The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, March 30, 1868, Image 2

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.lie littgillgt:.,,.."'.,‘..:.,,Oalttt
THE
By k.•mtvr co..+Rtzt.
Whatever weight the hours orne - • •
Along the path of frost andsnow, •
The world is never too forlorn
For birds to sing again.; we know
That earliest buds will soon expand
That Spring is somewhere in the land
For hark the blue bird sings.
Somewhere the grass is-green again, -
The meadow mild with shower and sun;
Out bud the trees, up starts the grain
-Through balmv woods the brook dot , h ran, i
'lff anywhere such things may be
Then why not soon for thee and me ?
For hark! the blue bird sings.
The world Is old, the world Is old.
But Spring Is ever fresh and new:
No dream so fair, no hope sobold, .
But some sweet Slav may find it true:
Who knows how soon that morn may rise.
And till us with a glad surprise?
For hark: the blue bird sings.
EPHEMERIS
—John B. Gough is going to Europu.
-3 T
land has the chicken cholera and
the rin erpest. _
—Ph adelphia has eighty thousand public
school hildren. .
—Funcalla the Bosphorus a Turkish bath
—for ladies only.
—Another scientific expedition is going to
the Rocky Mountains.
—Still another dead. baby in a box has
been found in St. , Louis.
--peneral Burnside has a $250;000 rail
rodd,contraCt iri Indiana.
—Dan Drew objects to being thought to
be a relative of An—drew.
—The "What-is-It" ie loose and frightens
people
,in its neighborhood. - '
French• papers say c that Lord Derby is
to be created Dnke of Knowsley.
—Henry ,Bingsley Says:that Robinson
Crnsoe was merely an allegorical account
of De Foe's own life. Poor De Foe.
-When is
_ : iron the most ironical? asks
Pun. W_hen it is a railing to be sure. •
—European physicians have decided that
in many - Casos coniumption. is Contagious.
—Wmt BlialteepeaN as a batcher's ap
prentice is <the latest novelty in sculpture.
Addeli'na Patti sang in Pittsburgh wlien
she wantonly eight years old, in 1852 or '53.
—At a recent levee at Buckingham Palace
Queen Victoria wore the lioh-i-noor as a
—Gustave Dore was at Rossini's birthday
dinner and made a good joke. Excellent
for .Dore.
—Eighteen thousand dollars worth of
damage Was done in Mercer county by the
recent; freallita:-
-The Prussian Government . objects to
Germans emigrating to Peru and' , cautions
them against it.
--46 persons dipped in twenty minutes is
the boast of a man vito is called the "plum
-pion baptizer."
—Spring aver-coats in Philadelphia and
farms in South Carolina coat just the same
amount of money. _
—London had a blue horse. Philadelphia
has a magenta donkey. Thr former died and
the latter was :dyed.
7-Peolate oaoks are COng' into fashion
again in Paris. Baron Rothschild was the
first to make the innovation.
--Undine, Wilson's Minstrels, Ortuid
Duchess, and the Hungarian &Fads form
the amusements of St Louis.
, •
-The Prince of Wales is hnitating.s3-eorge
IV. even to spending a large amount of
money on a pageint in:lreland,
-=lO,OOO Germans 4 ire engaged to come
over from Bremen to Baltimore this year,
and from fromh thence be distributed South.
—Andrew Johnson's house in Tennessee
is being thoroughly renovated. The White
House is to be too; at, least "such is our de
sire."
—The largest raft seen here for a long
time came down the . Allegheny on Friday,
and is now lying below the , suspension
Robert Browning is writing a poem
twice as long as the Iliad. Mr. Browning
has written several that were twice as
comprehensible. _
revenue, of Russia his increased
•,
35,000,000 of silver• rubies during the year;
a very pleasant little addition even to the in.:
come of a nation.
—Mrs. Chapman Coleman, noted as an
excellent trivaslater- of Genzum books, is
going to write a biography of her father; the
late John, J. Crittenden.
—Benjamin B. Bently Esq., of
has been appointed by Gov. Geary to
be President Judge-of the new ludiciia dis
trict in Lycoming county. • '
—At last the Thames tunnel is to be 'good
for something; heretofore it has 'been used as'
a curiosity, now the undergioun,d railroads
are going to make use of it. •
—Somebody thinks that Jenkind .must be
getting ' very Old,' lie:was a ooterrtpbrary of
N. P. Willis,' who is dettd, and bilried, but
Jenkins bids,fair to live on forever.
—Milan, Missguri, was =red recently by
' a large black cliind with a perfectly outlined
coffin done in white right inthe centre.' The
cloud stood over Miltn . for some tune.
—Edwin Booth has gotten:bon:to again
from his long , southern and western tour;
and will begin along engagement this even
ing at his "own theatre in 'PhilidelPhia.
=The New Maven Railroad Company in
.
tend-Shortly to lay down about four thou
and tons of steel rails upon their road in=
stead of,iron ones,. __which have to be re
moved. -
—A Nashv il le boarding house keeper
heixt on. murder,- put heat .`pins into her
breed: She never got • tO . the top of her berit
' 'bOwever, for she'wes taught 'Lind inearcers*
ted 4 , otherwise, juggid. , • '
Vanity Fair and Jane:Eyre, were both
in existence along time before their authors ,
could find publishers for them.-Take ',am
. •
'age ye gentlemen who write for the maga
iines and never tux)
—When George IV. of England was a
boy of fourteen be was severely_ !logged
with a horse-whip by Persons acting under
his father's orderv. • Genie IV. was. o ne of
the worst 'and eeite*Pilble of 41116.
:Albert Edwardmust surely ha v e, een flog,.
ged when aged fourteen:
+—Pairing boning water olOettaat,":itki
was the favortte amusement of the wife of
a'respeetable shop keeper in London. Keep
ing the'wives of all sorts of respectable peo
ple in hot water is the; favorite amusement
of servant ~trirls here, _The, servant girls
have.more.than a balatitee hi:their favor.
—An American Captain :Eowarii. ; hit
niitn niqued cars Mira,
.on :the head with a
water bottle, in Liverpool, because he would,.
sing "the bonnie blue flag," in spite of fre
quent requests that he should cease. An al
tercation followed by the 'water bottle was
the result. Carstairs died a day or two , af
terwards from the wound.
—Agnes Brown, of Ohio, - is said to be 110
and Mary Floyd, of Kentucky, 101 years old;
both are colored. It is remarkable the number
of colored "centurions," as A. Ward would.
say. So many colored persons have been
unable to keep family bibles, that we think
that probably their memory magnifies their
years.
—The New York World says : England
has had an Admiral King; maSr . we not as
fitly make an Admiral President?" Let us
extend that logic a little. England decapita
ted a King; why shall we not hang a Presi
dent? England drove away one King in
disgrace and appointed his successor; why
shan't we do the same thing to a President ?
ON ST PATnrcx's DAY, after the proces
sion, a grand banquet was given in Montre
al. Among the guests was Gen. AVERILL,
the United States Consul General.. After a
most complimentary, speech ikthe General,
the chairman gave as a toast' -11• C P s ie .Presi
dent of the United States. ? . .'l 4 'o this the
General responded in a speech, -which was
so stamped with the General's usual good
sense that we give below an extract. After
referring briefly to the perional compliments
of the chairman he mentioned the present
crisis in home politics, and his belief that
they would, turn out all right in time, and
then added:
I believe in the hard-working Anglo-
Saxon, and for - ;that matter in everybody
elsztuit works and respects labor, and I do
no elieve that any individual or party will
be able to injure the country seriously or I
permanently. "The mills of the Gods
grind slow, but exceedingly fine. " These
mills are now grinding the idleness, pride,
. presumption, and barbarisin of the South ,
their ignorant lazy whites—their bold and
able, but often presumptions white men and
their poor barbarian freedmen—a ,mixed
and mighty grist, which no power on earth
can prevent being reduced to atoms and
moulded into new forms. Such noble char
acters
in war and peace as the Lees and 1
Longstreets of the South will serve as a 1
strong leaven to the new mould. Beyond
this generation I look with confident assur
ance to the day when that land—fertilized
by the dust of this decayed past, and fur
rowed by the ploughshare of war—will
[ yield a rich harvest of civilization and pros
perity. And we shall not, object to the in
troduction of- new materials there. We
want plenty of Irishmen. Irish blood. has
flowed since the foundation of thy' Republic
into the veins of our people, and has been
spilled freely upon our soil: They bend
i
their steps into every avenue of our ndus
tries- the traditions, poetry, and songs of
Ireland are established in our hearts and
minds, so that it is no wonder St. Patrick's
Day has come to be observed in every town
and hamlet of our country almost as regular
' ly as any of ournational holidays."
A slight reference to the proposed Irish
reform cloud the speech, which was received
with enthusiasm.
AT Todmorden, England, the ReV. Mr. ,
Plows, the incumbent of the parish, Mrs.
Plows and several of the servants were at
tacked, on the night of the 2d instant, by a
suitor of one of the maid servants who had
been discharged on account of his visits.
Armed with a hatchet , and a pistol, the man
made a furious attack on 'Mr. Plows, and
frightfully mutilated him about the head. He
next attacked the female servants, and a
housemaid was shot dead. , The murderer
then armed himself with a poker, and pro
ceeded to a bedroom in which Mrs. Plows
was lying, and where she had recently given
birth to a child. Stripping down the bed
:clothes, he fired at Mrs. Plows, but the ball
difl'not take effect. He next' attacked her
• saiagely with a poker, inflicting severe scalp
wounds, breaking her nose, and otherwise
injuring her. While in the act of striking
another blow at her, his arm was arrested by
a neighbor. Mr. mid Mrs. Plows remain in
a precarious state.
TIIE Prince of Wales held a levee at St.
James' Palace on the 3d inst., which was
attended by the entire diplomatic corps - with
the exception of the American embassy.
The Pall Mall Gazette says that " this arose
from.the fact that. the American Congress
has recently adopted a resolution ordering
the diplomatic representatives of the United
States not to wear court suits. Mr. Adams
does notmi u e to revive the sensation excited
a fewyears 'two by the attempt of an ardent
American ditat to appear at court in a
simple evenin dress,--an attempt which
resulted in a squabble with the flunkeys and
along diplomatic correspondende—and con
sequently he stays at home."
ATTEMPTS have frequently' been made to
use bitumen and asphaltum in manufactur
ing illuminating gas, but , they have not
given economical results, for various reasons.
Their combination with coal in the retorts,
before distillation, has, however, as already
referred to in the Ledger., shown a marked
improvement in the quality of the light. A
mixture of 25 per cent. of bituMen and 75
per, cent.' of a certain kind of gas coal,
yielding by itself 1$;1-2 candle gas, has given
a 19 and 20 candle gas, and there is little
reason'to doubt that we may in some such
manner secure abetter light than we have
enjoyed for some time. Certain varieties of
petroleum may be equally or even more ap
plicable than bitumen. •
-On Sunday night a vast mass of ice
floated out, of Rondout Creek and carried
With a seetional dock' owned by Mr. Mor
,gin Everson, on which lay the steamboat
S. F. Brown. Soinelifteen or twenty canal
boats, a sloop, a Sleightburg ferry boat, and
a barge were all torn from ' their modsringe
and forced into the ,main channel. Seven
sunk the light-house, the others drifted
about promiscuously in the river until Tues
„day _noon, at which.time steamboats of the
`Cornell Line were busily •engaged in tow
lag them back”into the creek.
Tit! Louisville Atonal don't think Ben.
Wade a man of sufficient;polish to - fill the
Presidential chair. It says , of him that he
is "the coarsest. of the many coarse men
whom the vicissitudes of- the times have
thrown into Congress." It is therefore
s trongly in favoiof retaining the remarkably
,)30bei t polite; Polished eeeePent..
iow, YorkMedlc
al Collme ---
:Wintieri-hclosed its filth year on 'Monday
night .81nee.the opening of this histitution
thirty-Aire have been gradtiatid with the de4
gree of Doctor of and s
l ev er al of
the Medici
alumni have already buil ne, t up alarge and
lucrative practice.
: N ' : MONDAY. MARCH:;
DENTISTRY
,• . -
ONLY
0, • l. • .
d FULL SET-OF ARTIFICIAL TEETH
FOR EIGHT DOLLARS.
UPPER - AND LOWER SET FOR *l2.
TEETH - EXTRACTED WITHOUT PAIN.
NO CHARGE FOR EXTRACTING WHEN ARTI
_FICIAL TEETH ARE ORDERED.
ALL" "SVORS WARRANTED FOR FIVE YEARS:
LAUGHING GAS FREE 'OF CHARGE, AT .%
QUIN.OI' A. SCOTT'S
'Steam Dental Establishment,
278 PENN STREET, 3D DOOR ABOVE HAND.
N. B.—As DR. - SCOTT le a licensee under the
- Goodyear Patents, be will not make any ~ ..notribo-,
gtun rubber" sets, but will continue to manufacture
the genuine articIe—VULCANITE. -ml=O(l,4T
GAS FIXTURES.
GAS FIXTURES
32. Et , 3:L es I leingi,
FOR -GAS AND OIL
Just received. the finest and largest assortment
ever opened in this city.
WELDON & KELLY,
141 WOOD STREET, COR. VIRGIN ALLEY
inli24:=.
DRY GOODS.
1868. DRY GOODS. 1868 .
ARBUTHNOT,
SHANNON
WHOLESALE
7ZIII:Y* arC,CYJDIS
NOTIONS,
At Eastern Prices I
Buyers are Invited to call and ex-
amine our Goods and Prices.
No. 115 Wood Street, Pittsburgh.
migleleaM
N EW GOODS ,
JUST -RECEIVED, AT
• -
J. M. BURCEMLD & CO.'S,
No. S 7 Market Street.
•
BLEACHED 31IISLIBB,
CALICOES AND" CRASH,
•
Entire Stock of Goods Closing Out
To make room for extending the Store Room back.
REMEMBER VIE MACE,
No. 87 Itarket Street.
noi:_ - • _
lJ (Late Wilson, Carr & C 0.,)
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
I Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods,
o. 94 WOOD STREET,
Third door above Diamond alley,
PITTSBURGH, PA.
SECURITY AID COMFORT FOR
, ►THE TRAVELING COMMUNITY.
J. B, HARRIS' SAFETY FIRE JACKET,
Car Heater and Moderator,
For SMOKE AM) HOT ATIR FLUES, dispensing
with the use of Stoves and Fires in or about the -
Passenger or Baggage Cars, with the attachment to
graduate the beat to any _temperature that may be
desired without the possibility of tiring the car or
cars to which the Jacket may be attached.
- Having obtained of the United States Letters Pat
ent for a Safety Jacket which is warranted to resist
the most intense beat that may he adplied to It in
the position and purpose for which it Is intended.
It is a sure protection from accidents by lire. origi
nating from defective flues, or where iron pipes are
used as conducted s for smoke or heat. It- is appli
plicable to alt piping that may become overheated,
and is warranted to give perfect satisfaction where.
wood or other combustible material may be placed
In muse proximity thereto. I am now ready to ap
ply my invention to stores, dwellings, facteries.
ships, steambo:.ts, railroad. cars, &e.,
wherever.
pipes as conductors are made dangerous by being
overheated and security desired. I will sell, on ap
plication, rights to manufacture or to use the above
Invention: also, territorial rights, to such as may
wish to engage in settling priv:leges, either by State
or county.
J. IL HARRIS.
Witirizr3n,w c:lli t e i rTof„..l7 4 orle P p l it7 ; :t
ny Valley Rallroaa, lath aru, titteburgh, ra.
te2.italo
TittasiTitir DEPARTMENT,
OFTICE LIMIT HOIISS 110611.1), tt
WASIIIXOTON CITY, March
.17th, L ibea.
PROPOSALS FOR . STONE.
SEALED 'PROPOSALS will be received at -this
office until 'o'clock on •
Eiday, the 10th Day of April, 1868.
for the necessary stone for the face wall of a pier of_
Waugoshatice Light Station,
Straits of Mackinac, in accordance with plans and
specifications, copies of Which can be obtained upon
application to the undersigned at this office.
miilo:ni IMIUBRICK. Chairman,
HE GREAT HOUSEHOLD
FRIEND OF TUE AGE.
T -
•"Queen" .
The_Triumphant,
THE QUEEN •. OF THE . WASH TUB.
BUY IT. - TRY IT.
FOR GENERAL WARIHNO PT!' RPOSER PPM
PRONOUNOEDUNPRECEDENI'ED, cheaperthan
soap—cleanses Mare tboroOghlr-CtlAtS less. money-
saves wore time and labor, and is sold by all Grocers.
Ono trial will demonstrate Its superiority'and secure
It a firm plate la the affection or the entire .
house
hold. Bienutuetured by the . • •
.111149$ MANUFACTURING
Odic°, No. 130 wooasTHEET. Pittsbnuch.
—„—_.
MAtillLE &kLATE iLINTLES)
PITTSBURGH 'STEAM MARBLE AHD — SLATE WORKS.
.
. Office , end_LWariroomrThl, and, 353, ,I„tcgirry,
ifpitEEZ mantle Waterman Oa SCConti 014:041". .
Persons wanting Marble orglato .mansies Ink
it to their interest.to call. Workmanship, not .
celled in anyplace, and prlyes as. low as in Eastern
, cities. Marble* Mantimi , Punilitire., Slabs which
hayc beeches discolered'bh smoke, oils or uolds, can
be Marbleised and made to look's,' wen:es new ,
There other plasm in West( Puna s itssinia
'where Slate Mantles are manufactured:
Ml:kinds or Marble Work Alone in the beitulanner.
Marble Cutters suppliOd withiSaweazmerge skEnat+
ern priced, ptyriagp ft 001 41 1 - •
W:'
ItEMPI 6 .I bales Key Rough, now
bindle& for este - • .
m ISAIAH. DICKEY & CO.
!MEI
NCO.,
AND
AT TUE
CARPETS, OIL O/PTHS &C.
MIM
: ::• IRgs.
DIE VERY LATEST`
P tcrIPTERNS
CARPETS.
.N EST ;-•
YVES •
CARPETS,
I, AND SOLD
, BOON AS
Do
ARE DAIL
RECEIVE]
EIMMI
Y LOWEST.
TM
HcCALLtH BROTHERS,
51 STREE'I'. abo've Wood
- -
1868 . 301 T M STOCK 1868 .
OF • '
. .
_ .
. . .
CARPETS,
JUST OPENING,
•
LARGE ASSOR TMENT,
, •
AU Qualities - •
LOWEST. PRICES IN THE CITY
SPECIAL INDUCEMENTS TO THOSE WIIO RUT
TO SELL. .
. .
BOTARO ROSE & CO •
21 Fifth Street,
zahle“.l&AT OVER BATES k BELL'S.
23 .• JUST. IMPORTED, 23
And .Espe claily Adapted to this Market,
VELVET CARPETS,
OF MOST ELEGANT DESIGNS.
English Body and Tapestry Brussels,
INGRAINS AND BEMPS,
-THE FINEST ASSORTMENT AND TUE LOWEST
PRICES IN THE CITY.
COMMON CARPETS,
AS CENTS PER YARD.
OLIVERINCLINTOCK &CO .
leff: No. 23 Fifth Street.
71
73
DicFARLAND & COLLINS
ARE NOW OPENING THEIR
NEW SPRING STOCK,
OF 1
CAI~,PET~,
OIL CLOTHS,
WINDOW SHADES
CURTAIN GOODS,
PURCHASED LAST MONTH FOR CASH.
AND IN MANY INSTANCES AT
Less than • Actual Cost ,to Manufacture.
These Goods could not now be replaced for the
came cost, and are offered.FOß CASH at
WHOLESALE AND RETAIL,
Far Below Their Present Value,
AT THE PLACE WHERE BARGAINS CAN AL
WAYS BE HAD ON THE BEST STOCK
IN THIS MARKET.
Nos. 71 and 73 Fifth Street,
SECOND FLOOR.
feioatwraT
STEAM
•
CARPET BEATING
ESTABLISHMENT,
Which TEN YEARS , . TRIALin New York and oth
er Eastern cities has proved a complete success.
!ITS ADVANTAGES: . .
lst—rading and shrukkage are completelyavold
ed. - • , •
ripping apart necessary.
3d—When freed from dust, moths or their laryae,
the Carpet looks nearly ad good as. new, save the
natural fading from wear. , - • , •
4th—When perfeetly clean, a Carpet will wear as
long again, a desirable matter as a mere point of
economy, to say nothing of looks. • •
ALL ORDERS LEFT AT TLIE OFFICE,
No. - 179 Libertk:'Street,
Or addressed to F. 0, Box 473, will receive prompt
attention. • , •.
ifeCLINTOCK,
mble: - PiIiIIVRIE;TOR.
VIENIVOT & CO.`'GENERAL
Ai:NEWSPAPER., .ccatEsroNDING, AND
DVF.141811,i9-.AOENTS,
133 11**Wtt 3trfot -York;
(Itstabllsbod to MA.)
Nets-4ft, lii')). Itelmbota.
39*8 - oodwor,'Ne* Yolk ; Messrs. S , . It. Vonauter
Hill I CO.i aNennioh• otOectiiewTorlilleisrt& 31010. SIOS Groenwlel4 street N ew ..Iro rA ßuce, : Sod I
Thae Yound t
chambers At„;' N 41.; Moms. , Hagar I Co.. yroondero3o Qold feannil
,
ivrtiv , KEElo.(mtr -two
.. and make to order ail kinda-of '
sprogr u ipinjlimo . )&s,i t aTiMi. ~:;
-• ' •
.1 • ' And TU Nsr•srattli t ..or
HAY ItAKES and F
At DUQUESNE WAGON WORKS, near the Peni
tentiary, Allegheny Olt?.
JeliteM COLEMAN, FORRESTER COe
,30, 1868
MERCHANT TAILORS
P McARDLE,
•
•
93% SMITHFIELD STREET, PITTSBURGH,
Keeps constantly ou hand a flue assortrrent of
CLOTHS, CASSIMERES & VESTINGS,
Also,-HENT'S FURNISHING GOODS. GENT'S
COMING MADE TO ORDER, the latest style.
Now READY. •
For the Spring Sawn,
With a large and complete stock of
BOYS', YOUTHS" AND CHILDREN'S
. CLOTHING.
All the new and leading styles, to be found at
• No. 47 ST. CLAIR STREET.
• - GRAY A: LOGAN.
. , •
MERCHANT TAILORS.
JONES DUFF,
No. 3 ST.. CLAIN ,STREET, have just brought
from the East a full -supply of SPRING and SUM
NER GOODS.; CASSIAIEKES, VESTINGS, &c., &c.,
-which they are prepared' to cut -and make up in a
style equal to any shop in the east. or •west. They
are determined, to deserve and hope to receive a
liberal patronage. • • • no7.2:11.11
.
CRACKER BAKERIES
SUPERIOR CRACKERS.
ESTABLISHED IN 151.0.
SHEPHARD'S .
Steam Cracker am! Biscuit Factory,
317 LIBERTY STREET, PITT333IIRGH.
Manufacturer and dealer In all kinds of
CONFECTIONERY,
FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC FRUITS, NUTS,
AND
TAILOB,
FRENCH CRACKERS;
FRENCH CRACKERS.
FRENCH CRACKT.RS.
FRENCH CRACIiERS
FRENCH CRACKERS
FRENCH CRACKERS
And every variety of
MARVIN,
91 Liberty Sireet,, Pittsburgh.
TRY THEM.
GLASS, CHINA, CUTLERY.
100 WOOD STREET.
CHINA, GLASS AND
QUEENSWARE,
SILVER PLATED WARE,
PARIAN STATUETTES:
Bomatali CLASS"
And other STAPLE AND FANCY
GOODS, a-great variety.
'lOO AVDOD,*TREET.
RICHARD E. BREED & CO
100 WOOD STREET
CHARLES REMENSTEIN,
132 Federal Street, Allegheny,
(fourth door above Diamond.)
Glass China Ware & Table Cutlery
AT EASTERN PRICES. Everything required In
alit class store on hand. Call and examine our
goods. ' - • • jelO:n9
- PIANOS, ORGANS, &C.
.---
11 ; kr srTraso 11:NEDS(TuGAN.H CHEAP
-Ij.Sehomatker's Gold Medal Piano,
AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN.
The SCHOMACKER - PIANO combines all the
latest valuable improvements - known' in the con
struction of a first class instrument, and has always
been awarded the highest premium wherever ex
hibited. Its tone is sonorous and sweet. The
workmanship, for darability and beanty„ surpass
all others. Prices from $5O to $l5O. (according to
style and finish,) cheaper than all other so-called
first class Plano.
ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN
Stands at the head of all reed instruments, in pro
ducing the most perfect pipe quality of tone of any
similar instrument in the United States. It is sim
ple and compact in construction, and not liable to
g - •
CARPENTER'S •PATENT " VOX lUYMANA
TREMOLO" is only to be found in this Organ.
Price from 000 to 050.. All guaranteed for five
BARB , KNAXE & =TYLER, •
• inh9 No. 191 ST. aunt STREET.
SECONII:IIAND • .
314,0DEONS AND ORGA.NS,
Itr perfect order,from t 33 to $l3O.
-CHARLOTTE. BLUME,
rata.: ; ..4R ;Fifth et., Ad door above Wood
RATS AND CAPS;
NEW SPRING GOODS.
ALL THE NEW STYLES OF
Hats and Caps,
ARRIVING DAILY, AT
M'CORD & CO.'S,
fen 131 'WOOD STEEET.
MARTIN
DEALER- nr
HATS, CAPS AND ~• PURS,
Ablo,Manufattnrer, Wholesale and Retail Dealer
In TRUNKL,_ VALISES. &e. - No. 132 SMITH
PIELD STREET, Pittsburgh, ,
PEI. -
Orders promptly Idle - Amid sattsfaction guaranteed.
ARCHITECTS:
B _ - -
- 1!40161;
ATC,CHITECTSEt,
FRUIT HOUSE ASSOCIATION BUILDINGS, NOS.
2 and* St. Clair Street, Pittsburgh,:-Pa. Special.
'attention given to' the. designing and building of
'COMM HOUSES and PUBLIC BUILDINGS.
• MECHANICAL AND ENGINEERING
DRAFTSMAN.
Omee,> PhD° Hell, 73 Third Stireet„,
With Messrs HOLLAND it CO.. ' PITTSBURGH.
LUMBER.
FORT PITT LUMBER COMPANY .
Capital, - - $125,000.
PRISIDZICT—EDWARD
SEcturrAitY , ..T. A. WRIGHT.
SOPETIINTZNDINT.-EDIV.DAVISON:
. -
• • _ tautcrons:.. - •
: L. F. Ri . t . n tii cl dl;; .
'JahlrbfrOon, _ kene,e'l
LUMBER YARD -Cornerof istALEIt'A I PDA- 1
LEGIIENY STREETS, Ninth Ward.
___
OFFICE AT FORT PITT GLASS WORS4 , ,t,),vn
ington Street. • • Jazuwo
AUCTION SALES
BY ME M & PHILLIPS. I:I
P
ALMER & PHILLIPS,
AUCTIONEERS ,
And Commission Merchants,
OPERA HOUSE AUCTION ROO
No. 60 Fifth Street, Pittsburgh, Pa.
BOOTS, SHOES, CARPETS
Dry Goods and Notions,
PRIVATE SALE DAY. AND EVENING.
COustirstments Solicited. Promfit Be
turns.
BY SIRTBSWI, wino= & WOLELLPSD.
MONTGOMERY t tvErtuE
PROPERTY
AT AUCTION.
MONDAY. March 30,
.at 3 O'clock F. at.. on th •
premises, will be sold by auction: those threO deal •
table two-story Brick Houses, Nos. 54, 55 and 56.
(North Common.) Montgomery avenue. Each l.oust
contains eight rooms, inclnding batik room; gas. ho
and cold water throughout. Lots have aftout,of 20
feet each. extending back 77 feet, with side alley.
The location of this property is very.desiruble and
convenient for business men, and should command
their attention. -
. . SMITHSON, VANTIOOK. & MCCLELLAND.
m1125:n35 -' • Auctioneers.
LAND AT-PUBLIC SALE:
I will offer at Public Sale, on the j;ireintiseg, on
MONDAY, . 'March 30, Vita% at 1 P. .11144
All that valuable Tract of Land. recently owned an
occupied by Moses Hastings, dec'd. ate of. Nort.
Fayette township,Allegheny. couutv. Pa,
This Tract of Lam, contains 61.44, acre, 1 th
greater part of which ial cleared and -under mime:
the improvements are a good frame'barn and itwmet
house, and orchard of young apple trees; situatedlllll
on the P. C. k C. It. it., Panhandle, 13 miles from
Pittsburgh, anti adjo.ning Oakdale Station. This
property is considered by some persons the best , lo•
cation for , country residences of anything in the
neighborhood. The railroad passes over it; and also
two county roads. Convenient to churches, schools,
post office. mills, Sc. Any person wishing to see
the property, or any further information, will please
call at Oakdale Station, or to me in person, ot by
letter.
TERMS AT SALE.
ROBERT POTTER..
SMITHSON, VANHOOK S Mer;LELLAND. . •
Auctioneers.
JOHN S. JOHNSTON. Saleaman. • :
• • - Mitilo-M43-dkP
BY A. M'ILWAINE,
ALIJABLE STOCKS & BOND S -yN .BANK, BRIDGE. RAILROAD ANT? INSU.
R CE STOCKS. BONDS. &c.
TUESDAY EVEN LNG, If 31, at 7'f o'clock..
will be sold, on second floor of Commercial Sales
Rooms, 106 Smithfield street: ••
-25 shares Tradesmen's National - Batik. I
Ishares Peoples' National Bank. •
10 share's Allegheny National Bank.
• 10 shares Keystone Savings Bank. • •
33 shares - Monongahela Bridge Co. . •
2 shares Allegheny Valley 8., it.
• 40 shares Allegheny Insurance Co.
50 shares M. it M. Insurance Co:
*2O shares Cash Insurance Co. • I•I
50 shares Pittsburgh Grain Elevator Cm
• 20 sharesTacille & Atlantic Telegraph Co.
$l,OOO City of Pittsburgh 6 per-cent... Bonds:
02,000 Lawrence Railroad Bonds. .
• 1.800 Pittsburgh & Connelisuille R. R. Bonds.
• A. McILW AINE, Auctioneer.
mh24
TOWNSHIp PROP-
•
1.
- PUBLIC SALE.
In pursuance of Order of Court, in No. 245, June
Term, 1568. will be offered at Public . Sale. at .tbe
.1,1 ; ` , ) ,111 ` 151, 0 .1 3 * - Vg,l ' l t ief&k o) ; -,, .z. WEDNESDAY,
e All that certain piece or parcel of land situate in
Liberty township. on the Graddocksfleld Road, (the
.;.- - . property of. Lewis J. Fleming, trustee; containing
-g 7334 acres, more or less. ;-. _. .
Yams—One-half cash,' balance In one year: witts.
interest.
L. J. FLESIING, Truster
._.,71 FofTurther . information apply to E. F.. JON
= Attorney -at-Law, 64 Grant street. - _rniCZ:(
. .
1 'IDRICES OF THE . , .
. A-
VARIOUS KINDS IF GUNPOWDER,
MAIZUFACTtrIiED, BY THE
HAZARD POWDER COVANr,
ARTHUR KIRK, Agent,
office. 172 and 1.74. FEDERAL STREET,
CANIPZER row DEB.
I
Electric Nos. 1, " a, 4 ands grain;_:n Square.
Canisters.] lb. each
American Sporting, Canisters of 1 lb.
_ each -
Duck Shooting, Nos. 1,2, 3 and 4 jrrali, iii
Oval Canisters of 1 lb: each
Indian Rifle. in Oval Canisters of 1 lb. each....
Kentucky Rifle, in Oval Canisters of Ilb. each
Kentuckvit iflc..lnOvalCanisters of 3 lb. each
(5' one lb. Oval Canisters in a case.)
(50 half lb. do. do. . dm) ,
Kentucky KIiie..FPFG. FT°. and "Sea Shoot
ing" rc., In kegs, I:5 Ws
Kentucky Rine, FFFG, Fru, and "Sea Shoot
ing" r43,_ln kegs, n.q.
Kentucky'ltftle. FFFG, Fru, 'and "Sea Shoot
ing" FG. in kegs, ag lbs
Deer Powder, tickegs, 2,5 1b5....,
Xining and Shlppina Powder, 31Ining F, Fr,
and FFF grain, net cash, In kegs. lbs
Safety Fuse for 'Blasting, of superior quality,
In packages of 50 feet and over
Delivered free of expense on board of Boat or
Railroad, In Pittsburgh or. Allegheny.
rabll4:e3g
THE CREA'T ,
ARABIAN PHYSICIAN
TREATS DISEASES LN ALL ITS FORMS.
, .
P.
Office, No. utos Liberty Street.
rir PRIVATE ENTRANCE ON:.. GARRISON
ALLEY. . 210105:M1
NOTICE TO OWNERS • OF
DRAYS 9 HACKS, &e.
Notice is hereby given to all owners of 'Drays,
Carts, Carriages„ Buggies, de., whether resident or
non-resident in the City of Pittsburgh, to pay their
Licenses at the fTreasnrer , s Office of the ity of
Pittsburgh FORTHWITH, In accordance with an
Mt of Assembly, approved March .110th, 1880, and
and an Ordinance of the Councils of the City of
Pittsburgh, passed AnrillB, 1880.
All Licenses not paid on or before MAY 15.1888.
will be placed:3n the hands of the Chief of POUCO
for collection, subject to his fee of 50 cents for the ,
collectionthereofand all persons Who neglect or
refine to take out Licensee will be subject to a pen
alty, to be recovered befora the Mayor, double the
amount of the License.
The old metal plates of preylons years most be re
turned at the time Licenses are taken opt, or pay
115 cents therefor.
RATES OP LICENSE:
Each Ono Horse Vehicle.... ....... BO
Each Two Horse " ill 00
Eoch Four Horse .... . ~......... 15 (ND
Each Two Horse Hack 15 00
Omnibuses and Timber Wheelsi drawn, by. Two
Horses, Eighteen Dollars each. Yoe each addi
tional Horse used hi any of the above vehleles. One
Dollar. SAMUEL ALLINDER,
irranundir,' Ifehniary wide.
WAIiffaGTONIMIL/1" , -
WASHINGTON • '
L Near littsberahtirain - Elevitor
• •
W. W. *c" FREWSCONs
Mimitittnie of toitiarNekti, RYE PLO and
CHOPPED,PEED.- , orders delivered lek elutee env.
'free of f obtuse Oren of all. Iclagy.Vloppeo,
Core ihellea. on short notice. •
Cl OTIIES WRINGERS REPAIR-
F.D.—Alt the different makes ofClothes Wrintr.,
Cr. repaired, at the India Rubber Depot. SIG and*.
Si. Clair street. J. H. PHILLIP%
II
II
AXiEGHENY,
rEd-rOwbin
I: