X , X THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH, MONDAY, JULY 8, 1889. 5 IN THE KING'S HOUSE. Eev. T. De Witt Talmaso Describes the Spsndors of tho GOLDEN PALACE ON ZION'S DILL. Tho Eeception ly Angel Friends in Father's Mansion, 0r WBEEE TflERElSEOOMENODGHFOEAU .SPECIAL. TELE-RAM TO TnE CISrATCU.l The Hamptons, N . Y., July 7. Kev. T. Be Witt Talmae;e preached here to-day on the subject: "Our House on the Hills." His text was John civ. 2: "In my Father's house are many rooms." He said: Here is a bottle of medicine that is a cure-all. The disciples were sad and Christ offered heaven as an alternative, a stimu lant and a tonic He shows them that tbeir sorrows are only a dark background of a bright picture of coming felicity. He lets them know that though now they live on the lowlands they shall yet have a house on the uplands. Nearly all the Bible descrip tions of heaven may be figurative. I am not positive that in all heaven there is a literal crown or harp or pearly gate or throne or chariot. They may be only used to illustrate the glories of the placc.bat how well they do it! The favorite symbol by which the Bible presents celestial happi ness is a house. Paul, who never owned a house, although he hired one for two years in Italy, speaks ol heaven as a "house not made with hands," and Christ in our test, the translation of which is a little changed so as to give the more accurate meaning, says: "In my Father's house are many rooms." This divinely authorized comparison of heaven to a great homestead of large accom modations I propose to carry out. In some healthy neighborhood a man builds a very commodious habitation. He must have rooms for all his children. The rooms come to be called after the different members of the family. That is mother's room. That i tieorce s room, nat is iienry s room. That is Flora's room. That is Mary's room. And the house is all occupied. But time goes by and the sons go out into the world and build their own homes, and the daugh ters are married or have talents enough si ngly to go out and do good work in the world. HEAVEN IS FILLING TJI. After a vhilo the father and mother are almost alone in the b'g house, and seated by the evening stand, they say: "Well, our family is no larger now than when we started together 40 years ago." But time goes still further by, and some of the chil dren are unfortunate and return to the old homestead to live, and the grandchildren come with them, and perhaps great-grandchildren, and again the house is full. Many millennia ago Qod built on the hills of heaven a great homestead for a family in numerable, yet to be. At first He lived alone in that great house, but after a while it was occupied by a very large family, cherubic, seraphic, angelic. The eternities passed on, and many of the inhabitants be came wayward ana left, never to return. And many of the apartments were vacated. I refer to the fallen angels. Now these apartments are filling up again. There are arrivals at the old homestead of God's chil dren every day, and the day will come when there will be no unoccupied room in all the house. As you and I expect to enter it and make there eternal residence, I thought you would like to get some more particulars about that many-roomed homestead. "In my Father's house are many rooms." -You see the place is to be apportioned off into apartments. We shall love all who are in heaven, but there are some very good people whom we would not want to live with in the same room. They may be better than we are, but they are of a divergent temperament. We would like to meet with them on the golden streets and worship with them in the temple and walk with them on the river banks, but I am glad to say that we shall live in differ ent apartments. "In my Father's house are many rooms." You see heaven will be so large that if one want an entire room to himself or herself, it can be afforded. MANSIONS FOR ALU An ingenious statistician, taking the statement made in Revelation, 21st chapter, that the heavenly Jerusalem was measured and found to be 12,000 fnriongs, and that the length and height and breadth of it are equal, savs that would make heaven in size 1)48 sextillion 088 quintilliou cubic feet; and then, reserving a certain portion for the court of iieaven and the streets, and esti mating that the trorld may last a hundred thousand years, he ciphers out that there are over five trillion rooms, each room 17 feet long, 1G feet wide, 15 feet high. But I have no faith in the accuracy of that calcu lation. He makes the rooms too small. From all I can read, the rooms will be pala tial, and those who have not had enough room in this world will have plenty of room at the last. The fact is that most people in this world are crowded, though out on a vast prairie or in a mountain district people may have more room than they want, in most cases it is house built close to house, and the streets are crowded and the cradle is crowded by other cradles, and the graves crowded in the cemetery by other graves, and one of the richest luxuries of many people in getting out of this world will be the gaining of unhindered and uncramped room. And I should not wonder if instead ot the room that the statistician ciphered out as only 17 feet by 16, it should be larger than any of tne imperial rooms at Berlin, St. James or Winter Palace. "In my Father's house are many rooms." Carrying out still further the symbolism of the text let us join hands anil go up to this majestic home stead and see for ourselves. THROUGH THE PEARLY OTES. As we ascend the golden steps, an invisi- Die guardsman swings open the front door and we are ushered into the reception room of the old homestead. That is the place where we first meet the welcome of heaven. There must be a place where the departed spirit enters and a place in which it con fronts the inhabitants celestial. The recep tion room of the newly arrived from this world what scenes it must have witnessed since the first guest arrived, the victim of the first fratricide, pious Abel. In that room Christ lovingly greeted all new com ers. He redeemed them and He has the ncht to the first embrace bn their arrival. What a minute when the ascended spirit first sees the Lord. Better than all we ever read about him or talked about hira or sang about him in all the churches and through all our earthly lifetime, will it be, just for one secord to see Him. The most rapturous idea we ever had of Him on sacramental days or at the height of some great revival or under the uplifted baton of an oratorio are a bankruptcy of thought compared witu me nrst nasn ol ills appear ance in that reception room. At that mo ment when you confront each other, Christ looking upon you and you looking upon Christ, there will be an ecstatic thrill and surging of emotion that beggars all descrip tion. Lookl They need no introduction. Long ago Christ chose that repentant sinner and that repentant sinner chose Christ. Mightiest moment of an immortal history the first kiss Of heaven! Jesus and the soul. The soul and Jesus. But now into that reception room pour the glorified kinsfolk. Enough of earthly retention to let you know them, but with out their wounds or their sickness or their troubles. See what heaven has done for them. So radiant, so gleeful, so transport ingly lovely. RAPTUROUS GREETINGS. They call you by name. They greet you with an ardor proportioned to the anguish, of youjparting and the length of your sep-' aration. Father! Mother! There is your child. Sisters! Brothers! Friends! I wish you joy. For years apart, together again in the reception room of the old homestead. You see they will know -you are coming. There are so many immortals filling till the spaces between here and heaven that news like that flies like light ning. They will be there in an instant; though they were in some other world on errand from God a signal would be thrown that would fetch them. Though you might at first feel dazed and overawed at tbeir super nal splendor, all that feeling will be gone at their first touch of heavenly salutation and we will say: "O. my lost boy," "O, my lost companion," "O, my lost friend, are we I here together? nat scenes nave oecn witnessed in mat reception room of the old homestead! There met Joseph and Jacob, finding it a brighter room than anything thev saw in Pharaoh's palace; David and the little child for whom he once fasted and wept; Mary and Lazarus after the heartbreak of Bethany; Timothy and grandmother Lois; Isabella Graham and her sailor son, Alfred and George Cook man, the mvstery oi the sea at last made manifest; Luther and Magdalene, the daughter he bemoaned; John Howard and the prisoners he gospelized; and multitudes without number who, once so weary and so sad, parted on earth but gloriously met in heaven. Among all the rooms of that house there is no one that more enraptures my soul than that reception room. "In my Father's house are many rooms." BETORE THE THRONE. Another room in our Father's ho.usa is the throne room. We belong to the royal family. The blood of King Jesus flows in our veins, so we have . a right to enter the throne room. It is no easy thing on earth to get through even the outside door of a King's residence. During the Franco German war one eventide in the summer of 1870, 1 stood studying the exquisite sculp turing of the gate of the Tuileries, Paris. Lost in admiration of the wonderful art of that gate I knew not that I was exciting suspicion. Lowering myeyes to the crowds of people I found myself being closely in spected by governmental officials, who from my complexion judged me to be a German, and that for some belligerent purpose I might be examining the ;ates of the palace. My explanations in very poor French did not satisfy them and they followed me long distances until I reached my hotel, and were not satisfied until from my landlord they found that I was only an inoffensive American. The gates of earthly palaces are carefully guarded, and, if so, how much more severely the throne room. A dazzling place is it for mirrors and all costly art No one who ever saw the throne room of the first and only Napoleon will ever forget the letter If embroidered in purple and gold on the up holstery ol chair and window, the letter N gilded on the wall, the letter If chased on the chalices, the letter N flaming fro;n the ceiling. What a conflagration of brilliance the throne room of Charles Im mauuel of Sardinia, of Ferdinand of Spain, of Elizabeth of England, of Boniface of Italy. But the throne room our Father's house hath a glory eclipsing all the throne rooms that ever saw scepter nave or crown glitter or foreign ambassador bow, for ooir Father's throne is a throne of grace, a throne of merer, a throne of holi ness, a throne oi justice, a throne of uni versal dominion. We need not stand shiv ering and cowering before it, for our Father says we may yet one day come up and sit on it beside him. "To him that overcometh will I grant to sit with me in my throne." You see we are TRINCES AND PRINCESSES. Perhaps now we moveabout incognito, as Peter the Great in the garb of a ship car penter at Amsterdam, or as Queen Tirzah in the dress of a peasant woman seeking the prophet for her child's cure; but it will be found out after a while who we are when we get into the throne room. Aye! we need not wait until then. We may, by prayer and song and spiritual uplifting, this mo ment enter the throne room. O King, live forever! We touch the forgiving scepter and prostrate ourselves at thy feet! The crowns ot the royal families ot this world are tossed about from generation to genera tion and from family to family. There are children 4 years old in Berlin, who have seen the crown on three Emperors. Bnt wherever the coronets of this world rise or fall, they are destined to meet in one place. And I look -and see them coming from north and south and east and west, the Spanish crown, the Italian crown, the Eng lish crown, the Tuikish crown, the Bussian crown, the Persian crown, aye, ail the crowus from under the great archivolt of heaven; and while I watch and wonder they are all flung in rain of diamonds around the pierced feet. Jesus shall reign where'er the sun Does his successive journeys run, His kingdom stretch from sbore to shore Till sun shall rise and set no more. Oh, that throne of Christ! "In my Father's house are many rooms." Another room in our Father's house is the music room. St. John and other Bible writer: talk so much about the music of heaven that there must be music there, per haps not such as on earth was thrummed from trembling string or evoked by touch of ivory key, but if not that, why something better. There are so many Christian harp ists and Christian composers and Christian organists and Christian choristers and Chris tian hymnologists that have gone up from earth, there must be for them some place of especial delectation. Shall we have music in this world of discords and no music in the land of complete harmony? I cannot give you the notes of the first bar of the new song that is sung in heaven, I cannot imag ine either the soIo or the doxology. But heaven means music, and can mean nothing else. Occasionally that music has escaped the gate. DIVINE MELODIES. Dr. Fuller dving at Beaufort, S. C. said: "Do you not 'hear?" "Hear what?" ex claimed the bystanders. "The music! Lilt me up! Open thewindow!" In that music room of our Father's house, you will some day meet the old Christian masters, Mozart and Handel and Mendelssohn and Beetho ven and Doddridge, whose sacred poetry was as remarkable as his sacred prose, and James Montgomery and William Cowper, at last got rid of his spiritual melancholv, and Bishop Heber, whofsang of "Greeland's Icy Mountain and India's Coral Strand;" and Dr. Raffles, who wrote of "High in Yonder Realms of Light," and Issac Watts, who went to visit bir Thomas Abney and wife for a week and proved him self so agreeable a guest that they made him stay 36 years; and side by side, Augus tus Toplcdy, who bad got over his disliko for Methodists, and Charles Wesley freed from his dislike for Ualvmists; and George W. Bethune, as sweet as a song maker as he was great as a preacher and the autber of "The Village Hymns;" and many who wrote in verse or song, in church or by eventide cradle, and many who were passion ately fond of music, but could make none themselves. The poorest singer there more than any earthly prima dona, and the poor est plavers there more than any earthly Gottscb'alk. Oh that music room, the headquarters of cadence and rhythm, symphony and chant. psalm and antiphon! May we be there some hour when Haydn sits at the keys of one of his own oratorios, and David the psalmist fingers the harp, and Miriam of the lied Sea banks claps the cymbals, and Ga briel puts his lips to the trumpet and the four-and-twenty soldiers chant, and Lind and Parepa render matchless duet in the music room of the old heavenly homestead. "In my Father's house are many rooms. THE FAMILT ROOM. Another room in our Father's house will be the family room. It may correspond somewhat with the family room on earth' At morning and evening, vou know, that is the place we meet. Though every member of the household have a separate room, in the family room they all gather, and joys and sorrows and experiences of all styles are there rehearsed. Sacred room in all our dwellings ! Whether it be luxurious with ottomans and divans and books in Russian lids standing in mahogany case or there be only a few plain chairs and a cradle. So the family room on nigh will be the place where the kinsfolk assemble and talk: over the family experiences of earth, the weddings, the births, the burials, the festal days of Christmas and Thanksgiving raunion. Will the children departed remain chil dren there? Will the aged remain aged there? Oh, no; everj thing is perfect there. The child will go ahead to glorified maturity and the aged will go back to glorified ma turity. The rising sun of one will rise to meridian and the descending sun of the other will return to meridian. However much we love our children on earth we would consider it a domestic disaster if they stayed children, and so we rejoice at their growth here, And when we meet in the family room of our Father's house, w will be clad that they have grandly and glori ously matured; while our parents who were aged and infirm here, we shall be glad to find restored to the most agile and vigorous immortality tbere. If 40 or 45 or CO Years be the apex of physical and mental lile on earth, then the heavenlr childhood will ad vance to that and the heavenly old age will retreat to that. t TALKING WITH ANGELS. When we join them in that family room we shall have much to tell them. We shall want to know of them right away such things as these: Did you see us in "this or that or the other struggle? Did you know when we lost our property and sympathize with us? Did you know we had that awful sickness? Were yon hovering anywhere around when we plunged Into that memora ble accident? Did you know of our back sliding? Did you know of that moral vic tory? Were you pleased when we started for heaven? Did you celebrate the hour of our conversion? And then, whether they know it or not we will tell them all. But they will have more to tell us than we to tell them. Ten years on earth maybe very event ful, but what must be the biography of ten years in heaven? They will have to tell us the story of coronations, story of news from ail immensity, story of conquerors and hierarchs, story of wrecked or ransomed planets, story of angelic victory over dia bolic revolts, of extinguished suns, of ob literated constellations, of new galaxies kindled and swung, of stranded comets, of worlds on fire, and story of Jehovah's ma jestic reign. If in that family room of our Father's house we have so much to tell them of what we have passed through since we parted, how mnch more thrilling and arousing that which they have to tell ns of what they have passed through since we parted. Surely that family room will be one of the most favored rooms in all our Father's house. What long lingering there, for we shall never again be in a hurry. "Let me open a window," said an humble Christian servant to Lady Raffles, who, be because of the death of her child, had shut herself up in a dark room aud refused to see anyone; "you have been many days in this dark room. Are you not ashamed to grieve In this manner, when you ought to be thank ing God for having given you the most beautiful child that ever was seen, and in stead of leaving him in this world till he should be worn with trouble, has not God taken him to heaven in all of his beauty? Leave off weeping and let me open a win dow." So to-day lam trying toopenupon the darkness ot earthly separation the windows and doors and rooms of the heavenly home stead. "In my Father's house are many rooms. THERE ARE MANY ROOMS. How would it do for my sermon to leave you in that family room to-day? I am sure there is no room in which you would rather stay than in the enraptured circle of your ascended and glorious kinsfolk. We might visit other rooms in our Father's house. There may be picture galleries penciled not with earthly art, but by some process un known in this world, preserving for the next world the brightest and most stupendous scenes of human history. And there may be lines and forms of earthly beauty pre served for heavenly inspection in something whiter and chaster and richer than Vene tian sculpture ever wrought. Booms beside rooms. Booms ever rooms. Large rooms, majestic rooms, opalescent rooms, amethys tine rooms. "In my Father's bouse are many rooms." I hope none of us will be disappointed about getting there. There is a room for us all if we will go and take it, but in order to reach it it is absolutely necessary that we take the right way, and Christ is the way; and we must enter At the right door, and Christ is the door; and we must start at the right time, and the only hour you are sure ot is tne flour tne cloct now s trices, and the only second the one your watch is now ticking. I hold in my hand a roll of letters inviting you all to make that yonr home forever. The New Testament is only a roll of letters inviting you, as the spirit of them practically says: "My dying yet im mortal child in earthly neighborhood, I have built for you a great residence. It is full of rooms. I have furnished tVin as no palace was ever furnished. Pearls are nothing, emeralds are nothing, chrysophra sus is nothing; illumined panels of sunrise and sunset, nothing; the aurora of the northern heavens, nothing compared with the splendor with which I have garnitured them. But you must be clean before you can enter there, and so I have opened a fountain where you may wash all your sins away.- Come, now! Put your weary but cleansed fet on the upward pathway. Do you not see amid the thick foliage on the heavenlv hilltops the old family home Jndigestion IS not only a distressing complaint, of itself, but, by causing the blood to become depraved and the system en feebled, is the parent of innumerable maladies. That AVer's Sarsaparilla is the best core for Indigestion, even when complicated with Liver Complaint, Is proved by the following testimony from Mrs. Joseph Lake, of Brockw-j Centre, Mich.: "Liver complaint and indigestion made my life a burden and came near ending my existence. For more than four years I suffered untold agony, was reduced almost to a skeleton, and hardly had strength to drag myself about. All kinds of food distressed me, and only the most delicate could be digested at aii. Within the time mentioned several physicians treated me without giving re lief. Nothing that I took seemed to do any permanent good until I commenced the use of Ayer's Sarsaparilla, which has produced wonderful results. Soon after commencing to take the Sarsapa rilla I could see an improvement in my condition. My appetite began to return and with it came the ability to digesi all the food taken, my strength im proved each day, and after a few months ol faithful attention to your directions, I found myself a well woman, able to attend to all household duties. The medicine has given me a new lease of life." er's arsaparilla, PBZFABZD ST Dr. J. C. Ayer & Co., Lowell, Mass trice $1 ; six bottles, $5 Worth $5 a bottle. Apollinaris THE QUEEN OF TABLE WATERS. " People cannot hearken too earnestly to the WARNING'S already sounded by medical men against the indiscriminate use of the ALLEGHENY WATER at this time." "Dr. W. T.English said: 'It cannot be told how long the water will be impure; it may be for months'. " Pittsburg Dispatch, June 4th, 1889. "The purity of APOLLINA RIS offers the best security against the dangers 7vhich are common to most of the ordinary drinking waters." London Medical Record. Of all Grocers, Drutxtsis, &ittn. Wat. Dealers. BEWARE OF'IMITATIONS ' ' ' JelS.24-MS ' stead?" In my Father's house are many rooms." HOKSFORD'S ACID PHOSPHATE. It You Are Nervous, And cannot sleep, try It Have Your Bnby Photographed This week by Bendrlcks & Co., 68 Federal st, Allegheny. Cabinets, 1 a dozen. Mwy More of Them Printed Lmrm at 5 Cent. Standard prints, 4c Yard wide satines, 8 cents. Come early. ' Jos. Horne & Co.'s Penn Avenue Stores. hied. BEAM-On Sunday, July 7. 1889, at 3 P. M.. Oeoeqe Elwood, only son of Georce W. and Laura A. Beam, nee McAuley, aged 10 months. Friends of the family are respecfully Invited to attend. Tho funeral service at the family residence, 25 McLaln avenue. Pittsburg, on MohdaY evenino, at 8 o'clock, Interment private on Tuesday mohntno at 10 o'clock. Bcllaire, O., papers pleaso copy. CROSS At tho residence of her daughter, Mrs. John Robinson, No. 39 South Twenty-seventh street. Mrs. Maey A, relict of James Cross, of Allegheny. Funeral services at 2.30 p. jr., Monday, July 8. Friends of the family are respectfully In vited to attend. CRON1N On Bundav. July 7, 1889. at 2 o'clock P. M., ANDREW Q. son of Andrew and Bridget Cronin, aged 12 years 5 months 4 days. Funeral from the residence ol his parents, 354 Webster avenue, on TuESDAY.the 9th inst, at 9.30 o'clock A. jr. Friends of the family are respectfully Invited to attend. GRAHAM-At her residence, 41 Clark street, on .Sunday evening, July 7, 18S9, at 930 o clock, Sarah Hague Graham, relict of James Graham, Sr.. aged 75 years. . Notice of funeral later. GILLEN On Sunday, July 7, 1SS9, Frank, the youngest son of Michael and Mary Gillen, aged 11 years and five months. Funeral from the residence of his parents, Somerset street, Allegheny, at 9 a. jr., Tues day. Friends cf the family are Invited to, attend. GALLAGHER On Sunday. Jnly 7, 1889. at 11:30 A. M., Eddie, son of William and Mar garet Gallagher, aged 5 weeks. Funeral from the residence of his grandpa rents, Forward avenue (Four-Mils run), Twen-ty-third ward, on Monday, at 2 o'clock P. M. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. KOBER On Sunday moraine, July 7. 1889, at 630 o'clock. Christina, relict of the late Michael Kober, in the 63d year of her age. Funeral will take place from her late resi dence. No. 38 Thirtieth street, on Tuesday af ternoon at 2 o'clock. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. Philadelphia and New York papers please copy. 2 KINNEY On Sunday. July 7, 18S9, ANNIE, daughter of Maurice and Annie Kinney, aged 4 months. Foneral will take place on Monday, July 8, 18S9, at 2 P. Jl., from the residence. No. 49 Twenty-fifth street, Sonthslde, city. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. LANG On Saturday, July 6. at 2:10 P. H., Margareta LaNo, nee Bjer, wife of George C. H. Lang, aged 42 years 7 months and 2 days. Funeral service on Monday, July 8, at 2.30 p. M.,at the United Evangelical StPaul's Church, South Canal street. Allegneny. Friends of the family are respectfully Invited to attend. PEEL On Sunday morning, July 7. at 9 JO o'clock, Mrs. Maroabet Peel, aged 63 years. Dearest mother, thou has left ns, And thy loss we deeply feel. But it Is God who has bereft us; He can all our sorrows heal. Funeral from her late residence, 35 Wash ington avenue, Thirty-first ward, Tuesday, at 2 P. M. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. 2 SLLouisand Philadelphia papers please copy. PALMER Sunday, at 230 p. M July 7, sud denly. Samuel Palmer, at bis late residence. No. 39 Anderson street, Allegheny. Notice of funeral hereafter. REEVES On Sunday morning, July 7, 1889, at 1235, Robert Reeves, Jr., In the 18th year of his age Funeral on Tuesday, at st p. ii., from the residence of his parents, No. 18 Manhattan street, Allegheny. SUESS Sunday, July 7, at 9 o'clock A. M., Johanna Edna, daughter of Edmund and Anna Suess (nee Zschoegner), aged 11 months and 9 days. Funeral Tuesday at 2 p. M., from residence, 65 High street, Allegheny. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. 2 STREET At 430 P. M. Sunday, July 7. 1889, at Dennison. O., Stewart Leroy, infant son of C. B. Street. Interment at Blairsvllle, Pa, on Tuesday, July 9, 1839, at 1 P. JL SCOTT At the family residence, 252 Wylle avenue, James Allison, the youngest son ot Alex B. and Annie M. Scott, at 12.50 A.M., Sun day. Funeral services will be held on Monday, at 2 p.m. TOBIN On Sunday, July 7, 1889, at 1230 P. M., Annie, daughter of John and Emma Tobin, aged 10 months. Funeral from the parents' residence, 141 Cherry alley, on Monday at 2 p. jl Friends of the family are respectfully Invited to attend. W ATKINS On Saturday, July 6, 18S9, at 11:45 a. M., Ethel M.. only child of Alex C. aud Maggie Grezg Watkins, aged 8 months and IS days. Funeral services at the family residence. Sheridan avenue, near Hoeveler street. Nine teenth ward, on Monday, 8th Inst, at 3p.m. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. 2 WENZEL On Saturday. July 6, 18S9, at 1225 A. M.. Maodalena, wife of G. Peter Wenzel, aged 56 years, 2 months, 22 days, r Funeral on Monday, July 8, at 2 p. m., from her late residence. No. 1818 Carson street, thence to Gennan Baptist Church, Nineteenth street, Southside, Pittsburg, Pa. Friends are invited. ANTHONY MEYER, (Successor to Meyer, Arnold Sc Co.. lira.,) UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER. Office and residence, 1131 Penn avenue. Tele phone connection. raytO-tiO-MWFSu JOHN L. TREXLER & CO., Funeral Directors and Embalmers, Livery and Boarding Stables. Nos. 378 and 3S0 Beaver ave. Residence. 681 Preble ave.. Allegheny City. Telephone 8416. mh23-MThsu FLORAL EMBLEMS. CHOICE CUT FLOWERS AND SMILAX A. M. & J. B. MURDOCH, -iri SMITHFIELD ST. 0) Telephone 429. de6-f4-MWF ROSES, WATER LILIES. FLOWERS AND FLORAL WORK A GREAT SPECIALTY, At low prices during summer. JOHN R. & A- MURDOCH, Telephone 239. 6C3 Smithfield St. je2S-MWP pEPRESENTEIJ IN PITTSBURG IN 1SC1 Assets - . S9jC71,B9a33. Insurance Co. of North America. Losses adjusted and paid by "WILLIAM L JONES. 84 Fourth avenue. ia20-s2-D HOUSE-CLEANING TIME Is here. You will necd curtains renovated and carpets cleaned. There is but one place where you can get them done In the best manner pos sible, and that U at CHAS.. PFEIFER'S ALLEGHENY STEAM LAUNDRY. Offices In Plttsbnrg, 443 Smitbfield street, 1913 Carson street, and 100 Federal street, Alleghe y. Works, 353-3E) Beaver avenue, Allegbe ny Telephone 1264. mb28-Mwr JL U I ITVT A INSURANCE CO., -Zo2j JL LN -Ca Hartford. Conn. Assets, January 1, 1887 S9,&6H,839 60 EDWARDS 4 KENNEY, Agents. OQ iourth avenue Pittsburg. 1al5-53-MP Pears' Soap (Scented and Unscented) " SECURES A. BEAUTIFUL COMPLEXION. of azl vnuaaisxs. NEW ADVERTISEMEXTS. ONYX CLOCKS. We have opened a nice assortment of Onyx Clocks of our own Importation which we can sell at astonishingly low prices. We would be pleased to have you call and see them at our NEW JEWELRY STORE, 37 FIFTH AVENUE, WATTLES & SHEAFER, Sign of Big Clock on Sidewalk. We will close our store at 5 P. x except Saturdays, until September L jeZl-itwr FOEOED SALE BANKRUPT STOCK of J. R. ANDERSON, at 138 Federal street, Allegheny, Pa., ot DRY GOODS. A CLEAN SWEEP SUMMER GOODS must be made to open room for fall materials. See the LACE CURTAIN CARPET BARGAINS. -- T. M. r 138 Federal St, Allegheny,Pa. Jy3-jrwT3u EARLY CLOSING NOTICE I COMMENCING MONDAY, JULY 8, And until further Notice, our store Will Close at 5 O'olock Every Day Except Saturday. "We request our patrons to endeavor to shape their time so as to reach the store be fore this hour. Our Store is recognized as the cleanest, best kept and most comfort able house in the two cities to do shopping in. Our ventilation is perfect and the light the clearest. Our Salesmen and Sales ladies are polite and attentive, as well as having a thorough knowledge of the busi ness ana an experience in waiting on trade that greatly assists the buyer in supplying his or her wants in an agreeable and ex peditious manner. Our stock is at all times full and complete of SEASONABLE GOODS in STAPLE LINES as well as NOVEL TIES, and what yon buy from us you will find clean and fresh and in perfect con dition. OUE PEIOES "WE GUARANTEE TO BE THE LOWEST for the Quality of the Goods Sold. Special Bargains all over the Store. HORNE & WARD, 41 FIFTjS AVENUE. jyS-D GROVELAND. A new city amid forest trees. A beantlful place just opened to home seekers of Pittsburg, and brought right to their workshops, offices, stores and mills by three lines of railway. If you want a perfect home or an Investment that will yield quick and large profits In advancing values, look at Groveland. LARGE, LEVEL, SHADED LOTS, On wide avenne, with extended views of river. PURE AIR AND WATER. Churches, schools, stores, electric street rall- way, natural gas and all conveniences of city , natural gas ana : country combined, lv no lots until von ana country comoinea. iiuyno lots until you nave examined pi plans and learned prices and terms at Urovelan Chas. Somers,J313 Wood St, Jy-I W. L MILLER, Agent at Beaver. 77 "Rr PHOTOGRAPHER, 10 SIXTH STREET. A fine, large crayon portrait ts 50: see them before ordering elsewhere. Cabinets, J2 and W0 per dozen. PROMPT DELIVERY. apll-16-mvysa "WM. 165, IMPERATIVE CLEARANCE On Tuesday morning we inaugurate a genuine Clearance Sale in every merate all the bargains, but you will at prices lower than ever offered in nave accumulated in tne past six months, must go, without regard to cost for the sale: Body Brussels Carpets all fresh goods, now 2.0c, were 370. .Come quick for these. DRESS GOODS. 'The cut is deep here. AH must go if prices will etc., at marvelously low prices. All - .. always sold at 25c. All-wool colored half price, imported, fancy. Wool ioc, were 15c; I2jc, were 18c. And Ready-made Suits, Jerseys, etc Ladies' Jerseys 50c, down from 75c. Cream colored Jerseys. Fast colored 37c. Cream and Bleached Table Linens, 18c up. LOOK HERE I Away goes -he Queensware, Chinaware, Glassware, fine Vases, Chamber Sets, Soiled Sets. A soiled set imitation Glass, three pieces for 70c, worth 1 50. See also the immense bargains in Hose, Gloves, Millinery, Corsets, Laces and Embroideries. . SPECIAL. All remnants and odd at your own price. Remnants Cashmere, Remnants Henrietta, Remnants Remnants Embroideries and Laces. Remnant Sale. All must eo and eo Samples sent on request 'Mail . - NEW ADVERTISEMENT. OUR STORES WILL OLOS3 AT 6 O'CLOCK DURING JULY and AUGUST. ELOQUENT PRICES. Ladies' Silk Ribbed Vests, 75c; worth $1. Ladies' BalbriggaiL.Hose, toes and heels: tipped, 25c; worth 40c. Ladies' lisle Hose, regu lar made, 25c a pair; worth 38c. Ladies' Swiss Aprons, hemstitched and em broidered, 39c; worth 75c. Ladies' Pure Silk Gloves, 35c; worth 50c. Ladies' 4 - Button Kid Gloves, 75c; worth $1. Ladies' Initial Handker chiefs, 10c; worth 12. Ladies' Initial Handker chiefs, all linen, 25c; worth 35c. Ladies' Gloria Umbrellas, gold or silver handles, $1 50; worth $2. Ladies' "Windsor Silk Um brellas, gold or silver handles, $4 25 and $5. Ladies' French Corsets, long waisted, 58c; worth $1. Ladies' Summer Corsets at 38c, 58c and 75c, reduced from 50c, 75c and$l. Ladies' Smocked Jerseys at $2 50; worth $3 50. ladies' Stockinet Jackets at $3; worth $3 75. FLEISHMAN & CO., 504, 506, 608 Market Street jys-D PAULSON BROTHERS. LADIES' BLAZERS, 63 60 and 84. TENNIS OTJ'X'JF'ITS. Caps, 50c; silk belts, 50c; flannel blazers. S3, 3 50 and H; flannel shirti, from SI 50 to U ; silk shins, from S3 50 to $7; silk jersey shirts. S4 50 to S7; long pants, $5: knee pants, S3 and S3 50. Complete outfit, including English flannel cap, blazer, belt, shirt and pants, only S10. Our blazers are very wide stripe. This is the correct thing this year. Our English Lounging Suits are white with fine bine or brown lines. 51 HAMMOCKS. $1. Best woven "Perfection" from SI to the lar gest made. Length 11 feet, width 3 feet. Will not pull off buttons.' 50c. STRAW HATS. 30e. A eood Straw Hat for 60c, 75c and SL Of course we have the finest also. -4 PAULSON BROS., 441 WOOD STREET. Five Doors below Fifth avenne. N.B. Ladies' Sailor Yacht Hats, Steamer Caps and Riding Hats now ready. jeG-aiwr SEMPLE'S STORES, 167 and 169 FEDERAL STREET, ALLEGHENY, PA find them wherever you turn in the any market In short, all remnants, at 75c, were $1 25 and $1 50. Tapestry Brussels at prices away down for the Wool Dress Fabrics are cut in two i .- Cashmere and Henrietta side Darred fabrics, stripes and plaids, etc., at cut in the Clearance Sale will be lots are to be disposed of at the Remnants Ribbons. Odd and single at once. . Orders promptly executed. , i HEW ADVERTISEMENTS. Flopped Prices. Isn't this business of reduc ing prices being overdone? It may readily be that peo ple can't be got to buy, in any other way, if clothing is of doubtful value: that recourse must be had to the sensational and "paint-the-town-red" in advertising. We're selling our reliable maice at fair prices, Having begun the season so, we don't feel called on now to resort to topsy-turvy prices to bring you. Some lots we have lowered in price. We mean you to hold us to every word. Some of our goods: not all. They're incomparably low in price: the quality's right. Thin goods, too: right sizes: Hew goods: correct prices. Making to-order well done: i.ooo styles of goods. Wanamaker & Brown, Sixth street and Penn avenne. 3J6-D THERE CAN BE NO DOUBT As to where you should buy vour FURNITURE,' CARPETS and HOUSEFURNISHING GOODS, if economy is the object you have in view. KEECH'S SIAMMOTEr. Cash and Credit House, 923 and 925 Penn Ave., is the house for vou to oat- ronize, 11 you want to save want to save money, and get dependable and stylish merchandise. Jel7-rwT ANCHOR REMEDY COMP'NY, 529 LIBERTY STREET. Why do you pay Jl 00 per bottle forbarsanarillaandBeeflWinnand Iron when vou can bnv either nre- paration from ns at 75c per bottle. six bottles t-t 00. and quality guar anteed to be the best in the niar kot. We have numerous testimo nials from phvsicians and others indorsing onr Liver Pills as a mild and effective cathartic They are unsurpassed. After giv ing them a trial you will use no others. Price 25c. For sprains, bruiser and all rheumatic pains, nse the Anchor Liniment. It has no eanal. Come and see us if you are in any way auucieu. 2rwy JOHNFLOCKER & CO., MANUFACTURERS OF Flocker's Lubricating Hemp Packing FOR RAILROAD USE. Italian and American Hemp Packing; Clothes Lines. Twines, Bell Cord, Fish Lines, Chalk Lines, Night Lines, Sisal Bale and Hide Rope, Tarred Lath Yarn, Spnn Yam, etc WORKS East street. Allegheny City, Pa. OFFICE A JJHAtjiiauuuii e water St. ttsburg. Telephone No. 1370. my3-jrws department of the house. We have house. Now is the opportunity of a oddments, damaged or slightlysoiled or value. JNote tne following, wnicn l do it. Wash Goods in Satines, Lawns, Challis, Batistes, Gipgharfl3,' as to prices. See the double fold .. suitings, 55c, were 75c. Jamestown prices. Black Goods at equally good included everything in our Cloak Room, sale. They will last only a short time. Silks, Remnants Satines, Ginghams, pairs Curtains. Odd lots of Underwear and Hosiery. In fact j RESORTS. AslABtlc City. THE ELDREDGE. NO. 18 SOOTH CARO LINA avenne, within three minutes' walk or depot or beach. Large, cheerful rooms, ex cellent table. Terms moderate. MRS.E.J. ELDREDGE. Proprietress mvl&-91-p THE CH ALFONTE. ATLANTIC CTTr, N. J. MOVED TO THE BEACH. ENLAROED AND IMPROVED. UNSURPASSED OCEAN VIEW. Salt water baths in the bouse. Elevator. aplftSl-D E. ROBERTS A SONS. flC OTEL NORMAND1E, ATLANTIC CITY, .H.J. - NOW" OPEN. Under new management. T. C. GILLETTE, Prop'r. mv2Z Lata of Colonnade Hotel, Phllada. THE MANSION, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. Largest and most prominently located hotel with a new and first-class Restaurant attached. 330 chairs. Open all the year. Coacaes to asd from Beach and Trains. Brophy's Orchestra. leZ6-5l uu AKL.ua : CHARLES MCGLADE. HOTEL ROYAL Appointments and service first-class, bpaelous lawns 00 feet. Porch promenades. Cuisine unexcelled. W. H. REYNOLDS. je25-52-D Late Lafayette Hotel Pbila, T IHE WINDSOR, CAPE MAY; N. J. Directly on the beach. Now ODen. JeM-D W W. GREEN. THE NEW COLUMBIA. CAPE MAY. N. J. Opens June 15, 1863. James Mooney. "Owner." FRANK H. HILDRETH, (Late of the Hotel Lafayette.) jeH-73-MWP Proprietor. ASBURY PARK-HOTEL BRUNSWICK A leading hotel In every respect. Beauti fully situated near the beach. All rooms com mand an unobstructed view of the ocean. Ap pointments unsurpassed. Dralnace and Sani tary arrangements perfect. For information address MORGAN & PARSONS. jel545 PARK PLACE HOTEL. SEWICKLEY, Pennaon Pittsburg. Fort Wayns and Chicago Railroad, 25 minutes' ride from the city and two minnteV walk from the station;., newly famished througbout:eoantrrsnrTOand ings. elegant drives, with all the comforts of the city. W.H.8.McKELVY,Prop. jy4-71 SEA ISLE CITY, N. J., Br the ocean: hotels open: Continental, Tivolt, Surf House, Sea View, Philadelphia, Mansion and others: cottage boarding houses: Floral. Rosedaje. Ocean View. European and others; magnificent beach, bathing and rea views: rates moderate. Information C K. LANDIS, jel2-16 402 Locust St. Philadelphia. Thomson House, Kane, McKEAN CO., PENNSYLVANIA. 2,000 feet above ocean level. Open all the year. Now prepared far the reception of sum mer visitors. Rates, f2 00 per day and from 17 00 to tU 00 per week. Write for circular. jelS-2-P C. H. KEMP, Prop. RENOVO HOTEL, . RENOVO. Clinton Co., Pennsylvania. L209 feet above ocian level. Open all the year. Now prepared for the reception of summer visitors. Rates, S2 00 per day and from f7 0U to m uu per weeic. Write for circular. jelS-3-D C. H. KEMP. Prop. HOWLAND HOTEL, LONG BRANCH. N. J HEXRT WALTEE.PrOp'n, JNO. B.SCHL038EB, Manager, late of Hotel Duquesne. Pittsburgh JV7-59 BRESSON bPRlNGS. PENNA.. MAIN J line Pennsylvania Railroad, on top of ALLEGHENY MOUNTAIN8. THE MOUNTAIN HOUSE Now open. All trains stop at Creuoo. For circulars, eta, address WM. R. DUNHAM, Supt, nrv7-2-rsu Cresson. Cambria Co.. Pa. bTEAHEKS AND EXCURSIONS. -UNARI LIME. S?EW YORK TO LIVERPOOL. VTA OTJE1QJ3. iYek. TOWW. f EOM ylEK NOBTH Bl FAST ESrKESS MAIL SEKY1CK. Serrla, JnlvlX 5:00 AM lUmbrta, Anfr. 3, 10 AX circria. ui; T20. noou. Serrla. Ancuit 10. 3 p V Aaranla. Jnlr". SAM Kothnis,Auit. 14. 7:30AM lEtrurta. Aur.I7.10:3) A if Gallia. July 31. 7 A M Cabin nase&ce. S60L 1 UiDin passage, teu, ?su ana fiuo; intermedial. rs. Bteeraire tickets to aad from all parti c ne mt Terr low rales. VEK.ON a. KKOU.N A CO., General Agontl. .nrone ai Terr low rates. 4 Bowl.nr Green, tiew York. 3. 1. ItCCOKJllCK. Agent. Fourth ave. and smltbfleld St., CTttitrarz. Jrs- State Line To Glasgow. Belfast, Dublin and Liverpool. FROM NEW YORK EVERY THURSDAY. Cabin passage (35 to $50. according to locaUom of stateroom. zcqi8lonS65toS90. Meerajre to and from .Europe at Lowest Rates. AUSTIN BALDWIN i CV.. General Agents, S3 Broadway, New YoiK. J. J. McCORMICK. Agent, Pittsburg. Pa. mh!2-D ANCHOR LINE. Atlantic Express Service; LIVERPOOL via QUEENSTOWN. Steamship "CITY OK KOlIE," from New York. WEDXiiSDAY.July24.Aur.a. Sept. 13, Oct. 14? Saloon passage. w to 8100: second-class, S33. GLASGOW SERVICE. Steamers erery Saturday from N rw York to GLASGOW and LONDONDERRY. Cabin passage to Glasgow, Londonderry, Liver pool. S0 and GO. Second-class, iai. Steerage passage, either service. S3). baloon excursion tickets at ledueed rates. Travelers' circular letters of credit and -drafts for any amount Issued at lowest current rates. Jfor books or tours, tickets or Information, Apply to HEMIKKSON BRUTHEKS. X, TV., or J. J. McCOKMICK. Fourth and bmlthoeld: A. D. SCORER i SON. 415Smlthfieldst., Pittsburg: W. SEili'LE, Jr., ltt Federal St., Allegheny. jczr-jrwT ALLAN LINE ROYAL MAIL STEAMSHIPS, THE ONLY DIRECT LINE From GLASGOW, LONDONDERRY, and GALWAY To PHILADELPHIA. Passenger Accommodation Unexcelled. Prepaid Intermediate. $30. Steerage, !I9. Passencers by this route are saved the ex. Eense and inconvenience attending transfer to liverpool or from New York. j. J. Mccormick, or a.d. scorer son, myZ7-67-snnr SALE. not space enough here to enu Jifetimeto load up with Dry Goodsl articles of every description, which! we quote prices on as specimens this particular sale only. Ingrains! colored Cashmeres at njc, havej . it!. single and double fold fabrics! bargains. Black' Lace Buntings such as Wraps, Jackets, Shawls,- turkey red Tablings at 20c, wortKI Come early and often for choice Challis,- and other Wash Goods! V. 3 3 ' "5 .H' 3t-J &.-'.. thC!-&, L? UW-IJ- !- twwgj tS-MH -v