The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, April 01, 1869, Image 2

Below is the OCR text representation for this newspapers page. It is also available as plain text as well as XML.

    El
tts i# burg
IN , AN OLD CHURCH.
Through the chancel, quaint and olden,
Streamed the evening sunlight golden,
Firing purple pulpit stair.
And tue good preacher there.
Sweet the solemn anthem soared,
Note on note, and «ofd on word,
/Ong thr. ugh the long dedles
Ortne dim and ancient aisles.
- And upon its ealta surcease.
All the sir. with =breathed peace,
Seemed to gather force, and sway
Through the temple, either way.
And the preacher's tones at length
Boiled in circuit. gatbei lug strength,
Swatted around she lofty nave, ,
Lite a sea Main in a cave. -
Echoing from the walls around.
Psalm and prayer with sweet rebound ,
Psalm and prayer, and lesson given,
Passed; or Seemed to pass, to n• even.
—Onanntere Jourani.
—Oat in lowa they are sowing wheat.
—Janattscheck is playing in New York.
—De Cordova is lecturing now in Boa-
ton
—The wheat crop in Nebraskalooks
4,e11. •
talks of starting an English
iiieralroupe.
- —521,175 is Rev. H. W. Beecher's last
year's income.
A,Velocipedrome is the newest thing
in Jersey City.
—Real,the New York murderer, is to
be hung . to-morrow.
—Madeline Jennings, born Henriques,
has sued' for divorce.
—Lafayette, Ind., is to have a home
for ftiendless women.
—Washburne is at home in Galena get
ting ready to go abroad.
—A Chinese in San Francisco has de
clued filinself a Fenian.
—David Eaton, of Virginia, is now the
:oldest living Mason, it seems.
—An exchange says the currant that
'vas stemmed grew on a bush.
—One of the Lelands has gone to Eu
roPeto open a hotel in Berlin.
—A gaming house license • can be pro
' cured in New Orleans for $l,OOO.
• —Mrs. Sigourney's home at Hartford is
to be turned into, a railway station.
—Five dollars is the established price
for kick ing a small boy in Milwaukee.
—Aquartette of English burlesque
'writers has recently arrived id New York.
--Twenty.nine German balls were given
in New• York City on Monday,evening.
—On Easter Sunday there were three
sacred concerts in New York all crowded.
--Wallace's "Lurline” is to be brought
out 'grandly in New York some time in
• May.
—llmnbug is the name or one town in
California and the nature of plenty of
them. ,
—sl,ooo a year is the salary of the
catcher of the Mutual B. B. C. of New
York.
-Spurgeon's congregation last year
contributed nearly . $lOO,OOO to various
charities..
—lt is said that the insurance compan
ies never paid the poliCies on the life of J. '
Wilkes Booth. .
—80,000,000 acres of uncultivated land
in Great Britain starves a large portion of
the pOpOlation.
—Bennett, Jr., of the New York Her
ald, has gone abroad for a three year's
tear in Europe. -
-Mrs. Lander is not popular in New-
Orleans. The rebel element does not
countenance her. •
—A brother of Miss Anna Dickenson
is lecturing in Connecticut He is a
* Methodist preacher:
- —Farmers, should learn a lesson from
Wall street brokers, and see that their
stock is well watered.
.—A third edition of Humptyr Dumpty
was begun at the Olympic Theatre in
New York on. Easter Monday.
• _. —We *see by an exchange that "the
measles are about concluding's very suc
cessful engagement in New Orleans.
—Twelve dollars and a half pei barrel
, le the wholesale price paid in New York
now for new potatoes from Bermuda. •
--Mrs. Julia Ward Howe last Sunday
•
afternoon delivered an address in Horti
_ Cultural Hall, Boston, •on the "Religion
of America."
- 7 Judging from the signs •of • the times
a =grand . .crusade against the dogs
• in - most-of the cities of the country is
`aboutb to begin. - -
-Rumor says the Union Pacific Rail
road has engaged General BUtler to fight
Fie4;,..g this be true, a lively old time
- • maybe looked.for.
'';‘• -:-On.'Easter day the denizens of the
~.
'Ziewsixoye 'Home in New York had . an
' ::excellent free ;,,dinner given"-them , and
' . some special religionsZervices.
—The fountain's of the Crystal Palace,
Liindon,live jets that play to a height of
' 250 feet. and when lie operation consume
• 8,000,000 gallons of-water daily.
—An eichinge Says' 4 l3iiiidoin college
. .bas 211 students all 'told." YiteTilcn't
Imow , what they baie all . been told, but
suppose it must be some society secret.
-=An umbrella: thief in ,Clnciimati has
b!E tuois
' sent to gaol, whereon a Chicago
jo ' t pathetically remarks ' tour con
, sti tionil rightsare being taken fromtuo
—There are full half a dozen women.
In. Beaten who ride the velocipede public
Vitt the streets They display quite as
'lnch skill , as, and more grace than the
—The Boston .Pest thinks Ulla . the
scholar who turned night, into day made
light_work of it; and also that the man
who harbored an ill feeling afterwards put
it at bay. • .
—Plenty of wild geese and duolni are to
be seen un the Rtldl3oll river now, and in
Alumtlier when the season for baratoga
EPHEMERIS.
comes there will again - lielblenty of geese
and ducks on the-Hudson:
—"Has your husband got naturalized"
inquired an energetic politiciim of a ro.
bust female. "Got natliial eyes!" was
the response in an indignant tone; "yea,
begoray, and natural tathe, too."
—A congregation of Seventh Day
Christians in Hungary, being refused tol
eration by the laws, has embraced Juda 7 ,
ism in order to be allowed to exist in con
nection with one of the "received relig
.
ions." •
-31.. de Quartrefages reports two au
thentic instances of negroes who have
become white—a young man and a
girl.- The change was not a mere
cutaneous affection; but a veritable trans
formation.
—Two murderers have actually been
convicted in Texas, but there is so much
danger that they, will escape or be res
cued that a citizens' guard has been or
ganized to keep them secure until the day
of execution.
—New England Methodists project an
educational university that is to rival
Harvard. Towards its establishment
$1,000,000 have been subscribed, and the
Massachusetts Legislature is to be petition.
ed fora charter.
—A corps of short hand writers who
will take down the proceedings of the
forthcoming Oecumenical Council, is
being organized in Rome. The principal
difficulty in organizing such a corps is
that that the proceedings will all be in
Latin.
—A sharp Dutchman in St. Louis his
been victimizing a number of people in
that city—among others the police offi.
cers—by selling his valuable (I) meer
schaum pipe," "the last thing I have got,"
for funds to go to Peoria, He had sold
ten "last pipes" at latest accounts.
—The editor of the Boston Medical and
Surgical Journal says: "We do not
vouch for the following item, which has
been sent us: 'A surgeon in a distant
place is said to have removed a tumor
weighing sixty-three pounds, and thinks
of presenting it to General Grant.'"
—A correspondent of the Boston Jour
nal is trying to prove that Sir Walter
Scott was not the anther of the Waverly
novels; and asserts that they were writ
ten by the poet's brother John and his
wife. This man is simply another would
be Iconoclast, anxious for notoriety.
—The extremes of climate in Califor
nia are well illustrated by the editor of a
paper in Alpine county, who rides to 'his
office in a sleigh, the snow being five feet
deep in some places, and writes behind a
bouquet of flowers plucked in the open
air, within sight of his office window.
—Victor Hugo, in his new novel, "The
Man Who Laughs," says that James 11.
was in the habit of presenting to his
Queen the widows and daughters of no-
blemen decapitated by Jeffries. These
women the Queen sold to William Penn,
who sent them over to Pennsylvania as
wives fir his Quakers. Philadelphians
do not know whether to resent this or not
for although it is. disagreeable to reflect
that one's foremothers were thus sold in
bondage,_ it is, - nevertheless, pleasant to
think that they may have been Duchesses.
Sumner on the 'Alabama Claims.
There is great anxiety in all circles to
see the speech, which Mr. Sumner has
prepared to deliver in executive session
against the Alabama treaty. This speech
is about finished, and the Senator's
friends say he considers it the greatest ef
fort of his life. Some of the strongest
points of it having been made public,
tench to Mr. Sumner's annoyance, he in
sists that it Is a Most pacific , speech, while
at the same time it takes '‘high ground."
The "high grOund" consists in plainly
saying to England that she is indebted to
the United States for ships destroyed, for
years of commerce swept away, for
heavy bills incurred in maintaining an
immense blockade, for troublei and dam
ages along the Canadian frontier, and
more than all, and worse than all,the pro.
longation of the war and the consequent
expenses in , life and treasure. The pa . -
cific part, so far as can be learned, con
sists in saying to Great Britain: These
things are plain, they need no proof, and
the way to settle it all is to settle down in
a friendly spirit and agree upon friendly
terms based on the above admissions.
There is no concealing the fact that
several questions are, creating anxiety at
the English Legation now. The most
prominent of these is the settlement of the
Alabama claims, and in this connection
both the position of Mr. Sumner, and the
known agreement between the points as
above given from his speech and the views
of President Grant, have entirely dis
pelled any idea of settlement upon any
such basis as p posed by Reverdy John-
To comPliai e thic , the increasing inter
est both here a din Canada, in the ques
tion of ande on, looms up ini a ques
tion SWIM to assume a definite character
and purpose, and to rally a strong party
in the Provinces.
• There seems to be a general - belief,
among the representatives "of foreign
powers, that the present administration
will be trucked by, a very poidtive foreign
policy, And that before it is ended there
will be important changes in the rela
tions of our .Northern and Southern neigh
bors to the United States...T. Washington
Letter.
A CORRESPONDENT of a NeW York pa.
per wntes: "You know not what temp.
Cations to petty fraud you °fief to clerks
and cash boys in the grpttretall stdies by
putting your change in `your purses with.
'ont..Countirig. It is not more lady-like or
grand, but Amply, more silly, if nothing
worse, to affect indifference to the 'cor
rectness of a business transaction, even _a
small one. This counsel' is suggested by
the writer having seen one -, of the little
'cash' boys in a Broadway store slip a
part of the ctiutge into his pocket on.his
way. from the cashier's desk •to the lady
customer, .wno, I regretted to notice, put
the rest in her purse without the least ex
amination. A proper caution ,on her part
might possibly have saved that boy from
ruin."
s~~r~.~ ;fit ~'
PITTSBUIttiII
_GAZETTE: THURSDAY, APRIL 1, 1869.
IMitaies t:ured by IDlet.
•
Chronic diseases in many cases can
cured by diet. Dr. Bellows gives in
stances which are pf exceeding interest.
A. gentleman of sixty-four, who wore a
truss twenty-five years for inguitild her
nia, was advised to discontinue extra,Far
bonaceous food, and has recovered in
two years' time set as to dispense with the
use of the truss. y - Bv . taking
_less carbon
aceous or heating and relaxing food, and
eating more nitrogenous or muscle and
ltrengtb.giving food, tone was restored,
andlhe tendons were drawn taut and the
bowels retained. A Boston physician,
whose father and brother died of heart
disease a few years since, became so af
fected also that he was unable to attend to
his practice, and went from city to city
consulting physicians, but found no re
lief.. Dr. Bellows ascertained that he
was an excessive cheese eater, as were his
father and brothers. On reducing the
daily quantity of cheese about one-half,
he began to recover and is now well.
This was, of course, not' a case of organic
disease. Dr. Bellows' diagnosis was
this: Cheese being principa lly nitroge.
nous, the excessive quantity eaten daily
produced excessive tone and tension of
this muscular system, and thelleart being
a muscular organ the excess of tone arid
tension was most clearly manifested upon
it. . A gentleman of scrofulous tendency,
who had an open abcess for eight or ten
years. abstained from extra carbon and
partook of food rich in nitrozen and phos
phorous, and the abcess began to heal im
mediately and in a few weeks ceased to
discharge. A gentleman of gouty en
largement of the great toe joints, which
required boots of extra width to enable
him to walk, adopted natural food exclu
sively, and in a few months could wear
boots of a natural size.
Meath - of a Virginia Millionaire.
The richest man in Virginia, Mr. Sam
uel Miller, died at his home in Campbell
county, Virginia, in the neighborhood of
Lynchburg, on Saturday. Mr.l Miller
was the architect of his own fortune, and
was a man of such large comprehension
of commercial affairs that, had h lived
in London or New York, he would doubt
less have been one of the money kings of
the world. Living in perfect seclusion
on his farm, he yet operated in all the
great centres of trade,
and had not the
wait greatly impaired his estate, would
have left behind him a property second
only to that of the greatest of our million
aires. As it is, his wealth is estimated at
three millions of dollars. It is not known
how this has been disposed of in his will,
but $193,000 in securities was left as an
endowment for a Female Orphan Asylum
in Lynchburg, and $lOO,OOO as alund for
a Chair of Agriculture at the University
of Virginia at Charlottesville.
Hydrvphobia—Post Mortem.
Ciscrsrmeri, March 27.—A pose mor
tem examination of Timothy Creeden, the
man who died of hydrophobia on Wed
nesday, was held day before yesterday,
at which there were several prominent
professors and practitioners, of medicine.
The larynx was natural, but appeared
slightly congested, and contained a little
frothy mucous. The tesophagas, stom
ach, liver, heart .and intestines were all
found in a healthy condition. The .body
was well nourished. The brain present.
ed the oniy unusual appearance, its , sub
stance being softer than usual to persons
dying of ordinary diseases, and the white
substance of the brain showed an entire
absence of blood. These conditions Were
regarded as remarkable, but otherwise no
new light was thrown on the problem of
death from hydrophobia.
THE recent despatches from Admiral
Hoff furnish additional instances _of cru
elty on the part of the Haytien revolu
tionists. He says that prisoners taken
upon the field of battle wounded, and in
some instances fatally, were, in common
with others not wounded, shot imme
diately after combs; quarter on this
side being scarcely thought of. Several
other persons were shot without any
form of trial, upon the mere denunciation
of unknown individuals, the reason as
signed being for having talked against the
revolution. Upon the arrival of Salnave's
forces before, Aux Cayes, and upon the
first attack that was made, the numerous
persons who round themselves in prison
for minor offences and so-called political
prisoners were ordered into the prison
courtyard, the sick were carried down,
the doors were thrown open and a dis
charge of musketry was fired into
them. This being found insuffi
eent to kill fast enough, rounds of grape
and canister were directed againstthem to
hasten this dreadful butchery. Many
women were thus sacrificed. All the peo
ple who were shot had to stand up facing
the firing party, and forced to look upon
them while loading and going through
manoeuvres preparatory to their execu
tion. In most cases, the first fire only
wounded and otherwise shattefed their
limbs. There being no reserve party left,
to hasten their end, they had to wait
about a quarter of an hoar, still standing,
before the guns were reloaded. A father
and son were shot together without auy
other reason than some silly remark made
by the latter. After having uselessly
pleaded for the life of, his. son, the father
requested to share his fate, which was
gladly accepted by the rebels, as they
were •murdered before our eyes under cir
cumstances too horrible to relate.
Tan OLD RULING FAMILIES OF ENG
LADD.—The New York Sun says: "The
stability of the old ruling families of grtg
land is strikingly illustrated by a compari
son of some of the members of the pres
ent House of Commons with,' thew who
gat in the Long ParliaMent of - the times
of Charles L and Oliver Groin
welL That famous Parliament,: was
chosen in 1630. The lineal dependants
met least fifty of itp members °con& seats
1n the present House. Many of them re
present towns in larger districts repro
-seated by their ancestors ' while in fifteen
instances they hold seats for precisely the
same places which'their forefathers repre
sented 230 years ago.
HYDR9PLIOBIA heti heen successfully
treated with iodine' by 'Dr. Blaney, of
Chicago. *- Of the eight. aims promptly
treated With 'Odin° not one resulted fatal
ly, nor were any decisive., symptoms of
hydrophobia subsequently., manifested,2 In
four of the cases it vraspfalbable that' the
wounds were from animals really rabid,
and not in'the other four.
Acconuma to the usage of Lent, ,the
Pope hat blessed ' the symbelical golden
Jose, which it is the custom to send 'an
nually to some sofeieign servant of the
Church. There is 'some curiosity this
year to learn the name of the royal, per
sewage for - Whom the rose le • destined.
Last year the auspicious present: was sent
to the Queen of Spain.
~~nw ,
GAS FIXTURES
WELDON O. KELLY,
IturaAcumen and Witolesale Dealers in
Lamp% Lanterns, Chandelier%
AND LAMP DODDS.
CARBON AND. LUBRICATING OILS,
ri3ENZENTE, deo.
N 0.147 Wood Street.
aeshu.l2, Bet*lea and elth Mutual.
FRUIT CAN TOPS.
"
P L
SELF -.LABELING..
`FREIT-CAN.TOP'
. bOLIINS r(St • wR±O trr:
,
•
26. ‘• I;ITTS . I3 - 17 . R"GH;PA
We are now prepared to supply Tinners and
Potters. It is perfect. simple. and as cheap as
the plain top. having the names Of the various
Pruits stamped upon the cover, radiating trom
the cPnter. and an index or pointer stamped upon
the top of the can.
It is Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently
.ILAJBET.4/331).
by merely placing. the name-of _the fruit the
can cootaius opposite the_ pointer and sealing in
the customary manner : No preserver of fruit or
good housekeeper will
.use any other,after once
seeing it. - - • mh2s
TRIBEKI OS, NOT/ON11;d1C.
JOSEPH HORNE dc . CO.,
-BUYERS WILL FIND
THE LARGEST ASSORTMENT
Op
Notions.
White Goods,
Hosiery,
Gloves,
Handkerchiefs,
Embroideries,
Laces and Lace Goods,
Boulevard and
Balmoral Skirts,
Hoop Skirts,
Corsets,
Millinery_ and Straw Goods,
Hats, Bonnets,
Ribbons, Flowers,
Sundowns, &c. )
To be found in the city, and willati will be sold
tbe
VERY LOWEST RATES
Cash and Short Time, Buyers;
77 AND 79 MARKET STREET.
toun
SECOND ARRIVAL
OF y
New _ Spring Goodi.
EMBROIDERIES-,
A FULL LINE
In Jaeonet, Hamburg and &Win.
WHITE COODS,
At the Lowest Prices.
FRISOMS,
IN ALL STYLES AND COLORS.
LACE COLLARS, new elyle„
MLR SCARFS, for I tidies
CORSA, IN In white a inicolored,
VALENCIENNES AND THREAD,
Cluny and Maltese Laces.
GENTS FURNISHING GOODS,
OF ALL DESCRIPTIONS. • .
Jockey, Dickens and Derby Collars.
WHITE STAR SHIRTS,
COTTON HOSIERY
A COMPLETE ASSORTMENT. •
MACRIIIII,GLYDE &
78 and,Bo Market Street.
mble:
WALL PAPERS.
WALL PAPER.
THE OLD PAPER STORE 1N I NEW PUCE,
W. P. MARSHALL'S
NEW WALL PAPER STORE,
191 Liberty Street,:
(NEAR MARKET,)
SPRING GOODS ARRIVING DAILY: 11101
WALL PAPER;' •
In. New and Beautiful Designs,
IPor 'P4111,010, ' HALLS, DINING BOOMS and
on4mßzus, now mooning in great Tallat7 at
No. 107 Market Street;
azawirlArrW,AvEnwit.
Jos. U. & aria,
W . - 4 M
ANCHOR COTTON MILLS;
IPITT€II3ThfI4III. ,
iliavisll3lll4oll of al'util MEM= &wildest
ascisins AMID. imeNeu•
.TlNGltiriCit ANI) aierrim
LITROG : - •
=MAKIN
iNGRALY Iguccessors
to tno. P. Sentroustes( & •Co.,
PII4II7IIOAL iurritocntAraziss.
. . ,
The oil) ,W4utt Lithographlo Establishment
Welt otthe Mountains. - Business Cards, Letter
Maids; Bonds, Labels; Circulars, tlbow Cards,
Diploma&
w •Pon,ratte, Views. Certificates et , De• ttt„ In Mattel c lots, ac., Nofib 7T and 14
Emu Pittsburgh;
ISE
DRY GOODS.
54. - 54.
, • • .
KITTANNING
EXTRA HEAVY
BARRED FUNNEL,
A VERY LARGE STOU,
NOW OFFERED,
El
H :XX GOOD STYLES.
TELROY
DICKSON
& CO
WHOLESALE
DRY GOODS,
ada
WOOD STREET.
DRY, GOODS
A.rr
FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY.
ITO Cr.dOSE
THEODORE P. PHILLIPS,
182' MARKET 82rRRET •
del3
('IAMBI, LESS &
16.1 (Late '• on, Carr & C 0.,)
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Foieign and Domestic Dry. Goods,
No. ;04 WOOD STREET.
Third door above Diateuhrd
' ^ ; PITTSBUIteff. PA.
MERORANT TAILORS.
M'PHERSON MUHLANBRING •
No.io Sixth (tate SL,Clair)•street
isueoosibrir to: WN nieatio • & C 0.,)
ISERMIANT TAILORS,
, . , • .1
Have just seceyed their carefully selected stock
of Spring and Summer' Goods. and intif be glut
to show or sell, them to old and new co.tomers.
The Cutting Department still be' superin•
tended by Kr.
I take pleasure In recommending the above firm
to-the liberal support of the public.
Inh11:181 • - - • ,W. H. HOG E.
TJEGEL,
(iste Cutter with W. ,Bespeaheide,)
areatesszirr mtsmon.
No. 33 Smithfteld Stroot,Pittabvirgh.-
W FALL fadons:
splendid stair itocit of
criers,* . 0488.11118RE8,
Jest received by azguirlicriut.
self: Merchant Tailor. 78 Smithfield street.
DILEtaiNI CAL 'ENGINEER;
pcitosvAi BECKETT,
USa I
BCRUNIO4I4. lINCIOTEMB,
'And Solicitor. of Patents.
(Late or P. P. W. 'AO. Ranwar_./ •
Moe, No. to FEDERAL STREET_ , sworn No.
O.Ttp stairs. P. O. Box' Bo, ALLEGHENY
MILOHINERY. or all lieserlptloneAssispied.
BLAST - FITIONACII ROLLING MILL .
DRAWINGS ilinitsued. Particular •• attention
paid to designing COLLIERY LOCOMOTIVES.
Patents coundeutially EVEN.
INGIDRAWING CLAIM for Mechanics every
WEDNESDAY NIGHT. avian
CARPETS AND OIL (MOTES
CAge
200 PIECES,
BODY BRUSSELS.
425 PIECES
TAPESTRY BRUSSELS,
450. PIECES
3-ply and 2-ply Ingrain'.
The above Includes all the Newest
Styles and Designs, and are now In Store
and arriving, to be sold
LOW FOR CASH,
OLIVER II'CLINTOCK .;
23 . Fifth Avenue.
mb27
NEW CARPETS.
STOCK
'l7
-
R
• Z.&
L 1.•
3S I
JCI
IN THIS MARKET-
We Simply reggest a comparison of
Prices, Styles and Eatent of Stock.
The largest assortment of low priced goods In
any establishment, East cr West.
McCALLIIM BROS.,
.4-0. 51 FIFTH •arEXUE,
(ABOVE WOOD.)
Ethl2
CARPETS.
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 Flys.
-Best assortment of Ingrain Carpets
in the Market.
BOVARD, ROSE &
21 FIFTH 'AVENUE:
mh2•dbwT
SAVE TIME AND MONEY.
II'FARIAND & COLLINS
HAVE NOW OPEN THEIR
NEW SPRING 'STOCIK
OF
•
FINE CARPETS.-
ROYAL AXMINSTER.
TAPESTRY VELVET,
• ENGLISH RUDY DRUBSELS,
The choicest 'tries ever offered in this market.
Oar prices are the LOWEST.
A Splendid Line of Chop carpets.
GOOD COTTON GAIN CARPETS
•
At 25 Cents Per Yard.
NeF4IILAND & COLLINS, I
No. 71 and• 'Penn H AVENUE,
mhB • • • • (Second Floor).
,GLASS, CHINA. CUTLERY.
100 WOOD STREET.
NEW GOODS.
FINE VASES,
80/ILIILLAN AND CHINA.
NEW STYLE
Pll424l 4MiTe, •
GIFT CUPS,
SMOKING BETS,
A Large stook of .
SILVER. PLATED GOODS
of all deacriptions.
• .
Call and examine on z goose , and we
feel gottae!l no one noel fail to be bolted.
R. E.
100.WILIOD ATIMET.
FIAUR.
1A4t....'411 - jl;' . -:::-F4g114Y.:.' , ..!1'..FIAMil;
PGAGL : MILL Mime? Star Green . Grand. equal tea
FRENCH FAMILY FLOUR.
-74c e I'M only me cent out when cape
Tht P*4lllll re klLL ELIIE BRAN%
- PEARL lam iir E ,a u gaa s kt• /CAW
WHITE CORN 1" 1 16 . be &Ml i rllght:
• IL T. HEBB EDT 6 81104
aueshenr, Sept. 9. 18011. - PILAW. MILL.
ARCHITECTS
BABE. & MOiER,
AxicirrrEcrros
mom Boma Jusimkunox Burunxes,
Nos. I and 4 St. Clair Street, Pittsinirgit, Ps,
Special attention given to the designing and
betiding' of 'COURT ROUSES and PUSLI
BUILDINGS.