te?iy5flPffM3 nTTfWV3nTfi VJifMUi, rfNK?qeirff''xafTK-aBfiiunEnaHKKb tiAtKfSf.aNBfKL'tt'Z " ! I Cr , - ? Vi ' r E ' rV ' " ' ' ft. THE PITTSBtrRG- DISPATCH; " MONDAY, FEBRTJART. " 11, 1889. r ' if ft fc. . t THE TIME TOWOffi. Eey. T. DeWitt Talmae Preaches on the Duties We Owe to ALL THOSE LIVING AKODKD US. General and Generous Redistribution Needed. BENEATH A CANOPT OF ANGELS' WINGS rsrrclXL TELrGCAM TO TUB DISPATCn.l Brooklyn, February 10. Before an au dience gathered from all parts of the earth the Her. T. De "Witt Talmage, D. D., ex pounded passages of Scripture descriptive of stirring scenes in David's life. Led by organ and cornet the multitudes joined in singing: Time, like an ever rolling stream, Bears all its sons away; They fly forgotten, as a dream Dies at the opening day. The subject of Dr. Talmage's sermon was "Our Own Generation," and his text, Acts xiii, 36: "David, after he had served his own generation by the will of God, fell on sleep." That is a text which has for a long time been running through my mind, but not until now has it been fully revealed to me. Sermons have a time to be born as well as a time to die, a cradle as well as a grave. David, cowboy and stone slingcr and fishtcr and Czar and dramatist and blank verse writer and prophet, did his best for the people of his time and then went and lav down on the southern hill of Jerusalem in" that sound slumber which nothing but an archanuelic blast can startle. "David, after he had served his own generation by the will of God, fell on sleep." SERVED HIS GENERATION. It was his own generation that he had served; that is, the people living at the time he lived. And have youever thought that our responsibilities are chiefly with the peo ple now walking abreast of us? There are about four generations to a century now, but in olden time life was longer, and there was, perhaps, only one generation to a cen tury. Taking these facts into the calcula tion, I make a rough guess and say that tliere have been at least 180 generations of the human family. With reierence to them we have no responsibility. Ve cannot teach them, we cannot correct their mis takes, we cannot soothe their sorrows, we cannot heal their wounds. Their sepulchers are deaf and dumb to anything we might say to them. The last regiment of that great army has passed out of sight. "Vc might halloo as loud as we could, not one ol them would avert his head to see what we wanted. I admit that I am in sympathy with the child whose father had suddenly died and who in her little evening prayer wanted to continue to pray for her father, although he had gone into heaven and no more needed her prayers, and looking up into her mother's" face said: "O, mother, I cannot leave him all out. Let me say, 'Thank God that I had a good father once, so I can keep him in my prayers.' " But the ISO genera tions have passed ofE Passed up. Passed Jown. Gone forever. Then there are tren- erations to come alter our earthly existence hundred million, fifteen thousand, liften hun-lmsrp-Kipd nprhiiiK 180 venerations morp dred and fifteen. Iot slrmchy apparel, not nasceasea, peraaps j.ou generations more, d ,. nnt insnffir-iont imi. hut perhaps 1,000 generations more. Y e shall not see them, we shall not hear any of their voices, we will take no part in their convocations, their elections, their revolu tions, their catastrophes, their triumphs. A FORCED MARCH. "We will in no wise affect the 180 genera tions gone, or the 180 generations to come, except as from the galleries of heaven the former generations look down and rejoice at our victories, or as we may by our behavior start influences, good or bad, that shall roll on through the advancing ages. But our business is, like David, to serve our own generation, the people now living, those .whose lungs now breathe and whose hearts now beat. And mark you, it is not a silent procession, but moving. It is a "forced inarch" at 21 miles a day, each hour being a mile. Going with that celerity, it has got to be a qiuck service on our part, or no service at all. "We not only cannot teach the lSOjgenerations past and will not see the 180 generations to come, but this generation now on the stage will soon be off and we ourselves will be off with them. The fact is that you and 1 will have to start very soon for our work or it will be ironical and sar castic for anyone after our exit to Eay of us, as it was said of David, "after he had served his generation by the will of God, he fell on sleep." Well, now, let us look around earnestly, prayerfully and in a common sense way and see what we can do.for our own genera tion. First of all let us see to it that, as far as we can, they have enough to eat. The human body is so constituted that three times a day the body needs food as much as a lamp needs nil, as much as a locomotive needs fuel. To meet this want God has girdled the earth with apple orchards, orange groves, wheat fields and oceans full ol fish and prairies full of cattle. And not withstanding this, I will undertake to say that the vast majority of the human family arc suffering either from lack of food or the right kind of food. Oar civilization is all askew on this subject and.God only can set it right. EEJIESIBEE THE POOR. Many of the greatest estates of to-day have been built out of the blood and bones of unrequited toil. In olden times, for the building of forts and towers, the inhabitants of Isnahan had to contribute 70,000 human skulls, and Bagdad 90,000 human skulls, and that number of people were slain so as to furnish the skulls. But these two con tributions added together made only 160,000 skulls, while into the tower of the world's wealth and pomp and magnificence have been wrought the skeletons of uncounted numbers of the half fed populations of the earth, millions of skulls. Don't sit down at your table with five or six courses of abundant supply and think nothing of that family in the.next street who would take any one of those five courses be tween soup and almond nuts and feel they were in heaven. The lack of the right kind of food "is the cause of much of the drunk enness. After drinking what many of our grocers call coffee, sweetened with what many call sugar, and eating what many of our butchers call meat, and chewing what many of our bakers call bread, many of the laboring classes feel so miserable tbey are tempted to put into their nasty pipes what the tobacconists call tobacco, or go into the drinking saloons for what the rumsellers call beer. Good coffee would do much in driving out bad rum. Adulteration of food has got to be an evil against which all the health officers and all the doctors and all the ministers and all the reformers and all the Christians need to set themselves in bat tle array. How can we serve our generation with enough to cat? By sitting down in embroidered slippers and lounging back in an armchair, our mouth puckered up around an Havana of the best brand and through clouds of luxuriant smoke reading about po litical economy and the philosophy of strike'? Kb! Ko! By finding out who in Brooklyn has been living on gristle and sending them a tenderloin beefsteak. Seek out some family who through sickness or conjunction of misfortune have not enough to eat and do for them what Christ did tor the hungry multitudes of Asia Minor, mul tiplying the loaves and the fishes. Let us quit the surfeiting ot ourselves until we cannot choke down another crumb of cake and begin the supply of others' necessities. CARELESS OP LIFE. "We often see on a small scale a reckless ness about the welfare of others which a great warrior expressed on a large scale, when his officers were dissuading him from a certain campaien, saying: "It would cost 200,000 lives," replying with a diabolism that can never be forgotten, "What are 200,000 lives to me?" So far from helping appease the world's hunger, there are those whom Isaiah de- scribes as grinding the faces of the poor. You have seen a farmer or a mechanic put a Scythe or an ax on a grindstone, while some one was turning it round and round, and the man holding the ax bore on it harder and harder while the water dropped from the grindstone, and the edge of the ax from being round and dull, got keener and keener, and the mechanic lifted the ax glistening and sharp and with edge so keen he must cautiously run his finger along lest while exam ining the implement he cut his hand to the bone. So I hare seen men who were put against the grindstone of hardship, and while one turned the'crank another would press the unfortunate harder down and harder down until he was ground away thinner and thinner, his com tor t thinner, his prospects thinner and his face thinner. And Isaiah shrieks out: "What mean ye that ye grind the faces of the poor?" Itis an awiul thing to be hungry. It is an easy thing for us to be in good humor with all the wo: Id when we have no lack. But let hunger 'take full possession of us and we would all turn into .barbarians and cannibals and fiends. I am glad to know that the time is com ing, God hasten it, when every family in the round world will sit down at a full table, and it will be only a question between lamb and venison or between partridge and quail on toast, and out of spoons made out of Nevada silver or Cali fornia gold the pastries will drop on tongues thrilling with thankfulness because they have full enough. I hare no idea God is going to let the human race stay in its pres ent predicament. If the world winds up as it now is it will be an awful failure of a world. The barren places will be irrigated. The pomologists, helped of God, will urge on the fruits. The botanists, inspired of the Lord, will help on the gardens. The raisers of stock will send enough animals fit for human food to the markets, and the last earthquake that rends the world will upset a banqueting table at which are seated the entire human race. Meanwhile, suppose that some of the energy we are ex pending in useless and unavailing talk about the bread question should be ex pended in merciful alleviations. THE GREATEST BATTLEFIELD. I have read that the battlefield on which more troops met than on any other in the world's history was the battlefield of Leip- sic, 1G0.00O men under 2apoleon, 250.000 men under Schwarzeberg. No, no. The greatest and most terrific battle is now being fought all the world over. It is the strug gle for food. The ground tone of the finest passage in one of the great musical master pieces, the artist says, Vas suggested to him by the cry of the hungry populace of Vi enna as the king rode through and they shouted, "Bread. Give us bread!" And all through the great harmonies ot musical academy and cathedral I hear the pathos, the ground tone, the tragedy of uncounted multitudes, who with streaming eyes and wan cheeks and broken hearts in behalf of themselves and their families, are pleading for bread. k Let us take another look around to see how we may serve our generation. Let us see as far as possible that they have enough to wear. G oil looks on the human race and knows just how many inhabitants the world has. The statistics of tho world's population are care fully taken in civilized land?, and every few years officers of government go through the land and count how many people there are in the United States or England, and great accur acy is reached. But when people tell us how many inhabitants there are in Asia or Africa. a: best it must he a wild guess. Yet God knows the exact number of people nn our planet, and he has made enough apparel for each, and if there be fifteen hundred million, fifteen thousand, fifteen hundred and fifteen people, tner there is enough apparel for fifteen ragged apparel, not insufficient apparel, but appropriate apparel. At least iwo suits for every being on the earth, a summer suit and a winter suit. A irood nair of shoes for everv living mortal. A good coat, a good hat or a good bonnet and a good shawl, and a complete masculine or feminine outfit of apparel. A wardrobe for all nations adapted to all climes, and not a string or a button or a pin or a hook or an eye wanting. But, alas! where are the good clothes for three-fourths of the human raceT The other one-lourth have appropriated them. A REDISTRIBUTION NEEDED. The fact is there needs to be and will be a redistribution. Not by anarchistic violence. If outlawry had its way it would rend and tear and diminish until instead of three-fourths of the world not properly attired four-fourths would be In rag. I will let you know how the re distribution will tate place. By generosity on the part of those who nave a surplus, and in creased industry on the part of those suffering from deficit. otall, but the larce majority of cases of poverty in this country, are a result of idleness or drunkenness, either on the part of the present sufferers or their ancestors. In most cases the rum jug is the maelstrom that has swallowed down the livelihood of those who are in rags. But things will change, and by generosity on the part of the crowded ward robes, and industry and sobriety on the part of the empty wardrobes, there will be enough for all to wear. God has done his part toward the dressing of the human race. He grows a sur plus of wool on the sheep's back, and flocks roam the mountains and vallejs with a burden of warmth intended for transf erance to human comfort, when the shutters of the factories reaching all the way from the Chattahoochee to the Merrimac shall have spun and woven it, And here come lorth the Rocky Mountain goat and the cashmere and the beaver. Here are the merino sheep, their origin traced back to the flocks of Abrahamic and Davidic times. In white letters of snowy fleece, God has been writing for 1,030 years his wish that there might be warmth for all nations. While others are discussing the effect of high or low tariff or no tariff at all ou wool, you and I had better see if in our wardrobes we have nothing that we can spare for the shivering, or pick out some poor lad of the street and take him down to a cloth ing store and fit him out for the winter. Don't think that God has forcoiten to send ice and snow because of this wonderfully mild Janu ary and February. We shall yet have deep snows and so much frost on the window pane that in the morning you cannot see throngh it; and whole flocks oi blizzards, for God long ago aeciareu uai winter as wen as summer snail not cease, and between this and the spring crocus we may all have reason to cry out with the psalmist: "Who can stand before his coldJ' HOW STAY WE SERVE OUR GENERATION ? Again, let us look around and see how we may serve our generation. What shortsighted mortals we would be if we were anxious to clothe and feed only the most insignificant part of a man, namely, his body, while we put forth no effort to clothe and feed and save his soul. Time is a little piece broken off a great eterni ty. What are we doing for the souls of this present generation T Let me say it is a genera tion worth saving. Most magnificent men and women are in it. We make a great ado about the improvements in navigation and in loco motion and in art and machinery. We remark what wonders of telegraph and telephone and stethescope. What improvement is electric light over a tallow candle I But all these improvements are insignificant com pared with the improvements in the hu man race. In olden times, once in a while, a great and good man or woman would come up and the world has made a great fuss about it ever since, but now they are so numerous we scarcely speak about them. We put a halo about the people of the past, but I think if the times demanded them it would be found we have now living in this year 18S9 SO Martin Luthers. 50 George Washingtons, 50 lady Huntlngtons, 30 Klizabcth Frjs. Dur ing our Civil War more splendid warriors in North and South were developed in four years than the whole world developed in the previous 20 joars. I challenge tho 4,000 years before the Christ and the IS centuries after the Christ, to show me the equal of charity on a large scale of George Peabody. This generation of men and women is moro worth saving than any of the IfcO generations that have passed off. BEGIN WITH OURSELVES. But where shall we begin? With ourselves. That is the pillar from which we must start. Prescott, the blind historian, tells us bow Pi zarro saved his army for the right when they were about deserting him. With his sword he made a long mark on the ground. He said: "My men, on the north side are desertion and death, on the south side is victory; on the north side Panama and poverty, on the south side Peru with all its riches. Choose for yourselves; for my part I go .to tho outli." Stepping across the line one by one, his troops followed and finally his whole army. The sword of God's truth draws the dividing lino to-day. On one side of it are sin and ruin and death, on the other side are pardon and usefulness and happiness and heaven. You cross from tho wrong side to the right side and your family will cross with yon and yonr friends and your associates. The way jou go they will go. If wo are not saved, we will never save anyone else. How to get saved? Be willing to accept Christ, and then accept him instantane ously and forever. Get on the rock first and then you will be able to help others upon the same rock. Men and women have been saved quicker than I have been talking about it. What, without a prayer? Yes. What, without time deliberately to think it over? Yes. What, .without a tear? Yes. believe! That is all. Believe what? That Jesus died to save you from sin and death and bell. Will yon? Do you? ion nave, isometiung makes mctbinK yon have. New light has come into vonr countenances. Welcome! Welcome! Haill Hail! Saved yourselves, how are you going to save others? By testimony. Tell it to your family. Tell it to your business associates. Tell it everywhere. We will successfully preach no more religion and will successfully talk no more religion than we ourselves have. BEHAVE WELL YOURSELVES. The most of that which you do to benefit the souls of this generation, you will effect throngh yonr own behavior. Go wrong, and that will induce others to go wrong. Go right, and that will induce others to go right. When the great Centennial Exhibition was being held in Phila delphia, the question came up among the directors as to whether they "could keep the exposition open on Sundays, when a director, who was a man of the world, from Nevada, arose and said, his voice trembling with emo tion and tears running down his cheeks: "I feel like a returned prodigal. Twenty years ago I went West and into a region where we had no Sabbath, but to-day old memories come back to me, and 1 remember what my glorified motner taugnt me aoout Keeping ounaay, ana I seem to hear her voice again and feel as I did when every evening I knelt by her side in praver. Gentlemen, I vote for the observance of the Christian Sabbath." And ho carried everything by storm, and when the question was put, "Shall we open the exhibition on Sab bath?" it was almost unanimous, "No," "No." What one man can do if he does right, boldly right, emphatically right. What it we could get this whole generation saved! These people who are living with us the same year and amid the same stupendous events and flying toward the future swifter than eagles to their prey. We cannot stop. They cannot stop. We think we can stop. We say, "Come now, my friend, let us stop and discuss this subject,'' but we do not stop. The year does not stop, the day does not stop, the hour does not stop. The year is.a creat wheel and there is a band on that wheel that keeps it revolving, and as that wheel turns, it turns 365 smaller wheels, which are thei days, and then each of these S65 wheels turn 24 smaller wheels, which are the hours; and these 24 smaller wheels turn 60 smaller wheels, which are the minutes, and these 60 smaller wheels turn CO more smaller wheels, which are the seconds, and they keep rolling, rolling, rolling, mounting, mounting, mounting, and swiften ing, swiftening, swiftening. Oh, God! If our Feneration is going liko that and we are going with them, waken us to the short but tre mendous opportunity. UNTROUBLED SLEEP. I confess to you that my one wish is to serve this generation, not to antagonize it, not to damage it, not to rule it, but to serve it I would like to do something toward helping un trap its load, to stop its tears, to balsam its wounds and to induce it to put foot on the up ward road that has at its terminus acclama tion rapturous and gates pearline and garlands amaranthine and fountains rainbowed and do minions enthroned and coroneted, for I cannot forcetthat lullaby in the closing words of my text: -Liavia, alter ne naa servea nis own gen eration by the will of God, fell on sleep." And what a lovely sleep it was! Unfilral Ab salom did not trouble it. Ambitious Adonijah did not worry it. Persecutinc Saul did not harrow it. ifcxile did not fill it with nightmare. Since a red-headed boy amid his father's flocks at night, he had not had such a good sleep. At 70 years of age he lay down to it. He has had many a troubled sleep, as in the caverns of Adullam, or in the palace at the time his ene mies were attempting his capture. But this was a peaceful sleep, a calm sleep, a restful sleep, a glorious sleep. "After he had served his generation by the will of God, he fell on sleep." Oh, what a good thing is sleep after a hard day's work! It takes all the aching out of the head and all the weariness out of the limbs and all the smarting out of the eyes. From it we rise in the morning and it is a new world. And if we, like David, serve our generation, we will at life's close have most dcsirablo and refreshing sleep. In it will vanish our last fatigue of body, our last worri ment of mind, our last sorrow of soul. To the Christian's body that was hot with raging fe vers so that the attendants must by sheer force keep on the blankets, it will be the cool sleep. To those who are thin blooded and shivering with agues, it will be the warm sleep. To those who, because of physical disorders, were terri fied with night visions, it will bo the dreamless sleep. To nurses and doctors and mothers who were wakened almost every hour of the night by thoso to whom they ministered, or over whom tUey watched, it will be the nndisturbed sleen. To those who could not cet to bed till late at night and must rise early in the morn ing and before getting rested, it will be the long sleep. AWAY WITH IT. Away with all your gloomy talk about de parture from this world. If we have served our generation it will not be putting out into the breakers, it will not be the fight with the King of Terrors; it will be going to sleep. .A friend writing me from Illinois says that Rev. Dr. Wingate, President of Wake Forest Col lege, North Carolina, alter a most useful life, found his last day on earth his happiest day, and that in his last moments he seemed to be personally talking with Christ, as f nend with friend, saying: "Oh, how delightful it IS. I knew You would be with me when the time came, and I knew it would be sweet, but I did not know it would be as sweet as It is." The fact was he had served his genera tion in the gospel ministry and by the will of God ho fell on sleep. When in Africa, Majwara, the servant, looked into the tent of David Livingstone and found him on bis knees, he stepped back, not wishing to disturb him in prayer, and some time after went in and found him in the same posture, and stepped back again, but after awhile went in and touched him, and lo! the great traveler had finished his last journey and he bad died in the grandest and mightiest posture a man ever takes on his knees. He had served his gen eration by unrolling the scroll of a continent, and by tho will of God fell on sleep. Grim shaw, the evangelist, when asked how he felt in his last moments, responded: "As happy as I can be on earth and as sure of glory as if I was in it. I have nothing to do bnt to step out of this bed into heaven." Having served his generation in successful evangelism by the will of God, he fell on sleep In the mnseum of Greenwich Hospital, En gland, there is a fragment of a book that was found in the Arctic regions amid the relics of Sir Tohn Franklin, who had perished amid the snow and ice, and the leaf of that piece of a book was turned down at the words, "When thou passest through the waters I will be with thee.ft Having served his generation in the cause of science and discovery by the will of God, he fell on sleep. CANOPY OF ANGELS' WINGS. Why will you keep us all so nervous talking about that which is only a dormitory and a pil lowed slumber, canopied by angels' wings? SleepI Transporting sleep! And what a glorious awakening! You and 1 have sometimes been thoroughly bewildered after a long and fatigu ing journey: we have stopped at a friend's house for a night, and after hours of complete unconsciousness wo have opened our eyes, the high risen sun full in our faces, and, before we could fully collect our faculties, have said: "Where am I? whose house is this? and whose are these gardens?" And then it has flashed upon us in glad reality. And I should not wonder if, after w e have served our genera tion and, by the will of God, have fallen on sleep, the deep sleep, the restful sleep, we should awake in blissful bewilderment and for a little while say: "Where am I? What palace Is this? Who hung this upholstery? What fountains are these tossing in the lightr Why, this looks like heavenl Itis. Itis. Why, there is a building grander than all tho castles of earth heaved into a mountain of splendor, that must be the palace ot Jesus. And. look there, at those walks lined with a foliage more beauti ful than anything I ever saw before, and see those who are walking down those aisles of verdure. From what I have heard of them, those two arm in arm must be Moses and Joshua, him of Mount Sinai and him of the haltinc sun over Ajalon. And those two walk ing arm in arm must be John and Paul, the ono so gentle and the other so mighty. And those two with the robes as brilliant as though made out of the cooled off flames of martyrdom, must be John Huss and Hugh Latimer. A HOUSE NOT BUILT WITH HANDS. But 1 must notlook any longer at those gar dens of beauty, but examine this building in which I have just awakened. I look out of the window this way and that and up and .down, and I find it is a mansion of immense size in which I am stopping. All its windows of agate and its conlonades of porphyry aad alabaster. Why. I wonder if this fs not thehouse of "many mansions" of which 1 used to read? Itis, it is. There must be many of my kindred and friends in this very mansion. HarkI whose are thoso voices, whose are those bounding feet? I open the door and see, and lo! they aro coming through all the corridors and up and down all the stairs, our long-absent kindred. Whv, there is father, there is mother, there are the children. All well again. All young again. All of us together again. And as we embrace each other with the cry. "Never more to part! Never more to part!" the arches, the alcoves, the hallways echo and re-echo the woras, "Never moro to part. Never more to part." Then our glorified friends say: "Come out with us and see heaven." And some of them bounding ahead of us and some of them skipping beside us, we start down the ivory stairway. And we meet, coming up, one of the kings of ancient Israel, somewhat small of stature, but haviuga countenance radiant with a thousand victories. And as all are maklnc obeisance to this creat one of heaven, I cry out, "Who Is he?" and the answer comes: Tnis is the greatest of all the kings of Israel. It Is David, who, after he had served his gen eration by the will of God, fell on sleep." GREATESTREDUCTIONEVEK.OFFERED. S3. For One Week Only. 85. A half life-size crayon, handsomely framed infold bronzed silver,including one dozen cabinet photos, all for the small sum of 5, at the Elite Gallery, 616 Market st., I - WW-VJ MM W 0UUA1 UVU 1U1U this offer. THETEMYGOMEaUICJiS. Continued from Seventh Page. it was running incessantly. Trade in cloth and serge was brisk on account of the Franco-German war. What is one man's loss is another man's gain. The rattle of guns in France produced the rattle of the looms in Yorkshire; and every bullet put through a renenman s or a uerman s uni form put a sovereign into the pocket of a cloth weaver in England. Such is the law of equilibrium in nature. Business was brisk among the cloth work ers, but slack-among the linen weavers; the dead on the battlefield were not bnried in winding sheets, least of all in figured damasks. An unusnal downpour of rain had taken place, lasting continuously 48 hours. The very windows of heaven seemed to have been opened; at sunset the sky had par tially cleared, but there were still lumbering masses of cloud drifting over the face of heaven, as icebergs detached from the mighty wall of black vapor that still remained in the, west, built up half-way to the zenith over the great dorsal range, a range that arrested the exhalations from the Atlantic and condensed them into a thousand streams that leaped in "fosses" and wriggled and dived among the hills, and cleft themselves roads, to the east or to the west, to reach the sea. To-night the Keld was very full, so swol len as to hare overflowed, or rather to have dived under the embankments, and to ooze up through the soil in all directions in countless irrepressible Bprings, transform ing the paddocks into ponds, and the fields into lagoons. Thetowpath was the only walk that was not a mass of mud or a sop of water. It ran well above the level of the fields and the rain that had fallen on it had drained or, as the local expression had it, siped away. Along this towpath Jeremiah walked with his hands behind his back, brooding over his difficulties, seeking a solution that es caped him. If he remained silent, he must be content in a year or two to surrender Salome to another. If he spoke, he might lose herimmediately and completely; for were she to refuse him she must at once withdraw from under his roof and remain estranged from him permanently. But what if she were to accept him? He who was nearly thrice her age? And what if, in the event of her accepting him, her heart were to .'wake up and love another? Had he any right to subject her to such a risk, to impose on her such a trial? "Would there not be a sacrifice of his own self-respect were he to offer himself to her? "Would the love he would demand of her, given hesita tingly, as a duty, forced and uncertain, make up to him for the frank, ready, spon taneous gush of love which surrounded him at present? "I am in a strait," said Jeremiah Penny comequick, again. ""Would to heaven that the decision were taken out of my hands and determined for me." He had reached the locks. They, were fast shut, and the man in charge was away, injhis cottage across the field; there was no light shining from the window. He was asleep. No barges passed up and down at night. His duties ended with the daylight. The field he would have to cross next morn ing to the lock was now submerged. Mr. Pennycomequick halted at the locks, and stood looking down upon the lower level, listening to the rush of the water that was allowed to flow through the hatch. He could just see, below in the black gulf, a phosphorescent, pr apparently phosphores cent halo; it was the foam caused by the fall of the water jet, reflecting the starlight overhead. As Jeremiah thus stood, irresolute, look ing at the lambent dance of the foam, a phenomenon occurred which roused his at tention and woke his surprise. The water in the canal, usually glassy and waveless, suddenly rose, as the bosom rises at a long inhalation, and rolled like a tidal wave over the top of the gates, and fell into the gulf below with a startling crash, as though what had fallen were lead, not water. ;What; was the cause of this? Jeremiah had heard that on the occasion of an earth quake such a wave was formed in the sea, and rushed up the shore, without premoni tion. But he had felt no shock, and reallv a petty canal could hardly be supposed to act in such events like the ocean. " Jeremiah turned to retrace his steps along the path; and he had not gone far before he saw something else that equally surprised him. In the valley, about two miles above, was, as already said, .Mitchell s mill, lying athwart it, like a huge stranded Noah's Ark. It had five stories, and in each story were 20 windows on the long' sides; that made just 100 windows toward the east, to ward Jeremiah; 100 yellow points of light, against the somber background of cloud that enveloped the west. The night was not absolutely dark; there was some light in the sky above the clouds from stars, and a cresent moon, which later was hidden, but it was not sufficient to have revealed Mitchell's without the illumina tion from within. Here and there a silvery vaporous light fell through the interstices of the clouds, sufficient to give perspective to the night scene, insufficient to disclose anything. Now Mitchell's was distinguish able as five superimposed rows of twenty stars of equal size and luster. All at once, suddenly as if a black cur tain had fallen over the scene, all these stars were eclipsed not one by one, not in rows, by turns, but altogether, instantane ously and completely, sniffea out at one snip, and with the extinction Mitchell's fell back into the common obscurity, and was no more seen than if it had been blotted out of existence. "Stopped 1" exclaimed Mr. Pennycome quick, involuntarily.- "That is queer. I thought they were at full pressure, running night and day." "What followed increased his perplexity. He heard the steam whistle of Mitchell's shrill forth in palpitating, piercing call, not briefly, as if to give notice that work was over, not peremptorily, as signaling for a new batch of hands to 'replace such as were released; not jnsistingly, as calling out of sleep, but with a prolonged and growing intensity, with full force ot steam, rising in volumes to the highest pitch, as though Mitchell's great bulk were uttering a shriek of infinite panic and acute pain. And then, from the hillside, where stood another mill, called Poppleton's, howled a "syren" another, contrivance invented by a perverse ingenuity to create the greatest possible noise of the worst possible quality. "Surely there must be a fire," said Jere miah, "only bless me! I see no flames any where." Then he heard a tramp, the tramp of a galloping horse on the towpath, and he stood aside so as-hot to be ridden over. A parting in. the clouds let down a soft gray light that made the surfaces ot water into sheets of steel, and converted the canal into a polished silver skewer. Along, down the towpath, came the horse. Jeremiah could PQWI Absolutely Pure. This powder never varies. A marvel of pur ity, strength and wholesomeness. More eco nomical than tho ordinary kin ds, and cannot be sold in competition with the multitude of ow est, snort weight, aium or phosphate now ders. sola only in.cam. KUYAL BAKING POWDER CO, 100 Wall SUN. Y, oc5-m46-arwrsu AKIf i just distinguish a black traveling" spot. He waited, and presently saw that a man was riding and controlling the horse, and this man drew rein somewhat as he saw Jere miah, and hallooed, "Get back! get backl Holroyd reservoir has hurst." Then along the towpath he continued at accelerated speed; and disappeared in the darkness in the direction of the locks. - The alarm bell on the roof of "Penny quicks" began to jangle. The news had reached the night watch, and he was rous ing the operatives who lived in the mill fold. Then the "buzzer" of the yam-sphi-ning factory brayed, and the shoddy mill uttered a husky hoot. Lights started up, and voices were audible, shouting, crying. "What was to be done? Jeremiah Pennycomequick considered for a moment. He knew what the bursting of the reservoir implied. He knew that he had not time to retrace the path he had taken to its junction with the road. He was at the point where the valley expanded to its fullest width, and where the greatest space intervened between him and the hill side. Here the level fields were all under water, and before he could cross them, wading, maybe to his knee, the descending wave would be upon him. He looked toward the locksman's cottage; that of fered no security, even if he could reach it in time, for it lay low and would be immediately submerged. He turned, and ran down the path toward the locks, and as he ran he heard behind him not the roar, for roar there was none, but the rumble of the descending flood, like the rumple and mutter of that vast crowd that swept along the road from Paris to Versailles on the memorable Sth of October. Then a wet blast sprang up suddenly and rushed down the valley, swaying, the trees, and so chill that when it touched Jeremiah ns he ran, it seemed to penetrate to his bones and curdle his blood. It was a blast that traveled with the advancing volume of water, a little forestalling it, as the light ning forestalls the thunder. Mr. Pennycomequick saw before him the shelter hut of the locksman on the embank ment, a shelter hut that had been erected as a protection against rain and wind and frost. It was of.brick, and the only chance of es cape tnat onerea lay in a scramble to the roof. How mysterious it is with our wishes and our prayers! "We labor for many a year with taut nerve and ambition, keenly, un swervingly set on some object. "We hope for it, ana it is as though the heavens were brass, and ourprayers could not pierce them, or as if it were indifferent to our desires; it is as though a perverse fate smote all our efforts with paralysis, and took pleasure in thwarting every wish, and frustrating every attempt to obtain what we long for. At an other time, hardly knowing what we say, not calculating how what we ask may be accomplished, not lifting a little finger to advance its fulfilment, we form a wish, vague and inarticulate, and instantly, com pletely, in the way least expected, and with a fullness hardly desired, the prayer is answered, the wish is accomplished. "Would to heaven," Jeremiah Penny comequick had said twice that night on the towpath, hardly meaning what .he said, saying it because he was in perplexity, not because he desired extraneous help out of it, "Would to heaven," he had said, "that my course were determined for me," and at once, that same night, within an hour, Heaven had responded to the call. ( To be continued next Monday.") See our handsome costume patterns; entirely new designs just arrived. MWFSU HUGUS &HACKE. Scrofula cured free of charge at 1102 Carson st, Soutbside. Two beautiful lines of American challis, new spring effects, at 8c and 20c per yd. mwfsu Hugus & Hacke. Catarrhal Dangers. To he freed from the dangers of suffocation while lying down ; to breathe freely.sleep sound ly and undisturbed; to rise refreshed, head clear, brain active and free Irom pain or ache; to know that no poisonons, putrid matter de nies the breath and rots away the delicate ma chinery of smell, taste and hearing; to feel that the system does not, throngh its veins and ar teries, snek up the poison that is sure to under mine and destroy, is indeed a blessing beyond all other human enjoyments. To purchase im munity from such a fate should be the object of all afflicted. But those who have tried many remedies and physicians despair of relief and cure. Sanford's Radicai. Cube meets every phase of Catarrh, Irom a simple head cold to the most loathsome and destructive stages. It is local and constitutional. Instant in reliev ing, permanent in curing, safe, economical and never-Ialling. SANFORtfs Radical Cuke consists of one bottle of the Radical Cube, one box of Ca tarrhal Solvent, and one Improved In haler, all wrapped In one package, with treatise and directions, and sold by all drugeists for 81 00. Potter Dhuo asp Chemical Co., Bostojt. PAINS AND WEAKNESS Of females instantly relieved by that new. eleerant and infalllhln AntMnm to Pain, Inflammation and Weakness, the Cuticnrn Anti.PntnPlnafn,- Thn first and only pain-subduing plaster especially auapieu 10 uro i emaie rains ana weaknesses. Vastly superior to all other plasters yet pre pared. At all druggists, 25 cents; five for $1 00; or, postage free, of Potter Druo and Chem ical Co., Boston, JIass. wf ANCHOR REMEDY COMP'NY, 329 LIBERTY STREET, PITTSBURG, PA. ABOUT CATARRH. J. M. Jewell. Asst. Sudl Bovs' Industrial School, Lancaster, 0 says: I have no hesitation in rec ommending your catarrh remedy. It is bv far superior to anv other preparation I have ever used. Its curative ef fect is marvelous. Mrs. M. J Hatton, 72Forty-thIrd street, says: The Anchor Catarrh Remedy cured me of an aggravated case of catarrh of long standing, which 1 considered hopeless, aslhad used many other preparations without relief. We would be glad to have you give our ca tarrh remedy a trial. You will never regret it. jaS-MWP DM AflHTIfifUrFTni UMili) MMA1M REMNANT SALE. Baps, Surprising, Startling, ConviDeing, faej-Smg, DOUGLAS & HACKIE In announcing this great sale, to commence on FRIDAY. FEBRUARY 8, would say that this is no antiquarian museum, but an overaccumulation of remnants made during the very busy season since opening their New and Elccant Stores. Wo have just finished stock-taking. All goods of passing fashion, all odds and ends, will be included in this, the greatest Combina tion, Remnant, Stock-Taking Sale ever inaugurated lu Western Pennsylvania, all at prices that speak in thunder tones of money saved by every purchaser. REMEMBER FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 8. Following are a few samples. Prices no object. Remnants, Odds and Ends and Goods of Passing fashion. All, all, must go, let the loss be what it may. Remnants of Striped Plush to go at 15c a yard. Remnants Of Black Brocade Silk Velvets at 25c a yard. Remnants of Black Brocade SiIks will be put out at 12c a yard. Remnants of Double-width Dress Goods as low as Sea yard. Remnants of Sateens to be given away at So a yard. Then we've got about 3,000 more of thoso celebrated Curtain Ends at 10c, 15c and 25c each. They're simply wonderful. ODDS AND ENDS IN CLOAK SALONS. Odd Sizes in Ladies' All-Wool Cloth NewmarKots for $1 each. Odd Sizes in Ladles' Cloth Jackets for 31 and $1 GO each. Odd Sizes in Ladles' Seal PJush Wraps that were $22 50, now S9 SO. And lots of others. Come early and get the pick. You'll be pleased. It'll pay you. 151 and 153 Federal Street, Allegheny. fe-l-siwT NEW ADVERTISEnnnjT. No Reason Exists FOR HESITATING, And, Whafs More, You Know It When You Put Your Eye ' On the Price. Youths' Sizes, 11 to 2, All Tip, Button Shoes, Solid Leather, $100. Another Blow. Boys' Sizes, 1 to 5, Tip-Toe, Solid Leather, Tap-Sole Bals, eioo. TJNEQUALED FOR WEAR. Men's Buff Sewed Tip, Button, Lace and Congress Dress Shoesat SI SO. G. D. SIMEN 78 OHIO STREET, Cor. of Sandusky st, near Market House, Allegheny. feZ-MW GET W OUT AND NO FOOLING. 8oo Men's Suits Worth $20, This week (T J H This week ijlU. 500 Men!s O'Coats, Worth $20, This week This week Hats, Furnishings, Boys' Clothing, Ladies' Cloaks and Wraps. Prices cut in two. SALLER & CO., Corner Diamoi anfl SmliM Streets. lelQ-JTWFSu A complete assortment of Optical Goods. The best stock of Artificial Eyes. Spectacles and Eye Glasses in gold, sliver, steel, shell-and aluminum frames. Glasses and frames per fectly adjusted at KORNBLUSPS Optician Store, jal3orrwTFSuwk -No. 37 Firth ave. D. R. SPEER & CO., FRAME SASH, DOOR AND BOX FACTORY, THIRD STREET AND DDQUESNE WAY mhS-USl RAILROADS. PITTSBURG AST) CASTLE SHASNOSR.K. Co. Winter Time Table. On and after October 14, 1&33, until further notice, trains will run as follows on every dar except Sunday, Eastern standard time: Leaving flttsburg 6:f5 a. m., 7:15 a.m. ,9:30a. m 11:30a.m., lMOp.m., 3:40p.m., 5:10p.m. 6:30 p. m., 9:30 p.m., 11:30p.m. Ar lington 5:43 a. m., 6:30 a. m., 8:00 a. m., 10:2; a. m., 1:00 p. m., 2:40 p. m., 4:20 p. m., 5:50 p. m., 7:15 p. m., 10:30 p. m. Sunday trains, le&vln? Plttsburg-10 a. m.. 12:50 p. m., 2:30 p. m., 5:10 fc 9:30 r. m. Arlington 9:10 a. m.. 12 m.. :50p. m., 4:20 p. m 6:30 n, m. , itaa iiaiiA. supt. BALTIMORE AND OHIO RAILROAD Schedule In effect November 29, 1888. For Washington, D. C. Baltimore and Philadelphia, 11:30 a.m. and 10:'J0 p.m. For Washington. 1).U, and Baltimore, t7:00a.ni. For Cumberland, t7:00, 11:80 a. m., ond10:20 p. m. For Connellsvllle, t7:0O and '1UZ0 a. m tl.'CO, t4:CO.ind "10:20 d. m. For Unlontown,t7:0u.tll:30a.m., tIKOand41:00 p. p. For Mt. rieasant, 17:00 and 111:30 a. m,, tl:00 and 14:00 p. m. For Washington, Fa.. "7:30, 19:30 a. m., 3:35, 15:30 and 8:30 p. m. For Wheel ing, "7:30.19:30 a.m., 'Z-.35, S:30 p. m. For Cin cinnati and St. Louis, "7:30a. m., 8:30p. m. For Colombns, "7:30 a. in., '8:30 p.m. For Newarfc, 7:30, 19:30 a. m., "3:35, "8:30 p. m. For Chicago, iiai, p:.Kia. in.. JMoanu b:.hj p. m. trains ar rive, from Philadelphia, Baltimore and W ashing' ton, 7:10 a. in a-8:ao :50 n. m. From Columbus, Cincinnati and Chicago, 7:45a. m. and 9:I0p. m. inn -v:iop. : 15:00, "9:10 From Wheeling, "7:45, 10:0a. m Ta:uu. -v:iu 1 fc m. Throngh sleeping cars to Baltimore, Was! lngton and Cincinnati For or Wheeling. Columbus and Cincinnati. 11:55 p m (Saturday only). Connellsvllle ac. at 53:30 am. "Dally. IDallyexccpt Sunday. JSunday only. The Pittsburg Transfer Company will call for and check baggage Irom hotels and residences upon orders left at B. & O. Ticket Office, corner Fifth avenue and Wood street. W. M. CLKMENTS, CHAS. O. SCCLL, General .Manager. Gen. Pass. Agt. TprrrsnuuG and western railway jl Trains (cet'l stan'dtliae) Leave. Arrive. Butler Accommodation Day Ex.Ak'n.Tol..Cl'n. Kane Butler Accommodation Chicago Express (dally) Newcastle and Greenville Ex Zellenople and Foxburg Ac. Butler Accommodation 6:03 am 7:20 am 7:10 am 7:23 pm 4:00 Dm 9:20 am 12:30 pm 1:50 nm 11:05 am 9:36 am 5:30 am 2:10 pm 4:40 pm 5:40 pm Through coach and sleeper to Chicago dally. WflflF 01 iyii-jif m NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. KAUFM ANNS' B SHOE JEST X- At a recent assignee sale of the stock of a prominent Lynn, Mass., Shoe manufacturer, the agent of the firm of J. Kaufmann & Bros., Pittsburg, bought over two-thirds of the entire stock. This is unquestionably the largest pur chase of the kind ever known. (Boot and Shoe Gazette.) The above is self-explanatory and needs no comment. Al wa will add is that these goods are of the class we have the exclusive reputation of carrying The Very Best. The purchase required a very large amount of Spot Cash and we got every pair at a ridicu lously low price. The- entire stock is new and fresh, having been especially manufactured for the coming spring trade. We are now going to give you bargains in Shoes as you never saw or heard of. OUR LUCKWfLL BE YOUR LUCK, for we have just placed on sale our entire purchase at amazingly low prices. But even this is not all, for in pursuance of our rigidly enforced business rule ot never carrying goods from season to sea son to become "shopworn" or "out-of-style," and to close out all Odds and Ends and regular lines of Shoes that we have decided to change for others now in process of manufacture for our new spring stock, we open our annual Clearance Sale of Shoes simultaneously with our big Assignee's Sale purchase. ' These Two Sales Merged Into One gives the people of Pittsburg and vicinity the greatest opportunity to buy fine, stylish, solid footwear for positively less money than the cost of manufacture. "We quote a few specimen bargains, but they are not a one-hundreth of the great bargains offered: Ladies' French Kid hand-turned Boots at 4, worth $6. Ladies' bright Dongola Boots at $2, worth 3- Ladies' hand-sewed Waukenphast Boots at $3 50, worth $5. Ladies' hand-turned bright Dongola Boots at $3, worth $5. Ladies' straight goat Dongola top Waukenphasts at2 75, worth 4., Ladies' patent leather tip Waukenphasts at $3, worth $4 50. Ladies' glazed Kangaroo Boots at $3, worth $4. Ladies' bright Dongola Boots at $2 50, worth 4. Ladies' hand-sewed Kangaroo Boots at $3 50, worth $5. Ladies' patent tip hand-turned Boots at S3, worth $5. Ladies' French Kid Boots at S3, worth $4 50. Ladies' patent tip Oxfords at $1, $1 25 and Si 50, worth $2, $2 50 and S3.. Ladies' Kid Opera Slippers at 75c, worth Si 50. Ladies' "Louis XV" Opera Slippers, Si S worth S4. Ladies' Toilet House Slippers at 60c, worth Si 25. "Old Ladies' Comfort" hand-sewed Shoes at Si, worth S2. ' Misses' Dongola, French and Curacoa Kid Boots (n to 13 j) at Si 50, worth S4. Misses' Pebble Goat Boots (n to 2) at Si 50, worth S2 50. Men's Lace and Congress Shoes at Si 95, worth S2 50. Men's Lace and Congress Shoes at $2 15, worth $3. Men's Working Shoes at Si 50, worth $2 50. Men's hand-sewed Lace, Congress and Button at S5, worth S7. Men's Calf Lace and Congress at S3, worth S4. Men's French Calf Lace and Congress at S4, worth $5 50. Men's hand-sewed Lace and Congress at S4, worth $6. Infants' Low Button and Oxford Slips at 35c, worth Si. Children's Calf Foxed, Goat and Kid Shoes at $1, worth S2 50. IF YOU WANT SHOES NOW, if you ever expect to want Shoes, if you ever wear Shoes, attend this sale. But remember Time, Tide and Goods at such sweep ingly reduced prices wait for no man or woman either, for that matter. ' :) KAUFMANNQ Fifth Avenue and Smithfield Street. RAILROADS. PITTSBURG AMD LAKE EIUl! EA1LKOAU COMPANY Schedule In effect January 13, 1989, Central time: P. & L. K. K. K. Depabt For Cleveland, SOS, 7:40 A. M.. 1:30. 4:15, 9:20 p. jr. for Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis, 5:23 A. It., 1:20, 9:30 r. M. For Buffalo. 10:20 A. it.. 4:15 "3:30 r. 11. For Sala manca, "7:10 A. M.. 'ISO; 9&0 V. M. For Beaver Falls, 5:25, 7:40L 10:20 A. M., '1.-20, 3:30, 4:15, 5.-C0, 9:30 P. M. For Chanters, 5:25, "5:35, 6:50. 17.-CO, 7:15, 8:40, '9:06, 9:25, 10:2) A. M.. 12:05, 12:45, 11:25, 1:45, 3:30, 4:43, '5:1(11 5:31. '8:20, 10:30 P. M. AnniTK From Cleveland, 5:30 A. jr.. 1:00. 5:10, 8:00 P. M. From Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis, 1:03, S:00P.M. From Buffalo, 5i30A jr., '1M, 5:40 p. M. From Salamanca, 1:00, OO P. M. From Younsrstown, 5:30, '6:50, 9:20 a. m., 1:00, 5:40, '3:00 P. Jl. From Beaver Falls. 5:30, 8:50.7:20. 9:20 A. M.. '1:00. 1:35: 5:40. "8:00. P.M. From Chartlcrs. 5:10, 5:22, 5:30i 6:42, -6:50, 7:08. 7:30, 8:30, 9;2u, 10:10 a. IX., 12:00 noon. 12:3a 'Uli. 1:33, 3:42, 4:0ft 4:35, 5:00. 5:10. 5:4a "S:12 P. M. F., JlcK. & V. K. K. Depaut For .New Haven, 5:40a. m., 3:55 P. . For West Newton. 5:15 P. II. For New Haven, 7:00 a jr.. Sundays, only. AKIUVE From New Haven, 9:00 A. It.. 5:05P. jr. From West Newton, 6:45, 9:00 a. ji.,5:05P. M. Dally. Sundays only. E. IIOLUKOOK. General Superintendent. A. . CI.AItK. General Passenger Agent. City ticket office, 401Smithfleld street. ALLEGHENY VALLEY RAILROAD Trains leave Union Station (Eastern Standard time): Klttannlng Ac, 6:55 a, m.: Niagara Ex., dally. 8:45 a. m llulton Ac. 10:10 a. m. ; Valley Camp Ac, nan p. m.; Oil City and DuBols Ex- press,z:uu p.m. ; iiuiitn .a.c,d:wp.m. : muanuing )p.r a5or Ac, 4:00p.m.; Braeburn Ex., 5:00 p.m.: Klttann lng Ac. 5:30 p. in. : llraeburn Ac, 6:20p.m.: llul ton Ac, 7:30 p. in.: Buffalo Ex., dally, 8:fflp. m.; Hnlton Ac. 9:45 p. m.: braeburn Ac, 11:30 p. m. Church trains Braeburn, 12:40 p. m. and 9:33 p. m. 'Bnllman Sleeping Cars between Plttsburgand Buffalo. E. H. UTLEi. U. F. Jt P. A.: DAVID McCAIiUO. Gen. buot. PENNSYLVANIA COMPANY'S LINES February 10. 1839, Central Standard 'lime. TRAINS DEPART As follows from Union Station: For Chicago, d 7:23 a. m., d 12:20. d 1:00. d7:45. except Saturday. 11:20 S. m. : -Toledo. 7:25 a. m.. d 12:20, d 1 :00 and except atnrday. 11:20 p m.: Crestline. 5:45 a. m.tCleve lnnd, 6:10. 7:25 a.m., 12:35 and d 115 pfm.: New Cas tle nnil Youngstown, 7:03 a. m.. 12:20, 3:45 p.m.; Younirstown aud.N lies, cl 12:20 p. m.; Meadvl'le, Erie and Ashtabula. 7:03a. m.. 12:20 p. m.: Nlles and Jamestown. 3:15 p. m.: Masslllon, 4:10 p. m.; Wheeling and Bcllaire. 6:10a. m.. 12:35, 3:30 p. m.; Jlcaver Falls. 4:00, 5:05 p. m., S 8:20 a. m.; Leets dale. 5:30 a.m. ALLEGHENY Rochester. 6:30 a. m.; Beaver Falls, 8(1 11:00 a. m.: Fnon, 3:00 p. m.: Leets dale, 10:00. 11:45 a. m., 2:00, 430, 4:43, 5:30. 7:00. 9:00 p. m.; Conway, 10:30p.m.: Fair Oaks, S 11:40 a. in.: Leetsdale. 5 8:30 n. m. TRAINS AR1C1VE Union station from Chicago, except Monday 1:50, d6:0O, (16:35 a.m., d 7:33 n. in.; Toledo, except Monday 1:50, d 6:35 a.m., 7:33 p. m.. Crestline, 2:10 p. m.: Yonngstown and Newcastle. 9:10a.m., 1:25, 7:33. 10:15 p. m.: Nlles and Youncstown. d 7:3.5 p. m.tClcveland. d5:50a. m., 2:25, 7:43 -p. m.: Wheeling and Hellalre, 9:00 a. m., 2:25, 7:43 p. in.: Erie and Asbtabnla, 1:25, 10:15 p. m.; Masslllon. 10:00 a. m.: Nlles and Jamestown. 9:10 a. m. ; Beaver Falls, 7:30 a. m., 1:10 p. m.. S 8:25 p. in.: Leetsdale, 10:40 p.m. ARRIVE ALLEGHENY-From Enon, 8:00 a. ml: Conway. 6:59: Rochester, 9:40 a. m.: Beaver Fills, 7:10 a. m.. 6:40 p. m.: Leetsdale, 5:50, 6:15. 7:45 a. m.. 12:00, 1:43, 4:30. 6:30. 9:00 p. m.: Fair Oaks. S8:53a. m.; Leetsdale, S 6:05 p. a.: Beaver Falls. S 8:25 p. m. S, Sunday only; d, daUy; other trains, except Sunday. telt IG .:. HAUL -a -5 -a - Ofc 'fell-D RAILROADS. PENNSYLVANIA KAILUOAD ON AND after November 28, 1888. trains leave Union Station, Pittsburg, as follows. Eastern Standard Time: MAIN LINE EASTWARD. New York and Chicago Limited or Pullman Ve uuuie unit at ;u u. jii. Atlantic Express dally for the East, 3:00 a.m. jiaii train, uauy.excepiaunaay, ouaa. m, day, mall, 8:40 a. in. Day express dally at 8:00 a. m. Mall express dally at 1 :00 p. m. Philadelphia express dally at 4:30 p. m. Eastern express dally at 7:15 p. m. Fa3t Line dally at 9:00 p. m. Sun ureensonrg express a:iu p. m. weec aays. Derry Allthi r express 1 rough trains connect at Jersey Cltywltlt r "Brooklvn Anuex" for BrooHvn. N. Y.. li:wa. hi. wmk aajs. boats of "Brooklyn Anuex" forllrool avoiding double ferriage and journey through N. Y. CItv- Trains arrive at Union Station as roUows: Stall Train, dally 8:20 prm. Western Express, dally 7:45 a. m. Faclnc Express, daily 12:45 p.m. Chicago Limited Express, dally 8:30 p.m. Fast Line, dally 11:55 p.m. SOOTH WES f PENN RAILWAY. For Unlontown, a:4S and o5 a. m. and 4:23 p'. m., without change of cars; 1.00 p. m.. connect lng at Greensbnrg. Trains arrive from Union town at 9:43 a. m., 12:20. 6:15 and 8:20 p. m. WEST PENNSYLVANIA DIVISION. From FEDERAL ST. STATION. Allegheny City. Mall train, connecting for Blalrsville... 6:4 a. m. Express, for Blalrsville, connecting for Butler 3:15 p.m. Butler Accom. ........ 3:20 a. m., 2:25 and 5:45 p.m. Sprlngdale Accom 11:49 a. m. and 6:20 p. m. Freeport Accom 4:00, 8:15 and 10:30 p. m. On Snnday 12:50 and 9:30 p. m. North Apollo Accom 10:50 a. m. and 5:00 p. m. Allegheny Junction Accommodation. connecting ror Butler 8:20 a. nx. Blalrsville Accommodation 11:30 p.m. Trains arrive at FEDERAL STREET STAtlONt Express, connecting from Butler 10:35 a.m. Mall Train 2:35 p. m. Butler Accom 9:23 a. m., 4:40 and 7:20 p. ro. Klalrsvlllo Accommodation 9:52 p.m. Freenort Aceom.7:40a.m 1:32, 7:20 and 110 p. m. On Sunday 10:10 a. m. and 70 p. m, Sprlngdale Accom 6:37 a.m., and 3:02 p.m. North Apollo Accom 8:40 a. m. and 5:40 p. xa. MONONGAHELA DIVISION. Trains leave Dnlonstation.Pittsourg, as fbOowt: For Monongahela City, est Brownsville and Unlontown. Ha. m. For Monongahela City and West Brownsville, 7:05 and 11 a. m. and 4:40p.-n. On Sunday. 1:01 p. m. For Monongahela Clty,-5:4a p. m., week days. Dravosburg Ac weeX days. 3:20 p. m. West Elizabeth Accommodation, i:50a.m HCBl 6:20 and 11:33 p.m. Sunday. 9:40 p. m. Ticket offices Corner Fourth avenue and Try street and Union station. CHAS. E. PUUIL J. K. 1VOOD. General Manager. Gcn'I Pass'r Agent. PANHANDLE ROUTE NOV.I2. 1SS3. tTNIOX station. Central Standard Time. Leave ror Cincinnati and St. Louis, d 7:30 a.m., d 8:00 and d 11:13 p. m. Uennlson, 3:45 p. m. Chlcacro. 12:05, d 11:15 p. m. Wheeling, ?: a. m., S.8 6:10 p.m. SteubenviUe, 5:33a. m. Washlneton! 8:558:35 a. m.. 1, 3:30, 4:55 p. m. Bulmr.- a. m. Burgettstown, bll:33a.m., 5:25 n. m. Mans, field. 7:13, llaa. ra.. 6:30. dS:33;lo:4u. TvYnTMo. Donalds, d 4:15. d 10:00 p. m. " From the V est, .1 1:50, d 6:00. a. m., 310S, d 8:35 p.m. DcnnWot, 9:&a.m. SteubenviUe. 8-OSn mT Wheeling. 1:50, 8:43 a.m., 3:03. 5:55 p.m. Burgettt town, 7:15a. m.,S9j05a.m. Washington JllL 9:55 a. m 2:3d, 60 p. m. MansfleldTslSr 9?0 a-m... 12:4.3 djra) andl0.-COp.ro. Buleei.lSon.ii: aieuonaias, qs:aa.m.. d9ap. m. u u.uj, i? duuiuj viuj; otnei ether trains, except OUUtMJ t : , 'fsflHimvHMBHMHBiliHHBHIisiliHHHilBHiMRHHiisHHHINHB ss
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers