Pittsburg dispatch. (Pittsburg [Pa.]) 1880-1923, April 21, 1889, Page 5, Image 5

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THE PITTSBUJRG
DISPATCH .SUNDAY,
APBIL ,21, -i 1889.
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NO NEEDJORHLARM.
Ohio's Fluid Will Not Supersede-
.' the Pennsylvania Product,
but it May Become
-The basis of oil values.
sSome Kemarkable Characteristics of
the Bock in the Lima Field.
OXE WELL WILL DEAIfl "FIFTY ACRES.
EeTlcw of the Situation Overdrawn
Mnleiucnti Excitement In tbe Lima
Field Peculiarities of tbe Sock Forma
tion The Fluid Has to be Tumped
What Are the Standard' rian?-Ue-fillers
Who Are Building Air Castles
Will They be Frozen Out? No Advance
In the Price of Lima Olllikelyto Occur
in the Near Future.
"We give this morning a general review of
the oil situation as affected by the Standard
operators in the Ohio field. From this it
would appear that Pennsylvania producers
need not be greatly alarmed. The price of
their product is not likely to be immedi-.
ately depreciated, although it is probable
that in the near future Lima oil will be the
basis of value for all classes of petroleum.
rsrZClAI. TELEGRAM TO TBI DISFATCH.I
Lijia, April 20. Pennsylvania people
who are not unlikely to become alarmed by
the numerous fairy tales sent out from this
new oildom can with safety deduct from 50
to 75 per cent from the general newspaper
reports sent out from here, particularly to
the Ohio papers, and need not be at all scru
pulous about questioning the balance. The
whole town is stark mad and doesn't know
or care what it is talking about, in so far as
Lima oil and its future are concerned.
The solemn facts that the Standard has
acquired control of as much as possible of
this territory and is building a pipe line to
connect this field with all its works, and
even that it is refining Lima oil, are now
admitted by everybody, the Standard in
cluded, and the Pennsylvania oil people
must govern themselves in accordance with
these facts and common sense, but they
must make due allowance for the excitement
existing here, when considering any of the
extravagant reports ncweurrent
I will give some idea of the existing state
of affairs by overhauling a column of
ridiculous misstatements published in to
day's Cincinnati Enquirer. It speaks of
this as the greatest petroleum producing
region outside of the famous Baku district
of Bussia, when the daily production does
not average over 30,000 barrels, and speaks
of 1,000 to 1,500 barrel production on 100
acre tracts, when the average is 300.
DELUSIVE STATEMENTS.
It tells of tankage here lor 37,000,000 bar
rels, exclusive of pipe lines, when they real
ly have about 450 35,000-barrel tanks. It
has the amount of oil in tanks here down
all right, but says this 15,000,000 barrels of
oil is worth as it stands J0.000,000 to the
Standard. In other words, .according, to this
report, Lima oil, for which the Standard
paid 15 cents, is worth 51 33, or over 50 per
cent more than Pennsylvania oil. The ex
travagance of the statement is too apparent
to need comment
The district to-day, with restricted pro
duction, is producing 30,000 barrels daily,
or say 250,000 barrels a week. The produc
tion, as is well known, could be raised to
100,000 barrels a day, if such a thing was
desirable. This statement is important, and
is hardly less extravagant than the preced
ing one, in so far as the possibilities ex
pressed are concerned. Of course it is
hard to estimate what amount the earth
contains, and I have certainly no desire to
depreciate the importance of this field, but
desire to state such facts as will be valuable
to Pennsylvania oil men who are endeavor
ing to come to a conclusion.
People who come here from the Pennsyl
vania oil field find very different surround
ings from what they are accustomed to. The
rocky hemlock foothills are conspicuously
absent, and there is nothing here suggestive
of oil excepting the odor and tanks and
derricks, which look out of place. It is a
level agricultural country, and the putting
up of a derrick here previous to the natural
gas excitement, when oil was accidentally
discovered, would have been regarded as
sufficient evidence of insanity to put any
man in a lunatic asylum.
ONE WELL ENOUGH FOE 50 ACBES.
The difference between this oil territory
anu mai in .Pennsylvania is not confined to
tbe surface. The rock is as different as the
products of tbe two fields, if not more so. In
parts of the Pennsylvania field a well to the
acre is not an unusual thing. In this field
they followed the rule, and there are to-day
numerous holes not being worked at alt
The rock is so porous that one well will
drain ten acres and one well to 10, 20 or
even 50 acres seems to be more in accordance
with the nature of things. It has been
found that it is a matter of choice between
one large or several small wells. One well
will drain an immense territory. Further
more if a man don't get a big well and a
good wad of money at the outset he gets
left A 100 barrel well falls off to about 25
barrels in a year.
One disadvantage under which Lima pro
ducers labor is the fact that all Lima oil has
to be pumped. There is no pumping by
heads and no gas to make the well flow.
Thesame paper gives currency to some
alarming nonsense regarding th'e future
price of Pennsylvania oil, which is credited
to an old, experienced Pennsylvania pro
ducer who bad been squeezed up on the
right hand and frozen on the left bv the
Standard. He is reported as saying: "
WON'T beae analysis.
"It will recede, of course, and continue
to recede. It can't hurt anybody in this
field, but it means death to Pennsylvania.
The result will not be to put down the price
of crnde here in Ohio, but it will drag it in
Pennsylvania down to the 15 cent level. In
this one field the Standard controls 38,000
acres, capable of producing at least 50,000
barrels a day if necessary. There is no mar
ket for oil if it ran armpit deep in the
brooks, except through the Standard. The
price hereafter paid for crude oil is a mere
farce. Why? Because they own everything
except royalties. "Why would thev put up
the price? They are now paying in this
district 15 cents a barrel on their royalties.
They would be great fools to give gratuities,
and to advance prices now would be to give
gratuities. There are no fools in the Stand
ard Compan."
This sounds all right if you do not stop to
analyze it when it appears to be absurd.
One question will settle it If the Standard
should reduce the price of Pennsylvania oil
to 15 cents, how long would it be before
there would be a market for it outside of
Standard. At any such ridiculous reduc
tion independent refineries would spring up
like mushrooms, for Pennsylvania oil is un
doubtedly the best and would admit of
greater profits at an equal price lor both oils.
LIMA OIL AS A BABIB OP VALUE.
If there is anything that the Standard can
be depended upon to do it is to obstruct all
roads leadini
ng to competition, and it will of
take care of the Pennsvlvania
necessity
product at a price commensurate with the
intrinsic value as compared with Lima oil.
I should not be surprised to see Ohio oil
supersede Pennsylvania oil as a basis of
value, however, for it must be remembered
that-the Standard's interests are hereafter
centered in Ohio oil by reason of owning its
own production, which it will naturally
wish to utilize to the best possible advan
tage. Such being tbe case, the question of
taking care of the Pennsylvania product
would seem to bean after-consideration with
the price largely dependent upon how
cheaply they can buy it without developing
competition. I would not be surprised to
see the price of Pennsylvania oil reduced to
about a discouraging cost basis, and in due
course of time to see the Standard buying
out the discouraged producers just as they
have here. As to the price" of Lima oil I
believe it will be advanced.
One of the favorite pastimesof the Standard
is squeezing of independent refiners. There
are of these, the Eagle Consolidated Com
pany here, the Peerless Kenning Company
at Findlay, which is enlarging, and a new
refinery at Toledo just completed, and three
or four projected and one or two under way
here.
WHAT THE STANDARD "WANTS.
Thev are building air castles on a basis
of 15 "cent oil. Since the Standard owns
nearly all the production, how easy it would
be for them to pay the few outsiders who
supply the independent refiners say 30 or 40
cents for their oil until the independent re
finers were destroyed, and then turn on the
independent producer after having destroyed
his market
Colonel Hawkins, an old Pennsylvania oil
man, expressed the whole situation when he
said there is nothing to low for the Stan
dard to grasp or too high for them to reach.
'Whoever considers the subject must not
loose sight of the fact that the Standard
controls the market, and hence that the
efiect on Pennsylvania oil will be about as
the Standard wants it The chief question,
therefore, is as to their wishes, and in solv
ing this problem it will be necessary to
look a long way ahead. The newspaper re
ports of an advance in the price of the Lima
oil are, of course, false. The Standard is
still buying leases and territory, and no ad
vance can be reasonably expected, in the
near future.
THE SECEET OUT.
Providence seems to have come to the
rescue and let out the Standard Oil Com
pany's well guarded secret. The evening
papers contain accounts of the collapsing
of a 30.000 barrel tank of refined petroleum
just west of the Standard's refinery here at
l o ciock to-day. The oil hlled tne embank
ment with which all such tanks are sur
rounded, but instead of saving it, a force
was at once set to work cutting a ditch
through the embankment, by means of
which it was quickly drained into the river.
It seems to have been an imperative neces
sity that the stuff disappear as quickly as
possible'.
Standard men to-night deny that it was
refined. The public can consider the cir
cumstances and draw their own conclusions.
PULLED TOO SOON.
The Disclosure ot the Standard's Opera-
tions Defeats the Consummation of
a Gigantic Scheme to Bear
tbe Market.
rSFECXU. TELXGBAH TO TSZ DISPATCH.!
Cleveland, April 20. It has leaked
out here on what is considered likely
authority that what may be called the pre
mature publication of the great Standard
oil deal, wherein they appear to have prac
tically abandoned tbe Pennsylvania fields
for those of Ohio, not only interfered to a
greater or less extent with the capture of
Ohio oil territory, but really disarranged a
very important part of their programme, and
while cutting off a large share of their
profits saved the speculative public an equal
amount
It has been said that never since the days
or Croesus has such a commercial romance
been planned, much less written on the
Sages of history, and the assertion is proba
ly true, for it involved not only the acqnire-'
ment of the 15,000,000 barrels of Ohio oil at
a ridiculously low figure of 15 cents a barrel,
but also of the territory whence it was ob
tained at nominal prices, with all its known
resources and enormous unknown resources
in reserve, practically without the tieing
up of any capital. In other words, the
profit represented by the 15,000,000 barrels
of oil will pay for all the investments tbey
have made, and even enrich their treasury.
To the ordinary mind the securing of
such a quantity of oil at less than half its
intrinsic value would Seem to be a suffi
ciently enormous achievement, for the
golden eggs of unknown value with part of
the prohts quietly purchased the goose that
laid them, and now comes dame gossip with
a report that it was part of the original
plan to captthe climax by unfolding the
great transaction to the public by means of
a great bear movement on all the specula
tive oil markets. It is said the plan was to
put up as great lines of shorts as possible,
and when that was accomplished, grad
ually unfold to the over-confident bulls
the true state of affairs as expressed in the
dispatches of the past week. This would
have been the easiest part of the whole pro
gramme to execute, for the bulls were bank
ing on the small supply of oil in sight and
the declining production, and accepting as
true the fuel oil story.
Of course there is no knowing what ruin
this move would have wrought, but it would
have probably been executed on a scale in
keepimr with the balance of the transaction
and the speculative public may well con
gratulate The Dispatch upon the feat of
laying before them the facts at such
a timely date. It is said that the selling
movement inaugurated last Tuesday, when
the market weakened for the first time in
months, was the inauguration of the closing
chapter of the otherwise wholly successful
romance.
WHAT THE BTANDAED SATS.
Its Officers Blake Blanj Admissions and Talk
of Extension of Territory.
Several Standard representatives in New
York have been interviewed in regard to the
operations in Ohio. Mr. J. D. Arcbbald,
President of the Acme Oil Company, No. 26
Broadway, who is closely allied with the
Standard, said:
The Standard Oil Company has never enter
tained any idea of abandoning Pennsylvania
for Ohio; it has acquired territory in Ohio with
a view to supply a certain trade w hich requires
an oil inferior to the Pennsylvania grade and
consequently cheaper.
Mr. S. Q. Brown, of the Tidewater Oil
Company, which is also a large consumer of
Pennsylvania oil, said, when asked about
the alleged move of the Standard:
The Standard Oil Company Is simply extend
inc Its territory, not only in Ohio, but also in
Pennsylvania. Their company will at no time
desert Pennsylvania fields. The Pennsylvania
oil is far superior to any that can be had else
where. It Is always in demand. There is also
a demand for an inferior grade: in order to
supply this demand additional facilities have
had to be acquired, hence this story about the
unio neias. xjima on u ana always will De at a
disadvantage compared with Pennsylvania.
You cannot make, so far as known, a first-fix
oil of it
Mr. George H. Lincoln, the petroleum
broker at 23 Beaver street, who represents
large interests, was sounded on the subject
He said:
It is quite true that tbe Standard Oil Compa-
tory in Ohi
ness rations. They have a demand for a certain
grade of oil which they cannot supply from
Pennsylvania. It Is Inferior In quality, there
fore cheaper. A customer comes to them for
it He will not use it unless he can be supplied
for some time at a given price. He wants a
yearly contract In order to make such a con
tractthe Standard must have the ability to
meet it Unless they own the producing facili
ties they cannot regnlate tbe price of tbe oil;
they cannot make contracts; hence this invasion
into Ohio.
Astoleavmc Pennsylvania, that is what is
called a "fake?' Instead of doing so, they are
.ft.ieuuMi bucir lukercsui m uiatoiaic, ana It IS
their policy to contiue such extension. The
exteniion of the Standard's refining property
at Lima is contemplated, butno plans have yet
been followed about it; therefore, the story
that the company have their sleeves rolled up
and are working night and day, while the
sweat rolls down in bnckctfuls. In order to in
crease their Ohio refinery facilities is also a lie.
At tbe office of the Standard Oil Compa
ny, 26 Broadway, the tenor of talk was of
the same quality.
Blarrlase Licenses Granted Yesterday.
Nunc. Residence.
( Herman Weir Pittsburg
f mile Mlclde l'lttsaurg
5 John Werner Allegheny
)IdaPormann , Allegheny
j John JJsrton , Pittsburg
lcllle Casey : Pittsburg
t Timothy Carroll Pittsburg
I Delia O'Conner Pittsburg
ErnuUJauer Pittsburg
Maria Hermann Pittsburg
JH. C. McNary Pittsburg
I (Minna Beversdorf. Pittsburg
H. c Mcnary Pittsburg
Minna Beversdorf. Pittsburg
Kmll J. lienreutro Pittsburg
iMariaWilfUng Pittsburg
(Jacob G. HclfreT..
...Pittsburg
(Anna uonovau......
. ..
. rittsDurg
(John Johnson McKeesport
Emma Klce McKeesport
(Alphonse Lacttel Pittsburg
t urcb juazura ........ u. . a iiisourg
( William McCulley Pittsburg
Hannah King Pittsburg
jnenry Bromscber Pittsburg
AnnaK.orsTlnd Pittsburg
Desire L. Been Pittsburg
I Mario TJnterroler Allegheny
( William C. Jones .Tarentum
(Minnie M. Howe Tarentum
(Mark Williams..., Pittsburg
J Anna Klchards. Pittsburg
(John II. Hall Allegheny
I Mary McDonald Allegheny
J Presley H. Lamer Pittsburg
J Mary T. Padcn Pittsburg
(Slarshall L Cary Pittsburg
(Josephine Mitchell : Pittsburg
1 Charles Metzler Crelghton
( Maggie bralth 'liarentum
J William Crawford Allegheny
(Uebecca Carson Allegheny
IN THE GOOD OLD TIME
Nobody but Millionaires Bought Shirts.
The careful wife erected them according
to a mysterious and complicated theory.
The maiden aunt wrestled with the esoteric
problem, or the mother-in-law warmed up
the faltering affection of her son by present
ing him with a half dozen ably-constructed
garments that made him imperii his future
happiness every time he put them on.
Then came the era of high-priced custom
shirts. Three dollars was the price for a
shirt Some benighted souls who think the
world doesn't move still charge it
But Kaufmanns' began to sell shirts with
graduated bodies, five lengths of sleeves, a
fit around the neck and a finish such as the
S3 shirts rarely had, and charged 98c for
them; $5 50 per half dozen. That was the
beginning of the era ot comfort in shirts.
And to-day Kaufmanns' are selling more of
that shirt than any two furnishing goods
houses in Pittsburg.
II you have never tried them, you don't
Know what a comtortable, periect ntting
shirt is. Drop into Eaufmanns' any day
this week and buy one, you'll soon come
back and get a half dozen.
Never Too Lnte to Blend.
Mend what? you will sav. "Why, your
old clothes, to be sure, and DickBon, the
tailor, of 65 Fifth ave., cor. "Wood st, sec
ond floor, is the man who makes old clothes
look like new for a trifle. Telephone, 1558.
Dr. Sopbv E. FeltvFolI, Dentist.
On and after April 1, office, room 407
Penn building.
MARRIED.
WARDEN FLEMING On Thursday even
ing, April 18, at tbe residence of Mrs. John
Fleming, Sewickly, Pa., by the Rev. Dr. "Wm.
O. Campbell, Bessie Flexing, daughter of
Joseph Fleming, to Mb. John B. Waeden.
DIED.
BROWN At Wellsburg. W. Va., on Friday,
April 19, 1889, Rev. Robert M. Beown, pastor
of First Presbjterian Church there.
Funeral from his late residence, Wellsburg,
on Monday, at 11:30 a. it.
CASSIDY At her home in Munster, Cam
bria county. Pa.. April 7, 18S9, Alice, wife of
Henry L. Cassidy, formerly of Pittsburg,
aged 63.
Remains were interred at Loretto on the 9th.
DAVIS Saturday morning, at 10 o'clock,
Ruben W. Davis, In the 29th year of his age.
Funeral takes place from his residence, 123
Yucundo street Knoxville borough, Southside,
city, on Monday, at 2 i. m. Friends of the
family are respectfully invited to attend.
DOUGHERTY On Friday, April 19, 18S9. at
12 o'clock noon, Maey. relict of the late An
thony Dougherty, in her 53d year.
Funeral from ber late residence. No. 132
Forbes street on Monday morning at 8.30
o'clock. Services at St Paul's Cathedral at 9
a K. Friends of the family are respectfully
invited to attend. 2
NANNAH-On Friday, April 19, 1889. at 1:10
o'clock p. M., Rt.t.tk McKee, wife of J. L
Nannah.
Funeral from late residence, 265 Market
street Allegheny, Sunday, April 2L at 2
o'clock p.m. Friends ot the family are re
spectfully invited to attend.
Armstrong and Beaver county papers please
copy. I 2
RENVERS On Saturday, April 20, at 9.15
A. h., Teeesa, wife of Joseph G. Renvers,
aged 30 years and 20 days.
Funeral from her late residence, rear of 22
Race street Allegheny, on Tuesday, April 23,
to proceed to St PMlomena's Church, where
services will be held at 9 a.m. Interment pri
vate. 2
STRATMAN On Friday. April 19.1889, at
10:31) p. M., Gebhabd Steatman, in the 79th
year of his age, at the residence of his son-in-law,
Phillip Lange. 63 Washington street
Fourth ward, Allegheny City.
Funeral services Monday morning at 8
o'clock at St Mary's R. C. Church, Liberty
street Allegheny. . 2
SCHUSLER At her home. No. 21 Franks
town avenue. Nineteenth ward.on Wednesday.
April 17, 1889, at 7.30 A M., Margaretha,
relict of tno late Peter Schusler, in the 70th
year of her age.
Funeral services on Sunday, 21st inst, at 2
p.m. Friends of the family are respectfully
invited to attend. 4
WILBUR On Saturday, April 20, 1889, at 10
A. m., Reuben A. Wilbur, in the 53d year of
his age.
Funeral services at the residence of his
father-in-law, John Swinburg, Sr near Arm
strong Station, on the A. V. R. R., on Mon
day, 22d Inst at 1 r. 11. Friends of the family
are respectiuiiy inviteu to attend. a
JAMES M. FULLERTON.
UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER,
No. 6 Seventh Steeet.
Telephone 1153.
OClS-WFSU
w
H. DEVUBE &SON,
Undertakers and Embalmers and Livery Stables,
No. 512 Grant street near Fifth avenne.
At the old stand fine carriages for shopping or
parties or opera at the most reasonable prices.
Telephone 22s. mhI3-9S-wsa
JOHN L. TREXLER CO.,
Funeral Directors and Embalmers, Livery
. and Boarding Stables. Nos.376 and 380
Beaver ave. Residence. 681 Preble
ave., Allegheny City.
Telephone 3-11G. mb23-MThsu
A Planter's Experience.
"My plantation is" In a malarial district
where fever and ague prevailed. I employ 150
hands; frequently half of them were sick. I
was nearly discouraged when I began the use of
Tutt's Pills
The great result was marvelous. My men be
came strong and hearty, and I have had no
further trouble. With these pills. I would not
fear to live In any swamp." E. RIVAL, Bayou
Sara, La.
Sold Everywhere.
Office, 44 Murray street, New York,
ttssu
MLLE. E. DREYER.
NO. 6M PENN AVENUE.
IMPORTER OP FRENCH MILLINERY,
Trimmed Bonnets and round Hats.
Mourning a Specialty. mhl9-79a
T ADB3S, BY ALL MEANS GO TO MISS
U MARIE LANDERS, the Hair Artist and
have your hair dressed in the New Dlrectoire
style. Also examine her imported shampoo pre
paration, which i the very latest and best for
home use. Remember 25 Fifth ave.. Hugus
& Hacke building, upstairs. Take Sperber's
elevator. apT-wsu
T AD1ESBHOULD INVESTIGATE
Mme KelloE's Frencli Tailor Syslei
of dress cutting. Tbe only system in America
that cuts tbe Worth bias dart front back,
sleeves and skirts, without refitting. Lessons
not limited. School open day and evening.
bU PENN AVENUE. apll
1
NEW ADVERTISEMENT!.
Ox'igi -n all
Ladies' Dressers.
-ORDERS IN-
IVORY and CREAM WHITE
Taken for future delivery.
JDBAPF.IIY ON OBDEB.
We recommend this Dresser as a desirable
piece of furniture for furnishing with brass
and iron beds.
P. ft Schoeneck,
711 LIBERTY ST. .
N. B. Catalogue mailed on receipt of 50c
and 6c for postage. ap21-wsu
GOODS AS BRIGHT
AS-THE SUN.
Demand lighter footwear not
only in weight, but in shade,
to detract the heat and dust
which is upon us. Our varieties
in Tan Shoes in every depart
ment, which also includes the
daintiest styles and shades in
the Snug Wigwam Slippers is
worthy a look over if you will
follow the season.
ALL WIDTHS TO FIT PERFECT.
430-436 MARKET ST.
916 Main Street, Braddock.
ap21-8u
! ,
-.t
KID CLOVES.
OAUTION!
Kid Gloves bearing imitations of
our Lacing Hooks are offered for
sale.
The genuine Foster Glove Hooks
do not catch in Fringe, Laces, &c
nor accidentally unfasten.
All Gloves with genuine Foster
Lacings are stamped
FOSTER'S PATENTS.
Demand them and twthat you get them.
BEWARE OF IMITATIONS.
FOSTEB, PAUL
& GO.,
Msnufictotrs.
mhSl-fiS-wau
WM. GRAB0WSKY
Hat and Bonnet Dealer.
We received Hast week over 100 different
styles for ladles' Straw Hats and Bonnets,
samples of which are now ready for Inspection.
It is time to lay your heavy winter hat aside.
Look np your last summer hat. We will color
it black, brown or bine, and renovate it Into
any of the new shapes by our new method of
making hats. Just saving yon from 81 to J2 for
your new spring hat We wish to recommend
THE COLiICO,
A very stylish turban, with new effects. The
Elberon, English Walking Hat: the Lvceum.
niai;e uaw uu Durciy
!. 1T ...-1 - ' . - ."
need a Rnrinr FTat
Therefore, bring
your bat now and have it
iftl
PVv'l
L I jr Jr It I "X IB
ijfa x il
H3 tTjfigjfipPpGJr IStF nv fife,
I
llllliilMlllIlflii
made in tbe correct style at the old reliable
Hat Weachery and Feather Ujelne establish
ment of
WM. GRABOySKY,
707 Penn avenue, opp. Penn Building.
mh21-su
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
--
Mnzer's
, Old
Honesty.
The Chewers of OLD HONESTY
TOBACCp will soon find that it
lasts longer, tastes sweeter than
other tobacco?, and-will please you.
j Ask your dealer for it and insist
on getting it '
Genuine has a red H tin tag: on
every plug.
--5
mh2-35-SSU
, Perfection Attained
PERRINS'
LADIES' KID GLOVES,
WITH MELLEN BRAY'S
LACING STUDS,
DO NOT CATCH.
DO NOT UNFASTEN.
DO NOT CUT THE LACINQ.
Demand gloves with LACING
STUDS, and you will appreciate
the great IMPROVEMENT OTer
lacing hooks.
EASttY IDENTIFIED on the
gloves, being SMALLER and
MUCH NEATER IN DESIGN.
-sold sr
JOSEPH HORNE & CO.,
609 to 621 Pens Avbhtje.
apl4-TVSu
HIOITSEHOLD
Dinner, 'Tea and Toilet W,are. Lamps
and Art Potteries. Spring importations all
opened.
eU
-
TH
P. SMITH
Lamp,Gass & China Co,,
935 Penn Avenue.
Between Ninth and Tenth Streets.
ap21-wrsu
WE-:-BEAT -:-'EIYl-:-AGAIN!
Our prices, are Mike Krupp Guns ! They hit hard and
cause devastation in the camps of would-be com
petitors but remember it is invariably
THE STRUCK BIRD THAT FLUTTERS !
Hence, we feel rather complimented than otherwise, at
THEIR JIBES! TI'iEIR SLURS! AND' THEIR
SNEERS ! which ane evidences that even they, them
selves, fully recognize that WE SELL CHEAPEST
FOR CASH IN THE CITY, and give the easiest
terms on INSTALLMENTS.
piok;eb,ing's
HOUSEHOLD FURNISHING BAZAAR.
it o t;:e !
We lead the procession with the grandest values in
Furniture, Carpets, Baby Carriages', Refrigerators, Stoves
and everything essential to furnishing a house complete,
from cellar to garret
It should be known far and wide that we buj at M.RST HANDS, good that
we know will certainly satisfy all classes in this comra-nnity. We buy at lowest
possible prices and sell on the closest margin of profit Jossible. Our goods are
displayed to the greatest advantage. Everything we baVidle we guarantee to be
the best of its Kind made, and we stand ready to-day, aa we ever did, to refund
money on any that fail to come up (o the expectation of tbtf buyers.
To Young Married People We Offer Special Inducements!
PICKERING S
OH ReliaWe and Matchless Fnrnitnre Store,
v COR. PENN AVE. AND TENTH ST.
Open
10. P. M.
every evening till
.NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.,
tun
If you need any BBLIABLE
CLOTHING the kind that wears
with satisfaction that is not weak
inside in order to bo showy out
side, but that is solid all through;
the kind that will bring you back
again 6 buy more like it This is
the sort we are selling at 810, $11
and $12 for Men's all-wool Suits;
at $7 50, $8 and $9 for Boys fronr
13 to 18 years; at $4, $4 SO and
$4 75 for Boys from 4 to 14 years,
and at $3 50, 84 and $4 50 for
Kilt Suits. These are not odds and
ends, but all new spring patterns.
Our Hat Department is outdoing
itself, and the reason is a com
plete assortment of the latest
styles at low prices.
--
&
Tailore, ClotMers and Hatters,
161, 163 Federal St, Allegheny.
O0XQ.frfr.OO,Sp
apm-wysu
AT HALF PRICE
OUR ENTIRE STOCK
OF
Young Laflies1, Misses1 aM CMlflretfs
kg
TO BE CLOSED OUT.
ALL THIS SEASON'S GOODS
WANT OF BOOM FOR OUR
INFANTS' DEPARTMENT
THE CAUSE.
Come and Secure Some of These
MANY BARGAINS.
LARGE LOT OF CHILDREN'S
ilLT STJ1TS
Included in this sale.
G, CAMPBELL & SONS,
710 PENN AVENUE. 710
apli-Tursu
A,
8 o'clock and Satflays until
pa
ftEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
HUH III SMALL FEET
Will hear of something to their advantage by calling at our
stores. We have purchased 8o dozens Gentlemen's Half
Hose (in Silk, Lisle and Fine Cotton), every pair, of which
is worth from 50c to $1. We shall sJl them for
25 CENTS A. PA.IR.
The" reason we bought them so cheap and sell them so
cheap is that they come in small sizes ,only, viz.: Sizes 9
and g4.
We jump from one extreme to anot!her from the feet
to the head. After providing for the exterior of the feet,
we now offer something for the interior of heads, viz.:
ibooik:
Our Book List this week is unusually large, and'eon
tains many old friends, as well as many new candidates for
public favor.
JLT IO CIEJEsTTS EACH
We offer "Ten Thousand Popular Novels. This includes tfie
leading works of the leading authors. iNew araiogues just
ready, and mailed free to any address.
AT 25 OEIsTTS' EACH.
We-have just received a fresh supply of-Cloth-Bound
Books of the popular Arlington Edition. Send for Cata
logue. BOOKS TJST PAPEE.
The, Fashion of This "World, by Helen B.
Eyres' Acquittal, by Helen B Mathers. 8c
Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, ny o;evenson, oc
Frankenstein, by Miss Shelley, 80
The Spanish Nun, by De Quincy, 80
A. House Party, by Ouida, 8c
A Kainy Day, by Ouida, 8c
Mr. Meeson's Will, by Haggard, 10c
Miss Bretherton, by Miss Humphrey
Ward, 10o
Handbook for the Kitchen, by Keeley, 15c
Aunt Diana, by Kosa Carey, 15c
Story of a Sin, by Helen B. Mathers, 15c
Cherry Bipe, by Helen B. Mathers, 15o
The Silence of Dean Maitland, by Max
well Gray, 15c
Dolly, by Justin McCarthy, M. P., 15c
The Girl From Malta, by Fergus Hume, 15c
Molly Bawn, by the "Duchess," 15c
Airy Fairy Lilian, by the "Duchess," 15c
Beauty's Daughters, by the "Duchess," 15c
Phin tiT the "Duchess." 15c
TToiiio'a Memories, bv Eosa Carey. 15c
Esther, by Eosa Carey,
Uncle Mar, by Eosa Carey,
nnnn;' Whim.bv Bosa Carer.
15c
15c
15c
Barbara Heathcote's Trial, by Eosa
Carey, 15
Eobeft Ord's Atonement, by Eosa Carey, 15c
Lord Elsmer's Wife, by Bertha M. Clay, 15c
A Daughter of the Gods, by Stanley, 15c
Pole on Whist, 18c
Warwic, by Mansfield Walworth, 18c
Hotspur, by ManBfield Walworth, 18c
The Great War Syndicate, by Frank E.
Stockton, 18c
Lord Vancourt's Daughter, by Mabel
Collins, 18c
Fragoletta, by Miss Otto Booth, 18c
A Bow of Orange Eibbon, by Amelia
Barr, 20o
Miss Lou, by E. P. Eoe, 20c
Princess Napraxine, by Ouida, 20c
Love L' Amour, from the French, by
M. J. Michelet, 20c
Lorna Doone, by E. D. Blackmore, 22c
Tfie Quick or the. Dead, by Amelie
Eives, 22c
A Stiff-Necked Generation, by Walford, 23c
Elizabeth Morley, by Katharine Mac-
quoid, 23c
BOOEBINCLOTH. 1
The Pretty Sister of Jose, by Frances
Hodgson Burnett, 75c
Pipes O' Pan at Zekesbury, by James
Whitcomb Eiley, fl 18
Washington Irving's Works, 8 vols., 5 00
The Man Without a Country (Illus
trated), by Ed E. Hale, 1 98
The Wandering Jew, by Eugene Sue, 1 00
The Mysteries of Paris, by Eugene Sue, 1 00
Notre Dame, by Victor Hugo, 1 00
The Count of Monte Cristo, by Dumas, 1 00
Bret Harte's Poems, ' 1 22
MUSICAL ALBUMS
At 15c and
FLEISHMAN & CO.'S
PW DEPARTMENT STORES
504-506-508
-
OI
The World of Cant, 25o
Toilers of Babylon, by B. L. Farje On. 30o
The Elect Lady, by George MacDortald, 15o
Home A train, bv Georze MacDonali"3, 15o
The Nun's Curse, by Miss Eiddle, lo
.Miss Gascoigne, by Miss Eiddle ' JlSot
The Princes of the Moor, by E. Marl it, 15o
Gold Elsie, by E. Marlitt, 15c
The Bailiff's Maid, by E. Marlitt, ' 15c
The Lady "With the Eubies, by'E.
Marlitt, 15a
In the Counselor's House, by E. Marian 15c
The Second Wife, by E. Marlitt, 15o
The Countess Gisela, by E. Marlitt, -15a
Old Mamsell's Secret, by E.3rarliti ' 15a
The Inner House, by Walter Besaat 13o
The Story of an African Fans, yby
Ealph Iron, 15c
Strathmore, by Ouida, 15a
Idalia, by Ouida, 15a
Puck, by Ouida, 15c
Chandos, by Ouida, 15c
Tricotrine, by Ouida, 15o
Granville De Vigne, by Ouida, 15c
The White Chief, by Mayne Eeid, 18o
Scalp Hunters, by Mayne Eeid, 18o
Brownie's Triumph, by George Shel
don, 18o
Tempest and Sunshine, by Mary 1. J.
Holmes, 18o
Lena Elvers, by Mary J. Holmes, 18a
The English Orphans, by MaryJ.
Holmes, 18c
Artemus Ward, by EH Perkins, 38o
Ann a Karenins, by Tolstoi, 38c
What to Do, by Tolstoi, . 38c
The Immortal, by Daudet, 38o
The Silence of Dean Maitland, by Max
well Gray, 38o
Dr. Eameau, by George Ohnet, 38a
We Two, by Edna Lyall, 38a
The Slaves of Folly, by Horace Brown, 38c
Divorce, by Margaret Lee, 38o
The Man Without a Country, by EE.
Hale, 38o
Arms, the Libyan, by Kounze, 38o
A Strange Manuscript, by Gilbert Gaol, 38c
Donovan, by Edna Lyall, 38c
His Two Wives, by Mary Clemmer, 38a
SHAKESPEAEE, IN PAPEE, PES
VOL. 9o
Bagged Dick Series, per set, 5 00
Happy Hpurs in the Little Peoples
World. 33
Sunbeams for the Little Ones at Home, 33
White Eocks, by A. F. Hill, 1 00 1
A War-Time Wooing, by Captain
Charles King, 88
The Son of a Star, by B. "W. Eichard-
son, 1 20 -
Social Etiquette of New York, . 83
Last Chance Junction, by Sally Prait
McLean, 1 00
Cressy, by Bret Harte, 1 00
AND COLLECTIONS,
25c each.
Market St.,
5ITTSBURC3-, ZF.A..
- J
l
" "' ' " - - B' iisjii iii'iNJpiu-ii" u'pji" iaMnK