igLiAMyj'ia4iwii jiJIBEJgggftWWg'MBW PTKH -1 v a P?T: v5 7 svT ,- ..,SV'. -S" THE PITTSBURG ; SECOND PART. : PAGES 9 TO 20. ,& 11 HEALTHFAGTORY. Mark Twain Initiated Into the Mysteries of Mary's Baths in Austria. ALL TALK IS ON -LIYEKS, Ejccpt When a Jovial Fat Man Runs 2jainst a Eappy Lean One. A POESI BELEASED BY THE MUD. Austria's Emblem Should Be a Grandmother Harnessed to a Do?. ILOT FOE A THEILUXG STAGE ROSTAKCE TTTITTE3T TOH THE DTSrJLTCH.l HIS place is the village of Hirienbad, Bohemia. It seems no Terr great dis tance from Annecy, in Hante Savoie, to this place yon make it in less than 30 hours by these Continental express trains but the changes in the scenery are great: they are quite ont of - -" proportion to the distance covered. From Annecv by Aix to Geneva jou have blue lakes, with bold mountains springing from their borders, and far giimpes of snowy wastes lifted against the horizon beyond, while all about yon is a garden cultivated to the last possi bility of grace and beauty a cultivation which doesn't Btop with the handy lower levels, but is carried risht up the sheer steeps and propped there with ribs of ma sonry, and made to stay there in spite of Xewton's law. Beyond Geneva beyond Lausanne, at any rate yon have for a while a country which noticeably resembles Xew England, and seems out of place a&d like an intruder an intruder who is wearing his every-day clothes at a fancy-dress ball. But presently, on your right, huge green mountain ram parts rise up, and after that for hours you are absorbed in watching the rich shadow effects which they furnish, and are only dully aware that Xew England is gone and that you are flying past quaint and un speakably old towns and towers. Xext day you have the Lake of Zurich, and presently the Rhine is swinging by you. How clean it is! How clear it is! How blue it is! How green it is! How Bwift and rollicking and insolent is its gait and style! How vivid and splendid its colors beautiful wreck and chaos of all the soap bubbles in the universe! A person born on the Ilhine must worship it. I saw the blue Rhino sweep along; I heard, or seemed to hear. The German songs we used to slnjr in chorus sweet and clear. Yes, that is where his heart would be, that is where his last thoughts would be, the "sol dier of the legion"who "lay dying in Algiers." And by and by yon are in a German re- LEANNESS, rjLTKKSS cion, which you discover to be quite differ ent irom the "recent Swiss lands behind you. Youhavea6ca before you; that is to say, the green land goes rolling away, in ocean swells, to the horizon. And there is an other new feature. Here and there, atwide intervals, vou have islands, hills 200 and 300 feet high, of a haystack form, that rise abruptly out of the "green plain, and are wooded solidly to the top. On the top there is just room lor a ruined castle, and there it is, every time; above the summit you see the crumbling arches and broken towers projecting. Nature in Rudest Shapes. Beyond Stuttsart, next dav, you find other changes still By and by, approach ing and leavine Nuremberg and down by Zewhaus. your landscape is humped every where with scattered knobs of rock, un sociable crags of a rude, tower-like lok, and thatched with grass and vines and bushes. And now and tiien you have gorges, too, of a modest pattern "as to size, with precipice malls curiouslr carved and honeycombed by I don't know what; but water, no doubt The changes are not done yet, for the instant the countrv finds it is out of Wurtemberg and into Bavaria it dis cards one more thickness of soil to go with previous disrobings, and then nothins re mains over the bones but the shift. There may be a poorer soil somewhere, but it is net likely. , A couple of hours from Bavreuth you cross into Bohemia, and before long you reach this Marienbad and recognize another sharp change the change from the long ago to to day; that is to say, Irom the very old to the spick and span new; from an architecture to tally without shapeliness or ornament to an architectureattractively equipped withboth; from universal djsmaluess as to color to uni versal brightness and beauty of tint; from a town which teems made up ofprisonstoa town which is made up of gracious and graceful mansions proper to the light of heart and crimeless. It is like jumping out of Jerusalem into"Chicago. No Snch Variety Anywhere. Tlie more I think of these many changes, the more surprising the thing seems. I have never made so picturesque a journey before, fiand surely there cannot be another trip of like length in the world that can furnish so much variety and of so charming and inter esting a sortl There are onlv two or three streets here in this snug pocket, in the hemlock hill, but they are handsome. When you stand at the foot of a street and look up the slant of it you see only block fronts of graceful pattern, with happily broken lines, and the pleasing accent of bay projections and bal conies in orderlv disorder and harmonious confusion, and always the color is fresh and cheery, various shades of cream, with softly contrasting trimmings of white, and now and then a touch ot dim red. These blocks are all thick-walled, solid, masshe, tall, for this is Europe; but it is the brightest and newest-looking town on the continent, and as prettv as anybody could require. The steep hills spring high aloft from the very back doors, and are clothed densely to their tops with hemlock. In Bavaria everybody is in uniform, and you wonder where the private citizens are, but here in Bohemia the uniforms nre very rare. Occasionally one catches a glimpse of an Austrian officer, but it is only occa sionally. Uniforms are so scarce that wo seem to be in a Republic. Almost the only striking feature is the Polish Hebrew. He is very frequent He is tall and of grave countenance, and wears a (ioat that reaches to his ankle bones, and he has a little wee curl or two in front of each ear. He has a prosperous look and seems to be as much respected as anvbody. The crowds that drift along the prom enade at niusic time twice a day are fashion ably dressed after the Parisian pattern, and tbey look a good deal alike, but they speak a lot of languages which vou have not en countered before, and no ignorant person can spell their names, and they can't pro nounce them themselves. The Miracles of the Sprlnsr. , Jlarienbad Mary's Bath The Mary is the Virgin. She is the patron ess of these curative springs. They try to cure everything: gout, rheuma tism, leanness, fatness, dyspepsia, and all the rest. The whole thing is the property of a convent, and has been for COO or 700 hundred years, nowevcr, there was never a boom here until a quarter of a century ago. If a person has the gout, this is what they do with him: They have him ont at 5:30 in the morning, and give him an egg and let him look at a cup of tea. At 6 he must be at his particular spring, with his tumbler hanging at his belt and he will have plenty of company there. At the first note of the orchestra he must lift his tumbler asd begin to sip his dreadful water with the ret. He must sip slowly and be a long time at it Then he must tramp about the hills for an hour or so. and cet all the exercise cud fresh air possible. Then he takes his tub or wallows in his mud, if mud baths are his sort By noon he has a fine appetite, and the rules allow him to turn himself loose now and satisfy it, so long as he is careful and eats only such things as he doesn't want He puts "in the afternoon walking the hills and fillinz up with fresh air. At night he is allowed to take three ounces of auy kind of lood he doesn't like, and drink one glass of any kind of liquor that he has a prejudice against; he may also smoke one pipe' if he isn't used to it At 9:30 sharp he must be in bed and his candle out Repeat the whole thujg next day. I don't.see any ad, vantage in this over the gout A Becenerntlns Revolution. In the case of most diseases that is about what one is required to undergo, and if yon have any pleasant habit that yon value they want that They want that the first thing. They make you drop everything that gives an interest to life. Their idea is to reverse your entire system of existence and make a regenerating revolution. If you are a Republican ther make vou talk free trade; if you are a Democrat they make you talk protection; if you are a Prohibitionist yon have got to go to bed drunk every night till vou get well. Ther spare nothing, they spare nobody. KeformH reiorm, tnat is tncir wnoie song, at a per son Ib an orator, theygag him; if he likes to read, they won't let him; if he wants to" sing, gP ASD AT.L THE BEST. they make him whistle. They say they cin cure any ailment, and they do seem to do it; but whv should a patient come all the way here? Why shouldn't lie do these things at home and save the money? Xo disease would stay with a person who treated it like that I didn't come here to t3ke baths; I only name to look around. But first one person and then another began to throw out hints, and pretty soon I was a good deal concerned about mvself. One of these goutees here said I had a gouty look about the eye; next a person who has catarrh of the intestines asked me if I didn't notice a little dim sort of stomach ache when I sneezed. I hadn't before, but I did seem to notice it then. A man that's here for heart disease said he wouldn't come down stairs so fast if he had my build and aspect A person with an old gold complexion said a man died here in a mud bath, last week that had a petrified liver good deal such a looking man as I am, and the same initials. And so on, and soon. They Sent Him to Bed. Of course there was nothing to be uneasy about, and I wasn't what you may call real lv uneasy; but I was not feeling very well that is, not brisk and Ijvent to bed. I suppose that that was not a good idea, be cause then they had me. I started in at the npper end of "the mill and went through. I am said to be all right now, and free from disease, but this does not surprist me. What I have been through in these two weeks would free a person of pretty much everything in him that wasn't nailed there any loose thing, any unattached fragment of bone, or meat, or morals, or disease, or propensities, or accomplishments, or whatnot And I don't say but that I feel well enough; I feel better than I would if I was dead, I reckon. And besides, they say that I am going to build up now and come right along and be all right I am not say thins, but I wish I had enongh of my dis eases back to make me aware of myself, and enouch of my habits to make it worth while to live. To have -nothing the matter with yon and no habits is pretty tame, pretty colorless. It is just the" way a saint feels, I reckon; it is at least the way it looks. I never could stand a saint That reminds me that you see very few priests, around here, and yet, as I have al ready said, this whole Dig enterprise is ow ned and managed by a convent The few priests one does see here are " dressed like human beings, and so there may be more of them than I imagine. Fifteen priests dressed like these could not attract as much of your attention as would one priest at Aix-les-Bains. You cannot pull vour eve loose from the French priest so long as he is iu sight, his dress is so fascinatingly ugly. The Universal Subject or Conversation. While waiting in the reception room all by myself two men came in and began to talk. Politics, literature, religion? No their ailments. There is no other subject here, apparently. Wherever two or three of these people are gathered together, there you have it, every time. The first that can get his mouth open contributes his disease and the condition of it, and the others fol low with theirs. The two men just referred to were acquaintances, and they followed the custom. One of them was built like a gasometer and is here to reduce his girth; the other was built like a derrick, aud is here to fat up, as fccy express it at this resort They were well satis-. 1 V jMVX&ff EVEBTBODY INSISTS fied with the progress they were mak ing. The gasometer had lost a quarter of a ton in ten days, and showed the record with pride on his' belt, and he walked briskly across the room, smiling in a vast and lu minous way, like a harvest moon, and said he couldn't have done that when he arrived here. He buttoned his coat around his equator and showed how loose it a-". Tt was pretty to see his happiness, it vas s,o childlike and honest He set his feet to gether and leaned out over his person and proved that he could see them. He said he hadn't seen them from that point before for 15 years. He had a hand like a boxing glove, and on one of bis fingers he had just found a diamond ring which he.had missed .Itrears ago. ''-. The minute ttte derricK got a chance he broke in and began to tell how he was pil ing on blubber right along three-quarters of an ounce every four days; and ne was still nioinc awav when I was sentfor. I -left the fat man standing there panting and VI : 3 Tl! -J 11-! t ill muvriu, uuu oweiuug auu uuu&usiug like a balloon, his next speech all ready, you see, and urgent for delivery. They Talk About Their LlTeri. The patients are always 'at that sort of thing, trying to talk each other to death. The iat ones and the lean ones aro nearlr the worst at it, but not quite; the dyspep- night and all along. They have more symp toms than all the others put together, and so there is more variety of experience, more .change of condition, more adventure, and consequently more play for the imagination, more scope tor lying, and in every wav a big ger field for talk Go where yon will, hide where you may, you cannot escape that word liver; you overhear it constantlr in the street, in the shop, in the theater, in the musjs ground Wherever you see two or a dozen people of ordinary bulk talking together, you know they are talking about their livers. When you first arrive here your new acquaintances seem sad and hard to talk to, but pretty soon you get the lay of the land and, the hang of things, and after that yon haven't any more trouble. Yon look into the dreary, dull eye, and and say: "Well, how's your liver?"" You'will see that dim eve flash up with a grateful flame, and you will see that jaw begin to work, and you will recognize that nothing is required of you from this out but to listen so long as you remain contcious. After a few days you will begin to notice that out of these peoplt's talk a gospel is framing itself, and next you will find your self believing it It is this that a man is not what his rearing, his schooling, his be liefs, his principles make him, he is what his liver makes him; that with a healthy liver ho will have the clear-seeing eye, the honest heart, the sincere mind, the loving spirit, the loyal soul and truth and trust and faith that are based as Gibraltar is based, and that with an unhealthy liver he must and will have the opposite ot all these; he will se nothing as it really is, he cannot trust anybody or believe in anything, his moral foundations are gone from under him. Kow, isn't that interesting? I think it is. Hrleascd by a 31 ad Bath. Two days ago, perceiving that there was something unusual the matter with me, I went around from doctor to doctor, but without avail; they said they had never seen this kind of svmtoms before at least, not all of them. They had seen somo of them, but differently arranged. It was a new disease, as far as they could see. Ap parently it was scrofulous, but a new kind. That was as much as they felt able to say. Then then they made a stethescopic' exam ination, and decided that it anything would dislodge it, a mud bath was the thing. It was a very in?eniou3 idea. I took the mud bath, and'it did dislodge it Here it is: A Love Song. I nsk not "Is thy heart-still sure, Thy love still nann, tny faith secure;" I auk not, "Dream'st thou still of me? Lonc'st alway to fly to mo?" Ah, no-but as the sun includeth all Tho good gifts of the Giver, I sum all these In asking thee, "O sweetheart, how's yourlivert" For if thv liver worketh right. Thy faith is sure, thy hope is bright, Their dreams are sweet and I their god. Doubt threats in vain thou scorn'st his rod. Keep only thy digestion clear. Ho other foe my love doth fear. But indigestion hath the power To mar the soul's serenest houi To crumble adamantine trust And turn its certainties to dust, To dim the eye with nameless Brief. To chill the heart vi ith unbelief, To banish hope, and faith, and love, Place heaven below and neli above. Then list details are naught to me To thou'st tho sum-gift of the giver 1 ask thee all in asking thee, "O darling, how'70ur liver?''- Yes, it ii easy 'to say it is scrofulous, but I don't see the signs of it In my opinion y pirrsBima,- Sunday, it is as good poetry as I have over written. Experts sav it isn't poetry at all, because it lacks the element of fiction, but that is the voice ot -envy I reckon. I call it good medical poetry, and I consider that I am a judge. Some Strange Street Manners. One of the most curious things in these countries is the street manners of the men and women. In meeting yon they come straight on withont swerving a hair's breadth from the direct line and wholly ig noring your right to any part of the road. At the last moment you must view np your share of it and step aside, or there will Da a collision. I noticed this strange barbarism first in Geneva 12 years ago. In Aix-les-Bains, where sidewalks are scarce and everybody walks in the streets, there is plenty of room, but that is no mat ter; you are always eseaping collisions by mere quarter inches. A man or woman who is headed in such a way as to cross your course presently without a collision will actually alter hi direction shade by shade and compel a collision unless at the last in stant you jump out of the way. Those folks are not dressed as ladies and gentle men. And they do not seem to be con- ON RIGIIT OP WAT. sciously crowding you out of the road; they seem to be innocently and stupidly unaware that they are doing it. But not so in Geneva. There this class, especially the men, crowd out men, women, and girls of all ranks and raiment consciously and in tentionallycrowd them off the sidewalk aud into the gutter. There was nothing .of FhH kind in Bay reutb. But here well, here the thing is as tonishing. Collisions are unavoidable, un less you do all the yielding yourself. An other odd thing here this savagery is confined to the' folk who wear the fine clothes, the others are courteous and con. :siderate. A big burly ,CQmancbe with all the signs about him of wealth and educa tion will tranquilly force young Jadiesj-to step oft into the gutter to ayold being run down by him. It is a mistake that there is no bath that will cure people's manners. .out drowning would help. A Brraldlo Design Tor Austria. However, perhaps one can't 190k for any really showy amount of delicacy of feeling in a country where a person is brought up to contemplate without a shudder the spec tacle of women harnessed-np with dogs and hauling carts. 'The woman is on one side of tne poie, tne dog on the other, and they bend to the work and tug and pant and strain and the man tramps leisurely along side and smokes bis pipe. Often the woman is old and gray, and the roan is her grand son. The Austrian national ornithological device ought to be replaced by a grand mother harnessed to a slush cart ith a dog. This merely in the interest of fact. Heraldic fancy has been a little too much overworked in these countries, anyway. Lately one of those curious tilings hap pened near here which justify the felicitous extravagances of the stage and help us to ac cept them. A despondent man, bankrupt, friendless, and desperate, dropped a dose of strychnia into a bottle of whis'kv and went out in the dusk to find a handy place for his purpose, which was suicide. In a lonely spot he was stopped bv a tramp, who said he would kill him if he didn't give up his money. Instead of jumping at the chance of getting himself killed and thus saving himself the impropriety and annoyance of suicide, he forgot all about his late project and attacked the tramp in a most sturdy and val iant fashion. He made a good fight, but lailed to w in. The night passed, the morn ing came, and he woke out of unconscious ness to una mat ne had been clubbed half to death and left to perish at his leisure. Cheated Out 0 Hln Suicide. Then he reached for his bottle to add the finishing touch, but it was gone. He pulled himself together and went limping away, and presently came upon . the -tramp stretched out stone dead with the empty bottle beside him. He had drank the whisky and committed suicide innocently. Now, while the msn who had been cheated out of liis sui cide stood there bemoaning his hard luck and wondering hpw he might manage to raise money enough to buy some more whisky and poison, some people of the neighborhood came 6r and he told them about his curious adventure. They said that this tramp had been tne scourge of the neighborhood and the dread of the constab ulary. The inquest passed off quietly and to everybody's satisfaction, and then the people, to testify their gratitude to the hero of the occasion, put him on the police, on a good enough salary, and he is all right now, and is not meditating suicide any more. Here are alt the elements of the naivest Arabian tale; a man who resists robbery when he hasn't anything to be robbed of; does his very best to save his life when he has come out purposely to throw It away; and finally is victorious in defeat killing his adversary in an effectual and poetic fashion after already hors du combat himself. And now, if you let him rise in the service and marry the chiof of police's daughter, it has the requisite elements of the Occidental romance, tacking not a detail as far as I can see. Mask Twais. BECEI7EE8 HOI BOUND BY LAW. A Remarkable Decision in a Railroad Dam age Case In a Texas Court Galveston, Tex., Feb. 6. The State Supreme Court has rendered a remarkable decision in the case of S. S. Turner against the Missouri, Kansas and Texas Railroad, Cross & Eddy, receivers. John Turner's mother sued for damages for the death of her son who was killed on the railroad. The case came before Will iamson county on an appeal, and the jndges decided that, inasmuch as the lair mentions' specifically as liable owners, proprietors, etc., and omits receivers, the latter cannot be held responsible for injuries inflicted, nor compelled to pay damages. 'February 7, 189a THE SILENT MYSTERY Is .What New York Politicians Calling Grdver Cleveland. Are BILL AND HIS MACHINE WORK. A Murderer tho 3Iost" Interesting Character in New Tort. HIS IXECUTIdX AX APPROPRIATE ONB rronnEsroNBKNCi: or tite nisrAxrit.l New York, Feb. C Senator Hill, who is working the machine with all the ardor and many times the enthusiasm of a Man tallni at a mangle; Grover Cleveland in the strange role of The Silent Mystery, and Carlyle Harris conVicted of his young wife's murder are the important actors on the metropolitan stage this week. Of course the murderer is the most inter esting of the three. We never weary of intelligent murderers; in fact. we never have enough of them. Harris is the first that has turned up in a long time. His name and doings make conversation everywhere. When an ignorant brute commits a murder and dies for it, no one cares but himself, nere is an intelli gent young man, tall and slim, who has a young woman on his hands, finds the load embarrassing, and decides to kill her. That interests everybody. It is well worth while to study a young chap able to win the affections of numerous young women, and possessing, at the same time, s character that made it possible for him to kill a girl who loved him as calmly as that girl would have drowned a batch of kittens that she was not prepared to entertain. Any num ber of women thought a great deal of this dilnted, Tulgar little beast of a nineteenth century Henry VIII. Women's intuitions Not Infallfble. Therefore what is the use of talking any morp about the value of women's intuitions. That is one disillusion. Here .is another. Many good people have had great faith in stirpicultuM. That is to say, they felt that in the important matter of the perpetuation of the human raec too much was left to luck. The mother of the young murderer is a stirpiculturist and has written a book protesting against the prevailing principle. In her book she lays down rules which she doubtless followed and which were to im prove future generations very greatly. Her son turns out a murderer; an intelli gent fellow and lovable, as hi9 friends put it, but a murderer. That seems to discour age the stirpiculture idea. It is almost enough to cause a revision of his views bv the young man of the period who does his thinking on all subjects for himself, and who just now usually decides against the existence of a soul because he can't see it Here is a young man, enter taining, gay, intelligent and lovable, with the added advantages of stirpicnlture tried on himself, rho commits a cowardly mur der. It's enough to make a young thinker believe that there are some things in nature with which his mind is not fittedMo wrestle. The killing of Harris by electricity, if it ever takes place, will, in the language of newspaper men, be a great story: Electri cal killing seems hardly fair treatment for the sturdy straightforward laboring roan who commits his murder, with an axe or a billet of wood. He seems to hav almost a right tvdemand that he be punished with the rope in simplo fashion. An Appropriate Execution. But for a seientifiCjinedical'tourderer who nses drugs, prescriptions, and a knowledge ofhuman nature in his work, the complex dynamo, with its alternating currents, volts and wires and the knowledge it demands of nerves and other medical things, appears to be singularly appropriate. Harris passed his medical examinations most brilliantly. He will know what is in store for him quite as well as those who kill him. That will enable those who write about the electrio killing to give anew color to the affair. There will be interest ing copy also concerning the professional feelings of the doctors who constitute them selves executioners and who will have to one. ate on one of their brethren. The action of the Legislature admitting reporters to electrical executions will make of the Harris execution a notable event in the historjr of newspaper work. That action, by the nay, is a sad thing for the unhappy prison wardens. They can onlv admit six reporters to each killing and will have to deal with at least 25 news papers, each thoroughly convinced of its, right to send a man. Warden Brown, of Sing Sing, has two men to' kill next week. After careful thought he has decided that the reporters from morning newspapers shall witness one of the executions and those from evening nowspapers the other. Hill and Cleveland the Big' Men. The two political big men are in the sight of New York once more. " Mr. Cleveland is back from his fishing and doubtless very busy at Lakewood. Senator Hill in Albany sees so many callers, according to reliable reporters, that they keep the snow from falling on the sidewalk of his house, No. 123, State street, and save the expense of sweeping. Hill is now far beyond the stage in which it is necessary to speculate concerning him. From his early manhood he fought a series of political fights, always winning, and finally crowned his work by a fieht for Democratic control of this State, at the end of which a decision of the Court of Appeals made him tor the first time a serious candi date for the Presidency. He is now working to be President, and makes no secret of his ambition or his efforts. He has preferred to the advice of disinterested friends the old advice about a bird in the hand, and has decided to have his midwinter election of ddlegates and get the right ones while he is sure that he has the power to do it Among those who criticise him many declare that success has at last turned his head. His head is not one that turns. He is a mighty able man, "forcing his luck" as gamblers do by increasing their stakes when fortune smiles. Clevolanrt thn Silent Mystery. ' Grover Cleveland of all men on earth is now the mysterious one in the eyes of those who discuss politics in New York. He has returned from the South with tales of fat, woodcock and painful swamps. On the train' from Washington on Wednesday he was exceedingly .merry, speeding the hours with fishing and shooting yarns, and the other pastimes of great men turned loose. He did not look at all liko. one bowed down by the x, eight ot a schemine Hill. Everyone is waiting now to hear what Cleveland will say If he makes np his mind to talk. There is much speculation as to what the inside workings ot his mind ate. Does he worry about Senator Hill, is he do ing deep political scheming on his own ac count, or is ho simply drifting with tho tide, and how much Interest has he in the committee organized to protest against the midwinter convention which is now sending out protests for signature? If he would answer these questions and a few others he wonld greatly oblige many who are inter ested in him. The feeling aroused against Hill because of his determination to hold a midwinter convention has seriously alarmed many of his sincere friends in New York It Is feared that If he sends a lot of straw men to the National Convention a contesting delegation will be admitted, as were the Tanftnany Hall men in 1880, and that all the result of his wonderful machine work will be lost Tammany's Second Han. "The possibility that Hill may prove on- I cago lends importance to the other men who aiMiavic wucu nie ucuiuufubs meet in. jui-i mm llMWmSMMm A CONJUNCTION THAT KNOCKS might prove to be Tammany's second choice. Gorman, Flower and Whitney are among those talked about Whitney is the most interesting. He has remained very muoh in the back ground of late, but there is not any doubt that he has great influence with Tammany HalL The fact that he has taken no open part in the efforts that have been made to fight HilL in Cleveland's interest the ab sence of his name from the list of those pro testing against the snap convention, for in stancehas caused it to be generally de clared that he wa sitting up nights nursing a "baby" boom of bis own. It is quite possible that he has been, but his failure to fight Hill is no sign. A man who at any time may reasonably expect something pleasant to 'happen in a political way cannot afford to stand off and throw stones at the Machine. The chief thing in the way of Whitney's preferment, as often happens in politics, is. .one for which he is certainly not to blame the prosperity of the Standard Oil monop oly. After his nominatlou, if it should occur, every Republican newspaper in the country would be dotted with Standard Oil barrels, decortcd in various humorous ways, and unless the Republicans should put up some man of the Depew railroad type the Democrats would hare a hard time with the sons of toil. In spite of the Standard Oil, however, a CREDIT CO., 723and 725 Liberty Street, r Cor. Eighth, head of Wood Street. If not, let us have your ear for a moment, and, when you hear it, be generous and kind and charitable, and tell the neighbors across the way. They may not be readers of the Sunday Dispatch. It is our yearly custom before the spring season starts in to sacrifice every odd piece of furniture in the store to'make room for the spring stock ar riving daily. OUR $25 SUIT REDUCED TO $f5. , OUR .$45 SUIT REDUCED TO $25. REMNANTS OF CARPET AS LOW AS 10c PER YD. . WE MAKE AND LAY ALL CARPETS FREE OF CHARGE! ' WE STORE AND DELIVER ALL GOODS FREE OF CHARGE 1 1 , x Make your house comfortable and pleasant. Happiness' will then walk in and peace reign supreme. THIS SUIT $30. $30. $30. Cash or Credit Reduced from $45. PITTSBURG'S MOST JUPITER AND VENUS SILLY. good many who find time to speculate be lieve that Whitney is the second Presi dentol choice of the State machine. So much for politics in New York this week. It might perhaps have been well boiled down and confined to the statement that Hill is still on top, with Cleveland the gainer by a widespread revolt acainst the early convention, and a lot of little fellows holding their thumbs and praying for good luck. AisTmjR Brisbane. The Crippo Unglnc In Alabama. "La grippe is raging here, and I find Chamberlain's Cough Kemedy to be a cer tain cure for it," says W. G. Johns, of Trimble, Cullman county, Ala. Mr. Johns ordered a supply of the Remedy to be shipped by express as quickly as possible. There is no question but this Remedy is ot great value in the treatment of the grip, especially on account of its counteracting any tendency of the disease toward pneu monia. It is also a prompt and certain cure for the cough which usually follows an attack of the grip. 50-cent bottles for sale by druggists. ttssu Wj? carry large force of expert furniture packers, and furnish estimates on packing, storing and shipping of household goods. Hauoh & Keexax, S3 Water street. su 'Jtava&fc 723 AND 725 BUSIER NOW THAN WE GENERALLY ARE EN APRIL. itT "i TOf V H 111 kj ACCOMMODATING INSTALLMENT HOUSE. TWO BANDSQFSTEEL That "Will Draw tfortli and South America Into Com mercial Union. MGINEEES ABE AT V0BE Surveying the Eontes for the Inter continental Railway. 1,000 MILES 0P UNKNOWN LANDS. In Places the Iron Dorse Will Enn 12,000 Feet Above tie Sex CONCEPTION AND SCOPE OP THE WORE. fcoiuutsro-TOEScs ot rne dispatch.! WASinxCTOir, February 6. . T IS now near ly ten month since the three Government expeditions of civil engineers sailed from New York City for South and Cen tral America to make the sur veys for the line of the Inter continental railway. Ever ?; since last May U these parties have been in ivt the field, and though suffer ing the greatest of hardships and surrounded by all the in conveni ences and difficulties RiLL of the rainy season among the Andes and on the highlands of Guatemala they have pros pected and mapped out nearly 1,000 miles of road. The territory through which they are traveling is -practically unknown to the ' world and a great part of their journeys l have to be cut through forests and for hun dreds of miles they are away from the lines1 of wagon-roads and have nothing but mule paths to guide them. The reports from the different expedition have been received regularly at the Inter continental Railway office here, and very full private letters have been written to' Mr. Cassatt, the President, and to Lieuten ant Brown, the executive officer of the com-' mission, by the men of the various parties. This correspondence and these reports have not been given to the pnblic, and I have spent several days during the past week in looking over them. Flan of the Great .Enterprise. But first let me give Tire Dispatch some idea of this wonderful undertaking; It is the most stupendous international en- CREDIT CO., 723 and 725 Liberty Street. Cor. Eighth, head of Wood Street, - 0 THIS SUIT $15. $15. $15. Cash or Credit. Reduced From $25. ir- fe7- Jim fffltp 1 a TfgTP3 "Hill ' " g . 4 1 4 -V. . 'aa. & p ? ,J -t " . -jT-4 - - . , r t X , J"-Si . , X