The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, March 22, 1869, Image 2

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    01
Os Ft** Oaidts.
211.-11 1 41 ITS
•
Z6Cape - Cod is'iasklitg away.
—The Princess Metternich sniolres.
—Shad fishing in Connecticut hUs be-
Colorado . wants'
. 1,001 marriageable
'women. •
• • 4- -13L - .'Louis had recently a shower of
7:lll.Meat.
—Mrs. :Lander is 'very success in
liew Orleans.
-One
town, in lowa has voted to, pro
itibit billiards.
400,000 bushels of ,ivheat are stored
at union, Minn.
—A gymnastic revival has takewplace
sat. Yale College. •
—A new opera-house, is a pleasant ad
dition to Detroit. •
—Brignoli and Ronconi - are getting up
an Opera troupe.
—Portland, Me., is to itive anew $200,-
000 Opera House.
—The funeral of Lamartine was at the
expense `of the State.
—ln Chicago Mrs. Scott Siddons was
given a mockingbird.
—A one-wheeled velocipedetwelve feet
high is the latest vanity. •
--Geo. Francis Train in worth $4,000,-
000, at his own valuation.
z -The new State House. at Albany is to
, be commenced next month.
—Boston claims to have the - largest
velocipede , School in America. •
—Strawberries axe said to be quite a
drug now in the Paris market.
—Two dollars for five is said to he the
price of strawberries in Boston.
—The Duke d'Aumale is a regular
contributor to the London Times.
daily paper is published on board
the Mississippi packet -Richmond.
—Small pox killed off three thousand
of . Ban Francisco's sons and daughters.
Sewing machines _ and crockery are
among the , products of Salt Lake Valley.
. _ —1245 miles of the Franco-American
cable are already on board the Great
Eastern.
—A San Franciscan thinks that if all
the cats were killed, small-pox would
cease to be.
—Last Wednesday was the 101st con
secutive day of good sleiglung at Con
cord, N. IL
—An exchange says that Johnson has
a tit of the blues because he can't veto
Grant's inaugural.
.—Brick Pomeroy lectured in Detroit,
where the people are so decent that he did
not pay his expenses.
—Putnam, Lippincott, Galaxy, Harper
and Alantic are the April magazines
which have appeared.
—Covent Garden orchestra has de
cided to adopt the French musical pitch,
and Simms Reeves is jubilant.
—Treasure City, in the White Pine
,Silver regions, is said to be built so high
as to be always above the clouds.
—The arrival of Rev. Paul Bagley is
announced in England, on his mission
_to procure the release of .the-Fenian pris
oners.
—Seventy-five dollars were recently
paid for a dinner for four persons at Dei
tnonico's, New York, the wine charges
being extra. t
-The London Saturday Review, hav
ing about completed the flaying of the
Girl of the Piriod, has taken Mr. Horace
Greeley in hand.
.—The London Telegraph atlis Anna
Swann, the giantess, a "damsel of har
monious and homogeneous, though tre
mendous,,inches."
—Rodriguez, the man who, in 1851, at
tempted to assassinate Queen 'lsabella, of
Spain, has been in gaol for 18 years, but
: leis recently been liberated.
z*A newspaper palled the Alaska Time.
bit* be' started at' Sitka. The Alaska
Herald is published for circulation in
Walrussis, at San Francisco.
, —Pea-nuts are the national "beverage,'
'of the North Carolinians; and they have
a pea-nut stand, if not on their coat of
arms, at least in their State capitol.
- -Dr. Isaac I. Rays is making prepara
tions to go off on another North Pole ex
.,
pedition under thik auspices or the Ameri
can Gepirttphical and Statistical Society.
—Col.' John G. Scott committed suicide
-at San Francisco recently by gashing both
wrists and holding them over a water
pitcher and basin until he bled ti) death.
—George Alfred Townsend wants to
be the representative of the 'United States
in Switzerland. As the • _one European
•Repnblic, surely Switzerland is entitled
to some respect. , •
"—The English Aeronantical Society
.
Las 1111 ed in the ,anistruction of an
ingine of one-horse power, which. with
14i-boiler, without water or - fuel, weighs
Oztiy. Onndta.
'w T -41. laurel bush seventygdae feet high ,
tad eight_in ches , in, diameter has recently
lieerictit dsiwn, in Maiaachueetts. Any
Ontimbo wins that laurel will probably
itriditmuire.tban he , can beat':
; —The thicago Post gets off this pre- '
maturely absurd attempt at s ,
Of the late confederate generals, Wade
Hampton is a confirmgd rebel and Lon g
streetla a 'iorairMed surveyor;
-Ban Franilseo has recently bad a
=id hog who evidently considered him-
Jielfa peccary, as,he treed a policeman on
41amp•post and watched him until rein
, forroem ewe caused him to depart.
, in 'Meriden, Conn., is said
I•lo.psylisprofesSional visits'on a wiled
'flpixii,'which he manages
,iso skilfully that
-he is contintuily running against people,
EEO
BE
and solnjaring them that he keeps thus
steadily increasinglaiiiiitctice.
—lt is, raid that the Bishop of New
_
JerseY4efuses to confirm young ladies
who so adorn themselves that he is obli
ged to lay his hands upon a pile of false
hair and stuffing instead of on their heads.
—The depth of the snow in Canada is
shown by the story told by a St. Alban's
paper ,of a traveller in, the vicinity of
Three RiYers, whose hOrse becanie en
tangled in a telegraph wire and received
injuries from which it died. The wire
was twenty feet from thetground.
,
—By a recent' estimat e, . the population
of Chicago w ill be 49,090,000 m 1900. And
Toledo statisticians have estimated that in
1900 that place will be double the size of
Chicago, which leads the Boston Poet to
think that between the two the rest of the
country will be a howling wilderness.
—Mr. C. D. Hess is now, running the
Chestnut Street Theatre t 4 Philadelphia,
irhere he has a tine company,and the bur
lesque called the "Field of the ClCoth of
Gold," of which the. Ledger says "a capi
tal burlesque: It is - about as absurd,
ridiculous and amusing as anythink ever
imagined or produced on the stage."
—A horrible crime has been commit
ted at the village of Dolce .Aqua, North
Italy, caused by the enforcement of the
grist tax. :The population rose en masse
and killed the Mayor, whose head was
then mounted on. a pike and paraded
through the streets. During the same
day, twelve of the municipal councillors
were assassinated.
—A little negro girl, at Vicksburg, was
badly burned the other day over her en
tire body, and, in obedience to the direc
tion of the "wise - woman" of the neigh-
borhood, a cure was sought by holding
her scorched and,blistered body over, the
fire, to "draw the burn out,"until the
little sufferer was fairly roasted, despite
her screams of, agony.
The Wind.
From an article in the London Specta
tor, we take the following:
Nothing is more curious than the effect
produced upon the mind by the wash of
the waves and the blowing of the wind
in hollow places, It cannot be associa
tion which gives both sounds their air of
mystic dreariness, of vain lamentation,
or of melancholy desire. Both sea and
wind are potent enough and' practical
enough to make the men who specially
devote themselves to using and breasting
their power, hard, keen, daring, rugged.
Yet the sound of the sea on the shore
and the wind roaring through the hotise,
suggests anything but daring and enter
prise. It suggests danger and shipwreck
—that is, by association, and because we
know that shipwrecks come of waves and
winds—directly it does not suggest dan
ger or struggle, but rather
Old unhappy far off things,
And trials long ago,
—and this can only be because there are
certain Sounds adapted of themselves to
recall certain moods of thought, and
which have pot gained their power to do
so - by association. This is true of all mu
sic. But the special expressive power of
a high moaning wind seems to he to
blend an immense variety of subdued
notes—notes melancholy in themselves
into a volume of sound so great as to
seem like the voice of a great past•away
world complaining of its fate or its obliv
ion. If it is strange enough—as it is—
that solid food growing out of the earth
should supply hunsan organization with
nervous power to perceive and feel, it is
at least as strange that a few gases ranged
round the earth, the more immediate ob
ject of which seems to oxidize our food
in the lungs, and to provide currents
which ventilate our planet's surface,
should in addition nave the extraordinary.
power of supplying us with a medium for
speech, a natural music, and an inarticu
late language of emotion.
Anecdotes of a Revival Preacher.
The renowned revivalist, Jacob Knapp,
lately from California, preached at the
Baptist church in Battle Creek, Mich., a
few evenings ago. Among a goodly num
ber of other things, he gave his opinion
of singing in heaven. "Why," said he,
"the greatest croaker on earth will, when
he gets:to heaven, have a voice as much
sweeter than the voice of a Jenny Lind,
as her's is sweeter than the braying of an
ass." Dr. 8., a noted spiritualist, called
upon Mr. Knapp while he was in town,
and during the conversation said: "El
der, you and I are getting old enough to
begin to think about crossing over the
river to, the other side; have you got your
ticket and everything in readiness to go?"
Elder K. looked at him a moment, and
then said: , "Doctor, do you intend to
swim, or will you attempt to paddle your
self across in a stolen dugout? Should
you succeed in reaching the opposite
shore, I fear that God's pickets • will not
suffer you to land: Doctor, your ticket
is bad, get it exchanged now, while you
can." - The Doctor concluded that he was
making nothing out of the Elder, and
-. very politely took his leave.
Prar.intr,rnre sensations Are of a
peculiar sort. A few weeks 'lgo a wo
man's linger, encircled by a gold ring,
was found in a street of that city, and
now .the following somewhat , similar
•
story comes from the Ledger: Yesterday
afternoon, at two o'clock, a hoy passing
by Sixteenth and Locust streets,, raw in
the roadway .a human band. Tlte fact
was communicated to • a policeman, and
the hand was taken to the station house.
The mutilated member was evidently
that of a female advanced in • years, and
had been separated At. the wrist, but in
such a manner; as to exclude the idea,
which was first entertained, that the hand
had been 'torn _forcibly from the arm.
There were indications also that the hand
had been injected, and is therefore likely
to have been taken 4 from' a dissecting
table, and thrown into the street by some
one who wanted to create a sensation,
Ax English save that at Clem.
eats' Lin grace after dinner is not said,
butacted. Four loaves, ctosely adhering
together, typical of the four. Gdspels, are
.held up by the - occupant of the chair,
who raises them three times, in allusion
to the Blessed Trinity, and then hands
them to the butler, who hurries them out
of the hall , with an alacrity which is em l
blemstic of the freedom .with which the
Bread - of Life is given_ to the World.'
Thia -acted 'grace is ''of'' great antiquity;
and clearly had a religions Origin;
. • i
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PITTSBURGH GAZETTE : 1 - MOISI),AY: MARCH 22, 1869
r.
-The
_Fair Celestials.
rCorresporideace New York Times.]
Sax Famtcrsco Feb. 23, 1869. —lnns
bleu well underst ood, among the Chinese*
circles, for a week or two past, that the
China steamer which arrived yesterday
would bring a large shipment of Chinese
women, and in consequence great excite
ment existed among that interesting por
tion of our community. Every Chinaman
considered himself entitled to a wife, and
determined to obtain her_ at whatever
cost. Word was brought to Chief Crow
ley, that parties were arming themselves
and threatening to enforce their rights by
' the arbitrament of cleavers, iron,han,
revolvers.. With his usual enerzy , he at
once Aletalled it large force, fink/sent them
to the dock of the Mail Company, to pre
vent a riot. _
When the steamer was coming up the
harbor the news spread like wild fire
through the Chinese quarters, and at
once crowds of their peciple started for
the landing., Every possible means of
conveyance was in demand. The highL
toned merchants and head men, whit
were determined to prevent their country'-
women from falling into the hands of
their brethren of a, lodger caste, (provided
themselves with passes to the dock, and
went in hick's and on the street cars,
while hundreds of women, with umbrel
las spread over their heads, crowded into
express and-baggage 'waggons, and the
regular "pirates," or sanpans, as they are
called in China, harried to the place on
foot. At least 1,500 Chinamen had as
sembled before the steamer came in sight.
Beyond their infernal promiscuous jab
ber, the crowd were quiet till the
steamer came to her dock. As none but
the merchants and head men who had
passes were allowed inside the gates,
the rest crowded up to the gates or dis
persed along the wharves, lining them
away down to Main street. As soon as
the officers commenced lauding the
women from the steerage, the excitement
became intense, and it required a large
force to prevent them from breaking down
the gates. One Chinaman made an as
sault upon an officer, giving him a blow
in the face that brought him to the ground.
All the boats in the vicinity were engaged
' at high prices by the parties, to be rowed
to the aide of the steamer, hoping by that
means to get access to the women, and it
`required strong measures to prevent their
boarding the vessel. After the boats
were engaged, a terrible fight commenced
as to who should occupy them, and rawly
who had paid their passage were thrust
back into the crowd and their places taken
by those who did not scruple to takes sail
at another's expense. While this confusion
on the outside wasgoing on, the women
were landed, numbering three hundred
and ninety, and placed in half a dozen
rows. The examination by the Custom
house officers.(moat of them young men)
was exceedingly interesting. Large quan
tities of opium were discovered on their
persons, stowed away in, different places.
When the search was completed, they
were stowed a vay in large express wag
ons, and conveyed to such places as the
merchants and head men directed. An
officer was placed in front, two on each
side and one behind each wagon, and
armed with a heavy club, to bear of any
love-smitten Oriental who might try to
board it. It was an amusing sight to see
the wagon going up the hill from the
dock at full speed, the officers swinging
their clubs at the hundreds of men who
followed, jabbering their disappointment
at the top of their lungs. By five o'clock
the women were safely stowed away,
and under the strong protection of the
merchants and head men, who will prob
ably reship them to China by the next
steamer, or send them over akservants in
American fainilies.
A CTIAPTEZ in the history of Police
Detective Young of New York contains
an interesting account of the manner in
which he effected the arrest of the New
Windsor bank robberies in February last.
Soon after he bad begun to work up the
case, Capt. Young received information
'that a narty in New York was suspected
of dealing in bonds, although his ostensi
ble business was by no means that of a
money broker. - These suspicions proved
to be well-founded, and Capt. Young
engaged a banker to whom by means of
his assistants the suspected individual
was to offer the bonds for sale. After
tnany days of labor, the decoy proved
successful, and an appointment was made
with the robbers at the banker's office.
On the day named, three detectives secre
ted themselves in an, adjoining room,
which was divided by a stained-glass par
tition from the other. The robbers enter
ed the office and aftera brief conversation,
produced the bonds. Some time was oc
cupied by the banker making out a mem
orandum of the bonds, and when this
was done he gave a signal previously
agreed upon. The three detectives, with
drawn revolvers, at once sprang to their
feet and dashed out into the corridor, but
the door was locked. In the language of
Capt Young :—"I rapped very slightly,
but there was no answer. Finally I said,
in a low voice, 'Open the door. They
refused to open it, and I i heard one of
the men say, as if addressing the banker,
'lf this is a job, we will give it to you
first.' I then told Irving and Edsall to
go into the other room and enter the
banking office through the window, while
I remained at the door. Just as I heard
the window go up' pressed against the
door with the intention of, breaking it
open ; at the same moment I heard one
of the men inside say to one of his com
panions,- take the box; follow me,
and I'll clear, the way for you.'. The
door opened the same , instant, when I
immediately caught hold of the first man,
who had a revolver in:his hand. I pres.
'seamy revolver against him, and exclaim
ed 'All right.' Just as .. this occurred,
which was all in a second, Irving and
Edtiall jumped through the window and
covered the other two men. One of them
asked what we wanted; and I told them
that we - wanted the bonds and them too.
We then arrested them,,.. put them In; a
coach at the door and drove to headquar
ters." Capt. Young received 410,000 as
a reward for his services in this matter. •-•
A Bui. introduced in the Senate estab•
lishes woman suffrage in Utah. This is
a bold stroke at Brigham Young and his
uxorious elder& Give the 'wives of theie
men a chance at the suffrage, and they
would soon vote their husbands'out of
house, liome and hilrem. If Pomeroy's
bill passes, Mormatiism will receive its
death blow at the hands of its unhappiest
victims.
•
WIIEN J. W. 8., Esqr., of the Phila
delphia bar, failed, all the property re
turned by bim consisted of a pew in a
church, arci a vault in a graveyard. - . He
said that his: creditors might sit in the
pew if , they pleased and if , they .‘ pad any
desire to be
buried in his vault, they had ,
his hearty consent.
DANTISTRYi; - :-:
MEILI TR ZICIIIIACTIED
. 1 / 4 •
wrrirour FAIN f
NO CHARGE MADE WHEN ARTIFICIAL
TEE . = ARE ORDERED.
A fULL VET FOR 01.
•
AT.DR.
•
YEZIN EITEZZT. to DOOR ABOVE HARD
wasavrrzto . assa,:thip EI
*SPECTALENS 011"9:115IIDINZ NUIRAIS
mplit:d&T
_
GAS FIXTURES
WELDON & KELLYi
Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers . In
Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers,
AND LAMP GOODS.
Also, CARBON AND LUBRICATING OILS,
flSEDll4.l.riuel, &O.
N 0.147 Wood Street.
seam= Between sth and elth Avenues.
FRUIT CAN TOPS.
•
We are now prepared to supply
TINNERStuid the Trade with oar Patent
• • •
SELF.LAII.I4LING
• FRUIT CAIq TOP.
'tile PERFECT, SIMPLE Skid CHEAP.
Having the names of the various fruits
Stomped upon the Cover, rating from
' the center, and au index or pointer
stamped upon the Top of the can: it is
clearly, distinctly and PARMARENT
LY LABELED by merely placing tha
name of the fruit the can contains op
posite the pointer and I seaßng In the
customary manner. •
No preserver of fruit or geed
HOUSEKEEPER wIU nee other after
' once seeing It.
.Send NlSCenis for sample. •
• COLLINS & WEIGHT,
• I
139 Second avenue, Pittsburgh.
PIANOS: ORGANS, &C.
ICittrif THE BEST AND CHEAP..
ZEST PIANO AND 01343A3T.
Sehomacker's Geld Medal Plano,
AND ESTEN COTTAGE ORGAN,
The BOHOIkIAOSER PUN° combines all the
latest valuable improvements known In the con
struction of a first class instrument , did has al
ways been awarded the highest premium ex
hibited. Its tone Is full. sonorous find sweet. The
workmanship. for durability and beauty farness
all others. Prices from 660 to mix (iccording
to style and finish,) cheaper than all other so
called first class Plano.
3:STET% COTTAOR ORGAN
Stands atthe head of all reed!lnstruments. In
producing the most perfect piPegnalitY of tone
of any similar instrument in tho United States.
It is simple and compact in construction, and
not liable to ret out of order. I.
CARPENTER'S PATISNT " VOX WA
TREMOLO" is only_to be found in this Urges .
Price from $lOO to 050. .Allgnaranteed for Ave
BARRA SNAKE & 11pE1TLER,
PIANOS AND ORGANS—An en
tiro new stock of
alreaws UNRIVALLED :PIANOS;
HAINES BROS., PIANOS:
PRINCE & CO'S OBOA.NS AND MELODE
ONS and TREAT, LINSLEY t CO'S GROANS
AND MELODEONS.
CELAILLOTTZ BLUME.
43 Filth avenue, Sole Agent
MERCHANT TAILORS.
B TIEGEL,
° Mute Cutter with W. Efespenhetde,)
DEFARCHANT TAILOR,
I -
No. 5 3 Smithfield Street,Pittshergh
seeurzi'
NEW FALL GOODS.
MMME
CLOTHS, CASSIXERES,
Jut received by TIEIS4Y MEYER.
6614: Merchant Tailor. 73 Smithfield street.
GLASS. CHINA. CUTLERY.
100 WOOD STREET.
NEW GOODS. •
FINE VA S ES, •
BOHEMIAN AND CHINA.
SAW BrY I T AI
D R SETS" . •
TEA
- i GIFT CUPS,
SMOKING SETS,
A large stock of -
i
SILVER PLATED GOODS
of all deacripMons.
fenttalleil'lnatinge our flrtee. be suited.
R. E. BREED dz . CO.
A
W
100 WOOD STREET.
PEARL SILL FAMILY - FLOUR.
PEARL MILL Three Star Green Brand, equal to
FRENCH FAMILY FLOUR.
This roar will only oe Mt out when mie
dully ordered: , 0 •
' PEARL MILL BLUE 8R4111114 -
Equal to but Su Louis.
PEARL Rum itso l ua t /nt
WHITE CORN IfLO R NAVD
lIIEMT & BS%
_Allegheny, Sept. 9, 1565. etanr, MILL.
ELM :11.ND "PIiIItFIIIKERY.
tTORNPECI,k, ORNAMENTAL
TI IV
HAIR. AND PitIi,PIIMICI‘ Nod
Third street, near Smithfield. Pittsburgh. •
Aliratm luindeneral assortment Pittsburgh.:
lae.
thael ti Bt. , *01:1BLS. Gantlenienys
VI s. e so IiII/RD ()RAIN%
BRAGglitTei,, /to.
_ser.A, P ri ce In esab
will be alven'tor PAW E.
Ladles , and Sentienten , " Alit Cutting done
la ter neatest maularr.
~ 1 . tritif•no
LITHOGRAiDECEIRS.
wain
.
QINGERLY b• CLEIII, Successor!
to &w. P. SONutsitstAN
LIT 11,
PRACI4O44.
,U+46PIEICEAN. •
The only Steam, Lithovalphic Establishment
West of the Mountain's. - Business Cards, Letter
Heads„-Bonds,Label_ .11 Otroulari, dhow Verdi,
Diplomas. Portrsits, Views, Certificates of De.
13 0 a LS , , brlltat ewe, ac.. Nos. IN said 14
.Third street. Pittslittrah. •
:%j)1/ 3132 14 0 1 31:1
13.1.Y0N,
'ewe► of Weights and Measures,
No.:1110112173 8 MEET, 9.
, ,tisetween 14 . beni Ind bay atom;
EMI
Organ womptlY Wands , * to,
No. 151E17. CLAIR STREET.
FLOUR.
cm
k', o , . I OS, NOTIONS, &C
31 - 14R - DAir, March 22;
JOS. HORNE CO.
Will Open for the Inspection of the Trade
A large and complete assortment of k.
.TRAN GOODS, lILTS, BONNETS,
Fine French and American
OWERS. ROSES AND BUDS.
RIBBONS, in all Widths,
FRAAIES,
N s r
(fro de Nap Trimming Laces,
GIMPS, ORNAMENTS, &c.,
To whitit we invite tbeattention of
liners and Dealers
77 AND 79 MEET STREET.
mhiq
G' EAT AUCTION SALE.
MI
'MACRO & CARLISLE'S
01-2.120 SEPTALIVI2O,
No. 19 FifthAventte.
Fancy Goods, Hosiery, Trimmings.
EMBROIDERIES,
FURNISHING GOOD?; NOTIONS, &
MACBUM & CARLISLE having removed to
No. 27 Fifth Avenue,
Four doors, above ,their former location, bays
opened up Ith a fresh new stock, to which they
invite the attention of their old customers.
They haVe also concluded io clear out the en
tire stock at their old location, No. 19 FIFTH
AVE'S ITS,
AT AUCTION.
The first Bale will commence on SATURDAY,
March 20th. at 10 o'clock A.M. and at 2:30 and
7 P.' at., and continue from day to day till the
stock is Bold out.
3:les on Mondays. Tuesdays, Thursdays and
Fridays at 5t and 7 P. v., and on Saturdays and
Wednesdays at 10 A. M. 'Mule% and 7 P. M.
Great bargains maybe expected. le any of the
goods are new and the entire stock n oat be sold
out by April first.
Goods sold in lola to suit both Wholesale and
Retail trade.
Afternoon sales will Include. Embroideries,
Handkerchiefs. Hosiery, Soaps, Perfumery, and
a general variety of litaig s geode.
The Counters and Shelving at private sale.
H. B. saimisom it CO.,
ATTOTIONSXRB.
I=lll
GREAT BARGAINS
NEW GOODS, EST DECEIVED
EMBROIDERIES.
Javmet, Hamburg and Swiss
WHITE GOODS.
At the Lowest Prices
TRINLIKI CiTG-89
A FINE ASSORTMENT OF ALL COLORS
BUTTONS,
A LINE OF SILK, IVORY, JET, etc.
The flneat patterns of
TALENCHLVON AID THREAD LACES.
Inroad and Swiss Puffing, all widths
A Desirable line of LADIES' UNDEROLOTH
IFO, INFANT'S EMBROIDERED ROBES. A
fall Una of
COTTON HOSIERY
For Ladies , . Gents end Misses'
MACEIIN, GLVICIE & CO.,
78 and 80 Market Street.
DRY GOODS
AT CO ST,
FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY.
TO CLOSE STOCK.
TnEonen P. PHILLIPS,
87 MARKET STREET.
den
NEW STYLES
HATS AND CAPS,
JIJBT ABC WID AT
McCORD & CO's
181 WOOD STREET.
(UR% MCCANDLESS CO*,
ilaite Carr
Wllol4Maal row .= .u;
Faneign and Domestic Dry ,00061,
• No. 94 WOOD STEEN% ,
Third door above Diamond alley,
• P1rr351111.99. PA.
VCONOMIZE YOUR FITE% by
A u .usin g the
SUITE CENTBU MAL GOVERNOR,
•
.
the only tree • and easily. regulated Gover nor
niad. a i i perfect in Its operations and truly reliable.
'A'l slze Governor can be teen at the odlee of
TEX_ XALRUNIETT,./Itganleal Engineer
and nolleltor fa rittents, No. yli, Federal suwt.
Allegheny Oily, the only agent for this uovesnot
in the West. 0. ': • ; ,•0 . • -,, . ~ sefl2;xoll.•
CARPETS AND OIL CLOTHS.
NEW CARPETS.
STOCIC
- cr
N R.
I 'V"
.tEL
-
IN . THIS MARK - ET.
livestmply request a comparisOnot •
Prices, Styles,.and Extent. of ,Stoek. I
The largest assortment, of low inked goods Ist I
any estiollibment. Eaat c r West. .
MeCALLUI - BROS.,
.ro. 51 FIFTH
,41r.E.711W.E,
(ABOVE WOOD.)
CARPETS.. . .1
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, otht house
in • the Trade. We havell the
new styles. of Brussels Tapestry,
Brussels, Three Plys and Two Its.
Best assortment of Ingraiu Caipets.
in the Market. .s',
BOVARD, ROSE &,. C 0.,.
21 F'IF'TH AVENUE.
inh2:d&vrT
OLIVER
IicCLINTOCK
& COMPANY,
V Have just received and are now opening the V
largest importation of the most beautiful
1 : A
•
I. r.,
AL ft
i C.
MR.
No
~..
30 ,;..
' l r
SEE; 1
Ever brongbt to this city. being imported by
them direct from the most celebrated matiufac—. 4:1
tories of Europe. ;
OLIVER
McOLIN . TOCK
FS
& COMPANY;
No. 23 Fifth Avenue.
SAVE TIME AND MONEY.
)1 1 FARLAND & COLLINSI
Have Now Open Their
New Spring Sleek
OF
43.
Fine Carpets,...
ROYAL AXMINSTER,
-t
-4
TAPESTRY VELVET,`rk
, ,4.
v,-
~,
English Body Bnissels.
The Choicest Styles ever offered r
in this Market. Our Prices areV
the LOWEST.
A BPLEND; D LINE 0,
. . .- .. . .
__,.-
__, v'
.C4E4P . - : CARPETS.. I
Good Cotton Chain Catilets:
25 CENTS 'PER YARD.
IVEIRLAND '6z COLLINS
71 AND 73 HMI AVENUE,
(SECOND •IFLooit.)
ARCHInIOTS
B AR R &moiii"
)PRAT HOUSE ASSMARTOR BITILDINee,
Nos. 111 and 11 Bt. Olsir. Btreet, Pitutruillt,
81 1 861a1 attention given.ta.the,deeisain6 and
ballast of HOl36Rg .an 4 PUBLIt
, o
r --t
E ~•~+~
AT 4