LA' kt -,, -, - -t, .rjf 4 - I " - 'iXi. ROUS 01 THE RHINE Eevt George Hodges Points Out the Significance of the An cient Castles. THE RICH RELICS OP PAST AGES Pound in the Tottering Towers and Fal aces That Abound Along Ger many's Famous Eiver. EXE AND IMAGINATION APPEALED TO, By the Crani Panorama el rictnrefqne and His toneal Scenes. I vvmrizn fob the dispatch. 1 The beauty and glory of Antwerp and Cologne center about their wonderful cathe dral churches. "When you think of Ant werp you remember the sweet music of the carillon raining down from the lonely spire. And the thought of Cologne brings always o vision of that vast roof uplifted into the sky, upholding its two tall fingers in ever lasting benediction. But the interest of Heidelberg and X uremberg is of a different kind. All that is best here centers in the castle. All the way along the Rhine, as you watch the changing panorama of the shores, you are impressed by this constant balance of church and castle. Village after village is built along the river, and every village has one long street where every house laces the water, red-tiled, timber-built, with stair-cased gables, and of every hue and Ebape, and beside every landing-place is the same double row of green trees, each trimmed exactly like the other, like the stiff little forests ol the toy villages, and every where are two great buildings which tower tip above all other sort whatsoever. At one end of the village is the church; at the other is the castle. It makes one think of the escutcheon which is cut over the watch-towe' gate at Heidelberg, on one side a lion with a cross; on the other side a lion with a sword. It takes one back to that old day when the priest and the prince, and the En'peror and the Pope, stood out before all other men and strove for the mastery. Every village in the Rhine V.illey is a symbol of it. To fear God and to honor the king were the two chief duties of men's lives in those times. The Church represented one and the castle the other. Along these shores, and in these lands of Germany and Italy raged that fierce conflict between the great powers, political and religious, which makes up so larce a part of mediaeval history. But in the Rhine towns, as one sees them from the deck of the steamer, the two are well bal anced as they ought to be, SIGNIFICANT BTJINS. except that the castles are all in ruins sow, while the churches are all alive, and tounding every day to the voice of prayers and praises. The church stands lor pe.ice and love, while the castle stands for variance and violence. The ruins are insignificant when you think of that. You are reminded, it is true, as you pass the great, thick-walled, defiant fortress of Ehrenbreitstein, (-till planted by the Rhine bank, ready for battle, that the dajs ot violence are not qnite passed. Everywhere on this side the water you see soldiers. The streets are bright with uniforms. At every turn yon come Upon some man of war, or marching com pany of them. .Nevertheless the symbolism of the ruined castles is a true one. Their day is gone by. The time of anarchy and highway robbefy and turbulent barons agd armored knight's is happily of the past. " e are bound to have peace in these days, even if we have to purchase it with dynamite. The times are belter. Men are wiser and kinder than they used to be. The castles may well go to ruin. The Rhine scenery is beantiful, but not remarkably beautiful. Except between Coblenz and Bingen, ittis even common place. The Monongabela is as line. The Rhine banks are more romantic than lovely. Their interest is not so much in their shapes, cs in their human associations. It is the glass ot legend and historv through which these shores are seen which makes the Rhine perhaps the most delightful river in the worid. "We saw the Rhine banksfrom be neath an umbrella, and between rain drops, but they made us unmindful of the weather. Here is Drakenfels, where lived the dragon which Siegfried killed. And across the way is Eolandseck, where Roland built a castle, so that a chapter for each of the two great mediaeval epics is written on these two banks. Here is the head office of the Apollinaris Company, whose sign brings us back into the present day. All along are terraced vineyards. Prom this fine crag the Lorelei of the old ttories tempted her victims to destruction. Tonder is Rhem fels, the grandest of the Rhine castles, and bevond is Sooneck the most beautiful. Here is the Mouse tower, wherein the wicked Archbishop Hatto was very prop erly eaten alive, and beside it is Bingen, "Fair Bingen on the Rhine." MAYEXCE AND HEIDELBEBG. And so the traveler comes to Mayence, With its fine cathedral where the pillars are guarded by sculptured bishops, and its market place, where women in queer dresses pell their garden stuff, and its square with Thorwaldsen's Gutenberg standing in the midst of it And a railway journey brings us to Heidelberg. Heidelberg Castle stands on a great wooded mountain, looking into the long valley of the river Seckir. Six hundred years ago they laid the first stones ot it. Since then what scenes have been enacted herel "What beauty of color in the old banqueting hall where knights and ladies leasted with counts and kingsl What ringing of armor in these vaulted passages when the alarm of war rounded Irom one of the great towers! Louis XIV., of variously unpleasant memory, finst made a ruin here, making a good long mark in the score which Germany holds against Trance. What was then rebuilded was struck by lightning in a great storm 100 years ago. "it lies now unrooted, vine covered, with ragged walls against the sky, and the windows open to all weather, crown ing the hill top with the most magnificent pile of ruin in Europe. Outside, where its walls faced the world presumably a hostile world, all men being accounted enemies till they could prove the contrary, "stranger" and "foe" being the same word in the language of that day, actually synonomous outside, the walls are grim enough and blank enough. They tower up, with strong fortifications at every angle, and high places to look out from, . strong and defiant. But you cross the bridge over the old moat, and get into the courtyard, and everything is as beautiful as art can make it. Here are the fronts ot the great buildings, and they are covered with great carved marble statues of saints and heroes. Charlemagne and David, Justice and Jupiter, and scores more, still standing, unbroken most of them, against the un roofed walls, and between the blank windows. STRANGE RELIC OF THE TAST. Away down below, beneath the ground, in one of the countless subterranean Chambers is the great tun, the biggest wine cask in the world, empty now, but thrice in its history tall anddrawn out glass by glass to quench the thirst of knights and ladies. You climb up a considerable distance of stairs to get on top of it. Forty-nine tbon Bond gallons, they.say it held a singular relic of the past. ' I have uevcr seen anything sJ beautiful in its appeal, both to the eye and the im agination, as this majestic ruin. You rest in the shadow of its great walls, or look out nrrr it far the summit of one of Its high picturesque mediaeval past. The banners flv, and the trumpets sound, and the horses with their armored riders clatter across the drawbridge. , The castle gardens are excellently trans formed into beautiful pleasure grounds, where a band plays, and the drinking of beer goes on, and young men and maidens stroll about the shady walk. After all, life in its essentials has not changed much since the Middle Ages. ' It rains this morning at Heidelberg. Away up in the highest storv of the Schloss Hotel we are in the midst of the low-hanging clouds. "When the wind blows, and the clouds move before it, the streams of rain follow as if some giant up aloft were water ine the castle with some gigautic garden pot Beyond are the green hills. Below is the winding Heckar. . The next stop is Nuremberg. A night here and the next there, is the order of oar journey, hastening on to the Passion Play at Oberammergau. EUBOPE'S QUEER OLD TOWN. Nuremberg is the queerest old town in Europe. The streets are narrow, with side walks so scanty that most people walk in the street, with great high houses, terminat ing in steep gables, cut like meeting pairs of stairs, ascending to the regions of the moon, with picturesque oriel windows out in front, ornamented with carvings, roofed with red tiles. It is in the St Lorenz church in Nurem berg that that curious carved marble cibor ium stands, a place for the consecrated com munion bread, resting on the floor, and reach ing up, story after story, each more graceful and rich and slender than the other, till it not only reaches the top of the choir ceiling, but curls over along the bend of the arch. It is in the St Sebaldns Church that the wonderful bronze shrine stands, keeping men mindful of that saint, whose name and holiness is about all we know about him, to whom the good Nurembergers long ago let up this church the shrine adorned with a hundred figures, apostles above, and saints and fairies, a queer and most significant medley, below. Here, too, is a tombstone fit to match with Diana "Warburton's at Chester. The figure of a dreadful skeleton is pictured between the two tablets wnich contain the names of the Tucker family, a skeleton, part fleshed with crawling worms resting in its stomach, and having written over it in German: "I was once what you are; by and by you will be what I am." But the most notable thing in Nuremberg is the castle. This castle is not in ruins like the Schloss at Heidelberg. It is used still as an occasional residence by the royal fam ily of Bavaria. So that it has some modern interest Its great stoves ot earthenware, variously shaped and colored, enameled, painted,"are worth seeing not a bit of iron visible, stoves which glow and shine like decorated china, and are actually orna mental which with us is an unheard-of quality in stoves. A Vf ONDEBFUIj W ELIj. In the courtyard is a great live tree, about which, tradition says, justice was adminis tered nearly a thousand years ago. In a comer of the courtyard, nnder roof, beside the square tower, descends the old well, so deep that all other wells seem but shallows beside it You pour a glass of water into the darkness and you may leisurely count six before you hear the sound of the splash beneath. Or you may pour it in six plashes, and presently below you hear the answer, one, two, three, four, five, six. All but 30 leet of this deep well is cut in solid rock. That was the task with which for 30 years the lord ot this castle gave his prisoners exercise. Away down below near the surface of the water is a black hole which marks tbe entrance to a sub terranean passage, the other end of which emerges in clear daylight half a mile away. If worse came to worse in some time of pro tracted siege, here was a way ont But most interesting of all were the in struments of torture! Here vouget back into times which were darker than the deep well. You can see instruments of torture, of course, in a good many places. You can go to Madam Tussauil's "Chamber of Horrors" in London and view them in the cheerful gaslight But here in the Nurem berg Castle all the surroundings deepen the impression. These devilish things were made to be used, and to be used here; and here, where we stand, they actually were used, till the walls which echo to our voice rang loud with the cries of the tortured. You may put your own thumbs, if you will, into those thumb screws where men's hands have bled and give them a gentle squeeze by way of finding how it felt Here are finger smashers that go with the thnmb screws. And flesh pinchers working like sugar tongs, and sharp LIKE GREAT IRON HANDS with sharp points in place of fingers. Here vou see how the operation of "breaking on the wheel" was done. Upon this bed, ont of which at every loot rise sharp iron pro jections, wide as the bed and six inches high, they laid tbe man. And they took this heavy wheel, bound with thick iron, and grasping the spokes with both hands brought it down upon the body in the spaces between the projections. A man would be broken into twenty pieces when that dia bolical wheel had gone over him. Tbe climax ot this barbarism is in a heavy iron figure, hollow, three inches thick, with a double door in front, made in human shape, and named the "Iron Maiden." "Upon the doors which are meant to close in upon the mau imprisoned in this narrow cell, arc long spikes, on one door for the breast on the other for the throat, with one lor each eye! These grim doors have shut upon their victims more than once. And aiter all was over, a trap door has been opened from below, and a mangled body has dropped quietly through thij castle's floor into the water of the moat. And we turn away from the torture cham ber in the Nuremberg Castle, and set our faces toward that Bavarian village, where men are commemorating in living pictures that revelation of God's love which He made who died upon the cross, that He might drive nnbrotherlines, and cruelty, and all other deadly sin out of the world. Our journey lies toward Oberammergau. G. H. POLITICS KILLED HIM. ' A Candidate Killed by BU AciItb Efforts to Secure Election. Edmond. Ok., August 10. Milton Rey nolds, better known in the West as "Kick ing Bird," died at his home here last night from the effects of nervous prostration, in duced by fatigue during the recent political campaign. He had just been elected Dele-gate-at-Large to the Territorial Legislature, and a special election will be called to fill the vacancy. Mr. Reynolds had beep an active news paper worker since 1862 in various cities of the West, and at the time of his death was editor of the Edmond Sun. Headache, neuralgia, dizziness, ner vousness, spasms, sleeplessness, cured by Dr. Miles' Nervine. Samples free at Jos. Fleming & Son's, Market st. 51 Ilenr 10 Wash Flnnnela. Never soak them. Never have more than one garment in the tub. 1. Make a sud with Walker's Wax Soap in lukewarm water and wash with the least possible rubbing. 2. Rinse thoroughly in clear, lukewarm water until all traces of soap have disap peared. 3. Never wring, but take from the water dripping wetand hang up to dry. 4. Iron while still damp and stretch the garment into its original shape, using great care that the iron is not too hot. 5. Use Walker's Wax Soap, as it will not shrink theni. aull,13,14;l5 One Thousand Hollars Forfeit if I fail to prove Floraplexion the best medicine for liver complaint, dyspep sia, nervous debility, biliousness, consump tion. It cures where all other remedies fail. Ask your druggist for it Sample bottle sent free. FRANKXIN Hart, New York. MWFSU B. & B. . Read onr large "ad," this paper, then come early lor cnoice. Boogs St bU THE FALL OF A PREMIER. The Wonderful Career of Missionary Baker on the Isle of Tonga. HE BDILT UP A LITTLE KINGDOM. Under tho Cloak of Kelfglon He With the Tyrant's Hand. EnM COMPELLED TO FLEE FOE HIS LIFE Within the fortnight advices have been cabled from New Zealand to the effect that Mr. Baker, the Wesleyan missionary who was Premier of Tonga, has arrived at Auc land. It is further noted that Mr. Baker was expelled from Tonga, the native chiefs having signed a documentdeclaring that the populace would kill him if he remained on the island. Thus obscurely in half a dozen lines of print is announced to the world the end of a romance of the South Seas which is so unique as to demand a chapter to itself in the annals of the shady doings of adventur ers. The cloak of religion has been drawn about the principal actor of the comedy, which, by a narrow chance, has escaped a tragic end. The Tonga men, almost alone, of the South Sea Islanders, have never prac ticed cannibalism, at the time of their dis covery they welcomed Cook so heartily that he gave their home the name of the Friendly Islands, a name which they have done noth ing to. forfeit; their very traditions have little to record of fighting, their mot re nowned ancestors are famed only as fisher men and lawgivers; they carry non-resistance so far that they are often held effem inate, even if not cowardly. Year in and year out they havo endured a tyranny which has sought them out in their homes, and at last they end it not with bloodshed, but by announcing their regretful fear that the chiefs will be unable to prevent murder. The hint was sufficient, the oppressor fled, jg HOW BAKER ROSE. When the evangelical territory of the South Seas was parceled out among the sev eral missionary societies of Great Britain Tonga was assiened to the Wesleyan So ciety, and a ter some existence as a direct dependency of the English Wesleyans was finally transferred to the care of the denomi national Conference in Australia when tbey became strong enough to undertake the charge. Among the missionaries laboring in the Friendly Islands at the time of this transfer was Shirley Baker, then a young man, in no wise distinguished from his com panions. The transfer to the colonial Con ference for some reason displeased this mis sionary, and he testified his disapproval by reporting to thesociety in London: Forthis act of insubordination he was duly disci plined. Political complications arose in Tonga which proved more attractive to the young missionary than the small pleasures of snubbing a distant conference of ministers. The new civilization called for a readjust ment of the loose relations of savage life. The chief in the island which was the center of Baker's evangelizing labors was one Tubon, who had been baptized George. The missionary played upon the ambition of George Tubon, instilled in his mind the hope of ruling all his neighbors, and set him to wofk practicing the signature Geoigius Rex. Owing to the inertness and jealousy of the other superior chiefs, and mainly owing to the political shrewdness of Baker, the realm was constituted a sovereign State. George Tubon was made King, and con secrated according to the Old Testament rites, a Parliament of the subordinate chiefs and the village elders was created, the Wes leyan Church was ordained as the establish ment and King George at its head. Shirley Baker was made perpetual and irremovable Prime Minister. DID HI3 WORK WELL. In due time the new kingdom was recog nized by the great powers, Queen Victoria wrote to King George as her cousin and sent him a medallon; England, Germany and the United States, then engaged in sowing the seed of future tumult in Samoa, jointly undertook to see that all nations should leave the Kingdom of Tonga alone, and added an even greater benefit by agreeing to keep away from it themselves. This upholstering of a kingdom was not the affair of a day or a year. It was well done because slowly done, and while in all things Shirley Baker was the directing force, he so contrived his manipulations as not to tread upon any toes, whether native or European. In all that the new King did he found it necessary to rely for guidance upon his uselul Prime Minister, whoso power grew apace with that of his master. Baker bad not forgotten the public rebuke which bad been administered to him by that Conference, and was now ready for a row, all the more so since the chnrch of Tonga was not only self-supporting by this time, but had already been called upon to contribnte to the expenses of the body which had sup ported it in tbe days of its need. Baker found occasion lor the rupture when the Conference consigned to him a cargo of Bibles and hymn books in the language of Tonga. As head of the chnrch King George refused to give this literature his sanction; they were most emphatically not appointed to be read in churches, and a version which bore the great name ot the Premier-was pro mulgated by royal decree. Hereupon the Conference solemnly read Shirley BaKer ont of its communion, as guilty of gross contumacy. King George replied with a note that the church of Tonga was an inde pendent body, with himself at the head, and the Australian Conference did not show a Christian spirit in calling bis leading cler gymen hard names. Thus Shirley Baker cleared himself of his last thread of alle giance. TAXED TOO HEAVILT. But the common people of Tonga found the new royalty a burden. Thev found tithes at first" a mere jest, they could easily undertake to give one-tenth of tbe product of their labor to support the church and one tenth to support the date, for they did not labor. But the newParliament changed all that, laws were passed that every one must do a specified amount or labor, and the vil lage elders were commissioned to see that tbe work was done. As ii this double tithe were not in itself a serious burdenrspecial taxes were imposed, first fruits were de manded, and, if any objection were offered, the constitutionality ol the measure was proved by reference to Jewish history. Taxes were not tho only burdens, the com munity gVoaned beneath a roll 6f laws com pared"with which the old blue laws of New England are made to seem enlightened stat utes. The breaking strain was reached when Baker issaed an order prescriping Pure Blood Is absolutely necessary id order to havo perfect health. Hood's Sarsapanlla is the great blood purifier, quickly conquering scrofula, salt rheum, and all other insidious enemies which attack the blood and nndormine the healtn. It also builds up tho whole system, cares dyspep sia and sick headache, and overcomes that tired eellng. "I havo taken two bottles of Hood's Sarsapa ilia for salt rhenm and dyspepsia, with which I was troubled very much. After taking this medicine I am feeling as well as ever in my Me." G. W. Rose. Pottsville. Pa. Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists, $lj six for $5. Prepared only by O. L HOOD & OO., Lowell, Mass. 100 Doses One Dollar PITTSBURG DISPATCH, European attire. This proved too much, the obnoxious edict was repealed, but the effort to introduoe trousers left the Prime Minister and the people in a hostile atti tude. There has long been bad blood between them and Baker's expulsion is the result? of years of bullying on one side and distrust on the other. Shirley Baker is an old man, King George is an aged man far past fourscore, master and man are near the end of the allotted term. Back of them has arisen a new gen eration with new ideas and new aspirations, a generation which can never be content, with double tithes and first fruits and blue laws, a generation which has not failed to notice that Shirley Baker missionary and premier, has well feathered his own nest YOUNG PRINCE WELLINGTON. These men pin their hopes upon the heir apparent, Prince Wellington, they look to him now as they have done for years to free them from Baker. But Wellington is a prince of honorable instincts and wonld allow no act of violence to cloud the last years of his father's life, and to that sense of honor Baker has owed his immunity for the last ten years spent among a people whom he has taught to hate him most bitterly. Prince Wellington has said that when he comes to the throne nothing would afford him so much delight as the head of Shirley Baker upon a charger. The Premier knows it, and as a precautionary measure keeps his schooner yacht Sandfly in perpetual readiness to sail and carry him to New Zealand, where he has invested the proceeds of his extortionate measures. That which the Tonga lolks have longed for, that which the Premier has been shrewd enough to foresee, has at last come to pass, and Tonga is free. Killed in n Hone Trade. Colville. Wash., August 10. Will iam Jenkins arrived this morning from his ranch, 60 miles from here, and surrendered to the authorities. He stated that he had killed two men, William Daly and Benja min Shaw, in a dispute over a horse trade. Jenkins claims that he acted in self-defense. DIED. ANDERSON On the 3d instant, at her rest dence in Huntingdon, Pa.. Makgaebt wil, liamson. widow of the late John P. Anderson in the 71st year of her aee. 2 BAKER On Saturday, August 9, 1S90 at 2.10 p. M., Ida Mast, daughter of William H. and Sarah J. Baker, in tbe 15th year of her age. At Rest. Funeral services at the parents' residence, Blver Hill. Chartiers township, on Monday, Angust 11, at 10.30 A. M. Interment private. 2 BEILSTE1N On Sunday. August 10, at 6.15 A. m.. Oatuabine Beilstein, mother of J. l Theodore and George Beilsteln. aged 73 years. Fnneral services at the residence, 203 Spring Garden avenue, Allegheny City, Tuesday, Angust 12, at 2 P. M. Friends of tho family are respectfully invited to attend. 2 BROWNSON On Saturday morning August 9. 1890, Mary CONBAD, wife of J. M. Brjwn son. Funeral services at the residence of her hus band, No. 8 Cabinet street, Alleghony, on Mon day afternoon, August U, at 2 o'clock. In terment private. BYRAM On Saturday, Angust 9, 1S90. at ISO p. at , Henry Herbert Bybasi. In his 45th year. The funeral services will be held at the resi dence of his father-in-law. William VanKirk, Forbes street, Oakland, on Tuesday morning, August 12, at 10 o'clock. Interment private, at a later hour. 2 DAILEY On Saturday. August 9, 1890, Emma E., daughter of William ana Tillio Dailey, aged 1 year. Funeral services at parents' residence, 1251 Penn avenue, on Monday, at 2 p. m. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to at tend. Interment private. FRIEL On Saturday; August 9. 1S90, at 7 P. ir., John Fbiel, a?ed 42 years, 2 months. Funeral from his late residence, 4562 Pcnn avennej on Tuesday at 8.30 A. M. Services at St. Mary's Church, Forty-sixth street, at 9 A. si. Friends of the family are respectfully in. vited to attend. 2 HARTMAN On Sunday. Angust 10. at 9 A. jr., Frank Habtman, aged 28 years 8 months 3 days. Fnneral on Tuesday, August 12, at 3 p. m , from the residence of his parents, on Butler planie road, E na borough. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. 2 HEBLING On Sunday. 6 p. m.. Margaret Veletta. second dauchter of John B. and Anna Hobling, in the 11th year of her age. Funeral will take place from ber mother's residence, Stanton avenue, near Carnegie street, on Monday. August 11. at z p. H. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend, JONES At his residence, No. 128 Almond alley. Seventeenth ward, on Saturday evening, Angust 9, 1S90. at 7:10 o'clook, GEOBOE F. Jones, in tbe 60th j ear of his age. Funeral services will be held this after noon at 4 o'clock. Friends of tbe family are respectfully invited to attend. KEEFE On Saturday, August 9, 1S90, at 3 p. jr., Catherine, beloved wife ot Patrick Keef e, in her 63d year. Funeral from tbe family residence at Verona, on Monday, August 11. at 10 A. u. Train leaves the Union station at 9 A. It. FrienJs ot the family are respectfully invited to attend. LTJGAN On Saturday ovening, at Avalon, Nelliu, infant daughter ot Edwin and May Miller Lugar. Funeral from the residence of parents. Orch ard street, Avalon, P., Ft. W. & C. R. R,, on Monday afternoon, August 11, at 3 o'clock, Train leares Allegheny station at 2:15, city time. MAGILL At tho residence of his brother-in-law, Thomas Moore, Mornmgside road, Eichteenth ward, Sunday. August 10. 1890, at 10:15 A. m., William Magill, in the 29th year of bis age. Fnneral services on Tuesday, the 12th Inst, at 2 p. si. Friends of the family are respect fully invited to attend. 2 NOLAN In Chicago, 111., August 8. 1890, Ann Nolan, relict of the late John Nolan, aeed 76 j ears. Fnneral from tbe residence of her son, J. F. Belfour, 312 Laccck street, corner Goodrich, Allegheny, Monday. August 11, at 2 30 p. u. Services at St. Paul's Cathedral. Interment in St. Mary's Cemetery. NESTOR August 10, 1890, at 730 A. M., James Nestor, aged 59 jears, at bis residence, corner Station alley and Penu avenue. East End, City. Funeral from Sacred Heart Church on Tues day at 9 A. M. Friends of family are respect fully invited to attend. RILEY On Sunday. August 10, 1890, at 11:10 Matthew Riley, aged 61 3 ears. Funeral from bis late residence. Riverside street, Thirty-fourth ward, on Tuesday morn ing at 9 o'clock, to proceed to St. James R. C. Church. Friends of the family are respectful ly invited to attend. THOMPSON At Aldcrson, Indian Terri tory, Aueust 6, 1830, Margaret Thompson Reed Butleb Fowler, formerly of the Southside, aged 33 years 4 months. Gone but not forgotten.' WATSON On Saturday, at 9 15 p. jr., Ida. daughter of Moses and Mary Watson, aged 15 years 4 months and 17 days. Fnneral Monday, August 11, at 2 p. m., from her parents' residence, 75 Crawford street. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. WEAVER On Saturday. August 9, at G.S0 P. M., Mrs. SADIE LAP3LEY WEAVER, at the residence of hor father. Captain Thomas H. Lapsley, of Braddock, Pa. Services on Monday at 8 p.m. Interment private, on Tuesday at 10 a.,m. ANTHONY MEYER. (Successor to Meyor, Arnold fe Co., Lim.,) ,-TJNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER. Office and residence, 1181 Penn avenue. Tele phone connection. myll-140-MWFSU FLORAL EMBLEMS. ORCHIDS AND ROSES OF RARE BEAUTY. A. M. cfi J. B. MlJltDOCH, C1 A SMITIIF1ELD ST. Tclepbono US. 1102O-MWF SUMMER HAS COME And choice fresh flowers are cheap they will be furnished in any desired style. Telephone 239. JOHN B.&A. MVR.D O CH, 608SMITHFIELD ST. je28-MWF -pEPRESENTEU IN WXTSBIIIK lf 11 -i ASSET1 . . S9J071,e9B33. Insurance Co. of North America, Losses adjusted and paid bf WILLIAM L JONES. 84 Fourth avenue. .U20-S2-D . MONDAY, -AUGUST 11, NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ALWAYS SOMETHING NEW. We are always on the lookout lr new things in our line, and keep up with the times. You can hardly ask for anytnlng in tbe JEWELMY OB SILVER LIKE thatwo haven't got. Weneverletourstockrun down, but keep it up all seasons. Come and see what we have; you will be sure to find something to please you. SHEAFER& LLOYD, Successors to Wattles & Sheaf er, ' JEWELERS, 37 FIFTH AVENUE. Telephone 1933. jy21-srwp AT LATIMER'S Special prices for the DOG DATS! 75,000 YARDS 'GING HAM, jc, 8c and ioc. This means a clean sweep of all these shelves to make room for Fall Goods. " 9,000 YARDS S A TINE, 8c, ioc, 15c, 20c and 25c. Prices talk o?i these and move theni ottt. FAST BLACK Cotton Hose we are famed for; get your snare oj tnese tn tins sale. T. M. LATIMER, 138 and 140 Federal St, 45 and 4G South Diamond, Allegheny. jy30-HWF SEE OUR FINE WIDOW DISPLAY -OF- Silk : Umbrellas! A GREAT BARGAIN LOT, Of which we are having A SPECIAL SALE ! The best opportunity to get a fine Silk Umbrella at a very low price. We call your special attention to the handsome goods we are offering at $2, $4, $5 5 6 and 7 50, many of , these are-at half the prices at which they originally sold. UMBRELLAS RE-COVERED, covers ranging from $1 25 to $3 75, which we can put on for you while you wait in a very few moments. An ele gant assortment of LEATHER SATCHELS and TRAVEL ING COMPANIONS at very small prices. HORNE&WARD 41 FIFTH AVE. auS-D ADECIDED NOYELTT IN LADIES' HATS We have just received a lot of Ladies, English "BOATERS" or FELT SAILOR HATS. Just the thing for summer traveling, mountain and sea side wear. They come in all shades. We can make your old seal garments into beautiful shoulder capes, with high shoulders and Elizabeth collars, either entirely of seal or combined with Per sian lamb, after our new English pat terns just received. Men's fine English Flannel Suits, In dispensable for seaside or mountain, re duced to $Io, $12 and $14. PAULSON BROS., 441 Wood Street. jy25-MW7 samuel R .Baldwin. John s. Graiiam Don't buy until you see tho celebrated GOOD LUCK STOVES and RANGES. Also Steal Ranges suitable for botel, restaurant and family une. Hold by dealers every wbere. Manufactured add fur sJo by BALDWIN&GRAHAM, No. 638 Liberty St, Pittsburgr.Pa., Sole Agents throughout Western Pennsylvania for the f among Boynton Furnaces of New York. Over 60.000 in use. Jyll-23-MWF TEETH. I 7 AD tic. PULL earn. Elegant sets, fine nlllnga a specialty. Vitalized air &Sc. UK. THILL.1PS. 8Xi Fena ay., rail wait. , Open Suiiti. makes or repairs sets irUla you Bha-ia 1890. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. "ALWAYS THE CHEAPEST." lk M W! In order to make necessary room, for the immense Fall Impor tations arriving daily in our Cloak Department, we are compelled to close out the remainder of our Summer Stock at a sacrifice. No matter what the goods are worth, no matter what they cost, they must go, and go this week, if prices will do it READ, WONDER AND CON VINCE YOURSELF. Ladies' Percale Waists, 810. , Ladies' Flannel Blazers (Striped), 99c. Children's Gingham Dresses, 08a Children's Woolen Dresses, $1 40. Ladies' Broadcloth Jackets,$2 74. Remember that these prices are for this coming week only. To those desiring undoubted bargains this is the opportunity of a lifetime. REMEMBER! That we are the Leading and Larg est Millinery House in Western Pennsylvania, and that we make NO CHARGE FOR TRIMMING when materials are purchased in our stores. SOMETmNGNEW! Draping Forms with separable bust, $2 09 each. DANZIGEE'S SIXTH ST. AND PES! AYE. au9 B. & B. An August Bargain Sale 38-Inch Str'iDed, . Side-Border, Imported Dress Goods, 15c a Yard. A lot of Plain Beige and Plaid Serge 50c Dress Goods, 25c a yard. Lot of 1 25 Fine Imported Dress Goods, plains, plaids and stripes, side-bordures, 50c a yard. All-wool Tweeds, stripes, checks and mixtures, 1 25 goods for 50c. A lot of All-wool Cashmeres, in tan shades, only 25c a yard. 40-inch Colored Silk Warp Hen riettas, $1 quality, on the counter to-day for 75c. Several hundred yards odds and ends, plain and fancy American single-width Dress Goods, 15c goods for 8c a yard. About 50 pieces American Gray Twill Beiges, single fold, all-wool filling, 6Jc a yard. Yard wide American Challies, the black grounds with white figures, that have been so scarce, i2jc a yard. A leader in the Challie Depart ment, the Silk Striped Wool Chal lies at 35c a yard lovely patterns. 50c and 60c FRENCH, ALL WOOL CHALLIES large variety, the very choicest styles when the price is mentioned further comment unnecessary 35c A YARD. About a hundred pieces FIG URED ORGANDIE LAWNS black grounds with white figures 5c A YARD. 15 to 20 pieces Soiled Colored Canton Flannels slates, grays and olive go at 5c a yard. Another lot of better Cantons I2jc ones go at 7jc a yard. Two special Black Goods bar gains will make business brisk in this department. 46-inch Silk Warp Henriettas, $1 a yard unquestionably a big bar gain. 50-inch Fine All-wool Serge, 75c a yard a truly wonderful bargain in a staple fabric. Two Black Surah Silk bar gains, 50c and 75c a yard. It silk be among your wants, don't fail to see these. "Make bargains irresistible," is our method of making a lively business in midsummer. BOGGS&BUHL, ALLEGHENY. anil .Whin thi Of nr i eotB SCARLET FEVER, bUl.ua, H F19LCB. CATARRH. U. gWlg'.a gr4S nTTMgUCOrTH INVISIBLC II 1M fa is l&LSU wu UIOV ; H -' EH . C vt.h tm w..fi4 lA tm a USTQtf 13 i erefln.ofcueitliuaUKlaiUrd0- wjiatt eoatdaea. I'm mum to fM fan EE7itlj9 utv Qu W-tLm Km MMU& vithMt fmOT VHEW K3i-J ." iTj j j - var; j&a.h NEW ADVERTlSEarEXTS ODDS AND ENDS. mm sal ODDS AND ENDS OF STOCK Eemnants of Every Description. Soiled and Shopworn Goods. Balance of Summer Goods. Overplus Stock in All Departments. We Call Your Particular Attention to the Fact That PRICES QUOTED ARE FOR THIS WEEK ONLY I PRICES QUOTED ARE FOR THIS WEEK ONLY! PRICES QUOTED ARE FOR THIS WEEK 0NLY1 4 QUANTITIES LIMITED. NOTIONS AND SMALL WARES ! Star Skirt Braid, 3c Skirt Plaiting reduced from 16 to 8c, Whalebone Casing, 2c. Deltinjr, 2c. Silk Beltinp, 8c. Tape Measures, 3c Hook and Eye Tape, 6c. Seam Binding, 2c Tape, were 4c, now 2c Thimbles, were Be. now 3c s. "Whalebones, were 8e, nowSc Steel Hair Pin, were 4c, now 2c Mourning Pins, were 5c. now 3c Pins (good quality), were 5c, now4c S-ifety Pins, were 8c, now 5c Linen Floss, 3c a skein. Shoe Strings, 60 a dozen. Knee Protectors, were 2jc, now 13c Whalebone;., Cc a dozen. Mile End Spool Cotton, 4c a spool, or 43s a dozen. Turney's Pins, were 10c, now 6c. Tnrney's Book Pins, were 13c, now 8c Hooks and Eyei, lc a card. Corset Laces, 2c a dozen. Hair Crimpers, 3c Garter Elastic, former price 10c, now 5c Silk Garters, were 35c, now 19c. Silk Garters, were 63c, now 38c Thimbles, were 7c, now 3c. Cubes ol Pins, were 12c, now 8c Cubes of Pins (large size), were 22c, now 15c Emeries, were 7c, now 3c Pin Cushion', were 7c, now 4c. Pin Cushions, were 13c, now 8c Darning "Worsteds, were 4c, now 2c Cabinet Hair Pins, were 5c, now 3c Elbow Dress Shields, were 10c, now 5c No. 1 Seamless Stockinet Dress Shields, were 15c, now 8c No. 2 Seamless Stockinet Dres3 Shields, were 18e, now 10c. No. 3 Nainsook Dress Shields, were 25c, now 17c. No. 4 Nainsook Dress Shields, were 35c, now 22c No. 3 Silk Dress Shields, were 38c, now 25c. FLEISHMAN & CO., 50H"pic,st P. S. OUR NEW CLOAK DEPARTMENT Reorganized, Enlarged and Improved will soon be readv for business. null Wl BMUMEIiSBr nEBDMMBSaH And take advantage ot the reduced prices on Fine Kangaroo, Tan and all Lightweight Shoes at LAIRD'S Mammoth -:- Shoe -:- Stores. priced nsro-w" Represent a clean saving of SO TO 33 PEB dEHSTTI On former low prices. Men's Fine Kangaroo and Tan Shoes reduced from 4, $5 and $6 JO $2 90, $3 90, $4 90. Ladies' Finest Hand-made French Dongdla Shoes re duced to $1 98, $2 48, $2 90 and $3 90. "W- IMI- L && I RETAIL MARKET au9 Mwrsa B ether cruHtfj-Vre wqrld.Hr&ruout of the r&smon - ,TTrn yor house-cle&oinj- Ibis & solid ffl&wM cake oj scouring so&p.Try iK Cleanliness is always fashionable and the use. of or the neglect to use SAPOLIO marks a wide' difference in the social scale. The best classes are always the most scrupulous in matters of cleanlinessand the .beat classes use SAPOLIOj 5 ODDS AND ENDS. No. 4 Silk Dress Shields, were 45c, now 29c. No. 3 Black Silk Dress Shields, were 2Se, now 18c. No. 4 Black Silk Dress Shields, were 40c, now 25c. No. 1 Canfield Dress Shields, 19c No. 2 Canfield Dress Shield", 24c. No. 3 Canfield Dresi Shields, 29c Combs, were 10c, now 5c Darning Cotton, 6c per dozen. Dexter's Knitting Cotton, 5c. Barbours" Liuen Thread, 7c Ca.-pet Thread, 7c Silk Twist, lc. Silk Thread (100 yards), 5c Clarks' O. N. T., 4c a spool, or 45c a dozen. Darling Needles, 3c Needles, 3c Bodkins, 6c per dozen. Darneri, were 18c, now 10c. Initial Letters for marking underwear, lOo per gross. Bon Ton Hair Curlers, were 28c, now 19c Little Gem Hair Curlers, were 21c, now 15c Princess No. 1 Hair Curlers, were 28c, now 19c. King's Basting Cotton (SCO yards), 4c Darning "Wool, 2c Cotton Corset Laces, 8c a dozen. Linen Corset Laces, 3c, "Whalebone Casing, 3c. Dress Stays, 3c a dozen. Bone Pant Buttons, 15c a gross. No. 1 Clinton's Safety Pins, 4o a dozen. No. 2 Clinton's Safety Pins, 5c a dozen. No. 3 Clinton's Safety Pins. 7c a dozen. "Warren Hose SupDorters, were 20c, now 12c. Warren Hose Supporters, were 24e, now 17c. Warren Hose Supporters, were 28c, now 20c Warren Hose Supporters, were 33c, now 25c Warren Hose Supporters, were 38c, now 30c. T -A-1 IR, ID STOEES I w6 433 Ol) ST. jesc - L ins Br.'vrfSL ff--:- -" r" "V.T'"! -5 sAaA E IS HK o im. . - M 4 i i 4 1 I towers, and 70a are taken back into the j