Pittsburg dispatch. (Pittsburg [Pa.]) 1880-1923, June 04, 1891, Page 9, Image 9

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01 THE TARIFF ALOME
Campbell Expects to Canvass
the State of Ohio
Against McKinley.
IDEAS OF THE GOYERKOB.
He Plants Himself Upon the Demo
cratic Platform of 1888.
2fO ESTIMATE OP THE KBW PAETL
. It WEI Get Totes, but the Kumler Cannot
Tet Even Be Guessed.
ELTECTS OF THE AUSTEALIAX BALLOT
'SPECIAL TELEGEAM TO TEX DISrATCH.J
Columbus, June 3. "While I waited in
the Secretary's office for Governor James
E. Campbell to come
in Private Secretary
Claude Meeker enter
tained me "with a pe
culiarly lucid and in
teresting dissertation
upon the present state
'of political aflairs. in
: Ohio. Meeker was a
newspaper man before
; dropping into his pres
ent place, and no man
in the State keeps
himself closer in
Governor Campbell, touch with affairs po
litical than this neat, natty, tasteful "right
bower" of the Governor of a great State.
He looks more like Napoleon L than Major
McKinley, and I wondered if one of his
numerous qualifications for the office was
his power to keep the Governor reminded
of his great political opponent by his per
sonal appearance.
He touched on all things in a graceful
and easy way, from the probability of the
Hoopole township's primaries sending an
unbroken delegation to the county conven
tion to the state of Secretary Blaine's
health; and from the good the copious
thowers would do the crops to the philoso
phy and justice of the demands of the
grangers, and during the talk welcomed
and placed at case a delegation of distin
guished gentlemen from Zanesville; an
swered the questions of half a dozen news
paper men Mho popped in and out; shunted
on a peripatetic calling nuisance; was ap
propriately confidential to a pompous fel
low from a rear county who imagined hiin
Fclf apolitical maenate, and was absurdly
good-humored under it alL He said the
Governor had not been interviewed on the
situation, but that he was sure THE DIS
PATCH would be made an exception. And
he Mas right.
A Good-Looking Governor.
The newspaper cuts of Governor Camp
bell do not do him justice. He is a tall,
well-proportioned man, with an intelligent,
hantjfome face; a man who "carries himself
w ell," and whoe manner is such that it is
easy for one talking with him to explain
whv he has such personal popularity. He
had just returned from a school commence
ment at Logan, whers he made an address,
and was preparing to start East to aecom
panv Mrs. Campbell on her return here.
"Of course I w ill talk to The Dispatch,"
he said cordially. "I have a great admira
tion for the journal, even though it does
fcelong to the other congregation. It is not
n.n "organ but a newspaper, with the cour
i!;e of its convictions, and one also that has
the courage to treat the other congregation
fairly. I am glad to see its tone is winning
for it the success it deserves.
"You are a candidate for renomination, of
course, before the people. Do you care to
say anything about your prospects of suc
cess?" "In a general way I am a candidate. Xo
man can afford to go out and make a fight
for his second nomination. lama silent
candidate, hoMeier, and expect to be renom
inated. There is a vigorous fight being
made against me, but it is a fight wherein I
am compelled to remain quiescent. So far
It Does Nl Show Any Strength
at all when it comes to county conventions.
The only interview I hate had on the sub
ject was" in the Cincinnati Fust, which caught
me on the run. I told them that the fight
reminded me of the description we used to
read of a Chinese battle, it was all gongs
and stink-pots or noise and bad smells. I
am inclined to think, the more I see and
hear of it, that this view is about right.
There is no disguising the fact, howeer,
tint there is a strong disaffection among the
Democrats who have control of the machin
ery in Hamilton county."
''Congressman Outhwaite makes the sug
gestion in his interview in The Disfatcii
that the new system of voting, the Austra
lian ballot law", will help you greatly in the
city of Cincinnati, especially, because the
voters are enabled by it to cast an unre
ttricted ballot?"
"I concur most heartily and emphatically
with Mr. Outhwaite. The Democratic
party is composed largety of laboring peo
ple who are, in many instances, somewhat
dominated by their employers. This quai
compulsion would be done away with; and,
besides, under the Australian system, there
will be no purchasing of votes. There will
be somq corruption in the rural districts
tliat this sjeni cannot reach, that is by hir
ing men to stay away from the polls. The
only means to preient that would be
through a compulsory oting law. I recom
mended to the General Assembly the pass
age of such a law, which would effectually
prevent such corruption."
Only a Single Dissenting Voice.
"Have any of the counties instructed
against you, so far?"
"There has not been a single voice raised
against me In any county convention, except
in the county of Holmes, where one man
made a speech against me."
"We ba e alreadj assumed that you will
be nominated there is no question at all
about that, eo far as I can gather, and I have
canvassed the situation pretty thoroughly;
now what Mill be the effect of this third
partv movement on the election""
"Well, a purely Farmers' Alliance move
ment would cat cli a great many voters, but I
do not believe the third party movement, as
now constituted, will. Undoubtedly many
members of the Farmers' Alliance will ote
for a ticket if put up, but there is no sense
of loyalty to the third or "People's" party
movement among them, for the movement.
as constituted, is a conglomerate mixture of
elements not altogether concordant; uut a
purelv Farmers' Alliance ticket would have
polled an enormous vote in Ohio, from a
spirit of fidelity, if for no other cause."
"Do j ou think that the People's party ih
their meeting at Springfield, which is an
nounced for August 6 and 7, will name a
ticket?"
Chances of tho Third Party.
"Without any definite knowledge on the
subject, I assume they will, and they will
poll some otes, too."
"What, in your estimation, if you care to
make, an estimate, will be the extent of their
vote?"
"I could not give you an intelligent an
swer. The movement has no organization
as yet, anJ I do not think anybody in the
State coti'd uiMvcr tht question."
"From Mhich party wilktheir vote be most
largely 1'"
4'I should suppose they m ould draw more
from the Kepublicans than from the Demo
crats, but I do not think there is an intelli
gent man in the State m illing to say where
their strength will oonie from. I am very
feiw M
'MS&nm
Wtn i?r ""vy
v
sore that the Farmers' Alliance party, if a
ticket were put in the field, would draw two
to one from the Republicans as against the
Democrats. I think $very conservative
man who haslooked the field ove.r would
say that."
"That appears to me unquestionable, but
in the generality of my interviews so far,
the belief seems to be that this third party
will draw about equally from both parties?"
A Little the Best of It.
"I would not give a nickel for anybody's
opinion on that subject; I should say that
the chances are about even, with perhaps
just a little tilting against the Bepublicans
in the scale. The dissatisfaction which ex
ists in regard to the tariff, whjch cannot
hurt the Democrats, may hurt the Republi
cans.' "What effect, if any, will the demands of
the third or People's party,as formulated in
the series of resolutions in the Ohio conven
tion, havo upon the formation of the plat
form of the Democratic party in the coming
campaign?"
".None whatever. The Democratic party
has already done several things that are de
manded by the People's party. It -has
given us the Australian ballot system; it
has reduced fee's and salaries all over the
State, beginning with my office, which
they cat 2,000; and others in proportion; it
has legislated in behalf of labor by creating
free employment labor offices in the cities,
and in a great many other.ways too tedious
to mention in an interview. It has
legislated in the farmer's fa or in the ay
of taxes; in making the Dairy and Food
Commissioner's office which has been a
bone of contention elective, and in other
ways. The Democratic platform will be
made without regard to this or any other
movement."
Tho Tariff the Only Issue.
"Assuming that you and Major McKinley
will be the candidates of your respective
parties, upon what issue will thg.campaign
chiefly be made?" .
"Every issue save that of the tariff will
be forgotten two weeks after we are on the
stumpj nothing else will be thought of. We
ha e, in fact, a lot of issues upon State
legislation, etc, upon which the Republi
cans profess to be willing to mee; us, but if
McKinley should be the Homines, I do not
think they will be named His nomination
will be an indorsement of his bill as it
passed his committee and the House. They
are bound to make the fight upon the bill as
he passed it if they make him a candidate,
and not upon the Senate bill, from which
many of the original features were cut
out, and to which the seductive feature of
'reciprocity' was added."
"The Democrats platform will contain a
free-trade plank? '
"I do not know just what you mean by a
'free-trade' plank."
"Well, it will conform to the St Louis
platform? '
Upon the St. Louis Platform.
"Certainly. I was elected in 1889 upon a
platform which reaffirmed the St. Louis
platform, and which declared that the
Democracy of Ohio would fight upon that
issue until successful. Upon that I made
the race in '89. The Cincinnati Commercial
Gazette, then under Mr. Halstcd, never
ceased ridiculing me because I Triad e a lum
ber speech in Wood county and a wool
speech in Harrison county. I talked what
I considered to be the inequalities and in
iquities of the tariff right where it was go
ing to be of local importance, and the result
was that I gained in every wool-growing
county in the State."
"There appears to be some question in
the nen spapers as to your tariff record?"
"In the first place, there has been such a
persistent misrepresentation of my -course
and history in regard to tariff (instituted,
primarily by the Cincinnati Enquirer and
followed up by half a dozen other papers
that have fallen in behind it), that it would
not be a bad idea to call attention to the
facts. To begin with, I was elected to Con
gress in 1882, and was deprh ed of my seat
by the State returning Board of Ohio and
forced to make a fight for it. Before I ob
tained my seat a ote was taken in the
House upon what was known as the Mor
rison "horizontal" tariff bill. It has been
stated repeatedly that I voted against that
bill The truth is
I Was Not a Sitting Member
of Congress until after the bill was voted
upon; but when Mr. Morrison brought up
his second bill in the House of Representa
tives I called his attention to the fact that I
had been elected upon a platform adopted
bv the Democrats of Ohio in State Conven
tion demanding a restoration of the wool tariff
of 18(5 '. I had made tariff speeches through
out my campaign for election, and told Mr.
Morrison and the Other gentlemen exactly
where I stood. I said that if he insisted
upon making wool free I would have to vote
against it I did not ask him to conform to
the Ohio wool tariff of 18G7, but I could not
stultify myself by voting for the bill as a
whole if it put wool upon the free list
The bill did put wool on the free list, and I
voted against it on the strength of that
clause. My action was well known and un
derwood by the people of my district, and
in the ensuing campaign (that of 1886), in
which the fight was made largely upon tariff
issues, I was elected, although "the district
had been gerrymandered in such a
.way that there was a Republican
majority of 2,000 against .me. Ypu
will remember that in that campaign we lost
almost all the close districts, and some
Democratic districts in Ohio and elsewhere.
It is true I only carried the district by two
votes; but I got the certificate and drew the
salary, and was thereby enabled subsequent
ly to vote for the Mills bill, which I did
most cheerfully. I went on the stump in
1888, and I need not tell you what the issue
was then.
One Itundred Tariff Speeches.
"In 1889 the platform was a reaffirmation
of that of 1888, and the Ohio Democrats de
clared that they would.standupon that issue
until successful. If you will track me
around the State you will find that'I made
over 100 speeches on the tariff in that cam
paign. Ia 1890 I was selected by the State
Executive Committee to open the campaign,
and was sent to Canton, McKinley's home, to
open the campaign in his district against
him. It goes without saying that I would
not have been sent to McKinley's honie to
make thp fight on him if I had not been
equal to a discussion of the tariff. The most
arrant nonsense of the pretended fight
against me is the claim that I am not able to
take care of myself on the tariff. "
"If you are nominated, as you unques
tionably will be, will you go into the ight
in full consonance with Democratic ideas on
the tariff?'-' .
'Why, of course; any other hypothesis is
too absurd to discuss."
INCBEASE JH CmOTJXATION.
A Good Showing Made for the Tear by tho
Christian -Advocate.
The annual meeting of the managers of
the Christian Advocate was held at the Sev
enth Avenue Hotel yesterday. The report
of the business manager was read, which
showed an advance in receipts and an in
crease of 27 per cent in the circulation. Dr.
C. W. Smith, the editor, said he was very
The Latest Patent Improved DciNe-Slereolype Perfecting Press, Two of Which Arc Kou
well pleased with the handsome showing
made.
A publishing committee appointed by
the different conferences interested has
charge of the paper. Thev are Revs. R. S.
Borland, Guv's Mills; J. M. Warden, Sher
rard; W. R. "Clark, Fairmount; E. B. Ed
monds, New Castle; James Horner, T. H.
Wilson, B. F. Beazell, James A. Moore and
Dr. C. W. Smith. Pittsburg; R. P. Miller,
Indiana, and J. F. Mitchell, Tarentum.
THE CHABLESTON MEANT BUSINESS.
An Officer Tells tho Story or Her Arrival in
i Acapnlco TIarbor.
8AN Francisco, Jrine 3. A private let
ter just receiveH.-from "an officer on"'the
United Staf.es. cruiser Charleston, describes
the warlike preparatien on the cruiser at
the time she entered Acapulco harbor while
on her chase after the Itata. The letter
says the Charleston arrived 'at Acapnlco at
7:30 A. m. Maylfi.
At 4 o'clock in the morning she encoun
tered the Esmeralda. The Charleston was
endeavoring to enter the harbor unseen,
but the Esmeralda flashed her light, and all
hands on the Charleston were called to gen
eral quarters and the ship was cleared for
action. The crew were a. their station for
two or three hours, as it -n as supposed the
Itata was in the harbor, and everything was
in readiness to take her. SK and eight
inch shells were piled on the deck and
every gun was loaded. The Esmeralda
followed the Charleston into the harbor, but
the latter left and resumed her chase as
soon as possible.
A BRUTE INDEED.
Ho Knocked Ills Wife Senseless, and When
She Recot ers Kills Her.
Cleveland, June 3. Emerson Honey
smith, a restaurant keeper in a small town
on the dividing line between Van Wert and
Paulding counties, this State, got drunk
Wednesday night and assaulted his wife
with a scantling, knocking hsr down and
cutting a long gash in her scalp.
Moneysmith then left the house, but re
turned soon after, and, finding his wife had
regained consciousness, secured a revolver
and shot her dead, the ball passing com
pletely through her body just below the
waist. He was arrested soon after and
locked up.
THEIH CAS0USAL CUT SH0ET.
Tho Collapse of a Building Kills Three Men
and Injures Others.
Chicago, June 3. This afternoon a
frame building on the West Side, built on
posts, fell to the ground without warning.
Beneath it a half dozen men were carousing
and drinking, and were all either killed or
injured. .
Their names are; John Brahill, killed;
Willie Schwartz, killed; George Schwartz,
his brother, killed; Gus Schwartz, another
brother, injured in his spine, probably
fatally; George Schin, slightly injured. A
man called "Sleepy" was also slightly
bruised. .The main floor was unoccupied.
HOMESTEAD'S GRADUATES.
Eleven Young People Who Will Start Out
for Themselj cs To-Day.
This evening the commencement exercises
of the Homestead High School graduating,
class will be held in the opera hall there.
Tho exercises wiU consist of essays by the
members of the class, addresses by Superin
tendent Hamilton, Prof. Kendall, Hon. J.
F. Cox and L. L. Davis.
Those who will graduate are: Misses
Sadie Morton, Madge Izenourj Dessie Wil
son, Mvrtle Hadficld, Irene Cntchlow, Mary
McLockle and Messrs. Harry Kcni, Clyde
Atkinson, Fred Atkinson, Frank Lloyd and
Thomas Dixon.
Charged With aianslaughter.
The coroner's inquest in the case of Mrs.
Nancy Hogan was concluded yesterday
morning. The testimony and the result of
the autopsy showed she had died from the '
effects of kicks received from her son and
his ivife. Lucy Hogan was sent to jail to
await trial for manslaughter and Clay Hogan
will be sent there as soon as his workhouse
term is ended.
Wallpaper.
Lincrusta walton, pressed goods, hand
made goods; also cheap and medium grades,
with ceilings, friezes and borders to match,
and a full line of wood moldings, .at Welty's,
120 Federal street, 65, '67, 9 and 71 Park
way. its
THE PITTSBURG 'DISPAffOH THURSDAY, JUNE, ' 180L
lOMffiEDATHISHOME
Galena Unveils a Statue to Its Hlns
trious Citizen, Grant.
A EULOGY BY CHAUNCE Y M. DEPEW
Fire Great Names Adorn the First Century
of American History.
ONE IS THAT OF THE SILENT WARRIOR
Galena, III., June 3. Perhaps the
greatest civic event that ever took place in
this little city was the unveiling to-day of a
monumentlo its most illustrious citizen
General IT. S. Grant. The town was gaily
decorated, business was entirely suspended,
and an immense crowd attended the cere
monies. "
Tho monument unveiled to-day ia the gift
of H. H. Kohlsaat, a former Galena boy and
now one of the millionaire citizens of Chi
cago. A year ago he intimated to some of
his friends his desire that the city of Galena
should be graced by a statue of "The Old
Commander," who, with his family, had
resided there during one of the most im
portant periods of his life. The matter was
formally presented to the City Council and
the citizens of Galena by Mr. Kohlsaat and
James W. Scott, of Chicago, but formerly a
resident of Galena.
Tho Site and Description of the Statue.
No appropriate site for .the monu
ment, however, could be found until,
Mr. ocuib lumaveu u jiiuveuicut uy
which an elevated plot of ground on the
east side of the city, 40 feet above the
river, and covering sir acres, was ordered
purchased, and to be forever dedicated to
the city for park purposes. A portion of
the purchase was contributed by the City
Council, a second sum was raised by the cit
izens of Galena, and the balance was se
cured in Chicago through the efforts of Mr.
Scott The inclosure was named Grant
Park, and already contains n magnificent
soldiers' monument and a fountain erected
by the ladies of the city.
The bronze statue dedicated to-day stands
on a solid base formed of three tiers of
Quincy gray granite, with a pedestal of
beautifully carved and polished red granite
from the quarries of Maine. On the front
surface is the simple inscription in plain,
large letters, "Grant, Our Citizen." The
statue is heroic in size and represents Gen
eral Grant in citizen's dress, standing as if
in reflection. The likeness is excellent, and
the portrayal of the subtle individuality of
the man is admirable.
It was the hand of little Miss Kohlsaat,
daughter of the doner, that unveiled the
statue, and when its life-like proportions
were uncovered, the crowd seemed spell
bound for a moment until it broke out in
three cheers and a tiger. The oration was
pronounced bv Chauncev M. Denew. of
which the following is the full text:
Grant as a Citizen of Galena.
Thirty years ago your city of Galena num
bered among its citizens a man so modest
that ho was littlo known in tho community;
a merchant so humblo that 'his activities
were not felt in your business. Three years
later his fame illumined tho earth, and tho
calculations of every commercial venture,
and of every constructive enterprise in the
country were based upon the success or
failure of his plans. Ho ias then support
ing his family on $1,000 a yeai, and before
the third anniversary 6f his departure from
your city ho was spending four millions a
day for tho preservation of the Union. One
of tho patriotic meetings, common at that
period all over the North, was hold here to
sustain President Lincoln in his call for
7500 men to suppress the rebellion.
Tho ardor and eloquence of John A. Raw
lins so impressed an auditors horn none of
the Congressmen and prominent citizens on
thoplatlorm had ever met, that ho subse
quently made tho orator his Chief of Staff
and Secretary of War. Some one discovered
that Captain. Grant, a graduate of West
Point and a veteran of the Mexican War,
lived in this city, and he was invited to pre
side at the formation of a military company.
Ho as so diffident that few hoard his speech
of three sentences, but in that short address
was condensed all tho eloquence and logic
of tho time. "You know tho object for
which c aro assembled. Men are needed
to preset ve tho Union. What is your pleas
ure?" Ho organizod and drilled that com
pany: and led it to tho Governor at Spring
Held. By that march Galena lost a citizen
and the Kopublic found its savior.
AVhilo others were enlisting for brief per
iods, he hesought tho Adjutant General to
assign him to duty for tho war, but
the War Department had forgot
ten him. He struggled for days to
work through tho brilliant staff into tho
presence ot General McClelland, but tho
young dandies scornfully and successfully
haired his way.
How Grant Won Recognition.
It was soon scon that tho ohscuro military
clerk in the office of tho Governor of Illinois
was capable whero all the rest woro ignor
ant, and tnat under his firm and confident
hand order was evolved out of ohaos and
raw recruits disciplined into soldiers.
Though he as unknown and unnamed to
tho public, the Executive recognized in him
tile organizing brain of tho military forces
of the State. To a reluctant President and
hostile Secretary, the Illinois Delegation
said, "whero most of the appointments aro
experiments, try Captain Grant as ono of
vour Brieadicr Generals." Thus tlio Common-
I wealth that had so hotly pressed Lincoln for
the uutei juagisiracy 01 1110 Jtcpuunc, as
sumed tho lesponsibility for Grant as Coni
ininder of tho a nay.
Thcso marvelous men woio tho products
of that characteristic intuition of the West,
which quickly discerns meiit, and then con
fidently proclaims its faith. Education' nnd
cxporienco make old and crowded commu
nities avcrso to leadership unless it has been
trained and tested. Thev accent nnthlnir
outside t ho Tocord. Tho fact that the con-
Jit011! are new and tho emergency greater
than the schools have provided for, aro
stronger reasons for selecting only the men
who have approximately demonstrated
their ability. jfor all tho ordinary emer
gencies oflife the rule is excellent.
Hut It sometimes happens that tho captain
who has successfully weathered a hundred
gales. Is saved from shipwreck, in a
hurricane, by the genius of a subordinate,
it Is not that tho uneducated ana untrained
can. by any natural endowment, bo fitted
for command. Lincoln as a statesman had
studied politics on the stump and In Con
gress, and Grant as a soldier had learned
war at West Point and In Jfextco Tho op
portunity had not come to either to stand
before the country with Seward, Sumner
and Chase,or with Scott.Halleck and McClcl
lan. The East, following the traditions and
practice of tho centuries, presented tried
nnd famous statesmen at the Chicago Con
vention, and saw tho jVrmy of the Potomac
led to defeat and disaster for- years by ad
mirable officers who were unequal to the
supreme perils of tho handllngof gigantic
forces upon a. vast arena. The West gavo to
the country forPresident the rail splitter of
the Ohio, and, to lead its forces in tho field,
Grant, Sherman and Sheridan.
His Career Without a TaralleL
Grant's career willbe a paradox of history.
Parallels cannot be drawn for him with tho
great Captains of the. world. Historians, by
Running in the yea Dispatch Budding.
common consent, place Alexander tho Great,
Hannibal, Julius Cassar and Napoleon Bona
partointho front rank. But each of them
had learned tho art of war by continuous
service and uncqualed opportunities, and
displayed the most brilliant qualities at
every period of their achievements.
Hannibal and Caisar had won universal
fame in the thirties. Alexander died at 33,
grieving because he had no more worlds to
conquer, and Napoleon, at 37, was master of
Europe. But Grant, at 40, was an obscure
leither merchant in Galeiuu- As a cadet at
West Point he had risen only just above the
middle of bis class. As" a subaltern on tho
frontier and in Mexico, he had done no more
than perform his duty with the courago and
capacity of the average West Pointer. Ho
had pursued agriculture with his customary
ConsciaajtlonsL.care-andflndustiy. He was
not afraid to do the Vork of tho farm himself
nor ashamed to ride Into St. Louis upon the
load of wood which he was to sell, or to pile
it up for his customor, and yet almost any
farmer in Missouri was moro successful.
Clients failed to retain him as a surveyor,
his real estate office had to bo closed, and he
was not a factor in the tanners' firm.
But the moment that the greatest responsi
bilities were thrnst upon him. and the fate
of his country rested upon' his shoulders,
this indifferent farmer, business man, mer
chant, became tho foremost figure of tho
century. The reservo pOTt eraof a dominant
intellect, which ordinary affairs could not
move, came into action." A mighty mind,
which God had kept for tho hour of supremo
danger to the Kepnhlic, grasped the scat
tered elements of strength, solidified them
into a resistless force and organized victory,
ne divined tho purposes of the enemy as
well as he know his own plans. His brain
became clearer, his strategy more perfect,
and his confidence in himself more serene as
his power increased.
"Wonderfhlly Tertlle in Itesources.
Ho could lead tho assault at Donelson, or
tho forlorn hope at Shiloh, or maneuver his
forces with exquisite skill and rare original
ity of resources at Yickshurg,.as tho best of
brigade or corps commanders, or before
Richmond calmly conduct a campaign
covering a continent, and many armies with
consummate generalship, At tho critical
hour during tho battle of Sedan, when tho
Gorman Emperor, and Bismarck were anx
iously waiting the result and watching their
silent GenCral, an officer rodo up nnd an
nounced -that two corps of tho Gorman
army marching from opposite directions
.had met at a certain hour. Tho movement
closed in the French and ended the war.
Ton Moltko Bhnply said, "The calculation
was correct." Grant had not tho scientific
training and wonderful staff of tho Prus
sian Field Marshal, but ho possessed ih the
highest degree tho same clear vision and ac-.
curate reasoning. Tho calculation was al
ways correct, and tho victory sure. .
The mantle of prophecy nolonger descends
upon a successor, and tho divine purposois
not revealed to mortals. There exists, how
ever, in every age masterful men, who aro
masterful hecauso they sett with clear vision
the course of events, and fearlessly actnpon
tho forecast. By this. faqUlty the. statesman
saves his country from disaster or lifts it to
the pinnacle of power, the" soldier plucks
victory from defeat, and the man ,of affairs
astonishes the world by the magnitude and
success of his operations. It was pre-eminently
Grant's gift. Four days after the first
shot was fired at Fort Sumpter, he wroto
fiom Galenaa letter to his father-in-law pre
dicting tho uprising of tho Nbrth and the
fall of slavery.
Others saw only the commercial spirit of
the free States, he, far in advance of tho
public meu'of tho time, divined that superb
patriotism which inspired millions to leave
the farm and tho- family, their business and
their homes to savo tho Union. While
statesmen, of all parties were, temporizing
and compromising with tho slavo power,
this silent thinker, in tho rear ranks Of the
people, pierced with undimmed eyes tho
veil which had clouded the vision of the
nation for a bundled -years. His calm Judg
ment comprehended the forces in tho con
flict, and that their collision would bieak
and pulverize tho shackles of tho Blave.
Proof of Grant's Military Genius.
He possessed beyond most leaders tho
loyal and enthusiastio devotion of his peo
ple, and ho was the idol of his army. In esti
mating tho results and, nwardingtho credit
of tho last campaign of tho war, we must ro
member thatGeneral Loo had defeated or
baflled every opponent for threo years, and
that after a contest unparalleled in in des
perate valor, frightful carnage and match
less strategy, ho surrendered his sword to
Grant.
The number of men who have led their
generation and whoso famo will grow with
time is very fetf in any nation. Tfioir unap
proachable position has been Teached be
cause no one else could have done their
work. They appear only in those crises when
the life orlnturo of their country is at stake.
The United States aro surprisingly rich in
having possessed threo such exalted intelli
gences in their first century, Washington,
Lincoln and Grant. Tho Father of his Coun
try stands ulono among the founders of
Suites and defenders of tho liberties of tho
people, as pre-emlnontlv the. chief in both
war nnd 'peace. It is tho judgment of his
cotemporaries and of posterity that none
other of the soldiers and statesmen of the
Eet olution could havo won thow nr for inde
pendence as commander of tho armies, -or
consolidated jealous and v.airlng colonioo
into a nation, as first President of thq Ko
public. f
Many PresidentsOnly pnq Groat (Jonero
Thero havobeon many Presidents of tho
United States, and the',ro' will. i,'ndefl-
nitely extended. We have' had a number of
brilliant soldiers', hut only one great Gen
eral. Tho honors of civil life could add
nothing to the fame of General Grant, and it
has been often argued that bis career in the -Presidency
detracted from his reputation.
Such Mrill not bo the judgment or the Impar
tial historian. He was without experience,
or training for public life, and unfamiliar
with politicians and thoir methods. The
spoils system, from which ho could pot es
cape, nearly wrecked his first administra
tion. His mistakes were due to a quality
which is tho noblest qf human virtues, loyr
alty-to friends. Even at this short distance
from scenes so- vivid in our memories, party
rancor has lost its bitterness and blindness.
The President will be judged not by the
politics or policy of the hour, but according
to the permanent valuo to thp .Republic, ot
the measures-' which he promoted or de
feated. The fifteenth amendment to the
Constitution wns sure of adoption as one of
the logical results of tho war. Br it the
Declaration of Independence, which had
been a glittering absurdity for generations,
became part of the fundamental law of the
land, and the subject of pride and not
apology to tho American people. Tho Presi
dent's earnest advocacy hastened its ratifi
cation. On great questions atTocting ,tho
honor and credit of the nation he was
always sound and emphatic. A' people
rapidly developing their material resources
aro subject to frequent financial conditions
which cause stringency of money and com
mercial disaster. To secure quick fortunes
debts are reeklessly incurred, and debt be
comes the author or a currency craze.
PrcsidentGrnnt set the wholesome fashion
of resisting and reasoning with this frenzy.
Against tho advice of his Cabinet and many
01 nis party admirers ne vetoed tne wnation
bill. Ho had nevor studied financial prob
lems, nnd yet tho samo intuitive erasp of
critical situations which saved the country
from bankruptcy by defeating flat money,
restored public nnd Individual credit by the
resumption of speoie payments.
Dealing With Financial Problems.
The funding of, our war debt at' a lower
rato of interest mado possible thamaglcal
payment of tho principal,. Xhe admission of
Jast'of tho rebel States intq tho Union, and
universal amnesty for political offenses,
quickened tho latent loyalty of the South,
and turned its unfettered and fiery energies
Vto that development of its unequalled nat
nral wealth which has added incalculably to
the prosperity and power of the Common
wealth. These wise measures will ever form a bril
liant page in American history, but the ad.
ministration of General Grant will have a
placo in the annals of the world for inaugur
ating and successfully carrying out tho
policy of the submission of international
disputes to arbitration. The Geneva confer
ence, and the judicial settlement of the Ala
bama claims will grow in importance and
grandeur with time. As tho nations of the
earth disband their armaments and aro gov
erned by tho laws of reason and humanity,
they will recur to tlnsbeneflcientsettlement
between the United States and Great Britain
and General Grant's memorable words upon
receiving the freedom of tho City of London:
"Although a soldier by education and pro
fession, I have never felt any sort of fond
ness for war, and I have never advocated
it, except as a means of peaco" and thoy
will hail him as one of tho benefactors of
mankind.
Ho has been called a silent man, and yet I
havo often heard him hold a little company
In delighted attention for hours by tho
charm of his conversation. His simple nar
rative was graphic, his discussions lucid,
and subtle flashes of humor sparkled
through his talk, no said that -alien ho
spoke to an andience his knees knocked to
gether, ana tnis was eviaent in his manner
and address, but the speech was often a wel
come messago to tho country. As he was
speaking one evening with considerable em
barrassment, he pointed to a speaker who
had just entered the hall, and said: "If I
could stand in his shoes and he in mino,how
much happier forme and better for you."
Who of this generation could fill that great
plaeeT As tho years increase, events crowd
upon each other with such volume, that the
lesser ones are crushed out of memory.
Most reputations aro forgotten by the suc
ceeding generation and few survive a cen
tury. The Great Names of tho Present Century.
In our thousandth year as a nation, tho
only statesmen or soldiers of our first
hundred years whose names will decorato
tho celebration will bo Washington and
Hamilton for tho beginning, Webster for thb
middlo"penod3 and Lincoln and Grant for
tho close.
General Grant was tho product and repre
sentative of the best clement of our social
life. Home and its associations have been
the training and inspiration of our greatest
and noblest men. They havo come from tho
class which had neither poverty nor riches,
and which was compelled to work for the
support of tho family, and the: education of
tho children. Its members are God-fearing
men and loving, self sacrificing women. It
give us Lincoln from thq farm, Garfield
from the tow path, Sherman from the
crowded houso or the bravo and
struggling widow, Sherman from tho
humble cottage, and Grant from
the homo of tho country storekeeper
of tho Ohio wilderness. These men never
lost their sympathy with every Jiuman lot
and aspiration, or the homely simplicity of
their early conditions and training. Grant
was clerk in tho Custom House and Presi
dent of the United States, a Lieutenant in
Mexico and Commander-in-Chief of tho
armies of. the Union, numbering over a mil
lion of men, the unknown junior In a tan
ners' firm at Galena,, and tho guests of Em
perors and Kings. But tho memory of tho
church of his mother was ever-visible in his
revorent regard for her teachings.
Some of Grant's Memorable Words.
Through tno verses of great poets runs a
familiar strain, through tho works of great
composers an oft repeated tune, and through
the speeches of great orators arecurringand
characteristic thought Thcso aro tho germs
which exhibit the moving forces of their
minds. During the war "I proposo to move
immediately upon your works," "Uncondi
tional surrender:" "I shall take no backward
stop;" "I proposo to fight it Out on this lino
if it takes all summer." are the beacon lights
of the plans and strategy of Grant the sol
dier. At Appomattox, ''Tho war is over;',
"The rebels aro our- countrymen again;" nt
the threshold of the Presidency, "Lot us
have peace:'1 On his bed of agony Jnd death
at; Mount McGrcgoif when his ponur of
speech was gone, ntiivr to a Confederate
General by his bedside, "Much as I nncr, I
doIt,withplenuie,if iv that suffering csih
be accomplished tlio union or my country,"
aro tho indices of tho labors, tho aspirations
and tho prayer of Grant, tho statesman ahd
tho patriot. "
Daisy: CoiW Cube relieves at pnee and
.sostiiyoly cues. 15 cents: at druggistv
PITTSBURG 11 LIKE.
Chicago's lofty Structures May be
Duplicated in This City.' '
THE SAME CONDITIONS G0Y.EM.
A Pittsourger Inspecting the Windy City
For a Syndicate.
DRAWBACKS TO BIG BUILDINGS HERE
tSFECIAL TELEOBAJt TO THE DISFATCH. J
ChIcaoo, June 3. A well-known Pittsburg
capitalist has been spending several days in
the city looking carefully into the details of
construction of Chicago's newest greaf office
buildings, of which more than a dozen are
now in process of ejection, the steel for
them cominc from Pittsburg. "I have been
looking over your big buildings,"'he said
this afternoon, "and I am surprised at what
Ihave seen. They are certainly the most
architectural development that has been
witnessed in any city In tho world within,
tho same length of time. Eighteen buildings,
covering from 60 feet to a block, the lowest
13 stories and the highest 20 stories, and all
within a couplo of years.
"The gro-n th that it represents is amazing.
One has to stop a moment and think before
ho can realize it. Tet, strange as it is, I snail
not be surprised if I see the same thin? done
on even a larger scale in the city of Pitts
burg. Pittsburg Under Like Influence
"The forces which have produced these
monster business buildings in tho heart ot
Chicago are at work in precisely the samo
way in Pittsburg, and, unless I anfmuch
mistaken, t(io same results will follow there.
Your big buildings aro the logical result of
your improved means of local transit, fen
years ago, when Chicago had not 1 ig
better than horsecar lines, a fonr-story
building was big enough, and when a man
put on a fifth or a sixthhewas thought by
many to bemakinga very unbusinesslike in
vestment of his money. Since that time your
principal horsecar lines havo been cabled,
and that has increased their carrying Capac
ity tenfold. Then scores of feeders and cross
town lines havo been added, nnd the 'terri
tory which they reach has been quadrnpled
and quintupled. Besides that, the suburban
service on your railroads has been growing
better.
"The result of all those things is td" "bring
the business center of Chicago within; from
10 to 20 minutes riding for nearly 1,000,000
people, and into the business center they
pour e cry day to do their trading. Pre
cisely tho same thing is taking place at Pitts
burg. Wehavejustgotridof the horsecar
and taken tho cable and electricity in its
stead. Competition between tho Widener
Elkins syndicate and its rival has brought
carfaro to a point lower than any
line in Chicago reaches, almost as. low
as tho rates charged by the great under-
? round railways in London. Tho result is
bat the business center of Pittsburg is
brought more easily within reach of the
suburbs than it ever was before. It is thus
made the market for about half a million
people.
Pittsburg's Business Center Limited.
"Unlike tho business center of Chicago,
that of Pittsburg is bounded by great rivers
and a chain of hills, so that it cannot bo ex
tended. The result is that in the very near
future our Pittsburg architects wllibeatthe
task-wlth which the Chicago architects aro
now engaged that is to obtain the
utmost amount of avnilablo renting space
from a given pieco of ground. The diffi
culties in Pittsburg aro greater than they
are in Chicago, because our streets aie one
.third narrower than thoso of Chicago. Tho
city ordinances do not permit any projec
tions beyond the building line, which are so
marked a feature of all the big Chicago
buildings, and in many instances tne ground
is not loveL"
Althtough tho gentleman did not say so,
thero is good reason to believe that he was
hero in tho interest of a syndicate of capital
ists, who are .figuring on duplicating
in Pittsburg some of Chicago's
big buildings, and aro nuzzled to know
whether or not they can be made to pay in
that" conservative city, ncre the upper
floors of such buildings are used-for such
ruimnsea ji-offiecs of nrofessional and busi-
-nesa men and alo for light business pur
poses, where the parties occupying them
aie not dependent on transient trade, but
Tiavo a custom, that is brought in by adver
tising or otherwise. The Pittsburg man
seemed to -bo very doubtful whether tha
demand for such apartments was suf
ficiently active in Pittsburg to Justify
such a building at present. And
ho was, therefore, especially interested In
the now Masonic Temple, at Bandolph and
State streets, which proposes to rent a large
part of its upper floors to business men who
are dependent on transient trade, such as
drygoods, furniture, carpets and millinery
goods, for instance.
Some Stupendous Structures.
In view of tho facts, somo figures as to
the recent now buildings here may be inter
esting. The tallest, at present, is the Audi
torium; the tip of its flag pole is 290 feet
abovo tho sidewalk; Its lantern fs 2G5 feet
high; the top of tho tower is 210 feet high (17
stories), and the main building (ten stories)
is 145 feet high. The department store
known as "Tho Fair" is now erecting a
building which will be 241 feet to tho
coping, one foot -taller than the Auditorium.
The Masonic Temple will be 274 feet high to
the top of the coping and 200 feet from tho
sidewalk to tho bkylight.
The Women's Temple an office building
which is being erected by ladies connected
with tho W. C. T. U. will measure 136 feet 5
inches from tho sidewalk to the coping and
2CG feet to tho top of its tallest spire. The
Monodn'ock offlco building will be 1M feet
high to the coping just four feet higher
than the building which tho Cook County
Abstract Company is about to erect on
Washington street.
The Manhattan building on Dearborn
street, near Van Buren, is 193 .feet high to
the coping, nnd tho Henning nnd&peed
building, on Clark street, nearYan-Buren.
192 feet high, to tho coping. The Ashland
block, to make way for which an old build
ing is now being torn down, at the comer of
Clark and Randolph streets, will bo 210 feet
high to the coping. The average height of
13 buildings now just finished, or undorwar,
Is 183 feet 7 Inches, and of tho highest, y, 200
feot, 8 inches. ,,
Beyond Beach of Firo Engines.
Of course, the upper floors of thesejbuild
ings are beyond tho reach of the flro engines,
but that makes very little difference, be
cause without a single exception, they are of
flre-proof construction steel beams ' with
terra cotta filled in between nnd -built
around tho columns, so as to prevent -warping
bv heat. In case of flro all that can
burn "is the wooden floors which are laid on
tho terra cotta in tho rooms and almost
necessarily tho fire fs confined to
tho room in which ft originates.
Fire-proof construction has bon adopted,
not because of its being required by law,
but because of the greater security thereby
afforded to the capital invested. The ex
pcrienco of the last ten years seem3 to have
demonstrated that the danger from flro was
not worth considering. A more serious
danger is that in building so high thq archi
tects may put more strain on tho materials
than thoy can stand and thus run serious
risk of n collapse.
GoodBje!
This is a sad word when taking leave of
tho beloved, but when Hostetter's Stomach
Bitters enables us to say it to an attack of
liver complaint, it is by no means sad, but
decidedly jolly. Simijarlv; If the greafc tonic
alterative relieves from dyspepsia or kidney
troUDie To e-xpuriujiue ju. -uujurzu, rueu-
mutism and neuralgia are aiso
tenants which
this remedy uispossesses.
Below Cost
10 doz. infants' and children's fine skirts
hemstitched with fancy stitch SI, formerly
51 50; 51 CO, formerly 2 CO; 52, formerly
3 2-5; 52 50, formerly? 75. The greatest
bargain we ever offered in infants' goods.
A. G. Campbell & Sons, 27 Fifth ayenue.
Will Price ,
Sells the best colored balbriggan half hose
for 35 cts., three pairs for 81, ever shown.
47 Sixth Stkeet.
He loved her and attempted suicide. He
wouldn't have done so had he attended Sai
ler & Co.'s "workingmen's silcs' every
Fridiy. To-morrow, atr Corner Smithfield
end D'iamond streets, we'll sell men's 510
suits for 5C
Will Price
Has the handsomest assortment of Madras
pajamas ever shown. A7 Sixth St.
Trnj popular beverage. Iron City beer,
kept brail dealers, - '
BAILBOADS,
PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD.
Qx xso Af-rEB Mat 5Mh, 1891.
Trains will leave Union Station, Pittsburg
as follows (Eastern Standard Time):
MAIN LINE EASTWARD.
New York Chicago Limited ofPallman Vestlbula
Cars dally at 7.15 a. ir.r arriving at liarrisbur? at
1.&5P. M., Philadelphia 4.43 P. M., Jiew YorkT.OO
P. M.. Baltimore 4.) F. M.. Washington 5.55 P.M.
Atlantic Express dally at 3.50 A.M.. arriving at
Harrisburjr 10.30 A.M., Philadelphia 1.25 r. M.,
New York 4.C0 P. M., Baltimore 1.15 p. M., Well
ington 2.23 P. M.
Mali train daily, except Bnnday. 3.30 A. M arriv
ing at Harrlsbnrg 7.00 r. M. Philadelphia 10.55 p.
it. Baltimore. 10.40 P. M. Sunday Mall 8.40
Day Express dally at 8.00 A. M arriving at Harrls
burjr3.3)F. M.. PhIladelphla6.50iM.. JewYorlc
9.35 p. 31., Baltimore 6.45 P. M Washington
8.15 P. M. ,.-.
Mall Express dally at LOOP. M.. arriving at narrls
tmrg 10.45 P. M.. connecting at ilarmbarg with
Philadelphia Express.
Philadelphia Express dally at 4.30 P. jr.. arriving at
Uarrisbnrjr l.W A. it.. Philadelphia 4.25 A. M..
and New York 7.10 . M. ,
Eastern Express at 745 P. 31. daily, arriving Har
rl.hurg 2.25 A. M.. Baltimore 8.20 A. 31., V asa
bigton 7.30 A.M., Philadelphia, 5.23 A. M. and
NewYork8.00A. M.
Fast Line dally, at 8.10 P. M., arriving at Harris
irarg 3.30 A. M., Philadelphia 6.50 a. m.. New
York 9.30 A. M Baltimore 6.20 A. 31., Washing
ton 7.S0 A.M. . ,
All throngh trains connect at Jersey City with
boats of "Brooklyn Annex," for Brooklyn. N . Y.,
avoiding dqnble ferriage and journey through New
YorkCltv. .
Johnstown Accom. except Sunday, 3.40 p. M.
Grecnsburg Accom., 11.1a P. M. week-days. 10.30
P. M. Sundays. Oreentburg Express S.10 P. M..
except Sunday. Derry Express 11.00 A. M., except
Sunday. .
Wall's Accom. 6.00, 7 30. 9.00, 10.30 A. 31.. 12.15.
. 2.00. 3.20; 4.55. 5.40, 6.25, 7.40. 9.4U P. M., and 12.10
A.M.Iexcept Monday). Sunday. 10 30 A. M., 12.2a,
2.30, 5.30, 7.20, and 9.40 P. M.
Wllklnsburg Accom. 6.10. 6.40. 7.20 A. M.. 12.01.
4.00, 4.35. 0.2Q, 5.30, 5.50, 6.10, 10.10 and 11.40 P. M.
Bundar, 1.30 and 9.15 P. M.
Braddock Accom., 5.50, 6.53. 7.43. S.10. 9.50, 11.15
A.M., 12.30. 1.25. 2.50, 4.10. 8.TO. 6.-S. 7.20, 8.S5.
9.00 and 10.43 P; 31. week-days. Sunday, 5.35 A.M.
SOUTH-WEStf PENN KAH.WAY.
For TJnlontown 5.30 and 8.33 A. M-, 1.43 and 4.3
p. M. week-days.
MONONGATEEXA DIVISION;
OS ASD AFTEB MAT 25th. 1S01.
For 3Ionongahela- City, West Brownsville, and
TJnlontown 10.40 A. M. For Monongahela City
and West Brownsville 7.75 and 10.4O A. 31., and
4.50 P. 31. On Sunday. 8.55 A. 3r. and 1.01 P. M.
For Sfonongahela City only. 1.01 and 5.50 p. M.
week-days. Dravosburg Accom.. 6.00 A. 31. and
3.20 P. M. week-days. W est Elizabeth Accom.
8.35 A.M., 4 15, 6.30, and 11.35 P. 31. Sunday, 9.40
P. 31.
WEST FKSNSYI.VANIA HIYISIOX.
OS AND AFTEB 3IAT 25th, 1S91.
From FEDEBAL STBEET STATION, Allegheny
City:
For Springdale. week-days, 6.20, 8.25, 9.50, 10.40,
11.50, A. 31.. 2.25. 4.19. 5.00. 6.05. 6 20. 8.10. 10.30,
and 11.40 P. M. Sundays, 12.35 and 9.30 P. 31.
For Butler, week-days, 6.55, 8.50, 10.40 A. M., 3.15
and 6.05 P. Jt.
For Freeport. week-days. 6.53, 8.50, 10.40 A. 3t.,
3.13. 4.W. 5.00. 8.10. 10.30, and 11.40 P. IT. Sun
davs, 12.35 and 9.10 P. M. .
Foe Apollo, week-days. 10.40 A. M.. and 5.00 P. 3r.
For Blalrsvllle, week-days, 6.55 A. M., 3.15 and 10.30
3The Excelsior Baggage Express Companr win,
caU for and check Baggage from Bote's and Resi
dences. Time Cards and full Information can bo
obtained at the Ticket Offices o. 110 J lfth Ave
nue, corner Fourth Avenue and Trv Street, and
Union St itlon. J. B. WOOD.
CHA3. E. PUGn, GenU Pass'r Agent
General II anager.
gFii Tioia Pittsburgh Union Station.
llfennsyivania Lines.
Jl$edu!ofPassengerTralnj-Centranime.
Southwest System-Pan-HandleBonto
Depart for Columbus, Cincinnati, Indianapolis, St.
Louis, points intermediate and beyond: 1.15 a.m.,
7.10a.m ,85pjn.,11.15pjn. Arrirefromsamo
points: 2.10a.m., aCOa.m.,55pjn.
Depart for Columbus, Chicago, points intermediate
and beyond: 1.15 a.m., 1-05 p.m. Arriiehom
same points: 2J0 a.m.,t3.0o pjn.
Mor tbwest System-Fort Wayne Route
Depart tot Toledo, Chicago, points intermediato
and teyond: 7.10 a.m., 12i0 p.m., LOT p.m.,
111.20 p.m. Arrive from same points: "JliOa.m.,
6A5ajn.,5.55p.m.,0 60p.m.
The Pennsylvania Limited departs Tor Uiicago
8 45 pm. Arrives from Chicago 'B-OO a.m.
Devart tor Cleveland, points intermediate and
beyond: tU0 a.m , t) a.m., 2.4o pm.f
1105pm Arrive from same points : o.SO a.m.,
420 p.m.. fTXO p.m.
Pullman Sleeping Cars and PuUman Dining
Cars ran through, East and West, on principal tram
of both Systems.
Time 2u6Ze of Through and Local Accommoda
tion Trains of either system, not mentioned above, can
be obtained at 110 Fifth Avenue and Union Station,
Pittsburghand at principal ticket offices of the Penn
sylvania Lines West of Pittsburgh.
Daily. tEx. Sunday. tEx.Satnrda7. ITEx.MondaT.
JOSEPH WOOD, E. A. FORD,
Geceral JGuager, Cam! Passeagtr Ireat,
PITT3DTJRGH, PESN'A.
v
BALTIMORE AND OHIO EAILKOAD.
bchednle In effect May 10. 1391. Eastern time.
and New York, '8:15 a. m.
and9;20p. m.-
For Cumberland, 3.15 a.
m., $1:10, 9:20p. ra.
For Connellsvllle. M:40.
8.15 a.m., $1:10, $4:15 and
9.20 p.m.
For TJnlontown. $6-40,
8.15 a. m., $1:10 and $4.15 p.
m.
For Connellsvffle and
Walh?nP?-tonn. Pa.. T WO. $9.30a.m..
P For.CIhclnnatl and St. Louis, 7a) a. m. 7:4S p.
For Columbus. 7:20 a. m. 7.45 p. m.
For Newark. 7.20a. m.. 7:4ip. m.
Z For Chicago. ,7'20a.m.and.l;.p.rn.
Tnlna arrive from Icw York, rhuadrtphls,
Baltimore and Washington, -2 -m-' ' P;
m. From Columbus. Cincinnati nnd Chicago, 'iun
a. m.. 8 JO p. m. From Wheeling. a.S5, 10.i a.
"Dally "uJally 'except'sunday. JSnnday onlyj
lSatnrday only. IDally except Sararday.
Parlor anil sleeping cars to Baltimore, Washing
ton, Cincinnati and Chicago.
The Pittsburg Transfer Company will call for
and check baggage from hotels and residences upon
orders left B. & O. ticket office, corner I ifth,
avenue and 'Wood street, or 401 and G39 SmltlUleld
'j! t! odfxl. chas. o. scnix.
General Manager. Pen. Pass. Agent.
PITTSBURG & LAKE ERIE RAILROAD COM
PAQ r-ScheUnle In efTect May 10. 1391, central
time. V.S.L.E. K. R. Depvbt For Cleveland,
4.30, 8-00 a m. 'VM. 4.JD. "9.45 p Tu. For Cincin
nati, Chicigo and ijt. Louis, 4.30 a ra. li30. 9:45 u
m. For Buffalo, 8-0.ini, 4 20, "Si-Kprn. For Sal
amanca, 80anl,"l,5O.B.45 p m. For Youngs
town and JiewfCHMlsiU?'0.8100! 9-55 s - 2'M
430. 9.45 p m.'lTrvftWfver Falls. 4 JO, 7 00. "1:00.
9 M a m. "1.50, i-MiaV-20. "9:45 p m. ForChar
tiers. 4.30. 15.. 5 35, b .55, 7.00, 7.35. 7:50. 18.00.
8 45, "9.10. 9 j5. 11:30 a m. 12:10, 112.43. l.&. 3:30,
4:25, 4:30,.4T3, 5 JO. '3,50, 00. i9-45, 1030 p m,
AimiVE-From Cleveland. 6:40 a m. 'lSO,
5-40, "7.50 pm. From Cincinnati. Chicago and St.
Louis. 6: a m. 12 JO p ro. 1 M p m. From Buf
falo, "6:40 a m. 12.30, 10-05 p m. From Salamanca,
"10 00 a m, "7 JO p m. From Youngstown and New
Castle. "6:40, 10.00 am. "12.30. i-40. 750. "lO-OV
pm. From Beaver Falls, 3-3), "8.40, 7:20. 10.03
a m, 12.30, 1:20, 6:40, "7:30, 10 05 p m.
P., C. & Y. trains for Mansneld, 7:3S a m. 12:10, 1
4.35pm. For Esplen and Beechmont, 7.35 a m,j
'l C.& Y. trains f romManslleld, 7.05, 11:59 am,
4Spm. From Beechmont. 7 05. 11 159 a m.
1.; McK. & Y. B. B. Dsfabt For New
Haven. 10.10 am. "3-00 p m. For AY est Iewtou,
10:10 a m. '3-00. 5;2S p m.
ABEIVE From New Haven, 90 a m, '5:40
p in. From West Newton, 6:13. 9.00 a m, "S.IO
pm.
For McKeesport, Elizabeth. Slonongahela City
and Bellevernou. 6:43, 11 05 a m, 3 .35. 5.25 pm. -
From Beuevcrnon, Monongahela City. Elizabeth 1,
and McKeesport, 6.15, 7.40, 11.40 a m, "4:05, 5.40
pm. ,
"Dallv. TSundays only. I
City ticket office. 639 Smithfield St. !
A!
LT.EGHENY VALLEY. RAILROAD
Tm'tia ixirn TTntnn 4tAtlrn iKaitenr Standard
:":,. t.-.. .- - - . . i-mH v-v
tlailf, 8 15 a. Tn.(ArriTiDKt Buffalo at 545 p. m.);
Kltta'nnlng Ac., 9.00 a. m.; llulton Ac.. 10:10
a. m.: Valley Camp Ac. 12.05 p. m.: OU City and
n n. .Kit
r." ""v..r;? .; m - . nrnhht.
dally. 8:45 p. m. (Arriving at, BufTilo 7.20 a. m.U
Hulton Ac.. 9.10 p. m.: Valley Camp Ac. 11;
&ro. Church trains Emlenton. 9 a. m. Klt
nnlng, 12:40 p.m.: Braeburn. 9.40 p. m. Pull
man Parlor Cars on day trains and Sleeping Car on
night trains between Plttsburganrt Buffalo. JA3..
P. ANDF.U30N, Q. T. Agt,;TJAVlD MCCAEOO,
Uen. Snpt.
11ITTSBURR AND CASTLK SHANNON B- B.
X Winter Time Table. On an after March 30.
lsOO. nntll further notice, trains will run a fol
lows on every day, except Sunday. Eastern stand
ard time: Leaving Plttsbnrg-6ao a. in., 7:10 a.
m., 8:00a. m., D.30a. m.. 11.30 a. nj., 1:40p.m.,
3:40 p. m 5:10 p. m., 5 JO p. m., 6 JO p. m., 9 JO p.
m., 11:30 p. m. Arlington 5.40 a. m.. 6:20 a. m.,
7:10 a.m.. 8:00 a. m.. 10:20 a. in., 1.00 p.m., 2.40
P. m., 4J0p. m.. 5.10p. m., 5.50 p.m.. 7:10p.m.,
loaop. m. Sunday trains, leaving Pittsburg 10
a.m.. 12,5tfp. m., 2 JO p. m.. 5 JO p. m., 9 JO p.m.
Arlington 9:10 a. m., 12:10 p.m., VMr. m.. 4 JO
p. tn.f 6.30 p. m. JOHN JAT1N, Supt.
TITTSBUHR AND WESTERN RAILWAY
J. Trams (Ct'l Stand'd time). I Leave.
Arrive.
MilL Butler. Clalron. Kane.... 6-.SO a m 11:20 a m
Akron, Toledo and Ureeuvllle., 7:20 a m 7:30 p m
Butler Accommodation..... .... t-toam 3.13 pm.
(irecnvllle. Newcastle. Clarionl 1:40pm 9.11am
('lU-a Imprest (dally) 12i43 pinrl2:10 p m
Zellenopleand llutlc- I 4.25 pm 5 JO a m,
Butler Accommodation 5:30 p mi 7:20 a m
First class fare to Chicago. (10 EO. Second class,
(3 to. Pullman buffet sleeping tar to Chlcngodallv.
M. MAY, SONS &. CO.
MNE DYEING AND CLEANING.
KR fit-rtfH Avafinn
JtolUSSToihs - ' fltteburjr, 2 '
4
$
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1
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