mnBKgam.jaaiMtmBB savrTTFt srwS T" 14 001 OF M CLOUDS Into the Sunny Tropics on the Longest Street Car Line in the World. A MAD EIDE OF 72 MILES Through One of Nature's Wonder lands Behind Galloping Mules. BEAUTIFUL BELLES OP OLD JALAPA .Arches Through Forests That Bend Under the Weight of Orchids. CURIOUS HOUSES OF THE SOUTHLANDS ICO&KESrOXDEXCX OF THE DISPATCH. Veea. Cetjz, ilEXico, July IS. .N a street car tor a ride of 72 miles! A mad, wild race over hill and valley down the Mexican moun t a i n s 1 A gallop through great forest! and dense jungles! A ride through orange i- - groves and pineapple " beds. A Jump from tt regions where the coffee grows, through myriads of trcet loaded with orchids, out into groves of palms and on into the rank tropical vegetation of the Mexican hot land! A ride with strange driven who re mind you of Italian brigands! A rids through a strange people who live in strange houses and vtho look as queer as though they came fioin the other side of the world! Such is a mazy idea of the trip I took yesterday morning in coming from Jalapa to the little villag from whence you take the railroad for Vera Cruz. It was a ride over the longest street car line in the world. It was a rida through some of the most picturesque country of the American continent, and it is a ride which within a month will have passed from the possibili ties of travel. Ancient Jalapa, the Beautiful. Away up in the mountains, within sight ef the snow-iopped volcano, Orizaba, sur rounded by the richest of lands, lies one of the w ealthiett and most beautiful cities of Mexico. This is the old, old town of Jalapa. There is no place in Switzerland more beau tifully located, and you will find no town on the continent more picturesque. It lies right in the mountains. The clouds nestle uaonc the hills about it, and every street climb up and down, giving a series of beautiful views and vistas. The houses are all of ono or two stories. They are of stucco, and they look as though they had nil been finished but a year or so ago. Xncy nave long, low, overhanging roots oi red me, ana tnese roots jut out about a yard and a half over the street, and the rafters and the inside of the roofs aro painted a delicate light blue, Below this blue comes the brown, drab or yellow of the wall of the house, which foes down to a dado of dark red which bor ers the street. Th houses have great vaadows covered with iron bars, and out of these look the beautiful girls for which Jalapa is famoui They have blue eyes, dark hair and eyebrows, and their com plexioni are of the richest of cren Xot a lew of them have rosv cheeks, a d I caught Many a Reantlf ul Picture with my camera as I passed through the streets. The ground floors of the houses are le el with the sidewalk, and you can look through these windows right into the houses and see the red tiled floors, the walls fres coed in pay colors, and the garden of tropi cal plants which forms the courtyard about which the house is built The people di4 not seem to resent inspection, and the fair senoritas laughed when I pointed the camera at them, and I found them kinder and bet ter looking than the people of any other part of the Mexican Republic The Mexi cans themselves have a proverb concerning them. The v say that Jalapa is apart of heaven let down to earth, and the proverb is Las Jalapcnas son haluguenat bewitch ing aud allurmir are the women of Jalapa. Tue town is in the center of the richest of the cofiee regions of Mexico. It has about 11,000 people aud it is the most old-fashioned city of thi3 old-fashioned country. Its trade is cry great, however, and for 12 years the only connection it had with the seaport Las been the street car line, w men runs from it to Vera Cruz. 2 ow tiio Inter- Oeeanic Itailroad ot Mexico runs from the capital to it It was opened within a few WieLs and witmn a few weeks moie the line from Jalapa to Verb Cruz wiU bo completed nad The Tramway VT1II Be Given Vp. It wa thought that the grades wero too steep to be mounted by steam, but modern invention and engineering have proved the mistake. The iron hore, withm a month at least, will supercede the mules aud the craek of the -skip of the Mexican Jehu will be lost in the shriek of the narrow guage locomotive. The cars leave Jalapa early in the morning. They are first and second class, and the only difference between them Jalcpa Oirls at the Window is that the first-class train has better cush ioned seats and less passengers than the sec ond class. Each car contains six seats, is about 15 feet long and open at the sides. The seats run rijht across, the cars instead of up and down, and the driver Etands on the front platform with four lines in his hand, by which he guides four of the liveliest mules you will find in Mexico. He drives them at a gallop all the time, and we change mules every hour and go on a dead run up hill and dow n. Let me give you a picture of our ride, "We paid our fare at the depot It was a little over tG, and as we took our seats in the car a light ram began to f.ilL "We drivo first through the long, narrow streets of Jalapa, whose doors and windows were filled with faces hmilm a Kind rarewell, and then on out into the country. The road was that on which Cortez marchsd with his troops, and it is the same road over w hich the American army came under Gpneral Scott when it captured Mexico City. Near Jalapa it is wide and rugged aad paed with cobblestones. A thick eg ctation grows at each side of it, and the stone fences which line it are as moss-grown as tho-e about Cork and Kilaniuy in South Ireland. The fields back of thcs,e are full of the signs of prosperity. The grass is as green as that 4 -c - ill w fir of England, and it covers the hills on every side for miles. There are many fields of corn and this is in tastel, and I see roasting ears bursting forth, such as we have in August Here is a man plowing, and a cut in the field shows me that the rich brown loam is from six to eight feet deep, and a Mexican looks out from his big sombrero on the seat in front of me, and tells me that this land is worth as much as suburban lota about "Washington. It is curious to note the stages of the same crop in almost the same fields. Here is a field of corn in ear, and next to it you see another with the Eprouts just shooting from the ground. This ground will produce Tiro Crops of Corn a Tear, and it needs fertilization. Xow we pass a coffee plantation. The glossy bushes are shaded by tall, wide-leaved banana plants, whose heads bend over, and upon many of which there are long, brown blossoms or buds as big as an ear of corn. The ooffee bushes are full of ripe, red berries, and the flora and the trees nre wonderfully beauti ful. There is a Buena Uochez tree 30 feet high, crowned with great red flowers, and there are trees filled with blossoms which are of the same size and shape as the calla lily, and below them are the long, yellow tendrils of the Mexican love-plants, which have wrapped themselves around the moss covered lenecs, and shine like sapphires under the rain and the sun. The rain of the morning is now closing with a sunshower, and the dark cofiee trees are covered with drops of diamonds set into their emerald leaves. A few miles from Jalapa we'go into a forest, and here we first see tue Mexican orchid. They increase as we go onward, until thev cover the forest and hang down in great bunches, making the trees look as though they were studded rLOTVXSTJ 027 A with porcupines, decorated with the most wonderfully shaped and beautiful flower. Orchids of Every Variety. Thee orchids are of more than a hundred varieties. Thpy are of all shapes and colors and vou find them on all sorts of trees. Yon could have a carload here for the picking, and they hang over the road and fairly load down the branches of the trees to which they are married. Birds of the brightest of plumage fly in and ont among them, and the mocking bird whistles at our car as ths mules go galloping by. Thft vpfptnflnn pnnupps as tad pn hv. Hear Jalapa you find the forest trees of uuio auu u nines zuriuer uown me mnun. tain vou have jumped into the vegetation of Florida and Louisiana. Ton soon get into the fields of pineapples. They are littlo low bushes like cabbages and they cover the ground, their red bodies shining out below the green leaves. Near them are fields of sugar-cane, and I am told that sugar will grow here from year to year without re planting for more than 20years. In some parts oi Western Mexico there are said to be plnnts which have been cut year after year for 40 years, and which still thrust out new shoots from the old stumps, which Fairly Bubble TVlth Sacharrlno 1Vatei The cattle of this part of Mexico are fat, and these green hills are dotted with cows, sheep and goats. These are generally watched by half-naked neons, and every now and then you pass a thatched village or a great hacienda. Ve came on the dead gallop up to the sts'tion where Santa Anna made his headquarters on one of theso haciendas. Ue was, you know, the great general of the Mexican army and Dictator of the Bepublio, and General Scott de feated hita at the battle of Cerro Gordo, ,j wnen ne made nis marcn up tnis road to tus capital. Santa Anna owned hundreds of -thou sands of acres along this road. We rode for 52 miles perhaps through his planta tions, which Lave since been divided up and which are now owned by other partie His hacienda is a hollow square of long, low buildings with thatched huts surround ing it, in which live the poor Indians who were practically his slaves. It was hera that we made our first change of mules, and. the car stopped for about five minutes while four new animals were nut In. Then the driver cracked his whip and away we went at tne rate ot iz miles an nour. The Drivers Are SleioIIess. As we did so a freight car, to which was also harnessed four mules, was side-tracked on a s-n itch to let us pass, and behind us came the second-class train galloping away as fast as w e were. Our driver seemed to rejoice in every fresh team, and he had no mercy on the steeds. He wore the whitest of duck-linen clothes, and his pantaloons clasped his legs after the Mexican style, with as close a fit as those of the ballet girL He had a whip 20 feet long, and his sullen eyes looked out of a handsome face under a gorgeous yellow hat, whose brim was pulled down over his eyea. His whip crack sounded like a pistol, and up hill or down hill ha thrashed his mules, keeping them on the dead gallon all the time. He seemed to delight in whipping the mules as we passed the peons on the road, and he was the admiration of the dark-eyed Indian girls, who looked at him with great eyes at e went by. The Indians of the hot lands ore different from those of the Mexican plateau. They wear fewer clothes, and in fact some wear nothing at all. I saw many naked babies, and under one palm leaf roof a half dozen men slept with nothing but breech-clouts on them, and the sun crawled in through the slits in the roof and painted their skins ft varnished mahogany brown. Bouses or Flirting Poles. The Indians of Vera Cruz are said to be lazy, and a greater part of this ride was taken through the State of Vera Cruz. The oil is so ricn and fruit is so plentiful that they can almost live without working, and they uo no more tnan they can, possibly help. Their huts are made of cane of about the size of a fishing pole, and I noticed that they were very ingeniously constructed. Kails are dear in Mexico, and these huts were all tied together. The poles are driven into the ground and they extend about five feet upward, making a circular or square wall ot poles fastened together by other poles, which run around them and to which they are tired. From the too of these walls a conical or flat ridge roof runs upward. These roofs are made of palm leaves and fishing poles, and the thatch of paim is tied to tne poles, xne poles ot tne ground wall are not always very close to gether, and you can see the whole opera tions of the family going on within them. Some of them have but one room, aud men, women and children, married aud single, sleep and dress under the same piece of thatch. Many of the huts have no doors. The people sleep on the ground and they cook without stoves and the smoke finds its way out as best it can. Many of the girls are very pretty and the whole ride was a kaleideoscopio panorama of ever changing humanity. Oxen Ilarneesed by the norns. We took our dinner at Kinconado and ate with a dozen Mexican iarmers, who wore their black sombreros at the table. A pretty Mexican girl with a mantilla around her head sat opposito me and smoked a cigar ette after kermeahand hungry-eyed Indians looked curiously into the windows of the hacienda and watched us eat As we left the station we saw a boy plowing in the jungle, and his wooden plow was pulled by oxen who were harnessed to it by the horns. Everywhere in the fields and in the houses we saw signs of the great supersti tion of the Mexican peasants. Most of the oorn and wheat fields had crosses stuck up in them to keep the devil out of the crops, and many of these thatched huts had crosses stuck in their roofs or in the ground sur rounding them. As we neared the foot of the mountains we found the vegetation again changed, and we passed by great trees from the branches of which hung the bean from which the vanilla extract is made, and the oocoanut hnnc from the palms. The In dians were typical of the tropics where the air and nature invites to repose and where the chief thing in life is thcdolcefarniente. The Old National Road. "We left Jalapa at about 7 in the morning and we reached the end of our journey about 3 in the afternoon. Allowing two hours for stops, we made the 72 miles in six hours, or an average of 12 miles an hour, by no means a bad record for street cars and mules. During this ride we used 28 mules and we changed about every eight miles. The ride back from Vera Cruz to Jalapa is said to take twice as long, and the trip will be made in three hours by the new railroad. The railroad trip, however, will not compare in hi-storio interest or in natural scenery with this ride on the street cars. The journey is like one taken in a comfortable carriage, for the track is smooth and the seats are comfortable. The old road over which it goes has been in exist ence for hundreds of years, and it was over it that the Indian peasants carried their neavy pacta ot mcrcnancuse belore this street oar line was built, and for hundreds MEXICAN TABIC of years all the mule trains and man trains which carried the imports received at Vera Cruz to Mexico City had to pass over this road. The road is now as safe as any road in the United States, but only a few years ago it was infested by brigands and travelers were often robbed and killed, or rather killed and robbed, upon it You may still see wooden crosses by the roadside with heaps of stone about them, and you may OirU of Vera Cruz. know that each of these crosses stands above the bones of a murdered man and that the stones have been cast by the super stitious passers-by upon the grave as monu ments. Frank G. Caepes-xeb. DZSEEXED AND DESTITUTE. A. Hebrew Woman and Her roar Children Starving to Death on Penn Avenue. Barbara Goldman, a Hebraio woman, re siding with four small children, at 1114 Penn Avenue, is a destitute woman, whose case was reported to the Department ot Charities yesterday. Her husband, she said, deserted her two weeks ago, and since she has sub sisted on $2 50 a week afforded her from a Hebrew relief society. The room she occupied is very small and oheap, but she was unable to pay rent for it and her land lord went before Alderman Donovan. The Alderman refused under the circum stances. He and Mr. Donovan attempted to press assistance upon the woman, but she refused on the ground that she could not accept aid from a Christian. Mrs. Goldman's youngest child is and infant, and is dying for want of the nourishment which the mother, in her own starved condition, is un able to provide. And unless some Hebrew society comes to the relief of this helpless family they must perish Blowly of starva tion. KTToBTJKQ GETS A FIEE BOAT. Chlof Brown Still Refuses to Name the Chief Engineer. Mayor Gourley signed the fire boat or dinance yesterday afternoon. He said he placed his signature to it because ho be lieved' tho fire boat was a necessity and he did not think anyone could question the value of the water tower. He said he had no idea who would be chosen for Chief En gineer. Chief Brown was seen during the after noon and said he had not decided on any person for Chief Engineer, but would prob ably name the man on Monday. Do Your Own Picking Monday. SS 90 is the price that will make business hum at our large clothing house on Mon day. We know there are lots of men who need clothes, and we are right on hand with this cheap suit sale to fill their wants. We have marked 20 special lots of men's sack and cutaway suits, made from good cassi mere cloth, at 56 90 each. Uow you call Monday and do the picking. Choose the pattern that pleases you. Without doubt it's the best and cheapest line of garments for men ever offered. Dull business don't bother us. We announce our bargain prices for good, reliable clothing to the public, and always get a ready response. P. C. C. C, Pittsburg Combination Cloth ing Company, corner Grant and Diamond streets. ' Jtjst the drink for summer Iron City Beer. All dealers sell it; best bars, keep it on tap. Badges for lodges and societies at Mo Mahon Bros. & Adams', S2 Fourth avenue. su Stop at the Hollenden, in American and European plans. Cleveland, su New Automatic, cheap, half price; last one. Wheelee & Wilson Mfg. Co., rsu Ho. 6 Sixth street WBm ffiffefE 'If i I J f if THE PITTSBURG DISPATCH, SUNDAY, JULY LAW WEL SOT DO IT. The Millennium lot for Labor Unions Nor Legislatures to Make. MUST BEGIN WITH INDIVIDUALS, And Thcj Must Begin With little Thing Bather Than Great EAKTH CHANGES TO HEATEN SLOWLY tWMTKir TOB THK DISPATCH. J "Judge not, and ye shall not be judged; condemn not, and ye shall not be con demned; forgive, and ye shall be forgiven; give, and it shall be given unto you; good measure, pressed down, and shaken togeth er, and running over, shall men give unto your bosom." When nobody any longer judges or con demns his neighbor, and when everybody gives and forgives, then we will be living in the beginning of the millennium. It needs no argument, in this world of busy tongues, to show the advantage of such a state as that All that we want to know is how to bring that state of things about Christ tells us that it is possible to drive all un kind speech out of the world, and to put generosity and forgiveness in the place of it The millennium is possible. But how? We look into the books which give us pictures of the twentieth century, and offer to guide us into the promised land. And the land is fair enough and attractive enough, and a good deal of an improvement upuu iuo uuueu oiaies ui America m tms year of grace, 1891. But The Way Over to It is not so plain. We will somehow get there. the prophets tell us; there will be a social revolution, there will be a conquest of tho classes by tho masses, there will be this and that and the other crisis, catastrophe, bloom ing out of the new lite from the old; and then we will all. love one another, and tho brotherhood of man will be n blessed uni versal reality. Tho truth is that while we all want the millennium badly enough, nobody is quite sure of the way to it The blind nre leading the blind, and the end of such leading is pretty certain to be a sud den fall into an unexpected ditch. I havo no faith in anydramatio beginning of the millennium. I do not believe that the curtain of cloud will roll up at the tinkle of any reformer's bell, and behold, a new heaven and a new earth. The millen nium is coming, but it is coming slowly, gradually. That is how God works. The millennium is coming, but it is coming in very homely, simple ways; not by any ora tonal revolution passed in the parliament of man, not by any vaccination of the human heart with the baccilus of brotherly love, not by might of mobs nor strength of arms. Etory of the Syrian Nobleman. Christ tells us how the millennium will begin. But wo listen to him as the Syrian nobleman listened to the Hebrew prophet The nobleman, you remember, wanted to be cured of his leprosy, and ho came with his retinue of servants, a gorgeous procession, with trumpets and banners, he himself rid ing in the midst in his golden chariot; and they stopped before the plain house where the prophet lived, and the prophet sent out word that the best way to get rid of that leprosy was to so down and take a pood bath in the river Jordan, and the nobleman was grievously ouended. He had expected that Elisha would come out.aud bow down before him, and pray to heaven, and strike his hand over the place and make him whole. Instead of that, he was just to wash himself in a muddy little river. And then his servants came to him and said, "Master, if the prophet had com manded thee to do some great thing, wouldest thou not have done it? How much more then when he bids thee washond be clean!" And so the nobleman came to his right mind, and obeyed and was cleansed. Tho Millennium Begins at Home. How true that is to human naturel Here we are, praying that the Kingdom of God may como, and laying plans to convert all pen to brotherly love, and wondering what is just the best way to do that, and studying political economy to find out, and imagin ing soma wonderlul now legislation, or some fine new method of taxation, or some sub lime revolution, and not listening to what Christ says at alL Christ Bays that if we want to put a stop to unkind and unjust judging we must simply stop that sort of judging our own seh es. H we would not have others con demn us, we must not condemn them. If we want to bring in a revival of the spirit of forgiven ess, we must ourselves be for giving. And if we desire a better distribu tion of the good things of life, and want other people to give us better measure, we must begin that our own selves; we must ourselves set the standard of good mer:. That is, as we do, bo will others do to us. If we do well, others will do well The whole world wiU beoome Christian, if we are Christians. The millennium begins at home, lam Will Not Mako Brotherly Lore. That is very plain and slow and homely. It is not taken account of in "Looking Backward" or in "News from Nowhere, or in any other of the popular prophecies of the millennium that I have read. But it is the simple truth about the matter. It is the narrow way, and the Christian way, and the divine way, and the only way into the promised land. There can be no regenera tion of society without first a regeneration of the individual. There can be no human brotherhood except among a company of brothers. And you cannot get brotherly love by passing laws. Already there is beginning a reaction against socialism. The labor unions are making enemies. Plain thinking and clear headed men are doubting whether the millennium is any more likely to oome along the path of the tyranny of labor than along the path of the tyranny of capital. It was found, a good while ago, when experiments were being tried in ecclesiastical govern ment, that "my lords, the brethren," wore even harder masters than "my lords, the bishops." And it is being found to-day, to the workingmau's sorrow, that recent ex periments in the regulation of labor are re sulting in that same sort of discovery. Liberty of the Laboring Men. Tho laborer has lost his liberty. How long or how" short shall be his day, how much or how little shall be his wages, whether he shall work at all or not. is beta? absolutely decided for him as if he were a child. And if he attempts to assert his independence, and to follow his own honest will as a man should, his lords, the brethren, will make life miserable for him, they will hoot at him in the street and Btone him. It is not that socialism is at fault, for socialism is simply applied Christianity. It is an endeavor to set the condition of human life upon a distinctly Christian basis. It is an attempt to bring in the millennium. I believe most thoroughly that when Christ preached the "Kindom of God," He was thinking not for a moment of the church as an ecclesiastical organization, but of the so cialistic state, of the establishment of so ciety upon the sure foundations of brotherly love. But I believe with equal emphasis that there is only one way to bring in the socialistic state, and that is not the way of tyranny, but the way which Christ taught You can't whip men into brotherhood you can't stone men into fraternal love. Brotherhood, yes; all good men standing together for the best interests of all, yes: but manhood first. Personal liberty, first The ideal brotherhood is not a labor union of machines, but a labor union oi independ ent men. What True Socialism Is. If socialism means tyranny, then let all lovers of liberty fight it. It the union of labor means the stealing of tho rights of man, then let all friends of humanity do their best to breaK it jno; true socialism means honest and genuine and loving brotherhood, and has nouse for brickbats. And the union of labor, if it is to go on, as God grant it may go on, must proceed along the lines which Christ lays down, must persuade and not compel, must be a willing union, with no hard words and no hard handli encouraging the liberty of all men andpaying no court to tyranny. "Give, and it shall be given unto you, ' must be the formula of its faith and its hope. And "good measure, pressed down, and shaken together, and running over" will be its sure reward. The kingdom of God has uo place in the geographies. The kingdom of God is in the nearts of men. You know how they used to ask Christs in the old days, over and over, when the kingdom of God should come. But he set no date. For the king dom of God, the millennium, the reign of righteousness, begins whenever and wher ever any man or woman stops uttering un kind judgments and uncalled-for condem nations, and begins with a new earnestness to give and forgive. When Earth Will Bo Heaven. And the kingdom of God will fully come, and earth will be given another name and be christened heaven, on tho very day when all the men and all the women who live upon it shall have learned that lesson of eternal love. And so you see it depends, as I said, not upon princes, not upon parliaments, not upon saints, not upon socialists, but just upon our own individual selves when the millennium shall come. Not from without, but from within, is reformation to be looked for. Not by new law, but by new love, is society to be uplifted, and converted, and set right. And you and I must make the beginning. Don't wait Don't look for leaders. Be gin yourself. Judge not, and see how soon vou will ston hearincr unkind comments. Condemn not, and notice what a new toler ance and charity will come into the speech of all who talk with you. Forgive, and ye shaU be forgiven, and your example will awaken, though vou may not know it, a new sense ot the possibility of forgiveness. Give, and it shall be given unto you. Every body you know w ill begin giving. Experience of a Traveler. James Freeman Clarke describes in his fragment of autobiography a journey from Massachusatts to Kentucky in the days be- lore tne railroad, ne noticed, ne says, tnat the tone of a stage-coach party otten de pends upon the temper of a single individ ual. A cross, ill-natured, complaining fel low would make all the other passengers cross, ill-natured and complaining. "Once," he says, "when going through the Cattaraugus woods, where the road was mostly deep mire or rough corduroy, and there was every temptation to be cross and uncomfortable, one man bo enlivened and entertained our party, and was so accommo dating and good-natured, that we seemed to be having a pleasant picnic, and the other inmates ot the coach took the same tone. I therefore found It best, for my own sake, as soon as we took our place in the coach for a long journey, to manifest an interest in my fellow-passengers and their comfort; offering, for example, to change places with them if they preferred my 6eat to their own, "and paying them such little attentions as are always agreeable. It happened almost always that the other passengers would foUow this lead and take pains to bo civil and accommodating." Is not that a parable of human life? Widen out a stage-coach and you get a neighborhood. And set down one indi vidual in that neighborhood who tries a good many times every day to do what Christ Bays, and you get a glimpse of the millennium. That is now the millennium, begins. George Hodges. TJNrSED TICKETS To Blaine and Keturn, by Balh' Holders of unused railroad tickets, issued for the 16th to Blaine and return, will please turn the same in to us at once and re ceive in exchange regular round trip tickets good for SO days. Free round trip tickets by rail will also be issued to adult holders of unused steamboat tickets, issued for the same date, upon delivery of such tickets at our office. Chables Somebs & Co., 129 Fourth avenue. YOU FURNISH THE HEAD WE DO THE REST. We now make the grandest offer in Straw Hats ever made by any house in the city. On Monday we give you choice of chousands of stylish and fine quality straws sold all the season at 98c, 74c and 63c, for TWENTY-FIVE CENTS. The goods will be on exhibition and be sold from our large window on Market street. Remember, that while it's an ab solute and bona fide offer, it is for one day only Monday. It isn't our fault that we are compelled to make such a sac rifice it's the weather. All you have to do, however, is to take advantage of the situation. Still two months which to wear Straw Hats, and, at the price we now offer them, less than half a cent a day, gives you comfort I Lgc -- j B All it will cost you to own one of these nobby Hats in Mackinaw and Shansi Braids, in either white, black or mixed col ors, is 25 c. That is, if you are spry and get around in reasonable time on Monday. They are worth three times the money.but will go on that day for DON'T MISS IT. 95c We have numbers of other interesting bargains for you in each of our other departments. Midsummer prices pre vail in Clothing, our sale of Men's Fine Suits at $10 being a striking example. In Furnishings, Neckwear, Shoes, Trunks and Valises, and in every other article in which we deal it's a money-saving season for you. GUSK Y'S w 19, 189L GOING TO EEIE FOB C0UBT. The Officials of the United States Courts Lcavo PIttsburs To-morrow. The United States Circuit and District Courts will open at Erie to-morrow morning with Judge Keed presiding. There are some 20 cases to be heard in both courts and it is expected they will all be finished up in about one week. Among the cases to be tried are those of Key. Mr. Sutherland, who is charged with mailing improper matter, the case of B, J. Earley, the postal clerk who was arrested here a few days ago for extracting money from letters, Grimolo, the counterfeiter, Demotty, who is charged with robbing a postoffice near Meadville, and Johnson, charged with attempting to do the Bame thing at Waynesburg. Beside these are other cases equally as important but not as well known. Some important cases for violation of the postal and internal revenue laws are to come up and the court will have all it can do to get through with them in the time prdposed. There are 15 cases on the criminal list and five or six on the civil list, among the latter being that of Smith vs the Crosby Lumber Company, involving some $50,000, in a question as to the owner ship of some timber land. The officials of the courts will go over the Pittsburg, Shenango and Lake Erie road, in a private car placed at their disposal by Colonel Sam Dick, President of the road. A caterer accompanies them aud meals will be furnished on the train. Two Charters Granted Yesterday. A charter was granted yesterday for the Germania Musical Association of Tarentum. The directors are E. Peltzer, Fritz Danner, John Krautz, Jr., Fritz Nicola and Carl Zickan. A charter was also granted the Pittsburg Retail Grocers' Protective Asso ciation. The directors are J. C. O'Donnell, W. N. Willett, J. H. Friday, H. Daub, S. B. Charters, M. J. McDonald, C. Hubner, William Anderson and Thomas Jeremy. EVERY FAMILY Ehould bo provided with Ayer's Pills. No other aperient is in such general do mand or so highly recommended by tha profession. Mild but thorough in oper ation, these pills are the best of all rem edies for constipation, biliousness, heart burn, indigestion, flatulency, loss of ap petite, liver complaint, and sick head ache. Thoy break up colds, fevers, and malaria, relieve rheumatism and neu ralgia, and are indispensable to travel ers,eitherbyi iland or sea. Sugar-coat- Mnerle e nnd com pounded of iavGOS the purest Togo table! I cathartics, thoy may bo taken with impunity by old and young. Physicians recommend these pills in preference to any other. H.W.Hersh, Judsonia,Ark.,say3: "la 1853, by tha advice of a friend, I begaa the use of Ayer's Pills as a remedy for biliousness, constipation, high fevers, and colds. They served mo better than anything I had previously tried, and I have used them in attacks of that sort ever since." Ayer's Cathartic Pills Every Dos Effective. FOR DYSPEPSIA Distress after Eating, Stomach Catarrh, Head ache, Heartburn, and all forms of Indigestion. Prepared from the fruit of ths Papaya Melon Tree found la the tropics. Druggists jell tl-m. -6S-TTS Description does not de scribe the value of the hats we shall sell to-morrow at this small price. We can't in print, do justice to tho situation. If you come in and see for yourselves, you'll be surprised and de lighted at what you can get in the hat line on Monday for 25 DON'T MISS IT. PPO NEW ADTEBTISESrENTS. THE GREATEST PITTSBimB HAS EVER SEEN. RECREATION PARK, ALLEGHENY. The most dazzling, realistic and magnifi cent scene over shown to the public. Unrivaled attractions. Marvelous eruption of Mount Vesuvjuil I0.C0O square, yards of elaborate scenery. loo persons taking part. Graceful gondolas on a lake of Silver Sheen. Amazing feats by Aorobatio Artists. Wrestling, boxing and racing. aarcuea oi noman soldiery. $1,000 Display of Fireworks Each Evening. MAGNIFICENT SET PIECES AND ELABORATE DESIGNS IN COLOBED FIEES. CHABIOT, flrjKDLE AND FOOT BACESI This Gigantic Enterprise Has Been Secured by the People of Pittsburg on a Guarantee of $30,000. FALL OF POMPEII. OPENING NIGHT, SATURDAY, JULY 25. Every Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday nights thereafter. Excursion rates on all railroads leading to Pittsburg. GENERAL ADMISSION, 50c. Scats In private boxes can be secured ten days In advance of each exhibition. In case of rain admission tickets good on next clear night. Don't Miss This Opportunity to See the Greatest Spectacle of the Age. Jyl9 im HARRIS' THEATER. Mrs. P. Harris, K. L. Brltton, T. F. Dean, Proprietors and Managers. WEEK COHERING MONDAY, JULY 20. Every Afternoon and Evening. The last week of the season. The greatest of all labor dramas, THE LONG STRIKE! Presented by the favorite BTAHDARD DRAMATIC COMPANY. Seallstlo Effect Startling Situations! Jyl9-23 Grand Open Air Performance of it AS YOU LIKE IT," On the lawn of the Hotel Kenmawr, Shady avenue. East End. Specially engaged MISS ROSE COGIHiAH, As Rosalind. MB. JOS. IIAWOBTH, As Orlando wixoAM Muuoooar, As Charles, the Wrestler. MISS MARIE BUKKES9, AsCella. With a very stTong company, every mem ber being an aotor of national reputation. Produced under the direction of US. CHAS. HAGAR. All the original musio by large male chorus. On ThursdayTTuIy 23, 1891. TICKETS, S3 60 EACH. Nott on sale at Hamilton's Music Store, 91 and 03 Fifth avenue. G. C. JENKS, Jyl9-97 Manager. We are able to illustrate but two or three styles of the many we shall show, but can say .with confi dence that out of the im- mense assortment we place at your disposal, you are bound to find a suitable and becoming shape. No matter which you select, the price will be 25 DON'T MISS IT. 300 TO 400 MARKET STREET. II Dancing girls and flower girl. Citizens and dignitaries. Immense band. Superb Costumes. Splendid psitreant. Amazing effects more beautiful than the ordinary mind can conceive. Stupendous artificial lake. An almost es act reproduction of the Bay of Naples. Grand stands seating 15,000 people. RESERVED SEATS, 75c. DUQUESNE. PITTSBURG'S LEADING THEATER. David Henderson and John W.Norton, MANAGEE3. Theater Cooled by Iced Air. Preliminary Season Beginning SATURDAY EVENING, JULY 25. THE" GAM OPERA CO, Headed ty CHAS. H. DREW, JOHN E. BRAND, HENRY IIALLAIT, JESSE JENKINS, GEORGE CLARE, LAURA CLEMENT, AUGUSTA ROCHE, LILLIAN SWAIN, ADA BERNARD, IRENE KENT 40-OTHERS-40 In an elaborate production of Lecocg.'s tunelul creation, GIROFLE-GIRQFLA! NOTE During this preliminary season tha price will be SSS ELxxd eO Cents. Other operas m active preparation. Bale of seats begins Wednesday, at 9 A. x. Jyl9-W T. W. HAUS, Designer and contractor In all kind of GRANITE. Cemetery vaults, statuary and large monu ments a specialty. Call or write for designs and prices before contracting. Office, room 613, Penn building, Penn a v., Pittsburg. Jall-93-su 29 left Not only come yourselves, but bring your boys, for we shall have some splendid catches for you in Boys' and Children's Straws of all shapes and all colors. Again we remind you that this sale lasts but one day, and that you must come on Monday to take advantage of these hats at this special price. DON'T MISS IT. 25 V . .-i- .-k-AiLik&ii- ,
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