The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, March 20, 1869, Image 2

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• LOYWO RELIEF.
I believe it I should die, •
And you should kiss my eyelids whe I lie
and-dumb to ail the wort contains.
Tile' folded orbs would oven at thy b ath, _
And from its ex dein the aisles of de th.
1.1.1 b vrould come back gladly along my eini.
l
And you upon my lifeless heart'shoidd treia,
Mot knowing what the poor clod chanced to be.
• It would find sudden pulse beneath the touch
Of him it c +er laved in life so much,
And tomb again, warm; tender, true to thee.
r believe, If on my grave.
Hidden in woody depths er by the wave,
Your eyegshould drop some warm tears of regret
From every tatty reed of your dear grief
some fair sweet blosaom would Leap intoleaft
To prove death could not make-my love forget • ,
• I believe 11.1 should bolo
• Into those mystic realm* where 11 •ht is made,
And you should long oncemoremy face to
nigh see,
I won.d'ecant forth upon the hills of t.
: • And gather stare like faggot s till thy egtit,
Led by the beacon blaze, fell full on ine:
ibelle.ll7 my faith lit thee,.
• Wrongsat my life, so nobly placed to be, •
wont as soon exp ect to seethe sun
- Wall like a dead king from his height
glory stricken from the,thrpne of time,
As unworthy the Worship thou bast won.
Lbelleve not loved
Math bait. the treasure of hts Ile unproved t•
Like one who with the grape within his grasp
-Drop{ it. with all Its crimson lutes unoressea
- ~_.AIIII all itaiuscions sweetness unguessed,
• 'locrtfrotri hls careless and unheeding elat.P.
I believe loie, pure and true.
10 theuoul sweet. immortal dew
mast gmi ilf -"I petals in its hours of dUsk;
• • Th. wetting angels see and recognize,
The richsrown jewel...love of paradise,
. • When life falls front usAlte a withered husk.
RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE.
Agreeable to - the call, of ministers and
laymen Connected, with ; chtirches adher
ing to the General Assembly; .and with
• churches of the "Declaration and `Testi
mony Party," a Convention. was held at
Lexington, Ky.; not • long since. A.ti
“Aaartpo.”... • and "Ifeinorial" were
_
adoited, the' address, to the people of
- •s ,
Kentucky, ) and the memorial to be pre.
the General 'Asseinbly. The
;' , latter document asks . .1.. The rescinding
of
a the - order of 4865, inns
innelk as occasion Tor it t r inapsased away.
It brings forward paragraph, Art.
IX, Chap. XXI.; of the Presbyterian Con
- fission, and "implores, the :General As
-, aembly to adopt 8, minute, - declaring that
if tuz l / 2 , of the past deliverances of the
General - Assembly. are in conflict or in.
consistent with said article of the Confes
s sion of Faith, they are disapproved by!
this Assembly." •The organ of , the De.
, claration and Testimony men thinks the
Convention conceded - lei) ;:ituch, and is
quite severe on all it did. •
The 'American. Churchman, published
at Chitago, takes the ground that under
•`'no circumstances are_the columns of that
paper open to discuss any official act of
any Bishop in the Church, or any expel
' sion of 'opinion which a Bishop makes. or
,any txdyice..which,:_h_e__Elym.....At Bishop,
is utterly - above any judgment of
their"is, or any other mail's.
The "Church of the Covenant," (New
Schoei Presbyterian,) New York, organ
', itied some six years ago, has just been
-. relieved from debt. The total cost of the
buildings is about one hundred and sixty
•
- thousand doliais. The entire propetty„
' however, is valued it two hundred and
fifty thousand dollars. The New School
General 'Assembly is ; to meet in this
. , chunih in May next,
-s Much enjoyment as well as. benefit has
resulted from the "praise meetings," held
in Dr. Thayer'a (Congregational) church
- at Newport, Rhode Island. Thesimeet
-, - Inge are held on a week day evening and
_ . devoted mainly to singing. •
The Presbyterian says the Rev. W.
Calkins, of the N. B. North Presbyterian
church, in Buffalo ' recently baptized a
young man by immersion, using the bap.
- •'tistry of the Free Will church.,
Dr. Morgan Dix, a rector in , the Prot
' extant Episcopal Church, has been utter,
ing views in a recent sermon that
grieve' many of the communion of, that
Church, namely,.that the last three hun
dred years are "the real dark ages of the
''• Church, because, forsooth, Martin Luther,,
• •... by prescribing "private judgment of the
Bible as a fundamental doctrine of his
qfortnation,!" laid the foundations of "all
-the ,etrora and• infidel rationalistic doe
:trines" that are so prevalent at "the
' present. day."
• ' ' Rev. Ofis Gibson, Superintendent of the .
• Chinese Missionary work of, the Metho
' dist' Episcopal Church on the Pacific
• -
coast, has succeeded in a short t ime in
organizing fourteen Sunday. Schools for
Chinese, in which about four hundred
... , Chinamen are weekly taught our tau
Ac by Christian men and women.
'.' According to the Mend the Quakers
. 'in Pennsylvania are decreasing is num
, • beta. - Since 1880 but five new m i ct i ngs
ihave been established, while thirty-seven
, . have been abandoned..
The Indepenitent'aniounceatkat a Chi
. .anto business firm has undertaken the
entire a foreign missionary,
beginning with. the present year.
•.s -Ts Thd Methodists or Boston bought
Bromfield Hondo ettate, for the Peb.;
%Wig Office of Zfon7l 7 .Fierrtid, and the l
' and hi,' furnish enitable'
•r "Oetninearttionifer general inoetings.of the,
j'ifiacndtitglon. ' :The eaMtii ' . i s- ver y neat
' •'s I I trig,
located on Brotnfield street.l 4 .,Midd:
bcotiwethitieliiiont and-' witagigtO
:. ,street& • z
TheyhristiattAdvocate, of Newlnrk,,
referring , . , Om; Paregrapb;,,going; the,
• round of , the ineWitintner sinus* that the
13.nitartaid81131 to have receiVe4 ; ffiiiite
the last year more acomelonl-tgl Ptal‘t
of their ministry from the , Illethediat:
'Clergy than from all ' 01041°4161r
' .schdols together, says, it is possible that
• • •,s some Methodist minister has turned
tarlasi during the past year' but' the.
.t.•rrecord of it•has not reached that °file&
, • The Waahington city correspondent of
the Presbyterian referring to Bishop
timpson t o sermon in the Metropolitan
.
- • ..4g, • )4,4-=',.:4:w›l•-•.s.Nv7 ,
' Alaikr,flAtx-.D-..--,../Py›... • 44.
&wit, on thoisn'y or, Itn" . 6dicalion,
-WTI* " BishoPl l3 iniPso # is td American
Methodisni what Geneial,Grant was tithe
armit.l-great inft.inizer -o:one wise 'in
~discovering character and 1511
choosing 1)- -
ordinate" leaders for every kind of
work and possessing a personal magnet-.
ism; that is irresistible upon those over
whom he chooses to exert it. He thinks.
.the great --impetus, -to this branch of the
Church is due, as much to theiblessing of
God conferred upon them in the gift of
this man'as to -any other one cause. •
The gifted Rev. Franklin Moo t te, D.D.,
formerly of this city, and ;brother-in-law
of Judge Agnew, of the Shpreme Court,
has lost
. his voice, and, -is spending a
month or two in Florida fcirlis heatth.
-The closing exercises of the Allegheny
Theological (II: P.) Seminary willmem
mence Monday.; April 6th, nia dlose
Wedneiday evening.. The nsuaigisami
tion of the stttdents"will` take , plice; and
special sermons will be delivered hi Visit
ing ministers. , The Commencement a
. ercises proper , will' be ,held. WediesdaY
night in the "fourth church; Allegheny
' pity, When, dareeses will be delivered,
closineivith the presentation of Bibles to
the graduating class,by-the senior.Profes
sert-Dr..l'reisly: ,_ ' ' • .-. ' ' •
Reoent rules have been ihowitiliatid by
the proper ecclesiastical • authority of the
Catholic church, for .the 'gtddance of its
conniunicanta, namely: First, no Catho
lic who has &husband or wife alive can
be married Spin t4ess by applic&tion di
rectly to his bishop. Previous to this,
priests had the power. Second, a Catho
lic, who has been married outside the
Church can be absolved Trona such viola
tion of its rules only upon application to
tin bishop, and by public avowal of re-
Dentance. . ..
The Cumberland Preabyteriaa in discus
sing. the question "how to prevent candi
dates for the ministry from marrying before
their course of , preparation is completed?"
argues "who that has thps married in the
midst of his preparation, has arisen to
eminence as a.rainister." .
-
t•_i
Gait%
A wan has. broken' out between the
Ritualists and "anti-Btuallits in-the 1111-
nois diocese. Bishop ,:,:iVhitehouse heads
the forces of the. former, - A paper has
been signed by a large , rmmber of clergy
men, and laymen,' in which' they enter
their sOlemtkprOtest against allteachings,
innovations, ,machirttions and devices
that are employed. for unprotestantizing
'thisProtestant . 2piteopal Church, cor
rupting her ooctrthe,:debasing her wor
ship, and overturning ter long established
rights and wages. The teachings oalltpg
forththis censure are pointed out in the
official expressions of the Bishop and his
wheel' The signers of this paper propose
to hold a genrel meeting in June next,,
in Chicago, "of the Evangelical clergy
and laity of our church whosympathize
with the spirit and object of this protest,
for the purpose of discussing topics con
nected with it, and transacting such other
business as, under the circumstances. may
then be deemed expedient." -
- -vgritig-,UGC --GAZ
Truax days before the inauguration
Mr. A. T. Stewart went to Wfuhington.
Prior to his arrival most sumptuous
apartments were prepared for him at the
Ebbitt House. Parlors reaching the
width of the house were refurnished; car
pets of a new pattern were sent on from
Mr. StewfirVs store,and put down;
choice lace curtains depe nded
. from the
windows; new furniture adorned the
rooms; flowers covered the mtuttles,
stood in msugtificent lxiuquets on the
tables, and hung in rustic basketsfrom
the ceiling. A private entrance to the
street, in charge-ofliveried servants, was
secure : at all times from unwarranted in
trusion; a carriage stood at the door, with
liveried driver andfootman,ready to con
vey the occupant of those rooms where
ever and whenever he desired to go. It
was in these apartments that Mr. Stewart
in ,expectancy received, accepted, and
finally declined the office of Secretary of
the TreaSury.
l'aznotzum.--The Canadian newspa
pers are complaining that no method Las
yet been discovered whereby Canadian
petroleum can be refined so as to eqtial
that of Pennsylvania for illuminating
,pnrposes. The Canadian petroleum
emits a disagreeable odor, and injures
the tea, sugar, and other goods, near
which it may be stored. The duty of fif
teen per cent. imposed upon Pennsylva
nia petroleum prevents consumption by
the Canad d a demand has been ex
tensively 0 the repeal of this heavy
tax upon it which is essential to
the comfort. , very family. In New
Brunswick the coal oil works have been
closed, ~and, the bad smelling petroleuM
from the Province of Ontario to the only
substitute. Henoe the newspapers insist
that a more. effective plan ter refining the
oil should be attempted, or that the duty
of fifteen per cent; upon the foreign ar
ticle should immediately.be removed. .
THE ston Transcript :says that the
citizens off' Montreal are: apprehensive of
immense damage when the snow melts
and the river breaks :SA . . The city at
thorities as well as the Ofitzlere using
precautionaryrueastirs. he drains
love•b 000 Placed under _close Inspection, •
snow is being slutteled.'.froM"the roofs of
houses; and, . the, arailiVe;teams are,
employed In carting - the snow front the
streets. 'tit, also .feareil .thattbrentii lll
the region between St; Johns and' on ;
treat the destruction will be Incalehlable;
-and that s freshet will Occur ih•the
lieu and Bt. Johns rivets 'flooding the en«
tire level oouhtry..and making it an in.
'land sea.' 'Theritants are in daily
and almost 1 1* .dtee'd:' Communics- .
liortitf *alas if not thought of, and
W
:it eome Ulu before.,freight 'trains
will resume thel“etuditr;trtik!-
i BY •
tikettloll i or , th ofsiteretiry . of we
Navy the "pea service of officers hisretifter
; 1 4'0 1 tto,for,ilt period of three YoareVeunt
ing from the they receive ,the order
until they are detached on the return of
their vessel to theßnited States. Officers
• who have bees three years at sea will, on
-their return, be allowed three .years at a
Shore statiottisnd to make it fair for all,
officers will haverto take their turns at the
different 'Worts. `TMen Officers - zloty' on,
the 'Meditedinetukilation*B:not be or;
tiered there &gait 'bitir-they ! ha*, Per
formed duty on the coast of Brazil China,
Pacific and Home Squadrons, which will
be the tour of duty.
. 'THE 11A.D AO%
it..u.,_,, ,,k,„..
omas Powell Buiton was 'yr en
known in e early 'paittl the present
(*AMY as On of- the, most earnest &Wilt
nts ofYirillimik`ltillerforce in freeing
from ......-__ . . •
Englandd the critse&i his erniable from
alave-holding. - : -It is not to & we v er of Ids
public career, nor of his deep-Diety P hat
we ezaahoutto speak, bated' one ' eat
1 in his life, which shows - how a r ally
religions and intrepid man will• f e a
sudden and frightful peril for the eof
others. - The event took place in the um
' mer of 1816, when he was thirty e ars
old, a capital sportsman and ata or ,
remarkable personal strength , and great
height (six feet four). He was 'not pipet
, a baronet, and was at the time living at.•
Hamstead,•and daily riding into BOW
, fields to attend to the affairs of -a brewery
in which lie *as' a partner. During a
visits that',* wife - and - children were)
inatingataffistarice, he had teenstaYing
1 with .ins; brother-in-la w, air. Hoare, not
ffir, from. his home. „When his servant
1 1 brought his horse to ,him there, it walk
with the intelligenzatiutt his dog, Prince;
was in a strange state; had killed the cat,
almost killed another dog,'and had -tried
to bite some of the • Mr.-Buxton
desired - that the creattire shoutd -be tied
up and taken care of; and. hen rode off to
his business in town; but as he returned
he)saw Prince, evidently mad, covered
.with.mud, running furiously and biting
at everything. , ", t. ,
Mr. Saxton tried to ride him daWn or
drive him Into some outhouse, but in.vain;
and he bit at least a dozen dogs, two boys
and a man, Springing at aboy and seizing
him by the breast, but this time his master
was near enough to knock him dOwn with
his whip. He then changed his . course,
setting off for London, and Mr. Buxton
rode by his side, waiting for some oppor--
tnnity of stopping him, and constantly
calling to him; but the
_poor animal was
past attenaing tothe well known voice,
whethe.r coaxing or scolding. He was
getting near more closely inhabited places,
and considering the Itaiful damage he
might effect, Mr. Buxton thought "if ever
there was an occasion thit•jitatified a risk
of life, this was it," and ,determine4i*to
catch him himself. Prince ran to a gar.
den door, and Mr. Buxton., leaping from
his horie, grasped him by: the neck. His
atauggles were so desperate that it seemed
at first rathost impossible even for so pow
erful a man, to hold himT(hewas evident
ly a large dog;) but lifting him up from
the ground, he was more easily managed,
and Kr. Buxton contrived' to ring the
bell; but for a long time no one came to his
help, and,being afraid lest the foam which
was pouring irom the poor beast's jaws
might get. into some scratch on Ids fingers
And be, as dangerous as an urinal bite, be
with great difficulty held Prince with one i
hand while he worked the other ntOthe,
glove in his pocket, thent.banged hinds,
and thus put on the othet glove.. At last ,
the gardener opened the tool% and Deiced.
what he wanted. '"l h nitrotiglit Thu a
mad dog," was the answer; and desiring
him to get a strong chain: Mr. Buxton
walked into the yard crrrying Prince by
the neck. , He Wile deterinined.not to kill
the dog atone, thinking that if ,it should
prove not to be a case of , hydrophobia, it
would be • great relief to the persons
who had been bitten, and this could only
be determined by letting the disease take
its course. • The gardener was in great
terror, but had sense enough to obey di
rections, and was able to secure the col
lar round the dog's neck and fasten the
other end of the chain to a tree. Mr.
Buxton then walked to the utmost bound
of the chain and with all his force,
"which," he says,"was nearly exhausted
by the dog's frantic struggles," threw
the creature as far away, from him as he
could, and spranyback in time to avoid ,
poor Prince's desperate bound after him,
which was followed by "the most fear
ful yell he ever heard. "
All day the • unhalmy creature, in the
misery of that horrible disease to which
our faithful companions are sometimes
subject, rtished round and round the tree,
Champing the foam that gushed from his
jaws, and when food was thrown to him,
snatched at it with fury. but could not eat
it. The next day, Mr. Buxton thought
the chain in danger of giving way, so re
newing his act of bravery, he obtained a
stronger chain and & pitchfork. Between
the prongs of this he contrived to get the
dog's body, without piercing it, and thus
held him' pinned down' to the ground,
while fastening a much larger chain
round his neck. On the pitchfork being
removed, the dog sprang up, and dashed
after his master with such violence that
the old chain snapped in two. However,
the frenzy soon spent his strength, and
he died only forty.eiglft hours after the
first symptoms of madness had appeared.
All the dogs and cats he had bitten
were 'killed by Mr. Buxton^ himself,
knowing that for such a painful business
it was wiser to trustto no one's resolution
but his own. The man and boys had
the bitten parts cut out and the wounds
burnt, and it was hoped that' the horrid
consequences might be averted from
them. ,He himself expressed great thank
fulness both for his own escape and his
children's absente from home,, and thus
'wrote tdhis wife a day or two after :
""What a terrible badness it Was. Yon
Must not geoid me for the risk I ran.
What I did, I did from a convietiori, th at
.1t was my. duty, and I never ,nan. think
that an ever-cautious care of self in cir
cumstances where your risk --may: pre
serve others,is so great a virtue as you
seem to thik ft. Ido belieie if I had
.shrunk from-the; "
danger, and others - had
!Buffeted id' vinsequence,l should have
..felt more pain than I should have
,done
had I Acd-'6O Pita." ,,- - ,-, ,
•• • ' mid ln -ManrY,
• . , A ynott his , b ee _n_,, ca r t . hts ninety-three. 1
county, trennwwaluuw."D ; its. watts
pound'. i .11E a altdng , "Pdatur e ,:,, otteet. ~Pit a
wad sodietir ihreer 'f eet fa U l lnithes. In.
.eyes were .' two
'111111‘#1 437 .- the breast . or
-dliMitop. ~The ' Color „
.. its 'back
.1141614 . I‘'44rk* Yli g: r
PFli lls tilo ul tl7'
perfectly green an dap - - 4 0 T o and'
Iv re . two . o f t h
Arimma its n eck a d o ' cotre,
ono dark.stripe. , Frain 111.01.4 m OP
lead, °raid/or coMm g H p _
_ 4
centre:of/the nose,. :there , iro a l
si rr n o: i u n i
1 outousand sinallAight. a t tr r rs n
l an tg d ltt . are li4s . Fit ill w e i rr t eet ret m ts rire b n O 4 f c4 :!4 , :1 11 1. 0 ::! e r : 7 ~°4'7,.1
A has
rinitAnnernq medieddlicovery
recently been made in AIM tiatitinentior
deafness by Prof. Scott, of the )10:1! York
Medical University,. by which the most
apparently hopeless cases are radically
cured. The method consists--in introdu
into the
cing atomized oxide' of 0033 4 lihrY
unpleasant ' sensations 'ire' ptodueed, and
the :cavityy of ; ' tynipargooi 'A
0
a feeling of clearness seems to follow the
application. Cases are daily treated suc-
Ceisifully at the University.
1 ;
Mtit
t • $
p EXTRACTED
url
4 _
IVITTESATX PAIN
ao mums =MIS InIMN I ARTIIAt;
TIC L ETH ABS
SETFRDOBs
• HUL as
AT DR. SCOTT'S.
Wfli PICAS WREST ' itgt DOCUiaBOVISHAIUM
ALL . WOBX WARRANTED. oALLA.ND
Ala= BISCIBIEMES OF EMEIVEN.E VITLAZIATt
ITE. MYS:d&T
GAS FIXTURES
WELDON & KELLY,
3/lannincturers and Wholesale Dealers in
Lamps, ,Lanterns, Chandeliers,
AND LAMP. COODS.
44sp:. i:1•111104 ANp LU13134.CA.1:1103 OILS,
En
4i ate: :
No 147 Wood Street. •
se9:n22 < Betereextst4s!i i nd et! Aninnes.
FRUIT CAN! TOPS.
are now: prepared to apply
INNERS tae with on; ratent,
. .;. sar.r.-LABSraare .
FRUIT-CAN TOP.
.-Isle PERFECT, SIMPLE and CHEAP.
Having the names of the.varions fruits
Rtantipsd upon the Cover, taraating from
the center, and an but= or pointer
stamped upon the Top of the can. It is
• '
clearly. distinctly land PERMANENT
LY LABELED by merely placing the
name of the fruit the can contains op
posite the pointer, and sealing in the
customary manner.'
No preserver of fruit good
'IIBI)BEINEPER will use any other after
- once - seeing it.
send Ati cents for sample.
I COLLINS * wmpur,
139 Second avenue, Pittsburgh.
PIANOS. ORGANS, &C.
lOttlf THE BEST AND CHEAP
j.jr IST PIANO AND ORGAN.
Schoznaoker's Gig Masi Piano,
AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN.
The 1301I01IACKEll PlANCicombines all the
latest valuable improvements - known in the cam
'traction of a Silt clue instnenent. And has al
ways bees awarded :'the hlit hest premium ex
.
hibited. Its tone is MU. sonorous and linnet. The
workmanship. for durabillq and beauty, sunass
all others. Prieto from 11.50 to hlllO (according
toityle an& inish.) cheaper . all other ea
muo grst elan Plano. - - •
• ZIPPIETIECCOTTA9E SAGAN ,
•
Atimei ft the head-of all reed Math:meats, in
producing the moat perfect Me onuaty of lone
of am iltainElastriustent la the United States.
IS 10 simple and Compact, In cc/sanitation, and
met-Mutate get Out-. 1 order., V o l[
1 Ti grlaTZlt'S -PATS= " vA HUMANA
oalpW__be foetid Id ii
this Organ
, r_ it
I Wipe trom tosow.. All aturimmed SA dye
BAlitito INAKZ-AIfUETTLER.
Ilifo. lin. CCLAIR STAMM-
PIANOS AND ORGANS—An en
tire new stock of
SHADE'S UNRIVALLED PIANOS;
BAINES BROS.. PIANOS:
PRINCE A CO'S ORGANS AND . MELODE
ONS and TREAT, LINSLEY CO'S . ORGANS
AND MELODEONS. • .
011ABLeiTTII instnn E.
deg 4 3 1111 b avenue. Sole Agent.
rinußcatarr TAILORS.
BTIEGEL,
(Lute Cutter with W. Berpeubetdes)
almtcuArrr rair,ort.
No. 53 Smithfield Street,Pittaburgb.
• gasval
NEW FALL GOODS.
A splendid new stock of
I •
CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, &C.,
.
. Just received by 'JHENILY JESTER.
sent Yerelmnt - TalloiVlS Smithfield street.
k e ) =111[0: Q tie al;4•41
,; , NEW GOODS.
• • FINE' VASE,
AND . CHINA.
c▪ fr • . •
NKR STYLISI3_,__ : . •
DINNER:BW%. • -
O TILL fiETEN
EtIFT CUM
smolincro BETE, •.• . • -
• • A large steek Of . •
. SILVER PLATED 'GOODS'
▪ • of all description,.
.... . . ,
Call and examine our Kamm; and we
feel a*leAed. e one need fall to be EsLlted.
PEARL RILL FAMILY FLOUR
Orion Biind, wig to
FRENCH. FLOUR.
1 This Meer will cinly we sent obi whoa esPe s
Wins ordered. I.
PYAHL 111111,14 *Uri iIiAND, •
Load&
'lll44'llt*MWM '
W r iA till Ogio
inn; 001124 A.ND COHN
•is sivnligWili BIN
Sept. %M UM 1971 1. 1,0 z Una.
118e9
100 WOOD STREET.
loo t woqo wriverm.
FLOUR.
. Atii'' • _ : r ----.. ~:'-1
TWIN filin c lik OUNAINIENTAL,
IlvelitiVl - ito. 4
i .,, A Aliitt a rnagi s tir a e att' its t ir t pli
ir...i:L raim I s v •, , TA i vre an t im , s , .
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'
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• ' , " 7---- '' - '7': . i . - ..:' .
IKII rANNING
EXTRA. HEAVY-
BARRED FLANNEL,
A VEST UJUIE 4`oolc,
NOW OMRED;
"it GOOD Britt's.
DICKSON
& CO.,
WHOLESALE
DRY GOODS
4546
•
WOOD STREET.
'
e
0 0
t.J -
v. r g a
0
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4 ' '
14
- 44
0
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cl 10,4
PA - ' P
0 . c 3
44 Z
DRY GOODS
AT COST,
FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY.
TO Cl/0636. errocs.
•
THEODORE F. PHILLIPS,
, ; .NABEErsr - BEE.
de
l n
091:UMCCANDLESS & coil
a tLate Wilton, 'Carr & Va.)
• - -wilowcastz DZALX3B. IN-
Troeign and. Domestic Dry Goods,
No. 94. WOOD =BIM%
Tblrd•doon above Diamond
WALL PAPERS, .
THE:OI,P,PY'EISTOItg, IN i‘ IRV PLACIi
W. -•'
- ZlAilititAtiial '''
. ,
ANEW : WAIL PAPER 'STOVE ,
191 Liberty Hired,
• ,• e . ~. , . ~ssu4ssialszr r4
.:
OILING tkOOINS AIitSIVING DAM*. lilt
IWill rPl i al i t , t.' '
I'
:';; lii New and iiegilt*ltnifialillS, '.
iPc.kiiiitbilicllALLß,,tioitact Bliaitit find;
9Bl lt r gag , t " C " IT P a g.: 1 9 g tea ! TOMO a%
.e: ,
NQ. -,. it ll 7. *rEirilKet, Sti!eet,
, ~, . T :, n SOL IL MitiallES & 11110.
„ .
BATS ANI) CAPS,
3PBT Bigeli"Vgl),AT
MCCORD 4 .
s •
I=l
wituf - -:':cAleriCrm - :.
4 -. -x - ';:. •-..','.- - P.. • ks: , , , .....-.2'i - , --- • '','-`...;.. •
.. - i. ...:,..,.,, A .ST OCK,.
'CT
N R .
~
NT
I*. THIS. Al' KET:
We pimply request a eouiparisou of
'Prim Styirs
The i ii of leiittpevirgooes it
any -establishment, ,74st ‘ ey t y!,in.
•
Ited:“ILIINI3ROS.,
FIFTEV
• • •A4Po***':o4
AEI`
i)L.
r
we are Doi nce),ving ma.,Sphlg
Stook - of
pare4l,. to.
. ,
as low prices any other `;house
in the Trade Wo all the
new styles of .tilTels Tapestry,
Brussels, Three Piss and; Plys.
'
Best assortment of' Itigrain i Carpets
lit the Market: •. `1
':',l 1 -,.:.; ..- '..-1" . . .,. -- ;- - .1- '-::::,f ,- ; --::::•-- - • • .
-Ii4VIA' R Ij, ....4' ()E : /c, - CO.,
21 FIFTH AVENUE.
nns:aawr , .
OLIVER
,lievelust recuiccd and .are. now evening the
fargsatrimportation o rthe mat - beautiful
. .
IR.
• : OBS
•
•
Ever brought to this city, being importee hlrt I
them direct from the most celebrated
'tortes of Europe.
OLIVER
SAVE TIM AND MONEYi
friBUND Vii, COLIANS
it.hVE NOW OPEN TEEM
NEW _SPRING SrEOCI
•-• • .
FINE 'CARPETS.
ROYAL -
TAPESTRY VEL VET, •
. , ENGLISH BODY BBIISSEL
,
The choicest styles isier offered in this marked
Our prices are the LOWEST. .:
•
Splendid Chcap Carpets.
GOOD. COTTON ,OHAIN CARPED
At 25 Cents Per , Yard.
*TABLAND k COLLINS,
No..limita 73 Flirlit AVENUE, 'A
(SecotiOloor).4
ROCZ THE BABY
EARNEST I B . PATENT CRIB
P1TT381313871. PA.
DEMON &WEISE.
liudli;alFnnatt*Agi‘tditetetrers,
118 WOCI:WriI A.17.41a,1
W
h, ere riff: be Ilierid &tali assortment of Pe. , :ist
I,or. Chamber= d Xlteheil ihrretture: desqk
, tEltitt .
‘ 41 . 7
, S CO N t
• • . 31 4 , ..T* 02 7 1 40 , 4 -
BlAttaid tolokhuiting liithograplo
-
-.-.lnru e lreannans. l6;‘ , o , gx
Gralt , Ter.ry - .Road `end 118 d StreeP:'
E
two
- Meier/ I ' li ; " rtnLADzimn.A..47<-
181 WOOD EMMERT.
ISM
i
Mit
FE .ir LT,
Cirpets, le., and area pre
offer as' good ; stack, and at
McCIANTOGK:
& COMPANY,
NB Mil
AiIeCIANTOCIC
& COMPANY
No. 23 Fifth. 4venue.
mbli
< BOLD AM'T =B2
--.:
SKATES IILAVEsg ' iikATIOn
i
k7' - e:
3 'erigaii Rink , ' fi.
• , ~ ~,,, ~. '.. ••„ ~., ~ •
:. ,,‘ ` ,N ewxYark Zink
r•-•4:l•Tr
)l,Tit • = , •
,r :' , •• ' Eniir3 i i b D- iar r , Se.
f, ~ .- f ... 1..11 ro • v•ru: _ i
r ,1-4.-Ar.
All eir Iftlecoaad o 14,t loweip,
rues at etbstis
"IMBIBES & D
v•v..,.- - , , , , . - - . o,tz
441,;I:
• 1 itel4' °;.'ili*llilltiilit:EMALClGHßN r hi lt
. . _ ..
KEYSTONE POTTERY. F:1-
S
ManOusture o
RTEENSWARE. BRISTOL WARE
°Mee and Warehouse. 363 LIBERTY STEIN
orders PrOXlntly attended to,
11
1
MN