nF",fry?TOMwp-?Bj'n rw. 20 Ill, YET A CHILD, Bern on an Island of the Mid-Pacific and Xever Permitted Even to See the Ocean. MEW XOIflffia OP TIIE-TYORLD. Be Was Guarded by an Outcast Father, Who Had Brougit His Bride to the Lonely Spot to Live. SOLITUDE MADE THE WOMAN IXSANE., Another of Lieutenant ShufeHt's EemarkaWe Exper iences in Hia World Wanderings. VnUTTEN FOB THE DISPATCH.! A misty and a murky day at sea. A damp and a foggy dnj-that came at early-dawn with net pulls of cold moisture, across leaden waters and left its breath, on the hairy faces and on the bosoms of the flannel shirts of those who clustered on the fore castle and looked to windward. A long and even swell upon the broad expanse of ocean, a flash of while in a flying gull in the foamy wake of a creaking ship; a low and glowering horizon and hanging clouds of mist and drizzle scurrying before a fitful wind, a corvette bound to the westward in the mighty Pacific! A man with a navy cap pulled down over his lace, climbs slowly to the starboard, forecastle ladder. He is followed by an other, a young one, who carries a sextant box under his arm and a notebook between his teeth. Both look tired and wan from wan; of sleep and rest. They are the navi gator and his assistant. "Sun up nearly three hours, Mr. Rob ert? " exclaimed" the former, "and nary a "How about ought-thev to bear, rir?" "Say :N. X. W. a little to the X." Sighted a Bit of Land. And the navigator pointed -with his flat tened haadoer the huge anchor on the bows. "'Seen anything that looked .like land an isla-sd''" he asked suddenly of a man who had been leaning over the cat-head and sip ping every now and then from a tin mug lull of steaming cofiee. "I can't say tor sure, sir but Sparks was telling me, when I came on at lour bells, that there was land he saw, Eir, and others as had the morning watch, says the same SIT ' The clatter of pots and pans under the forecastle; the smell of burning coffee; the lazy stream of smoke from the galley fun rel, the dark forms of blue-clad men mov tcp about a wet and slippery deck along- a rd figure on the bridge walking rest-lr-h to and fro; a muddy morning on a sea g s.j man-of-war. the sun, sir, the sun, suddenly exclaims tfap voun assistant. "1 6ee it quick the ssxtantr-ready? es. sir." ' Stand by." ".Land, hoi" comesrlnging down from-the masthead. Vhere away?" bellows Bacons-startled officer on the bridge. 'Two points on the starboard bow, sir." "Make it out?" "High land, sir." "That will do, Mr. Eoberts," says the navigator. "You can put up the sextant ctid come below, sir. They aro the Bonin IsUnds." A Calm and Scml-Tropical Bay. At noon the sun is nearly overhead. The cli ads of mist and vapor have long since ' Esppeared. The ocean swell has calmed t one vast bluish surfaoa scarce rippled by c breath. The sea-worn prow of the old corvette sweeps sharp around the lofty point The lonely Outcast cf a rocky isle in mid-Pacific. Her engines J ccae to mroo; a snarp voice rings out a ciar command. Then comes a mighty splash, the rattle of a rusty chain, and 40 cars from Hawaii wo are anchored in the cttiin and tenu-tropia bay of Peel Island Isontn group. There are but few places now, even in the most unfrequented by-ways of trackless c. eans that have not at odd times, attracted e..firthecupiditvorthe curiosity of the rciidio rover. Even over the vast sweep cf the Southern seas, where almost count ing is.es neep their coral fringe above a j, - i'i ocejn, there remains but few if any v b eh the trader or the whaler has not ca . i upon for one purpose or another. The bi .oers of the Spanish Main; the bloody p f t i of the Coral Islands; the horrible Tt of Cannibal canoes all the reckless r '-ce of the sea, and its distant and un i ' a n lands, have long since been swept lrrtn the pages of fiction by the common j re voyages of the unromantie Btcamer, or f .. cnld facts of tho modern commercial irveier. Has Never Seen tho World. Sull, once in a while, in a long and cKa.igclul life, away from the middle and i e . epcr current of his experience, a ckar . r' Ffi odd and strange, so outside the pres en a i Mill so forgotten by the past, as to rrr oiex-n worse than the usual outcast Jrru 'he society of other men. Think of e a om, ot that society never to have k- u-n, of the sound or roar of the great wo Id of life never to have heard; to tj'r been bom in the nineteenth and died la the first century of existence. Yet upon tncte lonely islands it was reported that eucc a man lived; a man who knew abso-1-uuy nothing, and had no curiosity even cr m th simplest facts of modern history a.ia achievement. I met this man a few t-.ivq aii r our arrival, in an accidental way. The LJonin Islands are divided into three -. u,-s known to navigators as the Parry, tre Itjily, the Peel and the Katcr groups. O the Peel group are settled a few English tad other Europeans, generally the descend az. ot deserters from visiting whalemen or other vessels. Port Loyd, the calling sta tion on the largest island of this group, has a good harbor of basin-like proportions and Kale anchorage. It is the home of the great sea turtle of the "Western Pacific, and upon lie netn me lew innauitants mostly subsist, while its shell affords them means of trade wuli passing vessels. A Crmlo, Ucpalnted Building. 0e balmy afternoon I had started inland fo)u the circuit of the broad way of Port Lai and climbed a woody mountain-side to t. r i..Uf- beneath. Here, above a mass of durL sreemh leaves, I saw protruding the tj-ciitd roof of some settler's cottage. (. rio'iiv led me to turu my steps in this ci s direction, till I stood in front of a d U. one-story building of the crudest con t -ruction. Cnpainted and weather-stained, tc roujrh boards that formed its sides leaned id and out, warped by long exposure, and w h hardly remaining strength enough to sj, port the heavy burden of the matted t i There was a door hung upon leather I f.es and closed. 1 stepped upon the half-barrel that served a strpping-stone and knocked abruptly. I'm bonie time there wasno response, though Tie sound of my rapping echoed through the crazy house. Presently, however, I heard the noise of chair legs pushed about & floor and the shuffle of heavy feet. The door opened cautiously about half way and in the gloom of the interior stood a strange and uncouth figure. "What do ye want?" he asked sharply of me, in good English. Picture of the Outcast. As the light came slowly in through the leafy bower overhead, I made out more dis tinctly the figure and appearance of tho the man. He was a tall and bony person, with whitened hair and sunburned, wrinkled face. His predominant features were hia deep set, ferret eyes, overhung with bushy brows, and a nose that was hooked and large. He wore a coarse shirt, cut off at the elbows, and a ragged pair of trousers that barelv reached his naked feet. "What do yc want?" he repeated harshly. "I am tired, sir," I said, "from my long walk, and seeing your house through the trees, was attracted by curiosity and knocked upon vour door." He hesitated a moment and passed his hand once or twice across his large mouth., "I haven't any room for strangers nor nothing else. But ye can sit on the step it ye wish, and there's water back of the house, in a tub if ye is thirsty." And he shut the door again. The Boy Was More Hospitable. I stood irresolutely a moment, and then, followed his advice and a little foot-worn fath that led to the rear of the house. Here found the water in the tub, and a crude cocoanut dipper to drink from. X noticed, Where He Brought Sit Bride. too, that an apology for a window had been cut in the boards here, and a dirty piece of calico acted as a curtain on the inside. As I replaced the dipper this curtain was pushed aside, and the face of my inhospita ble friend, with theferfttty eyes, gazed fixedly at me. "Well, ain't ye gone yet?" I shook my head and replied that the sun was hot, and I would rest myself a bit, I thought, before Istarted back. He-dropped the curtain, and I could hear the shuffle of his feet again across the floor. So I went around again and sat on the barrel step. Half an hour passed, and I had just thrown away the short stump of the cigar I had been smoking, and was thinking of starting in earnest when the door opened again, and my queer friend stood upon the sill. "Ye see, stranger," he said, "I don't want to be mean and oncivil to"ye, but we never have no strangars here, and never sees no one and don't wants to. But I reckon ye are a new one on the island, and don't mean no harm. I've got a sick boy in here, and he's been a-beggjng to let ye in and be civil to ye sol does if ye wants to." Backed by a Burning Fever. And he held the door wide to let me pass. The room was low and musty with the smell of decayed vegetation. The floor was of boards, loosely laid on the bare ground, with no attempt at any caulking. Two. rude chairs, an attempt at a table and a low bedstead made from planks placed against the wall, supported by props from beneath, constituted the entire furniture. When my eyes became accustomed to the gloom I saw stretched on this rude cot the figure of a man. My strange host offered me a chair, and when I had seated myself, commenced. "Yes, sir, he's pretty sick, is he. I don't scarcely know as what ails him. He's been down two months now, and just lays there and sort of says nothing, only stares about most of the time." I moved my chair to the bedside and sat down again. The patient was a tall and well-built man of perhaps 25; before his ill ness he must have been a person of splendid physical proportions, but ne was weak and wan enough now. His face was very placid, but very, very pale; his eyes were closed and he breathed irregularly. I felt his hands; they were dry and hot and his tan gled hair lay in wet masses on his broad, whito brow. The older man stood by me as I looked down, running his coarse hand across his lips nervously as he watched. Would Not Ilavo a Doctor. "He has fever," I said. "Yes; I guess that's it like it it -worries1 me dreadful sort, he looks so yearning at me sometimes, and I don't know as what to do always." "Is he any kin of yours?" He wiped his dry mouth again and hitched up his coarse trousers about his waist. "Well, yes, sir; sort of kin my son, sir." I sat a while longer, and when I rose to go I promised to bring the father something irom the ship (he would not listen about a doctor) the next day or the day following. The old man followed me to the door, and, holding it open for me, said: "He's a-sleep-ing now;" closed it behind him, and guessed he would walk a step with me through the woods. Our conversation, at first desultory, grad ually led un to the subiect of his own nasi life and the history of his queer surround ings. He told it briefly. Story of tbo Outcast. Ho had run away from home a New England home over 40 years ago, and shipped on a whaler bound to the southern seas. He had served on her three years and over as the vessel rounding the Horn came slowly toward the cruising grounds of the Northern Pacific. Things had gone from bad to worse between the captain and him self for many months particularly after they had rescued the crew of a sinking South Sea trader, among them a young woman, the daughter of the trader's drowned captain. With this girl he feU in love, and her treatment by the captain made his soul boil with rage. So what with the beatings he got and the insulting of her, "we took we two the yawl and one night when the Mary Clyde came in for water at Port Loyd, pulled ashore and took to the woods." They built the little house I had seen, and for over 30 years had lived there. She had been dead these 15 years, leaving behind her the boy, now grown to manhood. They had lived all this time on what their little Ftrst tight of the Sea. garden had brought them on what fish he could catch in the bay, or on the meat of some turtles he bad now and then captured. The hard experiences of the past sea life of his wife had affected a little her "thinking powers," as he put it, and she never again came down to the ocean or in sight of it, nor had she ever allowed her son to approach its shores. The Boy Never Saw the Sea. After her death, her son had become so long used to the habit of obedience, that, though living on an island, ocean-bound, he had never seen it nor heard the roar of its mighty waves. They had no tools of any kind, and she was "not very much, sir, on education and the like noway," he said, so his son had "sorter growed up with the hills and trees and knew nothing else beside them." My visit of tho next day was not the last one. It was followed by daily ones there after. I had consulted the doctor of our ship with reference to the case and had great difficulty in preventing him from visiting the patient himself. In fact he did once, I believe, but was bo roughly met by the surly old man as never again to attempt it. But he gave me medicines and much good advice. So, over tho woody hills each day I tramped to the little wretched cottage In the valley. And I was glad to see the happy look of recognition in the glassy eyes, or the wave of the weak, bony hand -above the coarse sheet about him. That he was fading, day by day, I saw; that death was but waiting, hour by hour, to knock upon the lonely door, I knew full well. But In my heart there grew for him this man so utterly outside my world a real and tender affection. His Mind a Perfect Blank. Yet, In our daily, quiet talks, and we had these always at our meetings, I never met nor wish to meet again, a mind so abso lutely blank, so devoid of the slightest knowledge or conception of other men; the history of his own or any other age, or the triumphs of art, science, war, astronomy or religion. It was as if a babe had sprung to sudden maturity and been thrown into the society of mankind, long used to all the benefits of years of education and civiliza tion. I used to recall often the story of the child born in a French prison, who was reared in solitude and darkness tor 20 years; this was even worse perhaps than the case ot my strange dying mend. Jb or at least the latter knew language when he heard it; knew color when he saw it, knew the trees, the rocks, the animal life about him: but of the causes for, the reasons why, nothing. Sometimes when I was deep in the rela tion of some great historical event: some wonderful discovery; some astounding in vention, he would turn his pale face to roe, and half whisper to mein a placid way some simple, childlike question, that all my phil osophy could not answer. It was as if one who had never seen fire, had asked of an other who had seen it and in all the majesty of some roaring conflagration "What is fire?" "What does it look like?" Day by day he grew weaker, and both his father and myself knew the end was nigh. Little by little I changed the topio of our talks from earthly things to those beyond. But I saw that, too, was even more utterly blank and incomprehensible than the for mer. He listened gently, with often a faint smile upon his lips but, alas, a dark void, I knew, in his souk Begged to See the Ocean. And I could almost see the struggle in his mind within himself, always to lose itself in the dull look of total ignorance. At last one stormy morning we saw the end had come indeed: and when I softly entered, he opened wide his eyes and faintly beckoned me. X bent my head to his; he put his hot lips to my.ear and whispered: "I would like to see the ocean you have told me ot. We made his father and I hastily a rnde litter and carried him the poor, worn frame up the mountain side and down to where the great waves were breaking on the beach. Dark and heavy clouds were fast flying across the leaden sky the rising gale blew cold and wet in salty spray about us. He did not mind, but lay quiet and still, with a half smile on his lips. Suddenly he raised: he motioned tome and pointing with -his lean and weakened arm seaward, gasped: "is that it the sea?" "Yes yes." "1 understandnow it is God." And with these whispered words the soul of the child-man came into the presence of -its Giver. Mason W. Shxjfeldt, Lieutenant U. S. N. LATE NEWS IN BRIEF. Guatemalans deny the annexation story. Smallpox is epldemio at Great Morna, Bcssia. The coal miners' strike at Foster, Ia lg at an end. Oklahoma Is harvesting a mammoth wheat crop. The drought in Quebec province is so bad that Catholic churches will pray for rain. A bill regulating the granting of divorces has been introduced in the Dominion Senate. Fanny Banby, a member of the Gaiety Company, was granteU a divorce at London yesterday. The new Court House at Indianapolis collapsed Friday by a dynamite explosion. Loss, $20,003. Sherman Brooks was executed in public at Louisville, Ga,, Friday for the murder of another negro. The Railway Telegraphers, In session at St. Louis, have adjourned to meet in Chatta nooga next year. The number of Immigrants landed at New York Friday was 2,231-iall from Rotter dam and Liverpool. John Most, the Anarchist, was landed in a New York penitentiary yesterday to serve his year's sentence. Harriet Hosmer, at Rome, has completed ae moaei oi trie -nronose statue for the World's Fair. The Powhatan Club, of Richmond, has started a movement for setiarate street cars for white and colored people Tho German Hebrew Emigration Com mittee declines to undortake to send exiles to Palestine instead of America. Tho steamer Al-kl at San Francisco has been chartered by tho Government for ser vice in Alaskan waters as a prison ship. The shortage in the accounts of the National City Bank at Marshall, Mich., has been found to bo sioo.ooo. A receiver is asked for. Several battles have been fought between French troops and Chinese pirates, yot the pests of the Eastern seas aro still unsub dued. The Kansas Millers' Association has passed resolutions urging Secretary Blalno to hasten reciprocity negotiations with Mexico. Tho Mayor of Atlanta has vetoed all beer license because most of the sellers have been, selling -trliiskv unlawfully. Whisky licenses are untouched An ascending military balloon burst at a fair in Prague, Bohemia. The officers and crew were severely injured. The balloon Ignited and was consumed. A heavy rainstorm caused thd breaking of two dams at Fort Scott. Tho bottom land settlements wcro flooded in consequence, andhonses were swept away. The memory of Emperor Maximilian and tho t-n o Generals, Mexia and Miriamon, who were shot with him, was honored in tho City of Mexico yesterday by a grand requiem mass. Coal miners at Spring Valley, III., havo been on a strike since May 24 on the screen and other issues, have received an offer from Operator Scott to submit tho matter to arbi tration. , While investigating the causfe of an eleo trlo light flickering in Buffalo Friday night, Georee Kessler irrasned a hoisting rod. It proved to be charged with electricity and it killed him. The railroad collision on the Illinois Central near Lauve, La., recorded in yester day's Dispatch, resulted in four men killed and Blx severely injured. No passengers were badly hurt. President Pellegrini, of the Argentine Republic, vetoed the bill providing lor a re duction of the period of suspension of gold and silver payments, but the Chamber of Deputies passed the measure over his head. J. Rhinelander Dillon, a shareholder and depositor of the American Loan and Trust ComDany, Is going to ventilate in the courts the methods of the collapsed company. He has entered suit against the 18 directors to recover the value of $2,333 75 worth of stock. An investigation is In progress by a Do minion Parliament committee of charges of corruption in relation to public contracts 8 referred against Thomas ilcGreew, M. P. ne contractor testified to giving $100,000 to politicians and go-betweens and for political purposes. Tho Court of Inquiry Investigating the Manipur niassacro Iris found the Regent guilty of warring on the forces of tho Em press of India, but not guilty of the murder of Chief Commissioner James W. Quinton, British Resident F. St. C. Giimwood and the other British officials. Tho Regent has been sentenced to death. Frank Nelson, colored, an ex-soldier, was to have been executed at Nelsonvillo, Ariz., yesterday with Antonio Granado, but the former was granted a ten days' respite. Nel son killed a woman with whom he was liv ing, and also her child, at Fort Grant last July. Granado killed his wife and child at Morenclin August. Granado was hanged yesterday. For over a year the mystery surrounding the murder of Christopher Helm, a wealthy cattleman, whose body was found on the Cherokee strip riddled with bullets, has baffled tho authorities. A few days ago a burglar was latally shot at Cherokee, Tex. Just before dying he confessed that a man named Ben Scott killed Helm and robbed his body of a large sum of money. It is said that the authorities have Scott located. THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH, SUNDAY, JtmE 51, m. HARTMAN, OF COT.IJMBTJS, OHIO, GTXES A SEASON iBLE TECTUBE ON MEDICINE. Nervous Prostration Its Causes, Effects, Symptoms and Cure Nervines a Nuis ance, Bromides a Bane, Sedatives a Slaughter Natural Effective Bemedlea That Never Fait Nervous prostration (neurasthenia), epinal anemia, spinal irritation, nervous debility, nervousness and weak nerves aro different names given to an affection of tha nervous system, which is becoming more and more common. The habits of the aver age American is, in almost every particular, calculated to produce this form of nervous disorder. Hard work, close competition, business uncertainties, little sleep and high living, the use of narcotics, all tend alike to injure the nervous system. The dress and customs of polite society, the ever-increasing pressure of business circles, the reckless indulgence of the sporting classes, each fur nish their quota to swell the terrible list of nervous wrecks that crowd the many-hospitals and sanitariums of our country. Thou sands remain at their homes, desperately trying to go through the tedious routine of the duties of household, farm, shop or office, taking nervine after nervine, vainly striv ing to put off the day when they shall break down altogether, a. ouraen to themselves, a trial to their friends, these unfortunate people continue to drag out a miserable ex istence year after year. ststtoms. Probably the most invariable symptom in the history of nervous prostration is morbid fear. A foreboding of calamity of soma sort, vague apprehensions, a sense that something awful is about to happen, often precedes for a long time the general debility which is to follow. The loss of vitality of the nervous system deranges the functions more or less of every organ" in the Body. The head is one day congested with too much blood, and perhaps the next day pallid, because of too little blood. Twitch ing of the eyelids, moving brown specks before the eyes, and metallic ringing in the ears, are the result of brain exhaustion. Tho appetite and digestion mav remain good, although loss of appetite and nervous dyspepsia are very often prominent symp toms in such cases. Sour stomach after eating, with belching of gas, is very troublesome a feeling of great weight in the stomach after eating a full meal, pro ducing in some cases a terrible depression, causing the patient indescribable suffering, even when the appetite ana digestion re main trood. Morbid fear of leavinft home, or being separated from their usual attendants, also ot taking medicine for tear of being poi. soncd, fear of great storms, of crowded as semblies, all or either and many others are likely to be present in a decided case of nervous prostration. A constant desire to talk of their symptoms is commonly so great as to make it difficult to keep such -patients Ions at a time talking or thinkine of anything else. Chills and hot flashes of very irregular duration ana recurrence come and go without seeming cause. The hands and feet are usually cold and clammy, and the general tendency is to dryness and cool ness of the skin of the whole body. Among tha symptoms to which this class of patients are liable, but not always pres ent, may be mentioned neuralgic headache, nervous chills, hysteria, sinking or faint spells, distressing palpitation of the heart, defective eyesight, total inability to read, write or do any business; urine abundant, without color, loss of flesh, sleeplessness and many others, of which each case pre sents a different array. HTGENIO TREATMENT. This consists, first, of an entire change Of habits as possible. Wnatever vocation the patient has followed should be entirely sus pended, or as nearly so as possible, and some other employment taken "up to the ex tent the strength of the patient will permit Entire leisure is not favorable to improve ment, as the patients are too apt to dwell on their troubles. Second, the diet should consist largely of animal food, jurided by the preference of the patient. A long walk before bed time will frequently procure a good night's rest A tepid bath often will accomplish the same desirable end. It is generally impossible to keep the bowels regular by any hygienio measures, as the patient is unable to take exercise enough to keep up the natural action of the bowels. An effective and gentle laxative that does not weaken or disturb digestion is a very desirable remedy in these cases, but hard to find., I have found Man-a-lln to be by far the best laxative in these cases' X have ever been able to procure. There is no laxative the equal of Man-a-lin'in cases where a natural movement of the bowels is desirable rather than active purgation. SPECIFIC MEDICAIi TREATMENT. The first difficulty I meet with in the proper treatment of nervous prostration is to get my patients rid of the many nervines, stimulants and sedatives which they havo usually become accustomed to before con sulting me. It would be difficult to over estimate the damage these drugs do in such cases. Bromides, valerinates, chloral, opium in every form, caffeine, cocaine and many others are all alike of great injury and of no possible good. To get all these and many other similar remedies away from the patient, and Pe-ru-na in their stead, is the first thing to be accomplished. After the patient has taken Pe-ru-na, to the exclusion of everything else, a short time, there is a marked change in all the symptoms. The appetite becomes regular, sleep natural and every disagreeable symp tom improved. Of course it is sometimes several months or more before a permanent cure is realized, but it is only a question of time; Pe-ru-na will not fail to cure a single uncomplicated case. Pe-ru-na is a perfect specifio for these cases, and is absolutely in vincible. There aro no failures where these directions are faithfully followed. The itn-. provement is prompt, and the patient can rest assured that a perfect cure will follow a persistent use of it. Pe-ru-na contains no phosphorous, strychnine or quinine to temporarily exalt the nervous system, but acts permanently by restoring tho normal functions. It con tains no narcotic or sedative, and does not derange the action of any bodily functipn during its use. I have no hesitation or misgiving in making positive promises of results in advance as the cure of nervous prostration in any form by Pe-ru-na, taken according to above directions, except only in cases where softening of the brain or spinal cord had commenced before the use of Pe-ru-iTa was begun. A complete treatise on diseases of hot weather sent free to any address by the Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O. 790 Seven Dollars and Ninety Cents. Come along, everyone. Keep this well in mind that Monday we place on sale a very fine assortment ot men s light and dark suits at $7 90 each. All we ask is a look at them. Anybody, no matter how inexperienced, will see at a glance that they are great bar gains. Such excellent materials, such ele gant patterns, such finely made suits never before were offered for 5? 90. , Other houses ask 512 and 514 for the same quality gar ments. This js truth. "We include men's fine sack and cutaway suits, made from all wool cassimere, ?7.90; men's plain black Hawthorne cheviot suits at 57 90; men's bound or stitched diagonal suits, 57 90; men's Bannockburn tweed suits, 57 90. .Come to-morrow. Our great sale will at tract thousands, and if you want to get the best it's better to call in the morning the most stylish goods sell first. P. O. C. O., Pittsburg Combination Cloth ing Company, corner Grant and Diamond streets. ITrniiriTUBE upholstered and repaired. Hauoh&Keenan,33 Water street. au ITairmont awnings at Brown & Co.'s, corner Grant and Water streets. Tel. 1194. Hosrroa- and Hurano awnings at 2Xs xnaux & Son', 639 Penn avenue. CHOICE EAST END LOTS AT AUCTION ! WEDNESDAY, JUNE 24, AT 2 P. M., ON THE LOTS, Cor. FORBES STREET AND BRADDOCK AVENUE. Ms Emm ONLY 2 SQUARES FROM PENN AVENUE LINE OF DUQUESNE TRACTION CO. SEVEN MINUTES' WALK FROM BRUSHT0N STATION, v EIGHT MINUTES' WALK FROM WILKINSBURG STATION, P. R. R. Each lot will be sold to the Highest Bidder on payments of $2 PER WEEK, or as much more as purchaser desires to pay. Grandest chance of the year to get Large Residence Lots in a choice location on such terms. PENN Egjjjjplnwitif.SNE TfrAfTiriN M CAVneoib RESIDE MtE, tt lf. yi , -til nr tswrg ! 'jq ttr,i KEfYSUGTOK ST. rnar to- ZO' z3 2.A 7tf 4o 45" no Look at the Terms of Sale : Each lot will be sold to the Highest Bidder, $10 to be paid down on each lot at time of sale and the balance to be paid at the rate of $2 per week, or as much more as the pur chaser desires to pay; interest to be paid monthly; deeel to be delivered when $300 and in terest is paid on each lot; 5 per cent discount allowed purchasers paying all cash. Never Before We're Terms Like the Above Offered on such high class property. It gives the purchaser a chance to quickly accumu late savings toward getting himself a home. THESE LOTS WILL PROVE A PROFITABLE SPECULATION To purchasers on account of their CHOICE LOCATION in the midst of FINE RESIDENCE PLACES. They are sure to enhance greatly in value. All Tipkets Should be Bought to Brushton Station, Where Carriages Will be in Waiting to take parties to the Lots. Parties from the city, Shadyside, East Liberty, Homewood or intermediate stations should take the train Brushton should take train leaving Braddock at 1:26 p. m. FOR PLANS AND FURTHER INFORMATION t LACK & BAIRD 189L FINE NEIGHBORHOOD! Commands a Fine View of ffiMiSuii, BrusMon aiPart Place. 5TA. ' Sfc, 7 5rA8 CSoTHJtaEA Besjdsncs QSS'SOR h3 ft! o rt IS zs 27 & 19 JO a - 3 JJ 43 4-t 4o 39 TORIES AYE: "" T RAM Moom leaving Union Depot 95 FOURTH AUCTION sale: BEAUTIFUL RESIDENCES ON BOTH uwe. AVf Jm tJ I Mb. c. gyJ aJIi()) FRAN J ' ' ? 6$ JT 4. ? Z2 Uj "& if lv'SB " 7 I 3d Sfe) "o toll C' at 1:25 p.m. Parties from points East of AVENUE 95 SIDES! M H kl I Ai TTMTCTa T -W9V s o -i We want it distinctly under stood thatthesearenot25-foot lots, but are 40 to 50 feet wide, with beautiful surround ings, and just the place for nice homes, with pure air, nicely elevated 'ground and quick time to and from the city, and is the right place for Business Men, Clerks and Salesmen to build their homes. SEE 5 Jea-33-wan. .Maag