CTJSffBfrW 'TWf&BV'im 10 TERY LITTLE STYLE Exhibited by tbe Goulds in Their Spring Hunt for Health. THE WEE W1ZAUD AS A BOTANIST. Baseball Flayers Tind the Springs a Daren for Training. A CELESTIAL MIXTURE OF 1IEDICLNE rrBOX A STAIT COltRKSPOXDEXT.J Hot SrniKGS, April 8. One of the shab biest backs in Hot Springs bumped and rattled along the road in front of the Park Hotel this afternoon jest as the small band of baseball cranks were retnrninj with hoarse voices and perspiring hands from the field where the St Paul team had snatched victory lrom the Cincinnatis (Association). The hack was open and on the back scat sat a little man nitti a great many wrinkles in lis face and cr.iy hairs in his dark "beard. Beside him sat a Tery pretty girl -with a sailor hat and a jaunty air to match. Then vis-a-vis was a. younsr man, of very 6niall importance if appearance were to be trusted. The dust raised by the shuffling horses and the rickety ritr had not subsided before a 2Jrw Yorker anions the baseball cranks said irreverently: "Tuere goes old Jay!" Everybody Iti-ned at once, and as if to jrratity the curiosity of some of his subjects Sir. Gould hooked his umbrella into the hackman's neck and signalled him to wheel 'about. Then as they passed we all had a pood look .it tne "Little "Wizard, " aud the Kew Yorker further identified the pretty Kirl and the commonplace youn; man as Gourde Gould and his young wife, about vhom thousands of younc men raved when che adorned the stage as Edith Kingdon. Cot Patting ou Much Style. Another hack of equally plebeian aspect tne climate will be colder here when the supply of moth-eaten chariots and spavined steeds run out lollowed in the wake of Jay Gould's, containing JIi Helen Gould and Dr. John P. Munn, of 2"ew York, the phy sician vi ho accompanies tne railroad mag nate on all his journeys. The Gould party arrived to-day on their special car and they cot into the hacknien's hands of course. Even the wonderful strategic skill of Mr. Gould could not save him from the common fate of all who get out at the Hot Springs termiuus. It is my belief that Mr. Gould visits Hot Springs iiom time to time to study the hackmen, the druggists, the liotelkeepcrs and the rest of the financiers here. Anjhow, he drove all over town to day, and looked at the new hotels, the building boom, of which many new stores &rc the results, and paid the hackmen with out a protest which astonished them no doubt. Ot course Jay Gould's visit to Hot Springs ct this time is only an incident of his usual tour over tne great system of railroads which he dominates in the Southwest, but some people see significance of another sort in it A man who has had some dealings with Mr. Gould in the past said to me just now: "I have noticed that whenever a man of any influence in a financial way in this countrv dies Jay Gould very often comes upJn tne scene of the deceased's late activity before the estate is settled up. Observe the coinc.dpuce now that 'Diamond' Joe Eeynolds is hardly cold in his grave before Mr. Gould happens to appear in Arkansaw. Diamond Joe, you re member, practically owned the Hot Springs 3Sail-ond, which :s such a valuable feeder of Hr. tji aid's Iroli Mountain road, and he ha . trood many other interests in which Hr Could had concern indirectlv at all fvniib. AVhen a millionaire like 'Diamond Joe' dies there are always ssmc loose ends in. ins estate, ai.d who so well fitted to pick them ud as a brother millionaire? Ym may rest aured tiiat Jay G-.ulil will know sll about the distribution of Diamond Joe's estate, and his knowledge will be obtained at firs: hands, too, before ho goes back to "Sew York. " Gould ns a Botanist. "That is the secret of Jay Gould's won derful success in finance, or ior the matter o. that in everything he has turned his hand to," reruaricei a 2sew York banker who had listened to the above description of 5Ir. Gould's methods. "He knows his own busiuees thoroughly and doesn't trust any body to look after it for him, unless it be that his ill health has forced him to aban don some of the supervision ot his enormous interest to his son George. Thoroughness is Gould's creed and standard. I guess if it is true that he peddled rat traps once, no body ever peddled them with such assiduity and cnterpr.se as he did. I was astonished a year or two ago at an exhibition of Gould's versatility, which was also a tribute to his thoroughness A party of us, bankers and Wall street men, went out to Gould's country seat at Irvington-on-the-Hudson. "It is a beautiful place, as most people know, and Mr. Gould took us about before dinner to see the lions. Among other things he showed us the botanical collection which he had made. It contains, I believe, the principal plants ot almost every coun try in the world some growing out of doers, others in the hot houses. But that was not all. Mr. Gould himself as we wandered amoi.g the flowers and leaves told the two gentlemen who were lucky enough to be beside him most of the time the name, character aud life history of every Dlant they chanced to notice, cr he stopped to Boint out. His acquaintance with botany went tar beyond the text books; it spoke of personal observation and painstaking analysis. It opened my eyes more than anything Wall street had shown me to the positive genius ol the man." ltsrseball In Arkansaw. Everybody knows that Hot Springs is the purgatory ot baseball plavers. In this re gard no doubt the natives are correct in thinking that they ate as near Paradise as they can get. Sot so many baseball players as usual have come doun here to boil out this season; at le.ist I think this is true. St. Augustine has taken your brave boys and a good many others, and the boodle of not a few dazzle! s ot tne diamond has diminished to such .in extent that the Hot Springs visit has hud t !e put off till another year shall have replenished their pockets. Two teams of more or less professional eminence have been playing exhibition games here for a week or two. The Cincin nati Association club has been battling daily with the sturdy St. Paul team of the Northwestern Xeagne. The Cincinnati!, include some faces familiar enough to Pittsburg admirers of the game. The great aud only Arlie Latham is cap taining the Cincinnati team, in which are to be lound also SlcPhee, Tony Mullane, Harrington, lieilly and Holliday. The St. Pauls aie a very heavy crowd ot giants, and they have had the very best of the contest witn C.ucinunti so !ar. The snorts here talk very enthusiastically about the batting abilities nf St, Pauls' left fielder, Hamburg. He is a terrific Elugger with tne stick, and no doubt is des tined to achieve a national reputation. Of the Cincinnatis the veteran Mullane and little Hoiliday, who reminds me of "Fog horn" Miller in his sharp, snirited fielding and base running, are the only stars. Hol liday would be immensely popular with P'ttsburg crowds. I'fcflcrl Training Hard. Pfefler, the great second baseman of the Chicago's Brotherhood team list year, wflose services are still retained by the League club in the Windy City, spent three or lour weeks here nil he was summoned by Anson to report in Chicago last week. He is a geutlemaiiy fellow with nothing of the uoisy pluj:-ugly style about him, and he made a grt many friends at the Park, Where he stopped. Among those who were sttracted bv I'feffer's modet ways and his athletic habits vas a mild middle-aged man from Clucag.i, vim was taking a course of baths with a view : huildurg up a coustitu ion en ctbicii bt' overwork. This invalid ook great interest in Pleficr' mode of li:e, ad the strict regimen under which it was conducted. Pfeffer trained pretty thoroughly wbile he was here; bathing regularly after a long tramp over the hills, or a sharp spin around the hotel grounds. His Chicago admirer observed that Pfeffer'i health improved wonderfully under this treatment and be asked him If he conld share in its benefits, and accompany him in his exercise. Pieffer assented and the, next morning they started out after breakfast for Sulphur Springs, a resort about seven miles from here among the mountains. They started at a dog trot Pieffer's favorite pace. The road between this place and Sulphur Springs is rough and its course is moun tainous. Pfeffer made the return journey alone. His companion owe back by train, and abouftwo doien baths taken since then have not removed all his aches and pains. John L. Sullivan Takes Nothing. How the nnregenerate howled the other day when John h. Sullivan descended upon the town with several other actors and a fearful melodrama. To the bnlk of the population, native and imported here, John L. stands for all that is best and moat beau tiful in this world, and they made the great actor-pugilist ieel his importance to the full. Seats in the parquet at the Opera House went up to 5, and the theater was packed with an audience including all the sports in town and a considerable sprinkling of respectable invalids, who were there, of course, for their health. All day, long be fore the performance took place, there were rumors that John L. had filled up on Ar kansaw tangle-foot and might he expected to take the city by storm. He didn't take anything as it turned out not even a bath. The police force was under arms all dayfor nothing, and Mr. Sullivan appeared with out even a jag on in "Honest Hearts and Willing Hands." They say he played poker at the Arkansaw Club and won quite a sum. He always had the biggest hand, you know. . A Tardy Winter Everywhere. While the weather at Hot Springs during March was near genial and even balmy as compared with the awful article dealt out to you in Pittsburg aud to the North generally, not forgetting Chicago, which seems to have gotten even a double dose, ex perienced persons tell me that the season here is at least two weeks late. Southerners from other States report the same tardiness of winter in his retreat before the vanguard of spring. Last year peaches were ripe in the orchards hereabout on the 1st of May, but that will not happen this year for the blossoms have not fallen yet and the land scape is still prettily splashed with pink. Better than by figures from the thermome ter you can judge of the weather we have been enjoying here for some time when I tell you that the grand stand it is a sort of a baby grand at the ball game on Saturday last and again to-day was filled with inva lids and convalescents out to enjoy the sun shine more than the science and slugging of the St Paul and Cincinnati nines. On Sunday, when ne went to church, the Easter bonnets called upon the parasols lor protec tion from the sun, and under some blooming peach trees by the roadside brown pickanin nies, with very little more covering than their playmates, the black pigs, were dis porting in the dust. The natives flatter themselves that they are not out of the fashion, that they have had la grippe among them, but the doctors and my own senses tell me that they err. They have mistaken the simple but suffi ciently disagreeable cold for the horrible plague with the Franco-Russian name. A Celestial Mixture of Medicine. Talking of laymen's mistakes in the diagnosis of disease, a fair invalid's exper ience with a quack is worth telling here. I had it from the woman herself a South erner, who is fond of experimenting upon herself, it may be inferred. She said: "Last winter when I stopped at a hotel in Den ver I suffered a great deal iroai asthma, and somebody or other suggested that I should call in a Chinese physician who was mak ing some stir in the city. 1 did so, and a little ash-colored heathen calling himself Gun Wall came up to the parlor to see me. He asked me some questions the stereo typed ones Caucasian doctors put and left me a box of pills which he said would soon loosen the trouble in my lungs and give me relief. The pills did not have the beneficial effect; indeed, they made me terribly sick that night I was coughing as much as ever when he called the next day, in a great state of perturba tion. It was not easy to maki out what ailed the Chinaman; he talked very fast and in broken pigeon-English, but at last I made out that he had given me by mistake the medicine intended for a Mr. Crow "Clo' he calldd him another patient of his at the hotel. By that time I was pretty well tired of the Chinese doctor and Celestial medi cine, and I paid him off without further ex periment. Later I made the acquaintance of Mr. Crow who got the medicine meant for my asthma. We compared notes. What do vou suppose he was being treated for? Cala'ractI" Zach's Ready Wit. The chief doctors here employ several col ored mn to wait upon their patients, to usher them into the waiting room and to sec that they reach the inner shrine in the order nf their arrival. Dr. Dake, the leading homeopathlst, has a very bright colored man, whose name is, I think, Zach. The other day, during his office hours. Dr. Dake received a summons from one of his patients, who, although not seriously ill, is always afraid he is going to die. Dr. Dake had heard the cry of "wolf" so often from this quarier that he paid small heed to it, and told Zach to go to the nervous invalid and tell him to apply certain simple reme dies until he, the doctor, could leave his office. . "All right, suh," said Zach, starting away, and then as he reached the door he added: "If I'ae not back in an houah, suh, you may kuow I'segone fer der undertakah, suhl" HEPBUItiT Johjjs. CAKiDIAKS SMUGGLING. How They Take Advantage of the Fall In Sngar. Montreal, April 13. The dwellers along the borders of the United States and the eastern townships are bound to have freer trade relations in one way if not in another. There is now a difference between the price of refiued sugars in the United States and Cauada of 2 cents per pound, or about $6 a barrel, so that. the inducements to smuggling are enormous. Advices from that locality affirm that re tailers are offering granulated sugar at 5 5Jc per pound, and even here in Mon treal granulated and yellow refined sugar are selling under prices obtainable at the refineries. Their prices are 6c, and there is only one way in which the commodity can be sold SO per cent under cost, and that is by smuggling it into the heart of the Dominion. Another suggestion is that the refiners have betrayed the grocers.' combine and are themselves cntting prices. The Mon treal market for refined sugar is in a very unsettled condition, and no improvement is looked lor till the Government indicates which course it is to pursue. Pahliamektakt law, arbitrary or not, will not hurt the rale of Dr. Bull's Cough Syrup. Notice to Retail Milliners In Pittsburg and adjoining towns. Mr. W. D. Clause will be at the Hotel Anderson April 13, 14, 15, with a full line of samples and pattern hats. Please call. Ammon Stevens & Co., 4 Cleveland, O. 9 REAL ESTATE SAVINGS BANK, IXU. 401 Bmithflelil Street Cor. Fourth Avenue. Capital, $100,000. Surplus, $69,000. Deposits of $1 and upward received and interest allowed at 4 per cent txs SI CO. Until rnrllier Notice. S3. We will make our best cabinet photo graphs for SI CO per dozen, or a life-size crayon lor $3. Bring the children. Come early to Anirccht's Elite GaIley,31G Market street, Pittsburg. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup for Chll Iid Teotu'iurclrpi gnlet hernial lest. THE A PEEP AT YOKOHAMA Breezy Pen Pictures of Life in the Great Seaport of Japan. THE SHOPPING QUARTER QOAIHT. A ffhoU Day's Theatricals for the Small Enm of a TanVes Dime. WHERE LUXURIOUS LIYING IS CHEAP Pretty nearly every American who goes to Japan lands at Yokohama, the seaport of Japan, chiefly, perhaps, from its vicinity to Tokyo, the Capital of the country, writes Douglas Sladen. It is a very goQd place to land, for it is the principal foreign colony, and one can get excellent accommodation to recruit after the voyage, and a good many wrinkles about traveling in the interior. How novel aud strange it was to sit down to a regular French lunch of many courses, served by a crowd of spindle-legged Japanese, in their picturesque dark blue tunics and hose, who (most of theni), could not speak a word of English, and took their orders by the numbers on the menu: "Boy, bring me some No. 6." How funny we thought the shu filing noise they made as they ran about the floor, dragging their straw sandals by the big toes. Lauding in Japan 'is most entertaining. The moment a ship drops anchor she is sur rounded by a flotilla of sampans queer little native boats, propelled with one oar by half-naked "Japs," who swarm up on the ship's deck, sucking in their breath and bowing to the ground as soon as they are on board. Nobody patronizes them but the Asiatic passengers. Saloon passengers go ofi'in the hotel launches, and in a few min utes, threading their way through the swarmiug native craft, land yon close by the Custom House. Your luggage is car ried up by a swarm of coolies. How funny these coolies looked the first time one saw thcml Just like the servants in Perugino's pictures, or the varlets of the Shakespearian stage, in their tight hose and tunics, which were made of dark blue cotton, ornamented in the back with some brilliant device in white or red. Odd Tilings In the Shop Quarter. Close to the Hatoba is the division be tween the native and European cities. We made our escape from the "lie European town,' as the Chinamen would call it, and struck the genuine Japanese town in the Ben-ten dori (Venus street). The houses there Were thoroughly Japanese little one story affairs, built of wood, with their fronts removed all day, replaced, unless it was sunny enough, with dark blue or chocolate colored curtains, like the door of a tent ornamented with the owner's name or de vice in huge white Chinese characters. Most of them in the street were shops for the benefit of foreigners photograph shops, porcelain shops, casket shops, silk mer chants, haberdashers, or curio shops of the third order. The second order are in the Honcho dori the next street which emblematizes its superiority by having the shop fronts glazed instead of open. The first order are in shape like Dcakins or the hue art gallery in the lorcign settlement. Even some of the Ben-ten dori shops were un-Japanese enough to have counters.- The true Japanese store has a floor, raised about a foot above the street, covered with fine white straw mats nn inch thick. On this the proprietor squats, the customer never stepping upon it without removing his boots. The stock is partly spread out on the floor, partly on shelves ami partly hung from the ceiling. At the rear is a wooden ladder, like a ship's cotufianion, leading to the attic, if there is one, and there is gener ally a passage on one side. ' In the first shop a little boy was finishing off, with a hammer and agate burnisher, the gilt on one of the sreat "Satsuma jars," which they make in Yokohama. Tbe Theater Street. In about the third shop we bought some note paper, ornamented with storks, temples, torii and Fujiyama, which we loudly be lieved to be what the Japanese used, until a little lower down we came to a genuine Jap anese stationer's, Toinoya's, where we saw the 100-fect rolls of porous wrapping paper, upon which the natives of "Nippon" indite their "billets-doux," and saw them making the great white-covered account books with knotted rope backs, so familiar to us after ward. But even the Ben-ten dori was not quite Japanesy enough, though we did see a human water cart, carrying two great buckets of unpainted wood, which he set "a-showering" bv pulling up a spigot tied to a cord, held "against a linchet handle. The Japanese are wonderfully dexterous with their i fingers; they can do a different thing with every finger on their band at the same tim. A little lower down we found ourselves in the "theater street," a genuine bit of Japan. At the very entrance was a theater, where you could sit all day for ten cents, and smoke your pipe and eat ynur dinner; orna mented outside with huge sign-boards, cov ered with the most blood-curdling pictures of dragons as big as ships, breathing the traditional fire, of women being cut up, like beefsteaks, of blood-splashing murders, and splithair's-breadth escapes, painted in all the colors of the rainbow, the line of blood show ing up nobly. Most Japauese plays are very much in Ercles' vein; they are really exceedingly clever in simulating wounds; the murderer makes a savage cut and.blood spurts from his victim. A "turn turuming" noise is kept up all the time the perform ance goes on, possibly to draw the attention ol folks outside to the fait that the perform ance is going on. And a hoarse-voiced man invites you to enter, like 'the keeper of the ";at woman" and the "dog-faced man" at an English fair. Mntron-LIke Little Children. Outside the theater were a row of little girls, seemingly about 4 years old, carrying the next baby but one in the haon, on their backs, and discussing affairs with the grav ity of matrons, or skipping about to get out ot the way of the kodak. Whether they were standing still, or he was having his head shaken off, seemed a matter of pure indifference to the baby. Close by stood the pipe mender, with a rack full of second hand pipes, ranging down to a cent in price; bnt most of the customers wished to econo mize, and have their own dilapidated pipes mended. Then we. drove on, and passed a peripatetic kevsmith, carrying on his shoulder a box like a bootblack's, but hand somely bouud ivith brass, and hung with festoons of keys, aud close by blm an "araeya," or maker of dough toys, with one of the little street stoves, where, by paying a fraction of a cent children can have a little dough and sauce, and spend the whole afternoon in cooking. It Is a wonderful street,this Theater street, with its theaters and bath houses, anil ba zaars, where they sell semi-European trash, aud the inevitable pipe cases and hairpins. It has one most fascinating by-street lead ing off it, where the cabinet makers and lourth-closs curio sellers congregate. I have spent days and days in this street, picking up queer little articles of daily domestic use among the humbler Japanese as artistic as a Greek temple in their ob servance of the science of shape and orna ment, and each with its little bit of allegory or famous legend hinted at Brass bowls and placques, pipe case clasps, wooden and bone net sukes, metal ink pots for the belt, hardly differing from tbe Turkish; bronze mirrors and miniature temple ornaments; inros of rare lacquer chipped oat of all value, but interesting as specimens; the comb and mirror pouches used by Geish girls, and what not Foreigners Rather Well Fixed. When we had got to tbe end ot Theater street the rikisha .boys, who being paid by the hour (a whole 15 cents), naturally want ed to spin things out as much as possible, suggested that we should return by way of the'bluff. "Yon, see where English gentle man lives; very rich." Yokohama consists of at least five differ ent .quarters. TbeJwrH-to-do lorcignars all I lira up on '-'the Bluff,", as tho oueer; flat-1 KLTTSBUIIG- DISPATCH. topped hill of tbe orthodox Japanese pat, tern at the entrance of.the harbor is called. Their places of business and the hotels are in the settlement, separated from the Bluff by a creek, and mostly near the sea front or Bunch. At the back ot 'this is "China town." Yokohama has a population of 2,000 or 3,000 Chinese, and, separated from the settlement and Chinatown, by the road from the Hatoba to tbe cricket ground, is the native town, faced in the front mostly by buildings in the" European, style. Be yond this, again, is the Kanagawa Bluff, where the wealthy Japanese live, almost Overhanging the'railway station. Tho houses of the wealthy foreigners on the Bluff are some of them delightful. The -unevenness ot the ground gives a wonderful opportunity ior landscape gardening, and with a bamboo brake, a few palms, a lotus pond and one or two of the great stone vo tive lanterns tbey call ishi doro, one can be as Oriental as Aladdin. The houses them selves are great, roomy bungalows, full of the artistic things which can be picked up so easily in this land of recently decayed feudalism, and which will make the owner's fortune, or remind him forever of the quaint Eastern land in which he was a pilgrim a'nXl a sojourner, alter he Jias returned home, as the Englishman in the East always mean to do. The houses are full of picturesque, smiling, obliging servants, and really their owners have as much quiet lnxury as any reasonable man could desire. The Street Conjurers. Tiffin, as they call lunch in the East, is at 12, aud so we had been able to drive all around the native town; "the Bluff" and "the Settlement" and back in time X see some performances by daylight of the street tumblers and acrobats and monkey trainers, who hadollected around the Club Hotel ou observing that a new ship had come in. The conjurer's principal tricks consist in living on his back with his feet in the air, support ing tiers of human beings or spinning' an impossible number of large wooden tubs at the same time, or eating flaming charcoal. His sleight-of-hand is not, as a rule, remark able in Japan. I soon got tired of the con jurer, and persuaded tbe monkey trainer to begin. Their "monkey business" .is very funny in this particular troupe.jJThs're were two men and a very pretty and picturesque young womau a regular gypsy, as black as a Malay, who did everything with an up tossed head and haughty look in her eyes, as if she "couldn't be bothered." Her duties were multifarious. She had to twang tbe samisen, beat the drum, and keep the monkeys' wardrobes sorted, so that the performers could dress up the ani mals without delay. If the Japauese only knew how exactly the monkeys counterfeit them in the eyes of strangers, they would execute every nioukey in Dai Nippon. Now it would be an imita tion of a swaggering, two-sworded Samura; now an old hunchbacked mendicant woman hobbling along' with a stick; now the haughty master scolding a servant kowtow ing and groveling his forehead in the dust alwaps too life-like. Luxuriant, bat Cheap Living. We lived luxuriously at the Club Hotel. We had a fine sitting roam with five win dows, less than a stone's throw from the sea, with a private entrance to the street, and bedrooms, en suite, for almost half what it would cost us to live in the same style at quite a second-class New York hotel, and our first dinner will give an idea of how we were led. Our bill of fare that night moluded oys ters and turtle soup aud fish better cooked than one ever gets in an American hotel, and various kinds of meat and poultry and game and entries, and three or four kinds of pudding, with truit and nuts to wind up with. This was the roughing it in Japan that we had pictured to ourselves, and after dessert I spent a delightful hour in the snug library of the Yokohama United Club, one of the coziest clubs I know, aud then came back to our sitting-room to join the others.ensconced in easy chairs, with the feeling of content one has when one has bad a thoroughly good dinner as a climax to a tiring day on shore and a tiring fortnight on a stormy sea. Wp snt with ilia Hrnnmv hnnnlnnca tt 'lotos-eaters, listening to all sorts of unfamil- liar sounds, the shrill ho-he-to wr is tie on the double bamboo, followed by the clop clop of a blind man's staff proclaiming the wandering momo (massage operator), a task performed almost exclusively by the blind in Japan; the olattering of the rfsbka boys, whose vehicles wc conld couut by tbe glim mering lanterns of brightly painted paper, and at 9 o'clock the bugling on the war ships, which summoned to bed. ELECTRICAL WONDERS. AN IHTEEESTIHG DISPLAY PLAHNED FOR THE WOELD'S FADZ Application of Electricity to Various Eco- nomio Uses It Will Be Hade to Do Many Wonderful Things A Great Exhibit nf This Powerful Agent. Chicago, April 13. Electricity and its application to various economic uses prom ises to be one of the "wonders of the fair. Prof. John Barrett, Chief of the Depart ment of Electricity, is working hard for a great exhibit. An illustration of the many uses of electricity will be furnished in a miniature "electric" house. Electricity will be made to do many unusual things. The door-bell will be rung from a push but ton, the lights in the halls and all the rooms will be controlled from a given point, as well. as from the door of each room. An electric burglar-alarm will be there to pro tect the sleeping family, with a contrivance lor lighting the incandescent lamps afthe point of entrance of the intruder. The apartments will be warmed by elec tric radiators and'venlilated and copied by a system ot electric fans. The cooking for the f . frail v will be conducted upon an electric range in the kitchen at the top'of the house, and tbe food lowered to the dining room upon an electrically propelled dumb-waiter. Tbe dishes will be washed by an electric dishwasher. 'on which a child can wash 10,000 pieces a day. The washing, ironing, the scrubbing of the floors and woodwork, the scrubbing of the sijver and knives, and even the washing of the windows will be done by electricity. The offal, debris and sewage will be destroyed by an electric cur rent run to a specially prepared receptacle. A telephone and writing telegraph in strument will be in the sanctum of the mas ter of the bouse 'for the purposes ot his busi ness, and also a portable phonograph, with cylinders, for mailing a conversation to any point In the parlor will be a musical tele graph, with attachment for diffusing the music to an audience; a phonograph and cylinders containing celebrated speeches by celebrated men and songs by celebrated wdmen. There will be electric mnsic-boxes and every known contrivance to minister to the pleasure or comfort of tbe family. But this isn't all. "It is proposed," says Prof. Barrett, "to make a fac-simile figure ofPatti, to embody her gestures, smiles, movement of the eyes, etc., and to install in this figure a 'phonograph with attachment for disseminating the sounds to an audience. In this way one may experience all the pleasures'of an evening with the celebrated prima donna, hear her sweetestsongs precise ly as she renders them, and at the same time know that all this is the result of the genius of man." Coughs, hoarseness, sore- throat, etc., quickly Kllcyrd by Brown's Bronchial Troches. AMmnle and effectual remedy, superior to all other articles lor the same purpose, bold only In boxes. Notice to Eetall Milliners In Pittsburg pnd adjoining towns. Mr. "W. D. Clause will be at the Hotel Anderson April 13, 14, IS, with a full line of samples and pattern bats. Please call. Amuon Stevens & Co.. Cleveland, O. - The Lending Shoe. For $1 25 ladies' glazed kid shoe; worked button boles; nice soft stock. The best shoe ever sold at this price, at G.' D. Simen's, 78 Ohio utreet, Allegheny, Pa. ' ttf PHTSlcrANS recommend Pilsner beer as a .strengthener ft'r the "grip. 'Telephone 1 TUESDAY .APRIL 14, WEST VIRGINIA OIL Wildcatting With Less Kesnlts Than in' Any dlher Section. MTTLE F1I0H THE EXPERIMENTS. Kothlng New of Importance Reported From the Nearby Bields. WILDWOOD KBEM UP-THE OLD PACE The amount of "wildcatting" in West Virginia is simply surprising, and that there is in contemplation, as soon as better roads and weather prevail, more of it is more astounding. Just why capital will take its chances in West Virginia, with a knowledge and history of the conntry, and tbe slim prospects of higher-priced oil, is beyond conception. At no period of the industry has the experimental drill been so active and the results so little as at present The Eureka, Belmont and St Mary's pools have passedthe meridian of lite, and there is nothing in these places to indicate a revival'of their past history. We are glad to note, however, that "Billy" Boyle, "Billy" Johnson and good-natured Theo dore Barnsdall have met with success in this county, and if the tempter is not too strong will come out ahead. Jim Tennart, too, is iu a fair way ot making a raise, which will leive him right for the hardships he encountered in scouting at Cherry Grove. Jim, with a partner, is now drilling a "wildcat" well on Bull creek, and thinks tbey have got the well located on the spot Hannah & Co. recently completed a dry hole 350 feet northwest of Boyle's well on the Sheats farm. Boyle's well is doing about 40 barrels a. day. On the Ohio side of the river the Emery Oil Company have a well near the sand. The Johnston well, on Friendly Island, is drilling at about 2,000 feet It will be remembered this well was shut down in an unknown sand with some show of oil, but has since been drilled through, with no improve ment. They ''are now drilling for the Gordon sand. Unknown parties are drilling a well on tbe Ohio side at the head of Middle Island. The Duncan Oil'Com pany are also drilling a well back ot St. Mary's. Ackerley & Samuel continue to get good paying 'wells just north of New port The Ward well, about six miles north and 10 east from Newport, and 600 feet east of the Mandcville well at Archer's Forks, is still shut down on top of the sand. It is the intention of this company to drill this well in next week. This is considered a very important venture, as it will show to some extent the direction of tbe Archer Forks pool. The Monroe County Well. The Vandergritt & Co. well in Monroe county, 17 miles northeast of Archer Forks, will be drilled through the sand next week and tubed. Nothing In Wlldwood. , Wildwood presents .nothing new to-day, nothing being booked to come in but Griffith & Forest Oil Company's Whuesell well No. 12 which was drilled to-daj is still holding up from tbe first pay. Bowman & Co. struck gas in the 100-loot sand to-day, which is very unusual in this field. The re sult was the burning down of tbe rig. Iioth Oil Company's No. 2. Peeples well will be in on Wednesday with no bad luck. Johu M. Patterson's Espey well, on the Perrysville plank road west of Wildwood field, is on top the 30-Toot sand this evening. Griffith & Co. in Cole well are putting in the first casing. Greenlee & Forst.s Alston well No. 1 is doing three inches per hour. J. McGuffiv & Queen's No. 1 Kolber well is doing Z inches per hour. A New "Well at Glenshaw. The Hassinger well, located two miles northeast of Glenshaw, and which was be ing drilled by1 Wittmer Bros. & Co., late Saturday evening, at a depth of 35 -feet in the sand, found oil. It made several small spurts and they shut down to await the building of tankage, which will be this evening, and they expeot to drill the well in to-morrow, when her capacity as a producer 'will be known, although from the apparent ansence ot gas tbe well may have to be tubed to ascertain what it rill actually do. The com pa av are trying to mystify tne ven ture as much as possible, but old bands put her in her present status among the small producers, although deeper drilling may in crease her materially. Very Quiet In Butler. The field situation in Butler is distress ingly quiet. Harmony is stuggling along with about 200 barrels production per dav. Zelienople with about the same. Sutton & Co. No. 4, on M. Ziegler farm, is completed and dry. Gallery field is also quiet Hays & Co, No. 2, Bichardson farm, is tubed and pumping 30 barrels per day, makes frequent small flows, and makes its production without affecting wells near it Innis &"Co", on tbe Double farm, Muddy creek, is a duster. Location, about 100 rods north of tfieir No. 1 on Hockenbury farm. Snyder No. 2 well is in sand and reported to have a -fair showing. It is within 100 feet of their No. 1 Jefferson Center offers nothing. New producers are awaiting bet ter weather before making any effort to do anything. A Well Hint May Tell. A dispatch from Bulger says: A short tinie ago Carr Bros., of Zanesville, O., secured a lease of the Neal farm, con taining 100 acres, situated one-half mile northeast from Bulger station. They have built a rig and are drilling. The well is located between the Royal Gas Company's.. ,oil wells on tne AlclJnnald J arm on the ,e:ist and the Lawrence Gas Company's gas well on tbe Work farm on the west. The Lawrence Gas Company rnnnlineof levels on the Pittsbnrg coal in this section and located an "anticlinal" near .Bulger. Carr Bros, made a like examination and formed the same rock position, and located upon an "anticlinal" with a gas well in close prox imity on the west and the Royal Company's oil wells on the feast. It might be well for the trade to keep au eye ou this well. Little. Progress at Bridgevllle. This embryonic pool does not seem to make much progress'inthe way'otiig wells and new production. 'Graham & Co., on the J. Gilbert farm, are through the 50-foot, and the hole is filled up from 1,000 to 1,200 feet with oil; that is, when the tools are run ning. They are still drilling, and will penetrate the Gordon horizon before calling a halt Robinson & Co., on the Hugh Morgan farm, are drilling at 1,200. feet. Graham & Co., on the Jwmei Alexander-farm, are looking for the 50-foot some time to-morrow. The same company's No. 1 Hopper,' which burned down about three weeks ago, has got started up again, and will soon reach tbe Gordon. Alexander No. 1 is making 10 barrels n day and No. 2 32 bary rels a day. Donaldson No. 1 hows a ganije of 22 barrels a"UaV and No. 2 10 barr-eTsA while the Forest City Oil Company's Efick-' man farm well is panning out 7 barrels a a ay. News From Toylorstown. Uncle Isaac Reinemsn, high cockalorum of the Washington Oil Company came into the city to-day from suburban Washington, and in response tounterrogaticfui from The Dispatch scont, said thayoperatious in the Washington and t Tavlorstown field 'were very limited. Mr. Rcine man, who is authority on oil mat ters, was of tj18 opjmion that there would be very little drilling done in these fields the coming seaso. The Washington Oil Company have recently finished up two, wells, oire of.theni oV the Samuel Carson farm, whichls good fir 40 barrels, and the other on the John) Brown Lee, which is making CO or 60 barrels a day. This com pany bate one well drilling on the Sam Carson, farnvwhicb! is now in the "Big Jnju&v There is lout little prospect of a revfri of .old tims in this field, unless the gas weljj now dofiling should hit something ricn. -., '. n. Jauu, 1S9L KENO AT THE CAPITAL. A MOHTE CARLO IN THE SHADOW 07 WASHIHOION MOHOTtEHT. The Notorious Gambling Places of the Olden Days Banlkhed Across the Potomac How the 'Garni la Conducted In These Latter Times. Washington, April 13. This city, which was in tbe old ante-bellum days and for some years after tbe war one of tbe greatest gambling centers in America, is to day without a single gambling hell. That is to say, there are no longer public places where men can go to buck the tiger, pay stnd horse poker, keno, rouge et noir and other games ot chance. Of course, a good deal of draw poker is played by the poli ticiads,but it is conducted quietly in private houses or social clubs. There is nothing lilTe the old luxurious gambling establish ment which was run by Pendleton, who, I believe, was a distant relative of tbe late Senator lrom Ohio. At Pendleton's place on tbe ayenue, which is always pointed out to strangers, high stakes were tbe rule and many of the most conspicuous men of that day were regular worshiperst the shrine of fortune. Thad Stevens, Henry Clay, Bob Toombs and others were there almost nightly. Stories of the high ,play that was indulged in are retailed by the score by the old-timers. They tell of a famous game once between Thad Stevens and George D. Prentice, the predecessor of the star-eyed Wattcrson. It was poker, and backward and forward the "raises" had been going on until finally Prentice, whose cash was exhausted, negotiated the sale of several' negroes whom be owned to continue. Finally Stevens, who held fonr kings, told Prentice that be bad been beaten, .and re quested him to allow the hands to be shown, or as the gamblers put it, to "call" him. To that Prentice, who had four aces (this was before the day of the sequence flush), responded: "I never call yon. If I Iras Jupiter, and stars were chips, I would darken the heavens with this hand." The only vestige of public gaming re maining has been banished'to the soil of the Old Dominion across the Potomac river and out ot reach of the laws of the District of Columbia. Think of ft The mother of Presidents nursing in her bosom the vice of gambling alter it had been scourged out of WasbingtonI And it is keno, the lowest kind of gaming, that which appeals to the poorer class of the population who have only a few dimes to risk. They call the place where these keno games are conducted Monte Carlo. It consists of two large frame houses on the opposite side of tbe 'river from Wash ington where every afternoon and evening from 200 to 400 people are crowded about long tables "pegging" away at their cards as the manipulator of tbe wheel calls out the number. Only 10 cents can be risked on a card with the chance of winning from $10 to $15 according to the number who are in tbe game. It is in reality a aool, to which each player contributes 10 cents and which the sucresslul person wins, less the percent age of 10 per cent extracted by tbe dealer or whatever the person who manipulates the game is called. In these hot rooms, choked with tobacco smoke and alcoholic fumes, the young- Virginia farmers, some of them, perhaps, the descendants of Washington, Jefferson, Madison aud Monroe, squander their small earnings under the shadow ol the Washington Monument Little steam ferry boats ply between Georgetown and Monte Carlo every 15 minutes to .accommo date tbe Washington and Georgetown cus tomers. The-games are seldom disturbed. Occasionally a posse of Virginia constables come down out of the hills, confiscate tbe paraphernalia and fine the proprietors. Bnt not often. Tbe proprietors are willing to pay liberally to avoid being disturbed. HANKAH SO UTHWOBTH BTJBDm Body of the Slayer of Stephen X, Fettus Qaletly Taken to Kentucky. Louisville, April 13. There was no announcement of the burial of tbejbodyof Mrs. Hannah B. Sonthworth at "Cave Hill ou Friday afternoon. There were no mourners, no prayers, no one bnt tbe sexton and his assistant'to put away tbe remains nf the beautiful woman who startled all New York and Kentucky when she shot to death Broker Stepheu I Pettus, on' the morning of November 22, 1839, in' front of a tea store on" Fulton street, New York. But lor tbe laws of the city of Louisville no one but the family would have been aware of the fact" that Sirs. Southworth's remains rest in peace at tbe head of the street on which she was born. "tBefore the body oould be buried a burialpermit had to be ob tained, and this formality cansed the burial to leak oat Friday morning L. D. Pearson & Son, funeral directors, received a telegram from the dead woman's mother, Mrs. E. J. Mar tin, at Brooklyn, to meet the remains at noon at the Short Line depot, and bury them in the beautiful Martin plot in Cave Hill. When the train pulled in a big piftn box, lined with tin and containing a metal lic coffin, was lifted from the express car, placed in a covered undertaker's wagon, and taken to Cave Hill. A grave had been prepared, and ink lew minulea Mrs. South worth's remains 'twere at rest in her native city. The grave nvas neatly filled, and soon a marble shaft ,will mark tbe spot where Hannah Sonthworth lies. Mrs. Southworth died in the Tombs, New York's famous prison, Tuesday morning, January 7, 1890,) where she was confined under indictment for the murder of Pettus, the man at whose hands she claimed she had been greatly wronged. She passed away in her mother's irms, with a prayer on her lip. Soon after life was extinct the body was taken to the residence of William B. Martin, in Brooklyn, where on the follow ing Thursday the funeral services took place, and the body wps temporarily placed in a vault in Grcenwjood, to be quietly removed to Louisville after the tragedy which mined the woman's -.life; bad passed away from the minds of the people. BOW ImOBG HEGB0E8. A Little Boy Receives a Ballot Intended for Another. Little Rook, April 13. A bmndy row occurred early this morning between a dozen or more negroes at Faucett Bros.' saloon at Arger.ta, dijrectly across the river. A crap game was iri progress when a dispute arose over the lownership of a 5-cent check be tween twe! of the players, one of whom, John Jortes, drew a razor and attempted to use it upibn tbe negro who took the check. The l.ytter, who is a stranger, whipped out a revolver and flred at Jones. The bullet misseclhis intended victim, and entered the heart jnf a l-vear-old boy, named Robinou. Alter! the killing of the" boy, a general fight occupied among the negroes, in which several were badly hurt DEYOUBED BY W0LV8. orrlble Fate of a Chopper in the Woods Near Cneboj gan. , Cheboygan; Mich., April 13. James 'and John Gillspiei were working in the woods near Mullet lake, 12 miles south of here, when James' ax slipped aud cut a ter rible gash in bis leg. John bound up the wound and went to the village for help to bring in the wounded man. When the crowd came to the spot, they found a pack of wolves fighting over a lot of bones and clothing where John left his brother. The rescning party chased the wolves off and brought the bones b.fck for burial. LINOLEUMS at prices not to be, found in any other store fn cither cilv, at Weltv's, 120 Federal street, 03, G7, G9" and 71 Park way. tts An Ail-Around Superiority. A reliable brand of beer is that manu factured by the Iron City Brewing Company. This heer is better than any German article, and English porter cannot compare with the Iron City porter. . Hdndiikds of rolls oil cloth from 20o per yard to tbe best grades, at Welly's, 120 Fed eral street, 65. 67, 69 and 71 Park way. GOOD AS THE GENUINE A Kew Issne of Counterfeits Which Cannot Be Detected. RESULT' OP' LATE IKYEHTIOHS. Even the Special Paper Proves to Afford Ko Protection. THE WORK OP PEK-AXD-IXK AKTISTS WAsnisGjoir. April 13. The chief engraver of the Bnreau of Engraving and Printing was closeted the other day fur a long while with tbe Treasurer of tbe United States. Spread before them were two silver certificates one of regular Government is sne and the other a specimen of the new $2 counterfeit which has occasioned such a sen sation by reason of tbe perfection of its ex ecution. After spending a fnll hour exam ining the real and the false notes with pow erful magnifying glasses, the famous expert in mouey designing turned to tbe guardian of Uncle Sam's cash box and said: "There are no diflerencas." To such a point, in fact, has the art of counterfeiting been developed. The work of the fraudulent money makers is no longer, feebly imitative. Year after year it has grown more difficult of detection, until at last it may be said that the swindler can make as good a paper dollar as the Govern ment is able to produce. A high Treasury official was asked yesterday what was the chief difficulty that a counterfeiter bad to overcome in the manufacture of a successful bank note or certificate. A Itecent Invention Settled It. "He has no difficulties to encounter," was tbe reply. "The last of them has been swept away by a recent invention. A while ago. although some of the most skilllnl en gravers in the world belonged fo the crim inal class, their work was, nevertheless, invariably distinguishable from the true, there being differences beyond tbe power of hands or tools to avoid. But the new photo-mechanical processes have revolntionized counterfeit ing. With no labor worth mentioning, the camera reproduces the design of a note upon a metal plate, which, after passing through a simple etching process, becomes to all intents and purposes a fac simile ot the original steel engraving, ready to print the money from. Thanks to late discoveries in photochromy, the execu tion of green backs and red seals in pre cisely the proper shades is tbe easiest thing in the world. Here is tbe last report of the Chief of the Secret Service. He says: 'The genuine Government notes nowadays, es pecially the series of 1800, are marvels of tbe engraver's art, aided by the wonderful geometric lathe. One would think it im possible to successfully counterfeit such work, upon looking over the complex area of lines and patterns, and yet at this mo ment counterfeiters are reproducing it so perfectly that the elaborate beanty of this paper money may be said to offer no protec tion to the public or defense against fraud.'" "But how aboufimitating the paper?" The Special Paper 'o Protection. "That is no obstacle to the counterfeiter. The special paper used by the Treasuiy doesn't amount to a red cent as a protec tion. How should it? You can buy the same stuff, according to quality, at any stationer's. No, of course' it lacks the threads; but of what use are they? II a note appears satisfactory in other respects, who ever thinks of looking for the threads? Suppose, however, that one diJ; the swindler has several wayoof supplying them. With a ruler- anil a fine pen, loaded with light blue ink, he can draw them to perfection across the lace of the note; or he creases the bill very hard leugthwise with his thumb nail, so that anybody who is looking for a thread will swear he sees one in the fold, the illusion being caused by a breaking of the fiber in the paper. Possibly the suspicious person may try to lilt out the thread at a poiut with a pin. It he does, it is a hundred to one that the toughness of the paper's fiber will lead him to think the thread, is there. Oh, no; the paper is no safeguard." "What Is to be done, then?" "It's hard to say. Something has cer tainly got to be done when the Treasury engravers cannot tell counterfeits from the work they have themselves executed. I woul&suggest that radical changes should be made respecting tbe paper on which tbe money Is printed. Our designs are repro duced to perfection, therefore we have, noth ing hut the paper to fall back upon. It should be made absolutely distinctive, legal enactment forbidding the manufacture of any paper like the money paper of the Gov ernment. Each denomination of note or certificate ought to have its own special va riety of this kind of paper, so that one could tell a one-dollar bill from a five by the. Ieel merely. Trne, tbe paper could be imitated, but it is not "possible' to make finey paper without a bulky plant, and all factories here aud abroad would be carefully watched." The fllbst Bemarkable Counterfeiter. A few days ago the Secret Service Bureau of tbe Treasury received with renewed ex asperation the latest production nf the pen-and-ink counterfeiter. This extraordinary man, who "may fairly be considered the most remarkable maker of. false money known to history, must devote tbe greater part of hU time year alter year td his chosen pastime. It can be nothing more to hi to, inasmuch as the remuneration is necessarily small. The wonder.ul thing about bis imitations of United States notes is that they are executed entirely with the pen, even to the vignettes and most elaborate bogus lathe work. To produce one must require a vast deal of patience. Apparently be does about two a year, for once in six months pretty regularly a specimen makes its appearance, to tbe dis gust of the Government detectives. It is always either a fitty or a twenty, and it is a very curious fact that no two are sent to the department here from tbe same city. The supposition is that the forger, as quickly as he has passed one of his works of art, changes his residence to iinother city. He gets rid of the note be has just completed, which may remain in circu lation for some time before reaching a bank, and departs long ere tbe police agents have a chance to arrive upon the scene. The most plausible theory is that he is-a monomaniac of means, who gratifies a morbid vanity iu this way. His work bears scrutiny with the naked eye, though not with tbe magnifying glass. One of the most dangerous counterfeits at present extant is a bogus United States Treasury note for $1,000. Nut only are a number of the note themselves supposed to be in circulation five of them have been passed on one bink but the plates are in existence somewhere.ready to strike off mill Ions in currency ot large denomination. Thesa plates are known to have been execu ted by that most expert ot living forgers, Charles II. Smith. He was ,tlie man who, being employed as an engraver to execute certain 1,000 United States bonds 11 years ago, made a duplicate plate at homo in the evenings, primed S203.C03 worth of the bonds, and was only caught and prevented from negotiating (he boodle by sheer acci dent YotT have corns, and all druggists sell for 15 cents a positive cure Daisy Corn Cure. Notice to Itetall Milliners In Pittsburg and adjoining towns. Mr. W. D. Clause will.be- at the Hotel Anderson April 13, 14, 15, with a full line of samples and pattern h.iK Please rail. Aitaios Stevens & Co., Cleveland, O. a Something for the Girls. Fine glazed dongola kid spring heel but ton shoes. Patent leather tips, sizes 8 to 10i. at ?1 25, and Uto 2 at $1 50, at G. D. Simen's, 78. Ohio street, Allegheny, Pa. 'XT J" - -' SyfcppfllCg l.X-iTtrW it I vis nPxSMSEmmBm OJSTB bkjoys Both the method and results -when Syrup of Figs is taken; it 13 pleasant and refreshing to the taste, and acta genfly yet promptly on the .Kidneys, Liver and Bowels, cleanses the-system effectually, -dispels colds, head aches and fevers and cures habitual constipation. Syrup of Fig3 is the only remedy of its kind ever pro duced, pleasing to the taste and ac ceptable to the stomach, prompt in its action and truly beneficial in its effects, prepared 'only from the most healthy and agreeable substances, its many excellent qualities commend it to all and have made it the most popular-remedy known. Syrup of Figs is for sale in 50c and 1 bottles by all leading drug gists. Any reliable druggist who may not have it on hand will pro cure it promptly for any one who wishes to try it Do not accept any substitute. CALIFORNIA FIG SYRUP CO. SAN FRANCISCO. CAU LOUISVILLE. KY. HEW TOOK, N.T- s YRUP OF iUGS. SOLD BY JOS. FLEMING SOX, 412 Market street mhl9-S2-TTS Plttshnrg. 1 " BOTTLE Restored Loit Appe tite ana enrea my Dyspepsia. MRS. H. A. JltxKlxs. 819 Car son st,PIttsburg, Pa. BURDOCK 1U.OOD BITTERS. SOLD BY y JOS. FLEMING A-'SON, ill MAet street mbl9-SII-P Pittsbnrg. 'ITCHING PILES V-aSWAYNE'S niaiTRJseur ' ABSOLUTELY CUEES. Ulll IJlfcll I SYilPTOMS MoItnret Irtow Itehlnz and tlnglnct ni&.t ut nig-til; vomo by scratching. If allowed ttf continue tnnon form and protrude, wMca often bleed and ulcerate, becoming Tery sore. SWATHE'S OINT.UE.Vr .top. the ltchl. and bleedlnff. lienls ulceration, and In moat oaina rexnoTc tao tumor. .aujTCrnrugriuiaru lo 18-58-TTS Q V. AY N E'd OENTM EN T PlLESs SOLD BY JOS. FLEMING k SON, 41:: Market street, mhl9-S2-TT3 Pittsbnrg. MEDICAL DOCTOR . I WHITHER 814 l'KNN A liXUIi 1'lTTSUUItQ. V. As o!u resident know and back U!es of Pitu bur paper! prove, is tbe oldest established and most prominent pbysirUn in tho city, rfo votins special attention to all chronic dljcosei. Froniresnon-Mr nrtrilMTII PIIDCn sible personslUrLHUIN I ILVjUnLU Ml. Pfll I v anu mental uiseases, pnystcai llCn V UUo decay. nervous ileoiliiy, lack o energy, ambition and nope, impaired memiry, disordered siiht, self distrust, bashfulness, dizziness, sleeplessness, pimples, eruptions, im poverished Mood. lailinir powers, organic weak ness, dyspepsia, constipation, consumption, un fitting the person tor business, society and mar riage, permanently safely and privately cared. BLOOD AND SKINfeiM."? blotches, falling hair, bones, pains, glandular. swellin:, ulcerations ot tonzue. moutb, throat, ulcers, old sores, are cured for life, and blood, poisons thoroughly eradicated f mm the system. IIDIMARV kidney and bladder deranje Unllirin 1 1 ments, weak back, gravel, ca tarrhal discharges, inflammation and other painful symitoms receive searching treatment, prompt relief and real cure'. Dr. Wbittier's lire-long, extensive experlencj insures scientiUc and reliable treatment oa common-sense principles. Consultation free. Patients at a distance as carefully treated as 1C here. Office bodrs. 'J A. M. to 8 P. M. Sunday. 10A. M. to 1 F. 31. onlv. DR. WHITTIEK. 311 Penn avenue; Pittsburg. Pa. jaS-19-osuwk DOCTORS LAKE UDtfl'l S 1 fT m til viA4 ffe nuJrinc scientific aud confldea UR.UP.S.,i3 the oldest and most experienceu speemw tbe city. Consultation free and itmT I to , and 7 to o P. M.; unnaayj, ir iTSonsule them personally, or write. fiocTOiU LAKi. cor! Penn ave. and 4th st. Pittsbura Pfc je3-72.DWk JG&r- 9.iii.iij vw""""""' i NERVE, AND BRAIN TREATMENT. Spedfle for Hysteria. Dizziness. Fits Senr;.'?; titaets. Mental Depression, soitenttnfo Itte ' Krath.r uiaiii to insanity and leadln? to misery J-i5 deathfprematnro 'Old Age. Barrenness. Loss ol : Por in either sax. Involuntary Losses, and Spermatorrncea SSodl by oVer-eiertion of the brain, selratnse or orer-lndnlsenee. Each box contains one month's treat meat labor, or ilx for . sent by mall prepaU Wl?h each order for Els bolts, will send purchaser r-iranteo to refnr.d nvr It the treatment Jails to " ..- i MonlT- EMIL G. STUCKY. Drufst, lTOlandZJOl Penn ave and Corner W'ylie oi Fulton SL. PITTSBUKQ. PA. myl51-TT33a IR. SAJNXT3JS'fe ELECTRIC BELT FOB iWEAMEl sar.aax.-gg? ,"7A.rVVr2i--rlBlJ -MKNdebtlltatal ft?fei -.- L.- -.li ..- tbrongn disease, or .fh.rwU. wie li5T this Hew IMfBUVICO ALJCOTItlU IIEI.T or W;"1", lor this snecifle nnrpo-e, Cora ' aiU-".!, Biaaa WhTtlMl W..t. 1." r '. zi'l' '"i ,,m Hootninir. voaunnoiu .... n.nne. uu" '.i"'v.r'.." -: SrreM ra2n?i rrrKKNOTHectric current relt Instantly, or .nriaii&OOO In aV. BKL.T Complete aland Sfo'nthl Benlrd pamphleu free. Callonorad SAmdm iLtLTKia CO..S19 Broadwur Hew 1-orS myZi-U-Ti8Sa. a HCaKFORThT MILLION FaPfTV. OT TREATMENT .WITH MEDICAL ELECTRICITl r LTor all CHRONIC, OEGAOT0 a& NERVOUS DISEASES in both ansa. Bar BO Belt till TOU rtad this back. addTMo THE PERU CHEMIOALCO., MIIWAUUE.WU TTSSff TO WEAK MEN Suffering fro me enecta oi youthful errors early decay, wasting weakness, lost manhood, etd, rly decay,' rill send a will send a valuable treatise (sealed) contamnic ngw able foil particulars for homo cure, FREH- ot charge, jL splendid medical work; should be read by every man who la cervoua and debilitated.. AddresaL Pro. F. C. F01VI.EK, Bloodas. Coma. d'e2-Sl- dsu'Wk iruTAlE'DE's? TOAJL, V-Tr1 ra'a-B" MEHI MAPf. bealed Treatise, exp EXDlaInm?s rabao- CVa-MT. . rt lute and perfect CURE without rOnUU itomarh drusdnc, Tor Lost Jlan-' I tfUIl W hood. Nervous Debility. Lack of Vigor and Development, Premature Decline, irunc- clonal Disorders. Kidney and Bladder Dlseasea-eta. Wxm m Ilimi CO.. 1? tut Tho, let Tort, 1. 1. M-.Bna WJ mmm Sfftimt! eixejEsn ' T j&s,.jr- -.-!3l
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers