WmSSS Sgr Wmr? ttt ' THE JPITTSBUKG DISPATCH. SUNDAY. MARCH 13. 1892. BALFOUR'S BEHAYIOR The Absorbing Topic in British Po litical Clubs Just Kow. SOME EYEN THISK HIM INSANE. He Is Aniions for a Speedy Dissolution of Farliament and GENERAL ELECTIONS IMMEDIATELY TBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH. 1 Loksox, March 12. CopyrigliL The strange behavior of Mr. Balfour is the ab sorbing topic in Parliamentary lobbies and political clubs. The Tories do not scruple to use strong language about this curious philosopher, who treats them with con tempt which he does not attempt to con ceal, and which they repay by making him look ridiculous as the leader of the House of Commons. The Government has been placed in the minority several times this week, due to the resentment of the Tories against this so-called leader. The prestige of his administration still envelopes Mr. Balfour, and this, coupled with the fact that he is Lord Salisbury's nephew, has so far prevented open mutiny. Balfour is fully as superstitious as Disraeli was, but he has none of the tact, good humor and untiring watchfulness of the House of Commons which enabled the great Tory leader to mold the party to his will. It is a painful thing to place on record in The Dispatch, but it is a positive fact that Balfour does not care a button for the Houe of Commons. Last Thursday he outraged its finest feelings by appearing in dirty boots and mud-spattered trousers. In stead of being in his place when important business is going on he is lounging in the smoking room or hiding in the library. As Obstinate as a Male. He should be as supple as a professional courtier, but is as obstinate as a mule. He has imported into "Westminster the auto cratic methods of Dublin Castle and his col leagues and subordinates dare not remon strate with him. The clerks of the House, learned men on all matter, appertaining to parliamentary procedure, are afraid to ofler advice to Mr. Balfour, with the result that he is in a per petual muddle, and public business makes no progress. Nevertheless, Mr. Balfour is not always austere. It was the privilege of a DisrATCH reporter the other night to gaze upon the right honorable gentleman at a moment when he was easing his feelings and exercising his limbs with the airy abandon of a young athlete. The scene was the smoking room staircase, whereon the First Lord of the Treasury, who should have been in the House, where an excited debate was in progress, was testing the condition of his lungs and the length of his stride. Both were satisfactory, for Mr. Balfour did nothreathe very hard or otherwise show distress, and his last stride covered six stairs and brought him to the top of the staircase. He did not have his eyeglasses on, so that the wondering reporter was able to continue his observations. Balfour's Absence Noteworthy. All the members were in the House, an important division was about to take place, and Mr. Balfour noting the empty corridor, with evident satisfaction, grasped the balustrade on either side, preparatory to resuming his gymnastic exercise. But at this lntei estinc moment one of Mr. Balfour's Secretaries rushed into the corridor and in formed him that his presence was urgently required in the House. "Tell them," said the great mogul, "that I will be there presently," ana turning on his heel Mr. Arthur James Balfour strode down the corridor to the library. He did not take part in that debate or division, and me iiovernment was Deaten. Eumors of these solitary "goinss-on," to gether with his disregard of his personal appearances, inattention to business, and his rudeness to individual members of the party, have given rise in some quarters to doufits as to Mr. Balfour's sanity, but they are simply indications, clear enough to those .who know the man, of his disgust with his position. A nxioas for a Speedy Election. Mr. Balfour is vigorous enough, mentally and physically, but he is tired of plavingan undignified part. Furthermore, he has not had his own way in the Cabinet, lately, and he is sulking. He is anxious, as the fight cannnot be averted, to have a general elec tion at once, and he is doing what he can to compel Lord Salisbury to dissolve Parlia ment. He will soon be gratified. The Queen will hold a privy council Monday afternoon, previous to her departure for the south of France, andt is pretty certain that among the documents which" she will sign will bean undated proclamation dis pensing with the further services of her Jaithful Commons. Lord Salisbury will fill in the date as coon as public business shall have become sufficiently blocked to sfiord him a considerate excuse lor appeal ing to the country against Liberal "obstruc tion," aud the date will not be, a distant one. A significant sign of the times is Punch' political cartoon this week entitled "Off His Feed." The Conservative party is represented as a sick horse, whom" Balfour and Chaplin, as the two grooms, vainly try to tempt with the oats of "Local Govern ment lor Ireland" and the hay of "Small Agricultural Holdings," while Salisbury, as a veterinary surgeon, standing on a use less end of the discarded blanket of "The Conservative Majority," says: "Hum! Seems to have wasted a bit! "Wants a Tory!" It is only when Punch is very sure which way the wind blows that it deserts the Conservath e rrty; Too Bis Army Estimates. British taxpayers have been brooding a good deal for a week past over the figures given in the army estimates lor the coming year. The amount asked for, nearly 18, 000,000, is large enough to make a deep im pression upon every'man who has to help pay the bill, and criticisms, loud in as sertions, that even this tremendous sum has failed to secure effective fighting machinery, cause many worthy citizens to think harder than is good for their mental powers. Yes terday the naval estimates gave them fur ther food for thought and additional lor bewilderment. All parties are agreed that the mainte nance of the naval supremacy of England is a matter of life and death to the country which could be starved into submission by stoppage of its food supplies from abroad. Even Cobden used to urge that the British navy should be 50 per cent stronger than the French navy, and, barring France, equal to the combined fleets of any two nations; but critics, foreign and domestic, are agreed that the British navy, considering the man ner in which it is dispersed all over the world, is not more than a match for the French fleets, and that by certain conceiv able combinations it might be s ept off the seas. Not a Question of Money. Here again, as in the case of the army, it Is not a question of money. Sixteen millions three hundred pounds sterling are to be tpent on the Blitish navy during the coming year, and that sum is more than last year's naval budgets of France, Gerniaur and Italy combined. Everybody feels there is a shameful waste somewhere, and taxpayers want to know where it is. They have'felt and expressed the same desire lor years past, but ther have failed to obtain satisfaction, and they are not likely to be more success ful now. The young Earl of Dudley having sold his race horses, lorsworn betting, and given up gambling, is steadily striving to obtain recognition as a serious politician. He is blessed with a wife who possesses brains aud who believes that her husband is equal ly well endowed in that respect It was at her instigation that the Earl deserted his boon comptiions, and it is by the stimulus of her iaith in his abilities that be has set before him a worthier goal than the Derby stakes. It will be well for him, however, at the outset, to restrain his oratorical flights. He has already shown a tendency to wander away from beaten tracks instead of keeping to the safe path of commonplace. In particular he is prone to over-indulgence in figures of speech which, if not checked, will surely get him into trouble. A 1'ainrnl Show or tTeakness. He gavea painful exhibition of this weak ness Thurs'day night, when he was enter tained at a banquet at Birmingham by the Midland Conservative Club, for Lord Dudley, of course, is a Tory. He com menced his speech very prettily, by ex pressing "that he has as yet but small claim to the respect which was accorded to those men wno had at the expense of almost every personal treasure voted all their energies to public activity and usefulness," and from a Liberal point ot view he distinctly improved when he proceeded to declare that "the day of the old Toryism, the Toryism of privi lege and prescription, had gone beyond recall" a sentence which, by the way, bears upon it the stamp of the Countess Dudley, hut after enunciating the sound principle the orator plunged into meta phor, when he said: "In 18S6 the good old crusted port of Toryism, valuable and respectable from its age and antiquity, had at last become stale and tasteless. The blending writh the strong spirit of modern liberalism, ardent and fiery in itself and i little inclined to lead to dangerous conse quences if taken undiluted, has resulted in a liquor whose delicate flavor and power had secured for it a monopolyt all respect able clubs." The Midland Tories, having just disposed of a good dinner, laughed heartily at this joke, which seemed very good at first hear ing, but the next day, when they saw it in cold print, they did not like the look ot it, and to-day they arc asking Lord Dud ley lor proof that Toryism is or ever was stale and tasteless. FIRST OF MAY DISPLAYS. Preparations for Thorn Proceeding Quietly in All European Capitals. TBT CASUS TO THIS DISPATCH. LoxDOir, March 12. Little is publicly heard of preparations for labor demonstra tions on May 1, but they are proceeding quietly in every European capital and iu most large towns in every country in Europe. In Austria there is talk among the governing classes of suppressing such dis plays; in Germany they will not be inter fered with, according to the present inten tion of Kaiser "Wilhelm; in France, now that the strong man Constans has been in trigued out of the Department of the In terior, they will be perfectly free, and in Italy and Spain the police will in all proba bility provoke bloodshed. In London there is to be a demonstration, the magnitude of which will depend upon settlement of disputes now existing be tween various labor societies as to the men to whom the work of organization shall be entrusted. ONLY ONE FABTT IS H0EAL. Men of Other Views Expelled From Parlia ment for Their Sins. JBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH.1 LoirDOS', March 12. A sentence of five years' penal servitude, passed upon Mr. Hastings, M. P., for embezzling trust funds, has moved the Pall Mall Gazette to remark, sententlously and truthfully: "There have now been three members expelled from the House of Commons, and the only party in the House which has not had a member ex pelled is the one which two of the other three parties agree in denouncing as a pack of disreputables." It should be explained that Captain Ver ney. expelled for criminal immorality, was a Liberal, Hastings was a Liberal-Unionist, and De Cobain, the most loathsome of scoundrels, was a Tory. A Forcer Commits Suicide. BERLiif, March 12. A tragic event is re ported frcm Liebau, in Prussian Silesia. Herr Eckerd, the Governor of the district, a man of bih standing and supposed large wealth, was lately discovered to have been engaged in extensive forgeries. It appears that for some time past he had really been bankrupt and had Kept up his credit on forged bills of exchange. Finding that bis guilt was becoming known, he committed suicide by taking poison. Since his death additional forgeries have come to light, and the aggregate Is said to be enormous. Financial institutions and individuals who have cashed the forged paper are seriously embarrassed. Itrtrievlng a Family Fortune. TBT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH.! Lokdon, March 12. Lord Maidstone, the young son of a clever peer, the Earl of AVinchelsea and Nottingham, died the other day in the Kiveria of influenza. The list man who held the title drank himself to death after several years of wild debauchery, during one of which he served as a trooper in a cavalry regiment. The present Earl is endeavoring to retrieve the family fortune by developing quarries on bis estate. Funeral of Fred Tan Zandt. rBY CABLE TO THE DISPATCH.1 London; March 12. The body of Ferdi nand Van Zandt, who committed suicide, owing to mental trouble, last week, was this week buried in Brompton Cemetery. Van Zandt's father-in-law, Sir John Lub bock, and Sidney Buxton were the mourn ers, Mrs. Van Zandt being in California. Bin. Gordon Baillle Free Again. BT CABLE TO THE DISPATCH.1 London, March 12. Mrs. Gordon Baillie, the fascinating adventuress who had a weak ness for befooling peers and prelates, and whose career has been recorded in The Dispatch, has been liberated after lour years' seclusion in Woking prison. Gibson's New Grocery. Pay cash for your goods and buy where you get the best goods for the least money. At the following prices we will deliver all orders amounting to $10 and upward to any part of either city, or will pay freight to any station or landing within 200 miles of Pittsburg. All goods guaranteed first class, or can be returned at our expense. Send for weekly price list All goods shipped the" day the order is received: 10-R kitts Holland herring. $ 85 10-lb kitts A o. 1 lake herring G8 10-B) kitts good mackerel 1 10 10-lb kitts best mackerel 1 25 8-Ibs brick codfish 00 4-fbs Columbia river salmon 25 17 lbs rolled oats so 8 quarts navy beans 50 8 lbs Carolina rice 50 36 bars 5c soap 1 00 28 bars German mottled soap 1 00 60 bars rosin soap. ... 1 00 8 lbs fresh ground coffee 1 00 5 fts best Bio coffee 1 00 5 lbs 25c tea (all varieties) 1 00 3 lbs 50c tea (all varieties) 1 00 1 bbl best winter wheat flour 5 40 lbbl best Amber flour 4 90 8 cans Alaska salmon 1 00 20 cans sardines 1 00 26 Kn granulated sugar 1 00 30-lb box Valencia raisins 1 CO 20-lb box London layer raisins 1 25 10 lbs best cream cheese 1 00 8 lbs best lim burger cheese 1 00 2-Ib can baking powder 20 10-ft bucket lard 72 10 lbs English currants 50 A. A. Gibson, 177 Beaver avenue, Allegheny City. 'Watch for the To-lt Lists In to-morrow's Dispatch. They will be un usually satisfactory. To be healthy, rugged and strong, Bisque of Beef Herbs and Aromatics. use Select a House From the special to let lists in to-morrow's Dispatch. They will be very complete. NO LOVE LETTERS YET. Marie Blaine Has Been Persuaded ' Not to Have Them Published. SHE YIELDED WITH EELUCTANCE. Her Counsel Advised Her to Stand on Her Decision in Court RUMORED 0TERD0SE. OF MORPHINE New York, March 12. The day after the publication of the reply which Secre tary Blaine felt impelled to make to the imputations contained in the opinion of the Judge who granted a divorce to Mrs. Nev ins Blaine, a dispatch appeared in the papers signed by the divorced wife. She called upon Mr. Blaine 'to publish in full the correspondence from which ex tracts bad been quoted in his letter, and she said that unless he did this in ten days she would herself give to the world the en tire correspondence. The ten days have quite elapsed, but it is not likely that Mrs. Kevins Blaine will make another state ment Since she has been in New York she has been quite ill, and was prostrated with a fainting fit, although there was some intima tion that she may have been suffering from an overdose of morphine taken to alleviate neuralgic pains. Mr. Blaine Has Said All Ho Will. One of Mrs. Blaine's legal advisers was greatly distressed when he saw the state ment which appeared over her signature in reply to Mr. Blaine's letter, and this man felt that any further statement by his client would be inopportune and would tend to perhaps create a prejudice against her. He therefore determined to advise her both as a counsel and a friend against the issuing of any such statement. He knew very well that Mr. Blaine, having said all that his devotion to his wife and familv made it necessary for him to say, would be likely to take no notice of Mrs. Nevins Blaine's challenge. He therefore pleaded with his client as soon as she ar rived in New York, and he at first found her very set in her purpose to publish all the love letters and to set forth in great de tail the miserable story of the domestic trials of herself and her late husband. The counsel then said to young Mrs. Blaine that the publication of anv state ment would be likely to injnre herself, or at least to cause a. reaction from "public sentiment such as was voiced in the opinion of the South Dakota. Judge. .He said to her: 0 The Argument of Her Counsel. "You have taken your case into court; you have produced your evidence; on it you have been sustained by the court, and yon certainly ought to be satisfied with the opinion expressed by the Judge. You have won your case, and with it you ought to be content "Why should you appeal from a court that has decided in your favor, to a newspaper controversy. To begin a contro versy will not only weary those who have already become tired of this affair and of seeingit mentioned in the papers, but will also give rise to the suspicion or accusation that yon do not feel fully vindicated by a judicial finding in your favor. For your own sake it would be far better to let the matter drop where it is. If anything is said in private which reaches your ears, or there appears in the pipers anything which seems to be an accusation, all that you need do is to say, The courts have heard the evidence in this matter, and have vindi cated me.'" Mrs. Blaine was at last brought to see the force of this presentation by her counsel, and gave him and her friends to understand that she would take this ad vice and let the matter drop where it is now. She is, how-; ever, an impulsive woman, somewhat arbi trary, and her best friends here are not wholly sure that she may not take it into her head when she recovers from her illness to write out a statement, incorporate the lov e letters, and give it to the press. Watch for the To-let Lists In to-morrow's Dispatch. They will be un usually satisfactory. Thrre Special Mnslin Underwear Bargains. 200 fine muslin gowns, Si 50, worth 2 00; 100 fine muslin drawers, 50c, worth 75c; 200 fine corset covers, 35c, worth 50c, These are all lace and embroidery trimmed. Many other bargains. A. G. Campbell & Sons, 27 Fifth av. Select a House Prom the special to let lists in to-morrow's Dis patch. They will be very complete. Mel I or & Hoene Sell th'e.best pianos and organs made, and on the easy payment plan. You can get an instrument with your "pin money." "Palace of Music," 77 Fifth avenue. Watch for tho To-Let Lists In to-morrow's Dispatch. They will be un usually satisfactory. Marriage Licenses Issued Testerday. Name. . Residence. Ludwir Rehnjrnest Munhall station Mary Nordqueit Munball station Marshall Anderson Pittibur Mary E. Smith Allegheny Henry J. Kohler Pittsburg MargretMoloz Pittsburg Alfred Schwartz Lrccliburg HannaJausm McKeesport A. W. Reynolds .....Pittsburg Lillie L, Washington Allegheny W. T. Schsrr Reserve township Johanna Wlnckle Reserve township Charles Mnellerscbom Pittsburg Elizabeth Helmer Pittsburg John O'Brien Baldwin townshlD Ruth Sherwood Baldwin township James McKlssick Pittsburg Maggie Patton Pittsburg Benjamin Johnson Pittsburg Geneva James Pittsburg Julius Krause , Pittsburg EmmaKasten Pittsburg Nels J. Forsbcrg McKeesport Ellen S. Ludahl .McKeesport Ernest C. Damn Harrison township Mary E. Brannan Harrison township Edward Peatzel PalnesTlIle. O. Era Gaulcy Imperial The Grip Has shown by its sndden attacks, its terriblo prostration, and its serious, often fatal re sults, that it is a disease to be feared. For a fully developed ease of the Grip, the ears of skilled physician is necessary. As a Pre entlvq of the Grip wo confidently recom mend nooas barsapariua, wmen purines the blood, keeps the kidneys and liver in healthy action, gives strength where it is needed and keeps up tne health-tone so that the system readily throws off attacks of the Grip, or of Di; tiphtherla, Typhoid Fever, nu other serious diseases. Pneumonia an After the. Grip Hood's Sarsaparilla Is un equalled for purifying tho blood and restor ing the health and strength. "Six Weeks With the Grip Was my sad experience early in 1891, and I was even then very weak and unable to w ork over a few hours. Being urged to take Hood's Sarsaparilla ' I did so, and in 10 days I could work, sleep well, had a good appetite, and gained in health and strength." Chab. Krswxll, Toledo, Ohio. HOOD'S PILLS act easily, vet promptly and efficiently on the liver ana bowels, cure headache. URLING BROS., DENTISTS NO. 42X SIXTH ST., Cor. FENS. Set or teeth 95 COand.npward Gold fillings 1 00 and upward Alloy fillings. ,.... 60 and upward Gas or vitalized air, 60c; eztactlng, 25c Teeth Inserted without a plate. s-70-wu I DIED. BOEHMEB Friday, March 11, at the home of his parents, Louis C. Boihkeb, aged 90 years 10 months. Funeral services at his parents' resldenoe, Shalersville, Thirty-fifth ward, city, at 2 p. v., Mondat, March 14. Friends of the family are respectfully Invited to attend. Inter ment private. 3 COOK On Thursday evening, at 9:15, Framk Elwood Cook, only child of Charles H. and Lena Cook, aged 3 years, 1 month. Funeral from parents' residence, 222 Jane stieet, Southside, on Suuday, March 13, 1893 at 2 p. x. Friends of the family aro respect fully invited to attend. S EASLY On Friday, March 11, 1892.at9-.50 t. v., at the Home, corner Tunnell street and Webster avenue, Catheeise, relict of the late Andrew Easly. High mass of requiem at St. Paul's Cathe dral on Mohdat xobjiho, at 9 J0 o'clock. In terment at Latrobe, Fa. GINN1BF On Friday, Maroh 11, at 8.05 A. M., Thomas GiHNirr, ased 18 yeais, member of Mount Marice Lodge 360, 1. O. O. F. Funeral from his residence, 13 Juniata street, Allegheny, on. Sunday, March 13, at 2 p.,n. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. 2 HENEY At the family residence, 87 Tag jrart street, Allegheny, on Saturday, March 12, 1392, at noon, Frederick Louis, son of John and Otio Henry, aged 6 months. N.otico of funeral hereafter. HEREON Friday, March 11, 1893, at 12 P. m., Susak. beloved wire of Patrick Herron, in the 57th year of her age. The funeral will take place Hobday, at the late residence, 9 Grant avenue, Millvale Dor onsb, at 8 JO a. ir then to proceed to church, where requiem nigh mass will be officiated. EHBSTEIN On Friday. March U, 1892. at ioi.it ir .TiraiB Khrstbts'. brother of Mrs. Michael Ernwein, aged 76 years 11 months and 18 days. Funeral services on Sukday at 2 r. jc from the residence of his sister, Mrs. M. Ernwein, No. 1701 Carson street, Southside, Pittsburg, Pa. Interment later private. 2 KAKNALLY On Saturday, March 12, 1892, at 1 a. it., Theresa, daughter of Thomas and Mary Kannally, aged 12 years. Funeral on Mosday, Maroh 14, 1892, at 2 p. jr., from parents' residence, 21 Bayard street, Allegheny. KIRBY On Friday, March 11. 1892, at 5 o'clock a. x., John Kirby, husband or Mast eie Duffv. and only son of William and Bes sie Kirby, aged 89 years. LOCKE On Friday, March 11. 1892, at 3 30 p. if., Olive anistasia, infant daughter ol F. E. and Elizabeth Locke, nee Marsh. Funeral on Susday at 2 p. m., from parents' residence, 1829 Carson street, Southside. 2 LOEFFLER On Friday, Maroh 11, 1892, at 7:45 p. v., Henry Lobjtixb, aged 69 years. Funeral from his late residence. No. 78 Forty-fourth street, on Sunday, March 13, at 4 o'clock p. x. friends of the family are re spectfully invited to attend. LUTY On Saturday, March 12, 1892, at 9 A. jr., Frank J., oldestson or Gottlieb and Mary Luty, aged 24 years. Funeral on Monday, Marc 14, 1892, at 1 p. x., from parents' residence, Emsworth, Fa. 2 MEHdER-On Thursdav. Maroh 10, 1892, at 4 a, m.1 at her residence, Rebecca street. East r- .- --- - -. .. Euu, MAItY A., wue Ol H. i. jueicer, m 1101 23th year. Funeral services at St. Andrew's Episcopal Church, Ninth street, on Sunday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock. Friends of the family re spectfully invited to attend. MOHAN On Friday evenine, March 11, 1892, at 8:15 r. tt Ella F., daughter of Peter J. and Annie Mohan, aged 5 years, 9 months and 12 days. Funeral from parents' residence, 302 Is land avenue, Allegheny City, on Sunday at ternoon, at 1 p. m. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. 2 MOHAN On Filday morning, March 11, 1892, at 1:30 o'clock, Annie M., daughter of Peter J. and Annie Mohan, aged 9 years, 9 months and 6 days. Funeral from parents' residence, S02 Island avenue, Allegheny City, on Sunday after noon, at 1 o'clock. Friends of the family are lespectfully invited to attend. ' 2 McDOWELL On Saturday, March 12, 1893, at 1:30 o'clock A. M., Jakes H. McDowell, in his 23th year. Funeral services at his late resldenoe, Biookficld, Ross township, on Monday afternoon, at 1 o'clock. Friends 'of 'the family are respectfully invited.to attend. PBESTON On Saturday, March 12, 1892, at 3 p. M., at the residence ot Mrs. "Wyman, No. 10 Hill street, James Preston, aged 31 years. Funeral from above residence to-horbow (Monday) at 2 p. m. REFELD On Friday, March 11. 1892, Mrs. Mary A. Refeld j(nee Dowllng), wifo of Victor A. Keteia, agea aa years. Funeral will take place at 10 o'olock Sun day, March 13, from Hazelwood station. In terment Mt, Calvary Cemetery, Pittsburg, on B. & O. road. Friends of the family aro respectfully Invited to attend. REGAN At the Mercy Hospital on Friday. March 11, 1S92. nt 5 o'clock P. H., Patrick Began, aged 64 years. Funeral from Flannery's undertaking rooms, 5(3 Grant street, on Monday, the 14th inst., at 8.30 o'clock a. M. Services at St. Agnes' Church at 9 o'clock. Friends are in vited to attend. SAMPSON On Friday, March 11. 1892, at 6 o'clock a. Ji., John Sampson, aged 69 years. Funeral from the family residence, corner Center avenue and Francis street, on Sunday afternoon at 1 o'clock, services at St. Bridget's Church at 1:30 o'clock. Friends ot the family are respectfully invited to attend. 2 TEAENEY On Sundav, larch 6, 1892, at Bloomington, 111., Wm. Teabney. only son of Kuth and Thomas Tearney, aged 24 years, 7 months nnd 7 days. Funeral to-day trom his parents' residence, Railroad street, between Nineteenth and Twentieth streets, at 1:30. Friends of the family are respectfully invited to attend. THOMAS On Fi iday, March 1L at 4 p. X., Wx. P. Thomas, only eon or David nnd Mar- aret Thomas, aged 1 year, 4 months and 5 ays. Funeral will take place from the parents' residenco, head of Brownsville avenue, Thirty-first ward, on Sunday, March 13, 1892, at 2 o'clock p. M. Friends are invited. 2 WALSH On Friday, March 11, 1892, at 11.30 a. m., Leo, son of John and Kate Walsh, aged S months and 12 days. Funeral from tho parents' residence. South Twenty-fourth and Larkins alley, on Sun day, Maroh 13, at 2 p. m. Friends of tne family are respectfully invited to attend. 2 WORKMAN Henrietta Hastings, infant daughter of Harry L. and Jennie Shepard Woikman, at 9:15 a. m., Saturday, March 12, aged 16 months. Funeral services on Monday, March 14, at 3 p. M., from residence, 6437 Marchand street, East End, Pittsburg. 2 ANTHONY MEYER, (Successor to Meyer, Arnold & Co., Lim.) UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER: Office nnd residence, 1134 Penn avenue. Telephone connection. myl3-3t-MWFSU JAMES M. FULLERT0N, UNDERTAKER AND EMBALMER, Will remove to new offloe and chapel April 1. Largest livery and boarding stables in Western Pennsylvania. Nos. 6, 8 and 10 Eighth street. feU-WFSu WIIXIAM H. WOOD. Funeral Director and Embalmer. Rooms, 3806 Forbes St., Oakland; residence, 212 Oakland av. Telephone 4024. del3-220-TTSU HEAD STONES AND MONUMENTS SOLD on easy weekly payments. Apply to AMERICAN MONUMENTAL ASSOCIATION, Boom 610. Ferguson block. Third avenue, or 104 Fourth avenue, Pittsburg. Pa. mnl2 2 09II089 A torpid Uver is the source of dyspep- Ma, sick headache, constipation, piles, A bilious fever, chilli and Jaundice. tTutt's Tiny Pills! V have a specific effect onthe Uver, re- w storing' it to healthy action. sscts. o e wsmnc de:o-132-gu IATENTS. SOLICITOR. m I I "TvFutVr! Prttr'l NEW ADVEKTISEMENTS. TIPS OR NO TIPS. The MAIN TI? at Is the PRICE. Misses Straight Goat, Spring Heel Button Boots are being sold at AH $135. Mils SHAPELY, TYLISH, ERVICEABLE. This Shoe is another tri umph of "Our Low Prices." Crowded houses "greet us." The truth ofour prices is so manifest that we are not surprised to see "anxious buyers." Quality main tained at the "highest stand ard. " Bring your family to Great varieties perfect fit ting in every instance. Our Red Line should be seen. It will be the COLOR SHOE of the season. 430-436 MARKET ST. s BRADDOCK HOUSE, 916 BRADDOCK AVENUE. mhl3-wvsn aiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiia LOVELY FACES, WHITE HANDS.j Nothing will : WHITEN and C&BAR : the akin ao quickly aa - Derma-Rovalei Tho new diacoTarr for dissol. : : ring and rumoring dl. coloration, from the cuticle, S ; and bleaching and briichteninf the complexion. ; : There neter was anything like it. Full particulars ; ana pnntozrapns from llie, sent (sealed) J i ABEKTS ! L-S S10 A13AYEASY I Tke DERMA-ROYALE CO. Clncluatl, OhU.S niiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiliiuiu le i-lal-l tsl-Wi.i-a -v- .w,,a-J jj..v-..l- .-.-oc9-nol3-dell-ia9 CANCER1 una TU1I0E3 cured. IT knife. Send for testimon ials. G.B.McMichael, M.D., lag1 (, Duuuiu. .. i mhlS-71-ITSSuWk READTHESETERMS AND SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS For March: On a, bill of $10, $1 down and 50c a week. On a bill of $25, $5 down and $1 a week. On a bill of $50, $8 down and $2 a week. On a bill of $75, $10 down & $2.50 a week On a bill of $100, $10 down &$a50 a week. We Give This Month: With every lot of goods amount ing to $25 we will give a Cos tumer or Hat Tree in Oak or Ma hogany worth at least $4. With each lot of goods amount ing to $50 will give a solid Oak Chair in all desirable finishes, with silk plush upholstered seat. With each lot of goods amount ing to 1 75 we will give a pair of Lace Curtains worth $$. With each lot of .goods amount ing to 100, a $10 Center Table. HIMMELRIGHS jj (HVSV S VSVSSJ0nl TUr PHNM mi I1IMP Dm Hand8m8J practicable, reliable. You have not seen the acme of perfection in Fold I ML UUIlll rULUIHU DLU. ing Bejis unless you have seen it. A splendid variety of sty les here to show you. 923k 925, 927 PENN AVE. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. n A great line is now ready. Such hand some styles at such attractive prices you never saw. Here's a Tan-Colored, Silk Faced, strictly All Wool Overcoat at $9. It is shapely, correct style and as good as any previous gar ments at 12. Think of it only $g. But there are equally great values in swell Whip cords, Covert Cloths, Meltons, Cheviots and -Worsteds. It will pay you richly to see them. Parents should see the Black and Blue Worsteds and Tricots at $5, $6, $-, $9 and 12 genuine bargains. Oaf Taloii DBpanment Announces the arrival of two cases of Woolens direct from England to Pittsburg Custom House per steamers Servia and Aurania. First-class work, correct styles and popular prices are the inducements to visit our Tailoring Department. "Sinbad," the new Spring Derby, is a remarkable success. Prices $2, $2-5' 3 and 3-5 dOTfflERS, TAILORS AND HATTEH3. 161-163 Federal St, Allegheny. mhl3-wssa FAT FOLKS REDUCED BY DR. SNYDER, The Successful Obesity Specialist. Mis. Alice Maple. Oregon, fco. lVlgbt: Before treat ment, 820 lbs.; after treatment, 168 lbs. Ohesity -was regarded By the people of every clime Ai a malady without a. cure Until u most recent time. It was looked on as a misfortune. And all sood people's belief Was naught but starvation diet Could ever hilng relief, r But now this disease is vanquished; Its reign at last is o'er, For a conqueror hath arisen, And people will fear it no more. Xhis specialist lives In Chicago He treats both yontbmnd old age, And on this monster, Obesitv, A sucoessiui war aotu wage. He allows yon a generous diet; uis treatment is sate ana sure; iooesi Ho improves your health as well as your And, besides, it's a permanent care. Just write and ask him about it; If convenient to call Snyder McVicker's building Second floor end of the hall. PATIENTS TREATED BI ItlAlX. No starving, no inconvenience, harmless and no bad effects. Strictly confidential. For circulars and testimonials call or address with 8c in stamps, DR. O. W. F. SNYDER, McVicker's Theater Bolldinc, Chicago, 111. mhl3-28 I stRwS I IT J SRlbtfEPH Moving day is' near at hand, and the'time has come to think of what you need to beautify the old house or re furnish the new. Now's the time of our usefulness. The assortment of Housefurnishings we present is new, stylish and enormous. The pick of bargains from a hun dred factories is here, and you'll be surprised how many nice things you can afford when you learn our prices. DINING ROOM IN ENORMOUS Solid Oak Extension Tables High-Back Chairs. K NKW LENT READING, BUT READ THIS LIST II The following list of library Bound Books (half Levant Morocco, gilt tops), heretofore sold only in sets, we offer by the set or SINGLE VOLUME, while they last, ; Comprising: Kenejm Chillinely, The Caxtons, A Strange Story, Ernest Maltravers, The Parisians, My Novel, Devereux, Night and Morning, Paul Clifford Pelham, "What Will He Do '"With It? Last Days of Pompeii, Last of the Barons, "We Two, Knight Errant, In the Golden Days, A Hardy Norseman, Donovan, Hyperion, Outre Mer, Kenil worth and St" Koman's Well, Guy Manner ing and Ann ot Gierstein, Peveril of the Peat and The Betrothed, Tho Fair Maid of Perth, and The Antiqnarv, Waverley and Woodstock, Fortunes of Nigel and Count Bobert of Paris, Black Dwarf and Quentin Durward, Ked Gauntlet and The Pirate, Bob Eoy and The Heart of Midlothian, Bride of" Lammermoor and Chronicles of the Canongate, The Monastery and The Ab bott, Ivanhoe and The Talisman, The Spy, The Prairie, The Pilot, The Pathfinder, Last of the Mohicans, The Pioneers, The Deerelayer, Ked Kover, The Two Admirals, The Wa'ter Witch, Wing and Wing, Astoria and Salmagundi, Mahomet and Goldsmith, Tales of a Traveler and Sracebridge Hall, Sketch Book and History of New York, Columbus and Tour of the Prairies, The Alhanibra and Conquest of Granada. BOOK BUYERS, ATTENTION ! A WEEK OF Jp, More M M ROOK igfEwiii, Now ftt HUm lb. r is ofbt. REMARKABLE BARGAIN FOR 83c ra OXFORD SERIES, Containing all the Standard Books, printed on fine paper, elegantlybound- in best English cloth. Stamped in black and gold, with Headbands and Silk Bookmarks. 35 EACH, OR Abbot, The File No. 113, Adam Bede, JEiop's Fables, and . KnlolTs, Alhambra, Andersen's Fairy Tales. r oui .riav. Frederick the Great and II H Court. Gilded Clique, Gold Elsie, Green Mountain Boys, Griffith Gaunt, An Egyptian Princess, Aurora rioya, Arabian Nights' En tertainments, Arundel Motto, Baron Munchausen, Birds of Prey, Bride of the Nile, Chaplet of Pearls, Charles Auchester, Charlotte Temple. Gmlderoy, Gulliver's Travels, Hardy Norseman, A Harry i-onequer, Hanay Andy, Henry Esmond, House on the Marsh, Hypatia, In Peril of His Life, In the Schillingsconrt. Children of the Abbey, ivannoe, Jane Eyre. John Halifax. coming uace, Conigsbv, Cousin Pons. June, Crown of Wild Olives, Keneim cnuitngiy, Ladr Andlev's Secret. uaniel ueronua, Daughter of an Em press, The David Copperfleld, Daughter of Heth, Deemster, The Donal Grant, Dove in the Eagle's Nest, Tho East Lynne, Effle Ogilvie, Egoist, The Ernest Maltravers, Eugene Aram, Fair Women, Faith and Unfalth, Pellx Holt, Last of the Mohicans, Lady Castlemaine's Divorce. Leronge Case, Lorna Doone, Ldtliair. Macleod of Dare, Madcap Violet, Martin Chuzzlewlt, March in the Banks. Masterman Ready, -viiauiemarcn, Molly Biwn. Moonstone, The Monastery, Monsieur Lecoq, BY IVIAil,,. FLEISHMAN FURNITURE QUANTITY. $5 U P $1 EACH ADVERTISEMENTS. NOT BORROWED BOOKS. RIGHT THROUGH. MISCELLANEOUS. "THE fflSTOKTT OF DAVID GKIEVE," by the author of "Eobert Eljraere," cloth bound, 78c. Prescotfs CONQUEST OF MEXICO, inj 3 handsome volumes, good paper and print, Only $1.35 Per Set CAELTLE'S ESSAYS, 4 volumes, dura ble binding and large, clear print, $3.25 Per Set. Eawlinson's SEVEN ANCIENT MON ABCHIES, in 3 leather-bound volumes, gilt top, large type, profusely illustrated, Only $2.70 Per Set "GIBBON'S HISTORY OF P.OME," in 3 volumes, half Levant Morocco binding, gilV tops, good print and good paper,. Only $4.48 Per Set EMEKSON'S ESSAYS, in 2 volumes, half leather bound binding, large, clear print, For $1.48 Per Set THACKERAY'S WOKKS. in 10 nicely bound volumes, good print and many illus trations, Only $3 Per Set Bibles. Prayer Books and Hymnals at cut prices. FAMILY BIBLES. 3 FOR $1.00. Moth3. Silence of Dean Malt- Murders in the Bue Mor, Mv Heart's Darling. land, Squire's Legacy, Strange Story. A My Lord and My Lady, Sunshine and Boses, Mystery 01 urctvai. Swiss Family Robin son, Syrlln, The Young Duke. Mysterious Island, The Nick of the Woods, Nicholas NIcfcleby, No Name. Thaddeus of Warsaw, The Countess Eve. Old Mam'sdle's Secret The Fairy of the Alps, Three Guardsmen, Tom Brown's School Old Myddleton's Money. Other People's Money days. uuimar, Owl House, The Panl and Vlrginii, Phantom Ship, Tbe Pickwlcfe Papers. Tom Brown at Oxford. Tom Cringle's Log. Twenty Years Alter, Twice 'i old xaies. Two Years Before tha Pilgrim's Progress. Mast. Pilot, The Prairie. The Uarda. Vanity Fair, Vendetta. The Prime Minister, The Princess of the Moor, The Vicar of Wakefield. Vivian Grey. Queen Hortense, tied Hover. Vixen, Waver'ey, We Two. Beproach of Anners- ley, Bhoda Fleming, Robinson Crusoe. Wee Wide, What's Mine's MIhbl Wooed and Married, Widow BedottPapers, Willy Reilly, Woman's Face, A Woman in White, Tha Woman's Love Story. Wooing O't, Tho anoni. Rob Koy, Kory O'More, Romola. Scottish Chiefs. Sesame and Lilies, Shandon Bells, Shirley. Sketch Book, Zenobia. 12o E3CTISA.. & CO., 504, 506 and 508 MARKET ST. mhl3-37 Five samples of our bargains in BEDROOM SUITS AT $12.50 AND $14. They are but samples of the quality and value we give in the higher price suits. You can't duplicate these in the city. HALL RACKS. Still some of those ANTIQUE OAK RACKS at 50 PER CENT OF REAL VALUE. We can sell you a Hall Tree at any price and any style, and a better one for the price than your money will secure elsewhere. Jr SEE I WINDOW 923 TO 927 PENN A -.3 A $ i A i
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers