JM:IPiy mmuMM ipwe t wgT" JfrP .?- r't. VW c3 THE PITTSBURG A DISPATCH, SUNDAY, PEBRUAE 21, 18fe' . "rr s 20 S3E HP A MOMTAffl SIDE On One of the Most Bemarkable Works in the "World. 23 JIILES OF RAILWAY TO GO 6. X Trestle Work Xearly a Thousand feet High Along the Koute. .THE TIEW CXEQUALED JLXIWHEKE warms roa thi dispatch.! T -was getting on to ward the tropical inter, that is to jar, it -was nearly the end of March, rchen X first made rov acquaintance with the Andes mountains. I had come almost direct from the wilds of tropical Mexico and Central America and had taken passage in a slow goinc: 1-, -.;-i. i fe jjriiiBu irauip isteamer irom vera Cruz. Skirting the la Guayra Lighthouse. Coast and stopping at every port where it as likely that a few hags of coffee might be picked up, the steamer was seldom out of sight of land and after Wrinc Maracaibo. it was never far distant from the huge red mountains that i T trAV. J M ,r7Arx . frT-Haas'v a- '33I9T CBOSSDTG A CREVASSE MADE BY AX" EARTHQUAKE. r cemed to descend abruptly into the Carib bean Sea. I did not kno then that these mountains "were the most northerly peaks of the Andes, but when I had successfully passed the Custom House officers at La Guayra, the chief port.of Venezuela, I learned that I was actually standing at the most northerly extremity of the chain -which extends al most due south along the entire western side of the continent For a hundred miles or more the coast line had given me the im pression that the mountains had been Chopped With an Immense Ai, for nowhere, except at the mouth of some water course, baranca or ravine was there' more than a hundred feet of level land be tween the precipitous mountain slopes and the green waters of the turbulent sea. In feet, there are very lew places where there is more than ten feet of steady shore be tween the rocks and the mater, and the roadway that extends from town to town on the coait has been cut through cliffs over hanging the waves that frequently send theii spray over the traveler. It is only at a distance that there is a grandeur imparted to the appearance of the harbor, and this is due to the background, the peak of La Silla. Perhaps Rev. Charles Kinsplev, when he wrote his "Westward Ho" and took his hero, a brawny English tad, to La Guayra to rescue his sweetheart, who had been courted and coaxed away lrom Devon by a Spanish cavalier, the Gov ernor of Venezuela, drew his descriptions from a distant view. The long, low adobe house in which this Devon maiden lived ImDrisoncd is still at La Guayra under t thadow of what EJngsley calls a "gle TV looking fortress," but what in realit -oks like an excresence of mud perched upon a lull top. The glamor of romanr i cannot hi-de the fact that Venezuela's chief sea port is a dirty-looking, dusty, hot, disa greeable collection of one-story mud huts scarcely fit for habitation even by the aborigines. But nature has compensated the traveler for man's lack by placing at the back of the town the mountain La Silla, the highest jeak in the world that rises abruptly from the sea. Its saddle-like top touches the clouds 9,000 feet from the water at its foot, and it rises almost unbroken by smaller peaks or benches. Its base in a direct line Is but six miles thick, but that six miles is the obstacle that taxed the ingenuity of the best engineers to overcome, by the construc tion ol one of the most remarkable railroads in the world. Three hundred years ago, when the Spaniards took possession of this country, there n as but a mule path over the mountain to the rich valley where now the capital of he Eepuhlic, Caracas, nestles at the southern foot of La Silla. This path was only 12 miles long, and was called Dos Aquados. An Attraction for the Tourist. It was trodden by Indians ages before the discovery by Columbus, but at present it is not much used except by persons attracted by the impressive scenery and by the civil ized Indians who still prefer to go over the mountain on burros to waiting for the rail road tra'n and paying out money they can spenu mucn more agreeauiy in me pur chase of rum or gin at 10 csyits per bottle. By starting early in the morning, one can make this trip in lour hours. Later on in the history of the country, when the colonies were still young, a wagon road was built. It still exists, but some of the original grades have been abandoned for easier gradients. These abandoned por tions are curious and interesting relics of the olden times and suggest that perhaps the aborigines of this country had quite as severe taskmasters as those who weighed the straw and taled the brick lor the patient and oppressed Hebrew. All ot this roadway was well paved and most of the work still remains in good condition. The roadway was laid out in parallel lines three feet apart, between which lines of cobble stone,, set on edge, were planted. Cross lines of stone were then set up at in tervals of three feet so that the entire road way was laid out in three feet squares. These squares were then filled with diagonal lines of cobble stones also set on edge and then the work was completed the paving presented not only a pleasing, but an en during appearance. The scenery along this old road is excep tionally fine and the Spanish Cavalier upon arming at the top of the mountain and viewing the beautitul valley and the city of Caracas at his ieet must have felt quite as contented as the famous Hebrew who gazed westward across the Jordan upon the country reserved for his people. A Man el ot Bailroad Work. The third route to the capital is over the remarkable little narrow guage railroad which starts only 2 feet above high tide level and reaches an altitude of C.128 feet ih lets than 15 miles of tortuous climbing, crossing ravines on high trestles, piercing ridges by innumerable tunnels and winding around the lesser hills and peaks until one is bewildered. Altogether this line is 23 miles long- that is, it takes just 23 miles of track to reach Caracas, which is but 6 miles distant from La Guayra in a direct line. Inside of a mile from the depot the road crosses, upon a curved iron trestle, one of the crevices made by the earthquake of 1812. Since that time the opening has been filled with adobe buildings, and over their tops and through the cocoanut trees of a grove below, the traveler catches his first sight of the contour of the coast From this point until the summit is reached, 15 miles up the mountain, the sea is never out of sight save when the walls of a tunnel or a cut hide it from view. The famous "loop" of the Southern Pacific Bailroad at Tebachepi in California and that of the Santa Pe Bailroad in New Mexico are not to be compared in the same breath with the loop on this South Ameri can line. At one point I stood and looked below. We had wound around apeak three times and were about to cross on a hogs- back to the opposite side of the canon. Be low were the two tracks upon which we had traveled only a few moments before, so close that I could almost jump from one to the other and yet to reach the spot where I stood, had taken 20 minutes of hard pulling by the plucky little locomotive over those same tracks. Tracks Above and Below. Across the ravine, half a mile away were two tiers of rails one above the other, the iron standing out under the light of the strong run overhead. "We had approached the peak upon which I stood over these rails and a thousand feet above like a mere thread was another track for which we were aiming. Along the bottom of the ravine which debouched near the little village of Maguieto on the coast, were hundreds of washerwomen, beating clothes on the rocks, cleansing them as did the washer women of ancient times. Little girls, maidens, vounir women and old women were congregated there along the banks of the mountain stream and for two miles the rocks, bushes and huge ferns were covered with white garments that glared back at us in the sunlight. Half an hour later the train stopped for a few minutes on the track, which I had seen from below. Ko more magnificent panorama exists than that which spread be- fore me. Away to the East and "West stretched the sea coast lined with the co coanut grove fringe, while the green waters wera alive with craft of all kinds from the palace-like Red D. line steamship to the punt of the native plying about in the harbors. The solitary war steamer of the Venezuelan Govern ment lay at anchor with steam up and En glish, German and French steamers swung with the tide on either side. To the north the Sugar Loaf Mountain on the island Cur acoa was barely visible and rising from the sea to the east were the islands Los Rogues and Orchillo. It was a picture to which jio painter's brush could do full Justice and one, once seen, can never be forgotten. A Station on the Summit. Two hours after we started our train stopped at the Summit, a station hollowed ont of the rock. Only one building besides the water tank could find lodgment here, and these were perched upon stilts at the rear. Children free from other covering save that which nature gave them, played on the track, their par ents seemingly indifferent to the fact that if one of them fell over the cliff it would never stop until it reached the bottom a thousand or more feet below, where we could distinguish the huge bowlders that had been dislodged by the ravages of time, weather and earthquakes. The water of a running stream, clear as crystal, could be seen through trees covered with crimson and purple flowers. Mocking birds, parrots and paroquets fluttered about down below in the foliage, but none of them ventured to come within 500 feet of our height A little further on we crossed a short trestle work. It was only a hundred feet or so long, but the engineer slowed up and pro ceeded as cautiously as if he were venturing on newly-formed ice. I did not wonder' much at his caution when I looked ont through the car window, for we were upon the highest piece of trestle work in the world. The timbers extended downward 980 feet, but there were so many of them that thev seemed to form a network of straight lines and angles. An effort had been made to bridge this chasm, bat it had been found impossible to secure such a struc ture, and the trestle work was constructed only after many months of hard labor and numerous mishaps in the way of land and rock slides. Glidlnc Down to the Capital. From this point downward we wound along the side of the mountain on the north side of the yalley that debouches into the larger valley, where 300 years ago the Spaniards selected a site for their capital, secure from attack from the seaboard. Hot a foot of the road up to within a few rods of the depot at Caracas was built upon a bed that did not first have to be cut out of the side of the mountain, and in this short distance of 23 miles there are no less than 40 tunnels. Some of them are sev eral hundred feet in length. )ut most of them are so narrow that tne4 is barely room for the train to squeeze through. The safe conduct of this little road re quires the employment of an army of men. Track walkers are met every half mile, and it is their duty to be constantly on the move, for there is no knowing when a rock may roll down the mountain side and find lodgment upon the track. I was informed that on an average these track walkers-find from 30 to GO rocks a day on the tracks, so that their presence is indeed a necessity. Nothing could save a train that had been de railed by a bowlder. It could only leave the track in one direction and that on the side where there is a precipitous descent rang ing any where from 50 to 1,000 feet So uncertain are the movements of these bowlders that no trains are run after dark and all travel ceases promptly upon the setting of the sun. If a train be caught on the mountain side at this hour, especially in the winter season, it must remain at some side track until, the next daybreak. An Investment That Fays. Freights are high on this little line. It costs ?8 per ton to send goods from the seaboard to Caracas and no train is ever longer than three cars, attached to the locomotive, each car having a capacity of ten tons. Some days as many as 30 or 40 trains climb the mountain and the English company that built the road is reaping -a rich harvest. There are railroads that climb to greater altitudes, but there are none along which the scenery is so Impressive throughout their whole length. After the Caribbean Sea is left behind, the banana groves, aloe trees, cacti with strange forms, and other tropical plants and flowers that fill the val ley along which runs the old wagon road filled with thousands pf burros burdened with coflee, make an ever changing picture that keeps the traveler busy until Caracas, the South American Paris, comes in view around the last curve. With a dash across a crevasse made by a great earthquake the train draws up in a pleasant little depot, and the journey comes to an end only too quickly. Horace J. Hiia. Trom Omaha. Omaha, Neb., Mar 5, 1891. iered for Tears with neuralei headache, and Exause's Headache Capsules is the only remedy that has done me any good. Would recommend them to all sim ilarly affected. Chas. Passot, wrsu 716 Korth Sixteenth street NEW ADVEBTISBMENTS. THEATRE POPULAR WITH THE PEOPLE. Under the direction of It. M. Gnlick & Co. MONDAY. FEB. 22. ONE "WEEK ONLY. WEDNESDAY MATINEES SATUHDAY.. Annual Engagement of MARGARET MATHER Assisted by OTIS SKINNER AND AN ESPECIAL COMPANY. EVERY PERFORMANCE, except Wednesday Matinee and Fri day Evening, A GRAND PHDOUGTIDN OF THE EGYPTIAN! Trom Victor Hugo's Famous Novel, "The Hunchback of Notre Dame." Preceded by the Petite One Act Comedy, NANCE 0LDFIELD. Hiss Mather in Both. Plays. NEW AND ELABORATE SCENERY. Special Music and Picturesque Costume3 Wednesday Uatinee, ROMEO AND JULIET. Friday Evening, LEAH, THE FORSAKEN. FEB. 29- -YON fe21-72 YONSON." DUQUESNE I PITTSBURG'S LEADING THEATER. ONE WEEK'ONLT, Commencing SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT. MONDAY, Feb 29. RUDOLPH ARONSOITS COMIC OPERA COMPANY, Presenting the Great Successes, the TYROLEAN AND NANON. Performed 300 times at the New Toifc Casino Monday, Tuesday and Wednes day Evenings. THE TTBOLEAN. Thursday, Friday and Saturday Matinee and Evening, NANON. Original Cast: Marie Tempest, Louise Beaudet, Grace Golden, Eva Davenport, Drew Donaldson, Sylvia Thorne, Edwi Stevenj, Fred Schuetz, Max Figman, Fred Solomon. Original Scenery! Original Costumes! Chorus of 6Q. Orchestra of 23. Musical Director, PAUL STEKNDOBFF. Produced Under the Stage Direction of HEINBICH CONBEID. Seat selling begins Thursday next at 8.30 A. a. Orders by mall promptly attended to. fe2148 FREE LECTURE! "A PLEA FOB LITTLE CHILDRENI" BT A "LAWYER" FOB CHRIST, . AT CABNEGIE HALL, ALLEGHENY, THIS (SUNDAT) AFTERNOON, AT 3 O'CLOCK SHAEP. ENDS AT C P. M. SEE NOTICE IN PRESS. JK2137 Brain Worker's, Desk Men's, Ladies', Youth's & Sedentary People's New "Imperial EXERCISER Complete Oymnaalum for Horn and unico R timn for Circular. BookBi "An Ideal Complexion and Physical Develop ment", SO Illustra tions Wo. "Health A Strength in Phys ical Culture", 10 Illustration (Oct both books 76c Chart of lOAthlcttocntafor Dumb bells or Pulleys, 26c j. b.dowi,- St( MONROE STRICT, CHICAGO, ILL. AT BARGAINS, MHE STOCK CHOICE DESKS AND CHAIRS. STEVENS CHAIR CO., 3 SIXTH ST., PITTSBURG. JalO D. L. Down's Health Exerciser. ' Foi Brtia-Wciie:! 4 Seietttrj f ecp'.s: Gentlemen, Ldle& Touuia; AtMet. or InTElld. A oomplets gromilmn. Taxes up but In. tquua floor room ; ceir, scientific danb..coisprehen&lTe, cneip. JndoneU bj 0.000 pbTtklisa, lawyers, clertymen, edltnrisk otbers sowiutnflt. Scndforllltutratedcir mlir, 40 eicraTlBO. nocbarge. Prof. D. I.. DowiL Rdentlf PhvriralJrVA. B rT1 ' ! ' jV nf' AWAm 'Aiimm JWSM ir Y'wiTO.M4; a ii 4 m i i i 1 1 hi ij i SJfkWSL LADIES' CABINET (IKisx KAix.lGslOBttnTIEaKUtkeV.1isSgikI NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. The Leading Amusement Resort for Ladies and Children. WEEK COMMENCING MONDAY, FEB. 22. EM! EXTRA! EM! The Grandest 121st of Attractions rer Presented to the Public tor ONE PRICE OF ADMISSION. CURIO HALL. JO-JO, THE RUSSIAN DOG-FAGED MAN. 'TJIsTZrE 1 77 J, The Handsome Australian Bushman. ct OTSOIsTA., 77 Tho Man With Iron Hair. . "FATIMA, 77 THE BEATJTIPTJE HINDOO SNAKE CHANTKESS, and others. EN- TUEJATEJIi. TIE FITZGERALD ID LEWIS DRAMATIC CO In the New and Original Drama, II .) OR, The Lost Heiress. Depicting Life in New York City. Grand Scenic Effects I THE BROOKLYN BRIDGE BY MOON LIGHT! GRAND WATER SCENE I THE "WHARVES AT NIGHT, with the shipping, etc, all lit up. A BEAUTIFUL EFFFCTI DPEH AT12 M. VVASHINCTOH'S B1BTHDAY. ADMISSION 10 CENTS. fe21-74 PATTI IS COMING MARCH 5. fe21-SS OLD CITY HALL, FEB. 22, An Hlustrated Lecture by the Eminent Explorer, MME. LE PLONGEON, Ancient Cities and Inhabitants 01- YUCATAN. ADMISSION BOo. Tickets at Mellor A Hoono's, 77 Fifth avenue, or Alex Ross', 1U Federal street, Allegheny. fe21-93 Notice to School Teachers. Prof. J. S. Christy is forming a new private class for school teachers on next "Wednesday, at 1:30 r. M. Prof. Christy guarantees to learn 'dancin? in ons term, as he has the best sys tem and muslc.and all conveniences. Terms $5. New classes for beginners on Monday evening. February 21. fe2MS0 W 78 THIS IS THE DUDE That got left. Ho went to McAllister's party and his chums all had VOLTAIC DIAMONDS ' In their shirt fronts, but he knew better. He thought he could "ginah the heart" of some Kirl without one. He got beautifully lett. VOLTAIC DIAMONDS aro without an equal. They are set in Rings, Studs, Ear drops, Pins, etc. We have the loose stones, and mount them in any style or Jewelry. Not sold by any other Jeweler in the United States. B. E. AR0NS, SOLE OWNER, v , 63 FIFTH ATE. Xe21-xwu NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. DUQUESNE YOU'LL If you Coming GOODBY TO THE BOGIE MAN AND ALL ( YOUR OTHER. FRIENDS On Next Saturday Night the MR. DAVID HENDERSON, MANAGER. SECOND EDITION TO-MORROW NIGHT WITH NEW Songs, Dances, Features, People. THESE ARE THE THINGS YOU LIKE ALREADY Ta iDTixia TuAia JOBJU.TI03 Basxx. POSITIVELY LAST Popular Matinee ..WEDNESDAY.. Next -week THE CASINO OPERA CO. THE ALVIN THEATER. CHARLES L DAVIS Ownsr and Manager. 70 FIRE EXITS 70 Week of February 22, with Wednesday and Saturday Matinees. Holiday Performance Monday Evening, Washington's Birthday. NO PERFORMANCE ON TUESDAY EYENINO. FIRST TIME AT THIS THEATER I DANIEL FROHMAN'S SPECIAL COMP'Y, In Eelasco and De Mille's Most Enjoyabla Play, THE CHARITY Indorsed by Press and Fubllo the Country Over. BALL LYCEUM THEATER SUCCESS. IN THE CAST Messrs. Putnam, Leonard, Sands, Bruce, Granville, Gregory, Sheldon, Lawrence, Master Vaughn; Mesdames Chapman, Elton, Lowrie, Greybrooke and Logan. FEB. 29-THE GRAND MILITARY SPECTACULAR, "THE. SOUDAN." HARRIS' THEATER. Mrs. P. Harris, R. L. Britton, T. F. Dean, Proprietors and Managers. Popular Prices Always Prevail Harris' Theater, 10, 15 and 25 Cents! at WEEK COMMEfiHG MONDAY, FEB, 22. Every Afternoon and Evening. The Popular Younjc Actor, N. S. WOOD, In the Spectacular Melodramatic Success of the Year, THE ORPHANS -OT- NEW YORK. A Trus Piotnro of Life in ths Metropolis. The Great Drawbridge Scene. The Battery at Sunset Presented by a COMPANY-OF COMPETENT ACTORS. "Week Feb. 2fr-rnnk I. Frayne, Jr. feil-49 I PITTSBURG'S LEADING THEATER. HENDERSOS AND NORTON, MANAGE B 8. BE SORRY miss it, and the time is fast when it must leave. SECOND WEEK OF SINBAD American Extravaganza Co. and MUST SAY just 6 ::: 2 MATINEES DON'T PBOCRASTINATB, BUT GDIS HEAR THE NEW THINGS THAT THE WILD WAVES SAY AND THE NEW SONGS BT Eissing and Mulle,.Foy and Dunn. See the dance "La Lnmiere da Nord" By the CHITTON SI8TERS And enjoy again the beautiful pas do deaux by IRMLEE and JIOSCHE and EDITH CBASEE'3 Dainty Solo In THE WINTER BALLET. The Stupendous Pageant of Nations, The Exciting Storm and "Wreck at Sea, The Enchanting Tropical Island, The Jfrost-Spangled Valley of Diamonds, That Dream of Opulent Magnificence, SInbadi Palace, AHT "7 HE MORNING OF LIFE." The Jolly Cannibals, Happy Harlequins, Animated Icicles, Spinning Snowflakei, Merry Skaters, Sleighers and Tobogganers. "The Bogie Man, "."What the "Wild "Waves Say," "True as Steel," "The Peline Serenade," "Moments "When One "Wants to Be Alone," "Haven't Got It Now," v 'On a Minute," Etc, Etc TIME IN PITTSBURG. BEST SEATS 50' Special engagement felM7 "With Appropriate Scenery And Furnishings, a Worthy Production of An Entire Season's Bill In New York And the Greatest fe204 ACADEMY,' MONDAY, FEB. 22. Matinees Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday. KERNELL'S HIGH-CXASS Matthews & Buljfer, O'Brien & Redding, The Highleya, Thos. O'Brien, Miss Clara Havel, AU Bros, Blockson & Burns, Miss Blanche Andrews Harry Kernell, EXTRA HOLIDAY MATINEE, WASHINGTON'S BIRTHDAY, . MONDAY, FEB. 22. NIGHT PRICES. HARRY mm And the neir comedy called t THE HALF-WAY HOUSE. McFADDEN'3 TROrJER, JAY-I-SEE. Monday, Feb, 23 Dixon's Vaudeville Co. tttUt SEW ADVERTT7EMENT3. HIM WILLIAM GILLETTE'S TEKEIPIC HIT. Tne Original Cast COMFORTS An iridescent presenta tion of a series of the sort of aeeidents that Trill happen in even the beat regulated families. G OPERA HOMF C OPERA HOUSE V-'IVIU U HOUSE NEXT WEEE-ME. HARRY DAVIS' COJTJ1ENCING FEB. 22. CHIEF DEBRO AND WIFE, THE ONLY GENUINE REPRESENTATIVES OF THAT ICE-BOUND RACE. THE ESQTJIn.TJZSI, Nott before the American public. They Trill appear in the Curio Hall in their native, cos tumes, as shown in the appended oat. Every Man, -Woman and Child Should See These Strange People. JTRED RUSSELL, Chinese Musician. I PROF.CHAMBERLAIN'S Embroidery "Work. HARRY SAUNDERS, the Greatest of All I FITZSIMMONS, the Sensational Murderer Chalk Artists. I Suicide, in wax, remains another week. MINNIE CLAYTON, the Queen of Ophidian I Many other interesting features andaBlj Creation. I Menagerie. XPff TUB) TECESATESR. MACK, MILLER AND HUES' OLYMPHIAN VAUDEVILLE COMPANY, MURPHY AND LEONOEB, Character Sketoh Artists. LANDIS AND LANDIS, Burlesque Acrobatio Skatorial Artists. Minnie-r-TWO FRYS. Charles Coming Gray AtajOTListsioia, lOo. DOORS ington's Birthday, 10 TO 10. L LACES' Our Spring importation of new Laces has just arrived, and we are par ticularly anxious that the ladies of both cities should see our beautiful dis play of these goods while the stock is complete and looks its loveliest Laces, so Dame Fashion says, will be more worn this season than ever before. We are amply prepared to furnish the very latest novelties in this line at our well-known low prices. Examine the following: Point de Irelande, in black, white and ecru. Point de Gene, in black, white and ecrn. Point de Paris, in white and cream. Black and Cream Chantillj", in all widths, from 10c to $3. NEW VEILINGS: WHITE This department has been greatly enlarged and attractively low prices prevail all this week. Come and see the bargains. They're of a kind that will draw lots of new customers and make business brisk. Hemstitched Iawns, nice goods, at 15c, 18c, 25c, 30c, 40c, 50c. Cambric Tnckings, 38c, 50c, 60c, 75c, 91. Plaid Hainsooks, 8c, 10c, 13c, 15c to 25c TADI C I IAICA3C This, our new department, is growing in I AuLL Lllltllw"""favor daily' and no wonder. Prices and goods speak for themselves. Such excellent values are not to be had else where. Buyers can very easily satisfy themselves on this point. Damask Table Linen at 45c, 50c, 62, 65c, 75c and qSc. Napkins to match all Table Linens. Fine Linen Towels, large sizes, i2jc, 20c, 25c extra fine ones at c. 48c and 7?c. Full lines of new Pillow Shams from 50c a pair up. see them. A grand line of Aprons, i2c v iB Hi fltB sB is H 510-518 MARKET STREET. A V 'jsrMONM v ALL CHAKLES FROHMAN'S SELECT PLAYERS. THE The Original Scenery OF Asvreet-scented, refresh ing story told with such mirthful tintinnabulation that when once heard is forthwith rehearsed to i other gatherings. A BAENES OT NEW TORE. feZl-U FIFTH AVENUE MUSEUM AP FAMILY THEATER. FEATURES WITHOUT PARALLEL. First Appearance of MACK. MILLER AND HUES in their Sido Spllttins Farce, "TICKETS, PLEASE." THE MONTALLIONS. Swiss "Warblers and Nightingales. "BAKED ALIVE," A ROARING AFTERPIECE. Bros. "Hypnotism." OPEN FROM 1 TO 10 P. M.; MONDAY, "Wash- fa 13-28 Unen Hand-made Torchons, 340 patterns, from 4o to 50. Orientals in "white, ecrn and two toned, narrow and demi-IIonn-cins. Valenciennes, narrow, wide demi-flonncings. and All the highest novelties in Veilings such as Tuxedos, Fancy Jets, Grenadines and Sew ing Silks. GOODS I India linens, 10c, 15c, SOc, 25c, 30c, 35c Dotted 40c Swisses, 25c, SOc, 35c, Apronettes, to 25c 12 l-2c; 15c, 18c, 22c Be sure to to $1 bargains, every one of them. ftSl-TTMB
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers