FI W_Z:= ,• ••* 2•!--,11--,:ll iI • •• ‘lll i 2 Appleion's Ifagazine,contains some in- ] . aa * teresting'incidents from Princess Salm . • . . ' ------------------------________ Salm's Diary, written while in Mexico. , For the Pittsburgh Osztve. Here is one concerning the closing boars ' of Maximilian: 'f 6111.L'iD RAPIDS ASD LNDIANA RAIL* 1 , ROAD. The princess, on account of the imor. d. the tant art she had ta ken in the plan to —......_ Having sketche country through save the live of Maxim was seat' to I which the Grand Rapids and Indiana San Luis Potosi as ailian, prisoner. There she made another last effort to obtain the Railroad passes, - a brief sketch of its History, including the " pardon of President Juarez for the con- Land Grant by demned. • She says: Congress," will not be uninteresting. "The last day before the execution had ' HISTORY—LAND GRANT come; the next morning the emperor was to be shot. Although I had little hope, . This railroad company • evas or- still I determined to make one more , ganized •in 18;7 by the • consolida- effort to move the heart of the man who tion of -three companies, covering alone had the power to prevent the terri substantially the same route. A land b2e tragedy. The vale, melancholy face grant, originally' bestowed upon that of him whose clear-blue eyes had inspired with compassion even the Indian Pala portion reaching from Grand Kapids to cios, was ever before me. Traverse Bay, was subsequently extended " was eight o'clock i d the evening when I went to . the President, who ina from Grand Rapids to Fort ;Wayne, mediately received me. He was pale, making the distance three hundred and and looked careworn. With trembling twenty and sr half miles, to which aid has lips I pleaded for the life of the Emperor, I been extended at the rate of three thou- or at least for a respite. He saidhe could not even grant a respite, that it would ; sand eight hundred and forty acres per . . only prolong the Emperor's agony, and • miler making one million two hundred that he must die the next morning. 1 and thirty thousand seven hundred and "When I beard these terrible words I -• ;twenty acres of land. ''The company were was wild with grief. I trembled in every limb, and, sobbing, I fell on my knees, permitted to select these lands in altern and pleaded with words that came warm • • ate sections for twenty.miles on each side. from the heart. The President sought to . of the line of their road; to make up raise me, but I clung to his knees, and for the deficiency of public lands upon would not rise till he had granted my ' the Southern portion of the line of the , . prayer; 1 thought I must move him to • • road. " I he was deplmoved LOCAL SUBSCRIPTIONS. he, compassion. as well as saw Senor Iglesia, who was ;In addition to tlre'munificent land grant of more than one million acres of land, present, could not restrain his tears. He said to me, in a sad tremulous tone: 'lt the subscriptions by cities, villages, coon- pains me, madame, to see you thus on ties, Lac., including individuals, amounted your knees before me, but, if all the kings to near three quarters of a million of do l.: and queens of Europe were prostrate be lars. With all these resources at corn- fore me, I could not save his life. Ido mend, this great work languished for ; not take it; it is the law, the people de. twelve long years. mand it, not I. If I failed to do the will WORE ACCOMPLISHED. of" he people my life. would be the enity. Spasmodic efforts from time to time 'Oh," I cried, in my despair, "if blood down to 1869, had completed twenty must flow, take my life, the li!'e of a use miles of track north from Grand Rapids less woman, and spare that of a man who and about 60 per cent. of the grading may do so much good in another country!' south from that place had been made, and I "All was in vain. The President about 50 per cent. of bridging, , lac. raised me to m feet, and again assured :furnished, which are now in gootiesn o rder., y i me that the life of my husband should be • Ties and timber furnished twelve years I spared. He said he was very seriously before, had rotted in their places or had.; compromised, and would certainly be con been carried off by inhabitants along th e I damned to death, but that, as I had gained line of the road. Us esteem and admiration by my efforts lin behalf of Maximilian and my has- CITIZENS DISCOURAGED. band, he would grant my petition so far • • Repeated promises and successive fail- las he could. He would pardon my bus , urea an the part of the managers of the I band, and was grieved that he could do , road had discouraged and completely Ino more. I thanked him, and went. disgusted all who lived along the route of i .In the ante-room I found more than the road and all who were in any way I two hundred ladies of San Luis, who had ' interested in its! completion. The corn- I come to plead for the lives of the three pany Was deeply involved, unable to meet i condemned men. They were admitted, just and equitable claims, and pressed and but their prayers were of no mdre avail • harrassed by demands which they-claimed : than mine. were neither just nor equitable, b,ut posi- "Later, Madame Miramon came, lead , lively fraudulent. Bonds were upon the ing her two children. The president ' 4 ' market claimed to have been illegally, if I could not refuse to see her. Senor lalesa A _. :not fraudalently. issued, and the condi- told me it was a heart-rending scene to 4 lion of the road appeared to be hopeless see this poor woman and her innocent lit beyond relief. So little vitality did the tie ones plead for the life of husband and , company possess, that an individual living father. The President, he said, suffered • on the line of the road boldly carried off 1 teiribly in these interviews to think that )1' some six thousand cross ties, which had i stern necessity compelled him to take the been paid for by this company, and die- I life of the noble Maximilian and his two posed of them to another. . I 'brothers,' but he could not do otherwise. ANOTHER RAILROAD. "Madame Mrmon fainted and was In the meanwhile an individual posses. I carried out of th i e f room. - 1 sad of enterprise and energy, devised and , 'I could not close my eye§ that night, accomplished the construction of a road some hours of which I passed in the reaching northward from Kalamazoo to church with a number of laaiea of our .! Grand Rapids and Southward from Kala- I party, praying. mazoo to White Pigeon, on tte alichi- "In the course of the morning, the tel gas Southern Railroad. . egraph announced the sad intelligence that the executions had taken place and--- , AFTER THE LAND GRANT. i that all was over." . It is 'said that Mr. Gardiner, the projec - tor and builder of the roads, hoped to fall The statistics or ' heir to the lands above described, which Immigration- Michigan Of cial returns of passengers arriving would become- forfeited to the State of • in the United States during the quarter unless twenty miles more of endin d g with aO, 1869, show an ex. road were rcompleted before July first, of the current year (1869). The case seemed I tra° i Th r I whole l n n c u r m e a b s e e r , arrived was 177,580, hopeless, it seemed beyond the power of 1 of whom 111,674 were males, and n 5,908 the company to $o further, hopeless in females. Of theee 7,982 were citizens of solvency and the loss of the entire land the United States, 5,431 being males, 2,- grant seemed inevitable. - 531 females; also 3,613 foreigners not in- ItkCEIVEIt APPOINTED. tending to remain in the ted States, At the request of some of the holders of whom 2,560 were males, 1,053 fe . of securities of the company, Jesse L. 1 males, making an aggregate of 11,595 1 Williams, Es.q., well and favorably , known passengers not immigrants. The total as a Government Director on the Union number of immigrants was 165,987, of Pacific Railway, and as a Director for whom there were under fifteen years of many years upon the. Pittsburgh, Fort age 18,6 n males 17,512 females; between Wayne and Chicago Railway, was ap- I fifteen and fortY, 74,492 males, 37,901 I pointed Receiver by the Court, and di- i females; of forty years of age and up rected to complete the second twenty I ward, 10,538 males, 6,911 females; mak - miles north from Grand Rapids, in order ing to chartera total of 103,663 males and 62,324 save the land grant and the of I females. the railroad. I The occupation of immigrants were as THE CONTINENTAL IMPROVEMENT cost I follows : Clergymen, 60; physicians, 65; PANY. I artists, 58; mechanics, (of trades not i _sp 3 ec . ifi s e e d a , m ) 5 559. bakers, 333; butchers, About this time the railroad company sdesse's, 74; 'shoemakers 733; contracted with the Continental Improve- I tailors 756- masons,l 058; of mist era, Company to finish their road. This ; a aaus ' trade ; 1, ... a ; aio , 560- farmers, is a company organized under the laws of ; 16 55a• laborers, 40 255- clerks, , rade'rs 143. the State of New York, of which General I . 1 I , Eiii:ne 9 r . s, 308; - rhariners, 486; . serva , servants, George W. Cass is President and Colonel ; a, 0 , of other specified occupations,. 76 ; Thomas A. Scott and William Thaw,Esq., ti 1 56 whose occupations are not specified, are Directors, and 80,132 without occupation, being women and children. These 165,987 immigrants arrived from the following countries: Great Britain, 33.574; Ireland, 26,138; Germany, Austria, and Prussia, 50,999; Norway Sweden, and Denmark, 20,169; Switzerland 1,C80; France, 153; Spain and Portugal, 38; Italy, 105; other South European States, 1,742; other European States, 2,780; China and Japan, 5,984; British North American Provinces, 3,128; Mexico, 68; West Indies, 506; country not stated, 18,923. • A _GREAT FEAT. This company furnished the Receiver With 'funds', and in - leas than sixty days the required twenty miles were completed, and the work has since been accepted by • Governor;Baldwin, as having complied with the- requirements of-the law. The Receiver was ably assisted by John L. Shaw, Esq., Superintendent and En ,gineer, by. E. B. Talcott, Esq., En gineer, and by J. Zimmerman -and 111. Talcott, contractors. With the exception of the work on the Union Pacific road, Where much more ample provision was made for the purpose, the rapidity with ,WhiCh this work was carried on to com pletion has no parallel in the annals of railroad engineering. The line of the railroad from Fort Wayne to Sturgis is now under Contract, and by July Ist, 1870, will be completed to that point, as well as to sixty miles north from Grand Rapids. - Thus it will be seen'that a great im provement, ttuls will not only be of great worth to two great States directly inter ested, but to, the railroad And commercial interests of the country generally, will be largely indebted for its ultimate cam. pletton to Pittsburgh enterprise and sa gacity. This work directly interests the business of this city, as a concluding ar ticle will abundantly prove. B. H. W. A ccmtmrs from machinery in factories, • in England, during the six months end ing April 30th, 1869, amounted in num ber to 3061, of which 53 were fatal. The total number of accidents, /whether from machinery or other causes, amounted to 8177. With this large number of casual ties, only 430 infOrmations against own. era were laid, and 177 of these were with drawn on payment of casts. The envie tions were 265, and the fines inflicted amounted to 0,110. EMI First Dectaratiou of independence. In the churchyard at Concord, N. H., the following epitaph appears over the re mains of a slave. The man who conceiv ed this epitaph lived in advance of his time. Who knows big the unknown composer of this epitaph had a hand iri framing the Declaration of Independence in three years after? Or was in the spirit of Revolution ? "God wills us free; man wills us slaves. I will as God wills; God's will be done." Here lies the body of JOHN JACK. native of Africa, who died March, 1773, aged about CO years. Though born in a land of slavery, He was born free ; Though he lived in a land of liberty, He lived a slave, Till by honest, though stolen labor, He acquired the source of Slavery, Which gives him his freedom. Though not long before . Death the grand tyrant Gave him his final emancipation, And put him on a footing with kings. Though a slave to vice, He practiced those virtues Without which kings are but slaves. This has been called the first and °rig inal Declaration of Independence. PITTSBITAGH:GAZETTE: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1869, ; _,• • - ' l2 '' 7-- 1 ---:---11: PM — T - 7 -7 ' 7 ~,,,,, .••.•. •- • :;:scimrENbius , ruitmosie Ipn OPOSAILS - . .• - • , SYRLP, SEAWEED TONIC AND MANDEARD PILLS Will cure Conso mPtdor.s it - d 1 be received at the office of the older_ Complaint and Dyspepals, If taken accord- • signed until sATURD al. October aS.L 9A. st,. Inseto directions. They are all three to be taken for 1-nr UJEhillit 330 Or Gold's Inn -roved Indirect .at the sometime. They cleanse the stomach, re- Radiat es. and fit Inv yip (be tame for warming lax the livor ;ad put It to work; then the appetite - I the. new parts of. the A legheny . ( ounty- Jail. becomes good; the food digests and makes good i I Lrther inlet motion given a. our office, blood; the patient begins t 9 grow In flesh; the 1 sealiipla BARR .k. 31115e1t. diseased matter ripens Into the lungs, and the I ------------______ _ _ patient on tgrows the disease and gets well. This .; pROPOS B LS 15 the only way to cure consumption. • To these three Medicines Dr. J. H. Schenck, of f FOR Philadelphia. owes pis unrivaled sUccess In the treatment of pulmonary Consumption. The Pul moat° Syrup - ripens the morbid - matter In the Lumber, BrickS, Slate, Glass& Copper. lungs, nature throws It off by au easy exp' - Hon, for when the phlegm or matter Is ripens i - alight cough win throw it off. and the patient has Sealed Pr n Posals seri be received at this ar ss3l until 104 31. on TUESDAY, October 51.11, rest and the lungs begin to heal. T. do this, tile Seaweed 'lonic and Mandrake 186 - r'" rurnllblow i 1 1 ,s tee 0 niche s by 12 44- 16 and Iti fee( long. Su. 000 feet White Pine Fl - oaring. best onallty. Pills must be areal usei to cleanse the stomach • ti 0,600 feet Whit ‘ l' rte.:eh. atilt teg loarsislifi , end liver. to that the Pnlmonic Syrup and the toed sal =Serf. good blood, Scbenck's Mandrake Pills act neon the liver, by 8 111 . 111 e 11 Y H. l e 6 a i ud IS fet long. removing all obstructions. relax the c uct 5 of the gall bladder, the bile starts freely. and the liver 93 ,0119 1.,..1l 1% idte nue Jelin 2'6 by 3 I ecees, and 16 •ei long. 20.000 feet white Pine Joists 2 1 i by - 4- Inches, Is aeon relieved: the stools will show what the cept calomel (a deadly poison w, len 16 very clan- 1 Pills can do; nothing has ever been ex gerens to use un•ess with great cared that will ' unlock the gallbladder and start the secretions of the direr like St liebck's Mandrake Pills. Liver Complaint hi one of the most prominent /8811 i "All Tof.;;l'atel-9,ulogbeif.f good (la, I.ty. S it eirely free from large or loolst knot., Fa,,, shakes. ep; its and r 0 , and all ,t. be deliee. e d pt o f shop s at ill's Arsenal before the c use of navigation in :Louses of Consumption. - Schenck's Seaweed Tonic fitt - gentle stimniant and alterative. and the alkali In the Seaweed. Pronosals will lie made per thonsand feet, boa, il me mare. arid will stale whe t her the lum ber wit be delivered on c fr.. or wagon?. this Arsenal urst•l 10 .a. sr. Ull WEDS E , q, Ar • which this preparation Is made ot, ALES'EtS the •• sEALLD PROP. ISA LS will also Its r. este-, el at 1869, for fart lilting tee follow i stomach to throw out the gastric Juice to dissolve 1 I the food with the Pu'n' Syrap, and It ft made 1 O ctober 20 th, into good b ood without fermentation or soaring in the stomach. ' log materia's; A ime t 1 100,000 Reeks for Illor arches. The glebt reason why physiclawspio not cu re All bricks must se of tlir best ousildy. Pound I Colson I N th e y t r y to d o t oo lyn c h : th ey and well. burnt. Satup.es will be it:misted with give medic sweatstop the. cough. to stop chiliad° tbe bids. atop night hectic fever, sad by so doing Proposals will be made Der thoatand hricks; 1 they derange the whole digestive powers. lock. delivered at site of shops. at this A rienal, and lug up the ecretions, and eientnally the patient ery to commence by lift of May. 1870. and all to will state whether o a cars or wagon-. De iv. sinks and dies. Dr. Schenck, In his treatment, does not try Rao be delivered before A ugust Li- .1570. • with copper italic, 'about 600. squares (of /00 stop a cough, night sweats, 'chills or fever. • Me- ALSO, fur thrnlng aud pnttle gon In mortar. move the cauo ,e - and tae will all stop of their uare feet) ROOP OiaTiico. .own accord. No one can be cured of Consumpe. tO Don, Liver ComNalnt , Dyspepsia. Catarrh, file e l ate must. be of the beat ouality. Sallties Canker, Ulcerated Throat, unless the liver and stomach are made healthy. of d_rerent sires and var.,. ties wl.l we furnis est and separate propose:s made for each. If a person has consumption, of conrse the Pr opoials will be mace per square (01'100 tinge in some way are diseased, either tubercles, eiluare feet t) of 51sting exposed when put on the &Amami, bronchial Irrittion, pleura adhesion, . s roof. no 5 xti a aliowacee to be made for edges or inaroi,laihaorrnituttda,„l:olarm. alerlal, excepting sand and or the lungs are a mass oaten arsonation and fast waste in cattle g,. The [tinted States to furutstt decaying. In such cases what must be done? It Is not only the lunge mar are wasting, bat it Is the whole body. The stomach and liver havelost .T 1 e roof to be laid FO that less t ban oris-thir.l their power to make blood out of fo.d. Now the : Only chance la to iake Dr. Schenck's three tuedi of the length of each slate shall be exposedtestae , eeather. And all laitwithiu sixty days at, cc :he Mises. which will bring np a tons to the stomach, roof shall hay, been male leady for slate the patient will begin to want food. It will digest -ALSO YOH GLAsI3. easily and make gposiblood; then the patient be- SOO Pghts 27 by .13'.i Inches. gins to gain In fiesta and as soon as the body be- 1,4110 lights .6% by 13... ruches. gins to grow, the _lungs commence to heal tip, 1.900 1. glos 265, te: la Is-irenea. and the patlett gets thsliy an well. This lathe 3SO ngtllB 27.: by 13. s ldies. ODlr way to cure Consumption. 200 Itaitta 25-o• 13i,5111cnes. , When there Is no lung disease and only Lute The glass to be of best quality of window glass, . Complaint and Dyspepsi, • Schenck's Seawed , doable th'ckness, clear , out of selni,Pee from Tonic and MandrAke pills are suftclent, without 1 .I.listers. waves and steins. 'Sample s 1,111 be far - the Pulmotdc Syrup. 'Take the Manorate Pills nfshed wits the propoovs. freely in ail billions complaints , as they are Der- Separate proposals will be made per 100 lights fectly hrmless. ()teach variety-. nel.vere(l le car. at 111.. site of Dr. Schenck. who has enjoyed unlnterriapted Bisons at /Lee's. Leland Arse n el, all to be delivered health for Meaty years past, and now weighs 435 before May Isi, 1870. pounds, was wasted away to a mere 'skeleton, in ALSO, FC/1 COPPER GUTTERS AND SPOUT the very last stage of Pulmonary onsumption, his phyelclans having pronounced his case hope- INO. less and abandoned him to his fate. He wascared Atoot 1 .370 lineal feet of Gutters made of by the aforesaid mei Icines, and since his recove- sheets. 4 feet wide.. ry many or e aid similarly afflicted have used . About s'o lineal inchesf Valley Guiters, made Lir. Schenck's preparation with the tame re- of sheets 2 feet 6 ch wide markabie success. Full directions accompany About 930 lineal feet at Ridge Cover made of each a i making' it not absolutely cecessary to per- I sheets 2 feet wide. son lv see Dr. Schenck, unless patients wish About 760 lineal feet of Elia, h`ngs for g 5 b.es their lungs examined, and for this _purpose he is made of 5 fleets Ifoot SlLches wide. professlooally at his Principal is Philadel- About 733 ilneal feet of Dowu Spouts 4 Itches phis. e Saturday all letters for advice in Matto le/. must beeryddreed. whereHalso profeas • onaily at The copper to . be of the best quality, No. IS No. 3* 'Bond street. New York, every other (or 21x5 los. per square tool) and to be made up .Tuesaay, and at N0t,33 Hanover street, Roston, and plated in nos itle nin the manner to be pre every other Wednelday. Be gives advice free, 1 scribed by the Comtnardlug Officer of Rock Is• but for a thorough 'examination with Ms peso- • land Arsenal. The work to co iota ce se1:11 nlO rometer tee price MIL On ice hones at each city I stays ➢ af er notitication that the roof Is moue from 9 A. u. to 3 P.X. reAtly ProwjsAls vri./ be. made per lineal foot of Price of the Pu lmonieSyrnp and Seaweed -Ton- I each variety. The L Oiled States to farnish no Sc each $1.50 per bottle, or *7,50 & nail dOten. , labor or motet-cal. Mandrake Pills 25 cents a box. For sale br all ' Yeesons de•lrous to make pro - 6 1 5W! foe tbeso druggists. tarl9:lsl.d&F uhveri .1s Can see Ail t a e .I.A.Wnias ari a s oeta'n ail -------------------__________• neneesary tufo:motion by applylug at this Arse• • nal. Tile Enitsil States reserves the right to reJect 'any or all bids. or parts of b.dt. re t,. eemed sat / isfactory, and to duplicate withia one par any contract that may be made In (onto:miry Alta this Advertisement. - . Al pro: osals w l / 1 be made in duplicate and in detail, addressed to the Gommandinf; Officer, Rock is'snd Arser at, And tt dorsed "Proposa l s fur fere istalng (motel-lats.)" 'l' Lt. Colonel Ordnance, Rte. Brig. Lien U. S. A., commripilOg. Wet Is'and Arsenal, September 32, 10469. is. es ioeo _sr"DOCTOR WHITTIER. CON , TINUES TO numerous ALL PRIVATE DISEASES. That numerous class of cases resulting from self. abuse, producing tt• manliness, nervous debility, Irritability. erup tions. seminal emissions, and n- Potency permanently cured. Perso fi nsal l ay t/linim ed wiai oelicate, intricate and long stand ing constitutional complaints are polltelyin sited to call for consultation, which costs nothing. Experience, the best of teachers, has enal,ied him to perfect remedies at once efficient, safe, permanent, and which In most cases elm be used witho laincrance to business. Medicines pre rared In the establlehment, which embraces of lice, reception and waiting rooms; also, noarding and sleeping apartments for patients requiring dailycai personal attention, and vapor and chem.& baths. thus concentrating the famed mineral springs. „No matter who have failed. state your Case. Read what he says In hie paznpitlet of fifty nages, sent to Po, address for two stamps In stal ed enve.ope.- Thousands of cases treated annu ally. at o ffice and all over the country. Consul tation free, personally or by mall. Mice Yo. 9 Wylie street (near Conn House) Pittsburgh, Pa. Hours 9... A. 2. to 8 P. K. nundays 12 at. to 2 P. at. Pamphlet sent to any address for two staw____Lrst. apt IIarDATCYIELOWB HALR. DYE. Tills Splendid Hair Die is the berths the world: the only true aud perfect Dye; harmless, relia ble, instantaneous; n o disu PD o lntlitent: no 1 1- dicalous tnts; re.mecties rze ill erects of bs4 dyes; Invigorates and leaves the Hair soft and beactitta. black swarm... Pa. Sold by all Druggists and Perfbmere: er.d properly applied at Batche lor's Wiz PactorY, No. .1.15 Bond street. New York. mIZI:j62 1 THE HEALING POOL -- ESSAYS NOEL 'YOUNG MEN, wbo bare fdlen Into vicious babl's. and now t'esi re a hldher life, and a etterAlA N HOOD. 'Mr certain means of relief for the Sent lo afaifd letter envelopes, free of charge. Addrts. HOWARD ActIuCIATIVY, Box Plalladelphla, Penna. se2S:Bm•ddcF Eiii • DISSOLUTION OF CO.PART i 4EltalllP.—The. rm of Br/LUJAN. OED & BatiALEY washhis day , Ilstolard by rnntnal consent. Tae buslness rr,ll be continued by HatriterE W. BOLLMAN and RALPH Bars. , I ALES% nnner the •tyle and :inn Hartle of BOLL / MAN & dAGALEY, who are authorizrd to col lect all accounts due and psy all claims amiss; the firm. GEO. W. Br/LUJAN, RALPH HAGALET, JOHN H. BOYD, WM. CAMeBELL,Jn. PlTTSBunutr, August 21st, 1t169. In retiring from the foundry business we cheer fully recommend our late Partners to the further Patronage of the pub.lc. JOHN CAMPBELL,D NM Jn. PMENIX ROLL FOUNDRY, B MOLL AN & BAGALEY, 1 \ Manufacnrers of superior CHILL BOLLS. A. 1,71) ROLLS and PINIONS. Corner Liberty nd 24th str-etc, Pittsburgh. Be4:138; DIS*OLUTION.—The partner. COOP ship heretofore extstizte between JutiN g-4... E firm name of anu 11EN/tY BLEB, 'stler the . JOHN N. COOPER & CO„ Was dissolved on the 12th Day of August, 1869, Henry Bier pure:lasing the Interest of John M. Coupe-. firm Henry Bler settle all the btuslness of the late se2l:otia LIVERY STABLES., ROBERT 8, PitEiSON St . CO CORNER OP . Seventh', Avenue and Liberty St., PITTSBURG/3. PA. • will on s each urdo r , July 31st, and on ol succeeding Saturday, hold an Auction Bale of - . HORSES, CARRIAGES BUGGIES, WAGONS, An d everythlke appertalvair the Florae. Parties desl ing to sell will please leave their notice of conslgament on or before Thursday of each we < kto order for advertisit,g. Prompt at tention and good care will be given al/ Stock left forsale. • 1 y2B JOHN IL STEWART, Auctioneer: JOHN RJOHN 1/. w.A.T71411 • ow. riiimusolv & Co., • LIVERY. SALE AND • CONIXIMION STABLES: COB, SEVENTH AVENUE & LIBERTY ST. ates:bo PITTADVIZOU, P.& YDRAXLIC CEMENT.-100 bbls Louisville Hydrullc Cement. for sale J. is Qt.:kraus.; A LLEGuipNv COUNTY ss:—ln -LA- the Or.-hans' Court In and for said cvnnty. In the matter of the estate of JOSEPH A. Burr, dec'd. No 33, September Term, '1869. ..And now. to-wit, September 18:1o, /869, on motion of Brown .k .Lamble, Attorneys for ac countants, the Court appoints J. E. }ScRELVY, E tO ., 'Auditor, 'o audit the account and make d , stribution of funds In hands of administrator. (From the Ilscord,) By THE COURT. - Attest: A. HILANDS, Clerk. Notice it hereby given that the undersigned Auditor wl!l attend to the duties of the above anpointment at his °dice, No. 91 Grant street, Pittsburgh. Pus, on. WEDNESDAY, the'2oth day of Oc•oter. A. D. 1869. at the hour of 3 o'clock P. M. of Laid dlr, at which time au I place those Interested may attend. J. E. Stch"ELYY. A nclito-. W ITE R EAR, LETTFIRR OF AD., RATII:Non the estVE of FRANK LIN G. WILLIANIS. have ottn granted to the underogue,l. All p.r,oos latleinen to said es tate are rt.oetetl to tontze lunniate pay neat, and those baring el AIMS galabt Laud I sta'e wlll pierce e•eut th EUZIIC for settlement, prop:riy atithehtl,ate 6 , to the uwleril, nest. sAII, A. NEALE. City. turcl No 105 andusky street,T ward. Allegheny INl.4:rna/-P. lOTlCE.—Letters testamenta, icy on the estate of R. HURL:it/S. dent. are been graue4 to count andel - signed by the Register event Allegheny y, all ners-ns in debted to said estate are nereb. handed to make pa, anent. and tense hlring claims against the estate are r