The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, February 10, 1869, Image 2

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    121
littAutglj Gaitttr.
UNDER THE BEAUTIFUL MOON
Under the heantifel moon to-night
Silently a eeps the crowded town
Tenderly, dreamily. R.at3 the light.
O'er the wanderers up and down;
Echoing' faintly alonirthe street;
Farr are heard the restb'ss teet
Plodding an wearily,
sadly and-drearily,
Onward the last cf a hope to meet.
Under the beautiful mopn there alef ps
Many and many a fair young :ace,
Many and many a mother weep.
Bitterly over child's disgraces,
Smiles, be they false, till the sun Is set,
Under the moon may the cheeks be et.
Signing tearfully.
Sadly and fearfully,
Many a heard would fain to get:
Under the beautiful moon there go.
Flaunting their shame in its holy light.
Faces of loveliness to and fro,
Straying from purity tar by night.
Goodness and truth fur the light of day,
Under e moon may the bad - have sway:
th e could the beautiful,
Ever be (Waal.
Love might gladcen their hearts alscay.
Under the beautiful moon there rest
'Vicious and pure,and the hour. go on,
Souls that in love lard life are blest.
Faces of wretchedness pale and ,van;
Happiness under the moon may sleep.
Misery under the moon may weep,
Grievingly, sobbingly,
£ainfrily, throbbingly,
Hearts max make moan over sorrows deep.
Under the beautiful moon to-nlght,
Many will dream of the loved and lost;
Many liveover with Ernii delight
Hours when they suffered and sorrowed most
Tears for the lost when the day is fled.
Under the moon may their names be said:
Fondly. endearingly,
Never so cheeringly,
Memory breathes of tee loved and dead.
EPHEMERIS.
—This is Ash Wednesday.
—MeadVille has a velocipede.
—Detroit talks of tunneling the river.
Artist of agility is what a Boston acro
bat calls himself.
—The Missouri wheat crop promises
well, but may lie.
—The number of free churches is in
creasing in Boston.
—Marie Ross, a French violiniste, is
coming to this country.
—New York gossips say Edwin Booth
is soon to marry -"Miss M.Wickar. .
—One paper has had the hardihood to
nominate Buckslew for Governor.
—A colony of seventy - newspaper cor
respondents is wintering in Madrid. -
--Governor - Harrinaann of New Hamm:
shire wants to be consul to London.
—F. P. Whipple has severed his con
nection with the Boston Transcript.
—sloo,ooo and thirteen lives is the loss
by the recent dam accident :at Danbury.
—High prices are said to be the most
effectual preventatives of consumption.
—Rev. Miss Taefe, evidently of Danish
origin, isspealingthroughout Wisconsin.
—General Crist was buried at Louis
vine on the 4th inst. He died some years
ago.
—Patent preventatives for snoring turn
out to be nothing but patent spring clothes
pins.
--Poughkeepsie has a fine new opera
house nearly as large as Niblo's in New
York.
—A one million dollar hotel at Salt Lake
city is what Brigham Young now talks
of doing.
—Edwin Forrest is about making a for
eign tour, and begins next week at New
ark, N. J.' 1
--General Thayer, a healthylveteran of
84 years of age, 'ins the first Superin
tendent of West Point.
• —A folding mnchine - has been put in a
Rochester printing office which foids.24,-
000 papers in an hour.
--She postoffice at Cosgrove Hill, Sny
der county, has been discontinued. Ban.
nerrille takes its place.
—A religious revival is sweeping
through Buffalo, and has already been
felt by many denominations.
—The:Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
has decided that the seller is obliged to
- make a deed and furnish the stamps.
- —Susan B. Anthony Is said to have a
-kindly smile. As for us we never, be
lieved much in the efficacy of hidden
treasure.s.
—Two dollars is what it costs to gouge
out an eye in Cincinnati. Probably it
could be done cheaper by contracting for
'a quantity.
—A. T. Stewart has sold recently $64,-
.000 worth of shawls, one of which sold
for $4,000, and the remaining $OO,OOO
paid for twenty. _
—For exercise the members of the
• Rhode Island_ Legislature walk home to
dinner every day and back again for-'
evening sessions.
—A man in Alexandria, Virginia, had
the cap of his knee' broken by a shoe
maker, who was removing a tight boot
-for him the other day.
—We understand that a valuable pro
cess for manufacturing Russia sheet' iron
has been discovered; •at the Westerman
Iron Works at Sharon. ,
—John Brougham has Miss Effie Ger
mon, the favorite Philadelphia actress, at
his theatre in New York. She rides the
velocipede very neatly.
—School teachers and pupils in 'Hyena.-
ville, Indiana, haVe to be provided with
certificates,of vaccination. They have
small pox there and are afraid it will grow.
—A youthful wedding excited the at
tention of many in Lynchburg, Va., re
cently. The united, years of the bride
and groom were 160, he being 90 and
she 70.
—At last the spirit ofjeogress has ex
tended beyond enterprising females to the
other sex and a Men's Rights .A.ssociation
is spoken of at Chicago. It has our good
wishes.
—Rev. Dr. Alger lectured in Boston
recently for the benefit of Henry Giles,
who is an invalid, and had the good for
tune to clear about five thousand dollars
for kim. .:.
• —Pawtucket, R. 1., has a printer who
saves all of his spendings and then
spends all his savings on turkey dinners,
which he gives to inmates of New Eng
land gaols.
—ln Boston a groper once had but four
weights, with which he weighed any
number of pounds, from one .to forty.
They consissed of 1,2, 3 and 27 pound
weights. : i
—Another firemen' riot took place in
Philadelphia on , Sunday between two
companies. One man named William
Cook, of the Reliance, is supposed to be
fatally injured.
—John Brougha 1 is coining money
and words at hie New York theatre.. He
anno noes Ilavingmadrigals, Velocipede
menti , tioinabaloonatics, Cancanibalis
tics a d HumptumptYidiotics.
--,1
. 1
eather prophets say the coons have
built heir nests Li the open air and there
fore t e are to have a short winter. No
matter how short it is, if it does not be
gin soon it will IneceSsitate a late spring.
—ln England the Franking privilege
does not exist,. In that land of heredi
tary privilege and caste, every person,
from the Queen to the beggar must pay
the postage on letters r if they mail them.
—We •find in an exchange the follow
ing touching morcean :
Softly, softly, while we slept,
Came the snow-flakes gently down, -
Cam ,- and sorrowsully wove
A shroud of white lei the burled town;
We rose with feelings grand and intense,
And hired a middle-aged An gl o-A fric an shovel
ist to clean our shiewalK oil for fifty cents.
—Fisk, the operatic director, is trying
to tempt. Nillssen t 9 come here, by offer
ing to pay all her traveling expenses and
give her $200,000 for a season of 200
nights, besides engdging a troupe of nine
teen artists to assist her in opera.
—General McClelland is- hard at work
at the Stevens battery, and probably will
be for two years yet. He is pretty fairly
intrenched now, and if not obliged to
change his base or execute flank move
ments, ma, get through in triumph.
—The proceedings of the National
Convention of Vessel Owners this week,
in Philadelphia, are extensively com
mented upon by the newspapers every
where. It is regarded as -an important
gathering of an influential class of people.
—The Canton (Ohio) Republican pro
poses to make a velocipede with rimmed
wheels, so that it can run at the rate of a
hundred miles an hour on a single rail of
a railroad. In case of meeting a light
ning train, wouldn't it be very bad for
the bicycle ?
—An exchange says: "Titusville is-to
have a velocipede school shortly, and the
oil operators are all going to take lessons.
with a view of riding from well to well.
They hope thereby to avoid the muleci
pedes and old hossipedes formerly in
vogue there."
—The Nashville, Teen.,- Union says
there "are ten millions, more or less, of
women in the United States, and about
five hundred of them want to vote. A
true woman—one fit in every respect to
be a wife or mother—would as soon touch
. a tarahtula as a oallot."
—While lately en route to the - South,
Thurlow Weed was a fellow passenger
with a Mr. Latare, who told Mr. Weed,
who has long been an invalid, that he
never- been sick in his life. As the
steamer arrived at the Charleston dock,
Latare fell instantly dead.
--Mrs. F. S. Chanfrau, formerly in
the habit of starring with her husband,
but more recently leading lady at Bel
wyn's theatre in Boston, is very ill with
a dangerous combination of diseases, and
Frank Chanfrau, her husband, has thrown
up all his engagements to go and nurse
her.
--Incendiaries are quite numerous in
the country now. Complaints of them
come all the way from Wisconsin to
Maine. It must be an exciting vocation,
and the hair breadth escapes, daring ad
ventures and dreadful deeds of a success
ful one of several years standing, would
no doubt make an exciting tale.
—During the past week three brigs and
two barks cleared from the port of Phila
delphia with 476,340 gallons of petroleum
for foreign ports. Since the first of Janu
ary the petroleum exported from that port
has amounted to 2,030,732 gallons, and
'there are now two ships niiie barks and a
brig chartered and loading with it for for
eign ports.
—The Rev. Dr. M'Cosh, the new Pres
ident of Princeton College, is exceeding
ly successful in gaining the attention and
confidence of the young men under his
charge. Re plays a capital game of
whist, and does not think a good glass of
wine, on proper' occasibri:s, is any more a
violation of the sacred law of temperance
than eating a good beefsteak.
—Away out West an enterprising mer
chantladvertised everyplace, in newspaper
and with placards, the "IlEvommoli,"
intending to use and explain it to his ad
vantage later. After thishad been going
on for some time, another sharp business
man got out perambulators advising every
one to go to his shop and see the "REvo
tvriox." This appropriation of his
property naturally annoyed the origina
tor of the plan and he has been forced to
come out and assert himself at great addi
tional expense to himself and profit to
the printer.
_
Now and then an invention comes out
that moves onr admiration and hurts no
one. Capt. Ingle&ld, of the Royal.
Navy, has invented a mode of steering
ships by hydrostatic pressure—the pres.
sure of the water in which the vessel
floats. The apparatus is, of course, be
low the water line, and it can be con
trolled from any part of the vessel. The
Captain, sitting in the cabin of the largest
iron-clad, with a compass beside him, can
steer her with his thumb and finger. If
that is not a pretty invention, we know
nothing about mechanics; and so simple,
you wonder that Noah had not thought
of it in the ark. as he doubtless would
have done, if he had propelled by steam,
and cared which way lie was steering.-
,BITRGB GAZETTE
Singing Mice.
Musical news naturally gravitating to
wards the London Orchestra, the leading
authority in music in England, two. or
three correspondents of that journal tell
some stories of singing mice. One writes:
"The existence of these little animals,
especially in domestic dwellings, is by
most people regarded as mythical. though
they are spoken of by writers on Natural
History. Last night, however, I had au
ricular evidence of the fact. About 11
o'clock I was called down to the base
ment floor of my house to listen to a
singing mouse. From the corner of one
of the kitchens, where there is a mouse
hole, came a song such as one would hear
from a well trained canary bird, though
in neatly— subdued tones. They were
soft and sweet beyond description ' and the
notes perfect and continuous, not a dis
cord among them, and often accompa
nied by a delicious trilling. For frill ten
minutes my daughters and I stood listen
ing to the music with absolute astonish
ment and delight, so clear and exquisite
was it. itiw much longer it might have
continued to sing we know not, for we
left it while yet warbling."
Another says:
"About twelve months since we had a
singing mouse in my house at South
Norwood, and evening after evening he
used to amuse us with his delicate little
whistling in different parts of the house.
I seta trap In• ond of his haunts, and
caught him early one evening. He was
allowed to remain there, and continued
singing in the trap for upwards of an
hour. On examining him I found him of
a slightly different color to the common
mouse, being more inclined to a 'brown
ish fawn' color, and the skin soft and
silky; the nose was short, and the eyes
brilliantly black and bead-like."
And here is the explanation from cor
respondent No. 3:
"The most trustworthy explanation of
the singing mouse phenomenon is that the
supposed gifted little musician is in reality
'the victim to a disease caused by the pres
ence of a worm, probably cysticercus fas
ciolarix, inhabiting its liver. The irrita
tion caused by this parasite brings on re
peated attacks of coughing, the sound of
which, through the tiny trachea of a
mouse, closely resembles • chirping or
whistling."
A Female Religious Enthusiast
A Belgian paper devotes five columns
to a description of a new Ecstatic named
Louise Lateau. It appears for some
months past this young girl presents
every Friday the phenomena which are
called the. stigmata of the Passion. She
has on her hands; 'feet, and over the heart
sanguineous blisters which exude abun
dantly. The ordinary functions of life
are suspended. The eyes open, and turn
obliquely towards heaven, appear to be
attentively fixed on some object. The
pupils are dilated, the face is pale, the
mouth partially opened, and the features
express a sentiment of admiration, min-
I gled with a sweet sorrow. At times the
object she seems to contemplate produces
a painful starting. When not in ecstacy,
she is in catalepsy. At three o'clock she
starts up all at once, and suddenly flings
herself on the flags, without the least at
tempt to protect her face with her hands.
Yet She receives no injury. She remains
for an hour in this horizontal position, her
arms and feet crossed. About half past
four she raises herself quickly, without
any assistance, her arms still in the form
of a cross, as if some invisible power had
placed her in this vertical position. She
then falls on her knees, next sits down,
and in about ten minutes the body is sub
jected to a kind of torsion, and the Eel
static of Bois d'Haine— for so she is called
—throws herself supine on the ground.
Then it is that- she is waked up; but to
accomplish this the persons about her
must belong to the Order of the Passion.
A North Carolina Romance
- The Winston (N. C.) Sentinel. tells this
Rip Van Winklish story':
Thirty-six years ago, a man living -in
this county (then Stokes) was arrested for
some violation of the law. He was tied
and placed on horseback, and started off
to Germantown, then the county seat.
After he was arrested, his wife managed
to slip him a knife and- on his way to,
prison he cut his boids, and, being well
mounted, he made good his escape. Noth
ing was heard from him, after his escape,
by his family. He had been married but
a short time, and his wife mourned for
him as one dead.
A few weeks since, an old graY-headed
man stopped at the house where she was
living, and inquired for her: She came
out, when he asked her if she knew him.
She told him she had no recollection of
ever having see* him before. He then
made himself known as her long-absent
husband. And now, after a separation of
nearly forty years, they are again living
together as happily as a newly married
couple.
- -
A Hartford Love Altair.
A lady and gentleman are now living
in this city who were engaged-to be mar
ried more than thirty years ago, and who
are still anxiously waiting the day when
they shall be made one. In 1840 they
had been engaged for some time, bat did
not marry because each had a mother de
pendant upon them for support. The
two mothers refused to live together, and
their children would not leave them, but
decided to postpone their marriage until
one or the other should die. Both moth
ers are still living, an d the gentlem fll an
continues to visit the lady, their
duty still keeping them apart: The man
has had the consumption for several
years, and doubtless ere either of the
now very aged mothers shall take
their departure, he will have gone to his
last resting-place.l Every day a tremb
ling old Vemeolleaning heavily on his
cane, with feeble steps, wends his way to
the house. of Juliet, a withered maiden
lady, whose hair, is silvered by age hnd
trouble. Truly, they -deserve happiness
if any couple ever did.—Hartford Post.
TuE Omnibus Pacific Railroad bill will
be resisted on the ground of its cost,
taking into account the possibility of the
Government having to pay the bonds
themselves. It Is estimated that the roads
whose bonds are to be guarantee are
4,800 miles long, which at 380,000 per
mile, the amount of first mortgage bonds
allowed to be issued, will be $144,000,000.
The total amount of tnterest to be guar
anteed will, for the thirty years the bonds
run, be $252,720,000, being $108,720,000
more than the principal itself. At $16,000
per mile subsidy, the entire risk taken by
the Government would be $37,680,000
less than by the proposed Omnibus bill at
I the subsidy named. The. bonds required
would amount to 176,800,00, an the in-
ter st d for thirty years to o $138,2 d
40,000.
The total risk therefore is $215,040,000.
WEDNESDAY, - FEBRUARY 10, 1869.
GAS FIXTURES
WELDON & KELLY,
TiLanlifirturers and Wholesale Dealers In
Lamps, Lanterns, Chandellers, !
AND LAMP GOODS.
Alen, CARBON AND LIIBRICATINGOILS,
!BENZINE, &o.
N 0.147 Wood Sti4et.
se9:u= Between sth and 6th Avenues.
FRUIT CAN TOPS.
We are now prepared to supply
TINNERLd the Prade with our Patent
.FRUIT CAN . TOP.
It is PERFECT, 'SIMPLE and CHEAP.
Davine the names of the carious fruits
Stanspe4upon.the Comer. radiating from
the center, and an index or pointer
stamped upon the Top of the can. It is
clearly, rilstinetly and PN.RMANENT—
LY LABELED by merely placing tha
name of the fruit the can contains op
posite the pointer and sealing in the
customary manner.
No preserier of fruit or good
HMEKEEPER win use any other after
PIANOS. ORGANS, &C.
_.,..........._____
BUY THE BEST AND CHEAP
EST PIANO AND ORGAN.
•
Schomacker's Gold . Media Piano
AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN.
The SCFIOMACKER PIANO combines all the
latest valuable improvements known In the con
struction of a drst class Instrument. and has al
ways been awarded the hie hest premium ez
hiblted. Its tone is run, sonorous and sweet. Tne
workmanship. for durability and beauty, surpass
all others. Prices from 550 to 11150. (according
to style and finish.) cheaper than all other,So
, called first class Piano.
ESTEV'S- COTTAGE ORGAN 1
Stands at the head of all reed instruments.--in
producing the most perfect pipe quality of tone
of any eimilar instrument in the United States.
It is simple and compact In construction, and
not liable to wet out of order.
CARPENTER'S PATENT " VOX HII3IA.NA
TREMOLO" is only to be found In this Omar.
Price from $lOO to 4550. All guaranteed for five
yeaxs
BARR, SNAKE & Burt fLER ‘
No. lig ST. CLAIR STREET.
PIANOS AND ORGANS-An en
tire new ElLoek of
ENABE'S 'UNRIVALLED PIANOS;
HAINES BROS., PIANOS:
PRINCE & CO'S ORGANS AND MELODE
ONS and TREAT, LINSLEY k 00'5 ORGANS
AND MELODEONS.
ODARLCYTTEI BLUME._
deg 43 Firth atenne, Sole Agent.
MERCHANT TAILORS.
lIBIBQUIRTERS 17.
FOE
BOYS' CLOTHING.
Gray & Logan,
NO. 47 ST. GLAIR STREET.
BTIEGEL,
!MateCutter with W. Bespenbeidej
mmatcH.A.Dr TAILOR.
No. 53 Smithfield Street,Pittsburgh
se23:v2
NEW FALL GOODS.
j "‘ A lendld new 'toot of
CLOTHS, CASS/HERBS, &C.,
Just received by HENRY MEYER.
sell: iderehmit Tailor. 73 Smithfield street.-
GLASS. CHINA. CUTLERY.
100 WOOD STREET.
dIHOLIDAY GIFTS. 6 r ,, ,
. v
FINE VASES,
c;'.3 BOHEMIAN A.ND CHINA. ' 513
"'NEW STYLES,
I_4 -DINNER SETS, P
TEA SETS,
• GIFT CUPS, A
A SMOKI N G SETS,
p• A large stock of c:rl
C4:SILVER. PLATED GOODS tri .,g l
Pi 1)..1
of all descriptions.
I
FA .
S el il exn e::ff de :eT dce
I„ealel:Oin :d tall to bnited. -
glt.
:E. BREED & Co.
itili - 144011 STIIE9.
WALL PAPER = REMOVAL.
OLD PAPER STORE IN A NEW PLACE,
W. P. MAIIISHALIA
Ras rifinoved from 87 WOOD STREET to
ITO. 191 LIBERTY STREET,
• few doors above ST. CTATR,
- IL J. LANCE,
DYER AND - SCOURER.
No. 8 ST. 014 AIR STEMET
And Nob 186 and 187 Third Street,
PITTt3WCIRGH. PA,
ItCPSAIDALAS
FOR SALE BY DRUGGISTS EVERYWHERE
de7;b1040 91,
UNION ENTERPIIIS
FOUNDRY
W. N. .1011N110.'
Manntaetnier 01 COOKING STOVES, Arcbee,
Grates, Fenders, Sash Weights, and all kinds
Machinery Ware, Car Wheels and all kinds of
Castinrs Colt. WATSON & SHIN
GIBS STS., PITTIcilbllOM, FA. au26;r4wlt6
SELF-LABELING
once seeing it.
Send 25 cents for sample
COLLINS & WEIGHT,
139 Secant avenue, Pittsburgh
WALL PAPERS.
PURIFIES THE BLOOD.
CARPETS AND OIL CLOTHS,
51 51
51
Fifth Avenue,
ALBPETS,
CAUPETS,
CARPETS.
NCALLIIIII BROTHERS,
MTALLUM. BROTHERS,
M'CALLUIII BROTHERS,
51 FWth. Avenue,
Ell
ABOVE 'WOOD STREET._
SPECIAL INNOLNCEMENT.
TO ?lEET THE GENERAL DESIRE OF
THOSE who have been deferred from purchasing
until after the drat of the year,we have concluded
to continue our
GREAT REDUCTION SALE
PPR A FEW WEEKS LONGER. This is posi
ticely the last opportunity to stenre bargains In
C.A. 3P.Y9EOTS,
Oil Cloths, Mattings, &c
Good dirpts for 25 cents, a Yard
OLIVER
TOOK
AND COMPANY
ifth Street._
M'CLI
No. 23
RY, 1869.
JANU
PETS.
OA
ND&COLLINS,
EFARL
Contintte their
Will
CLEARANCE SALE
SNNLOIL
EKS LONGER.
TWO
r Bargainsthan
ill be offered to
Greate,
Ever w
close out Special Lines
of Goods, at.
71 AND 73 FIFTH AVENUE
ine SECOND 'FLOOR.
DRUGGISTS
a I RSON It • I
• 266 Liberty street, Dealers In Drugs,
aints and Patent Medicines. nA:Z)
W. MACKEOWN & • BRO.,
WHOLESALE DRUGGISTS,
♦ND NANITFACTUTtERS OF
Carbon. Oil.
MOM TO NO. 195 LIBERTY STREET,
PITPBBIIR4II, PENNA.
dela
Wh
ednetureite Window L
ne ead, Glass and Glasswar
e .
a
litanrs Wis.
SHEETINGS AND BATTING.
AOLMES~ BELL .....
ANCHOR COTTON MILLS.
PITTIEUGIErttriIEI.
Ranz Dia wren of HIGA.VI MEDIUM and LIGHT
ANCHOR AND MAGNOLIA
EIT-TICETINGS AND BATTING.
MECHANICAL ENGINEER.
pEBCEVAL BECKETT,
IGEORANIGAL ENGINEER,
And Solicitor of Patent&
(Late of I'. F. W. A C. Railway_.)
Office, No. 79 FEDERAL STREET, Room No.
9, tip stairs. I'. 0. Box SO, ALLEGHENY
CITY.
MACHINERY, of sll descriptions, designed.
BLAST FURNACE and ROLLING MILL
DRAW MOS tarnished; Particular attention
paid to designing COLLIERY LOCOMOTIVES.
Patents con tideutlaily solicited. Air An EVEN
ING DRAWL:aI CLASS for mechanics every
WEDNESDAY NIGHT. aplaiSB
DRY . GOODS.
54.
KITLIB . NMG
EXTRA HEAVY
BARRED iLANNEL,
A VERY LARGE STOCK,
NOW OFFERED,
GOOD STYLES.
111110 Y,
DICKSON
& CO.,
WHOLES..kLE
DRY GOODS,
Ogq:
WOOD STREET.
ci
o o g
g •R
cd M )P
Z
oi ca a
Ei ; 14 E 4
Z ' 19
1 11 1 1 E 4 M
° P 0 ° 54 g , ; 1 .a
z a
I'o a g p m
. 4 PI E-i zet
g 0 1111 cO
tfl 0 in . E. 4 .4 P
ti 5.
x Q rn ;T4
et 4
I: W 111 Pi ia 1
Z 0 i., 0 _ .....
a o g 1.1
x Pi E. 4
ri Il
P 1
14 (:) el
't4 Z
DRY GOODS
AT COST,
FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY.
TO CLOSE STOCK.
THEODORE F. PHILLIPS,
87 MARKET STREET.
deZI
GUalatLete WMCCANDLESS & CO.,
j.
iLson, Carr & Co.,
lnior.icsAY,E. DEALERS
Foreign and Domestic Dry , Goods,
' No. 94 WOOD STREET,
Third door above Diamond alley,
. PITTSBURGH, PA.
CEMENT, SOAP STONE, &o.
HARTMA_N & LABE, No. 124
Smithfield street, Pole 31moufacturera of
Warren' Cement and Gravel Rooeng. Ma.
tertal valetr iss:3o
HYDRAULIC CEMENT DRAIN PIPE, ii,
Cheapest and best Pipe in the market. Also,
ROSENDALE HYDRAULIC CAKENT for sale.
B. B. & C. A. BBOCIAETT & CO.
Office and Manufactory-240 REBECCA. I
Allegheny. W Orders by mall promptly atten. 2
ded tn. leZnrila
(e I) :ö
r B. LYON;
... limiter of Weights and Measures,
N 6. s YOUBTR. a rßErr,
(Between Libertyand P l aty streeter
TWA era ornmntiv attAndio to
HAIR AND PERFUMERY.
JOHN PECK, ORNAMENTAI4
HAIR WORKER AND PERFUMER, - .I.2cw.
a Third street. near Smithfield, Pittsburgh.
Always_on hando • eneral assortment of Laj:.
dies. ‘Wifi,_BAZWEI CURLS: Gantlemen f c -
WIGS. TOPERS, SCALPS, GUARD CHAINS,:'
BRACELETS. &c. Sir A good, Price in caste".;
will be given for RAW HAUL .t:
Ladles , and Gentlemen's Hair Cutting dank, :
In the TiPlit.ll , manner. mhirni -;:r
WINES, LIQUORS, &O.
JOSEPH S. FINCH Si CO., _
Nos. 185. 187. 114.191. 193 nod 195.
MIST BTREET, PITTSBUROg.
MdattI7ACTIMESTIS or, •
Copper Distilled Pare Dye Whisket -
Also, dealers in FOREIGN WLNES and 1../
141101113, aura, ac, m 112.8.1453,.
54.
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