H2 IHKasiiEa JCrr vrir? yz??!f&F&$!W3r Varri 10 Urlth an obtuse faculty for believing every thing he heard, and a pood deal more than fwhat he taw. He lived in an advanced, "ttneasy stage of "Wesleyanism, and had as Senator represented a proper people. He 'was, as rumor ran, among the statesmen rho had discovered that Grant's habits un tted him for high commands. One "White House story comes to me of his leavinjj Xincoln in wrath, "slamming the doors be hind him," because of some Presidcntal obtusencss in regard to Grant. X think also that he was the hero of the famous whisky story of Lincoln, now an nndying jart of the literature of American wit 'Tell me. Senator, the brand of Grant's 'whisky, ai I want to send a barrel to some cf the other Generals." One day his eyes opened to the-enormities f Whitman's lineB, and the poetnras-sent cbout his business. Whitman Turned-Out of n! Place. 2o such unholy hands should pollute the veered records of that department "Whit man went, and might have been a gentle man of the pavement, indeed, in the saddest iorni had not the poet Stedman, if I am sure in my remembrance, and John Hay found him access into another department Here he toiled at small wages, living in humble lodgings, pacing Pennsylvania ave nue of the afternoons on his daily errand to the hospital and camp. I do not think that lever heard "Whitman refer to this halo of martyrdom incident, nor do I see any trace of it "in his writings. He was not a man to nourish enmities nor recall dark remembrances. It was his nature rather to respect as a solemn dispensation the bereveament of intellect which could see sin in his poems, to regard it with the evmpathv we give to the blind, the halt and the dumb. "Whitman was never in the idle throng. Occasionally glimpses of him at theaters. Of the noisy, frothy world he never seemed to be a part, was more at home with the chestnut trees and the bbady laces. I do not think that we knew then, as it has come to us since, that he was living a life of renunciation. He was very poor. His talary was smalL Unfitted for the camp he had devoted himself to the hospital He lived in reserved, honorable penury; practiced personal abstinence that every penny might go to the hospitals. The Foet In the Hospital. It was not for our poet to go to the wars, and his life was given to the camps, and es pecially to the hospital. It was humble work, but it is, believe me, no want of re spect and honor lor the clamorous doings of the battle the onset, the rally, the retreat that makes me feel there was a singular kind of heroism in what this laboring clerk in the departments did lor the suffering. "Whitman himself, frank as lie is about everything, has little to say of it in his yoems. I recall the dead cavalryman, shot 'through the neck, and who could not live : Come, sweet death! he persuaded, O beautiful death 1 In mercy come quickly. There are likewise some further lines enc of the few references to these scenes. As a rule, however, silence upon what even lis admirers will regard as the noblest episode in his life: I thread my way through the hospitals, The hurt and the wounded I pacify with soothing hand: I eit by the restless all the dark night some are so younc Ecme suffer so much. I recall the experience tweet and sad, Many a soldier's loving arms about this neck have crossed and rested. Many a soldier's kiss dwells on thesobearded lips. I never was submerged by the Whitman 'enthusiasm, even in earlier days. I saw, ai Emerson wrote, that in his book were In comparable things incomparably said. I Tecognized the wit of what I once heard irom Wendell Phillips, that there were many kinds of leaves anions the "Leaves of Grass," but no fig leaves. It was an indo lent book, so much that might have been weeded out, if the author had f oreseen that his work was to be something more than a during experiment HThat Pruning 'Would Have Done Ben Jonson's regret that Shakespeare, In stead of never blotting a line, had not blot ted a thousand, applied with more force to Whitman than to any great writer of tho century except Southey and Byron. And even the improprieties which barred it from the bazars, the leaves, which were not fig leaves, were the mere saving of things soob vious that it seemed such a waste ot time to say them. Why rob me of night and silence and meditation and the self-respect of my thoughts? Ior could one accept, without pro test, the caprice which denuded his poetry of harmony. Whitman himself is my authority for the fact that he carefully culled out all touches of rhythm and metre and held to his rugged uneven lines. This is a loss to literature. Ho one can read "My Captain" or "Pioneers" without seeing that there was capacity for music in this man, as definite end sweeping as in Swinburne or Poe. I know few lines with more harmony than these on Lincoln: Hushed be the camps to-day, .And, soldiers, let us drape our "war-worn ea pons, JLnd each with musing sonl retire to cele brate Our dear Commander's death. J'o more Tor him life's stormy conflicts, ' Jfor victory, nor deleat no more time's dark events Changing like ceaseless clouds across the sky. Whitman's work wa never apart from the tharm of his personality. He was al ways Socrates loafing about the streets of Athens, and I never saw him in the war days without the idea that he was a revela tion of the old Greek. And as I was out of range of the worship, with perhaps a taint of heresy, the exclusion of his books from circulation, attorney generals of Boston Issuing warrants, Cabinet ministers chasing him out of departments as noisome things are chased with a broom this was such an ignominious business. A Sugsestioa for Elimination. Itea'ons of revenue and personal comfort were to be considered, as Whitman was poor; what he could save from his hire as clerk going to the soldie-s in the way of Eymps, tobacco and stationery. This justi fied snch an editing of his works as would pass the muster of the police. It had been done abroad. Itosetti's edition, as decor ous as Watts' hymns, with the Eosscti pruning, I had found in 'England. Other tG'tions were among the current literature of the railway stall and the shop. I was among those of Whitman's friends who hoped in i.ome such manner for his larger, truer aa-iiaore remunerative recognition. In tli ,ad of thinking I one day ran against Vhitman sailing donn Seventh aireet in h Is maiestical. three-decker wav. opposite the little brick house in which Jef ferson had written "the Declaration, then a eacred landmark of Philadelphia, but now crushed under the grinding heel of trade. He was steering lor Forney's office, at Seventh and Chestnut streets. I was glad to hear that he meant to print his book, be lieving that the, world was ripe enough to receive it and that it meant mended for tunes. But why not admit the "Children of Adam" not above 700 or 800 lines in that, and perhaps 200 or 300 in addition, and then have such a hook as was classic in England, what might readily be accepted in enlightened Sunday schools and in the ap parent regions of fashionable society? And bo on, with emphasis as precise and court eousas I could bestow upon one I so much admired and in whose material fortunes I had so deep an interest "What Was Written Wag Written. Whitman, who was always gentle and It'nd, a free, spontaneous nature, who never argued, but rather list&ed in benevolent, complacent wonder to argument, heard my speech" as if it were by no means a new story. I soon discovered that I might as readily hope to have the Sphynx throw the Egyptian sands from her person and go into the maze of a country dance, as lor Whitman to change, eliminate or reserve one line. Ho had had it out with Emerson, it said, years before, and his mind was settled. . What he had writUn he had vrltten. It was his message to the world. If men and omen would not have it as it came from hit ilps, it was not worth the having. As for the English editions which Hosetti and other friends had clipped and patched together, that was their affair. He .hid made a statue or nothing. There should be no torso in its place by Ms grace or leave. There was a modest, resolute pride in all this, a sincerity I could not but respect; nor was the subject alluded to again. The fact that the book' never had other than a languid circulation may have come from the agilitv of the police, or it may have been that it was ahead of its time, tbattbe Whit man taste had to be formed. I thought of the weary years through which Wordsworth waited for recognition, and how poor Car lyle hawked "Sartor Itesartns" around London only to find the reluctant, eleemo synary hospitality of some second-class magazine. Yet Wordsworth is now with the sovereigns in their spheres, and "Sartor Besartus" is sold by the thousands every year. How Henry Georse Had to Walt I had known also of a similar experience. That estimable gentleman, my dear and honored friend, Henry George, had written in those years a boM; which he ieit, as Whitman and Cirljle before him, to be a solemn message to minkind. Composed under depressing circumstances in Califor nia, he had managed by heroic sacrifices to put it into type. Xow if 'only some one would read his bookl Henry George was then unknown beyond the threshold of his Pacific home. I was going to England, and took a dozen conies to peddle for him. I tried an old-fashioned bookseller at the Haymarket" who had exalted people for customers a royal highness, Lord Beacons field and the like. In o few days I called only to see the books on the shelves, and the bookseller debating with his conscience as to whether he should not go to the Old Bailey and plead guilty to the condonement of a con spiracy for overturning society. All that was left was to take the volumes and ask the ever willing Smalley, of the Tribune, to name some advanced thinkers of the "crank" species at whom I might throw them and have the rubbish well out of the way. This book was "Poverty and Pro gress." In a short time its sale in London had reached to 60,000 a year. It gave its author world-wide fame as one of the foremost men of the time. Whitman was no farther from the spirit of the age than Henry George, and the party which came around him was as devont in its allegiance, although much smaller than that which now follows that eminent and intrepid man. I know of no writer, except it may be Carlyle, in prose who has affected literary style more deeply than Whitman. The directness of expression, the cogency of thought, the precise, unmis takable sense of meaning which we see manifest and growing in current literature, is largely due to Whitman. His influence is rather with those who write than read. From the thinking world has come his ap preciation, even as those on the mountains see the sun long before its glory floods the valley. "Whitman's literary Strength. Ho poet since Byron ever went more directly to his theme. No arrow ever left his bow without going home. Poe had this power when he had honesty and courage enough to use it As in "Helen, Thy Beauty Is to ITe," how surely the arrow goes home. I should say, however, that even above Byron above all English writers since Goldsmith and Dryden, the faculty of clear, definite thought rests with hitman, xou are never lost in his pages. Tou never pause over a word, nor listen tor the echo of a double meaning. The refine ment refined of Tennyson the mysticism of Browning the lush and over-ripened euphony of Swinburne- there is nothing of mis in me American. -Liie sea is me sea the sun is the sun and you go with him to stream and meadow and waterfall, and dis entangle the constellations, and sit by the fireside over the singing kettle, and read of old Kissabone, the sailor, who lived until he was 90, and died watching the brig cir cumvent the winds. In this simplicity, this sinewy strength will be found some of the reasons for the steady growth of Whitman's power and fame. Others will be fonnd in the fact that more than any other poet he identified him self with the Civil War. I recall no writ ings which contain so much ot the war as the thousand lines he has given to it in verse; not to speak of much that is valuable in prose. "Calamus" and the bodv electric, the "Sea-Drift" and "Birds of Passage," much of this we should be loath to spare. Still it could be spared, while the loss to American literature of the war passages would be irreparable. High Water MarJi In America. The "Song of the Banner at Daybreak" and "President Lincoln's Funeral Hymn" reach the high water mark ot American poetic genius; are as precious, at least to the writer of these lines, as Wordsworth's ode to "Im mortality," which, in his humble opinion, is the highest reach of poetic genius that has been attained since Shakespeare. You have the soul of war its majestv, its Titanic grandeur. "War! belt weeks, months or years, an armed race is advancing to wel come it" No anger, no truculence, no vindictiveness toward the South, no be littling the mighty lesson that the ages will find in that gigantic struggle by obtruding the wrathmnd vanity of the strife. Bather tenderness to the vanquished foe, as in these lines: Sly enemy Is dead a man divine as myself Is dead. I look where he lies, white-faced and still In the coflln, and draw near, Bend down and touch lightly with my lips tho white lace in the coffin. Whitman never troubles himself about the mere policies of the war, not even with Emancipation. There is no allusion, not even in the'Lincoln poems, to the breaking of the shackles, or setting the negroes free, no swelling the current note of Lincoln adulation. Kor does the freedman appear in any part of the poet's noble vision ot the restored Union. It was a Union war, the war of men, the war of the private soldier. There are few tributes to heaven directed genius some lines on Grant as "man of the mighty days and equal to the days" the ex ception. The soldier is the theme. Brave, brave were the soldiera (high-named to-day) who lived through the light; Bnt the bravest pressed to tho front, and fell unnamed, unknown. John- Eusseli. Young. To Se Concluded Kai Sunday. , His Fame is Widespread. Kennedy's restaurant nt Ho. 2 Sixth street is popular among shoppers and ladies generally who wish to get a nice lunch while downtown. Kennedy's fame as a caterer is widespread, and there are no weddings of note or social gatherings that he is not called upon to serve. His name adds so much to affairs of this kind that it is tho proper thing to secure his services. TTSSU Cough Following the Grip. Many persons who have recovered from la grippe are now troubled with a persistent cough. Chamberlain's Cough Remedy will promptly loosen this cough and relieve the lungs, effecting a permanent cure, in a very short time. 25 and CO-ccnt bottles for sale by druggists. tisu EXCURSION TO WASHrNGTOif, D. G, Via the Ti. & O. E. K. Thursday, January 23. Bate 59 the round trip; tickets good for ten davs. Trains leave B. & O. station at 8 A. m. "and 9:20 p. M. Through Pullman parlor cars on the morning train, and sleepers on the night train. Wn.lv call on 'you with samples and fur nish estimates on furniture reupholstery. Haugh & Kzes an, 33 Water street su Teeth made of aluminum are the rage. Light as paper and take the place of gold and at a very small price. Call and see them at Taft's Philadelphia Dental Booms, 39 Fifth avenue. To-day's Dispatch, second page, con tains a local "ad" headed "Drygoods and Carpet Prices Hit Hardl" Bead it J. H. Kuitkel &,Bsa Best set teeth that can be made, only Z8, at Taft's Philadelphia Dental Boom. 30 -Fifth avenue. THE YANKEE LAW MAKERS. Great Statesmen From the Section That Owns the Mortgages. FBTES B YERY DAY COMMON SENSE Hoar Is tie Historian of the Senate and Hale Is a Croesus. FIEET LITTLE SENAT0E OHAKDLES rCOMlERTOXDEXCE OP TUB DTSrATCIt. Washington, Jan. 16. New England is in proportion to its population the richest part- of the United States. From Maine to Connecticut the country is dotted with savings banks and the bulk of the vast in surance wealth of the Union is owned there. Tom Beed tells a story of a Nebraska farmer who traveling through Maine happened to stop at a little house hanging from the side of a rocky hill which constituted the farm. During his ,stay he mado many cutting criticisms upon the character of the soil, and asked the farmer why he did not go west, where the land was so rich that you could thrust your arm into it up to your shoulders and pull from the bottom dirt as rich as guano. "I want to know," said the farmer, "and where might such lands be?" 'Where I live in the West," was the reply. "Which is in Blank township, Blank county, Neb." "I reckon I have a mortgage on some of that land," replied the Maine man. And he thereupon brought out an old tin box and showed mortgages on half the farms of the township. "I bought these mortgages," he went on, "with what I made off my farm here, and as long as you fellows pay the interest I guess I will stay." Mew England Owns the West And so it is all over New England. Yan kee thrift has made the farmers the masters of many of the richest lands of the far West The biggest office buildings of nearly every Western city belong to life insurance com panies and are owned by New England. Chicago was practically rebuilt with Bos ton capital and the rest of the States of the Union largely rely upon New England for the money and machinery which turns their raw materials into gold and manufactures. With the worst climate intheUnited States, with half sterile lands torn by nature into the roughest of mountains and the narrowest of valleys, New England has had to fight for every inch she has gotten from the world in the way of progress. She has had to save her pennies in order to get her dollars and this tussle with the world has made her strong and rich. It has hardened the intel lectual muscles of her statesmen and has molded them into a type of their own. The Congressmen from New England are anions: the strongest men in Washincton. They number, all told, in the Lower House only 2G, or eight less than the representa tives of the one State of New York and two less than Pennsylvania. All New England has only five more representatives than Ohio, and you can add the 12 New England Senators to the 2G New England repre sentatives and the New England men here then will onlv exceed by two the represen tation from New York in both Houses. Where tho Leaders Camo From. Still, it has been for years one of the strongest sections in Congress. James G. Islainc, ol .Maine, was long the leader of the Bepublican party, and he held the speakership ot the House in the stormiest times of our history. NowThomasB. Beed is the leader of the opposition in the Lower House, and the Senators from New Eng land are among the strongest of the nation. Take a look at the men from Maine. Senator Fryc is a typical Yankee, but with it all there is no broader gauge man in the Union. He is thoroughly equipped on all public questions, and he tests everything with the loadstone of common sense. Ho was 12 years in the House of Bepresenta tives before he came to the Senate, and had made a reputation there as a bold and fear less leader. When Blaine was made Gar field's Secretary of State he was elected to take hisjjlaee in the Senate, and his first speech wis in defense of New England and against the South. Senator Call, of Florida, had described the workingmen and women of New England "as hungry, starving serfs." and Frve replied that the workintr people of one of the Strees of New England alone had enough money deposited in their savings banks to buy all the real and per sonal propertv of five 6uch States as Florida and have 550,000,000 left He Eonsed tho Whole Stmtb. "The serfs of Massachusetts." said he. "have 5200,000,000 deposited in the savings banks, and the whole valuation of the State of Florida is only 530,000,000." He then went on to attack Louisiana and North Carolina and succeeded in angering the whole Democratic side of the Chamber. It is a peculiarity of his that he handles all things without gloves. He is packed full of practical common sense and he has a manly hatred of all shams and it does not make much difference whether the sham is a Democratic one or a Bepublican one. There is nothing snobbish about" Frve, and he would just as leave be called "Bill" as Senator Frye. He tells a story of him self when he was Attorney General. Said he: "As I walked down "the steps of the State House I met a man who accosted me with 'Good morning. General.' 'Good morn ing, sir,' said I. When I got on the train another acquaintance spoke to me and said, 'Good morning, Major.' 'Good morn ing, sir,' I answered. At the next station I met another friend who addressed me as 'Good morning, Colonel.' Audi replied, 'Good morning, sir. The next man greeted me with 'Good morning, Mr. Frye,' and I replied,- 'Good morning, sir.' I hardly knew which title was the right one until as I was going up the street to my home a man met me who yelled out the same greeting that he had given me in my college days and shouted, 'How are yer, Bill,' and I suppose that was the best one." Doesn't Believe In Hoarding. There is, however, nothing undignified about Senator Frye. He said a few years ago that he was not worth 523,000 and his salary probably constitutes his chief means of support He does not believe in saving money and he says he got a lesson to this effect from his grandfather when he was a boy. Said he: "I was brought np in a Quaker family and when daring my boyhood I got a chance to take a trip to Boston my grand father gave me 55 to spend. I did not know any boys in Boston and I could think of no way to have 55 worth of fun without boys, so I kept the money in my pocket When I got home my grandfather asked me how I had spent the $5, and I, with the air of one who had done a virtuous act, said: 'I did not spend it at all, grandfather. I have saved it and I have it in my pocket' "Hereupon my grandfather replied, JThee may give me back the money, Will-, iam. I gave thee that money to spend at Boston.' This," concluded Senator Fryer "taught me a lesson, and ever since that I have known better than to save money." Senator Frye is, however, by no moans an extravagant man. He has a large family and abont eight grandchildren. He is C2 years ot age, but does not look 50, and he thinks the secret of his wonderful health is the fishing to which he devotes three months every year, spending this time on the Maine lakes, in the northern part of his State. One of the Rich Senators. Senator Eugene Hale is an entirely dif ferent man Irom Senator Frye He "is in the first place one of the richest men in Washington, havine become so thrnnrh h; marriage with the daughter of Zach Chand- Jer. benator... Uhandier left afortnnnof JLORnnnnn .nj luif .r tM. . .. n , ii""! - " wm w iui viie FLTTSBTJKGr DISPATCH, and the rest to his only daughter when he died. Senator Chandler was very generous during his lifetime and he gave-Senator Hale's children each 550,000 at the time they were born and invested the money, it is said, in Government bonds as a nest egg for the children to begin life with. Sena tor Hale has the finest house in Washing ton and he lives in as good stvle as any of his brother millionaires in the United States Senate. He was, however, not born with a golden spoon in his mouth, and his father was a farmer in one of the country districts of Maine. Young Hale was admitted to the bar when he ni 21. nnd he acted for nine years as prosecuting attorney of Hancock county and followed this with 13 years in the Maine Legislature. Now it happened that a man named Pike had been represent ing the Congressional district in which Sen atorHale lived in the House. A Tavorito or James G. Elaine. There was considerable opposition to him from some of the counties of the district. and seeing he could not get the nomination he concluded, so the story goes, to make a Congressman and he picked upon Hale, and he was nominated and elected. Senator Hale came to Congress while Blaine was in the zenith of his power, and Blaine took a gieat likintr to him ar.d did much to help im on. He lived lor a time at Blaino's honsc, and Blaine, as Speaker, pushed him forward to such an extent that tho late Sam Cox, much to Senator Hale's indignation, once leferredto him as Speaker Blaine's "Lit tle Bnb." Ilnlc, however, showed himself a man ot ability, nnd witn powerful fiiends and a shi ewd diplomatic manner ho got on. Grant was so pleased with nini that he wanted to make him his Tostmaster General, nnd Hajes offered him a Cabinet appointment He. declined both, and just 11 years ago he cot what was the goal or his ambition, a seat in me unitea states senate, aome oi ins fullow-Senators accuse him of having a very good opinion of himself. Tho Historian ot the Senate. Tho two Senators from Massachusetts are men of weight. Both havo for years been prominent before tho country, and since tho passing of Edmunds, Hoar Is to a largo ox tent tho watchdog of the Republican party. Ho is a man of unquestioned integrity, broad reading and much more than ordinary abil itv. Among tho other prominent things with which he has been connected was the management of the Belknap impoachment trial, and he was :i member of tho Electoral Commission of 1S7S. Senator Iloar is said to be one of the best posted men on American historv in Conercss. Ho is tho President of tho American Antiquarian Society, and ho lias receivod tlie.deree of Doctor of Laws from tho colleges of Amherst, Tale, Harvai d nnd William and Jlarv. He devotes tho most of his time to study, nnd hi3Greeley like faco is never happier than when ho is getting oft some historical fact. There is considerable humor in his mako up, and he Is by no means averse to a joko on his brother Senators. Ho lives very simply hero at Washington, and not Ion? ago he said that his total income ontside of hfs sal ary was less than $1,800 a ear, and that his whole estnte, with the exception of his house, did not amount to more than $5,000. no is more of a lover of books than of money, and Jiis library is said to be one of tho finest private libraries in the United States. The Indian Is Dawes' Hobby. Senator Dawes is now 70 years old. He was born during the administration of James Madison, and is a giadnato of Tale College. He begnn life as a school teacher, and served as a country editor and a lawyer before he trot to Congress at the ageottl. Since then he has been almost continuously in public life in one House or the other, and he was IS years in the Honse of Representa tives before he was elected to the Senate to take the seat of Charles Snmner. During the past year he has made Indian affairs his hobby, and he knows mora about tho In dians than any man in the body. Ho is an enthusiast on the subject of Indian educa tion, and when this subject comes np In the Senate he tears tho air and shouts nnd roars nt the galleries like tho Bull of Bashan. He is a tall, bent man. with gray whiskers and white h.Ur. He has the student's stoop, but is young for his years. The two Senators from Vermont are Jus tin S. Morrill and Bedileld Proctor. The State has lost n great deal in the retirement of Edmnnds, and if Vermont is to have much influence on the legislation of the Sen ate hereafter, it will have to come flora Proctor. Senator Morrill has finished the best part of hi3 life's work. He Is the oldest United States Senator, and "ho has had a longer continuous service in Congress thnn anyone else at present in public life. Ho has in his house a bnst of himself whioh is often taken for a bust of Snmner, and I am told that ho prides himself on the resem blance. The Man Who Seated Hayes. Of all the New England Senators there are none who are so well known as Senator William E. Chandler, or New Hampshire, nnd General Joe Hawley, of Conneoticut. They are both Tankee products, and each has his peculiarities, nawloy is perhaps tho ablest speaker, but Chandler is the greater politician, and ho Is Hawloy's equal as a man of affairs. I doubt whether there Is a shrewder political manager in the coun try than Chandler. It was his instrnctions to the New Tork Times to claim South Caro lina, Florida and Louisiana in 1876 that en abled the Republicans to seat Hayes with out trouble. Senator Chandler is noted for saying bit ter things, and it was a remark against the South that stirred np his fuss with benator Joo Blackburn, in which Chandler is said to have called Blackburn an "ex-nigger uuvor, anu jmcKoura is saia to nave con temptuously pulled Chandler's ear. How this may be I do not know, but the actions of both sides would have been perfectly natural to both Senators. It would not re quire a very bravo man to insult Senator Chandler. He is a little pigmy or a fellow, and his thigh is bardlvns bis as Blaokbnrn' biceps, and yon could put Iris little bushy 1 irun-yi-uy ueuu, uiacK niDoor glasses ana all, inside of Joe Hawley'sbig cranium, and it would rattle around like a pea in a bladder. Hawloy's Brilliant Record. General Hawley is another self mado man. His father was a Baptist preacher and young Hawley was brought np on a farm. He borrowed money to get his schooling and paid this with the first surplus from his practice after he had been admitted to tho bar. He early plunged into politics and had acquired some prominence as a speaker when tho war broke out. He was tho first man in Connecticut to volunteer and ho went into the army as a captain and came out of it a major general. After thojrar was overlie went again into politics making Journalism his profession nnd editing tho Hartford Courant which ho owned in connec tion with Chailes Dudley Warner. He was President of tho Republican Convention nt Chicago in IS6S when Grant was nominated nnd he has been the Presidental candidalo of Connecticut at National Conventions. As a Senator ho is a good extempore speaker and Is n hard worker. He is well-to-do, hae a pretty EugliMi woman for his second wife and i? noted as being a irank honest, and able man. ' The other Senators from New England rank well. Piatt, of Connecticut is 6 feet tall and 18 inches across the shoulders, and his head, which would fill a peck measure. Is picked with figures on the tariffand finance. The Rhode Island Senators, Aldrioh nnd Dixon, are fine looking men of average abil ity, -ind both are good workers and fair spcikn. as io ine memuers or theHouse fion :,Vtr Emiland, they will stza up Just iibout Iiko tho nvorage Representatives from the other prts of the Union. Only threo or iliuriuo of any national prominence, and Tom Reed, Henry Cabot Lodge, Charles A. Eoutc He and General Cogswoll are the only ones who have ncquiredioputations which extend beyond their own sections. iTu.SK G. CAitmrrrB. AN EYE-OPENER. An Astonishing Drop in the Price of Men's Pine Suits. . Monday we will sell COO men's sack, cut away or double-breasted suits at the very low price of 57 each. Ihese suits are mado of good quality cassimere and cheviot and we only name this low price to boom things. "We never stand dull time-. You make your own selection for only $7. A surpris ingly fine line to choose from. " P. C. C CL, Pittsburg Combination Cloth ing Company, corner Grant and Diamond streets, -opp. the Court House. Praise'T'rom Sir Hubert. Philadelphia, Jan. 9, 1892. At the recent meeting of the Pennsylvania State Music Teachers' Association, held at Pitts burg, the Henry F. Miller piano wasreat ly admired forits wonderful artistic quality of tone. It is unquestionably an instru ment that appeals fully to the requirements of all artist musicians. Philadelphia Music and Drama. These world-renowned pianos are for sale t wi n "Wl;t.v,iii'. -T.rn.iz, "pni iko . ..... -..., -...t , - aniru mvcim, SUNDAY, ANTJART IT, A MATTER OF TITLES. Bo!Burdette After Various Experi ences Finds Plain Mister- IS GOOD ENOUGH FOR ANT MAN. AdTentuTes In a Great Coit That Fright ened the Storms Away. WORSHIPING UNDER DIFFICULTIES rWBITTEN POB TOT DISPATCH. 1 Tson, in thisgTeat and free Eepuhlic, where daily we tread on the necks of kings and hrush irom our everyday clothes the dust of the crumbling thronesof the effete monarchies of Eu rope, in this demo cratic land, where all men are horn free to despise the sham and gilded trappings of hered itary wealth and despise with all th e scorn of a soul loftily horn the hollow title of pomp and vanity which so please the de caying nations beyond the sea, in this blessed paradise of equality and liberty, I observe one very marked difference between the free-born American who has but one title and the other free-born American who has none. The f. b. A. who has none has three or four times as many as the fellow who Is en titled to one. That is one of the glorious and paradoxical privileges of being a son of the Eagle. In this untitled land to him who hath shall be given that which he hath so long as ho can hold it, and to him who hath not shall be given half a dozen. Bnrdetto's Search for n Title. I made this very important, if untrue,dis covery as an astronomer discovers a comet; while I was looking for something ele. I used to feel very lonely without a title. For a long time I believed myself to be the only man without one. As I had really been in the army I was not entitled to any military title, unless I could prove that I had served in the band, when I would have been called Gener.iL 'So man, even a Georgian-born, looking at me once and a half, could introduce me to his friends as "Judge" without laughing in my face. I couldn't swear with that icy politeness and red-hot incisiveness that would entitle me to a colonelcy,-and the mysterious dis appearance of a man who once- called me "Cap" discouraged his imitators. In the course of time I became an unworthy occu pant of the diaconal choir, but the title of "Deacon" as a familiar and respectful handle, docs not "go" outside of New Eng- iana, where is is hereditary, and 1 W3s a Pennsylvanian. Hence, in my case, that title was like an American coat of arms, a pure invention of the owner, to be changed at will, with no meaning or standing in the heraldic office. Reconciled to Plain Mister. In time I became resigned, and at last blunted to my wretched condition, and heard myself introduced to audiences and strangers as "Mister," without a blush. Oh, once in a while a tramp would call me "Boss,' and he struck me for something every time he did so. .The tramp who called me "Mister" got ordered off tne place at once, and he who called mc"parduer got worse. I made him stay while I gave him a lecture. He never came again. Bnt after a while it happened, just as it always does, just as it will in your case, in the case of anv man in this Kepnblic.people pot tired of my untitled lot long before I did. Just as I had grown quite used to it, in fact. People in this country walk around on broken thrones and stand on royal necks to make Fourth of July orations, bnt un titled citizenship is something they will not stand. So, when it gradually dawned on them that I was not even entitled to be called ".Reverend," only tolerably rever end, my fiiends and casual acquaintances fitted me with titles to suit the taste of the fitter. The custom is a good one in some respects; it keeps a fellow front becoming lonely. A man calls me "Senator" andS then I walk or sit in the company of states men until another man calls me "Judge," when my mind at once takes on a judicial tinge, and I am thoughful, and fair and im partial in my attitude toward men. Then this charm is broken by some one calling me "Major," and straightway I am middle aged in my face, youthful 'fn feeling, defer ential to field officers, a trifle condescend ing toward the line, and charmingly brusque with civilians. From Battlefield to Books. Then while I am getting along splendidly in military circles a man calls me "Pro fessor," and I glide into a life of study far removed from the madding crowd, and in the quiet companionship of books and bookish men I am frequently surprised to Me Hadn't Played m the Band. find how fearfully much I know, and I begin to wonder what I will do with it all, when it is all taken away from me without a struggle by a man who comes up to me with "5v T)nr " nnd no ithm in nin n ill. tated man who called me "Cap." "Doctor" I rather like, and one of these days I am going to pull a tooth, and see if I can't acquire the title for keeps, but I kick on "Doc," Do you suppose if a fellow should cut off the head of a man who called him "Doc," it would entitle him to the other syllable of the degree? If you think it would I'll try it on a man I know. But even should fate smite me in the midst of my affluence "of titles, and strip me of all these empty dignities save only the sackcloth man tie. of plain "Mister," I will be patient Man himself is a Mister He, even to himself, and frequently to some of his neighbors. Ofttimes I sit by myself and ponder over the ponderous. I ask" my self, whither am I drifting ? And if so, how many ? If life is what it seams, then what is man better than a sewing machine ? If it isn't what it seems, then how is a fel low to find out what it is? How is the philosopher to diagnose grip from plain cholera morbus symptoms? Such things sometimes are, and overcome us like a sum mer, dream. A Remarkable Law of Nature, v Surely the mind of man is a chaos, with out any too much form, and tolerably void. ;.At least the minds oi some men, men whom 3fev ) 1892; I dislike, are in thh condition. No -man whom I heartily dislike ever knows very much. I cannot understand this strange law of nature, a law so faultless and inex orable that I cannot now recall .a solitary exception to it,, which has decreed that every man who is not to my liking should be an ass. I used to think it was a piece of special legislation, enacted solely, not exclusively, in my case alone, but in conversation with men of different nationalities, residing in widely remote, and in some instances quite different portions of the surface of the eartn, I learned that the same law, or one so similar that they might almost be con sidered similartaneous in their action, ap plied also in their experience. So I am led to conclude although not to finish by a long chalk that the law is general, and is intended as a salve to wounded vanity all over the world. Effect of Buying a Great Coat. Last winter, the day after Christmas, just as I was leaving home, a blizzard strnck Eastern Pennsylvania. I had nn idea that it struck me, and was liable to do it again, so I bought a storm coat which represented auout inree-ntths ol the wool clip ot tea United States for 1890. The sun came out the next day and spring set in the following week, and hoping against hope, I dragged that coat about the country witbme, paying extra baggage on it when I carried it on my arm, and suffering the agonies of the smothered when I put it on my back. It was just in the line of mylnck,"too, to have my route turned south as the weather grew warmer. A coat of that S'ze and weight hadn't been seen in the Sunny South since rebellion muffled her face in her woolly mantle and lay down to die at the foot of Pompey's statue. "When I entereda sleeping car with it on my arm the inflexible and indestructi ble feet awning3 which it pleases Mr. Pull man to disguise under the amusing nom de guerre of "blankets" rose up on end and did that coat homage as the Terror of the Storm. I thought it would kill me, I don't know why it didn't. It conld have done so; it had me down many a time, and when it got the Gave Sim a Trad on Tobacco. under hold on me I let right go every time. But somehow or other it spared me, and when I came home, after vainly trying to leave it on two trains and a Kanawha Eiver steamboat, it followed me. Hibernating In Tar and Camphor. "We stowed it away in a box lined with tar paper and let it hibernate for a few weeks, when a friend happened to hear us speak about it told us that it would draw the house so full of moths they would eat everv thinsr on the place except the windo"w weights and buggy wheels. He said if he wanted to catch a moth he would bait with tar paper. The only thing to knock out moths was gum camphor. So we trans ferred the Terror of the Storm to another box, and embalmed it in camphor. I think it took about a ton; not more than that It came to the house in a cart "Well, the thing slept along until some time in the fall, when I snokc aboul it to a visitor, who said he was an importer of woolens for 15 years, and that he discharged a porter or salesman who used camphor for headache the minute he came into the' store. He said he wished he could find a moth just to show me how greedily it would devour camphor. The only way they ever used it was to lay it nut on the sidewalk in front of the' store to draw the moths out of the place. Tobacco, he said, was the only moth slayer. That knocked them cold, but nothing else would. So we roused up the Terror once more, and enticed him into a barrel, in which we introduced a cargo of tobacco, broken and powdered, and went around weeping and sneezing the rest of the week. Taking the Coat to Church. Tou know how cold we all thought it was going to be a few Sundays ago; and how much it looked like snow, "and hail and rain? I hated to have so much dead capital lying about the houie, and fearing it would be the only opportunity this winter to wear the Terror, hauled it forth, got under it and crawled into it. I wore it to church. I went early in order to find an empty pew into which I could get that coat I hadn't been in the sanctuary very long before I heard the sexton telling a deacon that it was no use trying to do anything with that old heater; the more you tinkered at it the more it made gas. "Nobody will be able to sit in this church this morning," he said, "unless we turn off all the heat. Just go in there and smell tor yourself." And the deacon came in and smelled and told the sexton to go down and pour water on the fire, and to break the heater np Monday morning. I couldn't notice any thing myself, but as I was in a strange church I hated to say anything. A little later a severe-looking man placed a tract in my hands and went away and watched me read it, sitting where he conld observe the effect It was a story of a man who smoked tobacco until his system and being were just saturated with it, and then used drugs to conceal the odor. He was entirely cured of the habit by a little child, a dear little girl who put a cartridge in his pipe and blew the whole top of his head off. The Crying Need of the Age. I was deeply affected and must have dis played my emotion, for the man looked radiantly happy, and gave me another tract, much worse than the first, telling about a man who was very vain, and thought of nothing but dress, and at last stole money to buy a dizzy overcoat and was sent to Slate's prison, wliere he contracted a terrible dis ease that racked him tor weeks and months in terrible agony betore he died. I began to wish 1 had staypd at home. Another man, who sat just behind me, told me that he didn't think I ought to be out at all; that when the grip, reached that stage it was pestilential, and a man owed it to his neighbors as well as himself to stay in the house. All these things made me feel so uncom fortable that I left the house just Defore they passed the plate around. I regretted this, because ilooked as though I went to a strange church just to air that storm coat That really wasn't the Tcason, at least not the principal, or at any rate not the only one. J had other and, I trust, better reasons than that. "What the present civilization demands is not so much the discovery of new groups of asteroids so far away that it requires the united efforts of five men, work ing ten hours a day for three years, to see the place where they thought they were when they began looking, but an inodor ous, or at least pleasantly fragrant prepara tion that will kill or keep the moths ont of a 9 overcoat w ithout destroying the peace and good feeling of an entire neighborhood. P.OBEKX J. BUBDETTE. Fits All fits stopped free by Dr. Kline's Grea Nerve Eestorer. ho fits after first day's use. Mar vleons cures. Treatise and 82 CO trial bottle free to it coses. Jjr. Kline. 'Ml Arch it., l'hlla., I'o. su ir Sheet Music. AtH. Klcber Si Bro.'s, ISo. E06 "Wood street, you will always find a good selection of the latest songs and piano pieces, besides an immense stock of classical and popular music which they are selling at half price. Also a large assortment of SO-gent and $1 folios and instruction books for all instru ments in stock. Orders filled for all Euro pean and American publications. x 7 .V THE MUSIC WORLD. Latest Form of Art Enterprise as Developed in the East End. MERIT OF DAMEOSCfl'S ORCHESTRA. Eoom ibr Improvement in the Public fsttoalion of Criticism. A BUDGET OF GENERAL KEWS ITEMS The East End is already in large measure independent of the business center oftbe city in providing its own household sup plies, its own churches and its own social activities. Judging by the experience of other cities, the next step will be the grad ual establishment of public amusements in, the same residence section. It is this gen eral trend of development that lends deeper interest to the modest beginning in the de partment of choral music to be made this week. As was annonnced last Sunday, Mr. Joseph C. Breil has called a meeting of singers for next Thursday evening at 8 o'clock, in a photographic studio at No. 35 Erankstown avenue, for the purpose of organizing a choral society, which Mr. Breil offers to conduct gratis. While op portunity has been lacking for the general public, including the present writer, to form personal estimatcofMr.Breil'squalifications the fact of his going to Germany for an ex tended course ot musical study and the hearsay evidence upon his various achieve ments as tenor singer and as composer-are sufficient to make out a prima faci case in his favor. Such being the case he should have the whole-hearted and practical sup port of all East End music-lovers and es pecially of all experienced chorus singers residing in that locality. The future holds our promises enonsh to make it well worth while for all to join with voice or patron age, as the case may he. Bnt much depends upon the way in which such an enterprise is begun. In the first place, as local experience has amply" shown, permanent success cannot be at tained by a "one-man-power" chorus. The organization itself, not the conductor, must be the object of loyalty. The conductor should not be expected to attend to the gen eral business of the society; he should be elected by the society periodically under by-laws which define his sphere of duty and provide-officers and committees to assist him and to carry on the general manage ment of affairs. A point of even greater delicacy and of at least equal importance, is the selecting of singers for the chorus. An inefficient singer is very mnch worse than useless in a chorus; every one such is a positive draw back to the efficiency of the rest Perhaps a wise way at starting would be to fix the limit at a number well within the number of voices oflered and empower the conductor (aided, it might be, by a committee to divide the responsibility) to select the best of the material. A small chorus of, say, 20 to 30 picked voices is vastly more efficient than if increased.hy adding less desirable material. This is true not on.'y for the sake of final re sults before the public, but also, and even more, for the sake of the singers themselves. The need of drilling the poorer singers over and over on simple passages, is what dis gusts the better singers and drives them away finally. There is delightful music lying ready for just Buch a small chorus to take np. The glees and madrigals of the earlier English writers and the part-songs of their present day successors are quite generally intended to be sung without accompaniment and are suited to smaller choruses. These would lead nicely to the rich mines of pure choral music of the Palaestrina school, from which the rubbish ot centuries ought to be brushed away. This unaccompanied music is always effective to the public, in addition to its especial interest to the musician. It forms an almost virgin field for the new chorus so far as this com munity is concerned and is emphatically the field best suited for a society that can not, for the present at least, command the aid of an orchestra. "Wide opportunities open out before the proposed society, if rightly formed and guided; and it lies in the power of the ex perienced singers of the East End and nearby sections to start the enterprise in such manner as to realize those opportuni ties to the utmost A. Discussion of Itelative Merit Those who have questioned The Dis patch's remark that "Walter Damrosch's orchestra is not the equal of the Boston Symphony Orchestra may be surprised to see what the New York papers said of the Boston band upon its first concert there this season: Sun, "The palm of supremacy over all kindred organizations on this side of the water;" Serald, -'The finest body of strings ever heard in this country;" Recorder, "Nothing like it in New York, neither in quality nor in emembli;" World, "Among the three or four foremost orchestras of the world." "To which in the same week was added by the Brooklyn Eagle, '"The rival of any force of the kind in the world," and by the Phila delphia Recordt "The most proficient band of musicians ever organized in this coun try. It is much more pleasant to quote these praises than to quote the words of censure that frequently appear, in the best critics' reviews of Mr. Damrosch's concerts. Suf fice it to say that THE Dispatch accorded the New York" orchestra and its conductor more generous treatment than they com monly receive at home and elsewhere. On the many points as to which the defects of Cyclorama Hall rendered a positive judg ment unsafe, the benefit of the doubt was invariably given to the performers. Yet, however clearly the performances fell below the highest standards in this or that respect, the visit of Mr. Damrosch and .his men to this orchestrally benighted com munity was an important and most enjoya ble occasion, as has always been said in these columns. The Allegheny Musical Association should have every encourage ment to repeat the experiment" Some Ideas on Criticism, Apropos of this vexed question of musi cal criticism and its difficulties, there is a very interestins and feelinz treatment of the subject in last month's Boston Musical Herald over the signature of Mr. Philip Hale, himself one of the country's best critics. Part of Mr. Hale's article follon s: But the most dangerous foe to criticism Is the great nnd enthusiastic concert-public Some go to concerts becanse it is the fasbion borne are curious to see and bear celebrated people. Let it bo grauted, however, that eight out of ten are honestly fond of music. Some or this latter class have taken a few pianoforto lessons, and are even uble to "pick out tunes by ear." Or they sin?, and In tho matter of method liie Mr. Small weed in the matter of gravy they are adamant. Others are with out such accomplishments, but they ex perience n "pleasant sensation when their ears are tickled by sweet sounds or their nerves are rasped by athletic music. It is difficult to tf 11 which concert-oer is the more dangerous, tne man who ilays or sings a little or the man whoi frankly tells you "I don't know mnch about music, hut I know what I like." lhe lormer is apt to measure all perlormers by the narrow tape measure of his superficial knowledge; the latter is very often pleased .with that which is absolutely had. Go to a con cert in New York or Boston, Purls or Berlin. Tou will hear singers that habitually sing falso applauded to the echo, provided they indulge m cheap senti mental ism or Are off roulade-rncketd which explode at a dizzy height. The planornrte pounder conquers the gaping crowd. It is true that singers and players of merit are often as noisily applauded. The average 'concert-goer is greedy for enjoyment, and his appetite lscasny satisnea in tne matter of quality. Nowthe critic of a daily news paper is obliged by the prevailing custom to write his notice Immediately after the per- Iformance. He isobllged to write hurriedly, he Is at the merer of thenlght editor and the proof reader. He mast write a readabla notice, and too often, as Georsre llooro puts It, "hysterical abandonment of critical rea son Is fomented in the red pepper hours of spontaneous composition in a printing of fice." He has bnt little tlmo to weigh Ms sentences. Ho Is tempted to accentuate un dnly his phrases of praiso or blame. And, the manof midnight lsadifferentbelns front tho man or noon, the next day. The cooCi citizen who fonnd such pleasure In the con cert of tho night berore, tatesno hi3 news paper at the breakfast table and discovers that his applause was vain ana foolish. The singer that charmed him gang badly: tho player was unworthy tho reception given him. The critic gives his reasons. He states faats nnd appeals to established canons of taste. The reader does not discriminate; ha says to himself, "Well, I liked it. and this man was not satisfied. It is merely a ques tion of Individual opinion after all and I have a rfeht to mine. ;; He Is vexed, however, becansa the critic did not agree with him. He then writes the editor a noto In which he mis quotes and abuses the critic; for the average reader wishes the newspaperof his choice to reflect or confirm his own opinions upon all things knowable and certain other things. The fact that tho critic 13 thoroughly ac quainted with hi3 trade is of little Import ance. The citizen, a lawyer, ora merchant, or a doctor, wonld ill brook the opinions of the critic concerninehis particular business; he reserves for himself tho ri:;ht to criticise recklessly the critic in the exercise ofhij profession. So it is that there is a tendency In this country to settle questions of art by a show ing of hands and the applanse of the un thinking. "IJcadm articles" of a light and gossipy nature are la many Instances pre ferred to honest criticisms written by men of learning and convictions. Theyoffendno one. They give interesting details concern ing the parcntaao and the wardrobe of the singer. And they are olteu. pleasingly illus trated. Crotchet and Qaavsr. Mjie Etelka GEnsTzit and the pianist, Sally Liehirnir. are touring in the South Ger man cities with success. Moritz MosKowem's new opera, "Boabdll, the Lust KinK of the Moors," Is to be brought out at the Berlin Opera Honse In February. JIes. Amalie JoAcnnr, the separated wife of the great violinist, will bo welcomed to this country in February as one of the great est IAeder singers of the world. A Loiroox cable received last night says: "The Iwsoche" was played for the last tlmo. at the Royal English Opera to-nizht and the honse will he closed for some time. At St. Paul's Cathedral this evening will be sung a Tantum Ergo by Mr. Joseph c. Ureil. which is of ambitions deIen, bavins 1 tho finale set for soprano obligato, male quartet, full chorns and organ. Mr. Giuseppe Giixi was tho recipient of a handsome testimonial medal from his pupils and friends on the occasion of his ebneert last Thursday, wherein Messrs. A. I.ibcratv Kocereto, Charle3 Corcoran and C 'W. Flem ing assisted. Mn. II. L. Risgwalt and his chorus choir gave a successful concert last Thursday evening at the Shady Avenne Baptist Church. Miss Bertha M. Kaderly, Mr. H. B. BrocLett, Jr., and Miss Adele Ecahard took: part in the interesting programme. Patti and PaderewskI both want to ho heard in Pittsbnrg soon. The chief diffi culty each management seems to have Is to decide which of onr "concert halls" is the least objectionable. Whenever they may appear either of these artists may be sure of a full honse here. The National Society for the Promotion of Musical Art (the old 31. T. X. A.), will have Its next meeting at Cleveland Instead of Minneapolis. The lntter's representatives have thrown np the sponge L e. resigned la favor or Cleveland men, who promise to emulate Detroit's successful efforts on be half of the preceding meeting. The Bay City will be more convenient for Pitts burgers, at all events. Air eminent educator once remarked, "I I had two children, a boy andasirl, ana conld afford a musical education for but one of them, it would be the boy, for it would be a channel for him to work: off his superflu ous spirits in a way that would be of use to him. When grown tobe a man he conld find profitable employment for bis musical siill as church organist, choir director or singer, to say nothing of the social, moral and re fining value of music upon him, as well as the fact that tho practice of music Is an ef fective keep-at-home, as well as a pleasant employment of his time." PENETRATES STOPS PAIN WOOD'S Penetratinc PLASTER FAR IN ADVANCE OF ORDINARY POROUS AND OTHER PLASTERS SoldbyDmggbts Everywhere Nor Tork Depot 1 93 WZBaa Street The Reasons Are Plain and easily understood why Drs. Lowe, Grnbbs and associates of the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Institute, 223 Penn avenue, enjoy such a world-wide reputation for enring their patients. They are thoroughly edu cated physicians, and have had a combined practice of 50 vears. Their knowledge of disease and medicine, with their quick per ception enablo them to correctly diagnose the ills of their patients, nnd anply the proper remedies for each Individual case. Besides their costly medicines, prepared from their own laboratory, they have many other scientific methods of treatment not possessed by any other physician or firm of physicians in Western Pennsylvania. Their constant, watchful caro of their patients makes such changes in their treatment irom time to time as the change of their condition may require. S5 a Month. Although the medicines themselves cost several times that of cheap meaicines, ir respective of cost, Dra. Lowe, Grubbs and associates will treat all catarrh and dyspep sia patients who apply before February 15, at $3 a month, including medicine. Both old and new patients will be treated at $3 a month until cured, that the suffering publio everywhere may prove to themselves be yond a question of a doubt tho superior skill of these physicians in curing the disease of their specialty. La Grippe, Pneumonia nnd Consumption Often the Keso.lt of Iteglected Catarrh. While so many died last winter from la Grippe verr few patients who had received treatmentfrom the physicians of the Catarrh and Dys pepsia Institute were afflicted by that disease. La grippe Is always worse and more li able to be attended with fatal results when there is ca tarrh in the sys tem. The case of Mr. A. Weiblinger, 691 Ohio street, Al legheny, is of in terest as ie in volves not only tbe chest and lengs, nnfenln his tcm- jjij jjk liir Pfe'&aifc iSg& &&: mp Dr. A. & Lowe. ach. Ho had a feeling of weight nud tightness in his chest, short breath, nnd Tor six months he had a hacking cough, with an expectoration of -mucus. Ho had pain in his back and tired feeling in the morning, nehad dizziness, poor appetite, distress after eatinr, with sour eructations or gas. After takins u course of treatment he says: "I am glad to add mj- testimony with hundreds of others to a complete enre received from the physi cians or tho Catarrh and Dyspepsia Insti tute. (Signed) A. WEIBLIXGEK-" Office hours. 10 A. if. to 4 r. it., and 6 to 8 p.m. Sundays, 1 to I r. jr. Home treatment by correspondence. Send, two2-cent stamps for question blank. Remember tbe name and place, and address all letters to the ' GATABBH IID DYSPEPSIA ISSTITilTE, 323 PJENN AVENUE, PITTSBURG, PAT'' jal7-95-TT3SU M BSlSmSsS