Pittsburg dispatch. (Pittsburg [Pa.]) 1880-1923, April 08, 1889, Page 8, Image 8

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THBv 5IT-TSBURG,
PISFATCH M0NDA3", AEKEL ' 8;
1889:
8.
- A .
"XU
I
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TOWGMfyBEWABK
Dr. De Witt Talmage Preaches in St.
Louis From the Text,
AS AN OX TO THE SLAUGHTER.
He Points Out the Dangers of Borrowing,
and Shows That
IXEZimS POSSESSES SOME CAPITAL
1EFSCLU. TELEGRAM TO THE DISPATCB.1 .
ST." LOUIS, April 7. The KeY. T. De
"Witt Talmage, D. D., of Brooklyn,
preached here this evening to a vast audi
ence. His subject was "The Slaughter,"
and his text, Proverbs, vii, 21: "As an ox
to the slaughter." The eloquent preacher
said:
There is nothing in the voice or manner of
the butcher to indicate to the ox that there is
death ahead. The ox thinks he is coins on to
a rich pasture field of clover, where all day
long he will revel in the herbaceous luxuri
ance; but after a while the. men and the boys
close in upon him with sticks and stones and
shouting, and drive him through the bars a,nd
Into a doorway, where he is rastencd, and with
a well aimed stroke the ax fells him; and so
the anticipation of the redolent pasture field
is completely disappointed. So many a young
man has been driven on by temptation to what
he thought would he paradisiacal enjoyment;
butarterawhile influences with darker hue
and swath'ier arm close in upon him. and he
finds that instead of making an excursion into
a garden he has been driven "as an ox to the
slanghter."
First We are apt to blame young men for
being destroyed when we ought to blame the
influences that destroy them. Society slaughters
a great many young men bv the behest, "You
must keep up appearances; whatever be your
salary, you must dress as well as others, you
must wine and brandy as many friends, you
must smoke as costly cigars, you must give as
expensive entertainments, and you must live in
as fashionable a boarding bouse. If you bavn't
the money, borrow. If you can'f borrow make
a false entry', or subtract here and there a bill
from a bundle of bank bills; you will only have
to make the deception a little while; in a few
months, or in a year or two, you can make all
right. Nobody will be hurt by it; nobody will
be the wiser. You vourself will not be dam
aged." By that awful process 100,000 men have
been slaughtered for time and
SLAUGHTERED FOR ETERNITY.
Suppose you borrow. There is nothing
wrong about borrowing money. There is hard
ly a man in the house but has sometimes bor
rowed money. Vast estates have been built on
a borrowed dollar. But there are two kinds of
borrowed money. Money borrowed for the
purpose of starting or keeping up legitimate
enterprise and expense, and money borrowed
to get that which you can do without. The
first Is right, the other is wrong. If you have
money enough of your own to buy a coat, how
ever plain, and then you borrow money for a
dandy's outfit, you have taken the first revolu
tion of the w heel down grade Borrow for the
necessities: that may be well. Borrow for the
luxuries; that tins your prospects over in' the
wrong direction.
The Bible distinctly siys the borrower is
servant ot the lender. It is a bad state of
things when you have to go down some other
street to escape meeting some one whom you
owe. If young men knew what is the despot
ism of being in debt more of them would keep
out of it. What did debt do for Lord Bacon,
with a mind towering above the centuries? It
induced him to take bribes and -convict him
self as a criminal before all ages. What did
debt do for Walter Scott? Broken hearted at
Abbotsford. Kept him writing until his hand
gave out in paralysis to keep the Sheriff away
lroni his pictures and statuary. Better for him
if he had minded the maxim which he had chis
eled over the fireplace at Abbotsford: "Waste
not. want net."
The trouble is my friends, the people do not
understand the ethics of going in debt, and
that if you purchase goods with'no expectation
of pay mg for them, or go into debts which you
cannot meet, you steal just so muchmenev.
If I go into a grocer's store and buy sugars
and coffees and meat, with no capacity to pay
for them and no intention of paying for them,
I am more dishonest than if I go into the store,
and when the grocer's face is turned the other
way I fill my pockets with the articles of mer
chandise and
CARRY OFF A HAST.
In the one case I take the merchant's time,
and I take the time of his messenger to trans
fer the goods to my house, while in the other
case I take none of the time of the merchant,
and I wait upon myself, and I transfer the
goods without anv trouble to him. In other
words, a sneak thief is not so bad as a man
who contracts for debts he 'never 'expects to
pay.
- Yet in all our. cities there are families that
move every May day to get into proximity to
other grocers and meat shops and apothecaries.
They owe everybody within half a mile of
where they now live, and next May they will
move Into a distant part of the city, finding a
new lot of victims. Meann hile you, the honest
family in the new house, are bothered day by
day by the knocking at the door of disap
pointed bakers, and butchers, anddrygoods
dealers, and newspaper carriers, and you are
asked where your predecessor is. You do not
know. It was arranged ; on should not know.
Meanwhile your 'predecessor has gone to some
distant part of the city, and the people who
have anything to sell have sent their wagons
and stopped there to solicit the "valuable" cus
tom of the new neighbor, and he. the new
neighbor, with great complacency and with,an
air of affluence, orders the finest steaks and
highest priced sugars, and the best of the
canned fruits, and. perhaps, all the newspapers.
And the debts will keep on accumulating until
he gets bis goods on the 30th of next April in
the furniture cart.
Now, let me say, if there are any such per
sons in the bouse, if you have any regard -for
your own convenience, you had better remove
to some greatly distant part of the city. It is
too bad that, having bad all the trouble of con
suming the goods, you should also have the
trouble of bing dunned! , And let me say that
if you find that this pictures yonr own photo
graph, instead of being in church you ought to
be in the penitentiary! No wonder that so
many of our merchants fail in business.
THEY ARE SWINDLED
into bankruptcy by these wandering Arabs,
these nomads of city life. They cheat the gro
cer out of the green apples which make them
sick, the physician who attends their distress,
and the undertaker who fits them out for de
parture from the neighborhood where they
owe everbody when they pay the debt of na
ture, the only debt they ever do pay!
Now our young men are coming up in this de
praved state of commercial ethics, and I am so
licitous about them. I want to warn them
against being slaughtered on the rough edges
of debt. You want many things you have not,
my young friends. Yon shall have them if you
have patience and honesty and Industry. Cer
tain lines ot conduct always lead out to certain
successes.
There is a law which controls even those
things that seem haphazard. I have been told
by those who have observed that it is possible
to calculate jusp how many letters will be sent
to the Dead Letter office every year through
misdirection: that it is possible to calculate
just how many letters will be detained for lack
of postage stamps through the f orgetf ulness of
the senders, and that it is possible to tell just
how many people will fall in the streets by
slipping on an orange peel. In other words,
there are no accidents. The most insignificant
event you ever heard of is the link between
two eternities the eternity of the past and the
eternity oi tne luture. neaa uierignt way,
young man, and you will come out at the right
goal.
Bring me a young man and tell me what his
physical health is, and what his mental caliber,
and w hat his habits, and I will tell you what
will be his destiny for this world, and his des
tiny for the world to come, and I will not make
6 inaccurate prophecies out of the SU0. All this
makes me solicitous in regard to yonng men,
arid I want to make them nervous in regard to
the contraction of unpayable debts. I give
yen a paragraph from
MY OWlf EXPERIENCE.
My first settlement as pastor was in a village.
My salary was tSOO and a parsonage. The
amount seemed enormous to me. I said to
myself, "What all this for one year?" Lwas
afraid of getting worldly under so much pros
perity! 1 resolved to invite all the congrega
tion to my house in groups of 2.5 each. We
began, and they were the best congregation in
all the world, and we felt nothing was too good
for them, we piled all the luxuries on the table.
I never completed the undertaking. At the
end of six months I was in financial despair.
I found what every young man learns in time
to save himBelf, or too late, that ynu must
measure the size of a man's body before you
begin to cut the cloth for his coat.
When a young man willfully and of choice,
having the comforts of life, goes into the con
traction of unpayable debts heJcnows not into
what he goes. The creditors get after the
debtor, the pack of hounds in full cry, and alas!
for the reindeer. They jingle his doorbell be
fore he gets up in the morning, they iin;le his
doorbell after he has gone to bed at night.
They meet him as he comes off his front steps.
They send him a postal card, or a letter, in
curtest style, telling him to pay up. They at
tach his goods. They want cash, or a note at
30 days, or a note on demand. They call him a
knave. They say he ttes. Ther want him dis
ciplined at the church. They want him turned
out of the bank. They come at him from, this
side, and from that side, and from before, and
from behind, and from above, and from be
neath, and he is insulted and gibbeted, and
sued, and dunned, and sworn at, until he gets
the nervous dyspepsia, gets neuralgia, gets'
liver complaint, gets heart disease, gets con
vulsive disorder, gets consumption.
Wow he is dead, and you say: "Of course
they will let him alone." Oh, no! Now they
are watchful to see whether there are any un
necessary expenses at the obsequies, to see
whether there is any useless handle on the
casket, to see whether th.ere is any surplus
plait on the shroud, to see whether the hearse
is costly or cheap, to see whether the flowers
sent to the casket have been bought by the
family or donated, to see in whose name the
deed to the grave is made out. Then they ran
sack the bereft household, the books, the pict
ures, the carpets, the chairs, the sofa, the
piano, the mattresses, the pillow on which he
dies.
CURSED BE DEBT !
For the sake of your own happiness, for the
sake of your good morals, for the sake of your
immortal soul, for God's sake, young man, as
far as possible, keep out of it.
IL But I think more young men are slaught
ered through irrcligion. Take away a young
man's religion and you make him the prey of
evil. We all know that the Bible is the only
perfect system of morals. Now if you want to
destroy the young man's morals take his Bible
away. How will you do that? Well, you will
caricature his reverence for the Scriptures, you
will take all those incidents of the Bible which
can be made mirth ot Jonah's whale, Sam
son's foxes, Adam's rib then you will carica
ture: eccentric Christians or inconsistent
Christians, then you will pass off as your own
all those hackneyed arguments against Christ
ianity which are as old as Tom Paine, as old as
Voltaire, as old as sin. Now you have captured
his Bible, and .you have taken his strongest
fortress: the way is comparatively clear, and'
all the gates of his soul araset open in invita
tion to the sins of earth and the sorrows of
death, that they may come in and drive the
stake for their encampment.
A steamer 15,000 miles from shore wilh
broken rudder and lost compass, and hulk
leaking 59 gallons the hour, is better off than a
young man when you'have robbed him of his
Bible. Have you ever noticed how despicably
mean it is to take away the world's Bible with
out proposing a substitute? It is meaner than
to come to a sick man and steal his medicine,
meaner than to come to a cripple and steal his
crutch, meaner than to come to a pauper and
steal his crust, meaner than to come to a poor
man and burn his house down. It is the worst
of all larcenies to steal the Bible, which has
been the crutch and medicine and food and
eternal home to so .many! What a generous
and magnanimous business infidelity has gone
into! This splitting up of lifeboats and taking
away of fire escapes and extinguishing of light
houses. t
FATAL FUN.
I come out and I say to such people, "What
are you doing all this for?" "Oh," they say,
"just for fun." It is such fun to see Christians
try to bold on to their Bibles! Many of them
have lost loved ones, and have been told that
there is a resurrection, and it is such fun to
tell them there will be no resurrection! Many
of them hare believed that Christ came to
carry the bnrdens and to heal the wounds of
the world, and it is such fun to tell them they
will have to be their own savior! Think of the
meanest thing you ever heard of; .then go down
1,000 feet underneath it, and you will find your
self at the ton of a stair 100 miles long; go to
the bottom of the stairs, and you will find a
ladder 1,030 miles long; then go the foot of the
ladder and look off a precipice half as far as
from here to China, and you will find the head
quarters of the meanness that would rob this
world of its only comfort in life, its only peace
in death and its only hope for immortality.
Slaughter a young man's faith in God, and
there is not much more left to slaughter.
Now. what has become of the slaughtered?
Well, some of them are in their father's or
mother's house,broken down in health, waiting
to die: others are in the hospital; others are in
Greenn ood, or, rather, their bodies are, for
their souls have cone on to retribution. Not
much prospect for a young man who started
life with good health and good education and a
Christian example set him, and opportunity of
usefulness, who gathered all bis treasures and
put them in one box, and then dropped it into
the sea.
Now. how is this wholesale slaughter to be
stopped? There is not a person in the house
but is interested in that question. Young man,
arm yourself. The object of my sermon is to
put a weapon in each of your hands for your
own defense. Wait not for Young Men's
Christian Associations to protect you, or
churches to protect you. Appealing to God
for help,
TAKE CARE OF YOURSELF.
First, have a room somewhere that you can
call your own. Whether it be the back parlor
of a fashionable boarding house, or a room in
the fourth story of a cheaD lodging, I care not.
Only have that one room your fortress. Let
not the dissipator or the nnclean step over the'
threshold. If they come up the long flight of
stairs and knock at the door, meet them face to
face and kindly yet firmly refuse them admit
tance. Have a few family portraits on the
wall, if you brought them with you from your
country home. Have a Bible on the stand. If
you can afford it and can play on one, have an
instrument of music harp or flute, or cornet,
or melodeon. or violin, or plana Every morn-.
ing before you leave that room, pray. Every
night after you come home in that room, pray.
Make that room your Gibraltar, your Sevasto
pol, your Mount Zion. Let no bad book or
newspaper come into that room, any more than
you would allow a cobra to coil on your table.
Take care of vourself. Nobody else will take
care of you. Your help will not come np two
or three or four flights of stairs; your help will
come through the roof, down from heaven,
from that God who in the 6,000 years of the
world's history never betrayed a young man
who tried to be good and a Christian. Let me
say in regard to your adverse wordly circum
stances, in passing, that yon are on a level now
with those who are finally to succeed. Mark
my words, young man, and think of it 3C years
from now. You will find that those who 30
years from now are the millionaires of this
country, who are the orators of the country,
who are the poets of the country, who are the
strong merchants of the country, who are the
great philantbrophists of the country
mightiest in church and state are this morn
ing on a level with you, not an inch above, and
you in straitened circumstances now.
Herscbel earned his living by playing a violin
at parties, and in thainterstices of the play be
would go out and look up at the midnight
heavens, the fields of his immortal conquests.
George Stephenson rose from being the fore
man in a colliery to be the most renowned of
the world's engineers. No outfit,
NO CAPITAL TO START WITH!
Young man, go down to the Mercantile Li
brary and get some books and read of what
wonderful mechanism God gave you in your
hand, in youi foot, in your eye, in your ear, and
then ask some doctor to take you into the dis
secting room and illustrate to you what you
have read about, and never again commit the
blasphemy of saying you have no capital to
start with. Equipped! Why, the poorest
young man in this house is equipped as only
the God of the whole universe could affor 1 to
equip him. Then his body a very poor affair
compared with his wonderful soul oh, thit is
what makes me solicitous. I am not so much
anxious about you, young man, because you
have so little to do with, as I am anxions about
you because so have much to risk and lose or
gain.
There is no class of persons that so stir my
sympathies as young men in rreat cities. Not
quite enough salary to live on, and all the
temptations that come from that deficit. In
vited on all hands to drink, and their exhausted
nervous system seeming to demand stimulus.
Their religion caricatured by the most of the
clerks in the store and most of the operatives
in the factory. The rapids of temptation and
death rushing against that young man 40 miles
the hour, and be in a frail boat headed up
stream, with nothing but a broken oar to work
with. Unless Almighty God help them they will
go under.
Ah! when I told you to take care of yourself
you misunderstood me if you thought I meant
you are to depend on human resolution, which
may be dissolved in the foam of the wine cup,
or may be blown out with tho first gnst of
Win
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ocS-miS-invTSu
temntatloh. Hero is the helmet, tho sword of
Lord God Almighty. Clothe yourself in that
Eanoplr and you shall not be put to confusion,
in pays well neither in this world nor the next,
but right thinking and right believing and
right acting will take you in, safety through
this life and in transport through the next.
I never shall forget a prayer I heard a young
man make some 15 years ago. It was a very
short prayer, but it was a tremendous prayer:
"Oh, Lord, help us. We find it so vary easy to
do wrong and so hard to do right. Lord, help
us." That prayer, I warrant you, reached the
ear of God, and reached his heart. And there
are in this house 100 men who have found out
1,000 young men, perhaps, who have found out
that very thing. It is so very easy to do wrong,
and
SO HARD TO DO RIGHT.
I got a letter, only one paragraph of which I
shall read: "Having moved around somewhat
I have run across many ypung men of intelli
gence, ardent strivers after that will-o'-the-wisp,
fortune, and of one of these I would speak. He
was a young Englishman of 23 or 31 years, who
came to New York, where he had acquaint
ances, with barely sufficient to keep him a
couple of weeks. He had been tenderly reared;
perhaps I should say too tenderly, and was not
used to earning bis living, and found it ex
tremely difficult to get any position that he was
capable of filling. After many vain efforts in
this direction he found himself on Sunday
evening in Brooklyn, near your church, with
about S3 left of his small capital. Providence
seemed to lead him to yonr door, and he deter
mined to go in and hear you.
"He told me his going to hear you that night
was undoubtedly the turning point in his life,
for when he went into your church he felt des
perate, but whilelistcning to your discourse his
better nature got the mastery. I truly believe
from what this young man told me that your
soundingtbe depths ot his heart that night
alone brought him back to his God whom he
was so near leaving."
The echo, that is of multitudes in the house.
I am not preaching an abstraction, bnt a great
reality. Oh! friendless young man, Ob! prodi
gal young man. Oh! broken hearted young man,
discouraged young man, wounded young man,
I commend you to Christ this day, the best
friend a man ever had. He meets you this
evening. You have come here for this bless
ing. Despise not that emotion rising in yonr
soul: it is divinely lifted. Look into. tho face of
Christ. Lift one prayer to your father's God,
to yonr mother's God, and get the pardoning
blessing. Now, while I speak, you are at the
forks of the road, and this is the right road,
and that is the wrong road, and I see you
START ON THE BIGHT ROAD.
One Sabbath morning, at the close of my
service, I saw a gold watch of the world re
nowned and deeply lamented violinist. OleBull.
You remember he died in his island home off
the coast of Norway. Tha,t gold watch he had
wound up day after day through his illness,
and then he said to his companion, "Now I
want to wind this watch as long as I can, and
then when I am gone I want you to keep it
wound up until it gets to my friend. Dr. Dore
mus, in New York, and then he will keep it
wound up until his life is done, and then I want
the watch to go to his young son, my especial
favorite.
The great musician, who more than any other
artist had made the violin speak and sing and
weep and laugh and triumph for it seemed
when he drew the bow across the strings as if
all earth and heaven trembled in delighted
sympathy the great musician, in a room look
ing off upon the sea, and surrounded by his fa
vorite instruments of music, closed his eyes in
death. While all the world was mourning at
his departure. 16 crowded steamers fell into
line of funeral procession to carry his body to
the main land. There were 50.000 of nis coun
trymen gathered in. an amphitheater of the
hills, waiting to hear the eulogium. and it was
said when the great orator of the dSy with
stentorian voice began to speak, the 50,000 peo
ple on the hillsides burst into tears.
Oh! that was the close of a life that had done
so much to make the world happy. But I have
to tell you. young man, if you live right and
die right, that was a tame scene compared with
that which will greet you when from the gal
leries of heaven the one hundred and forty and
four thousand shall accord with Christ in
crying. "Well done, thou good and faithful
servant."
And the influences that on earth you put in
motion will go down from generation to gen
eration, 'the influences you wound up handed
to your children.Jand their influences wonnd
up and handed to their children until watch
and clock are no more needed to mark the
progress, because time itself shall be no longer.
81. Last month. SI.
April is positively the last month for $1
per dozen cabinets at Elite Gallery, 516
Market street, Pittsburg. Come early and
bring children, rain or shine. Use elevator.
The best line of co.-sets, gloves, hosiery,
underwear and a general assortment of
ladies' and children's fine furnishing goods
iu the city. Come to the grand opening
to-day and to-morrow.
F. Schoenthal, 612 Penn avenue.
LACE department A splenflid assort
ment of flonncings in Ohantilly and Span
ish guipure lace; entirely new designs in
drapery nets just opened.
MWFSU HUGUS & HACKE. .
, A full line of hosiery for ladies' and
children. Come to the grand opening to
day and to-morrow. F. Schoenthal.
612 Penn aire.
Sneezing Catarrh.
The distressing sneeze, sneeze, sneeze, the
acrid, watery discharges from the eyes and
nose, tne painful inflammation extending to
the throat, the swelling of the mucous lining,
causing choking sensations, cougH, ringing
noises in the head and splitting headaches,
how familiar these symptoms are to thousands
who suffer periodical! v from bead colds or in
fluenza, and who live in ignorance of the fact
that a single application of Sanford's Radi
cal Cure fob Catarrh will afford" instan
taneous relief.
But this treatment in cases of simple catarrh
gives but a faint idea of what this remedy will
do in the chronic forms, where the breathing is
obstructed by choking, putrid mucous accumu
lations, the bearing affected, smell and taste
gone, throat ulcerated and hacking cough
gradually fastening itself upon the debilitated
system. Then it. is that the marvelous cura
tive power of Sanfobd's Radical cube
manifests itself in instantaneous and grateful
relief. Cure begins from the first application.
It is rapid, radical, permanent, economical,
safe.
Sanfobd'b Radical Cube consists of one
bottle of the Radical Cube, one box of CA
IArbiial, Solvent, and an Improved In.
HALEBi'price, 1.
Potter Dbug t Chemical Corporation.
Boston.
IT STOPS THE PAIN.
Achmff muscles, back, bins and
sides, kidney and uterine pains, and
all pain, inflammation, and weak
ness relieved in one minute bv tbe
Cnilcurn Anti-Pnin Plnater. The first and
only pain-subduing plaster. New, original, in
stantaneous, never failing. Vastly superior to
all other plasters and remedies for the relief of
pain. At all druggists, 25 cents; five for $1; or,
postage free, of Potter Drug and Chemi
cal Corporation, Boston, Mass. ur
BUTTER,
BUTTER,
::: BUTTER.
EVERY POUND WARRANTED PURE
Chartiers Creamery Co.
Warehouse and General Offices,
' 616 LIBERTY STREET,
Telephone 1424.
PITTSBURG, PA.
Factories throughout 'Western
Pennsylvania.
For prices Bee market quotations.
Wholesale exolurrively.
, mhlS-jrrcr
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
Style.
AN important quality in deco
rative -work Is style.
"The style is the man." This
is revealed plainly in the
Hfilfintinn of lewels and nlate. The
dealer adapts the style of hiss.
wares to the taste or ms customers.
It is wise, therefore, in the pur
chase of jewelry, to select a store
patronized by persons ot cultivated
taste, with a just appreciation of
things artistic.
And it cannot be too often em
phasized that the present oloBe
margins of profit make any wide
variation in price between different
stores impossible.
THEODORE B.STARR,
206 Fifth avenue,
Madison Square, New York. f
Correspondence invited from in
tending purchasers.
apS
MBfe. DR. OROSSLEY,
One of the Consulting Physicians of the
Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute
at 22 Ninth street.
Mr. John H. King, a well-known citizen of
Allegheny county, residing at Tarentum, has
for a long time suffered from Catarrh. He
bad a hacking cough, dizziness and pain over
the eyes. The tough, tenacious mucous in his
head and throat was hard to raise, and gave
him such a choked-up feeling. Ue took cold
easily, and his throat often became sore. Hav
ing been unable to find any relief, he began
treatment with the specialists for Catarrh at
22 Ninth street. He says:
"In testimony that I have been cured of
Catarrh by the physicians of the Catarrh and
Dyspepsia Institute, I hereby sign my name.
"JOHN H. KING."
The above lady physician can be consulted
by indies suffering from diseases peculiar to
their sex. The medicines used are positively
curative, and aro so prepared as to allow the
patient to use the treatment herself. They
treat successfully Catarrh. Rheumatism. Dys
pepsia, Bronchitis, Asthma, Blood, Kidney
and Female Diseases.
Office hours, 10 A. X. to 4p. M., and 6 to 8 1.
it. Sundays, 12 to 4 P. M. Consultation free
to all. Will remove to 323 Perm, avenue on
April L mh2S-D
THE LARGEST FACTORyfr
H THE WORLD. jjtf
T SOLD EYERTtfHERE
jf AVOID IMITATIONS
DOUGLAS MACKIE
Have been and are still very busy. CAUSE? Good goods at extra low prices. EFFECT? A
discerning and enlightened public practically illustrating tbeir hearty appreciation. No time
for ad. this week: but here goes for a few startling samples of our Every-Day-ln-the-Week bar
gains. , ,
We've still got one case left of those wonderful all-wool Scotch tweed suitings, 88 inches
wide, at 25c a yard. Tney cost 35c to make.
Anotber 50 pieces lovely shades, all-wool costume cloth, in verypretty variegated silk stripes,
will be laid out at 45c a yard; they're 83 inches wide, and would be cheap enough at 60c
Then tbe 62-Inch all-wool check suitings at 60c a yard; would be elegant value at 75c
And your attention is very specially directed to the piles upon piles of 43-inch Henrietta
cloths in all the-new, desirable spring shades, at 37 50, 75c and SI 00 a yard, usually Sold at 60c,
75c, SI 00 and 1 25.
Our magnificent assortment of ladles' jackets, beaded wraps, newmarkets, stuff and silk
costumes cannot fail to please. Styles the latest, weaves and shades the newest, prices GETAT
ABLE BY ALL.
Lace curtains, poles, portieres, etc. Very busy. Still a large assortment. New Boods daily.
ALL AT MONEY-SAVING PRICES.
151 and 153 FEDERAL
MADE 0NLYBV, N THE WORLD
Geo.A.Macbeth&Co.Pittsburgh.Pa.
MOWS THE ACCEPTED TIME
-TO BtJTf TOUB-
FURNITURE AND CARPETS,
-AND-
IK IE IE C IK ' S
Is ijln.e 3?g3zLi3 place -bo get -tOn-exm.
if good qualities, pretty styles and low; prices have any charm
for you. We offer the very newest designs in Chamber, Parlor,
Diningroom and Library Furniture at figures- that no house in
this sectiqn of the country can duplicate.
The same state of affairs exists In Carpets, Bugs and House
Furnishing Goods. You can depend on this: It always pays to
come to
KBEOKS
CASH AND CREDIT HOUSE,
923 and 925 Penn Avenue,
. ZETeaa? 3ST3ZL-bii. Stoee-b-
H Open Saturday Nights till 10 o'olook.
, p5-itw
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
' Its Wonderful- Price.
Piles of Clothing adver
tised in that way just now.
The wonderful price is the
only thing about it brought
to the front If the Clothing
isn't inferior the downfall in
price is astonishing.
We are on a different line.
We want to give you more
than you can get anywhere
else for your money. Our
make of Clothing is the very
best in ready-made. Cloth
reliable, and trimmings: work
done by good work-people
for good wages: and a low
price tied invariably to a solid
and long-wearing quality.
Investigate before buying
wonderful-priced Clothing.
Our make costs a great deal
less because it looks and
wears well.
( Tailoring to orderin best
manner: 1,069 styles of goods.
Wanamaker
&. Brown,
Sixth street and Perm avenue.
apS-D
Optical and Mathematical Instruments, Arti
ficial Eyes, Medical Batteries. All American
and European Patented Eye Glass and Specta
cle frames. Glasses perfectly adjusted.
KORNBLUM, OPTICIAN
NO. 6U FIFTH AVENUE.
Telephone No. 1686. ap7-S6-DSu
HOUSE-CLEANING TIME
Is here. You will need curtains renovated and
carpets cleaned. There is but one place where
you can get them done in the best manner pos
sible, and that is at
CHAS. PFEXFER'S
ALLEGHENY STEAM LAUNDRY.
Offices in Pittsburg, 443SmIthfleld street, 1913
Carson street, and 100 Federal street, Alleghe
ny. Works, 353-369 Beaver avenue, Allegheny.
Telephone 1264. mh26-arwT
ANCHOR REMEDY COMP'NY,
329 LIBERTY STREET,
PITTSBUBG, PA.
J. B. Golden, 6102 Botlur street,
city, sayB: "I was able to throw
away my crutches after using one
half a bottle of tha Anchor Rheu
matic Remedy. Lconsidermycure
marvelous and heartily indorse
the remedy." Price 50c
We would be glad to have vou
eive the Anchor Sarsaparllla a trial. 'Tis the
ideal blood purifier, and is especially adapted
enriching tbe blood and invigorating the sys
tem. Our Beef, Wine andlon is also meeting the
wants of tbe public. Tis he best tonic in the
market, and we confidently recommend it as
such. Our price of each 75 cents; six bottles H.
mwf
STREET, ALLEGHENY.
ap8-MW
LAMP
sVuSQKS. -tbt 5bibV??z'MBbbs3l
nZftdESBhSKll Sk. icjibiEZ2??SSi
fsT Chimneys
ap549-MWg
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
Ringing Bargains
And This Time Some for
the Ladies.
HERB A FEW THAT SSttiL LIKE
HOT CAKES.
Ladies' Kid Opera Slippers,
50c.
Ladies' Kid Newport Button,
85c, worth $1 25.
Ladies' Pebble Ties, 85c.
Ladies' Pebble Goat Button,
$1 25, worth $2.
Ladies' fine Kid and Peb. Goat
Button, Opera and Common
Sense Toes, at $1 50.
And my 82 and 82 60 fine soft
Dongola Kid Button are complete
in style' and fit to any 85 shoes.
G,D. SI MEN'S,
78 OHIO ST ALLEGHENY.
mhZ7-MW
WE ARE READY
With an unequaled stock and
endless variety of Men s, Boys'
and Children's
NEW SPRING CLOTHING,
' Hats and Furnishings,
Come see what we haVe to
offer you and see if they are
not bargains.'
Boys' Confirmation, Suits
In every ?rade and. quality. Confirmation
Eats, Confirmation Neckwear, Confirma
tion Shirt Waists. Bring the boys aronnd
and get oar prices.
SPECIAL:
500 dozen Boys' Shirt "Waists, worth 40c,
19c.
Closing out Ladies' Jersey Waists at half
price to quit this branch.
I5?Free music every Saturday night.
SALLER & CO,
Comer Diamoni and SmlUifleia. Streets.
ap7.MWJ-su
77X
PHOTOGRAPHER, 16 SIXTH STREET.
A fine, large crayon portrait J3 60; see them
before ordering elsewhere. Cabinets, $2 and
$2 60 per dozen. PROMPT DELIVERY.
OC9-p70-MWF3U
WHOLESALE N0USL
JOSEPH HORNE & CO.,
Cor. Wood and Liberty St&j
Importers and Jobbers or
Special offerings this week in
SILKS, PLUSHES,
DRESS GOODS,
SATEENS,
SEERSUCKER,
GINGHAMS, PRINTS,
and OHEVIOTa
For largest assortment and lowest price call
and see us.
wholesale"exclusively
feZS-r&t-D
P
ATEHTS.
181 Fifth avenue.-above Bmithfleld, next Leader
omce. i.noaeiay.j csiaDusnea zu yeara.
se29-hlU
aAITJXOAOS.
A liLEOHKJTY VALLEY KAILKOAU
'!&! lMvn TTnlnit Stnttnn t rjistprn St&Tlflartl
time): Kltttnnlng Ac. 8:55 &. m.: KlMcanEz.,'
amy. ::u a. is., wmon ac, iuuu b. in. ; y uj
Camp Ac, 32:05 p. m.; OU CitTand IhiBols Ex-
Ac, 4:00p.m.; Braebarn Ex.,5.-&p.ra.: Kitupn
ing Ac, 5:30 p. nu; Braeburn Ae.,6:20p.n.: Hal-
. wa at;., cau p. in.; duuww .iu.., ,
8:Wp. m.; llulton Ac. 9:13 p. m. : braeburn Ac,
u:a p. m. vnurcn trams uraeoum, u:wp. m.
and 9:33 p. m. Vnllman Sleeping Can batwirn
Fittsburgand Buffalo. E. H. UTLEx. O. F. A
i. A.: IJAVLU ilcOAKUU. Gen. Snot.
BALTIMORE AND OHIO 1SA1LKOAU
Schedule In effect Noyember 29. 1SS3. For
Washington, 1). C. Baltimore nndriilUdelnhla,
11:30 a.m.and'iona p.m. -J'or Washington. U.V,,
and Baltimore t7rt0a.ui. For Cumberland. t7:0a,
"11:30 a. m.. andlOfiO p. m. For ConnellsTlUa,
17:00 and "11:30 a. m tl:00, taana -jwjjid. u.
For Unlontown,t7:CXUll:30a.ra., u and 4:00 p.
p. ForMt.Jfleaant, t7:M and 1:30 a. m,, tlflO
and UM p. m. For Washington, Fa.. 7:30,
i:30 a. m.,3:SS, tt:J0 and S:30 p. m. For Wheel
ing, 7:30, t9:S0a,m., 3:85, t&J p. m. FoxCln
eronatl and ttt.Lonli, 130a.m., 'stfOp.m. For
Colnmbos, '7:33 a. m7, S:30'p. m. For Newark,
7:30, ttiaoa. m., "3:31, 8:30p. m. ForChlcago,
7:30, 19:30 a. m.. '3:36 and 80 p. m. Tralni i ar
rive from Philadelphia, Baltimore and'VVaihlng
ton, 7:10a. m. andS:W p. m. From Commons,
Cincinnati and Chicago, W.TSa. m. and 9:10p.m.
From Wheeling, 7:45, '10:50 a. m., KM, JiW P,
m. Through sleeping cars to Baltimore, Wash
ington and: Cincinnati. . ,
I or Wheeling, uoiumDusann insinnan, jii;
j p m (Saturday only). ConnellJVille ac at S;30
Dally, tnalljr except Bnnday. .Sunday only.
Tbe Pittsburg Transfer Company wUl call for
and check Baggage trom hotels and residences
upon orders left at B. Ss O. Ticket. Office, corner
Firth ayenue-and Wood street. . -,,. .
W. M. CLEMENTS, CHAS. tf. BCTJLU.
General Manager. Gen. Fass. Agt.
m
NEW ADYERTISKSENTS.
ALWAYS LIVELY
ALWAYS
The above two sentiments are printed in capital letters in our busi
ness vocabulary. We like them on general principles, and especially
when in connection with young folk's wear. It suits the character of
the little customers, the patterns of the goods for them, the brightness
and briskness of waiting on them. Certainly the styles are here. Cer
tainly the variety is here. Certainly the beauty of cut, trimming and
workmanship are here, ?nd certainly, as a result of all these, THE
TRADE IS HERE. Why, it's a positive fact
EVERY BOY IN THE TWIN CITIES
CAN BE QUICKLY, PR0PERLY.AND CHEAPLY DRESSED OUT OF
KAUFMAN NS'
abundant stock; and what a real handsome place is the immense space
we devote to Boys' Clothing. And, remember, we are not experiment
ing with this difficult branch of our business. We found "long time i
ago"' the kind of material that is safe to put into Boys' Clothing so that
the knees and elbows don't come through too soon. This is an im
portant consideration to mothers with several boys. If you are inter
ested in
BOYS' SHIRT WAISTS,
come right in and see them by the
thousand every celebrated brand
and new pattern in the country.
We make a specialty of star waists
and sell more of them than any
three stores in this city put to
gether. Why? Because we give
you the best value in return for
your money. See! Why not call
and be convinced!
GIFTS -to the BOYS
FOR A FEW DAYS LONGER ONLY,
If you want any of our "Pigs in Clover," or "Cows in the
Corn" puzzles, as well as our wonderful Calliopes or Crack Shots,
you had better hurry, as the free distribution of these articles will
shortly terminate.
VMEFS FINE SPRING, SUITS:;:
READY-MADE.
An extensive aftd elegant stock
of Sack, Cutaway Frock and Prince
Albert Suits, faultless cut, fit, make
and trimmings, at prices ranging
from $$ to $2$.
OUR BIG SHOE SALE CONTINUES
IIS
Solid Working Brogans at 98c; fine Calf Dress Shoes, in
button, lace and congress, at $1 39; the celebrated walk
welj Shoes at $1 98 the popular English Waukenphasts
at $2 50; the genuine French Calf Dress Shoes at 3.
Can Any Shoe Dealer
LAD1RS
J Good Serge Shoes at 75c; first-class Pebble Goat
Shoes at $1; neat Dongola Kid Shoes, Worked button
.holes, at J5i 39; choice Curacoa Kid Shoes at $1 98;
fine Bright Dongola Shoes, turned soles, at $2 50.
::: Boys', Misses' and Children's Shoes in Proportion. X
KAUFMANNS
Fifth Avenue and Smithfield Street.
RAILROADS.
PENNSYLVANIA KAlLKOAD OH AMD
after November ss, 1888. trains leare Union
Station, Pittsburg, as foUows, Eastern Standard
Time:
MAIN ONE EASTWARD.
Nerr Tort and Chicago Limited or Fullmsn Ves
tibule dally at 7:15 a. m.
Atlantic Express dally for tbe East, 3:00 a.m.
Mall train, dallr. except Bandar, 6:33a.m. dan
dar, mall, 8:40 a. m.
Day express dally at 8:00 a. m.
Mall express daily at 1 :00 p. m.
Philadelphia express dally at 4:30 p. m.
Eastern express dally at 7:15 p. m.
Fast Line daily at 8:00 p. m.
Greensbnr;rexpress5:10p. m. weekdays.
Dcrry express 11:00 a. m. week days.
All throuxl) trains connect at Jersey City with
boats of "Brooklyn Annex" for Brooklyn. N. Y.,
avoiding double ferriage and journey through N.
Y. City.
Trains arrlre at Union Station as follows:
Mall Train, dally 8:2) p.m.
Western Express, dally 7:45 a. m.
Pacillc Express, dally U:4Sp. m.
Chicago Limited Express, dally 8:30 p.m.
FastLlne, daily 11:63 p.m.
aouTHWEsr penn kailway.
For Unlontown, a:45 and ou5a. m. and 4:13 p.
m., without change of cars; 1.00 p.m., connect
ing at Oreensburg. Trains arrlre from Union
town at 9:4.1 a. m.. 12:20. 8:13 and 8:20 p.m.
1 WEST PENNSYLVANIA JJIVlSlOB.
From FEDERAL ST. STATION. Allegheny City.
Mall train, connecting for Blalrsnile... 6:4o a. m.
Express, for BlalrsTille, connecting for
Butler J:13p. ja.
Butler Accom... 8:20 a. m., 2:23 and 5:45 p. m.
Sprlngdale Accom 11:40 a. m. and 8:20 p. m.
Freeport Accom 4:00, 8:15 and 10:30 p. m.
On Sunday 12:50 and 8:30 p. m.
North Apollo Accom 10:50 a. m. and 3:00 p. m.
Allegheny Junction Accommodation.
connecting for Butler. n 8:20 a. m.
Blalrsvllle Accommodation ; 11:30 p.m.
Trains arrive at FEDERAL STREET STATION:
Express, connecting fiom Butler 10:33 a. m.
Mall Train. 2:35 p.m.
Butler Accom 9:25 a. m., 4:40and7:20p. ra.
KlalrsTllle Accommodation 9:52 p. m.
Freenort Accom.7i40 a.m.. 1:32, 7:20 ndll:00p. m.
On Sunday 10:10a.m. and 7:03 p.m.
Sprlngdale Accom 6:37a.m., and J:02p. ra.
North Apollo Accom 8:40 a. m. and 3:40 p. in.
MONONOAHELA DIVISION.
Trains leave Union station. Pi ttaourg, as foUows:
For Monongahela City, West Brownsville and
Unlontown, 11 a. m. For Monongahela City and
West Brownsville, 7:05 and Us. m. and 4:40 p. m.
On Sunday, 1:01 p. m. For Monongahela City, 3:43
p. m week davs.
DravostrargAc, weekdays, 3:20 p. m.
West Elizabeth Accommodation, 8:50a. m., 2iCU,
620 and 11:35 p. m. Suuday, 9:40 p. m.
Ticket offices Corner Fourth avenue and Try
street and Union station.
CHAS. E. PUUH, J. R. WOOD.
general Manager. Ucn'lPaas'r Agent.
ITTBBUKQ aND WISTEHN RAILWAY
. Trains (Cet'l Stan'dtlmc) Leave. I Arrive.
Butler Accommodation....... 6.-00 am 7:10 am
DayEx.Ak'n,Tol..Cl'n,Kane 720 am 723 pm
Butler Accommodation 920 am 4 .-00 pm
Chicago Express (dally) 12:30 pm 11.-05 am
New Castle and Greenville Ex 1:50 pm 9:38 am
Zellenople and Foxburg Ac. I 10 pm 5:30 am
Batter Accommodation. (:40 pm 2:10 pm
Through coach and sleeper to Chicago dally.
PITTSBURO AND CASTLE SHANNON K. K.
Co. WlnterTlme Table. On and after October
14. 1888,, until further notice, trains will run as
follows on every day except Sunday, aEastern
standard time: Leaving Pittsburg 6:13 a, m.v
7:13 a.m., 9:30a. m., 11:30a.m., 1:40p.m., 3:10p.m.,
5:10 p. m. 6:30 T. m., 9:30 p. m., 11:30 p. m. Ar-
lington 5:45 a. m.. 630 a. m.. 8:00 a. m., 10:20 a.
m 1:03 p. m., 2:40 p. m., 4T20 p. m., tuO p. nu.
7:13 p. fiu, 10130 p. m. Sunday trains, leaving
Plttsourg-10 a. m., 13:50 p. ra., 2:30 p. m. 5:10
f.m., 9:30 p. ra. Arlington :10 a. mn 13 su,
JO p.m., 4i30p.ia., :'. ra.
iQUS JAHN, Supt.
SPRIQHTLY
CONFIRMATION SUITS
see ours, which we had especially
made for Easter in our own Custom
Tailoring Department, and are now
offering them at prices that are ac
tually lower than you have to pay
for the common factory-made goods
elsewhere Besides, we will mail a
beautiful gift to the address of each'
boy getting a Confirmation Suit
from us.
MADE TO ORDER.
A brilliant assortment of im
ported piece goods, from which we
make Suits to order at from 25 to
$50; Pants to order at from $5 to
?i2. Best work. Perfect fit
Match These Prices?
ap8-P
RAILROADS.
PENNSYLVANIA COMPANY'S LINES
February 10, 1889, Central Standard Time.
TRAINS DEPART
As follows from Union Station: For Chicago, d 735
a. m., d 1220, d 1.-00, d7:45. except Saturday. 1120
g. m. : Toledo. 723 a. m., d 1220, d 1:00 and except
aturday. 1120 p. m. ; Crestline. 5:15 a. m.; Clsve
Lind,6:10,725 a.m., 12:35 and d 11 :05 p.m.: New Cas
tle and Youngstown, 7:05 a. ra.. 1220, 3:15p.m.;
Youngstown and N lies, dl220 p. m.; MeadvlUe,
Erie and Ashtabula, 7:05 a. m., 12:20 p. m.; Nlles
and Jamestown. 3:15 p. m.; Masslllon, 1:10 p.m.:
Wheeling and Bellalre. 6:10a. m.. 12:35, 3:30 p. m.;
Beaver Falls. 4:00, 5:05 p. m., S 820 a. m. ; Leets
dale. 5:30 a.m.
ALLEGHENY Rochester. 6:30 a. m.: Beaver
Falls, 8:1-5, 11:00 a. m.: Enon. 3:00 p. m.: Leets
dale, 10:00, 11:43 a. ra..2.-C0,4:30, 4:45, 5i30, 7:00, 1:00
p.m.; Conway, 10:30p.m.; Fair Oaks, S 11:40 a.
m. : Leetsdale, S 8:30 p. m.
TRAINS AKIUVE Union station from Chicago,
except Monday 1:30, da:00, d 6:35 a. m., d 7:33 p.
m.; Toledo, except Monday 1:50, d 6:35 a.m., 7:33
S. m.. Crestline, 2:10 n. m.: Youngstown and
ew Castle, 9:10 a.m., 125, 725. 10:15 p. m.;Ntles
and Youngstown, d 7:35 p. m.; Cleveland, d 5:50 a.
re.. 225, 7:45 p. m.: Wheeling and Bellalre, 9:00
a. m 225. 745 p. m.; Erie and Ashtabula, 125,
10:15 p. m.: Masslllon, 10:00 a. m.; Nlles and
Jamestown. 9:10 a.m.; Beaver Falls, 7 JO a.m.,
l:10p. m., 8 823 p. m.: Leetsdale. 10:40 p. m.
ARRIVE ALLEGHENY-From Enon, 8:00 a.
ra.: Conway, 6:50; Rochester, 9:10 a. m.: Beaver
Falls, 7:10 a. m.. 6:10 p. m.: Leetsdale, idO, 6:15,
7:45 a. in.. 12:00, 1:13, 1:30, 6:30, 9:0O p. m.: Fair .
Oaks. 8 8:33a. m.; Leetsdale, s 6:05 p.m.; Beaver V
Falls. H 8:25 p.m. J
S. Sunday only; d, dally; other trains, except -
Sunday. fell "
PITTSBURG AND LACE EKlE RAILROAD
COMPANY Schedule la effect February 24.
ls89, central time:
P. & L. E. K. R.-DBrABT-For Cleveland, 525,
7:40 A. jr., 1:20, 4:15, 9:30 rsH. Jor Cincinnati.
Chicago and St. Louis, 525 a. U., 120, 920r. x.
For Baffalo. 10:20 A. ir.. 4:13 "9:30 r. M. For Sala
manca, "7:40 a. M.. T120, too T. M. For Beaver
Falls, 525, VM, 10:20 A. St., 120, 3:30, 4:15, 520.
9:30 p. M. For Chartiers, 525, 3:33. 6:50, 17:00,
7:15, 8:40. :0E, 925, 10:20 A. M., 12:05, 12:43. 11:23,
1.15, J:30, 4:43, 3:13 J2U, -3:20, 10:30 r?3r.
ABRrvTt-From Cleveland, sao a. m.. 1:00,
s1r. Jr. From Cincinnati, Chicago and
St. Louis, '1:00, S:00 P.M. From Buffalo, 3: A.
M.. 1:00, 5:40 p. v. From Salamanca, 'lloo, tM
T. jr. From Youngstown, 6130, :50, 9:20 A. ..
1:00, 5:10, -8:00 r. n. From Beaver Falls, 5:10,
6:60, 7:20, 920A. Jt, lr 1135; 4:10, "SO. P. H.
From Chartiers. 8:10, 5:21 5:30, 18:12, S:34 7:08,
-720, 8:30, 92 10:10 A. JiJri25 noon, 12:30. 103.
125. 3:12. IrCCi 1:35, 5:00. Sjio. 5:40. sTtir.
P.. MeK. 4Y.R7R.-DIPABT-ForNewHaven,
5:30 A. Jr3:30P. M. For West Newton. 5:30 A. JU.
3:80 and 525 P.M. For New Haven, 7:10 A, JC,
Sundays, only.
AKBljE-From New Haven. 10:00 A. Jt.. "J. .
JI. Fro West Newton. 6:15. '10:0OA- si..'5SP.x.
ForMcKcesport and Elisabeth, 5:30 A. Jt. 3:30,
4:03, 325 P. Ji.. 17:10A.sr. , ,. .
From Elizabeth and McKeesport, 6:15 A. It,
7:30. 10:OOA. Jt, CSP. Jt
Dally. ISundays only. , .
E. HOLBKOOK. General Superintendent.
A, E. CLARKTOeneral Passenger Agent.
City ticket office. lOiSmlthfleld street.
AMHASDLE ROUTE-NOV.12, 1888. UNIOS -
itaUon, Central Standard Tint. Leave for
Cincinnati and St. Louis, d 720 a.m., d (do and.
a 11:15 p. ra. Dennlson. 2:15 P. ra. Chicago,,
12:05, a 11:15 p.m. Wheeling, 7 JO a. m., Bat-,
6:10 p.m. Steubenville, 5:35 a. m. Washington.'
5:55, 8:35 a. in., 1:55. 3:30. 1:55 p. m. Bulger, lOtJS..
a, m. Burgettstown. Slia.m.. 5:23 p. m. Mans-'
neln, 7:13, U:00a. m 6-30. dS25jl0:lA, p.ni. Mc
Donalds, A 1:15, d 10:00 p. D.
From the West, d 1:30. d:00, a. ra., Jis, dsas
p.m. DennUou 9 :35a.m. SteubenvUla, tiS p. m.
Wheeling. 1:50, 8:43 a.m., IsM, 3:33 p.m. Burgetts
town, 77l5a.m.,9:03a.m. Washington, 6:55,7:50,
9:55 a. m 2:35, 620 p. m. Mansfield. 5257. ioO
a. nu, 12:15 d 620 and 10:00 p. ra. Bulger. IMOp. m.
McDonalds, d625a.m.,dKIQp. ro.
d dally; S Sunday only; otisr trains, except
Sunday.'