The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, January 01, 1869, Image 4

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    El
II
M
SI
MI
exiti tt
MIME) MILL BY'
' ROM & CO., Proprietors.
y. B. BBBYLBALB, JOSIAH KING.
T. P. HOUSTON, N. P. 8.1r.E.D.
Editots sard Proprteton.
• • •• ;
OFFICE
•
GAZETTE BUII.I MG, NOS. 84 AND 86 FtfTH
FFILCIALI PAPER ,
r
gh, Allegheny and J . l . .q•lF,l!•!ty
• -11
Of Pittab
Terfar• - , Vaiiy; Idivraatriak iv: '..A r-- afiraiv. ' •- •
a month. f::::._vi:«1 inef,p'euf:rga 4 l . .. s l
1
'ft the week 1-Threc laps 76 10 •
" ' " • 1.11
. .om caviler.) ~ ,‘ . • -- aadone to Aleut.
—_.—
:FRIDAY,' find)** 1869.
Tis WzionarArrs, ilistuunns
floodays and Saturdays, is the but and cheap-,
family *spa - per - in Pennsylvania. It
presents each ,t 06614 forty-eight COittiltni 'of
Wid reading matter. A gives the fullest as
well as the most reitableinarket regorts of any
paper in the State. Its Pi are used _ aeltP
1246 FlrteW.RiletAill, #l4ll
reference to important issues todstermiiie:
• the ruiinyyt sin q,e..lutrkettut the time of
1114 businesi transaction in ditaute."
Single dopy, one year, $1.50 L. in elubi office,
$1,25 in clubs of ten, $1,15, and one free
to the getter up of ;the dub. Specimen copies
lent fret to any address.
• •
Wz razz et" , the inside papa ~of this
itortiing's Gezi.prz—Becond, page: , "My
Old Woman and I,"—poistry Erßbetnerie;
Bobbers Caught; Spring Beanies. :Third
page: Financial MaitersinNew -York, Mar
kets by Telegraph, Imports by Baitroad and
River News. Sixth Page : Finance and
Trade, Pittsburgh Markets, and Peirdlet4a
Market. Seventh .page Aleetric Tele
graph, .Aninsement Directory.
Gpia) closed in New York: rate - I.day
at 134*1841-. , '
. '' ' ' E11i441.0 1 rAi14 15 T 4 4, (11 T. Y . i
otni NW - • -' - -
~id.... wine
•'.,, ' .':-'- T h' e :,G A2 .• - nT rn . closes
. `the e. __
~. .. . ad . 4 da i .
and :enter! into - t - 1 - 1 • -..'- .• re; ,
••,, yolnine. .• • n : li v i ng twho can
• '...., There is not a. mese
- - • bet' the da7 . -Fn i
f Pittsburgh
' which:
:of
-published
'...., the ,ri, e7i rude tittle hahalatlo•-truii:. ' Time;
~ ti- L e
.t i lt n umbe of : 01 1 r .
tw,4 , 8 unsparing .
bo went ,before
and relentless , has , cut
• • •-wa for the gray.e . theY..le
Veneration
since the es- .
, , ,
and the third • .nteesea . ler.
;'tire' GlirET 7 / 1 •'•/' • - - .`
" 131 . t4 . 3 . ent , A ti: Cl ` s . _..in' ' . 0. -..
• .
of the: now great .
common end
. of . naorentald
,
lie . pioneers
• _
.15, trade-center:
and
v` there yetie
. and busines s comma:.
• .have passed; 'awa y, 1
:illidri e - connectillg. l - #k
... the
al eto join the
. • m.
the : pr es ent - •
associations o local hisf ol 7: - '.
. I remotest period •of , o ur• ei.:
.. r
. ' • old.. and time,
. ' iii. our.:
I,B6hororethd
these
e ourn partss
sensation.of 1 ::in'
1 The - of a newspaper.
was the.
imagination t o portray
-firo ' issue
. it requires no keen
~. t4e,fee
'' ..l.
. lingo of pride and glory which
ireg
re esl. welled
re
Al. i - in the hearts of - the handful' of
..-..'...`,.. 'I , '
pioneers who gathered aboutthe - ah rude
ie l o og .
134 ch t slow
: 'sting house, here
-.• ~..i.-.1z:„"-- -- . - ._ed. c li ck of- the hand-press es ga tr v e e tiEp forth irin i
$ .: ,,..i . au' .
'•-2*i. : Wil - real news gazette of what :w
. 1,f3', 1 ;. i n the busy, - active, bust-114.f_ ly.oerlde.9.,T.seehheir,i;
"..t;'''.•-••;4-'1-.' • • mu st have gltaerietir jou rn al printed
•:.w....;'..,4 eyea - • • of - a *J 9 . ---- '
." , , , •;". - ..f1 , '.f..••:.2- •.d the , first cop y • • they read
.- •„ -;......-:::...". =ri b • . ,
h Allegheny mounta i ns;
'-•-•c"; - `••: -""", West of t-e--- • - ti• u • the , spreading
,--,:•4,....-•p4;:•---1
of o ,- . ~
r••'- 1 . .. -, 1 of the advance -
..
•.. -7 4,_,•' , ,,,'", , ,,`-_, ; ,-, , ot
. th e banner of enhghtelmi
,e n t sadcontine nt t ,
C. l7 '-i.:?,,,..3-,; - .-'•! , .]
gradual development of thegreat -
~ .,,,....,....:1 .411 09. 0- outside .
by
their
oteri
might, to
Western . borders
•,-; ,";..,':-i•z•-•1 .- have seemed mar k e d .
ru ' 'along the. ° • -•-•• •
t.:
. them,
e•vi ' lla - ~ e . of an hundreds armineiroji- s q uali d
gah,
..- cabins , ' stretc hed .
'-':';`-..n."-••-'-‘-'1',', . • -• of the press,
. r ..,.. e1s
~ .. .az1; 1:J :•.4 7 . They. felt the et l naliz ' a g. p o w er the
lir •••••',..., . ienger.looked - on
,-,.„... .... - ; . 4.. , R . ;,.. - .2-•,1 and no m ore ' eulthred
..,,-..,4 w i t h . eyes of, . envy, for undtt! look
••? , t;• - •;' ,7 )tk:2.1 '''.-... opened • a new era, ll.ll
the''
' f.'' ' '' ' 'T '''''' was they. " beh eld
..
- 4 , ... - i;k:.• - •-,',.., •. : ~. , th e future
..,
• : 'r'-' , ‘; , :' , -'s.al lug: ' 1] ;"" • . h e to follow, 1 . 11 - -
I" F4- .P.;.;!, ,. .;: - .:':-"..',.. , .'1 • greatn....eas. of . those a's
of the growth areame ,eri4theexir.•
l' •:' - ' 17, `:•1 . footsteps; • - . i n t o the . proud and
'''''-'''''l • - 'of village
I. l ••Vii:' , •, - .q41
pension - : their
of te-daY- '
1 . .-i1i54'.. , 7`,...:- , I Mpulous city The vildett .. en•
''';l.l
tblisi.engendered in by the introducti o n of
1 , • ••77*-,M, •pr inting press
Ppicture of the
t'i...„„...• , .'.414.`-•: , ,;z:1-- - i., the
p a t i lt , drawing_ of" a ' the
'l:'4kl.,,z•''',glZ!i.v:•;:,,r. have
-ca ti• l4 .f s Or - th - e e.ettlement.brighterthange.
_.
- :• - .... ,, ,e"v : i.::-;1 futuri .
ted... - The tittle vl'M ne e
t.Th' "•'' 'realityhie 'w arren • •
'''. l € - :.... , ...„ -1 , ..
~ .i,de. d ..: i nto • Metropolitan p ropor tio n s ; ,
:1 11 /P,z-:::' ,. .. - :'.,
~ .. , - , : . >:--ir.i and , 6 - - ~1 sending
• r...,-.,-.4.-~,-:.
ll'''''''::4
- expanded`
an ex alted
1,1 cities of the. .
' ' 1 • or. of :her .
•• • ••:*• - I , ..'if the skilled labor,
- position among t.h! . .. ,
of the '.clifilize .
, Ptvi", . tribe
tens of. th ousandso d f
•.::,,'"-rt-,ltiLl -. irktoe;yerY. quarter eli t e --GA:,
, - - --V' .. -i , ri,i--' ,, ,r art i sa ns
the' . o
q: - ..1.: , -f , '..----z...i
has driveA.l
5 .• , .,....•?..*-`, - globe. •- • lization - •,,,,,,, .-
t • •a ."4.,......,--..t.1
''''ii . , 4 :•' ' 22.- - - of 'de . Indian ~_.l a h l - ' i flive
. 4.
:''''''''''''' Tie the march of
K,:;,,i',,,,'.•i•J( 'the Itigivaill 'll tile' auu"'--ei
tribes West, and
• .. - ,,,..viv•- , . . west; ti ,
~. - r ..meary
''''''S'i4 "farther
after, ;•we' i-' - - ' .
-....
,kti' , , 4 ,4-,• , ...
xoom to, TAst,
. 4 'fc',s?,:-:',l • scarce 4,• . ' ' ' have beeP.
g 4: V : 4 bunt; our rivers
.• ~..,„„.- , ~,,r,..4B,tasChequered
covered with .
A .vw. • • . 4i e gi r 1 Lftraue t •••••••
..
.:4 , swift gliding
1• , : ]
i M with railroads, while the
placed in • close- communion
' •:'-tlir, remotest corners of
are . . .
_;_. ii. - iiiii a ux:
E.: •.- ~..-...".4. the wo rld :••
....., "heid.hetwu ,, e a -•- , 0 .
•••;, „ii e nede . - T, are .• - - . k. ileptha - 0 ,
by i.Le'7'i - d e d..in th e a# . , '
.•-•-'-, . earth , and a4SPPI • - .... bayeirrroliP,.
- A... ? ":: , ? : •f , I • ' ' -';EI hty-threeYea.r B - 1, -.- -.:..-,' , V
, '- ':' , f.• . '.t.ii.,, ::,•tho.ocesn• ... •g - ' - ••,. •- • acted hays aP.-,
0,14'.4-,:.1i deifiit'afitinges-- A e r•i- - die s t age ' of
,eflti , wa n ed tii p i ny their. Part °4 . -'iitimitioSi
.:0:1 - . - peaT .
~
_ i
~,,i bil. ,..ii i -d r 0t . 4. 0 7111de .
_,...._
2.•-•figigkl .. 111. ei4',. w 1 .,„", - cur "To P..* rf F 9l4 `" lB :
1.: :A., --E-Vy-gm. : . -- cltheta,piTfAfo s l. ,--- • • empiref totterra
~• •:•:-...' V-X' 4- -.'' ..",, , ' have pAsISCA6I,M?"-•-•-,-."14:-''Mar;"
.! . . 7 4 ,, 5' , 4 - .• , ': , -; , :.A . , ~.-, illttlen -I. A .•;- I '' ....' -• l,
• , •,:5k . ,:;:•2.4 , 1,-,1,, ~,.. • I crumbled, . dY/ 1 9 r „ -,2-; , " ti l l e d t X e lif e c 0, .,
.- I l it l • - .1 -':4 - '- , : - . . : ',T lial eilii tt ' iiiii i eitt9 itii:lik l',ei...statariti.e,. hunting.
.. t. „
i :.'• ' . .. , •:: . e.--wr. , _.•-• - ,- ateitfitiO,Aali...! ,1 a-t ~ ,,-- i i i iiii4,!
, •:,?•,,,,. Wv - ..- - ...niti% .f 4l . •- , • iiiii liiiTe; u ve w'7 -..- - - -4.4 . "
1
• 1: , k;1---:
~ ...,,,,updoby:the,g,air ,,,,,,,,,,.. .., rude . h.. .. `- 1
...:;',..-.4;: ••, - a.•: - *--. - -.- .•.
fields' and. ~...--, . -,..• • - ••••ii.d r .,;,..
- ....?`•,•.44it ••••,.• intaila# ll Pg - , iirotit*ti4eiitr,ire.o„
. .:3:;:, t.117 (, _
~, i c , thoempe o l4ing• - 0 . 'hien -hhti'•ip!,yvi.dlk
'i-4.' .') liable : mountai n s,
, * Y„,,i, 4 ,, s iw al id .Snoitlit,'
••,;,v,i1.i,.,-g-',i -'' ' 'rOn horse P--- - • •
him, is
. -fir.zit. . and the . 1 . . bor a e n s after .
~.t,1,.,1:. drn-sciiig his amn r ns. l A.tiehtia to , the
i .."'''.4- " -.-'- sirir e n..' fr C ial • 4e ' . ' istMrmY uke new . citlee, to
'-'il`4,l-$4 id f, , holfle7-. , - V addi ' l l: ' admiration, .
:.1 : ii : •.•;•`-'' . 4. : filit he 7 v a r .„ : „..-- . .. - -.1 1. k itt.40 ,1,11 9 -
...- -7: , - 1 , - ,c ::), a i i i join , kcAr . ' br ow of yore:
t‘
'1
. ;lvu-
- '.
airies4therfigeM .
..
_,..,
' - '.iiaked vr . . . .
• Pr ,
i• • i :.~ -*,-.1- :.
....-f-k•'; ~, 1 , - ...itittui:t h „.tpeuP .7,3 ,
_L- ,,, ave t i tn • , thnve . . •
' '-' , 1 e. , - - - liirieltixiiiitunm„ ~..,* - --,. .aCicirld at
1
t, 1,:,.,i,1tii*:..,'1 nerlttilairalhini., ' -tli . .,,.. t ,b v . -.. star
. '''''f - ' -4 "/"• 7 -- - -' ' ' '4 l desOitr-illett 4 -
.:: .1•1• ,„%ii.,..,• •:- - Italiet -,.•.;.• -- - '‘l' . ' i t h ' for . it i he _ Continent ,- -t'-:.
..' . ',.f.. , • , -IYstt''', ...- eAitdr . :fit the '.,?;1 1 ,- .•..... --,,! •; ''.. J .' 1...• , f , ,.•:,!!4.ef . ',
2 ',?:•'-‘:.Jl'..---.:; :: - . , ' - :A:nleilea.: •• "•:-." - -'•) .7filiet'vrt:,4lA 01'.°1-11. '
.i , ,4*-•! , '!',... -', .- , -....„ iiiiihiworidere_,,,._,,:. •.. - ..i'...,„.- .-- ..i..worid".4;*
, ... 4 ..,•:...:A4:.!!-..,. -'.• • , ' , .`e...- , - •-- i• rtityt. '• :,YV , lll?---":"-' .: the'
?--''. " . ..'...r.i.i4T : g . : - •;tol , ;40•;"- °* 1,-. .1. .."...44rist.,-.4en geei', l- .. .. •
..- ..
' '';',.f,!:i..f.1.,.:*.'.:'-;•":1-iieeh'[.'..tinderlif9Atit gAVeforiirlirdi.re• i
' •'. • lii .;',";:'ittaxil k ii.4 ls7:: iiii4Viagr-i:'.
' - - •,-. 4.
oordf Eittlifiiiiirthirerritg.o.4o4 . ' '•-• -. --.-':'-
r~c
,
ing its . exiatettee, helping to. ake history,
and _eh - the while improving and making
itself worthy the progressive spirit of the
age.. , 'The send of the press which worked
off the Gazuriniiever was litfahed through
all, the eight dectdes of years through which
it 'passed. It may have clicked:more mer
rily in the sunshine of prosperity, but it
sounded when the clouds •of adversity
lowered. Its long line of , editors and man
agers who have gone before us have steered
the old journal right, guiding and controlling
its course with the single view to Truth;
light, Justice, Equality and Liberty. .Its
record is unsullied, and by the Grace of
,flod, the present conductors hope tomer ttot
the beauty of the fair &Me which
have
columns i.wiiiiii,l4l4nizeil, by any !willing act
of theirs. In passing into the L.XX,XIV th
vediame, ' the • Gizirru Ur &Oiler ' finan
cially and otherwise„thali il ev er was before,
a fact attributable to the generous support
received from our Mime - tons patrons, and
for.yehichwo are *peel:4y vat.efui.
v
BETBSPECTIVE.
- a i r
We have bel l re ui a: 'eq . :ly of the""Pitts.
burgh GAZETTE published Saturday, May
.15T, neoipricelsix periter kindly' threislied
by aoll.4AltEll Tram; Of this 'city: `'lt'is
a venerable looking sheet, about one-eighth
the size of this paper, clearly enough
printed
~b ut very : quaint livhisia' Contrasted
with th e reecheAlea l eliPeePukee.ef ieerhala
iof this day. The , paper is .No. 12, Vol.
IV.,„andtcontsins winos items of interest,
among which we notice an obituary notice
of. Bosikart FRANKLIN in the . following
rie4 1 11 ,1 1 008 e: r ~ z - . 4 IL l'.f.' .' .5; ~
PHILADELPHIA, April 19tb, 1790.
Died on Saturday night - the 17th mat, in
the 85th year of his age r Benjamin Frank
lizt, . L.L. D. The world hasl.been ,so long
in possession of such extraordinary proofs
of the singular abilities ,and filriuestof the
FRIEND OF MANKIND , that itis -impossible,
for nenspapers tolncrease - his WED or to
convey his name to any part of the civil
ized globe where it is not already known
and admired,. .. • , p ~ t
It will be observed that the news of Poor
Richard's death was just: twentreight
_days
old whenpublished i n Pitirlierif.h. •
The fdr elgn news fioni - Londen and Paris
beitrs date jeatuall 8-2404 or foul Months
and Several days old at time of publication.
In the items from Patirtril fisidtbelolloW•
ing dispatch: 1
, '"The last stone of the,Bastilea l derigetina
was presented on Staturday, last to the Ns
tiOna Assembly, by the workmen' who de
molished the infernal regions."
It has not genertill# been timinnthit they
atricals' were in fashion in Pittsburgh . id'
long ago' as 1790, but the paper befOre ms
contains the following advertisement:
Prrisnomair. May 11, 1799.
At the request of several Ladies and
Gentlemen in Pittsburgh and its vicinity;
the, representation of the TRAGEDY of
-
,repeated on Wednesday evening
neXt, the l9th inst., to which wilt be added .
the FARCE of the
Moos DOCTOR
Oil
Dusts LADY Ctimn.
Tickets, - a two shillings and - sixpence
each, may be had at the Coffee House at
any time previous to the representation.
The doors will be opened precisely at six
o'clock and' the Icartaiti to firsts-tit; at seven.
Ladies and-gentlemen wing to partake
of. Ilt.e_Rautsement are desired-So „Apply
early for their Tickets as there will be no
more disposed of Ilan the Theatre can con-.
venientiy hold. • t'l
N. B. No money Will brs taken it the door;
nbr,any admittance without a Ticket.
Dennis O'Bryan, had cause to adver
.
tise his spouse in the following :Poetical
manner
..' Prrisuractir, Dee. Vi. 1790.
July the iwenty.seventh day,
Sty wile Deny ran away. .., - .
From lit d and board did Bee end dal" '
bele would no longer with me stay.
Sl.ce Shelves left sue Idtbotts cattab :-••• . ' . •
t ' , lt give her Um 1 enough to pause,
Thatitheina.y see her orrur • : , - i
when 1 lire happy with a fairer.
Therefore. 1 forwent. both great and , small
• To trust her anything at ail
• For her contracts from this day •
Not one farthing will I paY. • . " _
DEIMIS D'llaTa.it:
, ,_ , ,
Poetical, but misused and: abused Dennis
O'Bryan ! We preeum6BettYt6ok the hint
and-went back to herrliege lord, but the pa
per don't say so, and seventy-eight years
back is too far to go to get at the end of the
story: It shows that our great, great grand
potters were just as perverse and wicked
as the young women of to.:day. ,
In a fashionable squib we notice-that"the
lies have . adopted the Bastlle. bonnet
wiihh, with their cbarms, give - .aii idea of
chain) and ,confinementr"--a clever= joke by
OAT 1! °nay pre,deCESSOL:•' - ,•:• -; s . i•
A b on Innis repoze4 from London of any
American . loyist wise virite 'esked to take a
ticket for Geneed Burgerie'
... s benefit at - ,
Drury .lane as anaior' 'Of the "Heiress '1
said, "I paid enough kwr his swarm *vier..
,
ica, - ..and am determined 'wl give nothing , for
his pen in England." .' :-.,,,,,,, ~,,,,!. : r,,- , i, ~,.., t
1 It seems that some one of. he rUes about 1
' Pittsburgh, We . presume Sitwatal 'ilia iisa
larer-sized--catsflaii in dale 'of ' york„ if any
o
credence. can be placed !in the , Ja w ing!
communication •*,i.k..10. ti il li! .44 :- t,,, 1 1 l
: • "Mr. Scull : lam mtudvdl.lfaatillaCd witill
the inforrolitien given in *Ali > lasr‘undell
the signature of Caution, of making a kind ~
a burlesque of aleust-that it isitticninirt i thiii
ighbortgx4l4llshall State it as it is: John
Mossnian, the, editor, having lost a pig,wap
e n quiring 'for' it at ' . - the house -of James
florish, the wife of ' MAIM 1:' Pulled
a bone out of a headless-cask;.
isid it isemeedflto.s,be‘otheq.bbite of a
pig and was taken. 00 of the .belty, of A.l
cat lath Viet her t 4:timbindllplitelied. bi ' tfiti I
run theday v before,t end IS .. Wight /. bei that
this-oat Idir.'o.lthet ! rem.
dereatit . probable was that two days before'
when was l / 4 10olitivgAr4 his • „
saw the skin ' of a lamv - rvinit oar 'the r,u .',l
which lamb bad been missed by, a neig . -
bor, and thelprobabilityrs,ithatit KS& been
Snapped at and gutted by the cat fish. This
is a r,in rfactrlaliesat twittrefitticl b e mos,.
Man, Borish and his wife. So that Altrew - .
a 2:J01011h:4mi the:efiliir,_ as. if . people - rise&
not
be
afrf t P t i l l' AV Pi er iKSWlPl
near the'wa w ate r , is Ed a- neighbotC '
lioo4l)lool4WlPolkeittklienku=sicere
' less than they ought to be. A two year old
child; or thane; istuotraptartact6 walk,
mighttoddle, near the run and bsprade,a,
reT lolll # 'cat lielt , '.. . -..-
P
-.. triderithiiihekedf,i4poblegOir iirli
findthe follo,liiirje-iiiin 4 Wh i fi iteili7ger e ' '
itit*AtittlOC On Otititi.hfiAirifiriq;,:i,;,
, , !4. - popt tie orAix. - diA .4000 *lP4Mtker -,
of theith the einotint of thirteen ~ left gsgar , ;•
the,
lonsburgion-Oharthns dea l ) "Sind Wittr
4itilkantage ofirrising-flOod,
_oondUcted-tiR
-Watt fftmuthencitfootbotitei*, WWI.,
, Ohio , river.: , One: ereer4w i r
ntathe. for . ~,
lleaSy, built the purpose o f g ,
ab3u0.1.4-4'47f, Prti .I , ll l Sw.PAriPoPlotrO eSiO
rif ix
le and twerve ri.nreentn• a small park,
of t flittfOloOttttAilti :'_&,l*i
oil . • 00 he? 0 V ,. • 'lemall-11‘./
; PLITSBVILOIII 'GAZETTE FRI bAlf ,NJANTIA**I:4;
length,liedit foil die agOitedfa Feifeption of
passengers. The amazing facility with
which these boats palsied .down ;the creek
to the mouth, their sate crossing of two
mill dauss, one of which was about twelve
feet high, with the Wideness of the treefallk in
its natural state, especially at the s,
sufficiently shew what immense advantages
might arise to thousands of people in the
county of Washington, were the Legisla
ture to attend to the provement of its
navigation. From Canonsburg and nearer
Waahington, the charge of carriage to
Pittsburgh..on account of hills and,- deep
roads; Is not less' thin*' three shillings! and
nine pence per barrel, for flour, yet, were
attention paid to the cultivation of this ex
cellent stream of water, _one _boat of the
aforementimied'olie probabil
ity, carry two hundred barrels,lo the Ohio
withdit.detiiment thereto or a farthing ex
pense."
A WOL In'
the tour score years which have
plsed! away,.sinee the alicovel*MlisilttO,
Washington, Pa., has successfully held its
own and payswearly as much as ever fol
freights by wagon roads, between Pittliburgli
and that boreugh : ; Before eighty years more
roll away they may, perhaps, conclude lb
bilo.uteptuoiere volley Raiirnadandtlin,
mend matters. , ' '' ' , •
W find an , advertisement of, "a lottery
scheme for the sum;of ten Monza
foterectbag‘t.City6ttall-in-Phihidelphiw rind
fur theusitif .DieldniEutCollege in the bor
ough of Carlisle:: .The namel H of a num
ber of clergymen arriifirnished as ftgentri,for
thb riale;ist ette` fait' think,
delphia, •City Ind\ Dickfnatin College in a l
joint lottery to raise the paltry sum of ten
thousand dgllartst. We must look .up_.the
boXi`caria l ite . " if 'tie rdlie'r - tiribig Bill
for publishing - the scheme , ester been
paid, for Philadelphia is tic* plenty able to
discharge her obligations. We - presume she
will be esiumed at this date to acknowledge
that a lottery was held in her behalf in 1700.
/ runaway negro named "Sip" is adver
tised as having decamped from "McKee'e
Ferry at the .mouth ,of the Yough."
TWelve youndstreivaid were offered for his
return: if the old dab is still
I~vlng, at
the advanced age ; of 118 yea" we 'presume
he will take . hearty laugh in: this day of
. . a,
general jubilee over bia &Ver. ; getting
away from Ambition labors. 44erti,ing
runaway ;Taves lathe Pittsburgh , Psurrrn
was a profitable Fart _ of the business in early
days, bukyre don't carieny more for such
patronage —vtimillint :War it; if '..Wer , cesfirl
get it, could'ut get It if we would haVe it,
for there is =Amy more to be grit.
The horse department was also a conspic
uous one in our fore-father' a days, but the
advertisements of the owners of fast Mal
lions like "Young . Skewball" and
"Planter" would insult the more refined
reader of to-day, so we shall not re-produce
them. The announcements are accom
panied by well executed•cuts of horses and
grooms.
The Granrrs had in 1790 the largest cir- ,
culation of any journal West of the
,Alle
ghenies, ar there' were none others pub
lished,---al,l the city papers have. A now.
and published the list of letters remaining-in
the Postoffice, There were thirty-four Mils
elves awaiting the parties to whom ad
dressed. heavy business that, for the Post
master, Mr. JouN SCOLL, who was likewise
"printer of the Gszwrr;." Thirty-four
letters," ' Think of, it,'y e,
, business men, of
to-day, who receive-hundreds of litters by
every mall,—the whole budget of the Pitts
burgh Postciflice eighty years ago was a
handful of letters. One of the , missives was
addressed to "His Excellency DAVID MC-
Clams, Governor of Kentucky," who must
have been the guest of some of the first fam
ilies at that date. ' He is now dead.
There tveS ;I& Oxbadeflve leader 'in the
G.tzErrE of that period and ANDREW JOIIN- 1
SON'S name dldn'tappear once in the twelve 1
columns, for he was, it possible, less thought
of then than now- There were no market
reports, no police records, no'scandsla pub
lished, no telegrami, no redinray schedules,
no steamboat arrivals or departures, as all
these were further along. '• There were no
little , se, as we make them,,nor J'a as we
see them, but broken re - and black I's, as
substitutes. The paper on which it was
printed is clear and good, : but rendered by
time such a color as would set a Democratic
Naturalization Committee crazy• in attempt
ing to counterfeit,ivith coffee, as skillful as
they are acknewledgedt6 he:in that line of
business.
Perhaps the most interesting article in
this old GAZETTE before tis,'is an advertise
ment headed, "A Subscription for a Medal
of Gen. Waslaington," which reads as rol
-1
"Medals frOns the earliest,Period.,of time
havffirheenregarde4 VAIL enliglfteneil peer
1 pleas I p tohe rtreateitliel mitoryilia the
best method ,of transmitliVl4l , lo o 4l ,
age. and one of the most h • pll-,
meats a grateful people,tantheer ,
favorites. As the history o_ ho ne i ,ingance of * hgo or. getri • g vho
'has tatter -Aigired - tre. who iitseenitabe
justly entitled to the a ff ections or esteem of
the memory of theheroes l'ate,
a gratefuVrPla tribrigAgellmoy, the
President o 'the Un tedli tesWorge
Wrohigtttel, th
eme
artist is indaesd to offer to
Sie citizens. of America, a medal, with a
enticing and approved likeness; end such
inscriptions orjallegellieallifOrelea.altalll
' ' beet snit so great a character ; and he hum 4
bl "Awl tOXlicizoled'iwlth their patron
age. nebsoripWis will be received in
Pittsburgh bfintliti Seillin • l "
•
Corte--W., the ti3deitaigned, have. seen
' the ; medal. OfQVD. Wtßbbettlli :it lad Vsleit
it, a. Strong , eAtd espessive likeness, and,
worthy the attention of citistine of the .
' MitteEitikt_ef Qf ANnwricet IN i tr,f) off a' • '
TnemAe bilritas, doveroorthe
; . 3. . r .,-. -,,-B_,tat..9_ol?terV,lVlPAV, 'l7
• ;:f011ABI) rigrue, ..14perktiter of the
, . 1 . Nouse of Assembly. -
, • - CAMrerrerr Finliottai Throurer 01'
the State. ',
Poem's Jortosiori' ,voloilia- - oi the ;
late AntericallAtmy. 1, . .
1 4 46 t tfrolitivs itimell er ; t i l t* 7 , 14 1•... e it i e i n •
114 epee*ci of tbe:01:641111!) highly 'cons
mended. •
,They were , medn'of geld, tpev .
and Conikdon Met/kip ,:,
The kalowing r° 0114t1 ° 11 .7 4/1 b e of b 1
, 7.
, erest to some literestettin - the early s edmln 2
letnitmag,jseticeirtnesteruallstl l ntoldi
'_Witeirtkeet The hono*able Thomas 'Mo.
`Kean; Egg.; Meter of LaWe, Chief, Justice' K
of - theSnOreme 'reinirt of the Common
-IWealtliof nrisylesitit •end of the Courts `
of Oyer and Teiruilne ehdltenerai 061 de.*,
ltverritt and for the' laid State, and the
Iloo; , Willfrim -Ahgnsttts Atlas, one of the
ininkiteir Oi. eshiliginitb hXreiteat4Vdr
precept, hearing dateltBd , of
to Me '4lreetedgor Whit •Xriii-701re, Itr
AnAltirl64l."4-Yiltilmugh mithi oonntrof
Atuter , eni the 1i5t.467 , 40f ?lay nort,P
.., . - .
AN" ~ '..',. - •'t -, ',. - • , ..•
_,,
ME
•
,
.
Notice is hereby given to all justices .of the
peace, coroners and constables within Said
county that they be there and there in their
own persons with their rolls, recordd, in
dictments and • other remembrances to•do
those things which to their offices in that
behalf appertain to be done; also all those
who wilt prosecute against the prisoners
that shall then be-in the gaol of said' coun
ty; are to be then and there to prosecute
against them as shall be Just.
Dated Pittsburgh 19th day of April 1790.
' : • JAMES MORRISON
. : Sherilr.
. . ,
Janies GUTH:RIZ, of Greensburg, Sheriff
Of NV estinoreland county, attaches • note
to a similar proclamation, dated March lAti,
y 790. , , -
There are other items of interest which.
6 " may agai-Tt take occasion to refer to, Init
,our 'space le liMited,and we, must disintSs
the curious old paper from which the abOte
extracts were clipped ' • •
PtiOCBF.SS !tEl!OttrED.
•• ••• •
The approximate agreement, as first read!
between Lord SWcLZY and:our.Minister to
England, 'for thcl, Austrnent of pending
controversies, was -returned by `Secretary
Ebrwann, with ittatriketions to insist upon its
in,strveral, particulars, t 6 all of
which the British: t overdment low assents'.
distinctions sienow tO be made betWein
the Alabama cltiims and others, in the form
of their anbmisskor or in-the mode ofci
sion by the Ckantedssiotatiiereitpon. The
Commission is to sit. at Washington, and .
England consents thai the "umpire to be se
lected shall be subject the approVid of
American Senate. Our Secreptry,, having
carried all these points, now asks that the
treaty shall be called a "protocol" instead
of a "convention;" , that it shall be signed
here, instead of at London, _eo as to be im
naediately transmitted •to the Senate, "to
gether with.the Naturalization and San Juan
boundary treaties now ready to be aent in;"
and also a change in.the mode of choosing
an tunpire, 80 QUA, in the event of, a =tin
ned. disagreement by the COMIXIII3BiOII and*
the respective governments for tie period pf
six mouthe, the choice shall then be nuadeby ,
lot. All these desired innertdreents tarot re
.
Wirded s comp arat i vely unimportant, and
the assent of England thereto is not doubted. l
Without any reference to tke reasons of
expediency which may have led the Eng
lish government to acquleitol thus heartily,
in the 'needful preliminaries for the adjust
ment of its controversies with. the Great and
Once More ;United Republic, let' us recog
nize in the ' agreement, which has , thus
come to be an accomplished fact, a matter
for the heartiest, rejoicing. Nor can it be
denied that England has, upon her own
side, taken up and gone through this criti
cal negotiation in the most sincere good
faith, and with the strongest desire to meet
and satisfy all her just international obli
gations.
There is no good reason for doubting that
the Senate will readily accept and ratify the
Convention when presented \to it, with or
without such amendments as will not sub
stantially chanza its charact.
The signature of the Con ention, and Of
the accompanYing treaties relative to natu
ralization and the Northwestern:boundary,
will, in effect, put a final close to all out
standing questions of disagreement between
the two great nations. The New Year
therefore finds England and America more,
cordially united, in the ties of a more per
fect friendship, and with a less possibility
for any interruption of the international re
pose, than at any previous period in the
history of the Republic.
THE CRESCENT AND THE CROSS.
The cable brings a report that the Cretan
insurrection is ended, by the entire submis
sion of the population to the Tuikish au
thority, which gratifies the Greek feeling by
conceding to them a local but subordinate
government:-`lf this 'report - rbe cotrect, It
gives us effectively the end of the Greco-
Turkish imbroglie. That qearrel,has grown
aliogether out of the -Bair and undisguised
sympathy of the Greek government and
people with the Sultan's' Cretan subjects
who 'Were Greek in nationality and religion,
and whose revolt has' been sustained, if not
first instigated, by the national , sentimeat,,t
Withthe insurrection thus suppressed, van
ishes bodily the cause oflnternational diffi z
culiY, and, so far, equally :disappears any
Occasion for the proposed Conference of the
Great Powers. - - •
But beneath these temporary irritations,
is seen a more important question. ' The'
occupation of Greek soil'and the subjuga-,
tiOn'of a Christian people by the Mitssehhan
is not only a standing 'provocation to't bid
neig,)&boo.tibetweenthe.two .nsdit r
of more ':= consequence (thill,that, is itself a '
4644' c4f i li, ,,- .1407#6.4 ;!ieR141 , 90 : 1 41.
Christian; worl d When drat • the Gre ,
revolting from the . Turkish yoke ; achieve d
a national esuiteibe; and under it iffnidesa ,
which embrtited the.:greater poripflho'go.`•
ioPeall,P°s#o4/* of the 001Aan! the lime;
th'itreitde:'itte44<thCO2s*g, Slintlidliiiii
belk ' Otoi et t l iq
_.' 60:.rorf*r..idifiellerot liia•
dri11!,:.,, ac1F11'M'Ag. 1 4.' , 0 4 ! 40014 . 1i . 36 C
perm t'urope Is bbriatlae, from itis &that
tlettoolit to thbiwatereWtildh 4 aftrp it WI
the ' ccuithi aent, 'Astri e lai not , ey4l.
the....fegbleet','. 'fir its,'-';Christian ' ;: pecr,
ples' - should I:4'.•:' suffered to• reMainljioder
the MohaplntedeniwaY: ,Itja hightiMe that '
this i?arbartlY2 rt4,• 6 1 11 , 0 4. 1 d te as e •ctit; either '
the islandjef the GreekArehipeligo i or the
IllelTlVVßeilleitteetit 1 N tolaM n it
ai4 Moll 13 Of e Etiithe. . etzitted wt. ,
_ i ,
'til no t e an ' Christian . 0.11-klar 444ealOssies
of. Christian poireca with each otker, t foto
4
_a , • ,
be'lrPOY__4lB indeed it .lB eroc4ii,. t, o o_
*PrOrse&v.ouftrinice,4l. it.',Ove!,asstrAlsi
-svill.taltii-04a-41-44Oeireotillisrof
this, thalsglietialtifbroCrioni: ibiaiiiiiii of
, .. . •
IT r Ki seldom i thtkt we arzlie to
7 1 °T 40 :
41 1i41PA.4, . . iiii
:Unexpected pleasure now in muting from
it the;very sensible imisaraph ma foll Ors:
If lastf.illieporfiregalEcargaillit.
ton of General Grant's declarations are
tripii*lta Ihin3 tithigin ttatitottgiatlitoi. ,
become the most indiscreet end garrulouis
amen. But there inlPWs-hisen ;no truth
tth the stories which purport to - live the
Mesnrof thsTreeidentcelecytiif#: Ifeltk, ' ,
UF siti.stions of the &Y.
~:- • '''. - P. - P - _. -I'
'IBE9.
tTNCONsTITIXTION AL REPRESENTA
• TIONS.
We have taken several occasions, of late,
to remark that the rights of Kentucky and
Maryland, to representations for a colored
population which each of them have dis
franchised, ought, and doubtless :would be,
tested at the opening of the first session of
the next Congress. , Each of ',these States
has elected at least one member more -than
she Is entitled to, under the Kffth Article.
The neglect of Congress, at its last, or at
the present session, to give practical effect
.. this Article, by "reducing. the basis of
representation" in those States as the Arti
cle yequires, does riot, and cannot, work
any repeal of the Constitutional provision.
That -must stand--and it stands ignite; is
the way Of the admission of , usconsti
, tutional number of members *blob isither.
State will Clidra intim XLlst.COngresii.
—.lfore'than this / It 'Congress does not
make baste' to supply -its ••omiterionin this.
*talk and tialesetit - prqvicles
tag, by one year, theregular.detennial ma
mas of 1870, the same •tritixq!ipatibillty, of • the
Conatitstion with the existing , lima Will
luive to be ignored In the .elections of 1870„
lbr the Congress. : Aim . long, then,
can we afford ie.' disregard what. the Coast(-
' tution: plainly enjoins? • • 1-
In presenting and commenting'UPOU this
Situation, the GAZETTE has hiretofore stood
alone. Now, however, we are: glad - to per
that the New
_York tribunif Couture
tpitit e• . -We 8114 rely uponttie aid of that
influential journal in waking Up Congress
nit this very iinportant matter, ,
,
LEGAL TENDERS AND THE COURT
There are intimations that:the deciiiion of
the Supreme Court, to be announced to
'wards the close of this month, will be
in
favor of the constitutionality of the Acts as
a war-pleasure, but agaiiiit any 'new issues
in timey)f peace. This . decision would hold
all the. current . ' issues to be :alia s in their
origin. and in theli'subiequent currency, as
a legal-tender,,up to the present time and
until 're-eh - sorbed by theTFeasury. No
new limes would be authorized, aid it is
not clear that the Treasury would be em
powered. to Xe-hisne current_ receipts,.
The effect,of such an opinion with:this last
Unifier:ion would undoubtedly add . some
thing to the present embarrassments of the
Treasury, for which' Congressional' provi
sion would need to-be made, but the legal
tender validity the greenbacks current
among the people,and all issuesd under acts
passed before the close of the war, would*
remain unshaken, the paper' retainimr that
feature legally until finally withdrawn from
circulation.. The habitual , . inclination •of
that tribunal, toward that of
jafigment which equally considers public
policy and the principles of the law, would
be conspicuous in such a decision. For
this reason, we attach' some weight to the
rumors stated as above, and which an- -
flounce a bare majority of the Court as , com
mitted to this opinioh. '
. I
Rnommlrmr ex-rebels in Virginia are now
moving to secure the framing of a new Con
stitution which shall embody universal suf
frage with a general amnesty. ' They are
even willing that Congress may also, have
its say about it. In effect, they simply ac
cept the inevitable, so far as ,the suffrage is
' concerned, and propose to get a general re
enfranchisement if.they can.:,
COUGHS, COUGHS, COLDS, COLDS,
When a person' takes. cold , the lungs become
charged
_with phlegm; which oppressing, the con.
stitution a natural effort la made for .a ;relief.
This effort is a cough. The only sate and prudent
remedies to be .adopted are thosi`ibMiiiiistst
ture to its Work, by Loeser ing.the'Phiegin and eXcl..
clog a freedom of eipecturation until the evil is re
moved. DR, SARGENT'S '&MGR TITP is ad
mirahly adapted to proitote expectOration,'eaSettie
breathing, loosen the phlegm, abate thifever, and
allay the tickling which occasions the cough, with
out tightening the chest, or in any way figuring the
system, and for all temporary and local affections, -
Such as irritation of the throat, holiiettesa of the„
Take, infienza, de., it 15 of incaicuinbl value. FA
pet:lolly at this inclement season of - the year it
would be well for every family to have this valuable
remedy at hand. Prepared by GEO. A. E.EbLT,
Wholesale Draggist.torner W'od street and Second
nue.
_Pittsburgh, and f4r sale by alldrugglsts
jk aim defti •rs in medicine. StO cents per bottle.
GREAT PICTOIIAL ANNUAL.
to
ifoitetter's 'United States Almanac for iB6B, for
di s tribution ora3r, throughout the Lulled States
and all civilized contitries of ihe Wistein
lieinls
phere, 7111 be published about the lira' qfJantiary.
and all `who wish to understand the true philosophy
of health should read and ponder the 'ikaable, amp
gestions it contains. In addition to an admirable
medical treatise on the bancei, prevention and cure
of a great variety of inmates. It embrades a-large ,
amount of infarmation interesting to the nierehant,
the meebante. the. initer,'-the farmer, the .planter.
andtprofesslonal salntl 'and' the ealecnatious have
been-made for such meridians sad tatttades as aka
most snitabte Ibr a correct mat v.taprehotialve Na. 4
TIONAL CALENDAR. -.IN-
Tho natal's; uses; asd'estraordlaitYkifittary of
.,,ffects of EtoirFETT sTom4cia ping.gs, the
•11409 ,*przt:itiNt alterattie of, more than,braf .the,
C 61181,10 world; :erh . four set .feini.ta; its Tates,
whithh aciiifso intenniersedwith.,piotoriakllluatra •
VOUS; yalvabliireratfits for the household and farm, ,
haforoui' anecdotal; and other instructive sad
ikaust)ni reading , canner. original and ,selectol.,
Aicioas the Vicunas. to ,ippeer;iiink sha opening, of
tisk ifrAt.;;Trilfisii.tnia, Of the roost Rier.uPikro;
for tifs,riefap. earn' Tor copt,to the,
CentritSfainthiecary, at,l l / 4 ttshilicisi.ra . .., pato the
neareit'aiaier 11,0hErfAr,S'frOWALC71,13PF:.
• ffrft'FftB are . 1614 Ici ‘ tiaryAlfx, tosrk
'aiql . 'thifecksitor4;c
the entire ctsilise - d `stii'id;" ' ' ;
TRIBI/OREILTEST: , 01g, . 1 4111 i. COUGH
. • • -MIEDIOINESt .; :
, • :-• ,
At ttki 61: tbc.ief,F,l,4l4, me ets •
• • • • ,
.ofoiertifiMlth. oho* and. slush, It Is .
no wonder :that the •Itataral,'perdiand oonduets
the bodrhecottic = ,ohatrset9l.'ino •
ties bit'c'ene adeeted coughs ;sad.pithtionstry.
at throm talments. . tine of tile,Toll bettentes for •
all these !diseases wilt he feint! tu'DW KEibratifl.
PECTOttAL4l9fll•eiltre
itntirlsebeil mitter; retitotei t 0 '6lmtrue ititi; kid
allays the Irritability of the neivout-eisteMili
a way alto do no injut7 tolietitb.l‘ orAutorion with
aviteattonac - 14 hatibleastnillt `Must be
to - , , haue potent' ap remedy tu• the: hoose . ao
31.1LYBEIVII 'PECTORAL SYRUP.: which,` roi:ova ,
twpntylbmnL has-gitned?Au thirifft.otionileutd , to .l
stared: the health otthodsands of. Mir people To
stet the belt of *hit La going is a good roiwtri".any:
Mu phut tt to lisped/LW trni With resin tomodit:
clues And thrn Iszoitionsit media= thit Ike know
op4f coral potshot. hollkas a core and pronntnis
thito Da. 411011.4111111CTOEAL.BYIttre.1 ti
Sold st :the great .Modiblin titoroj Jo 140 Wood'
olgreet.r;WLl4l.:oll)l.o9l ATTER JA.settarr Jot
to 10T 1411.1TTIITRESTI'twOdixbrtv bdotr;
„•;,
08.411181,1114.1111Dramornaz torflitlll4l
Z141112111i110114 low, TI s isiutza v
okurati4xst WatONlCl.Dlimazetallc none
marint, prrsesvituraork.; mos 110 , 44 , 4iweil
9 442tillATUfAissaii' -,t54f,c14
poptaba
• .
--'
kt'
MEE
IMES
CHARTIERS VALLEY ROAD.
The conference between the Managers of .
the Pennsylvania. Central Railroad Compa
ny and ,a Committee of citizens of Wash
ington and Allegheny counties, is under
stood to have resulted most favorably for the
prospect of the early completion of the
Chargers Valley line. A re -survey will be
made; the local subscriPtions for $250,000
are to be made good, and thereupon the
Pennsylvania Company will proceed to com
plete the,road within one year thereafter.
It is presumed that the parties have fully
agreed as to _the mode of payment of the
local subscriptions, and that no serious otr.,
stacle now remains in the way of the early
construction of the work.- It seems to be
- only necessary for the citizens to put their
arigagementsin the fonn -agreed operni and
the work Will'ao•on at once;'
sorress-4•2 , 0 •sh - Or Sate." "VIA'
“Waste,,, "losvisa. ,l "Boarding," die. oot ess
etegaties FOUR LINES latheont be:tfuertedis them
Oottslint 14.24 fbr rwairrr-nrit axon; am*
additgosai Hoe zrit MUM.
-......0.:wei:iv.....~.;,,,,,,e.iw0e,...r ave.r.neee,ee.r.
VIANIED--Itgar,.-At Eanpl4.-
. - 'meat Mace; 'So. St. Clair Street ‘ BOY: 11
e ,3 iind *En for dtglere.ttt kinds of emptcy
meat Ferleell Ironing belp of all kinds cast 11111
ingidtett OttishOrtnottce. , , • --.-
_
WJMIMD-4ITAIATiONS.
WAb
.gen—
tlemin te,v3ber of disco desires 2.3030°1.
Location immexerial. • ' Address` stating salary,
—Teacher, I , ..G.sZagra Alice, _ '. • . • •
Atigi)-130Alisi*EaS a: " Pleati-
W:
ant room, with board, suitable for gent) man
and wire, or two young gentlersen Attie YOlatTli
eTIMET. Alio, a flaw day or dinner boarderecan
be accommodated. Reference requited., • . •
WAN T E'D_r-- AGENTS •4II O
14;11)0 PER MONTS—To sell a Sew Moot
pertaining to Agriculture and the Dieebanic Arts, . i
by GEIJRUE I. WARlNti.'ffsq..4 the diatttignishod I
Author arid Agricaftural Engineer of ths New York ilk
Central Par, Ite.. Nothing •Ilke it; MOO Engra- !
rings Sells at sight to 'Farmers, Mechanics and -
wotitingnsen of all classes. send for Circulars. A. •;.
L. orALCIITY , It CO., SS Market street, Pittsburgh awr
Penne, • _ • • s - def,
JOTTER.-PARTNER. :
can't al of from $3,900 to 0,000, to toast
in manufacta , Mg and yelling a valuable patented' • ,
Machine, which litany perfected, and: thti:bnattelia
already established.. 11 or pant:altars call at WHITE
13)10.s. & CO.'S egricsocurw -. Worebouse. No. 6
seventh avenue. . ,
•
WAilliTEDr-TO lIIENT-.41411Y-Per•
• 501 ? baTialg a. C4l3lfortable•bouse: of four or A
five MOMS, in a Oesiroblelocation in either City_or
suborns, can bear of a good tenant by addressing
J. R. aszETIT. OFFICE
25,004 l a n? Meg O F!. A i r ri
Comity' pert 7• Apply to ;or iid:re o ss C3:17 &
PLLLIPa, Bea 'Estate Agents; N0..139 Poulin
avenue, _ _
TITAN'rED. Ttiiittr to` Fifty
.11 V 'thousand ALLEGHENY VALLEY RAIL.
WAY BOZiDS in exchange. for .producilve city
nroperty, ?Aso ci2ss mortgage security for
Tvrehty-yise Thou,and terse or tie yeara
t". for ca.h. Address D. L., care l'Ustodice Box.
WANTED.-=BOARD ,
vomMland
WANTED-o-AGEINTS.
WANTS:
TO LET.
_
TO LET—OFFICE-A'. One ro i m
TO
on second •floor of_2•PIIELA.N,a - BiTILD-' ,
ZOE,' FIFTH ,AVEZiplfi., alto 'good light and .
ventilation and all the conveniences ot•a first .cls.s.
ottice. Kent moderate. Znquire of4.011:3 pg.g....-
LA on tt_ini.e.s , - , - ,: 4 - ,-.
• . „..
O LET—TWo most COnveniesit:
• - liousEs—one with eight room and the other .
e C even, du Eigeth stre.t n-ar Penn, opposite Christ
met.. • •
1O LET.-ETWO . HANDSOMELY
rj as
' furnished rooms. with g and ste, oneOn first
oor. and one front up stairs. Inquire at 109 Thir . d.
arenue. . • • ' '
WAITED --TO •RENT.- . .TWO - or
• THRERROOhIS OR A F.MALL HOUSE. In
a pleainut location, by aman and wiie: no children.
Good reference. A ddress, C. GAZETTE OFFICE.
R SALE
FOR SALE--DESIBABLE FARM,
Containing 161 acres, located in Aliegjteny
county. 24 miles from the c‘ty. fronts on West
Pennsylvania Railroad. and the euildiugs are with-,
in ten minutes walk of 'Natrona and Karnes etatlons•
31 acres of timber., 00sties - in grass. The whole
farm cAn be worked by machinery: good brick house
of 8 rooms and splendid' cellar: large frame barn
and all necessary ontbuildfligs: 300 choice grafted
fruit trees of all varieties, good soli and well wa
tered: would make a splendid dairy farm. Evers
trait i in Amt• class order, and needs, only to tis seen
to be apprectati.d,- yid be old lbw; as the owne its
is
determined to go :south. Terme:. asy. Apply
address ClttiFT .1 PHILLIPS, Real Estate Agents,
No.-139 FOURTH AVENUE. , • - • -
fiALEL-41 grain Business
F. STAND, - located on the line of the Fitts., C. &
St. L. it. W.,.in the best grain district in Ohio, con
sisttngofatwostoryframewaiehouse, 30 by 60,
convenient to Railroad. with side tnscit. tinning in
to It ta accommodate the loading and shipment of
tirailr, lot 60 by.loo feet. This is a rare chance for
a party to engage In a paving business as this stand
controls the GTAIII trade for 50 utileii ar. und. There
are other advantage's connected with the stand which
will .be explained on . application. batiafactrry rea-'
sons given for •eilla g. Apply to or address CIiOFT
& PHILLIPS. No 139 Fourth avenue.
•
_ _
FOR SALE--BUSEVESS LEASE..
HOLD - U3V113,7; a Pont of 46 feet Oil Washlng
ton street,Just above the Grain Elevator. by 115
feet deep along Hill alley. cn which is 'erected 3
three story brick business houses,- uow renting -for
41.900 per year. L.asehasiti years to - , un. Ground
r nt low. Soldeeparate or tog.tber. Price low and
terms easy. Apply to or address CEGFT PHIL
LIPS. Heal Estate h.gepts. 139 Funk th avenue.
FOR SALE-BUSINESS STAND-,
A well Icoown and prosperous wholesale busi
nest Stand. with • stcitk and fixtures, Is offered for
Failsf setory reasons 'are given for the ellipo-
FOR SALE-,That Huelva° story .
brick warehouse, A* by 04 feet. Mutated on.,
61110 nTILEET, Allegheny City,
s lco, 95, new °tr.-
bled ass P lone and Grain Wa rehouse. In
arehouse. Also,' that
two 'tor" , brick d wellies house. AO by elk feet, ad.
towing the above containing eiS.•rocrme; , Tor
further rticulare enquire on the ptenitises. of
EL -
FoIt„SALE-Ad - old - Tavern
blend, 5o. t 111 STRUT . Tor •
Pariticiiirs enquire ,at JOSEPH ASPIDICAR,B, 3
Butt's-Head Tavern . .. StieOnd Avenue - - 1
VOR, -,sAt.r.rAitate-wpoAcrejt
'of good Land, ' tutiht6d rein/ IV,.
X West
morel:Led countty tiro vino-ft* lAtllCBtiuott.
- the Penne. S.A. Amprovelvinalkhirredlrouse.
as
In, good repair, bask tosrA and _cluter_outbn i
Terms moderate.' Engtartr - or W. - w 1.0 0 1 0 11 :•
met”, Stattoni•or R. HOPS: &bun '
VOU ~ 1 1,11 M 4,1 L ' , new
iv.o,severi_roomilt_iiv.anaLtat•r. i*lth •
ktiChen• sorlite3-PEIME.riIVIAPORBIZI-DTILE ham .?„ R.
..also fou , c, roinsiA,urtiet, frink.tpu Forbe; ;5,
Dave t ig" / "1 tribl
tint clusretait ar,utitora ot ri
loestion• Ten:Weser. dolmas toot, I
bursn. .
sursolgus. NOTICES.
. ' 'VHIE3IIOI4 ''
11467Vr1ga31119t i ge..NI : ApTD .Tlint_ ,11 - tiTs""•' •
ZVZRY , SUNDAY at lOWA.. tr. anti IlriaG tqlwalt'.:( ' :
134. W BAP , . A. SOSSERMA• I I 4 . 7 • 4/,,r• -• . ~..• ..r. • ~,, , s 1
WRELIGIOIM--FLIBT - tIIMILI , : ',
. TIAITCHIJUCH: corner Beaver street it&
lioasValerT ateulte,••43legtieu7 JO&T.PIi &Me: ,
Prin t , tienicea..Faxt; Acatt` a , WI at,!.ppis,..y. - , , ,,
slum tree 4utdAll araistildlylavited, - • ~ ~ i. :.••c• • ;
12171ritik. "*iiiirt - uttootiist;:.
-,-- °mule% ywnr 4 1,:p.mrc. betweas With . . 7 1
• deldi sad +prat; streets. "AVEX. , II LARK;• rotor. -
• Prantdag,lMAT 800 404 l at' ,3,40.40 ~..s. And .;
1.750 roil. Vete,esta od.wtatopta to al1. 42 1 1 0 0 4 117 ..;,
' tlatt.t_A tVil a. i , and L'il' - '' --- . :ir
EMgt, 10ustifignsT
t,.....nretentuirETTstamtimaist:los*ft
CHURCH, ALt&c , '
ot.tassaisrell Army ,
Freida Fitz , ro ti m4 4 '..
krit44:44StiZtli,Terfo
:,:: retit. _
-.-: 4 4 , Anrilsstrib s
=via . la 1 '
Vrja
uuteiui
• MulAtputlistraeuv
A; uouigifie
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