rwrevsi-1 JS 'ITFKSEU TEE m m K. liLMAGEONSTOEMS. fBte Brindisi Sermon Deals With Paul bWZZr An rifl "IfoilitAi-fnnfinn ?3 Illustrated by his owe perils iJa. a Former Torace Through an Atlantic fr4 Cyclone of Furies. r. HIS MOST TflKILLIXG WOKD PICTURE rsrrcui to the dispatch.. BElNDisr, November 17. TheBev. T. De Witt Talmage, D. D., preached ia this Italian port to-day. Hia subject was "A Mediterranean Voyage," and he took for his text Acts xxrii, 41: "And so it came to -pass that they all escaped to land." Dr. .Talmage said: Having visited your historical city, which Xre desired to see because it was the ter minus of the most famous road of the aces, the Roman Appian Way, and for its mighty fortress overshadowing a city which even Hannibal's hosts could not thunder down, we must to-morrow morning leave your har bor, and after touching at Athens and Corinth, voyage about the Mediterranean to Alexandria, Egypt I have been reading this morning in my New Testament of a Mediterranean voyage in an Alexandrian chip. It was this very month of November. The vessel was lying in a port not very far from here. On board that vessel were two distin guished passengers; one, Josephus, the his torian, as we have strong reasons to believe; the other, a convict, one Paul by name, who was going to prison for upsetting things, or, as they termed it, "turning the world up side down." This convict had gained the confidence of the captain. Indeed, I think that Paul knew almost as much about the sea as did the captain. He had been ship wrecked three times already; he had dwelt much of his life amidst capstans, and yard arms, and cables, and storms; and he knew what he was talking about Seeing the equinoctial storm was coming, and perhaps noticing something unseaworthy in the vessel, ne advised the captain to stay in the harbor. But I hear the captain and the first mate talking together. They say: "We cannot afford to take the advice of this landsman, and he a minister. He may be able to preach very well, but I don't be lieve he knows a m&rlinespike from a luff tackle. All aboard! Cast on! Shift the helm lor headway! Who fears the Medi terranean?" PAUL WAS EIGHT. They had gone only a little way out when a whirlwind, called Euroclydon, made the torn sail its turban, shook the mast as you would brandish a spear, and tossed the hulk into the heavens. Overboard with the cargo! It is all washed with salt water and worthless now; and there are no marine in surance companies. All hands ahoy, and out with the anchors! Great consternation comes on crew and passengers. The sea monsters snort in the foam, and the billows clap their hands in glee of destruction. In a lull of the storm I hear a cnain clank. It is the chain of the great apostle as he walks the deck or holds fast to the rigging amid the lurching of the riiip the spray dripping from his long beard as he cries out to the crew: "Now, I exhort you to be of good cheer; for there shall be no loss of any man's life among you, but of the ship. For there stood by me this night the angel of God, whose I am, and whom I serve, saying, Fear not, Paul, thou must be brought belore Csesar, and lo, God hath given thee all them that sail with thee." Fourteen days have passed, and there is no abatement of the storm. It is midnight Standing on the lookout, the man peers into the darkness, and, by a flash of lightning, sees the long white line of the breakers, and knows they must be coming near to some country, and ferrs that in a few moments the vessel will be shivered on the rocks. The chip flies like chaff in the tornado. They drop the sounding line, and by the light of the lantern they see it is 20 fathoms. Speeding along a little further, they drop the line again, and by the light of the lan tern they see it is 15 fathoms. Two hundred and seventy-six souls within a lew feet of fcwful shipwreck! HE SAW THEIE SUBTERFUGE. The managers of the vessel, pretending they want to look over the side of the ship ud underbid it, get into the small boat. expecting in it to escape; but Paul sees through the sham, and he tells them that if they go off in the boat it will be the death of them. The vessel strikes; Tne planks spring! The timbers crack! The vessel parts in the thundering surge! Oh, what wild struggling for life! Here they leap from plank to plank. Here they go under as if they would never rise, but, catching hold of a timber, come floating and panting on it to the beach. Here strong swimmers spread their arms through the waves until their chins plow the sand, and they rise up and wring out their wet locks on the beach. When the roll of the ship is called, 276 people answer to their names. "And so," says my text, "it came to pass that they es caped all safe to laud." I learn from this subject: First, that those who get us into trouble will not stay to help us out These ship men got Paul out of Fair Havens into the storm; bnt as soon as the tempest dropped upon them, tney wanted to go off m the small boat, caring nothing for what became of Paul and the passengers. Ah me! human nature is the same in all ages. They who get us into trouble never stop to help us out. They who tempt that young man into a life of dissipation will be the first to laugh at his imbecility, and to drop him out of decent society. Gamblers always make fun of the losses of gamblers. They who tempt you into the contest with , fists, saying, "1 will back you," will be the first to run. Look over all the predicaments of your life, and count the names of those who have got you into these predicaments, and tell me the name of one who ever helped you out THEY AID YOU IN A WBONO WAY. They were glad enough to get you out from Fair Havens, but when, with damaged rigging, you tried to get into harbor, did tbey hold for you a plank or throw you a rope? Not one. Eatan has got thousands of men into trouble, but he never cot one out. He led them into theft but he wonld not hide the goods or ball out the defendant. The spider shows the fly the way over the gossamer bnage into the cob web: but it never shows the fly the way out of the cobweb over the gossamer bridge. I think that there were plenty of fast yonngmento nelpthe prodigal spend his money; but when he had wasted his substance in riotous living, tbey let aim go to the swine pastures, while , they betook themselves to some other new comer. Tbey who take Paul out of Fair Ha vens will be of no help to him when he gets into the breakers of Melita. I remark again, as a lesson learned from the texttbat it is dangerous to refuse the counsel of Competent advisers, Paul told them not to go out with that ship. Tney thonght he knew nothing about it. They said: "He Is only a minister!" They went and the ship was de stroyed. There are a great many people who now say of ministers: 'Tbey know nothing about the world. They cannot talk to usP Ah, iny friends, it is not necessary to nave the Asiatic cholera before you can give it medical Treatment in outers, it is not necessary to have your own arm broken before you can know how to splinter a fracture. And we who etand in the pulpit, and in the office of a Christian teacher, know that there are certain styles of belief and certain kinds of behavior that will lead to destrnction as certatnlv as Paul knew that if that ship went out of Fair Havens It would go to destruction. ONE THING TO BE SDEE OF. "Rejoice, O young man, in thy youth; and let thy heart cheer tbee in the days of thy youth; but know now that for all these things God will bring thee into Judgment" We may not know much, but we know that Young people refuse the advice of parents. They say: "Father Is over-suspicious, and mother is getting old." But those parents have been on the sea of life. They know - where the storms' sleep, and during their voy age have seen a thousand battered hulks mark ing the place where beauty burned, and intel lect foandered. and morality sank. Thevars old sailors, having answered many a shznal of distress, and endured great stress of weather, and gone scudding under bare poles; aud the old folks know -what they are talking about Look at that man in his cheek the glow of in- teroal fires. His eye flashes not as once with tbonght, but wits low passion. His brain is a sewer through which Impurity floats, and his heart the trouch in which lust wallow and drinks. Men shudder as the leper passes, and parents cry. "Wolt I wolf P Yet he once said the Lord's Prayer at his mother's knee, and against that Iniquitous brow once pressed a cure mother's lip. Hut he refused her coun sel. Ho went where enroclyduns hare their lair. He foundered on the sea, while all hell echoed at the roar of the wreck: Lost Pacifies! Lost Paciticsl Another lesson from the subject is that Christians are always safe. There did not seem to be much chance for Panl getting out ot that shipwreck, did thereT They bad not, in those days, rockets with which to throw ropes over foundering vessels. Their lifeboats were of but little worth. ONE CLASS CEBTAIN TO ESCAPE. And yet notwithstanding all the danger, my text says that Paul escaped safe to land. And so It wjl always be with God's children. They may he plnqged Into darkness and trouble, but by the throne of the eternal God, I assert it, they shall all escape safe to laqd." Sometimes there comes a storm of commer cial disaster. The cables break. The masts falL The cargoes are scattered over the sex Oh! what struggling and leapihg on kegs and hogsheads and cornbins and store shelves! And yet, though they may have it so very hard in comnarrcial circles, the good, trusting in God, all come safe to land. Wreckers go out on the ocean's beach and find the shattered bulks of vessels; and on the streets of onr great cities there is many a wreck. Mainsail split with banker's pen. Hulks abeam's end on insurance counters. Vast credits sinking, having suddenly sprung a leak. Yet all of thein who are God's children shall at last, through His goodness and mercy, escape to?and. The Scandmavianwarriors used to drink wine out of the skulls ef the enemies they had slain. Even so Goa will help us. out of the conquered ills and disasters of life, to drink sweetness and strength for our souls. IIYonhive. mr friends, had illustrations, in L j our own life, of how God delivers His people. l nave naa illustrations in ray uwu mu ui hid same truth. I was once in what on your Medi terranean you call a Earoclydon, but what on the Atlantic we call a cyclone, but the-same storm. The steamer Greece of the National Line, swung out into the river Mersey at Liver- Tinnl. bound for Now York. We had on board ,00, crew and passengers. Wo came together strangers Italians, Irishmen, Englishmen, Swedes, Norwegians, Americans. Two flags floated from the masts British and American ensigns. We bad a new vessel, or one so thoroughly remodeled that the voyage had around it all the uncertainties of a trial trip. AIT HOTIB OB TWO OP PEEIL. The great steamer felt its way cautiously out into the sea. The pilot was discharged; and, committing ourselves to the care of Him who holdeth the winds in His fist, we were fairly started on our voyage of 3,000 miles. It was rough nearly all the way the sea with strong buffeting disputing our path. But one night, at 11 o'clock, after the lights had been put out, a cyclone a wind jnst made to tear ships to pieces caught us in its clutches. It came down so suddenly that we had not time to take in the sails or to fatten the batches. You may know that the bottom of the Atlantic is strewn with the ghastly work of cyclones. Oh! they are cruel winds. They have hot breath, as thongh they came up Irom infernal furnaces. Their merriment is the cry of affrighted passen gers. Their play is the foundering of steam ers. And. when a sbit goes down, they laugh until both continents bear them. They go in circles, or, as I describe them with my band rolling on! rolling on! with finger of terror Tiling ua iuu wuiie Buceb w. uic wo iuio sentence of doom: "Let all that come within this circle perish! Bngantmes, go down! Clip pers, go down! Steamships, go down!" And the vessel, hearing the terrible voice, crouches in the surf, and as the waters gurgle through the hatches and port holes, it lowers away, thonsands of feet down, farther and farther, until at last it strikes the bottom; and al) Is peace, for they have landed. Helmsman, dead at the wheel! Engineer, dead amid the ex tinguished furnaces! Captain, dead in the gangway! Passengers, dead in the cabin! Buried in the great cemetery of dead steamers, beside the City of Boston, the Lexington, the President, the Cambria waiting for the arch angel's trumpet to split up the decks, and wrench open the cabin door and unfasten the hatches. MANY STOKMS CONCENTEATED. I thought that I had seen storms on the sea before; but all of them together might have come under one wing of. that cyclone. We were only 600 or 900 miles from home, and in high expectation of soon seeing our friends, for there was no one on board so poor as not to have a friend. But it seemed as if we were to be disappointed. The most of us expected then and there to die. There were none who made light of the peril, save two. One was an Englishman, and he was drunk, and the other was an American, and he was a fool ! Oh ! what a time it was ! A night to make one's hair turn white. We came out of the berths and stood in the gangway, and looked into the steerage, and sat in the cabin. While seated there we heard overhead something like min ute guns. It was the bursting of the sails. We held on with tooth bands to keep our places. Those who attempted to cross the floor came back bruised and gashed. Cups and glasses were dashed to frag ments; pieces of the table getting loose, swung across the saloon. It seemed as it the hurri cane took that great ship of thonsands of tons and stood it on end, and said: "Shall I sink it, or let it go this once?" And then it came down with such force that the billows trampled over it each mounted on a fury. We felt that everything depended on the propelling screw. If that stopped tor ait instant we knew the ves sel would fall off into the trough of the sea and sink, and so we prayed that the screw, which three times since leaving Liverpool had already SoSltft not Vtop now.' 01,rhow anxJ iously ne listened for the regular thump ot the machinery, upon wnicn our lives seemea to de pend. After a while some one said "The screw is stopped!" No; its sound had only been overpowered by the uproar of the tempest, and we breathed easier again when we heard the regular pulsations of the overtasked machinery going thump, thump, thump. WATEE IN THE CABIN. At 3 o'clock in the morning the water cov ered the ship from prow to stern, and the sky lights gave way! The deluge rushed in, and we felt that one or two more waves like that must swamp us forever. As the water rolled back and forward in the cabins, and dashed against the wall, it sprang half way up to the ceiling. Bushing though the skylights as it came in with such terrific roar, there went up from the cabin a shriek of horror which I pray God I may never hear again. I have dreamed the whole scene over again, but God has mercifully kept me from hearing that one cry. Into it seemea to be compressed the agonv of expected shipwreck. It seemed to say: "I shall never get borne again! My children shall be orphaned, and my wife shall be widowed! I am launching now into eternity! In two minutes I shall meet mv God!" There were about 550 passengers in the steer age, and as the water rushed in and touched the furnaces, and began violently to hiss, the poor creatures in the steerage imagined that the boilers were giving way. Those passengers writhed in the water and in the mud, some praying, some crying, all terrified. They made a rush for the deck. An officer stood on deck and beat them back with blow after blow. It Mas necessary. They could not have stood an instant on the deck. Oh! how they begged to get out of the hold of the ship! One woman, with a child In her arms, rushed up and caught hold of one of the officers aud cried: "Do let me out! I will help you! Do let me outl I onnot die here!" Some got down and prayed to the Virgin Mary, saying: "O, blessed mother! keep us! Have mercy on us!" ALL WEBE IN EABNEST. Some stood with white lips and fixed gaze, silent in their terror. Some wrung their hands and cried out: "O God! what shall I do? What shall I dor' The time came when the crew could no longer stay on the deck, and the cry of the officers was: "Below! all hands below!" Our brave and sympathetic Captain Andrews whose praise I shall not cease to speak while I live had been swept by the hurricane from his bridge and had escaped very narrowly with his life. The cyclone seemed to stand on the deck, waving its wing, crying: "This ship Is mine! I have captured it! Ha! ha! I will command it! If God will permit I will sink it here and now! By a thousand shipwrecks, 1 swear the doom of this vessel!" There was a lull in the storm; but only that it might gain additional fury. Crash! went the lifeboat on one side. Crash! went the lifeboat on the other side. The great booms got loose, and, as with the heft of a thunderbolt, oounded the deck and beat the mast the jib-boom, stnddlng sail boom, and square sail boom, with their strong arms, beating time to the awful march and music ot the hurricane. Meanwhile the ocean became phosphorescent The whole scene looked like fire. The water dripping from the rigging, there were ropes of fire; and there were masts of fire; and there .THE GREAT. ;DYfi COSTQUBRS Believes and cures EEBUMATISM, NEURALGIA, Sciatica, Lumbago. HEADACHE, Toothache, Sprains, BKTJTSES, Burns and Scalds. At Druggists ajcd Dealers, MS WASHES H.VMEIEH Q8..6a81mtft,IM. TRADE relpj MAmcd REMedy; PAlN PAIK. ship of fire, sailing on a sea of fire, through a night of fire. en a night of are. fiiayj. never see anything like It again! Everybody prayed. A lad of 12 years of age crot down and prayed for his mother. ji i should give up," he said, "I do not know what would'become of mother." There were men who, I think, had not prayed tor SO years, who then got down on their knees. NO HESITANCY ABOUT IT. When a man who has neglected God all his life feels that he has come to his last time, it makes a very busy night. Allot our sins and shortcomings pass through our minds. My own life seemed utterly Unsatisfactory. I could only say, "Here Lord, take mo as I am. I cannot mend matters now. Lord Jesus, thou didst die for the chief of sinners. That's me! It seems. Lord, as if my work is done, and poorly done, and upon Thy inunltemercylcast myself, and In this hour of shipwreck and darkness commit myself and her whom I hold by the band to Thee, O Lord Jesus! praying thatlt may be a short struggle in the water, and that at the same instant we may both ar rive in glory!" ...,...,. Oh! I tell you a man prays straight to the mark when he has a cyclone above him, an ocean be neath him, and eternity so close to him that he can feel its breath on his cheek. The night was long. At last we sawthe dawn looking through the port holes. As In the olden time, in the fourth watch of the night Jesus came walking on the sea, from wave cliff to wave cliff; and when He puts his foot upon a billow, though it may be tossed up with might it goes down. He cried to the winds, hush! They knew His voice. The waves knew His voice. The waves knew His foot. They died away. And in the shining track ol bis feet I read these letters on scrolls of foam and fire. "The earth shall be filled with the knowl edge of God as the waters cover the sea." The ocean calmed. The path of the steamer be came more and more mild; until, on the last morning out the sun threw round about us a glory such as I never witnessed before. God made apavement of mosaic, reaching from horizon to horizon, for all the splendors of earth and heaven to walk upon a pavement bright enough for the foot of a seraph bright enough for the wheels of the archangel's chariot As a parent embraces a child, and kisses away its grief, so over that sea, that had been writhing in agony in the tempest, the morning threw its arms of beauty and of bene diction, and the lips of earth and heaven met As I came on deck it was very early, and we were nearing the shore I saw a few sails against the sky. They seemed like the spirits of the night walking the billows. X leaned over the taffrail of the vessel, and said, "Tby way, O God, is in the sea, and Thy path in the great waters," AFTEE THE STOBJI. v It crew lighter. The clouds were hung In purple clusters along the sky; and, as if those purple clusters were pressed into red wine and poured out upon the sea, every wave turned into crimson. Yonder, fire cleft stood opposite to fire cleft; and here, a cloud, rent and tinged with light, seemed like a palace, with flames bursting from the windows. The whole scene lighted up until it seemed as if the angels ot God were ascending and descending upon stairs of fire, and the wave crests, changed into jasper, and crjstal and amethyst, as they were flung toward the beach, made ine think of the crowns of heaven cast before the throne of the great Jehovah. I leaned over the taffrail again, and said, with more emotion than be fore: "Thy way, O God, is in the sea, and Thy path in the grbat waters!" So, I thought will be the going off ot the storm and night of the Christian's life. The darkness will fold its tents and away! The ralrtan feet of the risinc morn will come skin- ping upon the mountains, and all the wrathful billows of the world's woe break into the splen dor of eternal joy. And so we come into the harbor. The cyclone behind us. Our friends before us. God, who is always good, all around us. And if the roll of the crew ana the pas sengers had been called, TOO souls would have answered to their names. "And so it came to pass that we all escaped safe to land." And may God grant that when all our Sabbaths on earth are ended, we may find that, through the rich mercy of our Lord Jesus Christ; we all have weathered the gale! Into the harbor of heaven now we glide. Home at tastl Boftty we drilt on the bright silver tide, Home at last Glory to God ! All our dangers are o'er; We stand secure on the glorified shore. Glory to Uodl we will shout evermore. Home at last! Home at last! Sneezing Catarrh. The distressing sneeze, sneeze, sneeze, the acrid, watery discharges from the eyes and nose, the painful Inflammation extending to the throat the swelling of the mucous lining, caus ing choking sensations, cough, ringing noises in the head and splitting headaches how familiar these symptoms are to thousands who suffer periodically from head colds or influenza, and who live m ignorance of the fact that a single application of Sanford's Radical Cube fob Catabrh will afford instantaneous 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 mucus accumu lations, the hearing affected, smell and taste gone, throat ulcerated and hacklngcongh grad ually fastening itself upon ths debilitated sys tem. Then it is that the marvelous curative power of Saxford's Radical Cube manifests itself in instantaneous and grateful relief. Cure begins from the first application. It is rapid, radical, permanent economical, safe. Sanford's Radical Cube consists of one bottle of the RADICAL CURE, one box Ca TAEBHAL SOLVE3T and an IMPROVED In- iialek; price, JL Potter Drtjo and Chemical Corpora tion, Boston. I CAN'T BREATHE. Chest Pains, Soreness, Weakness, jatHacking Cough, Asthma, Pleurisy Spand Inflammation relieved in one r minnteand assisted to a speedy cure by the- Cuticnra AntWPainPIaater. A new, instantaneous and infallible antidote to pain. 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Bemlngton. who resides on East S5th street A few weeks ago he bad a beautiful wife and a happy home; now his ears are pained by the cries of his motherless children. Mrs. Bemtngton passed through the Summer In good health and spirits, but the first change In the weather chilled her, caused her to n h. nnlckened her pulse and brought on a gen eral feeling of weariness. Sir. KemlDgton thought lt WM 0Diy a cold, and so neglected It. nhl Whv didn't iao someimng nerore it was too late?" he exclaimed bitterly. "Ikneirsho was weakened by the heat of the Summer, all the pores of the skin were open and she was an easy victim to disease, bnt I might have saved her if I had only assisted Nature In time. Instead of walt lne, and then sending for the doctor when it was too'late." Nearly every man or woman who has passed through the Bummer months is specially liable to the stuck of this same demon. Pneumonia, which comes so quickly, so unexpectedly and often ends so fatally. 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On September 16 he save the fol lowing statement for publication: "This is to certify that I have been cured of Catarrh, from which I had suffered for about five years, by tne phvsicans of the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute, 823 Penn avenue. Patrick Gorman." WJMf7AwM-'''' MISS LYDIA MORGAN, Whom SO doctors said must die of consumption. Her disease was caused by catarrh and was cured by the physicians of the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute. She lives on Kearsaree street, near Virginia, on Mt. Washington. Treatment by Correspondence. A system by which patients are successfully treated at their homes by correspondence. Mr. David West, of Prospect, Butler county, an extensive farmer and a well-known dealer in horses, suffered from catarrh and asthma for 15 years. Bis head, nose and throat was con tinually stuffed up and had a burning sensa tion. He was so suffocated at nights that he conld not sleep, and there were wheezing SMinds from his lungs when he breathed. He began treatment, and on November 5 he wrote: "I have no stuff ed-up feeling, or burning in my nose and throat, no suffocation nights or wheezing." The Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute is per manently located at 823 Penn ave. They cure Catarrh. Dyspepsia and Diseases of Women. Consultation free to alL Office hours, 10 A. K. to 4 P. M., and 6 to 8 P. St Sundays, 12 to 4 p. w. nolS-MWPSu Buy from the maker; then no time is lost And best returns are gained at lowest cost. Wanamaker & Brown, clothiers. Stylish Black Cheviot Suits, $14, $16, $18 and $20, manufactured in the best manner and sold direct to the retail customer at but one profit. Bargain prices prevail throughout every department in our stores. Sixth street and Penn avenue nol8-D XSSSgsj Latest improved Spectacles and Eye-Glasses; will fit any nose with ease and comfort. The largest and best stock of Optical Instruments and Artificial Eyes. KORNBLTJM, Theoretical and Fraotioal Optioian. No. CO Fifth avenue, seal 'Wood street. Telephone No. I860- eoU-SBa. 35 ggSBEgJ?' NEW ADTEUTISSHXNTS. popular Excursions FQR $I 75; A series of Intellectual 'Excursions will be made during the year 1890, under the aus pices 'of the Publishers of The Youth's Companion, of Boston. By sending $1.75 to them you will receive The Youth's Companion regularly once a week during the yar 1890. You can then join these wonderful excursions, which are under the personal charge of famous and experienced men, and fully illus trated in the paper. This week, in imagination you cross the Atlantic in com pany with Captain Kennedy, on the White Star Steamship Ger manic, and enjoy all that he has to reveal; next week you travel into the very heart of Africa with Commander Cameron and search for Stanley ; you go to Burrnah and help to purchase Barnum's White Elephant; you reach the East Indies in time to be shaken by the great Earthquake of August, 1883; you go to Rome and see a Pope elected ; you live for a day in a Lighthouse on the Massachusetts coast; you take an economical Bicycle Tour through Europe ; you go to Ire land and your head grows dizzy .as you climb the Skelligs ; you visit Samoa; you sail the Ger man Ocean, and feel the hard ships of the North Sea fishermen, as you witness their wild life, and you enjoy a day's rough adventure hi a Canadian Lum ber Camp. A year hence, your jour. neyings over, you will know more of the world, your vision will be broader, your interests larger, and your mind full of pleasant memories and valuable ideas. Will you not join these excursions by sending a year's subscription (1.75) to the Pub lishers. Write for the Prospectus, containing full particulars. The Youth's Companion, ' 41 Temple Place, Boston, Mass. GOLD MEDAL, PABIB, 1878. 17. BAKER & CO.'S MM Cocoa absolutely vure and it is soluble. No Chemicals are nied In Its prcpintlon. It hii nor than ikrm timet tXt ttrmffA ol Cocoa mixed with 8tticb, Arrowroot or Sogir, and It therefore far mare economical, cotting Utt tXaa on ml a cut. It if delidoui, nosriihls?. strengthening, EiSHT DiazSTD, and admirably adapted for Isralldi ai well ai forperaomla health. Sold by Grocere everywhere. W.BAKER & CO., Dorchester, Mass. if I ift mM 1 I II 1 ANOTHER MONEY SAVING, BUSINESS PRODUCING- W mmkt AT DOUGLAS MACKIE'S. 100 only Ladies' Elegantly Beautitnl Htriped Cloth Newmarkets, that ware meant to be a bargain at S3 00, we've secured to sell at $3 75 each come earl v for choice. We'll show you the prettiest collection of Ladies' Cloth Newmarkets, embracing all the latest novelties, in plain, stripe and plaid weaves, at J5 00, 57 00 and 10 00 and on up; you'll save from SI 00 to 3 00 by selecting from this range. 100 only Ladies' Stockinette Jackets. Handsomely Braid Trimmed, well offer this week at $3 00 each, they're worth and would be cheap bought at $7 00. We've got an exceeding excellent range. Ladles English Seal Plush Jacket, marked to sell at IS 75, 510 00, S12 00 up to finest, from tl 75 to $5 00 less than usual prices. A most superb exhibit Ladies' English Seal Plush Sactraes at $16 60, SIS 60, 120 00 up to best made, at our figures, they're from S3 60 to S3 00 less than you'd expect them to be. Note Please A trulv excellent assortment, best makes, London Dye, Seal Skin Bacauea. at prices that'll save you from 23 00 to SS0 00 a garment. Kuea, AND ALSO REMEMBER An abundant supply ot all the latest novelties, in Ladies' Stylish Jackets and Newmarkets. In Plnsh and Velvet Sleeves, etc, etc Misses' aud Children's Wraps, Cloaks, etc. Thousands to select from. All at our well known POPULAR, EVERYBODY'S BARGAIN PRICES, 151 and 153 FEDERAL STREET, AliEGHENY. nol8-ltwr FURNITURE AND CARPETS GRANDEST VARIETY! BEST QUALITIES! NEWEST STYLES! KEEOH Oasli and C:t?ecLl3 923 and 925 Penn avenue, near Ninth street. THE LARGEST STOCK. LATEST STYLES. W. M. L AXRI3, XJBUJDTJSrG- SHOE IDE-AJDEI Wholesale House, 515 and 517 Wood street. USE f TflDT AUP .- THE r .Mst ikit. aiABfc UNLY RVA GeoAMacbeth&Co. Pittsburgh NEW AD y-EKTISEMEXTS. " COME and SEE At $1 25 You can buy a pair of Gents' Heavy Sole Tip Bals. or Con gress. At $ 1 . 50 A pair of fine sewed ' Gents' Dres3 Shoes, plain and tip toes, Bals., Button and Congress Gaiters. At $2 Gents' Waterproof Grain High Lace Shoes, with heavy soles. Also genuine Calf Boots -AX- GD.SIMEN'S 78 OHIO ST ALLEGHENY. Corner of 8anduaky street. 'noi-mr Reduce Your Shoe Bills. Schurr's Patent Shoe Sole Protectors are an absolute protection for the soles of shoes for men working in mines, mills, foun dries, steel works, blast furnaces, eta ASK YOUR SHOE DEALER FOR THEM, Dealers supplied by Pittsburg Shoe Finding Homes. oo7-29-srrh RAILS0AD3. PITTSBURG AND LAKE XEIE KA1LKOAD COMPANY. Hchedule la effect Norember 17. 18S. Central time. DKFABT-lTor Cleveland, :C0, '8:00a. m.. '1:35, Niio, "BiW p. m. For Cin cinnati. Chlearo and Bt-iLonls. 5:00 a. m.. ?!;. 8:30 p.m. For Buffalo. 8:00 a. m., iOS, 8:S0 p. n. mot uaianunca. 8:n a. m.. 4:3 n. for Younxatown anl Newcastle, t;0O, 3:00. 10:15 a. m.. 1:3S. 4.-3I. '3:30 u. m: Jfor Beaver Falls, 8:03, r:W, 8:00, 10:15 a. m.'I:K. 8:30, M.-2J, :2a, :3up. m. For Chartlers. :oo, 15:83 a. m., 5:15, o:oow;u. jjou. o:w, a;ouk i;ou,iu;is.ni.,i2:ua.iz:?a, 112:45, 1:40, 3:30, 3:50, 11:30, 6:05, 6:20, '3:10, '10:30 p.m. Abbivi From Cleyeland, 8d3 a. to., 12:30. 5:40. 7:55 p. ra. From Cincinnati, Chicago and St. Louis, 12:J0, 7:55 p. m. From Buffalo, : a. m., '12:30. 10 p. m. From Salamanca, 12:30, 7:55 p. m. From Yonnjrstown and Mew Castle. 6:23, 9:20 a.m., '12:30. &. 7:55. 10 p.m. From Beaver Falls, 5.-2S, 6:25, 7s21, 9:20 a. m., J2iJ0" 1:21 5:0. 7:55. 10 n. ra. T7" P.. O. &y. trains for MansSeld. 8:30s. to., 2:3iul a.fWTi- Tn. Tni Kflpn Anil RfvchtnAnt fl.Wl m ' 1 3:80 p.m. , -i' P.. C. & Y. trains from Mansfield, Essen and Ueeehmont, 7:o8a m., 11:30 a. m. P., McK.AT. B. K.-J)EPAKT-For Kew Ha ven, 15:30 a. m., '3:30 p.m. For West Newton, 15:30, 9:30 s. m.. 3:30, 5:20 p- m. Abbtvx From New Haven, t"8ffl0 a. ra., J:15 p. m. From West Newton, 6:15, t"8s a. m.. 1:25. 5:15p. m. -t For MeKecsport, Elizabeth, Mono&gahela Cltv and Belle Vernon, 6:30, 17:30, 11:15 s,m., 13:30, From Belle Vernon. Mononobela City. Eliza beth and McKeeaport, 7:45 a. m., 19:20, 12:30, 5:00, 15:15 p. m. . y. ui Uallv. ISnndavs ISnndays only. JW1U ran one noar lato on Bnnday. IWI11 ran two boors late os San .to av. aa City Ticket Office. KBSmlthfleld Street, inTSBUKO AND WESTERN RAILWAY Trains (Ct'lBtsn dtlme) Leave. Arrive. Day Ex., Akron.Toledo, Kane t:40a m 8:00 a m 7:37 p ra IM n ra Bailer Accommodation.., laicKO repress lusiiyj...... New Castle Accommodation, 13n tier and Foxtrarz" Ac 12:40 p m 11 JO a m uu p m 5:30 p m 7:00ii a 5:30 a m jrirsi class isro to uucagro, iu w. eceona cuss, S9S0. Tollman Ballet steeping ear to Chicago LOWEST PRICES! EASIEST TERMS! BEST TREATMENT! 'S' ZEHo-CL.se., se23-3rnrr EST ASSORTMEN T LOWEST PRICES. Retail Stores, 406 and 408 Market street. OC16-46-HWT kw - flEST IHIMNEY5 mew ABVz&TisxacEXTs. KAMNNS' DAILY CARD OP REUft into our store to buy his he could make a penectly lew minutes. Uur assortment is so extensive as to brace everything he could possibly desire. Our Clothing is Fit for Presidents, anW: Don't You Forget It ! As a matter of fact we keep as fine Clothing as can be made. No materials, trimmings and workmanship are too good for us to put in our garments. We place our Ready-made Clothing along with that turned butfby. the best merchant tailors and we challenge vou to detecft any dinerence, save in tne nait tnat oi the tailor. No wonder, under tablrshment is the acknowledged mecca of the fine ers of Pittsburg and Allegheny. And we know from! perience that there is as .much (if not more) style among! ine gentlemen ox tne twin iNew York, Philadelphia II T nowever, n you insist on getting your clothings made to order, leave your measure in our extensive, cus" torn department third floor. Though we turn out tfiel finest work possible, we charge nothing like the high prices of the exclusive tailors. The difference between the prices of our ready-made and made to order garments , is simply the natural proportion in the cost of getting, av single garment made or stance, the buits or Overcoats we make to order for $3c are equal to tnose wnicn OUR CROWDED SALESROOMS LAST . plainly, told the story of and prices. Your custom dorsement of our methods treat you right to earn that custom. We have always maintained that your interest is outs ours, yours. " Th more and oftener you come the better it is for you. ' Itl is our: large number of customers that cheapen the goody for each other. Popular co-operation is the secret of the! low-price clothing you buy success. KAUFMANNR' I V ) V ij' Fifth Avenue and TmOIiEB A.T.JS XAJXKOADS. i From Pittsburg Union Stilloo. BnnsulvaniB Lines. Train Ron by Cenirsl Time. SOUTHWEST SYBTEM-PANHANDLE ROUTE. lrfre ror Cincinnati ana St. ixmn, a i :u s, m.t A 7:30 a. m.,d 9:09 and d 11:1 J p. m. DennUon, 2:45 p. m. Chicago, d 1:15 a. m. and 12:05 p. m. Wheeling, 7.-3U a. m.. 12:05, 8:10 p. m Steabrn vllle, 5:55 a. m, Washinzton, 5:55, 8:35 a. m.. lOi. 5:30,4:15, 4:55 p.m. Balirer10:10a. m. Bnrgetts town, S 11:35 a. m., 5:25 p. m. Mansfield, 7:15. 8:10.11.05 a. m 1:05, 6:30. d 8:30, 8:50 p. m. Mc Donalds, d 4 15. d 10:45 p. m. TBATNS AEMVIfrom the West, d 2:10. d 6:00 a. m., 3:05, d 5:55 p. nr. Dennlson, 9:30 a.m. Bten benrllle, 5.-05 p. m. Wheeling, fclO, 8:45 a. m.. 3:05, 6:53 p. m. Bnreettstown, 7:15 a. m., 3 9:05 a. ra. Washington. 6:55, 7:5a 8:X 10:3 s. m., 2:36. 6:Sp. m. Mansfield, 5:35, 3x 11:40 a. in., 12:46, :5a.8:40asdSS:30p. m. Bulger, 1:40 p.m. McDonalds, d 6:15 a. St., d 8:00 p. m. NOBTHWEST STOTEM-sT. WAYNE KOUTB. Leave ror unicag-o. a 7:25 a. m. 8:46, except Datnrdav 11:20 p.m. d ua dl.ta,d Toledo, 725 a. 2SJ, n. IB., and 7;15 a. m.. via I'.- Kt-W. 2 U.JCV. Castla and Yoangitown. 7:05 a. m.. 12:20, S:43p. m.:Yountown and Nlles, d 12:20 p.m.tMead- vtlle, Erie and Ashtabnla. 7.-05 a. m.. 12.-3) p. m.s Nlles and Jamestown, 3:45 p.m.: Masslllon. 4:10 p. m.; Wheeling and Bellalre, 6:10 a. m.. 12:15. i-M p, m. : Beaver rails, 4:00, 5:05 p. m. ; Beaver ralUH8:a.m.;:Leudale. 5:30a.m. impart rnox ALtxoHXxT Koebester, M a. m.; Beaver Talla. 8:15. 110 a. m.t Enon, M p. ra.; Leetsdale, 5.-60, :00,JO.-oa, 11:45a. m.: 1:11. 3:90. 4 JO, 4:45. 5:3J, 8:15. 730. 8:00 p. m.: Conway, MdO p.m.; FalrOaEsS 11:40a.m.: Beaver Falls, S 4:0p.m.;Leetsdafe. 8 5:30 p. m. Tratss akbtvx Union station from CMcsro, ex cept Monday. 1:50, d 6.-00, d 6:35 a. m., d 3:54 and d 6:40 p.m.; Toledo, except Monday, 1:50. d 6:33 a. m.. 5:55 and 6:50 p. m.: Crestline, 2:10 p. m.; Yonngitown and New Castle, 9:10 a.m.. 1:25, 6:50, 10 1 15 p. m.: Mies and Youngttown, a 6:30p.m.: Cleveland, d 5:50 a. in., 25. 700 p. nv; Wbeellna and Bellalre, 9:00 a. m., 2:25, 7W p. m.: Erie and Ashtabula, 1:25, 10:15 p. m.: Masilllon. 10:00a.m.: Nlles and Jamestown. CIO a.m.: Beaver falls 7:10 a. m., lnop. m.; Beaver Tails, 8 id p. mi Leeted&ie, 10:40 p. m. Abbits AixxOHEirrV'-from Enon, 8.00 a. m.; ConwavB.40. Rochester. 9.40 a. m. : Beaver Falls, 7.10a.m., 5.30 p. m.r Leetsdale, 4.30. 5.3X6.15. o.50,"7.am.. 12.00, iis, i.3i .w, . - P.-m.: Fair Oaks. 8 8.53 a.m.: Beaver jraiis, . fi'in. 1.30 1 IX. W p. m.; LeeUdale, S 6.05 p. iu: Beaver Falls, BS. 15 p.m. d. dallv: R. Snndav oslvt other trains, exeeot Bnaday. A MTOHENY VALLEY- KAILKOAD X.Tralm leave Union Station (Eastern Standard time): Klttanninr Ac ti a. m.: Niagara Ex.. dallr. 8:46 a. m Hal ton Ac. 10:10 a. m.: Valley camp Ac, 22:86 p. m.; ou cuy ana mbou ja- press, M0 p.m. iHnlwn Ae.,0p.m.t Klttannlng AC, tSBp.Bl.1 JSfMDBra U,H(.n, JUHaan Ail. Ida lag Ae.,5.30p..m.r Braebsra Ac, 630p.m.: Hd tea Ac, 708 p. ra.; BaCats Ex- aaUy. Site p. aut Helton Ac, 9:4 ,a.: Braeban Ac. lliK p. a. Qisrca trains lwaasara. 11:48 p. ra. sad t8S n. ra. tollman ffieewas: Cars betwte FitWtHirsr aad BaHUo. J AS. 1'. ANDERSON, . T. AsS.l DAVID MOOABQO. HaavSaat. prXTSBUHS AND CASTLESHANNONB. K. js. samasar xiaae uaoie. us hs iiHraij-j, M89L ui rtbnriiotliM.mlBawlllrnnasfoIlows on every day, except Sunday. Eastern standard tlraes Leaving Fltubnrg-sdB a. nu, 7:10 a. ra., I M0 s.M.. 9-Jba. m.. lldOa. m...l:40p. m 8:40 p. m., 5:10 p. Tn.. 5:50 p.m., 6 JOp. m., 9:30 p.m., 11 JO p. m. Arllugton 5:48 -a. m., 6:20 a. m., 7:18 a.m., 0a.m., 100 a.m., 1M p. m 2H0 p. m 48 p. au, :10b. m.. t:W p. ra 7:10 p. m.. 10:38 P . au Swtdaf trains, leavlac Flatstmrg-10 a. m Ka. L.2iop.m.. 6:10 p. at. 7:10 p. m., t: p. at" AWagtaa-adJa. tt au. iatp.0 m rm, . aa..awvy. v, ..W-.-. r mmhh November 18,'l88!n yc Sley'.. MO . A. MH.1(l7'. OU UIDCU fcU WUi, BW IIHU.lJ to lose. l No marvel that I teiiA to cboose." ,' -miss: THE PRESIDEITi A si Who'll be ourTriewI neighbor acrossthe street? Evidently its much easier tofselecM turning man aiiostjj master. If President! Harrison shoufdstepj ne,w Winter Suit or OveoatJ satisfactory selection -withiff pnee ours being about- ones the circumstances, that ourj cities, as you nna m iJostona or Washington. T. fmJXli a lull hundred. Ihus, tor un- cost 545 elsewhere. SATURDAY the popularity;- qun means your approval of doing business. Wemus from us, and the cause oT ourj Smithfleid Street! and. BETATU nol8-Df' KAJLK9ABS ., vQ PENNSYLVANIA KAU.KOAW ON'S'AND' after November 10, 1288. trains leave-TJnlosf Station. nttJboxi at jouowv Mmutu. imiw" xime K AIN LINE EASTWARD. New York and QUcage t.lmlTiwl of iroffisusTi uonje oaiiv as iua,m, '. Atlantis Extuvh dallv for the East. 1:38 a.: Mau train, dallr. except Bandar. iMu n.- aav, mau, s;wa. m. Day express dally at 5:00 a. ra. Mall exnrest dallv at 1.-00 n. m. cpresa dally at 1.-00 p. m. yntladelpnla express dally at 4:S a. av , eipm cxprtH u n exoresa dallv a rjutcra c wtcm umiiT a . u p im Fart Idne dallv at 8:10 n. m. Greens Dure expressftilo p. m, week day, i jjcttj express jisuu a m wtck ixaja jui uinrara hiuu connect as i boa u of "Brooklvn. Annex" fori rongb trains connect at JeneT'CMr wMMj 'Broouvn Annex" for Brooklvn. N. T-.l avoiainfaonblsiernageaaa 3apay taroaga JU - I . WIT. Trains arrive at TJaloa Station as fsHowsi 8t. Louis. Chlcaio and Cincinnati Exnress. dall v. ....., . ... ...... ...,,,,. ...2400 a. S8 Mall Train, dallr t IiIDrMb. Western Excress. dallr... - 7:46 a-'m.' Pacific Express, dally. .....12:45p. m." 4Jblearo United Exnr&ca. dallv 9:30 o.m. Fast Dae. daily............ ........ USJp.rn.-Ii SOUTHWEST JTENN BAH.WAX. For Unlontowa, 5J0 sad Ids a, m. and 4:35 a. t'M nu. witness cnans oi cam Jiiu p. m., connect-, uk vinsiuitfx AiaiiM arriTO uojb uiumt town at 9:46 a. ra.. 1138. Sias and 8:10 p.m. w jserr it.ennsxi.tania uiviaioa. Butler Accm.....88 a. au, 26 and S:p.nwsS Dpnxiaruaiv jaccuBiaaA.UHV a.m. iw aau vin vm jrnepoTtAceom........4il9. sooand Ji:p. On Sunday. .IMS and 9 JO p. Nortb Apollo Aecota.... .11.-00 a. m. and -00p. Alleabeav Jnnctlom Aeeommodatlon 10 a. Blalrsvllle Aeeossniodailoa , 11:90 p. nwi Trains srnveMFEDESALlfriiXErSTATIONsI auuieaa,- eoanecuag rroas Bntler. .w-"" a. sva Mall Train . l:tn. ia.;l Bntler Aecoa.........9:10 a. at.. 4:and7ip. aufl Blatrsvllle AeeoraraodaUoa...' .JSp--BWJ Mrrcpon accosb. ( w a. au 1 ta, lea ana u au p. i Oil Saadav ...U):ll3i m. and7d0n.i Sprlngdale Aceom.... .U.-lga-u, 3:45, 6i4S p.H aonnApouo Aecota. ...s:40 a. m. anaa:wn.ii MONONQAUELA DIVISION. Cnlontown. : West Brownsville. 7a ami, tov a m. d 4:40 num. On Bnnday, IsOl p. m. For Moaonxanela drj. 4-8 ! Dravottmrg Ac. weekdava. n. m. leStltsahaKli ainM.n.iMLAj.lM i.tnm b . IrfSV eauandU-JSn. m. Sandar. t:4Sn. m, --'- Ticket pBces-Corner Fovfttt avenua aaTrfi CUA3. E.PUH1L J. O. WOOI1 ! O eneral Manactsv Gen'l rasa'r Asnat.1 TJALT1MOKE AND OHIO KAILKOAD jlj scneanieinezrectNOVRuberlsviasi. --, For Wasalngtan. p. a, Baltimore. FaHailel- pau.aa.-t,v xorx. sna. m. ana y:v p. For Camberlaivi- -a -m tnm. "B.-aji For ConnellsvlUr, 4:40and6.-O3a.m Jlrtfltt4t) ana -d p. nu For Cnlontown. 18:40, Tiaxa. tinn ana Jl.-oe rw iw air maaant. 18:48il ra:0Oa. ra.ani ftan and t4.-COp,m r 2,JH M v.Vtvua.1 lnffton. Ja.. 7ana mUl i. S. 6l8B l 7:W n. ra. far tvhuim'. r.fa. 9:0 a ..' SU 1O0 p. to. For Cincinnati and BtyLonl. ''1 m., "7:30 p. m, , iao p. m. ForOolnmboa, "7ws a. m-, "pSrl p.fiu jorse For Newark. "7:05, : a. m'tM, 7J i: Jan. -i 4 ,. tralM arrive from New York. XTuladdabta, Baltimore and Washington, saoa. I3i5ip.; m. Frosa Colnmbns. Cincinnati and CWcaa; 8:a.Bj. : p.m. From Wheeling ! n. m. h-a fhtMM --W MUl-w w,l --a, m aj -aaJip. m. - mroojth Sleeping ears to uaiumorc, nasci ton. tlltlf!lnntl mnA lilearo. Coanollsvltle accommodation al jajTaS aanoay-eaiy. xacFHtba rr Traniftr Com DSD T WlrtieaSliiSl . aMobeefc smom from hotels and re44saatl raanieRat a.s. u, uca awe. sac, wood it;- u J.X. O'SMUiK, -n 'fKA Vz- W tZtt ' - VLl f if.;.-wci II