralyzed by the | streams of golden grain that poured in the markets and sold for prices that threatened rain and starvation for C Pruasyivans The system in the South 1s just | The | days of the Mississippi ts din apnea LEAVE FOR THE SOUTH. Voaluateers Press Up at Canyp Meade Girls Disguised a Boidiees Ar rested snd Placed ia jul Pifi-anth BEV W Barwa threes dave do the tniking assnnye that there wers | vil no eareless 15 the ry. Bat with the good ones ve had some bad ones. While in winter quarters in "6 our surgeon, old Major 0 i fig ut assistant had slinrge of the hos. pi ital, which wae a wali tent and abont as cold as a modern refrigerator. roang sawhones pinned bis faith to two ramediss, castor ofl and quinine old Union | 9a was made brigade snrgaon, and ihe The Ja {One morsiog at siek call ons of the | boys showed up with a roaring tooth. ¢ i ache, asl, said that he dni ireached his complaint replied that decaysd testh wore cansed by a disordered stomaeh, and if the | stomach was ail right the teeth oil he would not be excused from duty steward, as it was frozen to the econ sistency of goml ios cream. on his way swearing. That same doo of tha largest cities iz Ohio "Chi cago inter-Gevan. Fe Ss BAA SS DAH Eaiferay Travel in Chins. There is plenty of talk about new rat;ways in China interesting sdventares for those whe patronize them floods at Petaiho, who went there from: Tientsin for two days was kept eight days before he eonlid hear oT. % train going back. started for the elation, gullies to be negotiated, were fall of water. He stnippedio th | singlet, holding his deupatches in his mouth, snd swam for it, leaving the rest of his clothes to ght by his boy and cools, vs bran hat Peitaiho, right at the sia} but his singlet, won with nothing trogsers, The train started and went on slowly fil it rame to a place where | th & water was {oor fest des P: and it : had to { where the passengers had t : days before they contd taake another retved word of Nbanksikuan, 5 wail 1x0 put bask 10 Wastminster Os zatie, Lord Mater zs Fowr Swords, regalia of the Lord Mayor of London. There is: 1, fhe sword of Jawmtice: 2, the sword of Htate. 3, the black swerd, anil 4, the paar! sword. When the Lord Mayor the opening day each session the “sword of Jastie in place: 1 behind ihim. The dated nf Hate iin frost of the Lord Mayor | emblem of his authority, the ‘black | pword” being used daring Lent and on the death of any member of the royal fawily, while the ‘pear! sword’ presented by Queen Elizabeth —in carried before him on all sogsione Different siiken oo iow #5 ine i ip attends the Central Criminal Conrton | i% real VATE aT arn for different oe Far fes- { tivities the Pe a9 the oo i easion of a royal andes nes. the Lord | Mayor is resplendeat in a gown of pald, while for reasons of mosraing, ! black 12 wore, In the caty the Lord ¢ Mayor takes precedence of every one, | in ciading even the mvereign — It : Bits. 18 The Kaglish Tramp. Whaever, queries a writer in the , Saturday Beview, aualyziag the way Harer's charseteristios, Teard a habit ual tramp sing, or even whistle? him. shuttles, | chested, weali-kneed and narrow call for him. He hates the country, and regards the open road merely ass lodging house or casaal ward to ao other. As a representative of the trae ‘ vagabond, to whom the wind and the { smell of the eurth and the warmth of ‘the sun sre sheer physical delights, be ix the greatest frand that ever ‘novelist or a eoekuey essayist im. agined. He is nothing but aa un- speakably dirty and spiritiess man, pri awiing siong ith BY eve to stealing Lor begeing envagh for a lo dag bauss care with bers tril (en if gs | ot VERE ee, The Mr.’ Navy officers avoid us muek as pos sible addressing cach other by utile, employing the ‘Mr " vhenever official courtesy does not demand an open recognition of rank. im tlie Navy. The doctor prescribed castor Natarally the fellow ‘kicked aod | not think cas’or oil | The doetor | papa wonid | be all right, and if he did not take the | 5 Tio po The follow with the toothache | took the oil, which war dag ont of a jjar with a spatula by the hospital | and went | tor hae a good praciies to-day in one Some of And i already in existence farm to provide | Beeently there were! {ine gentleman He | but between | Peitatho and the rail way there are two and Feds : they wore afraid to follow Lim, and returned to | The gentienian arrived all | 8 Luekily the particular train that he canght bad aa Eogliah | engine driver, who leat him & pair of | PMs Leharged, and the Von {fhe jet [ RWay These four swords form part ol the | | Mansion House > returned a {om Enginesr Price at ra a few nightx amy with ail borne and an state I afr the of Asx he comes slonching down the sunny! side of the road his very walk gives the lie to any romantic motion about | He does not walk; he merely fim change while asleep 18 the expectorating freely as he ‘goes, The wind on the heath has no | The new cotton belt is more able to wearisome way froma one common | Zewenshure, hig th ah AM: Padidon ti 85 dab Ianels ‘ Simry : Fine 3 to 38 Fresmar. Sood thai 9 Bootie, Wextord Alsgheny 1% Te Fi Kerr, West §elsorcing. Paveirs James McMurieie, Nong Ou 25 tn $0 pHa $16 1s 3 4 row sd 4 wom, Ma i: Fi. Shaner Porter i Vi iia Ae ARI OER iH ns i han Warren Fawr Pays $17 Tare Fa FB a ha ae y T Ra SEP ed Blownd hy Was ather day whieh he & podireman Jietely Cis § Ir oi the & Aged oa e mn the 2nd Saney tenes hay inty, ERY % When about 5 Mauch Bunk Harry Wegvery, ag iu to Bix mother IRCGRES a i Hie gun OF A Was fr wide of Bi Mre JF Cope the Mra leant of Wilmir oft x fortune Si oH te De dintribnitedg Mew £" aa Pope aunt ie t They had charge $; dawn the sland wa the « Ar bags Harper J. SIONS med ty he 3 Ecole Mra Johmson and her faa ji dren narrowly wR pad fives Tramps are sispectad it On fre Mrs. Anna A Rha tarey . Hichardaan ths into Erg Fails re { IVE Al at thay y cars which fell Billed eight men The Rome of Gresneiile wae bury x iE i iN mid Toren An Fp youd SIRT ary ast af the Folie? siting it Adare 3 tu®als man at Fr by # me: [eT dad “ch be " Sharpay Tye Prest eran rostered uit for IEAGYR RZaiAW Cincinnan street a ay company fr duries received last Beptomiber Pani Baker a conduciae : Greenghurg, Jeannette andl eetrie Raliway, was roblasd CR Bas Pirest ART hars cast of Jeannette a few nights aye Quartsrmast:sr Edward BR MoO wile of the Tenth Reglhmsnt fa Manila, has served notice of bis $dacy for President Judge in Westmoreland County distrist Mrs John 1. Beer, aged 33 yrarsm fell into an open gray last week and was burned to death Oier-axeriion in chasing a caused the death of Doyegr.oid Stall of Lancaster The Soypar-old son of Leslie Harmey pf Burssviile Washington uppity, was robbed of a box cuntaining 309 he was carrying Bote for his father matured gas reCen xD Thoss County magntair * Aon Ho v4 tha Dg rt he &* eas I fOant an mang aeileh buy Theil Haven nw anal the town CER ness Bl gal mounds at ene cote. will De opened he Carnegie Lnsth FF = at CREE tha OE John #8 wy LiXiengyy Vas Alleghsny hy archeologists st tute of Flhitshuryg A big woolen mil is to be stablizhe i { at Brookville = URN Hind BU PTER WHEAT No 2reg © Veal Caves af whieh THE MARKET iA ——, Crain. Flour and Feed. i WHEAT No. 1 red i No. dred {ORK No. 2 yeliow, ear. .,.... No. I yeliow, shelled Mixeavar. ... OATR. Xa 2 white . Na 4 white - YR !No. 3 FLOUIE Winter patents. Fagoy sreaight wister Eye Sour : HAY No 1 timoahy L Faeyr. Na Fo... i TEED No 1 white mid, toa Brows muddiings ! ES Ra w REEDS Guver, 60 Ba Timothy, prime : Dairy Products BUTTER Figen cronmery, | hi SPRNmNg ¢ : Fanpop sountry rodl sinew CREEAE- Ohio, new... Xow Yard now Feuits send Vegetables BEANS Lima oo oo FOTATORS Fane y wit, ? bs {AEBRGE. Por ORION. Chutes soiiow, 1 ba Founitry, Bs RENE Per pair, sml # RXEY=. Par fram Fr and Obi FMW 49 ® se REM asa La oo AX a Bo Wn SYEUY SITREBBUIBLLC- EAR Sh ¥ Woent ve wl 68 # at Padus «Bi Te " ¥ fromah CINCINNATL 5 EnNEnE FLOUR. . WHEAT Bx E Neo 7 red ha ¢ (Mis creamery. ... BE was FPiiA DYLPH IA. FLOT 1. Crier WHEAT 3a deed, LL CORK No. 7 mized. ’ re OATR No 3 white Lpsmary, outni. oe Eats. Pengeyivanin Hratys, & ‘ $i 3 & ow ko = i 2% iy NEW YORK FLOUR Patents Ne 410 Te COER No 3 H GATS. White Western bd BETiie « Fs EGOS sists of Peon 3 FAVE STOCK. Crntral Stock Yarde Kast Liberiy Fa CATIIE IHS Ye IRD Bes | 1150 Mus, Henry Wl to 1000 Ha 0 to Wh Ba Bixee PH jake Ty, Him tes Fair if fe bet Loman Prime, fxvcud Aw lt 4 Bw . To t I 3 * § 4 iw 24 LA al Wh Sad Heavy . Roaghe and stags | wHE EE, sid Good, 85 Fair 0 5 = Sa f HmMMmen. wl L254 S8BuGEE ¥Buzs® Gh Gp Tw od 1:8 WN, ¥ he Gn Ryrages, exis... . pringer goo Roton rth ag to Tate Fares vemrBags. iught yonriads. 8888s TRADE REVIEW. Owenter Than Fras Evport of iron. B® Fon & Co's paview oF trade Feria as foljows I Hint week The : ro Bas safoly passin The Trial of toslestiafe Before this sles. 2 except political ase " buxipess sniarges af tirade Ras bHewn FC RAGWR IN aRY month is9% The revard on shams <learings thie fas year 1 REY than in ies ¢ ory ify (xtobwr have ih GarRYr than last year farger thar in (eR showy AR Increnss of Foster SX POPs, in exporia fron Nea & Bele Emports showed me PT amt in (Riaber against foreign bankers Gp ai $f Inconvenient absasiutely me angiesy abit the carvency, and the Treasury ani stroug. When enormous BT products are considered 1 omiposestibie Tar the soan- ering pans tRry § Frew past Fhe country sensly & vent Bgl vee. Wilh Xriantie 1 Fou faded, f 33x23 hipahelal, Laid 4% Year RE Pui FR ert HrraReds CREA 52.55 ant Woosrersn bushels fur th “% mags i's Xow Jo nay Rot Volume o Trade wm Preceding £5 pw 3 § Sr In £ can wits re lines yy fad 561 ivan ra CER PWR Nap an 4%1 THRE. comin ong Wek 4 Te Lar Bas Prac gyn l ain of asad An ER Re 18 8 ne tisha ¥ than he § dries Sainth an daraaind a Beyond ah Dae Tors Tals Tar Poge gmil oe ie tans 4 ww pyms billets fram Ail RYeal Juaniities ang aifer Snished The virkd are generally rifers Ine iuadin many van nd lake shipyards sad ain, With seasonabe de. prroadane tx minar metas still advanes fargely with the London demand on tes 3810 cenin and Jdopper tn 1280 suis id Jor lake. with lead stenidy at Lite ¢edts in smite of Reavy Mexican arrivals Wosad for the MSY Week wears saly 4 rong pr aus at the three Yhief cnnterm markets and were secured by soppceattions at all markets as last ae wie making IRIN mounds agains! 16.87 Lamyl for the Fame twa 0 VERT and 12.250 sey peed for ns weeks 5 Ia Many © wiusing 0 abate their firhees largess mangfas. yruge Bhd CUTTER. market : af fhedy uBceriainiy mn demand. Par xanien Bas somewhat nprvag raully the minds of dderw that the supply Sneslil Woe! on band % than has heretofaes i SUP are] hton goods an in DBeflieor demand, athough ard title ¢an be said ing characte 88 15 the de. staple goods of damesric asdf so her Ths Bi Are thsi Lheilow i ast RT
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers