Pittsburg dispatch. (Pittsburg [Pa.]) 1880-1923, April 07, 1890, Page 8, Image 8

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IODEKMACHPELAHS
Oar Cemeteries Suggest to Dr. Tal
mage an Interesting Problem
BEGAEDIKG RESURRECTION DAT.
Easter JTorninjj Thoughts on the Joyfal
Mcetins in Heaven
WHEN THE GRATE GITES DP ITS DEAD
rtriCIAI. TELEGRAM TO TUB DISPATCn.1
Beookltn, April 6. The Academy of
.Music was apppropriately decorated to-day
for Easter service, and the regular artists of
he Brooklyn Tabernacle were assisted by
eminent musical performers. The hymn
sung before sermon was:
We praise Thee, O God. for the Son of Thy
lore.
For Jesus ntio died and is now cone aborts.
The subject of Dr. Talmage's sermon was
"Machpelah: or. Easter Thoughts." It was
based on the words in Gen. xxhi: 17, 18:
"And the field Ephron, which was in Mach
pelah, which was before Mamre, the field
and the care which was therein, and all the
trees that were in the field, that were in all
the borders round about, were made sure
unto Abraham." Followins is the sermon
in full:
Here is the first cemetery ever laid out
Machpelah was its name It was an arbores
cent beauty, wheie the wound of death was
bandaged rth foliage. Abraham, a rich man,
not being able to bribe the King of Terrors,
Iroposes here, as far as possible, to cover up
lis raraces. Jic bad no doubt preriously
noticed this region, and now that Sarah, his
wife, had died that remarkable woman, w bo at
90 rears of ace had born to her the son Isaac,and
nno now, after she had reached 127 years, had
expired Abraham is negotiating for a family
plot for her last slumber. Enhron owned this
real estate, and after, in mock sympathy for
Abraham, refusing to take anything tor it, now
sticks on a big price 100 shekels of silver. This
cemetery lot is paid for. and the transtermade,
in the presence of witnesses in a public place,
for there were no deeds and no halls of record in
those early days. Then
IK A CAVERS OF LIMESTONE BOCK
Abraham put Sarah, and, a few jears after,
himself followed, and then Isaac and Rebekah.
and then Jacob and Leah. Embowered, pic
turesque and memorable Machpelah! That
"God's-acre" dedicated by Abraham has been
the mother of innumerable mortuary observ
ances. The necropolis of everv civilized land
has vied with its metropolis. The most beauti
ful bills of Europe outside the great cities are
covered with obelisk and funeral vase and
arched gateways and columns and parterres in
honor of the inhumated. The Appian Way of
Rome was bordered by sepulchral commemora
tions. For this purpose Pisa has its arcades of
marble sculptured into exquisite bas-reliefs
and the features of dear faces that have van
ished. Genoa has its terraces cut into tombs;
and Constantinople covers with cypress the si
lent habitations; and Paris has its Pcre la
Chaise, on whose heights rest Balzac and David
and Marshal Sey and Cuvicr ana La Place
and Molierc, and a mighty group of warriors
and poets and painters and musician. Iu all
foreign nations utmost genius on all sides is
expended in the work of interment, mummifi
cation and incineration.
Our own country consents to be tec
ond to none in respect to the lifeless
body. Every city and town and neighborhood
of any intelligence or virtue has, not many
miles away, its sacred inclosure. where affec
tion has engaged sculptor's chisel and florist's
spade and artificer in metals. Our own city has
bbown its religion as Hell as its arr, in the man
ner in which it holds the memory of those who
have passed forever away, by its Cypress
Hills aud its Evergreens arid its Calvary and
Holy Cross and Friends' cemeteries. All the
world knows of our Greenwood, with now
about 2S0.O0O inhabitants sleeping among hills
that overlook the sea. and by lakes embosomed
in an Eden of tloers, our American Westmiv
6ter Abbey, an Acropolis of mortuary architec
ture, a Pantheon of mighty ones ascended, ele
gies in stone, Iliads in marble. hole genera
tions in peace,
-WAITING FOE OTHER GENERATIONS
to join them. .No dormitory of breathless
sleepers in all the world has so many mighty
dead. Among preachers of the gospel, Beth
une and Thomas DeWitt, and Bishop Janes
and Tyng, aud Abeel the missionary, and
Beecher and Buddington and McCImtock and
Inskip and Bangs and Chapin and 2?oah
Schenck and Sa nucl Hanson Cox. Among
musicians, the renowned Gottschilk and the
holy Thomas Hastings. Among philanthro
pists, Peter Cooper and Isaac T. Hopper and
Lucrctia Mott aDd Isabella Graham, and Henry
IJcrgh, the apostle of mercy to the brute crea
tion. Among the literati, the Careys, Alice
and Phoebe, James K. Paulding, and John G.
Eaxe. Among journalists, Bennett and Ray
mond and Greeley. Among scientists, Onnby
Jlitchell, warrior as well as astonomer. and
lovingly called bv his soldiers "Old stars;" the
Drapers, splendid men, as I well knon,
one of tnetn my teacher, the other
my classmate. Among inventors, Elias
Howe, who, through the sewing ma
chine, did more to alleviate the toils of woman
hood than any man that ever lived, and l'rof.
Horse, who gave us magnetic telegraphy; the
former doing his work with the needle, the lat
ter with the thunderbolt. Among physicians
and surgeons, J oseph C Hutchinson and Marion
tSims and Dr. Valentine Mott, w ith the follow
ing epitaph which he ordered cut in honor of
the Christian religion: -Mv implicit faith aud
hope is in a merciful Redeemer, who is the
resurrection and the life. Amen and amen."
This is our American .Machpelah as sacred
to us as tiles' Machpelah in Canaan, of
which Jacob uttered that pastoral poem in one
Terse: "There they buried Abraham, and Sarah
his wif ; there they buried Isaac, and Rebekah
his wile; and there I buried Leah."
At this Easter service I ask and answer what
may seem a novel question, but it will be
found, before 1 get through, a practical and
useful and tremendous question: What will
resurrection day do for the cemeteries T First,
J remark, it will be their supernal beautitica
tion. At certain seasons it is customary in all
lands to strew flow crs over the mounds of the
departed. It may have been suggested by the
fact that Christ's tomb was in a garden. And
when I say garden, I do not mean a garden or
these latitudes. The late frosts of spring and
the early frosts of autumn are so near to each
other that there are only
A FEW MONTHS OF FLOWERS
in the field. All the flowers we see to-day had
to be petted and coaxed, and put under shelter
or they would not have bloomed at all. They
are the children of the conservatories. But at
this season and through tho most of the year
the Holy Land is all ablush with floral opu
lence. You find all the ro3-al family of flowers
there, some that you supposed indigenous to the
far North, and others indigenous to the tar
South the daisy and hyacinth, crocus and
anemone, tulip and water lily, geranium and
ranunculus, mignonette and sweet marjoram.
In the collego at Beyrout you may see Dr.
Post's collection of about 1.600 kinds of Holy
Land flowers; while among trees are the oak of
frozen climes, and the tamarisk of tho tropics,
walnut and willow. Ivy and hawthorn, ash and
elder, pine and sycamore. If such floral and
botanical beauties are the wild growths of the
fields, think of what a garden must be in Pales
tine! And in such a garden Jesus Christ slept
after, on the soldier's spear. His last drop of
blood had coagulated. And then see how ap
propriate that all our cemeteries should be
florallzed and tree shaded. In June, Green
wood is Brooklyn's garden.
"Well, then," you say, "how can ton make
out that the resurrection day will beautify the
cemeteries? Will it not leave them a plowed
up ground? On that day there will be an earth-
Suake, and will not this split the polished Aber
een granite, as w ell as the plain slab that can
afford but the two words. "Our Mary,' or "Our
Charley?"' Well, I will tell you how the res
urrection day will beautify the cemeteries. It
will be by bringing np the faces that w ere to us
once, and in our memories are to us now, more
beautiful than any calla lily, and the forms that
are to us more graceful than any willow by the
waters. Can you think of anything more beau
tiful than tho reappearance of those from
whom we have been parted? I do not care
which way the tree falls in the blast of the
judgment hurricane, or if the plowshare that
day shall turn under the rose leaf and the last
china aster, if out of the broken sod shall come
the bodies of our loved ones not damaged, but
Irradiated.
THE IDEA OF THE RESURRECTION
gets easier to understand as I hear the phono
graph unroll some voice that talked into it or
Bung into it a year ago, just before our friend's
decease. You tnrn the wire, and then come
forih the very tones the very accentuation, the
very ough, the cry song, of the person that
breathad into it once, but is now departed. If
a, man can do that, cannot Almighty God. with
out half trying, return the voice of your de
parted? And if He can return the voice, why
not the lips and the tongue and the throat that
fashioned the voice? And If the lips and tho
tongue and the throat, why not then the brain
that suggested the words? And if the brain,
why not the nerves, of which the brain is the
headquarters? And if He can return the
nerves, why not the muscles, which are less in
genious? Aud if the muscles, why not the
bones, that are less wonderful? And if the
voice and the brain and tho muscles and the
bones, whv not the entire body? If man can
do the phonograph, God can do the resurrec
tion, will it bo the same body that in the last
day shall be animated? Yes, but infinitely im
proved. Our bodies change every seven years, and
yet, in one sense, it is the same body. On my
wrist and the second finger of my right hand
there is a scar. I made that at 12 years of age,
when, disgusted at the presence of two warts,
I took a red-hot iron and burned them oil, and
burned them out. Since then my body has
changed at least a half dozen times, but those
scars prove it is the same body. And we never
lose our identity. If God can and does some
times rebuild a man five, six, ten times, in this
world, is it mysterious that He can rebuild him
once more, and that in the resurrection? If
He can do it ten times, I think He can do it
11 times. Then look at the 17-year locusts.
For 17 years gone, at the end of 17 years they
appearand by rubbing the hind leg against
the wing make that rattle at which all the hus
bandmen and vine-dressers tremble as the in
sec tile host takes np the march of devastation.
Resurrection every 17 years!
Another consideration makes the idea of
resurrection easier. God made Adam. He
was not fashioned after any model. There had
never been a human organism, and so there
was nothing to copy. At the first attempt God
made a perfect man. He made him out of the
dust of the earth. If out of ordinary dust of
the earth and without a model God could make
a perfect man, surely out of the extraordinary
dust of the mortal body, and with millions of
models, God can make each one of us a perfect
being in the resurreciion. Surely the last un
dertaking would not be greater than the first.
See
THE GOSPEL ALGEBBA.
Ordinary dust minnsamodel equals a perfect
man; extraordinary dust and plus a model
equals a resurrection body. Mysteries about
it? Oh. yes; that is one reason why I believe
it. It would not be much of a God who could
do things only as far as I can understand.
Mysteries? Oh, yes; but no more about the
resurrection of your body than about its pres
ent existence. I will explain to you the last
mystery of the resurrection, and make it as
plain to you as that two and two make four, if
you will tell me how your mind, which is en
tirely independent of your body, can act upon
your body so that at your will yonr eyes open,
oryoor foot walks, or your hand is extended.
so l nnd nothing in the riioie statement con
cerning the resurrection that staggers me for a
moment. All doubts clear from my mind; 1
say that the cemeteries, however beautifnl
now. will he more beautiful when the bodies of
our loved ones come np.
They will come in improved condition. They
will come up rested. Tne most of them lay
down at the last very tired. How olten you
have heard them sav, "I am so tired !" The
fact is, it is a tired' world. If I should go
through this audience, aud go round the world,
I could not find a person in any style of life
ignorant ot the sensation ot latigue. 1 ao not
believe there are 50 persons in this audience
who are not tired. Your head is tired, or your
back is tired, or your foot is tired, or your brain
is tired, or your nerves are tired. Long jour
neying, or business application, or bereave
ment, or sickness have put on you heavy
weights. So tho vast majority of those who
went out of this world went out fatigued.
About the poorest place to re st in is this world.
Its atmosphere, its surroundings, and even its
hilarities arc exhausting. So God stops our
earthly life, and mercifully closes the eyes,
and quiets the feet, and folds the bands,
and more especially gives quiescence
to the lung aud heart, that havo
not had ten minutes' rest from the first res
piration and the firs; beat. If a drummer boy
wore compelled in the army to beat his drum
forZi hours without stopping, his officer would
be court-martialed for crneltv. If the drum
mer boy should be commanded to beat his
drum for a week without ceasing, day aud
night, he would die in attempting it.
THE HEAKT'S CONSTANT LADOK.
But under your vestment is a poor heart
that began its drum beat for the march of life
SO or 40 or GO or 80 years ago, and it has had no
fnrlough by day or night; and. whether in con
scious or comatose state, it went righ". on, lor
if it had stopped seven seconds your life wonld
have closed. And yonr heart will keep going
until some time after your spirit has flown, for
the auscultator says that after the last expira
tion of 1 nng and the last throb of pulse, and
after the spirit is released, the heart keeps on
beating for a time. What a mercy, then, it is
that the grave is the place where that won- I
drous machinery .of ventricle and artery
can hall! Under the healthful chem
istry of the soil all the wear and
tear of nerve and muscle and bono
will be subtracted and that bath of good, fresh,
clean soil will wash off the last ache, and then
some of the same style of dust out of which the
body of Adam was constructed may be infused
into the resurrection body.
Hnwcan the bodies of the human race, which
hate had no replenishment from the dust since
the time of Adam in paradise, get any recuper
ation lrom the storehouse from which he was
constructed without our going back into the
dust ? That original, life-giving material hav
ing been added to the body as it once was, and
all the defects left behind, what a body will be
the resurrection bod! And will not hundreds
of thousands of such appearing above the
Gowanns Heights make Greenwood more beau
tiful than any June morning after a sbowei ?
The dust or the earth being the original
material for the fashioning of the first
human being, we have to go back to the same
place to get a perfect body. Factories are apt
to be rough places, and those who toil in them
have their garments grimy and their hands
smutched. But who cares for that, when they
turn out for us beautiful musical instruments
or exquisite upholstery! What though the
grave is a rough place, it is a resurrection-body
manufactory, and from it shall come the
radiant and resplendent forms of our friends
on the brightest morning the world saw ever.
Yon put into a factory cotton, and it comes out
apparel. You put into a factory lumber and
lead, and it comes out pianos and organs. Ana
so into tho factory of the grave you put in
pneumonias and consumptions, and they come
out health. You put in groans and they coma
out hallelujahs. For us, ou the final day, the
most attractive places will not be the parks or
the gardens or the palaces, but the cometeries.
WHEN THE END COMES.
We are not told in what season that day
will come. If it should be winter, those who
come up will be more lustrous than the snow
that covered them. If in the autumn, those
who come up will be more gorgeous than the
woods after the frosts have pencilled them. If
in the spring, the bloom on which they tread
will be dull compared with the rnbicund of
their cheeks. Oh the perfect resurrection body!
Almost everyone has some defective spot In his
physical constitution; a dull ear, or dim ey e, or
a rheumatic foot, or a neuralgic brow, or a
twisted muscle, or a weak side, or an inflamed
tonsil, or some point at which the east wind or
a season of overwork assaults him. But the
resurrection body shall be without one weak
snot, and all that the doctors and nurses and
apothecaries of earth will thereafter have to do
will be to rest without interruption after the
broken nights of their earthly existence. Not
only will that day be tho beantification of well
kent cemctcrie". but nme of the graveyards
that have toon neglected, and been the
pasture-ground for cattle and rooting
places for swine, will for the first time have
attractiveness given them. It was a shame
that in that place ungrateful generations
planted no trees and twisted no garlands, and
sculptured no marble for their Christian an
cestry; but ou the day of which 1 speak tho
resurrected shall make the place of their feet
glorious. From under the shadow of the
church, where they slumbered among nettles
and mullein stalks and thistles, and slabs
aslant, they shall rise with a glory that shall
flash the windows of the village church, and
bv the bell tower that used to call them to wor
ship, and above the old spire beside which their
prayers formerly ascended. What triumphal
procession never did for a street, what an ora
torio never did for an academy, what an orator
never did for a brilliant auditory, what obelisk
never did for a king, resurrection morn will do
for all the cemeteries.
This Easter tells us that in Christ's resurrec
tion our resurrection, if wo are His, and the
resurrection of all the pious dead, is assured,
for He was "the first fruits of them that
slept." Renan says He did not rise, but SS0
witnesses, 00 of them Christ's enemies, say He
did rise, for they saw Him after He had risen.
If He did not rise, how did GO armed soldiers
let Him get away? Surely 60 living soldiers
ought to be able to keep one dead man! Blessed
be God! He did get away. After His resurrec
tion Mary Magdalene saw Him. Cleopas saw
him. Ten disciples in an upper room at Jeru
THE GOOD OFFICE OF:
Is well illustrated In
the cure of neuralgia.
iuu uiim vuipiom oi
I which Is. ah intermit-
' tingpain which follows
the course of the nervo
affected. St. Jacobs Oil
i bv trentle rubblmtand
applied frequently, will euro
NEURALGIA.
106 Sacfcctt St, Erooklyn. N. Y., Jan. SI, ISO.
I was taken with neuralgia In side and
suffered 6 months. I was given up by doc
tors, but was cured by St. Jacobs OIL
MICHAEL McQINN.
At DBcaocrrs Aim Dxalebi.
THE CHARLES A. V0GSLER CO., BtKIaort, Hi.
aw .4 ir
t?M-rtAK-,
kimi.i is
TOl
THE
salem saw Him. On a mountain the 11 saw
Him. Five hundred at once saw Him.
FAREWELL TO THE EARTH.
Prof. Ernest Renan, who did not see Him,
will excuse us for taking the testimony of the
580 who did see Him. Yes, yes; He got away.
And that makes me sure that our departed
loved ones and we ourselves shall get away.
Freed Himself from the shackles of clod. He is
not going to leave us and ours in the lurch.
There will be no door-knob on the inside of our
family sepulchre, for we cannot come out of
ourselves; but there is a door-knob on the out
side, and that Jesus will lay hold of, and open
ing, will say: "Good morning! You havo slept
long enough! Arise! Arise!"' And then what
flutter of wings, and what flashing of rekindled
eyes, and what gladsome rushing across the
family lot, with cries of "Father, is that you?"
"Mother, is that yon?" "My darling is that
your' "How you all have changed! The cough
gone, the croup gone, the consumption gone,
the paralysis gone, the weariness gone. Come,
let us ascend together! The older ones first,
the younger ones next! Quick now, get into
line! The skyward processien has already
started! Steer now by that embankment of
cloud for the nearest gate!" And as we as
cend, on one side the earth gets smaller until
it is no larger than a mountain, and smaller
until it is no larger than a palace, and smaller
until it is no larger than a ship, and smaller
until it is no larger than a wheel, and smaller
until it is no larger than a speck.
Farewell, dissolving earth! But on the other
side, as we rise, heaven at first appears no
larger than your hand. And nearer it looks
like a chariot, and nearer it looks likeathrone,
and nearer it looks liko a star, and nearer it
looks like a sun, and nearer it looks like a uni
verse. Hail, sceptres that shall always wave!
Hail, anthems that shall always roll! Hail,
companionships never again to be broken, and
friendships never again to part! That is what
resurrection day will do for all tho cemeteries
and graveyards from the Machpelah that was
opened by Father Abraham in Hebron to the
Machpelah vesterdav consecrated. And that
makes Lady Huntington's immortal rhythm
most nnmisitf" !
When Thou, my righteous Judge, shalt come
To take Thy ransomed people home, .
blialll among them stand?
Shall such a worthless worm as I,
Who sometimes am alrald to die.
lie found at Thy right hand?
Among Thy saints let me be found,
Whene'er th' archangel's trump shall sound,
To see Thy smiling face:
Then loudest ot the throng I'll sing.
VhiIe heaven's resounding arches ring
With shouts of sovereign grace.
A Trifle Shy on Assets.
MINNEAPOLIS, April C A schedule of
the condition of C. F. Cottrell & Co., in
solvent barrel manufacturers, was filed to
day. It shows assets of $20,000 and liabili
ties of ?97,000. The heaviest creditor is the
National City Bank, of New York, for
524,339.
FOR DYSPEPSIA
Use Horaford's Acid Phosphntc.
Dr. J. J. McWilliams, Denison, la., says: "I
have used it largely in nervousness and dyspep
sia, and I consider that it stands unrivalled as
a remedy in cases of this kind. I have also
used it iu cases of sleeplessness, with very grat
ifying results."
FASHIONS FOR BOY'S' CLOTniNG.
Pretty New Styles for This Spring Received
From New York.
The celebrated makers and designers of
boys' and children's clothing, Messrs. Bro
kaw Bros, of New 'Xork, have placed the
spring fashions in these garments with Mr.
A. L. Sailor, Sixth and Liberty streets, who
is sole agent for this city. Such is the
reputation of these garments that mention of
them is sufficient. They are the finest and
most exclusive, but not the costliest, made.
MWF
Did Yon See Anything Drop?
Yes; it happened at the People's Store.
Several hundred rolls of carpet dropped out
of the house upon the floors of happy house
keepers, who bought at bargain prices. A
few more hundred rolls still on hand. Bar
gains all of them. Cami-bell & Dick.
Yonr Ceiling is Cracked nnd Broken.
It may be in vour parlor, your library,
your kitchen, diningroom or bedroom.
We have just what you want to put on over
the old broken plaster, and it will stay. Em
bossed metal ceiling plates. Expressly for
residence ceilings.
Neat, beautiful artistic and in almost end
less variety of design.
If you are building, and don't intend to
put nil your money on the outside, send for
our illustrated catalogue and see what we
have got for the interior.
A. Nortiirop & Co.,
Twenty-third and Mary streets, S. S., Pitts
burg, Va.
Fancy Prices.
The public generally are tired of paying
fancy prices for photographs. They now
patronize Hendricks & Co., No. G8 Federal
st, Allegheny, the best and cheapest photo
graph gallery in the cities. Good cabinets,
?1 a dozen.
Don't Experiment With the Throat nnd
lungs. Use only the old brand Baker's Pure
Cod Liver Oil or Baker'sEmulsion. Druggists.
Sneezing Catarrh.
The distressing sneeze, sneeze, sneeze, the
acrid, watery discbarges 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 in ignorance of the fact that a single
application of Sanfokd's Radical Cuke fob
Catarrh will afford instantaneous relief.
But this treatment in cases of simple Catarrh
gives buta faint idea of what this remedy will
do in the chronic forms, where the breathing is
obstructed by cboElng, putrid mucous accumu
lations, the hearing affected, smell and taste
gone, throat ulcerated and hacking cough
gradually fastening itself upon tho debilitated
system. "Then it is that the marvelous curative
power of Sakforu's Radical Cure mani
fests itself in instantaneous ana grateful relief.
Cure begins from tho first application. It is
rapid, radical, permanent, economical, safe.
Sanford's Radical Cure consists of one
bottle of the Radical Cure, one box Ca
tarrhal Solvent and an Improved In
haler; price. Si 00.
Potter Drug fc Chemical Corporation,
Boston.
It Stops the Pain.
Aching Muscles, Back, Hips and
bides. Kidney and Uterine Paine,
and all Pain, Inflammation aud
weakness Itclieved in one nnnuto
by i lie Cuticura Antl-Pnin Plaster. The first
and only pain-subduing plaster. New, original,
instantaneous, never tailing. Vastly superior
to all other plasters and remedies for the relief
of pain. At all druggists 25 cents: fivo for SI;
or, postage free, of Potter Druo andCheju
cal Corporation. Bostou, Mass. jif
THOMSON'S IMPROVED .
GLOVE-FITTING CORSETS
Possess the highest degree of merit. Fifteen
grades and three lengths (snort, medium
and extra long) to choose from. Con
stant improvements in shapes.
AND OUR
NEW SMOOTH FLAT
SEAM
HAVE MADE
THOMSON'S
GLOVE -FITTING
The Most Popular of
Any.
A Perfect Fit and
Absolute Comfort
WiiftiiS'?'' SA'vM Guaranteed.
LANGD0N, BATCHELLER & CO.,
Successors to Thomson, Langdon fc Co., New
York, Sole Manufacturers.
For sale by first-class dealers throughout the
United States. mb21-63-irwF
uvji&e ijL . r
THECREATEN CL!SH REM DyTi
Beecham's Pills 1
I For Bilious and Nervous Disorders. 1
I "Worth a Guinea a Box "but sola I
1 for 25 cents,
BY ALL DRUGGISTS.
m U RVBrMi3
PITTSBURG- DISPATCH,
SAD EIED W0J1CN.
1 Why so Many Ladlesare Miserable Clearly Ex
plainedSome Stirring Remarks by One
Who Knows.
"Ifeel sad every time I seo a woman." The
above remark was made to the writer by one of
the oldest and most prominent physicians in
Now York.
"Is it possible that you are a woman hater,
doctor?"
"Not at all, but I havo seen so much suffer
ing, so many women who are miserable, that I
cannot help feeling sorry for them alL How
many ladies do you know that are perfectly
well and healthy? Howmany enjoy life as they
should? Is this not enough to make one feel
sorrowful?"
"There must be a cause for all this, doctor."
"There is. Women are weak and their trou
bles largely arise from weaknesses. When a
women is weak she requires strength. Her
body, her mind and all ber functions must bo
nut in a healthy condition, or she cannot secure
strength. Notbingdoes this so easily and surely
as pure spirits taken in moderation, either be
fore meals or between meals. 1 know scores of
ladies that are kept in perfect health, strength
and brilliancy by the judicious use of Duffy's
Pure Malt Whiskey. Many of these ladies are
wives of ministers and profossors. and most of
them are temperance women. They realize
that Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey furnishes the
best and only positive help, and they are intelli
gent Riioufrh to nrofit bv such knowledge. I
know whereof I speak andl speak as a temper
ance man. The nest temperance people or to
day are the one3 who use pure spirits in moder
ation, and find that strength, vigor, color and
brightness are the resnlts, rather than weak
ness, sallowness and a loss of interest in every
thing in life."
I was much impressed with the remarks of
the doctor, and, believing their importance, re
produce them entire.
Absolute Proof of Success
Is the fact that the hundreds of testimonials
of cures made by the specialists of tho Catarrh
and Dyspepsia Institute at No. 323 'Pcnn ave
nue, and which have been published in this
paper, have not only contained tho residence
but the full name AS SIGNED BY THE PA
TIENT, thus proving their genuineness. To
say that a physician can cure a disease is one
thing, and to prove that ho has cured it is an
other. If they have the means to euro the dis
eases of their specialty and thus provo this
fact by referring yon to hundreds whom they
havo cured in your own city and at your own
door, what better evidence can they give? The
physicians of this institution arc specialists in
the true sense of the term, as no patients are
received for treatment except thoso suffering
from catarrh, dyspepsia or diseases of women.
MORE SHARPSBURG TESTIMONY.
Tho above is a portrait of Miss Mary F. Hart
man, of Sharpsnurg. and a sister of Mr. John
Hartman, whoso portrait and testimonial re
cently appeared in these columns. Miss Hart
man has also suffered from catarrh, and the
symptoms were a dropping of mucus from her
head into her throat, whero it became very
tenacious and hard to raise. She coughed, and
often felt dizzy. Her stomach became very
weak, so that she felt sick after eating, and
would often vomit up her food. She was con
tinually tired and fully realized that she was
gradually getting weaker. After taking a
course of treatment from these specialists she
says: "It gives me pleasure to state that f have
been cured of catarrh.
"MARY F. HARTMAN."
Please bear in mind that THEY HAVE
BUT ONE OFFICE, and which is PERMA
NENTLY lXK'ATkDat323Pcnn avenue.
Office hours, 10 A. si. to 4 p. it., and 6 to 8 r. u.
Sundays. 12 to 4 p. u.
Consultation free toalk Patients treated suc
cessfully at home by correspondence. Bend
two 2-cent stamps for question blank and ad.
dross the Catarrh and Djspepsia Institute. 323
Penn avenue. Pittsburg. ap5-MFSu
There's a great difference
in lamp chimneys depends
on the glass. One pops when
ever anything happens, some
times when nothing happens.
Another almost never breaks.
Lamp chimneys are like
segars they cost so little
apiece and so much by the
year! the breaking kind. The
other sort is like the measles
once is enough.
Can you tell them apart?
The unbreakable chimney has
a "pearl-top. " The mak
ers, Macbeth T-J& Co., Pitts
burg. ap2-MWT
Tnfeo no a'loes unless
W. L. Douglas' name and
nrlpA nrn ftramDed on tho
bottom, ir tho dealer cannot supply too.
send direct to factory, enclosing advertised
price.
$3 SHOE GENTLEMEN.1
Fine Calf, Heavy Laced Grain and Creed
moor Waterproof. , . ,
Best in the world. . &nn'?J1,.l
S5.0O GENUINE nANIJEWED SHOE.
84.00 HANn-SEWEI VELT SIIOE.
83.150 POLICE AND FAKMEnS' SHOE.
82.00 EXTRA VALUE CALF bllOE.
S2.85 & S2 WORKINGMEN'S i SHOES.
S2.00 and S1.75 BOYS' SCHOOL SHOES.
All made in Congress, Button and Lace.
$3 & $2 STOES lafd.s?s.
S1.7C SHOE FOR MISSES.
Best Material. Best Style. Best FlttinBi
TV. L. Douglas, Brockton, Mass. Sold by
FOR SALE BY
H. J. A G. M. Lang, Forty-fifth and Butler sts.
J. N. Frohing, 389 Fifth ave. D. Carter, 73
Fifth ave. E. C. Sperber, 1328 Carson st. In
Allegheny Citv, by Henry Uosser, 108 Federal
st, and E. G. Hoilman, 72 Rebecca st.
iaH-GO-M'vJl,
Latest improved Bpectacles and Eye-Glasses;
Will fit any nose with ease and comfort. The
largest and best stock of Optical Instruments
and Artificial Eyes.
KOBNBLTJM, Theoretical and
Praotical Optician.
No 50 Fifth avenue, near Wood street.
Telephone No. 163K. de2RS
THE DISPATCH BUSINESS OJTFIOE
' HAS BEEN EEMOVED
To corner Bmithfield and Diamond sts.
mh9-U7 I
V'a'i irF''rtii , ift-ni hfW rtMitftfrfiiikhlrf
WL, DOAJGLAS
V..cgfg- r y Vi ;xS.-y
MONDAY, APRIL V,
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS.
CARPETS,
WALL 7 PAPER.
BIG STOCK.
NEW GOODS.
LOW. PRICES
In all new ohoice styles for
spring:. Also Portlers, Cur
tains, Linoleums, Window
Shades, Etc. Come and see
ua It will be to your inter
est "We show 50 styles of
Linoleum in all qualities,
and all grades of Carpets
and Wall Paper.
Geo. W. Snaman,
136 FEDERAL STREET,
ALLEGHENY,
fel7-113-MWP
Ccletoratcd.
Grand
DENVER RANGE.
Sold by all stove dealers. Manu
factured by GRAFF, HUGUS &
CO., 632 and 634 Liberty street
mh3-6-MWP
OFFICIAL PITTSBURG-
No. 33L1
AN ORDINANCE-AUTHORIZING THE
Department of Public Works to purchase
from Jacob Weber's heirs ten acres and 101.27
perches of land in the Nineteenth ward of
Pittsburg.
Section 1 Be it ordained and enacted bv the
city of Pittsburg, in Select and Common Coun
cils assembled, and it is hereby ordained and
enacted by the authority of the same. That the
CHef of the Department of Public Works of
the said city be and is hereby authorized, em
powered and directed to purchase in fee simple
for the use and benefit of said city from Jacob
Weber's heirs for the consideration hereinafter
named all that certain piece or parcel of land
situate in the Nineteenth ward. Pittsburg,
bounded and described as follows, to wit: Be.
ginning at a pin on the northwestern corner of
lands now belonging to Thomas W. McCune
and R. A. Balph and the city water works
property; thence north 53 15 west sixty-seven
and fifty-nine one hundredths (67.50) perches on
said line of said McCune and Balph to a pin on
line of property lately owned by Samuel Gar
rison; thence south 13 40' west on said
line twenty-two and fortv-two one
hundredths (22.42) perches to a pin;
thence south 43 35' east sixty-one and ninety
eight one hundredths (01.1)8) perches to a pin on
line of city propert; thence north 30 53' east
thirty-two (32) perches on said line to place of be
ginning, containing ten acres one hundred and
one and twenty-seven one-hnndredths perches
(10 acres 101 27-100 perches) more or less, and
upon the delivery of said deed in fee simple the
Controller of said city is hereby directed to
issue his certificate for a warrant for the con
sideration, to wit: eleven thousand (511,000)
dollars, and chargo the same to appropriation
No. 41.
Section 2 That any ordinance or part of ordi.
nanro conflicting with the provisions of this
ordinance bo and the same is hereby repealed
so far as the same affects this ordinance.
Ordained and enacted into a law in Councils
this 10th dav of March. A. D. 1890.
H. P. FORD. President of Select Council.
EITK10RDI1ARY CMTAH SALE.
DOUGLAS & MACKIE
Have purchased for spot cash the entire stock Harness Madras Curtains of Wilson Bros,, the
world-renowned muslin and curtain manufacturers, Glasgow, Scotland. We had to take the
whole lot or none. We've got 'em, and will sell them at prices that neither you nor wo over saw
curtains sold at before.
FOR EXAMPLE: White Harness Madras Curtains, 3 yards long, for 28c, 50c, 53a and 78 c
a pair, and they are worth from 85c to SI 50 a pair.
White Harness Madras Cmtains, 3 yards long, for 88c and 51 2.3 a pair, the usual price for
which would be 81 75 and S2 50.
White Harness Madras Curtains, i yards long, SI 25, Jl 38, $1 48, SI 03 and SI 89 a pair; regul ar
price of these vary from $2 50 to U 50.
m IN CONJUNCTION WITH ABOVE
Will show one of tho most prominent Nottingham Lace Curtain manufacturers' entire stock of
curtains. (For certain reasons we cannot mention tho name.) PRICES AND QUALITIES
TALK LOUDER THAN WORDS.
Nottingham Lace Curtains, 3 yards long, from 42c to 9Sc a pair.
Nottingham Lace Curtains, 3 yards long, from SI to S3 75 a patr.
Nottingham Lace Curtains, 4 yards long, from SI 95 to S3 75 a pair.
AND PLEASE TAKE NOTICE .
Above Sale Commences TUESDAY, April 8, 7:30 a. m.
D. & M. desire to intimate that in consequence of their rapidly increasing business they
have been compelled to annex the store next door. They will commenco alterations at once
Due notice will be given cf opening new building
ZDOUGKLA.S 3c IMICIEOIIEL
151, 153 and 155 FEDERAL ST., ALLEGHENY.
ap7-HWJ
THE DISPATCH
BUSINESS OFFICE
REMOVED
From Fifth avenue to Corner Smithfield
and Diamond Streets building formerly
occupied by Ahlers, merchant tailor.
apg-117
ssssssssBllMsTHiissssssHl
-i -if ' -
1890.
OFFICIAL PITTSBURG.
Attest: GEO. SHEPPAUD. Clerk of Select
Council. GEO. L. HOLL1DAY, President of
Common Council. Attest: GEO. IIOOTH,
Clerk of Common Council.
Mayor's office, March, 13, 1890. Approved:
WM. McCALLIN. Mayor. Attest: VV. H.
McCLEARY, Mayor's Clerk.
Recorded in Ordinance Book, vol. 7, page 316,
28th day ot March. A. D. 1890.
No. 332.1
AN ORDINANCE-AUTHORIZING THE
Department of Public Works to purchase
from H. Sellers McKeo 13 acres and 158.10
perches of land in the Nineteenth ward of
Pittsburg.
Section 1 Be it ordained and enacted by the
city of Pittsburg, in Select and Common Coun
cils assembled, and it is hereby ordained and
enacted by the authority of the same. That the
Chief of the Department of Public Works of
the said city be and he is hereby au
thorized, empowered and directed to
purchase in fee simple for the use
and benefit of said city from II. Sellers McKee
for the consideration hereinafter named, all
that certain piece or parcel of land situate in
the Nineteenth ard, Pittsburg, bounded and
described as follows, to wit: Beginning at apin
on the southwestern corner of land conveyed by
CasperNegley to said city, on the line of land
of the late James McCullv, deceased, thence
along other land of the said city, north 30 Z&
east 43.7 perches more or less to corner of land
of Jacob Weber, deceased, thence north 49 35
west 02 perches more or less to a
pin; thence south 14 15' west 56.G
nerches more or less to a pin.
where this land comers with land of the said
James McCullv, deceased; thence along said
land south 59 degrees 25 minutes east 45 perches,
more or less, to the place of beginning, con
taining fifteen acres, one hundred and firty
eight and one-tenth perches (15 acres, 153.1
perches) more or less and upon the delivery of
said deed in fee simple, the Controller of said
city is hereby directed to issue his certificate
for a warrant for the consideration, to wit: six
teen thousand seven hundred and twenty dol
lars (616,720), and charge the same to appro
priation No. 41.
Section 2 That any ordinance or part of or
dinance conflicting with the provisions of this
ordinance ue and tne same is nereoy repealed
so far as the same affects this ordinance.
Ordained and enacted into a law in Conncils
this 10th day of March, A. D. 1890.
H. P. FORD, Presiuent of Select Council.
Attest: GEO. SHEPPARD, Clerk of Select
CounciL GEO.' L. HOLLIDAY. President ot
Common Council. Attest: GEO. BOOTH,
Clerk of Common Council.
Mayor's office. March 13, 189a Approved
WM. McCALLIN, Mayoi. Attest: W. II.
McCLEARY, Mayor's Clerk.
Recorded in Ordinance Book, vol. 7, page 347,
28th day of March, A. D.1890.
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT THE
report of viewers on the paving of Park
'Way avenne, from Penn avenue to the city
line, has been approved by Councils, which
action will be final, unless an appeal is filed in
the Court of Common Pleas within ten (10)
days from date. E. M. BIG ELO W,
Chief of Department of Public Works.
PlTTSnuna. April 3. 189a apS-U
KA1I.KOADS.
From Pittsburg Union Station.
ennsylvania Lines.,
Trains Run by Central Time.
ESTSYS'rKM-PAMHAWDLEKOUTJS.
Leave for Cincinnati and St. Louis, a 1:14 a. m
d 7:30 a. m.,d 9:00 and d 11:15 p. in. Dennlson, 2:11
p. xn. Chicago, d 1:15 a. m. and 12:05 p. m.
Wheeling, 7.-3U a. in.. 12:05, 6:10 p.m. ateaben
vllle, 5:55 a. m. Washington, 5:55, 8:35 a. m., 1:55,
3:30,4:45,4:55 p.m. Bulger. 10:10 a. m. liurgetts
town, !j 11:35 a. m., 5:25 p. m. Mansfield, J 115,
9:30. 11.00 a.m.. 1:05, C-.M, d 8:30. 9:50 p. m. Mc
Donalds, d 4 15. d 10:45 n. m. .
Trains aiibivk from the West, d 2:10, d S:C0 a.
m., 3:05, d 6:55 p. m. Dennlson, 9:30 a.m. Steu
benvllle, 5-06 p. m. Wheeling, 2:10, 8:45 a. m..
3:05, 5:55 p. m. BurgetUtown. 7:15 a. m.. b 9:0-5
a. m. Washington. 6:55, 7:50. 8:40, 10:25 a. m.,
2:35. 6:25 p. m. Mansfield, 5:35, 8:30, 11:40 a. m.,
12:45, 3:55, 9:40 and S6:20p. m. Bulger, 1:40 p. m.
aicuonaius, ud:ms, m., uv:ujp. m,
NOKTHWESTSYSTEM-KT. WAYNE KOUTE.
Leave for Chicago, d :2i a.m., d 12:2V dl:0O, d
1:45, except Saturday 11:3) p.m.: Toledo, 7:25 a,
m., d 12:20, d 1:00, and except Saturday 11:20 p.m.:
Crestllne.5:45 a.m., Cleveland, 6:10a m.:l2:45d 11:05
p. m., and 7:25 a. m.. vial.. Ft. W.& City. -.New
Castle and loungstown. 7:05 a. in.. 12:20, S:4op.
m.: Yonngstowa and Miles, d 12:20 p. m. ; ilead
vlile, Erie and Ashtabula, 7:05 a. ni.. 12:20 p. m.;
Miles and Jamestown, 3:45 p. m.; Masslllon, 4:10
p.m.; Wheeling and Bellalre, 6:10 a. m.. 12:45,
3:30 p.m.: Beaver Falls, 4:00, 5:05 p. m.;lteayor
i alia a 8:20 a in.; Leetsdale. 5:30a. m.
DIPABTPROM ALLEGHENY Rochester, 6:30 a.
in. ; Beaver Falls, 8:15. 11:00 a. m.; Knon, 3:00 p
m.: Leetsdale, 5:00, 9:00,10:00, 11:45a. m.:l:15, 2:30.
4:30, 4:45. 5:30, 6:15, 7:30, 9:00 p. m.: Conway, 10:33
p.m.; Fair Oaks 3 11:40 a.m.: Beaver Falls, a
4:30 p. m. ; Leetsdale. S 8:30 p. m.
Trains akrivk union station from Chicago, ex.
cent Monday. 1:50, d 6:00, d 6:35 a. m., d 5:55 and
dC:50p.m.: Toledo, except Monday, 1:50, d 6:35 a.
m., 5:55 and 6:50 p. m.; Crestline, 2:10 p. m.;
Youngstown and .Newcastle, S:10a.m.. 1:25, 6:50,
10:15 p.m.; .Nlles and Youngstown, a 6:50 p. m.;
Cleveland, d5:50 a. in., 2;25, 700p. m; Wheeling
and Bellalre, 9:00 a. m 2:25. 7:00 p. m.: Erie and
Ashtabula, 1:25, 10:15 p. m.: Masiltlon, 10:00a.m.:
Miles and Jamestown, 9:10 a. m. ; Beaver Falls,
7:30a. m., 1:10 p. m. ; Beaver Falls, S 8:25 p. m.:
Leetsdale, 10:40 p. m.
Abhive allsohekt. from Enon, 8.00 a. ra.:
Conway 6.40a.m;Kocbester,9.40a.m.;Beavcr Falls,
7.10a. m., 5.30 p. m.: Leetsdale, 4.30. 5. SO, 5. 15,
6.50, 7.45a. m.. 12.00, 12.45, 1.45, 3.30, 4.30, 6.30, 9.00
II. m. ; Fair Oaks. S 8.55 a.m.: Beaver Falls, 3
I. SO p. m. : Leetsdale, S 0.03 p. in.; Bearer Falls,
S 8. 15 p. m.
d, dally; S, Sunday only; other trains, excent
Sunday,
JOHNPLOOKER & CO.,
MANUFACTCBIBS OF
Flocker's Lubricating Hemp Packing
FOR RAILROAD USE.
Italian and American Ilemp Packing,
Clothes Lines, Twines, Bell Cord, Fish Linci,
Chalk Lines, Night Lines, Sisal Bale and Hide
Rope, Tarred Lath Yam, Spun Yarn, etc
WORKS East street, Allegheny City, Fa.
OFFICE AND SALESROOM. -W Water It.
, Pittsburg. . Telephone No. 1370k fel3-nws
lift
hoiTtHw
a:Jfefc -,riL.iSL,J..j jfffaiA,
NEW ADTERTISEarESTS.
KAUF
INNS' DAILY
former we Will offer the following unequaled array of bargains:
1,200 Ladies' Good Black Jerseys at 29c.
FURTHER: A large assortment of Ladies' Jerseys, pleated,
braided, smocked, passementerie trimmed vest fronts, etc., in black
and all different colors and shades, at ONLY 69c
Further: 900 Ladies' Fine All-Wool Cashmere and Worsted
Jerseys, black and colored, plain and fancy, none but new styles, at
ONLY 98c
Further: A grand variety of Jerseys, including silk and other
very fine and finest goods, and embracing all the very latest and
handsomest styles of the season, from jSi 25 to $6.
We also show a complete line of Girls' Jerseys, and all kinds and
syles of Ladies' and Misses' Blouses.
French Surah Silk Waists at $4 98.
They're equal to anything offered elsewhere for $ 7 and $8. We
have them with belts, puffed sleeves, raised shoulders, and in all
different colors. Your choice $4 98.
CORSETS,
If we can build up a large
corset trade by selling only the
BEST GOODS at the LOWEST
PRICES, we will succeed.
There are probably a hundred
different makes of Corsets.
Some are good in quality, but
poor in fit; others, vice versa,
are poor in quality and good in
fit. Some are good in every
way; others are good in no
way. We have sorted the
wheat from the chaff: bought
none but the thoroughly relia
ble and best fitting Corsets in
the world. The following are
the most noteworthy brands to
be found in our stock: The C.
P., the J. B., the P. D., and Dr.
Warner's. Note our opening
bargains.
1,000 Dr. Warner's regular 65c Corsets for 49c.
The celebrated Francaise (French) Corsets, usual price Si, for
only 69 c.
Dr. Warner's popular Coraline Corsets, sold everywhere for
j5i 25, at only 89c.
The genuine a la pirene C. P. Corsets, regular price $2, for only
49.
Don't you think, Ladies, we deserve your trade.
$1
-$$
KA0FMANNS
Fifth Avenue and Smithfield Street
ItAlI.UOAO-.
PtJNSVl.VAMA KAII,KOAl) ON AND
alter November 10, I8SI), trains leave Union
Station, rituturg, as follows, Eastern Standard
Timet
StAIN LINK EASTWAKD.
Netr York and Chicago Limited or l'nllm an Ves
tibule dally at 715 a. in.
Atlantic Express dally for the riist. 3:3) a. m.
Mall train, dally, except Sunday, 8:30 a.m. Ban
dar, mall, 8:40 a. ni.
Day expressdalry at 8:00 a. m.
Mall express dally at 1:00 p. m.
I'Mladelphti express dallr nt 4:30 p. m.
Eastern express (Lilly nt 7:15 p. m.
Fast Line dallv at SilO n. m.
Oreensburc express 5:10 p. m. weekdays.
I)crry express il:0ua. m. wees diys.
All tnroueli trains connect at Jersey City
lth.
boats of "llrooklyn Annex" for Ilrooklyn, H . Y.
avoiding double lerrlage and journey tnrouKU .N.
T. City.
Trains arrive at Union Station as follows:
St. Louis, Chicago and Cincinnati Exnress.
dally z:03a m.
Mall Train, dally 8:10p. m.
Western Express, dally 7:45a.m.
1'aclflc Express, dally 12:45p. m.
Chicago Limited Express, daily 9:30 p. m.
last Line, daily ll:5an. m.
SOUTHWEST 1'ENN HAILWAI.
For Unlontown, 5:30 and 8:35a. m. and 4:25 p.
m., without change ol cars; 12:50p. m.. connect
ing at Oreensburg. Trains arrive from Union
town at 9:4 a m., i.!:C0, 5:35 and 8:10 p. m.
WEST l'ENNSYLVANIA DIVISION.
From FEDEUAL. ST. STATION. Allegheny City.
Mall train, connecting for lilalrsvllle.- 6:45a. m.
Exnress. lor BlairsviUe. connecting ror
Uutler Wip.m.
llutler Accom 8:20a.m., 2:25 and 5:45 p. in.
SprlngdaleAccom9:00,ll:50a.m.3:30and 6:20 p.m.
Freeport Accom 4:15, 8:20 and 11:40 p. m.
On Sunday 12:35nd 9:30p.m.
North Apollo Accom 11:00 a. m. and C:O0p -m.
Allegheny Junction Accommodation... 8:29a m.
Blalrsvllfe Accommodation ,1:0oR-.?!-
Trains arrive at FEDEIJA I. STKEETSrATlO N:
Express, connecting from Butler 10;3Sa. m.
Mail Train .J:top. m.
Butler Accom S:ipa. m., 4:40 and. :2o p.m.
DIalrsvllIe Accommodation .?.:orp nu
Freeport Accom.7:40a. nr., 1:25,7:25 and 11:10 p. in.
OnSundav 10:10 a. m. and 7:00 p. m.
Sprlngdale Accom.6:37, UHSa. m., 3:45. C:4p.m.
North Apollo Accom 8:a. in. and 5:40 p. m.
MONONUAIIELA DIVISION.
Trains leave Union station, mtsburg. as Tol-
For Monongahela City, West Brownsville and
Unlontown, 10:40 a.m. For Monongahela City and
West Brownsville. 7:05 and 10:40a. m. and 4:4op.
m. On Sunday 1:01 p.m. For Monongahela City,
5s40 p. m.. week days.
Dravosburg AC. weekdays. S:2D p. in.
West Elliaoeth Acco.nmodatlon. 8:20 a. m., 2:00,
G:20andll::i5p. m. Sunday, 9:40 p. m.
Ticket offices Corner Fourth avenue and Try
street and Unln station.
CHAS. E. FUtJll. J. WOOD.
(Jenor.il Manager. Gcn'I l'ass'r Agent.
PITTSHUKO AND CASTLESIIANNON K. It.
SummcrTlmoTablc. On and alter March 30,
1890, until further notice, trains will run as follows
on every day, except Sunday. Eastern standard
time: Leaving Flttsburg-6:20 a. m., 7:10 a. m.,
Itf) a.m.. 9:30 i. m.. 11:30 a. m.. 1:40 p. m 3:40 p.
m., 5:10 p. m., 5:50 p. m., 6:30 p. m., 9:30 p. m.,
11:30 p.m. Arlington 4:40 a. m., 630 a. m., 7:10
a. m 8:00 a, m., 1020 a. m., 1:00 p.m., 2:40 p. m..
4:20 p. m., CIO p. m.. 5:50 p. m., 7:10 p. m., 10:3
p. m. Sunday trains, leaving Flttsburg 10 a.m
12:50 p. m., 2:4) p; m. ,5:10 p.m. 6:30 p.m. Arling
ton 9:10a. m.( 12110 p, m., 1:50 p. in.. 4 CO p. m.,
6:30 p. m. JOHN JAHN. Sunk
nTSHUItl AND WESTEUN KAILWAY
Trains (Ct'l Stan dtlme)
Leave. I Arrive.
DavEx.. Akron. Toledo, Kane! 6:40 a rn 7:37 p m
Builer Accommodation I 9:00 a m 3:00 pm
Chicago Express (dally) 112:25 p m 11:30 a m
Newcastle A Clarion Accom. 4:30 p m 7 .-00 a m
Butler Accom I 5: p 'm 5:30 a ra
First class fare to Chicago, 110 50. Second class.
taw. Pullman Bullet sleeping ear to CMcazo
-ViiuXialK. JiktSLtl
- ."
CARD OF REASON
April 7, 1SDO.
A JERSEY SALE
To-Day and To-Morrow.
Said a lady last Saturday: "One
can hardly keep track of the many
marvelous surprises, so fast they
follow."
The speaker was right
Ever since the opening of the
spring season we've been surprising
and astonishing the ladies of Pitts
burg and Allegheny with our Match
less Bargains in Wraps, Capes,
Jackets, etc., and now comes the
crowning event of all:
Our Great Two Days' Jersey Sale
AND THE
Opening of Our Corset Dep't.
To assure the success of the
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T3ALT1MOKB AND OHIO KAI1.UOAD."
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Schedule in en"et November 10,1389:
i&f
For Washington, V. ti.
Baltimore, 1'h i I a d el pull
and New York, "8:C0 a. m.
and "9:20 p. m.
For Cuniherlind. "3:00 a.
m., SI:00, "I JU p. m.
For Connellsvllle, $6:40,
8:00 and (4M a. m., ?1:00,
14:00 and "9:20 p. m.
For Unlontown. 23:40.
28:00, i3:S a. m., 1:00 and
;4:iir. m.
For Mt. 1'leasant, 13:00 a.
m. and 11:00 and 14:00 p. m.
For Wasnlngton. i'a.. "7 03andt9.40a. m.,3:33,
15:3u and "7:30 p. ra.
For Wheeling, 7:05, w:4iia. m.. 3:35, "7:30 p.m.
For Cincinnati and fct. Louis, 7:05 a. m.t "7:30
p. m.
For Columbus, "7:05 a. m., 7:30p. m.
For Newark. "7:05, 19:40 a. m.. "7:33 p. m.
For Chicago, "7:05 and 7:30 p. m.
Trains arrive from New York, Philadelphia,
Baltimore and Washington, "6:20 a. m., "8:55 p.
m. From Colambns, Cincinnati and Chicago,
8:25a.m.. "9:00 p.m. From Wheeling, 4r.3.
J0:50 a. m., 15:00, '9:00 p. m.
Through sleeping cars to Baltimore, Washing
ton, Cincinnati and Chicago.
'Dally. IDaily except Sunday. JSunday only.
The Pittsburg Transfer Company will call for
and check baggage from hotels and residences
upon orders left at B. & O. ticket office, corner
Fifth ave. and Wood St., or 101 and 639 Smithfield
street.
J.T. O'DELU C1IAS. O. SCULL,
General Manager. Gen. Pass. Asent.
PITTSBUKO AND LAKE KUIE KAILKOAD
COMPANY. Schedule In effect March 23,
1S90. Central time. DitrART For Cleveland.
5:00, 3:00 a. m.. 'l 430. "9:30 p. m. For Cin
cinnati, Chicago and St. Louis. 5:00 a. m.. "I:M,
9:30p. m. For Buffalo, 8.-00 a. m., 430, "9:30 p.
m. For Salamanca, "3:00 a. ra., 4:20 p. m. For
Youngstown and New Castle, 5:00, "3:00. 10:15 a.
m '1:35, iSO, 9:30 p. m. For Beaver Falls.
5:00. 7:30, 8:00, 10:15 a. m., 1:33. 3:30, "4:20, 5: SO.
9:3up. m. For Chartlers, 5:00, 5:33 a. m.. 5:3i
6:55, 7:30. 7:. 8:05. "g:!, 10:1511iS. a. m.. 123a
12:40, 112:45, 1:40, J.-20. 3:30,135.4:30,5:05,530, '8:10.
10:30 p. m.
ABittVB From Cleveland, 1:23 a. m.. '12:3a,
5:4a "7:55 p. m. From Cincinnati, Chicago and
St. Louis, '12:30, "7:55 p. m. From Buffalo, "6:23
a. m., '12:30, 10 p. m. From Salamanca, 12:30,
7:55 p.m. From Youngstown and New Castle.
635, 9:30 a. m 12:30. 5:40. 7i55. 10 p. m. From
Beaver Falls. 635. "635, 7:20, SO a. m.. 12:30.
1:20.5:40. "7:55. 10 p. m.
P.. C. & Y. trains ror Mansfield. 7:40 a. m.. 3:20.
5:20 p. m. For Essen and Beechmont, 5wo, 7:40
a. nu. 330 p. m.
P.. C. Y. trains from Mansfield. 6:17. 7:12,
rum a.m. From Beechmont, 7:12, 11:30 a. m.,
5:40p. m.
P McK.&Y. R. K.-DKFART-Kor New Ha
ven, 15:30 a. m., 3:ttp. m. For West Newton,
Hao, 8:la. m.. 3r0, 530 p. m.
ARRIVE From New Haven, 8:."0 a. m.. XUU
5:15. p. m. From West Newton, 6:15, "3:00 a. m..
135. V:i5. 5:15 p.m.
For McKeesport, F.lliabeth, Monongahela City
and Belle Vernon, 6:35. 17:30, 11:20 a. m., 13:00,
3:50 p. m.
From Belle Vernon. Mononrahela City, Eliza
beth and McKeesport, 7:50, 13:50 a. m., 12:35, 5:00,
14:15 p. m.
. 'Daily. ISundays only. IW1U run two hours
late on Sunday.
City Ticket Office, 639 Smithfield Street.
ALLEGHENY VALLEY KAILKOAD
Trains leave Union station (Eastern Standard
time): Klttannlng Ac.. 6:55 a. m.: Niagara Ex..
dally. g- a. nu. Hulton Ac., 10:10 a.m.; Valley
Camp Ac, 32K p. m.t Oil City and IhiBols Ex
pression p.m. ; unite n Ac, SSdp.m. i Klttannlng
Ac., 4:00p.m.; BraebarnEx5axp.i3.: JUttaan
lng Ac, 5.30 p. m.; Braeburn Ac, 6 :20p.m. i Hul
ton Ac-, 7 JO p. m.; Buffalo Ex., daily,
:50 p. m.t Hulton Ac, i45 p.m.: braeburn Ac.
11:30 p. m. Chnrea trains Braeburn, 12:40 p. nu
and OiK n tn Vnllman 81umnv iavm h-.wu
Pittsburg and Buffalo, J AS. P. ANDERSON.
,tt. T. Axtt JJAVU1 MOCAiiQO, G.nT Sujk.
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