The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, March 17, 1869, Image 2

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    El
littedmirit fiaptts.
`EPHEIEBIS.
—Louisville has a three legged colt.
—Chinese jewelry is the latest style.
4Parton wants to be Consul to Paris
—ln April John Brougham goes to Cali
forth&
' - •
• —"Boys In buttons" are the newest
Fifth avenue pomp. "
=A sculptor in Boston has done the
West Wind in marble.
—Brigands in Greece trouble the popu
lation which is decamping.
—Erie boasts of being the most moral
city of its size in the Union.
—The Prince of Wales is to visit Gar
abaldi on his way,from Egypt.
—Joseph Rip Van Jefferson Winkle has
a son witha great talent for the stage.
--The Princess Metternich's butler's
salarY is the same as that of President
tirant.;
--Atman named Henry Kincaide hung
limself in the Vermont Lunatic Asylum
'the other day. -
-Eight policemen have been killed
-while in the discharge of duty in Mem
phis since - 1866.
—Two remarkably fine marble busts of
Pompey and Brutus has just been discov
credit Pompeii.
—Mumm S. Co. have invented a new
brand of champagne, which he calls
"Champagne Patti." •
—Miss Yonge, who wrote the Heir of
ited-clyffe, etc., etc., is now editreals of .
the London Monthly Packet.
,z —Cary, Fa -Congressman, is lecturing
an "Labor Reform." Whether he labors
to reform himself is doubtful.
—The King of Prussia bestowed the
vorder of merit on the King of Saxony on
account of his translation of Dante. •
:—Belle Boyd, it is alleged, has come
down to the cancan level; i. e.: that she
dances that monstrosity in New Orleans.
-Horse dealers who wish to buy cheap
beasts should go to New South Wales,
whire they are said to- sell for two cents a
—Charles Lever is the author, it is said,
Of "Thai Boy of Norcott's," now being
published in the Cornhill and Harper's
Wsekly.
—Gold has been discovered in Alaska.
If this report be true Alaska would be
suddenly populated even if it were on
the north pole.
—An exchange 'having found out that
as you sow so shall you reap, has conclu
ded to try his wife's . Singer in his fields
neit harvest time.
;—(lovernor. Hoffman of New York is
trying to 'equal A. J. in. the veto way.
hits already exercised that power o
— his office three times. .
A 'young American lady was attack
ed, robbed' and almost murdered on - a
street in Parte the other day in despite of
the "best police in the 'world."
—One who has lost tremendously, says
that the old saw "Exchange Is no rob
bery". must have been invented before the
Steci : Eichange existedJ—Fun.
—The oldest Mason In 'the United
States has turned up again. This Lime,
it seems, heis ninety-six years old, and .
Is the father of 'go-Governor Wm. F.
Johnston. '
—'l'aglioni's husband is a nobleman,
yet he beats and maltreats her when he
stets drunk, which he frequently does.
Evidently her only .refuge is in the Lex
Taglionis.
--d late divorce case in Chicago de
velops the fact that an old man, after
nineteen.' years of wedded life, married
three other women in rapid succession,
and thus maintained four separate eitab.
lisliments.
—Punch says "Which is the wickedest
portion of America ? Why Sin-sin
naughty of course." Of which the Bos
ton Posg says "It is as bad as any - fet
heard from, as well as inaccurate,
,of Chicago."
'-'—Bridgeport, Connecticut, has a ;col-
oral citizen who can lift a keg of nails
• ... weighing 106 potinds, with his teeth, and
mobil 11 knepling on one knee hold it
rdritT ; m •
inute By this feat he won a
tenients. •
Admiralty fladerDiamaii,
iiieldialabscribe largely to Judy and other,
papers of Tory complexion because they
weralikeiy to exercise a beneficial 'Miri
am over the crews of Her Majesty's
- vessels," as was recently stated* Perlis
meat
—The Philadelphia .Ledger says the
stock of petroleum at Point Breeze,
Gleeniiich and Gibson's Points, at the
close of last week, amounted to 41,950
barreli. Three balm, one brig and •two
schooners • are now loading with petro-
, --.."Arthir.Shetcliler has recovered
his spirits sufficiently to make a Joke, and
Jur it . "Mrs. Brown says
. we have
had such imiechievOtte galeirall •through
the winter that she doubts whether the
Equinoxions gales will be Equally.nox.
ion," •
~he,latest style for suicide is' that
succssitfull3r, Introduced by an English
newspaper man, who drenched himself
in petroleum and then set fire to it, thus
furnishing a Bruning itera.for the. papers.
Thus we see that every few days some
new use for that wonderful petroleum is
discovered.
—The "Marquis of Hastings bas a suc
cessor in Paris who recently lost £4OOO
in gambling, at one sitting, - to 'a female;
hired the-whole . of a theatre for himself
and a.party.of friends, and would allow
one else to attend the performance;
tr llir St.7 l4 in
•
=
and has taken to dping four donkeys in
his carriage.
—About one hundred female operatives
in the hoop-akirt factorias of Derby, Con
necticut, struck for higher wages on
Tuesday. They are desirous of an in
crease, while their employers were con
templating a dedrease in wages. At last
accounts the affair was unsettled. •
—The Presidentess of the Chicago So
rosis went to Washington to see the in
auguration, and was denied a room at
the hote l) because she was unattended.
She sim y seated herself in the office
with the remark that she wouldn't stir
until she was protided with a room. The
clerk gay, it. up.
—A couple "of high social position" in
New Orleans recently appeared at one of
the churches in-that city and were marri
ed. At the close of the ceremony the
husband informed his bride that they
parted there, and that' she would never
see his face again. He walked off, she
fainted, and there is a mystery.
—:A frightful tragedy has been enacted
in Grenoble. On the evening of Febru
ry 20th, Baron Brayer, inhabiting, with;
his wife and son, aged fourteen years, a
private residence in the Rue Lafayette,
was shot by hiawife, the Baroness, armed
with a revolver. The unfortunate wo
man, reported as mad, instantly Bred lon
her son, whom she' shot through the
heart, and then blew out her own brains.
—Chivalry is at a discount in Tennes
see. -At Montgomery the other day the
son of a Senator quarreled with the Reg._
laterof the : county, but at last proposed
that they should take a drink and part
friends; They started arm in arm, for the
nearest saloon, when the treacherous fel
low, with his arm about his friend's
waist, shot him in the back, killing him
instantly.
—At the great American ball in Paris
on Waghington's birth-day, a young
Englishman was promenading after a
dance with an American belle. "Who is
that old swell?" said the youth to his
partner, pointing to a capital portrait
which belongs to Dr. Evans. "Why,
Washington, you know." "No, I don't,
I have never met him." "Take me to
mama," was altehe
A meet Upon Railroad -4Knocir-Dowue.t ,
When a conductor pockets for him
self a part of his collections (such cases
have occurred) I he is said to "knock
down."
We find in a Chicago paper
the annexed explanation of an ingenious
method to check this busineiii:
This is a ticket, giving stations, dis
tances and fares; ;which is supplied to
passengers on the trains who pay their
fares to the conductors in person. He
charges an excess, graduated according
to the distance traveled, punching a hole
through that part of the ticket indicating
the point of- stoppage, and the holder is
entitled to recover this° excess on pre
senting at any of the offices of the corn
pany. The extra charge takes the place
of that usually made heretofore in all
cases of fares paid won the trains, with
this modification, thaf sum is
returned on application, whereas former
ly it was never repaid, but operated as a
penalty for not , procuring a ticket before
entering the cars. 'This plan has been
adopted with signal success upon the fol
lowing, among other railroads: Penn-
Sylvania, Northern Central, Philadelphia
and Erie, Dubuque and Sioux City,
Camden and Amboy, Philadelphia, Wil
mington and Baltimore. Baltimore and
Ohio, Hudson and Erie, and New York
and New Haven.
Financial Views of seiretary Boutwell.
Mr.l3outwell's views on financial mat,
ters axe very well set forth in the follow
ing extract from a speech made by him
to the Massachusetts Republican State
Convention :
"We do not propose to tolerate, sanc
tion or permit an issue of demand notes,
payable In coin, to be exchanged for the
time-bonds of the United States, We in
teitd'hilimit, and, if necessary, to dimin
lab gradually, the volume of paper money
until it approximates in - value to the
standard of coin. We intend that there
shall be one currency for the bondholder,
the merchant, the farmer, the pensioner,
and the laborer. That currency shall be
of the value of gold. When this is done,
the public debt will be paid as the re
sources of the country may permit, and
to tho satisfaction of those who pay and
of those who receive. When the credit
of the country is restored, as it will be by
the single fact of the election , of General
Grant, we can issue bonds, payable after
ten or twenty years. bearing a lower rate
of interest, and thus save annually the
sum of twenty or thirty millions of dol
lars. But, first of all, as a means of re
storing the public credit, the people must
dispel by their votes the apprehension of
nationat dishonesty in the public finances.
'The Bepublicaapaityknows no policy in
finance but honesty."
General John A. Rawlins.
Major General John A. Rawlins, the
new Secretary of War, was born in Jo
Davies county,• - Illinois, Februar f 18.
1831, and was reared as a farmer and
charcoal.imrner, which occupation he
followed till 1854, when he *mat to Ga
lena, Illinois, studied law, and was ad
mitted to the!, bat in 1855. He at once
commenced - practice, and continued to
devote his attention to the law Until the
breaking out, of the war. On receivPig
the news of the Bull Run disaster he en
gaged in raising troops, and on the 15th
of September following went into the
service on the staff of General Giant dur
ing one of the etrly months of the war
fbr the Union. 'He stood by his chief
from the beginning to the end. Reheard
the Arid gun' fired at Belmont,and the last
at Appomattox: Since Lee's surrender,
he has been.stationed at- Washington as
Chief of Staff of the Army- of the United
States. By profession he is a lawyer. In
politics he was formerly a Denglas Dem
ocrat, but ever since the firing upon
Sumter he has been an earnest Republi
can. Throughout the rebellion his servi
ces to the General-in-Chief and to the
cause of the Union were of the highest
order.
Ix ♦ cities of little girls at school, the
question was asked, "What is a fort ?'
"A. place to put men in," was the.ready
reply. "What is a fortress, then ?" asked
the teacher. This seemed to puzzle, till
one of the; girls - answered, "A : place to
put women in
PITTSBURGH GAZETTF.: • W E DNESDAY, MARCH 17, ;1869
nom PITTSBIIRS4II TO ST. IAMI&
tCorrespondenee of the Pittsburgh Gezettej
Si. Lours, March 11, 1869.
Leaving Allegheny City at 10:25 P. M.
011 Thursday, I reached this city at 10 P.Y.
.
last night, via Chicago; where I made
a close connection with the Chicago and
St. Louis road, getting into Chicago at 7
A. M., and leaving at BA. M. I only men
tion these trifling matters that people
may -see what time it requires -to travel
on these routes. The whole distance
from Pittsburgh to St. Louis, by theroute
traveled, is 468 miles to Chicago, thence
280 miles to St Louis; total, 748 miles.
The Fort Wayne road, from Pitts
burgh to Chicago, is kept in good order,
and there is no road on which I enjoy ,Ja
more comfortable feeling of security.
The officers are courteous' and appear to
do all they can for the safety and com
fort of their passengers. At Crestline I
took a sleeping car; was asleep while yet
in Ohio, and awoke in 'lllinois. There
is an enormous travel going on over
that road. But no wonder, when we
consider its eastern and western termini,
and the populous country . through which
it passes. •
The road I came on yesterday from
Chicago to this city is one over which I
qiever before traveled. It passes alt this
way through a magnificent and well im
proved country. nearly all of which had
been prairie. It is only toolevel. I. was
astonished at the number, size and beauty
of the towns along ,the road, especially
Springfield, the State Capital, Auburn,
Bloomington, Alton and many others
which I cannot stop to enumerate. Towns
most grow in such a country as that, and,
when grown, they must engage in man
ufacturing, and this I am -glad to see is
fast coming to pass.- They have plenty
of coal. Shafts, with buildings over them
and steam engines for hoisting the coal
to the surface, are to be . seen in many
places all along the road; and the puffs
of escape steam from numerous buildings
in the towns told that productive indus
try was going on.
This great city is beginning to feel, as it
never felt before, the necessity of a bridge
over the Mississippi; and I am glad to
know that the ;capita l to supply that ne
cessity is secured, and that the work will'
be vigorously pressed forward. It is a
huge job, and will cost from three to five
millions. . C.
A PARIS letter says the fashion for "de
portment" during the coming year has
already been set. Parisian ladies walk
very much on their toes, with the waist
elevated behind and sinking in front.
The Empress, with whom originates the
fashion, executes it charmingly. The
heels of the satin boots being very high,
and the soles extremely thin, this becomes
easy enough, and can be acquired with
out much practice. A high authority an
nounces that, in the new style, "the air
of the visage is to be bold, no longer
wearing that expression of simpering ti
midity which suited with the long curls
down the neck." The chin is projected
forward, and the forehead thrown back,
while the eyes are kept wide open, hard
and round as possible; the lips are in gen
eral pale—coral coloring •is quite gone
out of fashion—and the expression of the
mouth to be that of weariness and scorn.
In consequence of the raising of the
coiffure, the ears, so long neglected, have
become an object of attention, and may
now be seen tinted with pink or white,
as maybe required. They are all brought
forward, or forced backward, accordin
to the urgency of the case, and it is as
tonishing to find what expression may be
given to the countenance by dint of a lit
tle management. Blue eyes and fair hair
are still considered indispensable to a rep
utation for beauty, and black eyes and
raven hair are scarcely tolerated; those
who are unfortunate enough to possess
them being Compelled to use every kind
of stratagem in the way of powder, paint
and dust, to conceal their disgrace. The
elbows must be rather squared, not
rounded, and brought forward as much
as.possdNe, in order to make the chest
look hollow, and add to the consumptive
look bestowed by the pale, lips and
I flushed cheeks imparted by the absence of
all coloring in the one case, and the ex
aggeration of its application in the other.
Let no young lady.dare to appear In fash
ionable society, unless she adhere with
the utmost strictness to these rules.
THE. carom of the New York Assem
bly Committee of investigation into the
alleged bribery frauds, asserts that large
sums of money were paid into the lobby,
and that they remained there, for no sat
isfactory evidence has been fuxhished of
the corruption of any Senator: Daniel
Drew testified that Kr. Eldridge bad
drawn $500,000 out of the Erie treasury,
which was disbursed "for the purpose of
litigation," but there is no positive dis
closure of the manner of its expenditure.
The Committee state that Lewis F. Payne
and Luther Caldwell were the head and
front of the lobby, and that together they
had received the sum of $120,000 and
used it for their own benefit. It was
proven that all the newspaper'eharges of ,
corruption Were based. upon rumorirn4
had no OnlitdittiP4 in faCt- . ThejepOt
011411 4 /3
closes. fwitiv - :4l:Le ul vOcom 4'l ,p 1 t
change ituthelly ,Nispecting tat l'; As
the-law ne* stonily:the - giver of , bribe •
which ik ocoePted f shall be eXeni froni
prosecution;AndObserve that ' .guilt
of the party who,' by accepting *bribe.
betrays a public trust, and vieb*his of
ficial oath, is (if there can be anyfiwee
of guilt of Ude kind) greater than , 'tWicif
him who gives it, and that the Legistepire
owes it to its reputation and • dlOity;,,t6
adopt such measures as arebest edspted .
to remove every obstacle that nowitill
to a full and thoroughinvestigat, silo
"
the conduct of its members. , '4; 1
"Nam our 'WV readers ride on yeloci
pedes they 'must wear the following areav
prey:Abed by the Velocipedist: "Let the
outer dress skirt be made so as to button
its entire length in front—the back ' part,
should be made to button from the bottom
to a point about three-eighths of a ye:dup.
the skirt. This arrangement -does not
detract at all. from the appearance •of an
ordinary walking costume. 'When the
wearer wishes to prepare; for a drive, she
simply loosens two or three it the lower',
buttons at the front and back, and briligj
ins together the two ends of each side,
separately buttons ahem around each ,
ankle. Tinsgives a full skirt around each
ankle, and when mounted, the dress falls
gracefully at each side of the front wheel."
Galt. MEADE.—The straight•forward
course of this distinguished soldier, in
administering the affairs of the Depart T
meat of the South, has -secured for him
the warm esteem and regaid of the citi
zens within the territary formerly under
his jurisdiction, irrespective of party.
- - "zt
DENTISTRY
T om lIIMERACTED
wrriasotrr
NO CHARGE MADE WHEN ABTIMICIAL
TEETH ARE ORDERED.
• PULL SET FOR $5,
AT DR. SCOTT'S.
In PENN STREET, DOOR ABOVE HARD
•__LLFO_I_LE WARRANTED. OALL AND El
13YROYMEWB OF GENUINE VV LOA
inva:dAT
L=l
I
G 4 FIXTURES
i ' & KELLY,
1 s and Wholesale Dealers in
anterns, . Chandeliers,
...
AMP GOODS.
1 AND LUBBICATING OILS,
WELDO.
Nanufactu
Lamps,
AND
Also, CABBO
►BENZINE, aco.
N 0.147 Wood Street.
setisu23 Between Bth and 6th Avenue,
FRUIT CAN TOPS.
We are now prepared to supply
TINNERS and the Trade with our Patent
• SELF-LABELING
FRUIT CAN TOP.
It is PERFECT, SIMPLE and CHEAP.
Ravine the names of the varicns fruits
Stamped upon the Cover, raMating from
the center, and an Index or pointer
stamped upon the Top of the can. It is
Clearly, distinctly and PERMANENT
LY LABELED by -zmerely placing the
-name of the fruit the can contains op
posite the pointer and sealing In the
customary manner. -
No preserver of , fruit or good
HOUSEKEEPER will ase . any other after
once seeing ft.
Send 25 cents for sample.
COLLINS dt WRIGHT,
•
ISO Second avenue, Pittsburgh.
PIANOS. ORGANS. &C.
BUY i'lLEol27)lt€A2. CHEAP-
Schomacker's Gold Medal Piano,
AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN.
The SCHOMAOICW;II PIANO combines all the
latest valuable improvements known in the con
struction of a first class instrument. and' has al
ways been awarded the blithest premium ex.
hiblted. Its tone is fall, sonorous and sweet. Tne
workmanship. for durability and beauty, surpass
all others.' Prices from $50,t0 $l6O. ( according
to style and Mash.) cheaper than all other so
called drat class Plano.
RSTRY'D COTTAGE ORGAN
Stands at the head of all reed Instruments. In
producing the most perfect ptpeguality States
of any similar Instrument In the United
It is simple and compact In construction, and
not Ilanie to ret out of order.
CARPENTER'S PATENT"VoI HITILANA
TREMOLO" Is only to be found In this Orgar..
Pries from $lOO to 050. All guaranteed for dye
years.
;11:1:1411:i:f..11iirAwy01:4:1
PIANOS AND OBGANS--An en
tire new stock of
MRABE'S UNRIVALLED PIANOS;
HAINZt3 BROS.. PIANOS:
PRINCE & CO'S ORGANS AND MELODE
ONS and TREAT. LINSLEY & CO'S ORGANS
AND MELODEONS.
OILARLOTTE BLUME.
43 Fifth &Inane. Sole Agent.
MERCHANT TAILORS.
BOYS' CLOTHING
At 'Very Low Prices.
Gray 'Bt Loom,
rem 47 ST. CtUER STREET,
TIEGEL;
B
° (Lite Cutter with W. liewpenheide.)
MERCHANT
No. 53 Smithfield Street,Pittslitirgh.
se2B:YZI
NEW FALL GOODS.
A splendid new stook of
CLOTHS, CASSIMERES,
Jut received by HENRY MEYER.
self:. Merchant Tailor. 73 Smithfield street.
PFIV:MMMIEMTPMrA
100 WOOD STREET.
NEW GOODS.
FINE VASES,
STEIN MAN AND CHINA.
NEW STYLES
SETS,
TISA. bind,
%ROBIN° BESETS, GIFT IMPS,
A large stook of
SILVER PLATED GOODS
■
of illdeseriptions.
Call and exezdni our g
_oots, and we
feel astielled no one:need fall to be suited.
Re E. BREED 00.
400 WOOD STREET.
PEARLIIIII MR,
PEARL MULL Throe Star erten Brand, easel to
rR $cH FAMILY FLOUR.
Tltia Jim will only no seat *at When UPS
gum ordered.
SPICRlhlid Ana Ems mum,
Spiel to boat st. LoUU.
- mum. ima Una lIINAaDs
alto hest tmio ewer.
Wan'! CORN YLOUIt AND CORN
11. T.
Auteatierni. leri‘gAlNlL " IMIL Mr""
171 al Ce 17i. 1 / 4 - zir-iI )y v, !:irtiliTal
tour !Lviroiv,
of Weights iu!d lleasitelo
No. 1011ItTEI B REM%
IBetween Liberty and rerY street+
nt!iolittatraDthr illtended to
QEMENT, SOAP STONE, &O.
VARTIMAN LAURA •No; / 2 ; 4
Smithfield street.. Sole Manufacturers 'of
Arran's Belt Cement and Gravel Roofing. Ma•
Curial for sale. jaatifi
No. IA BT. GLAIR BTRZET
FLOUR.
EMI
DRY GOODS.
..M..._..».
KITTANNING
EXTRA HEAVY
BARRED FLANNEL,
A VERY LARGE STOOK,
TOW OFFERED,
IX GOOD STYLES.
DOli
-
k CO„
WHOLESALE
DRY. GOODS
.04
WOOD STREET.
d
rn
E 4 ; 14 :41
l z 2
0 4) 1-4
0 A g am
Za 4 H Yt=t .
>4
44
4 0 ;11
WIN
1 Z 1 1
0 4
0 ; To 9 . 4
cn P" 4
< Aa r
E
t . f 2 .7.:
Z iv! 4c 0 sit
E-1
A ca
t t°4 l ri
• F
14 0
, c 4
z
r
0
U.
DRY GOODS
AT COST,
FOR , THIRTY DAYS ONLY.
TO CIABE STOCK.
THEODORE F. PHILLIPS,
87 MARKET STREET.
deS3
CARRIIffeCANDLEfiS & CO.,
Late Wilson, Carr I c 0.,)
WBOLZBALE DEALEBES
Foteign and Domestic Dry 13loods,
No. 94 WOOD STREET,
'Third door above Diamond alley,
PITTSBIIBOIL
WALL PAPERS,
WALL PAPER.
THE OLD PAPER STORE. lAA ERN PUCE,
W. P. MARSHALL'S
NEAP WALL PAPER STORE,
191 Liberty Street,
(NEAR MAEKEZ)
!WRING GOODS AUDITING DAILY. WO
, WALL PAPER, •
In New-ani Beautifal Deeps,
For PARLORS, HALLO; DINIZIO ' ROOMS and
OPLARLORRIL now readying in "Brut variety at
„
No. 107 Market Street,
iqi r F B A Y lNtri '
SOS. R. NIUGIIIIIII & 880
NEW STYLES
lIAM AND CAPS,
JVBT TtIOEIVLD eT
acCORD, & COls,
MCI
CARPETS AND OIL CLOTHS.
NEW CAILPETS.
54.
IN THIS. MARKET-
We simply recmst a comparivin-of
Prices, Styles and Extent of Stork.
The largest assortment of low priced goods In
any establlaL•ment, East t r West.
NeCALLIEII BROS.,
..ro. 51 FIFTH • ArEsrUE,
mhl2
We are now receiving our Spring
Stock of Carpets, &c., and are pre
pared to offer as good stock and at
as low prices as any other house
in the Trade. We have all the
new styles of Brussels Tapestry,
Brussels, Three Plys and Two Plys.
Best assortment of Ingrain Carpets.
in the Market.
BOVARD, ROSE /c, CO,
mhll:ddiwT
OLIVER
Have just received and are now opening the
largest importation of the most beautiful'
36 .
Ur
Vver brought to this city, being imported by.
them direct from the moat celebrated manufac
tories of Europe.
OLIVER
SAVE TIME AND MONEY.:
11'111111ND Sb COLLINS
It &VIC NOW OPEN THEIR
NEW. SPRING STOCK
. OF
.FINE CARPETS.
ROYAL A 'MINSTER,
TAPESTRY VELVET,
ENGLISH BODY BRUSSELS,
The choicest stvles ever offered In this market.
Our prices are the LOWEST. .
I Splendid Line of Cheap Carpels.
GOOD 'COTTON CHAIeli - CARPET&
At 25 . Cents Per Yard.
• • McFARLAND & COLLINS,
No. 71 and 73 FIFTH AVENUE,
nibs , (Second Floor).
PROPOSALS WILL BE RE
CEIVED ..‘..
PITTSBURGH WATER WORKS;
131 WOOD STREET
A STOCK
"Cr
3E1..
IJ
.4!L
3CO
(ABOVE WOOD.)
CARPETS.
2J ilYi`H AVENUE.
McCLIIiTOCK
& COMP,O.Y,.
McCLINTOCK
& COMPANY,
No. 23 Fifth Avenue.:
Dlsmond Market, until 7 o'clock. Much 5111„:
1869.
FOR ALL LUMP. AND NUT COAL , -
Needed at the LOITTM WATER WORIR t O` Nara
street y for the year from April 1, 1809, to
A ri l a l otail LB 74t Lu sk .....d 'Nut Coal for the trp_-
PER wATXR WOußrt, Bedtord avemte,xagrah
mrard. • •
TO FOUNDRYMEN:
• BIDS will be received ler PIPES and litt3Ct L•
LANEOUS CASTINtits. Pipe to be of 9 and 111
feet %niggle, and of *net size as mly be ordered
by the Water Committee. Bide will specify the
price or 4. 0. 9, 10. 19, 15 and AO inch pipes;
also fbr Fire Plats. 131 , pXooks and Ferrules.
nto josmpa - p.9,9909, ;superintendent.
. 1 * X* IWINT J. BEAT?
FITWIPIT & ILILITT,
".•° - autcartacrrtrum. Asp
ORNAMENTAL CARVERS
He. it &Musky , St. ' Allegheny, Pa.'
)
_, .
.....la T ikeusortaant of ItIEWEL PCKTEI - and
B•LosTzsis corataatly on *and: TURVILIiii
of all tleaellotloac done. . , . mamas
THE MAN. QR - TUE MEN.:
who
SERIESATONd TICKETS. d
an 8d OW WASHINGTO N MEDAL- LION' PENH, ale hereby Informed that the draw
ings were made January. 89; 11109, and that air-
ULM' giving fall information of the numbers
drawn, will be sent to peranns Interested, as
their addressing the WASHINGTON MEDA.L
LION PEN COMPANY. New. York.
N. 8. - Retail as TICILITB OF TM" 4TH Si,
711211. • leknfe .
F~EBH- • •
CANNED GOODS.
onolds Community. Winslow's and ;Yrmouth
Green Corn, frean Asparagus.' Peas,. Okra. To
matoes. Peaches, dtc. for sam by the case or dozen
at the Slimily Grocery dtore of
JNO,A.• RENSHAW,
Corner Liberty and Hand streets.
tabu
2000 BITSHELS OF PEACH
fILUW lits
'4O BARBELSOF 8044:111IIN
DILLLITGER .I'B=llll6o'
N
MI