The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, October 15, 1869, Image 2

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    El
ttegittAurgt Gaittts.
GIMUL NEWS.
. ,
liirne.we is famous tor' suture's 'trusted.
BATon ROUGE Is to hßve . a new cotton
mill.
GAB is made out of dirt in the East In
dies.
Tan people of Nevada patronise
MORN soup,
THE Avondale fund has reached the
sum of $200,000;
Bosrox - claims to haie made $50,000
by the Peace Jubilee.
THE Indians are causing trouble at
"Loyal Valley," Texas.l .
E. A. POLLARD is desirious of purchas
ing a Washington newspaper.
THE wives of Brigha m young, con
solidated, weigh 5,000 , 'pounds,
A musics at Concord, N. H., takes up
a collection four times each Sunday.
NEW YORK reporters are worse paid
than any of their brethren anywhere else.
•
CLavirsania has a "pulsating artesian
well" which throws up water in alternate
jets.
THERE are 229,000 threshing machines
in the United States, not counting the
• schoolmaster.
AN apparatus for extracting fire-damp
- or other deleterious gasses from mines has
been discovered.
Tan writer of this column in the New
- York,Democratputa his jokes in italics to
make theta evident. •
DAVENPORT, lOvi4, is excited over the
murder of Fritz Ehrig, whose body was
found in a water-spout.
ANOTHER Republican journal has been
started at Martinsburg, West Virginia,
styled Thi "Ft r:ey Star.
Tom ALLEN, the pugilist, is in Cincin
nati, perfecting arrangements for his fight
with McCoole on the 10th prox.
A NEW YORKER was fined $lO,OOO the
• other day, and to satisfy the judgment he
gave all his property—ten cents.
A LIVE eagle was perched on the Re
publican headquarters at Hainsburgh,
Pa., on Wednesday afternoon. .
Tax San Francisco Herald, a Demo
cratic paper, has been suspended. The
New York World mourns the loss.
BISHOP WHITAKER Was consecrated
yesterday, in New York, as an Episcopal
Missionary to Nevada and Arizona.
A CINCHTNATI magistrate has decided
that there is no law to prevent women
from wearing men's attire in that city.
THE Homeopathists will build a monu
ment to the late Dr. Gram, who first in
troduced homeopathy into this country.
GROPED was ' broken on Tuesday at
Beckleysville, Baltimore county, Md.,
for the Parktoir and Manchester Rail
road. •
, .
Ix New England, the phase "before the
food" is always understood to refer to
the times antecedent to the- late Deluge
there. •
Tun Paris and Constantinople Railroad
will place the two cities within sixty
how' ride of one another. The road will
be4wo thousand miles long.
A mum; of Lemington, Maine, lost a
gold chain in 1837, and supposed it was
stolen from him. He found it lately
while plowing a piece of land.
CHICAGO is the place for a man of a
peacable disposition, to settle in. , About
85,000 arrests were made in that delect
able city during the last three months.
THE anniversary *of the discovery of
:America by Columbus has just been cele
brated_by-the Italian Mutual Benefit So
- ciety of Boston, with a public parade and
picnic.
A aux in Kentuc thought he would
scare his wife by pe ting stones at her
through the window. She pelted a bullet
at him through a rev lver and he was let
down in a boxl ,
In Westport, C
Ketchum. the New'
Rev. J. Eaton Bali
Mr. Smith thinks w
sues for the amount.
WHILE stocking
ville,Tenn.. lately,
kille. It is said ti
body was crushed 1
flesh was. Unbroken. --
• THE Rev. Dr, i'i ey, who has visited
Afrida, in a recent ecture, expressed it
as his belief that A rica would some time
or other be themo st thickly populated
country in the wo d.
AT Bowling Gieen, Kentucky.. a few
days ago,
a little boy named Lord, while
passing ahorse, struck it upon the flank,
when it kicked him upon the forehead,
crushing his skull, fatally.
THE party under Lieut. Wheeler, sent
to explore the great desert country west
of Colorado and squth of White Pine re
port their arrival, after severe. struggles,
at Muddy river, fifty miles south of the
' Rio Virgin.
A comrazzy of 1 geatlemen are about
erecting a large building in Hartford,
Conn., for th accommodation of small
families who, o not wish to board under
the present sy tem, and yet cannot afford
to keep house. I ,
AN attempt , as, recently made to rob
the National Bank'.at I Townsend, Mass.,
but the burglars nied',too much powder,
alarming the citizens , by the' explosion.
The burglars fled; leaving behind them
many of their , toots. ,' ( . • ' '
i =
the
pastorate
Da. birRAG has resigneu
pastorateof 'the 8e nd . Presbyterian
Church, in ' Albany, N. Y.;-itt society
mi t
which he has ministe r, d to for upwards
of ; forty Years—and the Church eas voted
lam an anneal pens ion '. of. $2,000. , .
-- - T ,
A Miftzlrecerz. JUDG E,, in sentencing it
criminal who. . offence l send him to
thecountY" j for one : wo uld
yeaz of to the
. - Ztate prison for two years , chose and im
p%W the latte sentenee on the : ground of
'fitizinahity, not deeming the jail fit to be
inhabited.
sk Min who
thelfitte Meal
j..lnatt's pleri ts
nurse, writes
that in Amen!
a 'Celtic •wife t
to have him.
Tun Heiena it Sferaitt records the casting
of a $50,000 go d brick for Messrs. Bohm
and Anb; the rges‘ that was'eyer run in
'' - tell United 13ta s. Mr; Bohm has - offered
to make a pres tof this brick to any one
who will shon er It and walk one mile
- without stoppin . It weighs 270 pounds.
ir t
_ltoel4the fe.bester, in jail at CievtN
land, had •an terttiew the 'other day"
with the wife w om he is in the habit of
abusing, and who offered to \ pledge • I
her household goods to save him fro..
going to jail. After the interview he had
a fit. He Is said to be a relative of Booth
the assassin.
ditori al risks.
IF A Jortnneigsx desires s(
let him go to the far west. The Laram i
(Wyoming) Sentinel speaking of the lac
of editorial in a late issue says: /-"Th
editor-in-chief has been living on ben
meat for the past two or three days, t
such a fearful extent that it has set
wild, and he must have left for the wood ;
at least he could not be found in tow
this morning. .
Gov. Soinagn's message urges strongl
the ratification of the Fifteenth Amen .
ment; says the interests of Tennesse
would be icirthered thereby, had the peo
pie voted for it; urges a continuation o
the free school system and comments upo
Its good effects; scouts repudiation' an
advises the sale of delinquent.railroads t
enhance the value of the State bonds, an '
asks for action to encourage immigration.
A- FARMER who wished to Invest the
accumulation of his industry in United ,
States securities, went to Jay Cooke's
office to obtain Treasury notes. The
clerk inquired: "What denomination will
you have them in, sir?" Having never
heard that word used excepting to distin
guished religions sects, the farmer, after
a little .deliberation, replied: "Well, you
may give me part in. Old School Presby
terian, to please the old lady, bat give
me the heft cin't in Free -Will Baptist."
Tun Social Science Congress, wh'ch
commenced Its sessions 'at Bristol, Eng
land, on September the 28th, it is an
nounced, will embrace a wide field in its
inquiries. Among the subjects mention
ed aril gie relation between England ill:id
her colonies, and how the connection
can be maintained or how altered, charit-
endowments, sanitary matters, the
condition of the agricultural laborers'and
the treatment of animals. Sir Stafford 1
Northcote, Secretary for India in the
Disraeli cabinet. delivered the °pent g
address. A Ladies' Conference was so
to be held.
JEFFERSON DAVIS says to-his admir rs
who call on him in Briltimore that he as
no interest whatever in political affai s,
and shall decline all conversation in re pr
ence thereto during his trip to Missis
sippi. He is said to lava expressed the
hope that the liberal Conservative Be
publicans of the South and the Democrats
of the North would succeed in the fall
elections. His estimate of parties is that
i t
the Northern Democrats epresent what
is left of the principtcl'Or K-governme 't,
or "White Man's OW, tent," while
the Conservative RePti erns South r -
present all that is left of the principle n
that section. '
THE Duke of Genoa, the nephew f
Victor Emmanuel, is once more talk a
about as a candidate for the Spanish
throne. The little Prince Thomas is not
yet quite sixteen, and he might be put to
a worse use than that of Governor of the
Spanish State. He is ,a handsome boy,
amiable, and already possessed of nvari
ety of, accomplishments. He is a pretty
good horseman, can dance, fence, row,
hit the bull's eye, drink rum punch, and
has enough blue blood in his veins even
for foolishly pretentious Spain. His ed
ucation is advanced, but not yet comple
ted; and there is elasticity enough in him
for the Spaniards to bend him into the
most rapproved form of a modern King,'
if his guardians will consent to the
trial.—Florence Letter.'
-, a son of Morrie
ark banker, gave the
a cow hiding, which
worth $lO,OOO, and
odder near Browns
,: negro was instantly
at every hone in his
o atoms, and yet his
Ifuses to be •ebermed by
ntations of John' Chine
se a tonse-sentialt and
the . . New York Times,
John Invariably chooses
goon as he caul And one
Alice and Pricene Cary.
Alice and Plufebe Cary have begiin the
Sunday evening receptions that, .every
winter, renders so'. attractive their little
house in one of our pleasantest streets.
It is a small nest of a place, just large
enough. for the two gracious maidens who
have chosen to abjure - the constant com
panionship of the- superior sex. It pos
sesses one feature rather unusual in New
York houses—it has I a hall running
through the center, on one side of which
is:the drawing-room, and on the other the
library. Both rooms are as cosy as they
can be, wearing an air of gentle refine
ment and " unobtrueive culture. Everp_
thing is so testefally disposed that upon
entering It is only the tout ensemble that is
perceived.' No glaring picture rushes at
you from the wall. No tiowry sofa con
fuses the vision with an absurd mixture
'of color. Soft-toned draperies and skill
fully grouped.artistic trifles at once melt
The visitor with a delightful sympathetic
'rapport. A peculiarly striking object is
an exquisit mosaic table, imported from
Germany, and presented to the sisters by
an appreciative friend.
Their more favored visitors are invited
to come to tea, at which banquet Miss
Pinebe's sparkling humor almost makes
her.friends forget the more material feast
before them. Mr. Greeley's amiable
countenance often beameth abo've their
table ) at these Sunday evening teas. For
manY years he has been a devoted-friend
to he sisters. During the evening the
literati of the city assemble,
dropping in
one by one in an informal way that is
very charming. At the last rethption
Oliver Johnson's gray locks and'strong
face were visible in a corner, their owner
dis Coursing amiably to a knot of attentive
listene,rs. :Under the gaslight sit Miss
Phcebe, plump. laughing.eyed, piquant.
She wears all sorts of willing cut bonnets
and sashes and bracelets and beads, p -
fectly in accordance with her cheery .
style. There's nothing of the proverbial
old maid about her—not a bit of it. Con
versing with her is. Lord Adare, son of
thiEarl of Dunraven, who is just now
traveling here with his wife. He has a
slight figure, an intellectual Dice, and a
long - tawny moustache. Lady Adam ik
Scotch, and consequently •"," bright eyed
and bonny. She looks rather amused as
-Miss Phcebe energetically' •rrirks that
she wishes some other than BOoth might
become the high priest of the drama in
America. At one. side, Susan B. An
thony, in the, inevitable acerlet crape
.shawl and spectacles, relates her recent'
experience in Cincinnati to a sympa
thetic bearer. Susan's nose takes an
upward turn, and her eyes snap as she
goes into detail. About the room roams
the philosopher of the Tribune radiating
'militia and common sense until he grows
tired and takes his leave in his own char
acteristic minnesr•that Is he wanders
vaguely away without saying goodbye
to say Wdy, - The conversation very often
turns upon spiritualistic matters, the sis
ters being devoted Spiritualists of the
higher type. While Miss Cary's accom
plished nieces were here, music was one
of the attractions of these gatherings, but
they have long since borne all but its re•
membiance to happy homes of their own.
Throe out this, nest breathes the most
exquisite culture, the sweetest purity,
and a beautiful picture la the lives of the
two sinsingrbirds gwithin.—Clorrespond•
vice of Cincinnati Gazette.
SIIIIIIGH GAZETTE: FRIDAY, OCTOBER 15, 18(0).
lIE
• Absence of Culture.
We preach the love of beauty in season
and out of season, read and write expo- •
sitions of the principals of taste and
nauseam, by dint of preserveiance main
tain a certain amount of enthusiasm for
accepted standards; and yet in what an at
mospherii of ugliness do we live, and
move, and have our being. Take by the
way, of example, the so•called well ap
pointed house of an English family in
comfortable circumstances. The draw
ing-room will differ in no essential degree
from thousands of drawing-rooms. the up.
holstry will he unexceptionable as far as
costliness goes, the decorations will be of a
piece, with all the other houses in the
same street and no individuality is ex
pressed anywhere. If pictures adorn the
wall they are of the popular'kind. Stich
works of art ss have been collected to
gether represent • the money rather than
,the tast expended upon them. Love of
commonplace luxury and absence of dis
-1 criminating choice pervade every
nook and corner. The question nat
' orally arises—is the enjoyment
of so much display at all equal
o the labor it often represents ? Some
f the Most costy households in London,
onseholds that rival , princely establish.
ments in wealth and splendor, are main
tained by dint of commercial undertaking
`of the most unremitting and often hazard
ous kind. As there are no bounds either
to the conventional uses of wealth or the
passion for display, the pursuit of fortune
is persisted in till the very faculty of en
joying better things is gone. Yet nobody
can deny that it is quite possible to lead a
life perfectly consistent with good - taste
and refinement, and invested with enjoy
ments of a high order, on a comparatively
moderate income, if people would only
set about in the right way, avoiding mere
rivalry of display_ and vain ostentation.
In the present time good taste is out.
raged a hundred times a day. There are
our hospitalities, to begin with. What
can be said in , favor of the dinner parties
which begin between eight and nine
o'clock and last for two hours ? Noth
ing can exceed the lavishness of the ban
quet, the savoir fairs of the servants, the
brilliance of illumination, the splendor of
the ladies' toilet; and yet what a dreary
ceremonial is the whole entertainment
from beeinning to end! Halt the money
expended on two or three quiet little
gatherings of well.assorted people would
be really productive of pleasure and
profit; yet the host or ' hostess who fol
lows this plaitbis looked upon as both ec
centric and shabby. It is the same with
other things. To cultivate the esthetics
of common life is to wage war against all
kinds of tyrannies and follies. A woman
who should dress in the way best suited
to her figureiand complexion, regardless
of the last edicts of Persian milliners.
would only win approval from the artistic,
and a country gentleman who pre
fers art to hunting and sport finds very
little favor in the eyes of his neighbor.
Yet we have too much of the sporting
spirit and too little appreciation of music
and painting. It is not so much the cul
tivation of taste 'as the application of it to
every-day existence that teachers of es
thetics should insist upon. Most of us
know what vulgarity means, and would
be horrified to have such a sin laid to our
doors. Yet how patiently do we submit
to the vulgerization of our toilets, our
dwellings, our amusements, our liters.
-thre, nay, even our charities! . Is not
'the evening dress of our daughters the
very reverse of refined? Is not the pro
fuse upholstery with which we fill our
houses vulgar? The real value of esthet
ics in common life must be measured by
the sincerity with which they are prac
ticed,
_not the enthusiasm with which
they are professed. Might not preachers
inculcate this maxim even on Sundays
sometimes 2—Pail Mali Gazette.
They are beginning to discuss in En.
'rope the question of the costliness of
monarchies. Some statistics on this sub
ject have been lately completed, which
may possibly set people to thinking. Ills
Holiness the Pope, who can look over the
whole of his temporal dominions from
the ball of St, Peter's, is the cheapest
• monarch of Edrope, and costs only $200,-
000 per annum. Wnrtemberg spends
$220,000 on her august sovereign. 'Den
mark $240,000, Norway and Sweden
$260,000, Holland $500,000, and Portugal
$665,000. These thrones are among the
comparatively inexpensive establish
ments. Bavaria sets apart a round million
for royalty. Englandv provides for her
Queen and royal fami1y42,350,000. Prus
sia 'maintains majesty at a cost of 42,-
400,000. Italy charges her people for
the new monarchy the handsome sum of
$3,200,000,' and Austria suffers for the
support of the Hapsburgs to the extent of
four millions a year. -These are among
the moderate. kingsfolk 'and imperial
people. When we come to the Grand
Turk, tvlio wants many sequins to keep
up his seraglios and harems, we find him
tolerably “high-priced," $6,600,000 being
Abdul Assiz'a allowance. The Emperor
of the French gets his $7,000,000 for man
aging the affairs of the' empire. Lastly,
the Caar, who is the most expensive
monarch to keep up of all, has $8,500,000.
Taken altogether, the sitters upon Euro
pean thrones cost their subjects about
forty millions of dollars a year for their
mere personal expenses. Perhaps one of
these days it may be thought that this
enormous, expenditure tan be made to
better ativantage than in the empty show
of royal and imperial state.
THEME is now on trial, before Judge
Johnson, at Meadville, Pa., an important;
case; growing out of the lamented Angola
railroad disaster last winter. It is the
case of Caroline Steward vs.' the Buffalo
and Erie railroad company. Stephen W.
Stewart, husband of the, plaintiff, was
killed in theterrible accident referred to.
He was, at the time °this death, Presi.
dent of the Pirat National Bank ofiCorry,
and a gentleman universally respected.
The action is brought , by his widow to
recover damages torm the company for
causing his death. It is an' interesting
Case, involving site fine 'law po ints, and
its results will be watched wit h interest.
A mums of mishaps occurred lately at
the funeral of a little child at ,Houghton,
Michigan. The horse attached to the
hearse bedame frightened,' Eald Tall away
while on the way to to the house to get
the body, threw the driver off and under
the wheel, which took off one of his ears.
The horse was soon secured and the fn.
neral services proceeded. Upon arriving
at the cemetery it was found that the
gate keys had bepu forgotten, and a gate
had to be burst open. Then the bands
to sustain the coffin were missing; and
lastly, the coffin box was &and to, be too
small, and no cords, hid ! been iproilded
for lowering the whole into the grave.
The, Cost ot _ a King.
SELF 1403EL - 1 - NG
111ITITTAN TOP.
C 0 I - Liar IT,
PITTSTIVRGH;
, , • •
We are now prepared to supply Tinners and
Potters. It rmrfect, simple. and as cheap as
the plain top, having the names of the various
Fruits stamped upon the cover, radiatingfrom
the center, and an index or pointer. tiPon
the top of the can.
It Is Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently
X...11-13mr.x133,
by merely placing the name of the fruit the
cart contains opposite the pointer and sealing 14 ,
the customary manner. No preserver of fruit
good housekeeper will use any other after once
seeing t. m 1125
IPES. CHIMNEY TOPS. &c,
WATER PIPES,
CUISINES TOPS
♦ large assortment,
HENRY H. C7OLLINB,
ap14:10I7 1d Avenne.near Sudo field !St.
DRY GOODS
Li Di 1:11 tAilkva D) nal
62 1-2 c. Heavy Corded Brown Poplin
heap at $l,
641-4 e 4-4 Silk Finish Black Alpacas
rest bargains; worth . 87 1.4 c,
37 1-2 c. Mixed Poplins, worth 641.4.
Black Bilks cheap.
Empreos Cloth cheap.
Black Poplin cheap.
ONE HIINDREID
NEW ARAB SHAWLS
25c. heavy Plaid Flannels.
25c, Ileavy White Flannels.
25e. Heavy Red Flannels.
31e. RIM Heavy Gray Twilled Flannels
WILL OPEN ON MONDAY,
# LARGE STOCK OP
Sacques, Wraps. Walking. Coats,
BROADWAY IAORIITS,
All nbw Styles at very Low Prlces.
PAISLEY SHAWLS
BEST BARGAINS IN THE CITY.
WHITE BLANKETS / 1-4 ALL WO
$3.50 T 9 $5.00, A BARGAIN.
lA35c• GOOD TICKING,
Abe. YARD WIDE FEATHER TICKING.
K IL GARDNER,
N 0.69 'Market Street,
Wed Corner Market and,Fourth.
oc9:True . !
of
-,w z
14
cizr 13
og
'l4 z A
7 E 14 M fr.l
M „
ei pi CA ri
cf 2 . 6 0 ~A 4 w
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9. 4 ud F
LA r 4 O
E. 4 g k " 4
I= o WO Pi k 4 FI
OCI oa: s
04 14 t 1
01
a ti
C ARR & teeViribion. CO.,
WHO a LEBALD MILL= /V
Foreign and Domestic Dry. Geode,
so. 44 WOOD ESTEEM. -
TD3rd door abate Diamond siter t •
P=M:TILOR. TA4
:„ &o .
SCHMIDT & FRIDAY,
111UPORMS OP
WINES,. BRANDIES, GIN, &C.,
rROLZII I WC DRUMM 11l
'KBE BYE 'WHISKIES,
";.409 PENN.STILEET,
Rave Iteinoved to
NOS. OM AND 880 PENN,
Cm Eleventh St., (formerly CanaL)
JOSEPH S. FINCH & CO.,
Nos. itie.lll7V-1130. 191. 190 and 195 9
TIBET sun% P1TT41311144 •
Pie MOM Pare - Mil Ina%UV
Line dean= in NOB ZION WIN= sad U.
QUOMBOI . 3, Le. ann.ng
BUNGS, NOTIONS, &O.
New Goods!
New Goods!
SACRUM & CARLISLE'S
No. 27 Fifth Avenue,
NEW DRESS TRINKINGS, •
FRINGES,'GINFS AND
BUTTONS NRW eASEI AND
BOW RIBBONS THE LATEST
NOVELTIES IN HATS. NEW
ST LY BoIPERIRS.
NOVELTIItS IN LACE GOODS
GLOVES AND HOSIERY,
complete assortment for Fall.
MERINO An WOOL
Shirts and Drawers,
„ALL KINDS AND SIZES.
ZEPHYRS, RAT . MORAL AND
FANCY YARN, KNIT SHAWLS,
CLOAK 4 CY HOOuS. NOTIONS AND
FA N GOODd.
Merchants and Dealers supplied at low Wines
ILAORUM & CARLISLE
NO. 27
m f'IFTH AVENUE.:
FALL OPENING.
FINE ASSORTMENT OF
ARAB SHAWLS,
In Plaid and Boma* Striped
Ruffled Collars and Cuffs,
The New Sailor Collar,
' Silk Fringes,
Satin Trimmings,
Silk Glass Buttons.
In all the Newest Patterns.
MISSES PINE WOOL CAPS IND SIMI%
An elegant assortment Just received.
Hair. and Jute Bitritehes,
Balmoral and Plaid Hosiery,
Wool Half Hose,
Billets and •Drawers,
FOR FALL AND WINTER WEAR.
YARN,
A Fuca Supply df AU Kinds.
HEAVY PLAID FLANNELS,
MACRUM, (CLYDE . & CO.,
78 & 80 Market Street.
Kea
J - UST OPENED
BY
JOSEPH HOENE & CO.
EXTRA. QUALITIES
ARAB SHAWLS,
IN STRIPED AND SCOTCH PLAID, AL
SHADES.
Iteyersed Satin Pleating,
The Latest Novelty in Dress Trimming.
Quilled Satin Trimming,
Fringes •
Plain and Plaid Hercule Braids,
bilk, !Win and Velvet Buttons,
Seolcb Plaid Glass Buttons,
Black and Colored Velvet Ribbons,
Lams and Bilk Girdles.
Merino and Wool Underwear.
.
In all size. and qualities.
Child's Merino Dresses,
Ladies' Merino Skirts,
Boultsarde Felt Skirts
HOSIERY.
An Unsurpassed Assortment
Merino and Wool Mimed,
Fleeced Cotten.
• Plain MerinO,
Tartan.
, Pa•isian Striped,
vioToure AND STUART. CASHMERZ
HOSE, M all sizes.
Gents' Half Hose In Wool, Merino and Super
Stout C otto n,
AT 'VERY LOWEST PRICES.
77 and 79 MARKET STREET
WALL PAPERS.
ELEGANT
PAPER HANGINGS.. •
•
Enameled Wall Papers In_platn tints Imper
vious to soot and smoke. VetmllllonlEunds
wlth . sold and Inlaid figures. &RHUMB. WILL-
Y/ITS, INDIA TAPESTRY. UREEN. P ELS
stamped and =lilted gold. '
Newly imported and not to be found elsewhere
la the country. For sate at
W. p i , wr A RAU ALL
1 .,3
NEW WALL rAPETt stroßE,
• .
bn
191 "Abbe* Street.
DEC Olt A iONßtafin ood,
Marble and all
Fresco Imitations 14 Ws
anti Celllnks of Dining BOOMIIt Halls, ~
No.!107 Market street.
ort -, JOSEPH B. HMI= RO.
§TAtIIrED GOLD PAVERS fo
tortors. 240.107 Market Street.
yV Amara B. HUGHES • 880.
1 Z-V'T
R co.,
ANCHOR COTTON MIIIII.B.
liang tialauors of RUNT 11:1111Drpg
A3C110111.. AID .11AfiNOLILI,
arrarrnran AND 111AVIT1i4.
ROCK THE BAST
EARNEST'S PATENT CRIB.
BOLD OILY
LEMON &
Practical PuraMae Nalulfacturzerikes
118.1POITJEVT.EI
en May In Itmadi tallissortinest ofttr•
oz. Chamber Nisiglen rasalcirze. deal
ELEGANT. CARPETS,.
,f
The latest. and Moist beautiful — designs era
shown in
TAPESTRY OR BODY
BRUSSELS.
Just reeelved by direct Importation from Env,
7a3a:CrarairMT29l
Of the latest styles in large quantities.
OLIVER
CARPETS.
Oil Cloths, Window Shades,
DRUG GET SQV,A.RESt
At the Lowest Prices Ever Offered:
BOFARD, ROSE & CO.,
selB.daa
NEW FALL STOCE.4
CARPETS,
THE CHEAP E-ST.
CHEAP INGRAIN CARPETS.
BODY BRUSSELS
'Myer Ofrei'eci. Da Pittsburgh.
Bove tlme and money , by buying from i
MePARLAND & COLLIN%
atZ:MIT
NEW CARPETS!
MESH IMPORTATION
Purchased by our Mr. S. MuCallum . from swum
facturers in Europe.
VELVETS,
,BRUSSELS,
Tapestry Brussels, &c.,
THE FINEST °
Assortmerit ever o'ffered in Pittsburgh.
ALSO, A. FINE :
I BTUCE OF
THREE:I%IB, I INGRAINS, _
COMMON CARPETS
Well Seasoned Oil Cloths,
M'Citttli BIOS.,
41V. 51 FIFTH Ar.E.rvx,
..io
COAL! COAL!! COAL!!!
DICKSON, STEIVART ,&
Having removed their OMee to
NO. 567 LIBERTY STREET,
(Lately City Mar MIIO 13ZOOFID BLOOM.
Are now premed to furnish good YOIIGHIO..
BHENY.LTMP. I= COAL OBESLACIL at the
lowest morket price.
AU orders left at , their offlee, or addressed to
Chem through the mail. will be attended to
ornteretiV.
CIBEGAR.4 Y Eli STITITTE, 1521
C„). and 1829 SPRUCE STREET, Philadelphia.
Pa ENOLlsli' AND FRENCH. For- Young
Ladles and Misses, BotrAlug and Day Puplls.
will reopen on MONDAY &pen tier 20.
FRENCH Is the language or fatally, and lo
Constantly spoken In the Institute.
t ILADAIRE DIDDIATILLP.
3723;rran Principal.
S.
IN
MeCLINTOCK
& CO.
23 Fifth Avenue.
NEW FALL STOCK.
DRUGGETS.
Ingrain tarpets,
FIFITE AVENUE.
The First in the Market
AND
CHOICE PATTERNS
Two-ply and Three-ply
THZ lINEST LINE OF
17o;" 71 aad 73 SI7TH AVIC.N3I.
(ikeend 'Moo?).
FLNE AESOR.TMENT OR
COAL AND COKE.
I3).lit•7'ip n
DR. Vira:n=Ml
CIONTINFES TO 'TREAT ALL
11 its forms. all
nrtngr y ti t s e d rrn s ea b e l l Israeli all
mercury -are
completely era dicatedl dPermatorthee_
.or Bent
nal Weakness an d rernotency, resumes
self-abuse or other causes. and which prodnoes
some of the following egeore. as blotches, bodily
weakness. indigestion, consumption. aversion to
society. unmanliness, dread of future events,
loss of memorf. indolence( nocturnal =Malone,
and filially so prostrating the serbal system at Vs
render marriage unsatbractoil. , and therefor.'
imprudent, are permthently cured. Persons af.
Meted with these or any other delicate. intrieate
or long standing.constitutional itOmplOnt should
give the Doctor a trial; he never fills.
A particular attention given to all Aimee ocial.
Plaints, Leucorthea or Whites. Talling,lndsze•
nation or Ulceration , of the Womb. CORMS,*
pruritic Amenorrhoea. Menontsgia, Dytmeas.
north oek and later/My or Barrenness, ars treat
el with tbe greatest success.
It is self-evident that a physician who =ninth
himself exclusively to the study of a certain class
of diseases and treats thousandirrof eases every
Isar must acquire greater skill In that epeeildle
than one In general practice.
The Doctor imiblislies medical AM
Pages that, gives tal i
exposition of vpamphletenereal
i ti n t iprtrate diseases, that can be had tree at oMoe
or-by mall for two stamps, in sealed envelopes.
Every sentence contains Instruction to the &fa
Meted, and enabling them to determine the Ml*
Mae nature tifeomplainta.
The establishment, comprising ten ample
rooms, i; central. When It is not convenient te
TIM the elt/I the Doctors opinion can be Cam
Labial by giving a written statement of the au%
and medicines can:be forwarded by mail or ex
press. In Witte instanees. however, • personal
examination is a absolutely necessary. while In
others daily personal attention Is reqt lred, and
for the accommodation t f such patients there are
laret= connected with the office that are m.o.
m 31 1
with every requisite that- ls calculated to
promote recovery. including medicated Taper
baths. All prescriptions are prepared in the
Doctor's own laboratory. under Ms personal su
pervision. Medical ramplilets °Mee free. or
ma, for two stamps. - Metter who hires
NW, rearAlthat he says. Monza 9 it. x. to
two4rx x. war e Ofitcl i t i o. 9
bTAZAT. (near art, ilousea • targt,"7