The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, September 10, 1868, Image 2

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    Ell
Ctt littslTO Gaittit.
THE DEMOCRATIC PLATFORM.
Great Heaven': Is this our mission? And for this the
pnwors and tears,
The tolls, the ware, the - watching of our younger,
better years ?
Still as the Old World rolls In light, shall ours in
shadows turn - •
A beamless chaos cursed otGod, through outer dark
ness borne? ,
Where the far nations looked for light.. a blaCkness
in the air
Where for words of hope they listened, the long
wail - of despair.
The crisis presses on us—face to face it stands,
With solemn lips of qn atton, like the Sphynx. in
- Egypt's sands !
TbLs day we fashion destiny, our web of tato we
spin• ,
This day (dr all hereafter choose we holiness or sin:
E'en now - from starry Gerlitm or Ebal's c'oudy crown
We call the dews of Messing, or the bolts of cursing
down !
By all for which the martyrs boie their agony and
shame,
By all the warning words of tru,li with which the
prophets came -
By the Intern whteh awaits ifs; by all the hopes
which cast
Their faint and trembling beams across the blackness
of the past;
In the names of those who for our countrVa free -
dolt' died;
Oh ye people! Oh my brothers! choose yr the right
eous side! •
• -
Ete. shall the freedom-lover co joyful on his way.
To wed Penobscot's waters to San Francisco's bay.
To make the rugged places smooth and bOW the vale
with gr In,
And bear, with liberty and law, the Bible In his
train;
The mighty North shall bless the South, and se'
shad answer sea;
And mountain unto mountain shoat—PRATSE GOD
FOE WE, AIM Fltltt:
EPHE3LERIS.-
—Saratoga has a negro bishop.
—SentuckSr has the cattle plague.
—The tanners are going up to Tarentum
- to-night
—A new eruption of Vesuvius is daily
awaited.
--prowning's great poem is to be out ye
this year.
—An editorial controversy is now called
a paper mill.
—An heir to the throne of Persia has
died of cholera.
--Roseerans' trump-card—the heart in his
hand.--Ezehange.
Kirby Smith, the one-time rebel General,
will open-a military school next week.
—Triangular - visiting cards are just now
the most snobby things in New York.
—Savannah disputes with Pittsburgh, the
title of healthiest city on the continent.
—Cranberries are plenty in NOW Jersey.
They are as thick as hops at the seashore.
---Jerry Black, liuchanan's adviser, is now
stumping this State for Seymour and Blair.
- ,Emigranti are going from Australia to
Japan, which is already too thickly popu
lated
=Chicago is disgusted with the Nicolson
pavement, and has put down asphaltum to
try it.
—Footing up a long column of figures
without a drink is classical; it is a Dry-ad.—
Ezeharge
`—Chicago has forty public school build
ing's, which accommodate 401 teachers and
29,464 pupils.
—lt is said that the Harpers use every
day-in their printing establishment $lO,OOO
worth of paper.
—Ten thousand bronze statuettes of Gen.
Grant are now in
.the market, and the de
mand for them is large.
• -:-Some ruffians in Newark, last Sunday,
bOmbarded and seriously injured a man,with
fourteen beer glasses. --
-The colored ladies of New York talk
of organizing a club. We thought they had
more sense than,they seem to have.
—A. bridal pair in Savannah were chlor
oformed by hurglars and robbed on their
wedding night recently, and the bride died.
—Louisa Pyne will give concerts in this
country, this year. Louisa is not what the
world calls juvenile, but she still sings well.
—Leo Htidson has a cuckoo dock, and
not having been very, successful in her re
cent engagemants, the Sheriff is going to
sell it.
—The poet editor of the Memphis. Ava
lanche has retired and has begun the prac
tice of law again; i, Pike has turned
Shark.'
-10,000 bales of flax and 6,000 bales of
-hemp, valited at $23,000,000, were burned
np at a large fire in fit. Petersburg on the
24th ult.
=Some of the Russians attribute the ter
rible fires in that country to the vengeance
of the Poles for the oppressive acts of the
Russian government.
—A young woman in Tennessee, after
being comfortably buried, was brought to
life by a resurrectionist, wbo cut off one of
her fingers to get a gOld ring.
—A Minnesota paper says : "We saw. in
Winona, a few days since, on a little wild
weld, one inch long, sixteen thousand po
tato bugs." . We commend the patience of
the counter.
—A German philologist who lives at Jena,
where he is a: professor, says that within
five centuries English will be the universal
language. This is bad, very bad for the
future French-teachers. _
—ln Southwark, borough of the Lon
don Metropolian District, the names of all
the women householders have been placed
on the register of voters. This is the' case
also at Liverpool and other places.
—An excellent Democrat, who has been
trying to find new, arguments against the
Republican party, calls the defeat of the
yacht Sappho in English waters "another
result of 'eight years of Radical misrule."
—Gounod's fraud, says an exchange, has
been translated into Polish and was recent
ly produced in that language, at Warsaw.
This may be true, but we understood that
•theYolish language was forbidden.; in Po
- _August 25th was the list day in .Eng
land for voters to make claims to have
their names registered. Thee revising
barristers decide their claims at courts
to be held betweea September 14 and Oct°-
.
• The New York Leader' • has found out
the difference.between New York and the
West; (a difference of one thousand miles
we 'should 'think.) - 'ln New fork they
haie Barbe . Bleu,.and in the West they have
Barbe-cue. :.
—The rebels and other Democrats are
" down' on Longstreet because '' Lougstreet
thinks Grant's silence is "gland." And'
Prentice thinks that Gen. Longstreet himself
would be a little more grand than he is if he
had the lock jaw.
—One of the largest establishments for
the cultivation of flowers is that of Bender.
son & Co., at New. York. They have four
teen greenhouses each, one hundred feet in
length, six about half as long and several
others which are devoted to the culture of
cameliaa.
—The Roman Catholic Bishop of Mon
treal has caused a pastoral letter to be read
in the churche,s, - forbidding Catholics 'to
attend theatres where . such "immoral and
indecent" plays as Offenbach's "La Grande
Duchesse," "La Belle Helene," and "Barbe
Bleue" are performed.
—The Parisian newspapers make fun of
the French Government's peace profess
ions. La Cloche, which is extremely anx
ious to be suppressed, says: "The proof that
the empire really means peace is that peace
has been made three or four times (after
war) since the empire, and that it will be
made again.
—A. Paris newspaper contains the follow
ing interesting advertisement: "A. father
wants to find for his son a school where he
could get a hettlthy and manly instruction,
and where the teachers do not fill the heads
of the boys with humbug stories about na
tions which died and were buried thousands
of centuries.ago." -
—Two. hundred thousand casks of Ma
deira wine are sold for every one thousand
that ire made. A whisky manufacturer,
whose brand is considered to be about the
best, was surprised recently on going into
the London Docks to see more of his brand
of whisky than there had been made in his
works for fifty years.
—Why do we get through the Associated
Press reports so much about John Allen ?
We wager there are not fifty people outside
(or inside either for that matter) of New
York City, who care whethe - r Allen is or is
not the wickedest man in New York, and
not many more who want to hear shout his
questionable prayer meetings.
—On the Central Pacific Railway over
six miles of track have been laid in one
day. We wonder if the contractors and
stock-holders of these two great roads, the
Union and Central Pacifi, are aware that
safety and durability are of much more im
portance than speed in the laying down of
tracks? We sincerely hope they. are.
—General, then Colonl, R. E, Lee cap
tured John Brown, in 1 1859, for having re
belled against the State of Virginia. John
Brown was hung. General Grant captured
this same General R. E. Lee in 1865, for
having rebelled and fought against the laws
of the whole United States. General Lee,
with General Itosecrans, is now telling us
what is the proper way to rule the country.
—Gen, Grant and the late Gen. Alexan
der Hays, of this city, were intimate friends
at West Point. Gen. Grant was in his
manners' exactly the opposite of Gen. Hays,
and . yet their intimacy Was none the less,
and continued on after they left the Pr*
and there is still in the family of I
Hays a picture of the Generals taken shi
after graduating, at a time when their
est visions could hardly have led them
hope for the positions they afterwari
gained.
—Either owing to errors in the type or ig
norance in the writers, the names of Ham
burg and Homburg are so mixed that none
but an especially bright person well versed
in the ways of both these towns can make
out which is meant, and although half of
the newspapers say there are eight hundred
Americans at the one place, the other half
insists that they are at the other. All the
journals nearly have announced that Patti
is to sing at Hamburg, while a correspon
dent writing from Homburg says that she
is expected there,, and so we are left, to de
cide the momentous question ourselves,
only-knowing, certainly, that she will not
sing at both places.
—lt is the fashion or the policy of-Demo
crats now to speak of Lee, Davis, Hood and
otiers of that type, as earnest, honest men
who for the time were politically traitors
but now, are compared, as noble men, to
Washington. When uttered in a clear loud
voice with an eloquent tongue, such words
sound well but--they choose to forget that
treason is the greatest, deepest and blackest
of all crimes, embracing in its enormity all
other crimes from murder and arson down,
and that a man is not and cannot be a trai
tor merely for a period for the- crime black
ens him for all time and eternity. Because
a man did a foul murder a year ago we do
not say he was for the time al murderer,
and as the stain of blood clings to the name
of Professor Webster forever although he
was an educated, polished gentleman, so the
blacker stain of treason will sully and con
demn the great , traitors of the South forever.
LEON ESCUDIER relates in his new vol
ume, ";lies Souveniers," the following an
ecdote : "The celebrated double-bass vir
tuoso Bottesini stopped, during one of his
numerous peregrinations through the United
States, with the rest of his concert troupe at
a hotel in a city whose name I have forgot
ten. Bottesini was accompanied by a little
negro boy, half a child, half a monkey, but
as devoted to him as a little man. Friday,
who followed him everywhere. Now, the
landlord of the hotel in question had but one
room to spare, Bottesini took I it, and said
the little negro might look out for him
self. The virtuoso took a late }supper and
went to bed. Next morning he was awaken
ed at daybreak in order to continue his jour
ney ; the case of his double-bass was put on
the shoulders of a porter, another took a
trunk and carpetbag, and the musicians set
out. Bottesini thought the negro boy was
in the yard of the hotel, but he could not
find him anywhere: Finally he said to the
landlord, 'As soon' as, you find thelittle fel
lo*,buy him a railroad ticket, and send him
aftei me.' They reached the town where
they were to give a concert the evening.
Fortunately it was only sixty miles distant,
a Ahree' hours! ride by rail. Fortunately,
Itoo, It occurred to Bottesini to examine the
strings of his dodble.base. Heopens • the
case, but there'is no dquble-baseln it ! In
its, stead he finds in the e the little negro
snOrlng like thiiinisslu! natrunient. The
little fellow,triable to d a bed, hid taken
tho instrument out Of theoase, put It into
an alcove, and then laid, wn in the case.
Fortunately therowas &crack in it, and the
.biziywcs notstilled. , It.ottesini telegraphed
for the double-bass which arrived in time
for the concert."'
PITTSIII3.II,GIi VAZETTE: THURSDAY. fSEPTPIBEIR 10, 1868:
TEETtit EXTRACTED
WITIMMTT PAIN
NO CHARGE MADE WHEN ARTIFICIAL
TEETH ARE ORDERED.
A FULL BET POE
AT DR. SCOTT'S.
818 PENMSTREET, 3D DOOR ABOVE HAND.
_ -
ALL WORK WARRANTED. CALL AND EX
AMINE SPECIMENS OF GENUINE VULCAN-
ITE. my9:daT
teMill ai 0:40 10) a al:
WELDON & KELLY,
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in
Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers,
AND LAMP GOODS.
Also, CARBON AND LUBRICATING OILS,
BENZINE,
No, '147 Wood Street.
ge9:n22 B l etween sth and 6th Avenues
CEMENT, SOAP STONE, &C.
HYDRAULIC CEMENT.
SOAP STONE,
PLASTER, CHIMNEY TOPE.
WATER PIPES.
5t46:070
HYDRAULIC CEMENT DRAIN, PIPE.
Cheapest and best Pipe bilhe market. Also. RO
BENDAI.E HYDRAULIC CEMENT for sale.
IL B. It C. A. BBOCILETT CO..
Office and , Mannfitctory-2140 REBECCA ST.,
Allegheny. air Orders by mall promptly attended
to. Jero:r93
PIANOS. ORGANS, &C.
RUT THE BEST AND CHEAP
EST PIANO AND ORGAN.
Schomacker's Gold Medal Piano,
AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN..
The SCHONACKER PIANO combines all the
latest valuable improvements known in the con
struction of a fret class instrument. and has always
been awarded the highest premium wherever ex
hibited. Its tone is full, sonorous and sweet. The
workmanship. for durability and beauty, surpass
all others. Prices from $5O to $l5O, (accordingto
style and finish,) cheaper than all other so-called
first class Piano.
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 traited States. It is sim
ple and compact in _construction, and not liable to
get out of order. •"'
CARPENTER'S PATENT "VON- HUMAN'A
TREMOLO" is only to be found in ithis Organ.
Price from $104) to 6630 . All guaran ced for dye
year..
BARB, EVIEt & BUE7LF,R,
mn9 No. 12 ST. CLAIR: STREET,
KNABE &, CO.'S
AND RAINES BROS. PIANOS,
Fof sale on mon Oily .and quarterly payments.
CHARLOTTE BLUIIE,
ant) • 43 Fifth street. Sole Agent.l
1-4".A.L.41_A TIA TS
Arcolir) & co.,
Are now ready: with 2 LARGE - AND SELECT
STOCK of
40.Z1 , &.r: 0 1E3,
PMEffM
HATS, CAPS AND, XIMS,
AD°. Manufacturer, Wholesale and Retail Dealer
In Tp.IINKS. VALISES. doz., No. US SMITH
FIELD STREET, Plitseurgb, Pa.
Orders promptly filled and satisfaction guaranteed.
MERCHANT TAILORS.
SIUMAIER GOODS. .
Boys', Youth's and Children's
WINNER CASSIMEEE SUITS,
LLS EN SUITS.
DUCK SUIT'S.
FLANNEL Bu
CCrrA s.
ALPAJACE7f.TS.
In every style. of the greatest variety, suitable for
the present reason. Oentiemen will And a tine ai•
sortmeat of WHITE and SHOWN DUCK SUITS,
ALPACCA and FLANNEL COATS, Se., every
garment being
,apeelally nixie tor us by the beet
Eastern houses. Our prices are as l low as good
goods can be sold at by any firm East or West.
sal 47 ST. CLAIR STREET.
HENRY METER,
INERCHAPPOR,
No. 73 SMITHETELD BT377,..T.'llttabargh,
Gonatantly on hand, a fall tiaiiritment, of CLOTHS,
CAS.SIMERES, VESTING& ' ap20:o811
TOBACCO AND CIGARS.
JUAN ALLEN,
LEAF TOBACCO-AND SEGA.RI3,
NO. 8 SIXTH STREET, (National
.Bank of Com
merce Building,
PITTSBURGH, PA.
Branch of 172:Water street, N. Y.
ap4:n77 DANIEL' F. DINAN.
EXCELSIOR WORKS.
W. JENSINSON,
Manufacturers and Dealers in ,
Tobacco, Snuff, Cigars, Pipes, &0.,
LE() 6 FEDERAL ST.. ALLEGILENYI
Ipfi•h3ri
Pavatooomis;oaf:lll
ITENIII W. lIO#BACH,
Confectionery and Bakery
No. 800 SMITHFIELD STEBET,
'Between Seventh and Liberty.
SW*LADIES , OYSTER S.ki,(;*X. attulved.
GEO. SC/MEW:Br,
Fancy Cake Baker & Confectioner,
AND , AZALEA IN
, -
BOBEIQN'd DOMESTIC FRUITS 3 NUTS,
•,
No. 80, earner Federal and Robinson Alla-
Om?: oir Cosustavtly on band, 10E Ow"' Ilk at
various favors. - . •
SEWING MACHINES.
T AMERIC AN
""1.
JS[JTTON•HOLE OM3EAKIN6I
AND SEWING MACHINE.
IT ILLS NO T 14171.1 .9
BEING ABSOLHTEIX THE BEST FAMILY
XACI T N E I,IIIh c LIT L EHE WORLD All: IN
airAgente wanted tlail i t
tni C ali E aeline. •
GRAS. C...BAMIEMADIri
Agent for 'Western Pennirlvanln.
Corner FIFTH AND MARKET STRISTSt over
illcherdoon'e Jewelry Rom. wrZgl64
DENTISTRY
HERBY H. COLLINS,
25 Wood street.
HATS AND CAPS
131 WOOD ETDEET,'
AND FURS.
=1
GrIIAY 8c LOGAING
DRALZBIN .114,L KINDS Or
DRY GOODS.
87. Xi=CET STREET. ST.
NEW FALL GOODS,
NOW OPENING,
AT
TIIEOIIORE F. PHILLIPS',
87 MARA'ET STREET.
kOF
SECOND ARRIV
NEW AND BEAUTIFUL
7`.A.ILAILA
THE FINEST
SILKS, POPLINS, EMPRESS,
AND EVERY DE/3CRIPTION OF
DRY GOODS,
TO BE FOUND IN TIME CITY, AT
J. IL BURCHFIELD & CO'S,
No. 54 St. Clair, near Liberty St.
set
ii
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4= 74" D !x i a - ..,... .1
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168.
NEW GOODS.
NEW ALPACCAS.
NEW MOHAIR.
BLACK SILKS.
HOSIERY and GLOVES.
F. SOUCY,
ear No. MI Wylie Street.
168. 164.
ra r ao:n4o)
BLACK SILK SACQIJES.
Lama Lace Points,
Summer_Shawls,
TOE SALE AT LOW PRICES, BY
WHITE, ORR & CO.,
23 Fifth Street,
CARR, McCANDLESS & CO.,
mato wttgon, car? &, C 0..)
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Foteign and Domestic Dry Goods,
No. 94 WOOD STREET,
Third door above Diamond alley,
PITTSBURGH, PA.
GLASS, CHINA. CUTLERY.
100 WOOD STREET
(1111LiA, GLASS AND
•-- 1 1
QUEENSWARE, •
SILVER PLATED. WADE,
PARIAN STATUETTES,
BOHEMIAS GLASS,
And other STAPLE AND PAXOY
GOODS, • greet variety.
100 WOOD STREET.
RICHARD E. BREED & CO
mhZr
100 WOOD STREET
. WALL PAPER.
WALL PAPER,
AT REDUCED PRICES.
AFTER JULY lErr,
We will offer our present stook of
Wall Papers at Greatly Reduced Prldp.
A large assortment of SATIN PAPERS, for halls,
rooms, ceilings, &c., at
No 107' Market Street,near Fifth.
JOS. R. HUGHES & BRO. •
Pa •
lU .. _..II I U2L . LI2IbiUUa: t . • : e
[ 'BUMF, / BELL &
ANCHOR COTTON MILLS,
erx-rtssuncan.
Mono 'Amens of lIHAVY, =DIM awl LIGHT
ANOIIOI/ AND DIAGNOLL&
SHEETINGS AND BATTING.
DYER AND SCOURER,
Jr. LANCE"
DYER AND SCOURE
Ito. 3 ST. clsAill Es T
And Not. 186 and 187 TIM Ste(iti
PITTSBURGH, P.S.
m 718454
r W
FOR_THE FALL.TRADE.
AT
MACRUM, CLYDE & CO.'S.
THE ENTIRELY NEW ,
"LA BELLE SKIRT,
IN ALL THE DIFFERENT COLORS.
A complete line of
Balmoral Hosiery, for Ladies & Misses.
The best assortment of
GENT'S CASSIMERE SHIRTS.
Also, a full line of
Gent's Fall and Winter Underwear.
WHITE FRENCH CORSETS,
Sli g htly soiled by salt water, only 60 cents.
A BEAUTIFUL LINE OF
Infants' Wool Hoods and Sacques.
BRADLEY'S FLANNELS, in all colors.
Our Assortment of Notions is well Selected.
ks we hive received a very fine strck of Goods,
country Merchants
goods well to examine our
stook, as we have the suiting their trade.
MACRUM, GLYDE /Ir. CO.,
78 and 80 Market_Street.
der.
ours.
ENT OF
PRICES MARKED DOWN!
AT
& CARLISLE'S,
N 0.19 Fifth Street.
• •
ALL GOODS GREATLY REDUCED!
ON AND AFTER JULY IST.
HOOP SKIRTS. (Ladles , ,) for 500
CORSETS, (Real French,) SO
LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS, 3 for 25
KID GLOVES, (warranted,) 1.00
PAPER COLLAR 10
200 Yds. SPOOL TTON, (good) 5
POCKET BOoliS, worth 50c 25
MEN'S SUMMER, UNDERSHIRTS 50
MEN'S JEAN DRAWERS 75
All kinds Bonneti and Hats at Half Cost
GREAT BARCAINS!
IN AI I. KINDS OE , GOODS:
Special Bates to Merchants & Dealers.,
=MUSA! & canizsul,
19 FIFTH STREET.
168.
DRUGS AND CHEMICALS.
ELECTIC SUADIER CORDIAL,
* An infallible remedy for Summer Complaint, Diar
rhea. Dysentery, Vomiting, Sour Stomach and
Cholera 11Iorbus..,
DR. lIBILIS' CRIMP ME,
A specific for Cholera,. Cramps and Palm In the
Stomach. fur sale by
HARRIS & EWING,
Corner of Liberty and Wayne Streets,
J. SCHOONAWIEIR & SON'S_
PURE' WHITE LEAD,
AND _
IIIeCOVS VERDITER GREEN,
The only green paint that will not deteriorate by
exposure. It will look better, last longer and give
more perfect satisfaction th ani any paint In the
market.
COAL!! COALM .
DICKSON, STEWART & CO.,
Having removed their Office to
NO, 567 LIBERTY hirritMEir,
Mately - City Flour Mill) SECOND ELOOB.
NV l w h ?I're, e d l
t o O n A i r CY, M i eSi t Z 4 s
morket price.
,All" orders le ft at their office, or addressed to
them through the mall, will be attended to promptly.
my'aubM
A RMSTRONG & HU'regINSON,
YIII.A.DXI.IIIII.A.It c gratICIIIIINT COAL Co.,
MINERB,_EIHIPPERS AND DEALERS, B RAIL
ROAD AND RIVER, of superior loughiog Y
heny
CAS AND FAMILY COAL.
Office and Yard--FOOT OF TRY STREET, near
the Gas Works.
DISSOLUTION
•
OTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN
that thepartnership heretofore existing be
ween J. B. SHERRI F WJ. ERIC !FF. HUGH
LOUWIREY and WILLIAM McGRAW under the
name and style of SHERRIFFS , LO IIGIIREY
BIeGRAW,
,has been this day dissolved by mutual
consent, and the PLUMBING, GAS AND STEAM
FITTING, COPPER, SHEET IRON AND BRASS
FOUNDRY BUSINESS will be continued here•
after by
SHERRIFFS & LOUCHRE'i •
•
Who will settle the accounts J of t elate.irm •
. B. SHERIFF.
W. J. SHERIFF
HUGH LOUGHWEY.
WM. hIcGRAW.
att2B:v:a
HAIR AND PERFUIM:MY.
SliOliN PECik, Ornamental Halt
HAIR WORKER AND PERFUMER, No. 333
Wed street. near Smithfield, Pittsburgh.
Always on hand, a general assortment of Ladies'
WIGS,DANDS, CURLS; en's WIGS, TO-
Was SCALPS, GUARD CHAINS . , BRACELEI"3,
de. Air A good Price in cash wilt be given for
RAW AIR.
Ladies' and' Gentleinen't Hair Cutting eland
the neatest manner. . , . mh2tufl
LITHOGRAPHERS.
entintsLY • PHILIP CMS.
QINGERLY iSticcesson
A 7 to @so. F. ScavcaxAN 3 Co„,
piR , A€TKAJL . LITHOGRAPIIIO/48.
The only , steam Lithographic bitablishinent West
of the Mountains. Badness Cards, Letter Reads.
Bonds Labels, Circulars, Show Cards, Diplomas.
Portraits, Views, Certificates of Deposits, Ittvita•
lion Cards, Se— Nos. 73 and 14 Third street,
Pittsburgh- :•
BABE & MOSES,
Anc
FRUIT HOUSE ASSOCIATION BUILDINGS, NOS.
A and 4 St. Clair Street, Pittaburgh, Pa. Special
attention given to the designing and building of
OM= HOMES and PUBLIC BUILDINGS,
AGENTS FOR
COAL AND COKE.
BUSINESS CHANGES.
v [si
CARPETS AND OIL CLOTHS.
FALL GOODS.
FIRST ARRIVAL . OF- THE SEASON.
A FULL AMORPMENT OP
Velvet,
Brussels,
Tapestry,
Three Ply, s
CA.Itr9E7CS,
JUST OPENED AND OFFERED AT THE
LOWEST RATES
OLIVER lII'CLINTOCK & CO., /
No. 23 Fifth 'Street
CARPETS! CARPETS!
MANIIFACTIIRERS HERE and
is Euiope HAVE NOW AD
VANCED PRICES, but we of
fer all kinds of CARPETS for
the present at the very low- .
est CASH RATES of the past
season. Having made all our
contracts previous to any ad
vance, and invariably for '
cash, we, . are enabled to sell
lower thim they can be pur- -
chased this Fan.
8R05. 5
51 FIFTH STREET.
HIM
~.*~
NEW CA_BPETS,
IC.T 'UV _A. I Ikkr
CORNICES
WINDOW SHADES,
WELL SEASONED
FLOOR OIL CLOTHS,%
TABLE AND PIANO COVERS.
THE BEST GOODS AT LOWEST PRICES. t
McEARLAND & COLLINS,
Nos. 71 and 73 Fifth Street,
Next Building to U. S. Custom House II Post Office
13737E0a
;LX . 14:411 :T.A at ;311 3.01
,--.-- - --,-,- -:,,,,,--. ' -,, - !" . ;', t )'' ....
Mr:
~ 4 : . •;•
, c. 1 ' :g. 'f„,
lir
- :•.• ..,-1,..t.•:-.-..r.: 4 :0"0,
c, ..
_...:.- --.•-::.;.,, --!..... r 7,..„. , , et
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A
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....;e1- ...., N`h ::, : i.,' • ' ,- , .:' , 2: 1:::;:: ,
R
ARE SUPERIOR TO ANY OTHERS
OFFERED IN TKO CITY.
S
BOSTON, SODA, CREAK, FRENCH,
WATER, BUTTER, SUGAR and SODA CRACK
ERS; SCOTCH and BISCUIT.
For Sale by Every Grocer in the City.
Bakery, No. 91 Liberty St.
Jes:r3e
SLATE
SLAM
THE TWIN CITY SLATE CO.,
manufacture a superior article of
IEZOIDPrNG
rfrOffloe, 48 Seventh St., Pittsburgh, Pe.
.1. S. NEWMEYFR, Pres e t.
m7284:164
CORN MEAL, RYE FLOUR, &c.
WASHINGTON MILLS,
NABEINGION BIBEET,
Near Pittabarigh Grain }Mentor I
W. W. ANDERSON,
Manufacturer of CORM MEAL, ItTE TLC= 'and -
CHOED FEED. Orders delivered in either city
free ofcharge. Grain .of all kinds chopped. sad,
Corn shelled. on abortnotice..
REMOVALS.
- DEMOVALL-The - Merchants
Manufacturers National Bank will, on
THURSDAY, Augait 27th,
Itemoie to ttie Occup i ed First and Wood streets,
House formerly by the Peoples National
Bank, and remain during the erection of their new
Banking House.
auM:vl9 JOHN SCOTT, Jr., Cashier.
EDUCATIONAL
A: I .:ILEGELEIIiY ACADEMY.
e next regular session will commence on
TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER IST,
In EXCELSIOR HALL, Feiferal sweet,. Allegheiri.
MR. T. E. WAREHAM, Principal, will receive
pupils at the Hall, on Itionday, August 31st. fr,.ta
9 to 12 o'clocc. aulliv4l
And Ingrain
IHEI