Pittsburg dispatch. (Pittsburg [Pa.]) 1880-1923, September 23, 1889, Page 8, Image 8

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    i .8
'GEEATEST DOMINION.
The Breadth of Our Continent Em
ployed as an Illustration of
A WOELD UNDER OXE SOYEREIGK.
Dr.
Talmage's Snnilay Morning Sermon
Fall of Word Tainting.
HE WODLD TAKE IS ALL TERRITORIES
rSrECIAL TELEGBJUJ TO TOT DI.SFATCIM
Brooklyn, September 22. It ras a
great anthem of praise that Trent up from
the crowded throngs at the Brooklyn Taber
nacle this morning, where the Kev. T. De
Witt Talmage, D. D., preached as usual.
The opening hymn was:
No more let human blood be spilt
Vain sacrifice for human guilt;
But to each conscience be applied
The blood that flows from Jesus' side.
The subject of the sermon was, "From
Ocean to Ocean, or Jly Transcontinental
Journey." Text: Psalms Ixrii, 8: "He
shall have dominion from sea to sea," The
preacher said:
What two seas are referred to? Some
might say that the text meant that Christ
was to reign over all the land between
the Arabian Sea and Caspian Sea, or be
tween the Bed Sea and the Mediterranean
Sea, or between the Black Sea and the
North Sea. No; in such case my text
would hare named them. It meant from
any large body of water on the earth clear
across to any other large body of water.
And so 1 have a rizht to read it: He shall
have dominion from the Atlantic Sea to the
Pacific Sea. My theme is, America for
Godl
First, consider the immensity of this pos
session. If it were only a small tract of
land capable of nothing better than sage
brush aud with ability only to support
prairie dogs, I should not have much en
thusiasm in wanting Christ to have it added
to His dominion. But its immensity and
affluence no one can imagine unless, in im
migrant wagon or stage coach or in rail
train of the Union Pacific or the Northern
pacific or the Canadian Pacific or the
Southern Pacific, he has traversed it.
OUR VAST CONTINENT.
Having been privileged six times to cross
this continent, and twice this, summer, I
have come to some appreciation of its mag
nitude. California, which I supposed in
boyhood from its Bize on the map, was a few
yards across, a ridge of land on which one
must walk cautiously lest he hit his head
acrainst the Sierra Nevada on one side or
slip off into the Pacific waters on the other,
California, the thin slice ol land as I sup
posed it to be in boyhood, I have found it to
be larger than all the States of New En-
fland and all New York State and all
'ennsylvania added together; and if you
add them together their square miles fall
iar short of California.
North and South Dakota, Montana and
Washington Territory, to be launched next
winter into Statehood, will be giants at
their birth. Let the Congress of the United
States strain a point and hoon admit also
Idaho and Wyoming and New Mexico.
What is the use keeping them out fu the
cold any longer? Let us have the whole
continent divided into States with Sena
torial aud Congressional representatives
and we will all be happy together. If
some of them have not quite the requisite
number of people, fix np the Constitution
to suit these caes. Even Utah will by
dropping polygamy soon be ready to enter.
Monogamy has triumphed in parts of Utah
and will probably triumph at this fall elec
tion in Salt Lake City.
Turn all the Territories into States and if
some of the sisters are smaller than the
elder sisters, give them time and they will
soon be as large as any of them. Because
some of the daughters of a family may be
five feet in stature and the others only iour
leet, do not let the daughters five feet high
shut the door in the faces of those who are
only four feet high. Among the dying
utterances of our good friend, the wise
statesman and great author, the brilliant
orator and magnificent sou, S. S. Cox, was
the expressed determination to move next
winter in Congress for the transference of
other Territories into States.
THE DESERT TO BE RECLAIMED.
"But," says someone, "in calculating the
immensity of our continental acreage you
must remember that vast reaches of our
public domain are uncultivated, heaps of
dry sand, and the 'bad lands' of Montana
and the great American desert." I am
glad you mentioned that. Within 25 years
there will not be between the Atlantic and
Pacific coasts a hundred miles of land not
reclaimed either by farmers' plow or miners'
crowbar. By irrigation, the waters of the
rivers and the showers of heaven in what
are called the rainy season will be gathered
into great reservoirs and throngh aqueducts
let down where and when the people want
them. Utah is an object lesson. Some
parts of that territory which were so barren
that a spear of grass could not have been
raised there in a hundred years are now
rich as Lancaster county farms of Pennsyl
vania or" Westchester farms of New York or
Somerset county farms of New Jersey.
Experiments have proved that ten
acres of ground irrigated from waters
gathered in great hydrological basins will
pTOQUce as much as titty acres from the
downpour of rain as seen in our regions.
We have our freshets and our droughts, but
in those lands which are to be scientifically
irrigated there will be neither freshets nor
droughts. As you take a pitcher and get it
full of water, and then set it on a table and
take a drink out of it when y n are thirsty,
and never think of drinking a pitcherful all
at once, so Montana and Wyoming and
Idaho will catch the rains of their rainy
season and take up all the waters of their
rivers in great pitchers of reservoirs, and
drink out of them whenever they will and
refresh their land whenever they will.
IMMENSE IEEIGATIOK ALREADY.
The work has alreadv been grandly begun
by the United States Government Over 400
lakes have already been officially taken pos
session of by the nation for the great enter
prise of irrigation. Elvers that have been
rolling idly through these regions, doing
nothing on their way to the sea, will be las
soed and corraled and penned up until such
time as the farmers need them. Under the
same processes the Ohio, the Mississippi and
all the other rivers will be taught to behave
themselves better, and great basins will be
made to catch the surplus of waters in times
of freshet and keep them fortimesofdrought.
The irrigating process by which all the arid
lands between the Atlantic and Pacific
oceans are to be fertilized is no new experi
ment. It has been going on successfully
hundreds of years, in Spain, in China, in
India, in Eussia, in Egypt,
About 800,000,000 ol people of the earth
to-day are kept olive by food raised on irri
gated land. And here we have allowed to
lie waste, given up to rattlesnake and bat
and prairie dog, lands enough to support
whole nations of industrious population.
The work begun will be consummated.
Here and there exceptional lands may be
stubborn and refuse tovyield any wheat or
corn from their hard fists, but if the hoe
fail to make an impression, tne miner s
pickarwill discover the reason for it and
bring up from beneath those unproductive
surfaces coal and iron and lead and copper
and silver and gold., God speedy the geolo
gists and the surveyors, the engineers and
the Senatorial Commissions and the capi
talists and the new settlers and the hus
bandmen who put their brain and hand and
heart to this transfiguration of the Amer
ican continent!
THE GIANT TBEES OF CENTURIES.
But whilel speak of the immensity of the
continent, I mutt remark it is not an im
MBUr tf monotone or lameness. The
w-
larger some countries are, the worse for the
world. This continent is not more remark
able for its magnitude than for its wonders
of construction. What a pity the United
States Government did not take possession
of Yosemite, California, as it has of Yellow
stone, Wyoming, and of Niagara Falls, New
York! Yosemite and the adjoining Califor
nia regions! Who that has seen them can
think of them without having his blood tin
gle? Trees now standing there that were
old when Christ lived. These monarchs of
foliage reigned before Caesar or Alexander,
and the next thousand years will not shatter
their scepter. They are the masts of the
continent," their canvas spread on the winds
while the old ship bears on its way through
the ages. Their size, of which travelers
often speak,does not affect me so much as their
longevity. Though so old now, the branches
of some of them will crackle in the last con
flagration of the planet.
That Valley of the Yosemite is eight
miles long and a half mile wide and 3,000
feet deep. It seems as if it had been the
meaning of Omnipotence to crowd into as
small a space as possible some of the most
stupendous scenery of the world. Some of
the cliffs you do not stop to measure by feet,
for they are literally a mile high. Steep so
that neither foot of man nor beast ever
scaled them, they stand iu everlasting defi
ance. If Jehovah has a throne on earth
these are its white pillars. Standing down
in this great chasm of the valley you look
np and yonder is Cathedral Eock, vast,
gloomy minster built for the silent worship
of the mountains. Yonder is Sentinel Bock,
3,270 lpct high, bold, solitary, standing
guard anions; the aces, its top seldom
touched until a bride one Fourth of July
mounted it and
PLANTED THE NATIONAL STANDARD
and the people down in the valley looked up
and saw the head of the mountain turbaned
with stars and stripes. Yonder are the
"Three Brothers," 4,000 feet high; "Cloud's
Best," North and South Dome and heights
never captured save by the fiery bayonets of
the thunder storm.
No pause for the eye, no stopping place
for the mind. Mountains hurled on
mountains. Mountains in the wake of
mountains. Mountains flanked by mount
ains. Mountains split. Mountains ground.
MountainsTallen. Mountains triumphant.
As though Mont Blanc and the Adiron
dacks and Mount Washington were here
uttering themselves in one magnificent
chorus ot rock and precipice and waterfall.
Sitting and dashing through the rocks, the
water comes down. The Bridal Veil Falls,
so thin vou can see the face of the mountain
behind it. Yonder is Yosemite Falls, drop
ping 2,634 feet, 16 times greater descent
than that of Niagara. These waters dashed
to death on the rocks, so that the white
spirit of the slain waters ascending in robe
of mist seeks the heaven. Yonder is Nevada
Falls plunging 700 feet, the water in arrows,
the water in rockets, the water in pearls,
the water in amethysts, the water in dia
monds. That cascade flings down the rocks
enough jewels to array all the earth in
beauty, and rushes on until it drops into a
very hell of waters, the smoke of their tor
ment ascending forever and ever.
But the most wonderful part of this
American continent is the Yellowstone
Park. My visit there last month made upon
me an impression that will last forever.
After all poetry has exhausted itself and all
the Morans and Bierstadts and the other
enchanting artists havecompleted their can
vas, there will be other revelations to make
and other stories of its beauty and wrath,
splendor and agonv, to be recited.
AMERICA'S PLAT GROUND.
The Yellowstone Park is the geologist's
paradise. By cheapening of travel may it
become the nation's playground I In some
portions of it there seems to be the anarchy
of the elements. Fire and water, and the
vapor born of that marriage, terrific Geyser
cones or hills of crystal that have been over
5,000 years growing. In places the earth,
throbbing, sobbing, groaning, quaking with
aqueous paroxysm.
At the expiration of every 65 minutes one
of the geysers tossing its boiling water 185
feet in the air and then descending into
swinging rainbows. Caverns of pictured
walls large enough for the sepulcher of the
human race. Formations of stone in shape
and color of calla lily, of heliotrope, of rose,
of cowslip, of sunflower and of gladiola.
Sulphur and arsenic and oxide of iron, with
their delicate pencils, turning the bills into
a Luxemburg or a Vatican picture gallery.
The so-called Thanatopsis geyser, exquisite
as the Brvant poem it was named after, and
the so-called Evangeline geyser, lovely as
the Longfellow heroine it commemorates.
The so-called Pnlpit Terrace from its white
elevation preaching mightier sermonB of
God than human lips ever uttered. The so
called Bethesda geyser, by the warmth of
which invalids have already been cured,
the angel of health continuallv stirring the
waters. Enraged craters, with heat at 500
decrees, only a little below the surface.
Wide reaches of stone of intermingled
colors, blue as the sky, green as the foliage,
crimbon as the dahlia, white as the snow,
spotted as the leopard, tawny as the lion,
grizzly as the bear, in circles, in angles, in
stars, in coronets, in stalactites, in stalag
mites. IN STRIKING CONTRAST.
Here and there are petrified growths, or
the dead trees, and vegetation of other ages,
kept through a process of natural embalm
ment. In some places waters as innocent
and smiling as a child making a first at
tempt to walk from its mother's lap, and not
far off as foaming and frenzied and ungov
ernable as a maniac in murderous struggle
with his keepers.
But after you have wandered along the
geyserite enchantment for davs and begin
to' feel that there can be nothing more of
interest to see, you suddenly come upon the
peroration of all majesty and grandeur, the
crand canyon. It is here that it seems to
me and I speak it with reverence Jeho
vah seeems to have surpassed Himself. It
seems a great gulch let down into the eter
nities. Here, hung up and let down and
spread abroad, are all the colors of land
and sea and sky. Upholstering of the
Lord God Almighty. Best work of the
Architect of worlds. Sculpturing by the
Infinite. Masonry by an omnipotent trowel.
Yellow! You never saw yellow unless you
saw it there. Bed! You never saw red
unless you saw it there. Violet! You
never saw violet unless you saw it there.
Triumphant banners of color. In a cathe
dral of basalt, sunrise and sunset married
by the setting of rainbow ring.
Gothic arches, Corinthian capitals and
Egyptian basilicas built before human
architecture was born. Huge fortifications
of granite constructed before war forged its
first cannon. Gibraltars and Sebastopols
that never can be taken. Alhambras, where
kings of strength and queens of beauty
reigned long before the first earthly crown
was empearled. Thrones on which no one
but the King of heaven and earth ever sat.
Fount of waters at which the lesser hills are
baptized while the giant cliffs stand round
as sponsors.
NOT THE "WORK OF A DAT.
For thousands of years before that scene
was unveiled to human sight, the elements
were busy, and the geysers were hewing
away with their hot chisel, and glaciers
were pounding with their cold hammers,
and hurricanes were cleaving with their
lightning strokes, and hailstones giving the
finishing touches, and after all these forces
of nature had done their best, in our century
the curtain dropped and the world had a
new and divinely inspired revelation, the
Old Testament written on papyrus, the New
Testament written on parchment, and now
this last Testament written on the rocks.
Hanging over one of the cliffs I looked
ofl until I could not get my breath, then re
treating to a less exposed place I looked
down again. Down there is a pillar of rock
that in certain conditions of the atmosphere
looks like a pillar o! blood. Yonder are 50
feet ot emerald on a base of 500 feet of opal.
Wall of chalk resting on pedestals of beryl.
Turrets of light tumbling on floors of dark
ness. The brown brightening into golden.
Snow of crystal melting into fire of car
buncle. Flaming red cooling into russet.
Cold blue warming into saffron. Dnll gray
kindling into solferino. Morning twilight
flushing midnightshadows. Auroras crouch
ing among rosks.
Yonder is an eagle's nest on a shaft of
basa.lL Through an ereelais we see among
it the young eagles, bat the stoutest ana ofl
!
THE
our group cannot hurl a stone near enough
to disturb the feathered domesticity.
Yonder are heights that would be chilled
with horror but for the warm robe of -forest
foliage with which they are enwrapped.
Altars of worship at which nations might
kneel. Domes of chalcedony on temples
of porphvry. See all this carnage of color
up and down the cliffs; it must have been
the battle field of the war of the elements.
Here are all the colors of the wall of heaven,
neither the sapphire nor the chrysolite nor
the topaz nor the jacinth, nor the amethyst
nor the jasper nor the 12 gates of 12 pearls,
wanting.
BETWEEN EARTH AND HEAVEN.
If spirits bound from earth to heaven
could pass up by way of this canyon, the
dash of heavenly beauty would not be so
overpowering. It would only be from glory
to glory. Ascent through such earthly
scenery in which the crystal is so bright
and the red so flaming would be fit prepara
tion for the "sea of glass mingled with
fire."
Standing there in the Grand canyon ot
the Yellowstone park, on the morning of
August 9, for the most part we held our
peace, but after awhile it flashed upon me
with such power I could not help but say to
mv comrades: "What a hall this would be
for the last judgment!" See that mighty
cascade with the rainbows at the foot of it?
Those waters congealed and transfixed with
the agitations of that day, what a place they
would make for the shining feet of a judge
of quick and dead. And" those rainbows
look now like the crowns to be cast at his
feet. At the bottom of this great canyon is
a floor on which the nations of the earth
might stand, and all up and down these
galleries of rock the nations of heaven might
sit And what reverberation of archangels'
trumpet there would be through all these
gorges and from all these caverns and over
all these heights. Why should not the
greatest of all the days the world shall ever
see close amid the grandest scenery Omnipo
tence ever built?
Oh, the sweep of the American continent
Sailing up Puget sound, its shores so bold
that for 1,500 miles a ship's prow would
touch the shore before its keel touched the
bottom, I said: "This is the Mediterranean
of America." Visiting Portland and Ta
coma and Seattle and Victoria and Fort
Townsend and Vancouvers and other cities
of that Northwest region I thought to my
self: These are the Bostons, New Yorks,
Charlestons and Savannahs of the Pacific
coast. But after all this summer's journey
ing and my other journeys westward in
other summers, I f onnd that I had seen only
a part of the American continent, for
Alaska is as far west of San Francisco as
the coast of Maine is east of it, so that the
central city of the American continent is
San Francisco.
APPLYING THE LESSON.
I have said these things about the magni
tude of the continent and given you a few
specimens of some of its wonders to let you
know the comprehensiveness of the text
when it says that Christ is going to have
dominion from sea to sea; that is, from the
Atlantic to the Pacific. Beside that, the
salvation of this continent means the salva
tion of Asia, for we are only 36 miles from
Asia at the northwest. Only Behring
straits separate us from Asia, and these will
be spanned by a great bridge before another
century closes, and probably long before
that The 36 miles ot water between these
two continents are not all deep sea, but
have three islands, and there are also shoals
which will allow piers for bridges, and for
most of the way the water is only about 20
fathoms deep.
The Americo-Asiatic bridge, which will
yet span those straits, will make America,
Asia, Europe and Africa one continent So
you see America evangelized, Asia will be
evangelized. Europe taking Asia from one
side and America taking it lrom the other
side. Our great grand-children will cross
that bridge. America and Asia and Europe
all one, what subtraction from the pangs of
seasickness! and the prophecies in Revela
tion will be fulfilled, "There shall be no
more sea." But do I mean literally that
this American continent is going to be all
gospelized? I do. Christopher Columbus,
when he went ashore from the Santa Maria,
and his second brother, Alonzo, when he
went ashore from the Pinta, and his third
brother, Vincent when he went ashore from
the Nina, took possession of this country in
the name of the Father and the Son and the
Holy Ghost
SATAN CAN'T CLAIM IT.
Satan has no more right to this country
than I have to your pocketbook. To hear
him talk on the roof of the Temple, where
he proposed to give Christ the kingdoms of
this world and the glory of them, you might
suppose that Satan was a great capitalist or
that he was loaded up with real estate, when
the old miscreant never owned an acre or an
inch of ground on this planet For that
reason I protest against something I heard
and saw this summer and other summers in
Montana and Oregon and Wyoming and
Idaho and Colorado and California. They
have given devilistic names to many places
in the West and Northwest.
As soon as you get in the Yellowstone
Park or California you have pointed out to
you places cursed with such names as "The
Devil's Slide," "The Devil's Kitchen,"
"The Devil's Thumb," "The Devil's
Pulpit," "The Devil's Mush Pot," "The
Devil's Tea Kettle," "The Devil's Saw
Mill," "The Devil's Machine Shop," "The
Devil's Gate" and so on. Now it is very
much needed that geological surveyor, or
Congressional Committee, or group of dis
tinguished tourists go through Montana and
Wyoming and California and Colorado and
give other names to these places. All these
regions belong to the Lord and to a Christian
nation, and away with such Plutonic no
menclature. But how is this continent to be gospel
ized? The pulpit and a Christian printing
press harnessed together will be the
mightiest team for the first plow. Not
by the plow of cold, formalistic theology,
not by ecclesiastical technicalities. I am
sick of them, and the world is sick of them.
THE BEST Or BAIT.
But it will be done by the warm hearted,
sympathetic presentation of the fact that
Christ is ready to pardon all our sins and
heal all our wounds, and save usboth for this
world and the next. Let your religion of
glaciers crack off and fall into the gulf
stream and get melted. Take all your
creeds of all denominations and drop out of
them all human phraseology and put in
only scriptural phraseology, and you will
see how quick the people will jump after
them.
On the Columbia river a few days ago we
saw the salmon jump clear out of the water
in different places, I suppose for the pur
pose of getting the insects. And if when we
want to fish for men we could only have the
right kind of bait they will spring out
above the flood of their sins and sorrows to
reach it The Young Men's Christian As
sociations of America will also do part of
the work. All over the continent 1 saw this
summer their new buildings rising. In
POWDER
Absolutely Pure.
Ibis powder never varies. A marvel ot par
Jty, strength and wholesomeness. More eco
nomical than the ordinary kin ds, and cannot
be sold in competition with the multitude ot
ow est, short weight, alum or phosphate now
den. Sold only in cant. ROYAL BAKING
POWDER CO., 108 Wall Sk. N. Y.
oc5-mltacwna
Wirt6
PITTSBUKG ' DISPATCH,'
Vancouver I asked: "What are you going
to put on that sightly place?" The answer
was: "A Young Men's Christian Associa
tion building." At Lincoln, Neb., I said:
"What are they making those excavations
for?" Answer: "For our Young Men's
Christian Association building." At Des
Moines, la., I saw a noble structure rising,
and I asked for what purpose it was being
built, and they told me for the Young Men's
Christian Association.
TO CAPTURE ALL TOUNG MEN.
These institutions are going to take the
young men of this nation for God. These
institutions seem in better lavor with God
and man than ever before. Bnsiness men
and capitalists are awaking to the fact that
they can do nothing better in the way of
living beneficence, or in last will and testa
ment than to do what Mr. Marquand did for
Brooklyn when be made our Young Men's
Christian palace possible. These institu
tions will get our young men all over the
land into a stampede for heaven. Thus we
will all in some way help on the
work, you with jour ten talents, I
with five, somebody else with three.
It is estimated that to irrigate
the arid and desert lands of
America as they ought to be irrigated,
it will cost about 8100,000,000 to gather the
waters into reservoirs. As much contribu
tion and effort as that would irrigate with
gospel influences all the waste places of this
continent Let us by prayer and contribu
tion and right living all help to fill the res
ervoirs. You will carry a bucket and you a
cup, and even a thimbleful would help.
And after a while God will send the floods
of mercy so gathered, pouring down over all
the land, and some of us on earth and some
of us in heaven will sing with Isaiah: "In
the wilderness waters have broken out and
streams in the desert," and with David:
"There is a river the streams whereof shall
make glad the city of God." Ob, fill up
the reservoirs! America for God!
FOR NERVOUS DEBILITY
TJno Horsford'a Acid Phosphate.
Dr. A. M. Bilby, Mitchell, Dak., says: "I have
used It in a number of cases of nervous debil
ity, with very good results."
81. Until October. 81.
Mothers, bring children to Aufrecht's
Elite gallery, 516 Market street, Pittsburg.
Use elevator. Cabinets ?1 per dozen, proof
shown.
It is absolutely
Age." '
pure. Klein's
"Silver
MWF
SHE HAD CONSUMPTION!
SO THE DOCTORS SAID.
"1 had a short hacking congh, tightness in
the chest, short breath, and I felt tired all the
time. As I grew weaker I suffered with
those terrible night sweats. My father took me
to 20 physicians who said I could not be cured.
I doctored with many- physicians, but got
no better. After 14 years of suffering I began
treatment with the physicians of the Catarrh
and Dyspepsia Institute323 Penn avenue, to
whom I owe my recovery. My cough is gone.
I have no dizziness, ringing in the ean, head
ache or night sweats any more. The pain and
soreness in my stomach have lett me. My food
digests well, so that now no gas forms') n mv
stomach. My throat used to be so pore I could
hardly swallow. That is cured. I feel well
and strong, and why should I not praise these
doctors for thus saving me from such an un
timely death?" MISS LYDIA MORGAN. Kear
sarge St., near Virginia, on Mt Washington.
Mrs. Dr. Crossley, ladies' consulting physician
at the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute, 323
Penn are. They cure Catarrh, Dyspepsia and
Diseases of Women. Consultation free to all.
Office hours, 10 A. M. to 4 P. M, and 6 to 8 P.
M. Sundays, 12 to 4 P. M. selS-irWF
ALLxEaHENY!
TWO DATS ONLY,
Monday and Tuesday, Sept. 23 and 24
AT EXPOSITION PARK.
P. T. BARIMUM'S
GREATEST SHOW ON EARTH,
Great London Circus,
Wild Moorish Caravan.
Paris Olympla Hippodrome.
Black Wizards Tent of Illusions.
"APERFECTREVELATIONOFSURPHISES."
Amazement Astonishment and Mystification
Depicted on the faces of all Visitors.
Children delighted with Fairyland Wonders.
BARNUM & BAILEY'S ,
GREATEST EFFORTS REALIZED.
A Sumptuous Feast of Dazzling Splendors.
Rich Costumes. Wonderful Features.
High Class Equestrianism. Beautiful Displays.
Remarkable Feats. Perfect Performances.
Marvellous Attractions. Magnificent Exhibi-
tions.
Fifteen enormous exhibitions Combined in one.
3 Full Clreus Companies in 3 Rings.
Special Elevated Stage Performances.
2 Monster Museums of Wonders and Curiosities
2 Herds of Performing Elephants.
2 Droves of Arabian Desert Camels.
2 Troupes of Trained Imported Stallions.
Great Mid-Air Displays of Real Daring.
Hostsof Fearless High-class Foreign Specialists
20 Pantomimic Clowns. 20 Animal Clowns.
A whole Menagerie of Trained Beasts.
125 Breath-taking and Daring Acts.
Everything New, Novel and Wonderful.
Two Performances every day, at 2 and 8 P. h.
Doors open an hour earlier.
Admission 60cts. Children under 9 years, 25 cts.
Great Street Parade Morning of Arrival of
Show.
Route as follows: South ave, to Allegheny
ave., to Western ave., to Ohio st, to Federal
st, to Isabella st, across Seventh st bridge, to
Liberty st, to Smlthfield st, to Water St., to
Wood St., to Third ave- to Market st, to Sixth
st, across bridge to Robinson st, to Anderson
st, in Church ave.. to Union are., to Ohio st.,
to Federal St., to Lacock st., to Exposition
Park.
As an accommodation Reserved Seat Tickets
will tiA anlri nt tha raimliv nrfoA anil AHmflilA.
Tickets at the usual slight advance at E. G. I
peumatisin
TRADE ySuMAHK
SlacoOil
C0.md.The1IHAS-MDGEIERG11
NARCISSE M E R M A I D . " IJLgM
I
tuys a uo.'S riano store, vo ruin ave.
relW6117,Wl21,22,23
h-l.
MONDAYS
"SEPTEMBER
A SADH0ME.
The Vain Regrets of a Sorrowful Husband
Over the Needless Lots of His Wife, and
the Warning It Conveys to Others.
Probably the saddest most unhappy man In
Hew York. City to-day Is Mr. G. V. Remington,
who resides on East 35th street. A few weeks ago
he had a beautiful wife and a happy home; now
his ears are pained by the cries of his motherless
children. Mrs. Eemlngton passed through the
Summer In good health and spirits, but the first
change In the weather chilled her, caused her to
cough, quickened her pulse and brought on a gen
eral fecltng of weariness. Mr. Bemlngton thought
It was only a cold, and so neglected It.
"Obi Why didn't I do something before It was
too late?" he exclaimed bitterly. "I knew she
was weakened by the heat of the Summer, all the
pores of the sklu were oDea aud she was an easy
victim to disease, but I might have saved her If I
had only assisted Nature In time, Instead of wait
ing, and then sending for the doctor when it was
too late."
Nearly every man or woman who has passed
through the Bummer months Is specially liable to
the attack of this same demon. Pneumonia, which
comes so quickly, so unexpectedly and often ends
so fatally. Immediate assistance to nature or a
strong stimulant Is the only way by which it can
be avoided, and it Is for this very purpose that
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey has achieved such a
national reputation and become so popular. The
dangerous, often fatal, diseases which attack the
system when it is specially weak can bo quickly
thrown off by this pure stimulating whiskey. The
highest testimony of the leading physicians ol the
land amply prove this, and tho thousands who
have been saved from untimely graves also attest
It. Great care should be exercised to secure only
the genuine, as It Is the only preparation on the
market which has the power to enre ana which
does so Invariably.
FAHNESTOCKPLACE!
PLAN OF LOTS.
The Most Beautiful and
Attractive Building
Sites in the
EAST END.
Fronting on Penn Ave
nue, Mead, Thomas,Mc
Pherson and Home
wood Avenues.
A.T
H0MEW00D STATION,
F. R. R.
Large Lots, Dry, Level and Cov
ered with Shade and Fruit Trees.
CALL FOB PLAN AT
JAMISON & DICKIE,
96 FOURTH AVE.,
Or Cor. PENN AND SHADY AVE., E. E.
se21-CS-invs
SEAL : KILLING
XN AliASEA.
J. G. BENNETT & CO.,
3ZAJST7FA.CrrT7JZETl&.
I AnirQ wishing to purchase Genuine
LMUIllO Alaska Seal Garments can get
them at Bennett's.
We are direct importers of Sealskins.
We know good Sealskins.
We cannot be deceived in bad Sealskins.
We are manufacturers of Seal Garments.
Wo are the only manufacturers of Seal Gar
ments in Pittsburg.
We can give you a perfect fit If yon wish
your old Seal Garments made over or changed
into any other shape, no difference how diffi
cult it should be, we can do it. Our work will
always be the best, our fits perfect and our
prices the lowest.
J.G. BENNETT & CO.,
Hatters and Furriers,
COR. WOOD ST. AND FIFTH AVE.
se22-110-MwTSU
BLOATER MESS
This season's catch of
Bloater Mess Mackerel
just received.
O. K. BrEVENSON & CO.,
SIXTH AVENUE. JalZ-69-MWT
LADIES' AND MISSES' WRAPS, JACKETS, Etc. A WONDERFUL DISPLAY.
DOUGLAS &MACKIE
Will lay ont for your inspection one of the largest
Wraps, etc., ever exnioitea in iujs vicinity, ah
are here, whilo the prices are sucn as to o
ru WAT.T, OR WINTER GARMENTS.
rices are such as to be APPBOAOHABLE BY ANY AND ALL IN QUEST
We'll show you a magnificent collection of Ladies' English Seal Plush Jackets, perfection
in fashion and finish, at 15 each. This is undoubtedly the lowest price ever quoted for this gar
ment, here or anywhere else.
Tben we'll lay ont 100 Ladles' Seal Plush Sacqnes at 19 SO each; you'd consider them cheap
enough at 25,
Then there's another hundred, much finer, which we propose offering to start the season, at
23 6ueacb. Thev are the regular $30 goods.
1.000 Ladies' Newmarkets, in pretty stripes and lovely checks, we're marked to sell from 3
to 25, and they're worth from SI to 5 more.
A most surprising and fascinating exposition of Ladies' Cloth and Stockinette Jackets will
range from 1 75 to 20. They're very much cheaper than yon'd expect to get such goods for.
' AND THO' LAST NOT "LEAST.
We've got a most snparb array of Alaska Seal Sacqnes. 88 Inches long, at prices varying from
$125 up. LADIES, WErLL SAVE YOU GOOD MO&EY ON THESE GARMENTS.
SPECIAL, Every Department: Dress Goods, Silks, Velvets, Plushes. Trimmings, Under
wear, etc. etc, replete with all latest styles .and novelties, ALL AT OUR WELL-KNOWN
LOV PBICES.
151 and 153 FEDERAL STREET, ALLEGHENY.
' se23-M.wr
FURNITURE AND CARPETS
GRANDEST VARIETY!
BEST QUALITIES!
NEWEST STYLES!
Oasli. oo3-dL C:L?ecLt ZEEcru.se.,
923 and 925 Penn avenue, near Ninth street.
USE
' r."
THE
MADEQM.YBy
IN THE
GeoAMacbeth&Co.Pittsburgh,Pa.
:1889
-
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
J9
gr
WE ARE READY!
THE MOST COMPLETE STOCK
HT THE COUNTRY.
Suits to order from - 820
Trousers to order from - $5
Dress Suita,to order from $25
Overcoats to order from - $15
'oO
rcU&yr
313 SMTTHFIEIjD STREET,
PITTSBURG, PA.
Samples and selfmeaanrement rules mailed
on application. Be22.107.MTh
SCHOOL BAGS,
PENCIL BOXES
and RULERS
HAVE MADE IN MY
SCHOOL'.SHOE
DEPARTMENT
Has induced me to Give Them
Away a few weeks more. With
every pair of Boys' or Girls' Shoes
bought at my store I will give that
very useful article, either a School
Bag or a . Pencil Box and Ruler.
So don't miss your chance and buy
your Shoes
-AT-
G.'D.SIMEN'S,
78 OHIO ST., ALLEGHENY.
Corner of Sandusky street.
seS-stw
Latest improved Spectacles and Eye-Glasses;
will fit any nose with ease and comfort. The
largest and best stock of Optical Instruments
and Artificial Eyes.
KORNBLTJM, Theoretical and
Practical Optician.
No. so Fifth avenue, near Wood street.
Telenhone No. 1688. selg-pan
RAILROADS.
ALLEGHENY VALLEY RAILROAD
Trains leave Onion station (Eastern Standard
time): Klttannlng Ac. 6:53 a. nu: Niagara Ex.,
dally. 8.43 a. m.. Helton Ac, 10.10 a. m.: Valley
Camp Ac, 11:05 p. m.; Oil City and DuBols Ex
pre,2:00 p.m. ; Halts n Ac, 3:00p.m. : Kit tanning
Ac, 4.00r.m.; Braebnrn Ex., 5:00 p.m.; Klttann
lng Ac, 5.30 p. m.; Braebnrn Ac, 6:10 p.m.: Hul
ton Ac, 7:50 p. m.: Buffalo Ex., dally,
8:50 p. m.; Hulton Ac, 9.43 p.m.: Braebnrn Ac,
11:30 p. m. Church trains Braebnrn, 12:40 p. m.
and 8.33 p. m. Pullman Parlor Buffet and
Bleeping Cars between Pittsburg and Buffalo.
JAS. P. ANDERSON, G.T. Agt.; DAVID MC
CAROO. Gen. Bust.
nTSBUUO AND WESTERN RAILWAY
Trains (Ct'lBtan'd time) I Leave Arrive.
Day Ex., Akron.Tolcdo, Kane 6:40 a m 7:37 p m
Butler Accommodation 9.00 a m 5:00 pm
Chicago Express (daily) 12:40 p m 11:30 a m
New Castle Accommodation. 4:30 p m 7:00 D m
Butler and Foxburg Ac 5:30 pm 5:30 a m
First class fare to Chicago, 110 50. Second class,
to 50. Pullman Bullet sleeping car to Chlcagc
daJlr.
stocks of Ladies, Misses and Children's Cloaks,
too
newest styles ot material, weave and fashion
LOWEST PRICES!
EASIEST TERMS!
BEST TREATMENT!
se23.irwT
LAMP
0EST (himneys
yy unvij
IgP&tZfP&G
ISTNote! Out store "will
KAUFM ANNS'
Are Winning NewTrade Every Day
WithTheirRightlyMadeClothir
CLOTHING OUT IN STYLE!
CLOTHING FAULTLESS IN MAKE!
- CLOTHING PERFECT IN FIT!
Nobody does, nobody can make
even increase the cost of a garment slightly if thereby the qHalityof.
fabric, trim and make is so enhanced as to render perfectly acceptable
service. Nobody objects to paying from 15 to $25 for a really goodjfl
Suit or Overcoat.
Ours must be just right, otherwise you are expected to bring tfeeail
back at anv time: which means that we assume all the risks. In a sfinaeV"
we take your money on trust If
we keep the money; if they go wrong we refund it. We can afferd'.to)
deal in this liberal way only because so few of our clothes ever go
wrong. .
MEN'SFINEFALLCLOTHING
A. more complete, finer and handsomer stock than ours was never
seen. The better grades of garments are equal in every particular to
the most expensive custom work. In suits we have the celebrated Clay's
Diagonals and English Wide Wales in Fall Overcoats we show the
finest imported Cassimeres, Meltons, Diagonals and Wales. And the
price we have put on these choice garments is only 20.
At JS18 and $15 we show a most extensive line of fine Fall r Dress
Suits and Overcoats that the most
pride and satisfaction.
Our 10 and $12 qualities of Suits and Overcoats are just the
per thing for men of limited incomes,
that thev be well dressed.
We also show over 300 styles of
$8 and $g every one made of
materials.
SUBSTANTIAL CLOTHING FOR THE BOYS
Our efforts to increase the durability of Boys' and Childrea's
Clothing ought to interest every mother of both cities. So many peo- .
pie go crazy onjprice! price! price! that most dealers yield to the pop
ular mania and sacrifice EVERV FEATURE OF PERMANENT
MERIT to satisfy this clamor it DOESN'T matter to them howTottea'
the linings are if YOU can't discover it until they have gotten hold of
your money. intiX don't care wnetner tne gooas are aii-wooi or nor,;
fast colors or unreliable, whether the fabric is serviceable orjiotso lcmg''4..
as it looks sightly enough to catch your dollars; YOU CAN WHIS- - T
TLE FOR YOUR SATISFACTION. ' .
We have now on sale counter after counter of lovely Kilt Salts,-
nobby short-pant Suits and elegant long-pant Suits every one of a newjr
pattern, a taking style and a good quality. As for prices, they are '
marked in plain figures on every garment and we guarantee them to be ,
the lowest in the city for the same qualities. '
m
EWith Every BOY'S SUIT or OVERCOAT
we will give a Vacuum Tipped Arrow Pistol,
with a red, white and blue target These pistols
are sometmng entirely new, ana, Demg as accurate as a revolver, is
perfectly harmless, they furnish a good deal of amusement for yoag"
and old alike. No accidents are possible with these pistols.
. t 1 -
KAUFM ANNR
Fifth Avenue and
RAILROADS.
PENWSTtVANIA KA1LKOAD ON AND
alter September 21. 1889. trains leara Union
Station, rituborg, u lollowv Eastern Bttnrtant
Xtae:
MAIN LINE EASTWAE1J.
New York and Chicago Limited or 1'aUman Vea.
tlbnle dallT at 7 :15 a. m.
Atlantic Express dally for tne Ea.sU 320 a.m.
Man train, dally, except Bandar, 3:3) a. m. sun.
oar, mail. a:w a. m.
Bar exDress dallr i
ay express dallr at Sao a. m.
all exDress dallr at 1:00 d. m.
Wall express dallr at 1:00 p. m.
Philadelphia express daily at 4:30 p. m.
Philadelphia express dallr at AM p.
Eastern exorei dallr at 7:13 D. m.
r at i :w j
On. nu
x ast une aaiir at s:iu p. m.
ureeniourc ei
l)errr express
Greentourc exprestouo p. m. week dars.
Alltfironeh trains connect at Jener Cltrwlta
Data of "HrnoklTn Annex" for Brooklrn. N. T
41SWB. m. wcck uaja.
avoldlngdoublelerrlageand :onrner through N.
Y.OItr.
Trains arrrre at Union Station as foUowa:
Mall Train, dallr 8:Mp. m.
Weatern xpreia, dallr 7:15 a. m.
Pacific Exnresa. dallr .......12:43 P. m.
Chicago Limited Express, dallr 8:30 p.m.
KastElne, dally 11:45 p. m.
souTmvEsr etLnn bailwax.
For Unlontown, 5:30 ana 8:35 a. ra. and 453 p.
m., without change of cars: 12.30 p. m., connect
lng at Greenibnrtr. Trains arrrre from Union
town at 9:15 a. m.. 11A 5:35 and 8:10 p. m.
WEST tENNSriiVANiA. MVlSMMt.
From FEDERAL trr. BTATION, Allegheny City,
Mall train, connecting for iUalrarille... 8:45 a.m.
Express, for Ulalrsrllle, connecting for
Butler S:Mp.ra.
Untler Acoem 8:30 a. m, 23 and 3:43 p. m.
Bprlngdale Accom9 .00. 11:50 a. m. 3: JO and S0 p. m.
Freeport Accom 4:15. 8.30 and H:40p. m.
On Bandar I2:50and.8;30p. m.
North Apollo Accom 11:00 a. m. and 6:00 p. m.
All.trh.nr Jnnrtion Accommodation
connecting for Untler .S m'
Blalrsrllle Accommodation ... jjLi"d! ?;,"
Tralna arrive at FEDEKAL STBEET BTATION :
Expreia, connecting from Butler 10:33 a. m.
Mall Train. ..........1:43 p. m.
lintler Accom :10. m., 4:40 and 7:2) p. m.
BlalriTllle Accommodatlon...........a2 p. ra.
Freenort Accom.Tia.m..ias,70andll:l0p. m.
On Sunday 10:10 a. m. and 7:00 p. m.
Bprlngdale Accom. ...S:,H:4Sa.m.,S:2S.6i30p. m.
North Apollo Accom 8:40 a. m. and 5:40 p. m.
MON ON Q AaELA DIVISION.
TralnileaTeUnlonstatlon.ritupnrg.asfonows:
For MonongaheU City, Wen Urownsrllle and
Unlontown. 10:40 a.m. For Monongaheia City and
Wett BrownTllIe,7rt5 and 10:40 a.m.and 4:40 p.m.
On Bandar, 1:01 p. m. For MonongaheU City, 5:49
p. m., week days.
Dravosborg Ac, week days, S.-20 p. m.
West Elizabeth Accommodation, a :20a.m., 2:0,
too and U:JS p. m. Sunday, 9:40 p. m.
Ticket offlces Corner Fourth arenas and Try
street and Union station. ,..,.
CHA3.E.PUUH. J. K. WOOD,,
General Manages. Gen'U'aai'r Agent.
TDTTTSBUEG Ai LAKE ERIE RAILROAD
UOMPANX scneaaie in cuecttfuuBi, low.
Central time.
DurABT For CleTeland, 5.00, 8:00
a. m., '1:83, 4110, fSD p. m.
nro and Rt. Loals. 5:00 a.
930 p. m. jrori;inciDnail. vni
m., -iua, ,-vJup. m.
For Buffalo. 8:00a. m.. 4:10, :3QP. m.
p. m. r or saia-
manca, 8:00a, m.. 4:10 p. m. ror Yonngstown
unrt No it Castle, s.oo. 300. 10:15 a. m.. '1:35. 4:10.
9:30 p. m. For Bearer Falls, 6:00, "8:00, 8:30,
10:15 a. m '1:35. 8:30, 4:10, 3:13. SO p. m. For
Chartlers. 5:06, V:J0 a. m.. 6:35, 6.50, 8 53. 7;15,
8.05, 8:30, 9:25. 10:15 a. m.. 12:05, , '12:13,
1:4 3:30, J4:30. 4:W .OS, 5:15, SiOS, '10:30 p.m.
ABRITZ From Clereland. "8.30 a. m., '12:30,
6:33. 7:S 9:40 p. m. From Cincinnati. Chicago
and Bt. Louis. l 2:30, 7:55 p. m. From Buffalo,
8:30 a. m., '12:3,0, 9:40 p. m. From Salaman-
cs- '12:30. "7:53 D. m,
from xoungstown aua
titir Castle. t:XK 9:20 a. m., '12:30. 5:35. Tai
9:4up. m. From Bearer Falls. 5:15. 6:30, 7:20, 9:20
a. m., 12:30. 1:10, 5:35, "7:53, 9:40 p. m. P.,
C. Y. trains from Mansfield. 8:30 a. m., 3:30,
4:50 p. m. For Essen and Beechmont, 8:30 a.
m.. 3130 p. m. P., C.4Y. trains from Mans
field, Essen and Beechmont, 7.-0S a, m., 11:59 a. m.
P. MCK.4Y. H. K.-DxrABT For New Baren.
J5:30 a. m., 3:) p. m. For West Newton, l'5-JO,
10.05 a. m.. 8:30, 5:13 p. m. abbot, From New
Haven. W-Y m., 5:00 p. m. From West New
tnn, 6:15. t7:50 a. m., 1:25. 5:00 p. m. For Me
Keesport, Elizabeth and Monongaheia City, 5i3o,
10:05 a. m., 3:30, 5:15 p.m. From Monongaheia
city, juuaoeia ana aicrkeesport, iiw . m.( ijv
M
'Dally. 1 Bandars 'only. iWM run one hour
late on Bun.
oonaay. i will run two noura taie on
Buaasr,
uiy ucsn oaice, i sauuuieia street.
wEraTWKwm. 3EkW
i piii- 1
fitV ,
be closed next ThvLradnj.
SBrV
"CLOTHING LOW IN PRICED
better. Fact is we find it best tto
,
the clothes give you full value in wears' '
particular dresser can weariwitli
but wnose calling requires otj
., 4
Men's Suits and Overcoats'arlS
thoroughly honest and fashioaablel
v-v . 3
. " . l.A.
4
Smithfield Street?
S&28-D
RAILROADS.
PENNSYLVANIA COMPANY'S L1NHB
May 12. 1S89. Central Standard Time.
TKA1N3 DEPAKT -
As follows from Union Statics: For Chicago, d 731
a. m., dUdO, dl:00, d7:4C except Saturday. 1138
&m.: Toledo. 7:36 a. m d 12:38. d 1:00 and except .
turday. 1130 p. m. : CrestHne. 5:45 a. m.: Clare-
land, 8:10 a. m 12:45 and d 11:06 p. m. and 7:3S -
a. m., ria r jr. w A u. kt.: New casus'
ana xoungstown. 76 s. m ma
SB, 3:46 p. m.
Yonnestown and Nlles. d 12:20 d. m
nam
Erie and AshUunla, 7:65s. m.. 11:30 p. m.; Nile
jneaariue.
and jameitown, 1:14 p.m.; Haolllon. 4:10p.m.:
Wheeling and Bellaire, 6:10 a. xn 12:4Sy 1:30 p. nu;
Hearer Falls. 4-oa. I -OS p. nw Bock Point, 88:39
a. u.: Leetidale. 5:10 a.m.
ALLEGHENY Kocneitex. SJ0 a. m.1 Hearer
Falls, 8:15, 11:00 a.ra.:Eao J.-00 p. nurLeet.
dale, 10:00, 11:45 a. m., 2.-C9, iix, 4:46, ade, 7:08, :B
p.m.; Conway, 10 JO p.m.; Fair Oaks, 8 11:48 a.
m. : Leetaaale, 88:30 p. m. -f
TRAINS AKK1VE Union station from Chleag
except Monday 1:30, dsrfxx d8JS a.m d Ids n-i.
m. ; Toledo, except Monday lae. a 8:36 a. bu, ease)
Mm - - utbaauub m-r u. i avuuai
m.. Crestline, 2:10 p.
Youngstewa aad.
Newcastle, :10a.m lias, 8:50. 10:15 p. m.;NN
and Yoanntown. d 6:50 p. m,
Clereland. d 8 :30 m-
m.. ion, iOM p. m.s
s m.. 2:25. 7rfX n. m
Wheellng and Bellalre, 9:09.
Erie and Ashtabula, irs,
10:15 Ti. m. i M&ssUlon. 10:00 a- .
Jamestown. 9:10 a.m.; Bearer Falls. 7 JO a. nu,
1:10p.m.. Kock Point, S 8C3 p m.; LeeUdale,
10:40" p. m. .
xmea ana
AK1UVK ALLEGHENT-FTdm ZnOB. 80 a.
m.: Conway, 8:&0; Boehester, 9:40 a. m.; Bearer
Falls, 7:10 a. m., 5:45 p. m.t Leetadale. 5:50, 6:13.
7:45 a. m 12.-00, 1:45, 1:00, 6 JO, 90 p. m.: Fair
Oaks. 88:55a.m.: LeeUdale. a 66 p. ra.: Book
Point. S 8:15 p. m.
8, Sunday only; L dally; other trains, except
Sunday. j$
IJALTTMOKB
and nmn
RAILROAD
Xj Schedule In effect May 12. IS
Schedule In effect Mar 12. ISO.
For Washing.
wo. u.u.. Baltimore. Philad
Baltimore, Philadelphia and New
York, 8.00 a. m.. and "9:20 t. m. For Cum
berland, '8:00 a. m., JliOO. "9:20 p. m. For Con
nellsrllle, J8:49 and 8rt0 a. m.. llrtC, 24:00
and 9ao p. m. For Unlontown. 6:40, S.-OO a. m
tl)andi4.00p. m. For Mount Pleasanv$:40 and,
ttSO a. m., and 210 and 4:00 p. ra. For
Washington. Pa., 6:48, :W a. m,, 36, $5:33
Pi8 J0p. m. For Wheeling; 6:46, : a. m..
3:35. 8.30p.m. For Cincinnati and St. Louis.
6:45a. ri., SdOp.m. ForColurabus. S:45and9:49.
a. m.. "S-J0 p. ra. For Newark. 6:46, $9:40 a. m.,
2:35, SdOp.m. For Chicago, 6:45. $9.40 a. m..
3:35 and S30 p. ra. Trains arrlre from New
York, Philadelphia, Baltimore and Washington,
6:20a. m. and 80 p. m. From Columbus, Cin
cinnati and Chicago. "7:45 a. m. and "00 p. m.
From Wheeling, 7:45. '10:50 a. m $3:00. "9-00 p.
m. Through sleeping ears to Baltimore, Wuh-
lngton and Cincinnati.
nni
only. ConnellsrUle accommodation at S8:S3 a. m.
pally. $Dally except Sunday. SSunday only. . ;
The Pittsbnrg Transfer Comnanr will call for.
and check baggage from hotels and residences
npon orders left at B. & o. Ticket Ofllce, corner
Jl?,1 .."jnue and Wood street. CHAS. O.
SCULL. Gen. Pass. Agt. J.T.ODELL. Oen.Mgr.
PITTSBURG AND CASTLE SHAN SON B.R.
, Summer Time Table. On and after May 1.
1889, until farther notice, trains will runas follows
on every day, except Bandar. Eastern standard
time: Leaving Pittsburg -6:20 a. m 7:10 a.m..
8:00 a.m.. 9:3b a. ra.. uaoa. m.. 1:40 p.m.. 3:40 p.
m 5:10 p. m., 5:50 p. m., 6:30 p. m., 9 JO p. m.,
11:30p.m. Arllngton-:40 a. ml, 630a.m.. 7:19
a.. 8:00 a. ra., 1030 a. ra., 10 p. m.. 2:40 p. mj,
430p.m.. 8:10p.m., 5:50 p. n' 7:10p.m.. J
p.m. Sunday trains, :earlngPlttJburg-10a.m;,
12.50 p. m.. 2:39 p. in., t:10 p. m., 7:10 p. m, 9i
p.m Arlington 9:Ua. mM 12 m 1:50 p.m., 38
p.m. 6:Jup. m., 8:00p.m...
JOHN JAHN. Supt.
PANHANDLE KOUTE-JULY 8. 1S89. UNION
station. Central Standard Tin . Lea "I
Cincinnati and St. Louis, d 7:30 a.m., d 8- I and
d 11:13 p. m. Dennlson, 2:44 p. m. CblcagJ.
12:05, d liilff p. ra. Wheeling, 7J0 a. 12
e:Wp.m. BtenbetmUe. !: a. W"!
1:56, 8:35a. m..lUK,3ao,4:ii,4J5p. m. Biev!:2
a.ra. Hargettstown.aUJ6a.m- SPri.'r5ilsa
field, 7:13. 9:30, 110 a. m., 1:05,
nu, ;ji uws, nu. ir, '
p.m.
. D1- M.IMV1.1,. .....JI ..a.L.
From the Wti a 9iiA a s.m a. m.. 3:
McDonald, d 4:16, d 9it5p. m.
, ai-M
5 p. m.
Wheeling, t Kl:4Sa.m.. 3.05. S.ssp.m. "' -town,
7:l5a.m.,B8a.m. Washington. jli.J;.
8i40. in-lx. m' a rt.ix m. Mansflsld, 5:3d,
Brtft 11Jf1 n W.Jl 9.U "
KB and
P.B.'
Bulger, l:p. m. Hi
r"-- .".r "rn-j.. am.
.cxfOBaina, u i.
p. ra.
dJHy S BMiaroBlr: ota trains, x4.v.
BL. ....... J
-WSi
JyroSgb
FHtS
M
:
"V
f.
.-- 1
i
..?a
faalL.
i.s. ,iiMA.MA
Ea