The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, October 18, 1869, Image 2

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'JOE JONES.. . ~
' Don't you remember lame :Sally, doe Jortee, - l' 1
'I I
Lime Sally, whose u•sse was so brow brown.
Who looked . Ake a clam if you - gave her a smile II
'
• And went into fit at your frown
In the old goose-pond in the orchard. Joe Jonesi
Where the goslings are learning to swim. II
_
I pantAnethere d 'Jolly
by mistake went Oshin
tounembled wet,
in. windy day, I:
,
-Under windsms bruph fence, Joe Jotes, • 11
That at the faot of the hill,
'l'Ogetber we've seen the old-camel go round, 1
Grinding cider.at AppletOu's na la : • 1
The mill wheel is oven wood now, Joe Jones.
Tbe rafter fell on to a cow,
And the weasels azd'rsts that crawl ronnd as
you gaze, ~/
. - Are the lords of the cider 411.11n0w. ." .
•
Don't you remember the pip pen. Joe Jones,
' Which stood on the path to the barn?
grow on
And the shirt-button trees,where they
the boughs.
Which we sewed on our l jackete with Teri?
The p 1 pen has gone to decay. Joe Jones,
And the lightning the tree overcome: •
And down where the onions and carrots once
grew.
Grow thistles as big as your thumb.,
IDon't yon remember the school, Joe Jones?
I ' . And the master who wore tbe old 'wig?
eAndth o shady nook by the crook of the
brook. ld
I'• Where we played with Aunt Catharines pig?
2dlce live inthe master's wig, Joe Jones,
The brook with the crook le now dry—
I And the boys and the girls that were playmates
• then,
Have all grown up ever so high:
_ —...-----------
STATE ITEM.
MAD dogs still prevail in Philadelphia.
EDWIN FORREST will be in Brie Nov
ember Bth and 9th.
I VENANGO crrx is, entirely free.from
,debt, and has a balance in the treasury.
\ROBERT REEVE, an aged citizen of
Perry county, died suddenly Monday of
last week, while perusing a letter.
WILLIAM artroaTzu (of Jesse) of Ty
rone, Perry county, last week killed a
, catamount nearly three feet in length.
ERIE is much exercised over the opera- I
lions of incendiaries, and the Caned is I
•
urged to increase the reward o_Ared for
their apprehension. , • 1
THE anti•TeMperance men ?if Erie
claim the decrease of Gov. ‘ Geaty's ma
. jority in that city is due to their efforts.
The decrease is 350. i 1
THE United American clianics in
Perry county will parade at ticcannon
on the 28d.. Harnsburg Cou ells have,
been invited io participate.
OIL CITY having been report $lOO,-
I l t
- 000 in debt, the Times denies th fact, and
states that the debt, includin that for
school buildings, is less than $4 ,006.
GEORGE SuaxgE, of . Etamilt n :town
ship, Monroe - county, was recently
,
I found dead in the woods neari his resi-
'
dence, death having been cause by palsy.
his age was sixty years. I
TEE Commissioners of .Ere county,
from 1862 to 1864, issued *p to the
amount of $227,275,
of whi the Audi
tors have destroyed up toAate $203,775,
leaving-$23,000 outstanding: i
CONTRACTORS on the Pittsburgh and I
Connellsville Railroad are' being put to
much expense and trouble by persons
starting groggeries in the vicinity of the
road, causing the laborers to neglect their
work. ,
ALDERMAN BILL MCMHLIIII, of
IPhila
delphia,.was arrested on the 14th on the
affidavit - of a prominent ge tleman, who
stated that - while conversing ith a friend
on the sidewalk he was at ked by the
Alderman without provocati n Of cause.
IN Washington borough, n the even
ing of the 12m, Mr.. John A old was in
stantly killed by being st ck in the
breast, - with a stone, thrown by some one
of a number of intoxicated white persons
engaged in pursuing and stoning colored
-men through the street. •
TIME in the shops of the Pennsylvania
Railroad Company has b‘en reduced to
nine hours each day, exdept Saturday,
when the shops are closed in the after
noon. The employees, therefore, ac
tually work but five dayt (fifty hours)
per week. The working force is also to
be reduced ten per cent. ,
A SHORT time since Charles Wesley
Megary, of Milroy, while at work in a
saw-mill in Clearfield county, had his leg
dreadfully crushed by,a log rolling . upon
it, and owing to wantof proper ,surgical
attendance in season,lamputauon of the
- limb became necessau, but the injured
man soon died from the effects of the op.
eration.
Tan DeDIOCHHIC toughs showed in
strong force at the meeting of the Return
Judges in Philadelphia on the 15th, and
finding no "Rade' to mash, they set to
work pounding eachi other. Finally a
Republican appeared, was instantly
assailed, struck on thl i head, punched in
the ribs and then 1, - iea aside to make
room for another victim. No arrests.
TUESDAY night ofd last week, Owen
Feeney, employed byithe Min Rill Rad
road Company, as signal man, e
and living
with his family in the signal tower on
Broad Mountain, in kShuylkill county,
was burned to death, with his wife and
two children. About rednight, while the
family was buried in profound slumber,
iorn some cause unknown the house
caught fire from below. The smoke
. awakened the wife, who. arousing her
husband and sister, told them_ the house
was on fire. Mr. Feeney rose, and on
opening a door leading down stairs, the
flames came in vast volume into the
, room, enveloping the family, except the
sister, who sprang, from the second story
of the tower. The father. mother. and
their two little ones were consumed so
completely that nothing but the bones Of
Mr. F., his wife and their eldest child
were found next morning—not a vestige
of the youngest, an infant, could be dis
covered.
THEY have had another Brooks case in
Philadelphia Patrick Morley, in the
employ of the government, and under the
orders of the Collector of Revenue, was
attacked on Thursday of last week on the
street, by three men, who beat him terri
bly about• the head and face with rakes.
Finally one of them stabbed him deep in
the back with a thatcher knite, and was
I about to plunge the weapon into him
1 , : tigain, when Morley, by this time wen
t nigh exhausted, managed to elude his
IJ murderous L assailants. ' A missile - sent
'after, him was well aimed, striking him on
the back part of the head and knock
ing him to the paventent senseless and.
bleeding, the would-be assassins leaving
him tothe care of any one who saw fit to
carry him away,wbile they retreated. The
police stood idle, as if in colleague
with. or fearful of performing their duty
At
arresting, the parties to the outrage.
At a late hour in the night ~the "detect
ive" force had succeeded in arresting but
one of the supposed guilty parties, no less
a personage than Owen McCartney, pro
prietor of the whisky distillery where
officer Morley was stationed at the time
the attack on him was commenced.
The injured,man's condition was !evad
ed se precarious. . .
I \
h
I\
\
~17+1".11111912113861's"-----.---------
_
—______
GENERAL liEl'i S. man4S-Inader-successful European
novelty, and exemplifies a woman's right
A. COLORED 31asonid lodge has been • and ability to blow.
- .
organized at Belleville, Illinois. I •
' Mrs. Sewn , Sinno*s is - said ta be still
THE "lightning train" makes but one more enchanting this year than last.
stop between Albany and New York, at I She is now p aying at the Fifth Avenue
Poughkeepsie.. i I theatre in N w-York. • - --
„..._,
IT is rumored that the Vanderbilt party I Mu. JOSE, H JEFFERSON, a main; not
has obtained control of the Lake Shore !unknown to. fame, was in Buffalo last
Railroad, which caused the stock to rise 1 week playing a not altogether obscure
to 91. _‘ _,_ I play called Rip Xan Winkle.
A. TAN-YARD, buried for at least 150 I Ruston says that an unpublished opera,
years, 'was brought to light at Paterson , called Joan of. Arc, has been discovered
last week,- by some workmen digging a ' among some papers of Moira and will
sewer. . _ail,
be brought out shortly at Venice.
e
p as s ed of the "oldest inhabitants” I A. D.IRING, composer, 'named Garzill,
has passed sway. Mr. Johnson Brown, h a s produced a new opera entitled Mies:
of Madison county, Ind., died on thelOth sandro Stradella, in spite of the famous
inst. at theage of 109 years. ,I work of the same name by Flotow..
A 'WOMAN in, New Bedford, Conn., re.f REDENsTEIN, the pianist, has corn. 1
cently drew*. dead body of her infant posed a cantata entitled "The we
h r of
in its little carriage, i to an undertalter'S 1 Babel. " The confusion suppose T d
o tohave
shop in that city, to have it - measured for . existed there cduld be expressed better 1
a coffin. I ! by a novice upon the piano. - ' -- ..--------------____
-..., .
MB. ALDEN, the inventor of the IV•se EGBERT F. TEN EYCK;an actor at the \ WATER. PIPES.
shoe improvement and other agricalt ral Grand Opera House in New York, was i T 011115SNST TOPS
implements, was recently caught in the arrested on Wednesday night and held to I
1
machineiy
co s . his shop at Utica and literally bail in $2,000 to anawer a charge of forg-!!
cutto pies I log army paymasters checks.
THE great counterfeit ten dollar green- I THE King of Bavaria refuses
for ph
to,pg he
y
back may be detected by its inferior fur the gorgeous scenery procured
length and width; also by the absence of 1 production of Wagner's Rhein gold at
a small dot after the word "United" in . Munich end the reat composer ot music
"United States." ! for his
eat
A DECISION has been rendered in favor I grief- . -,
of the city ot Rochester, and against the I THE New York circus is back in New
Commercial Bank of .Rochester, N. 1 ! Y., 1 York again, and the papers there speak of
in the matter of a claim for the , repay- . I the various members of that _ company
meat of $50,000 tax levied on bonds. I
summer. The ho mails themse lve little Mes popularlville ere in the
\ s lad is not
THE Boston city government used up
1
dead yet, althOugh he has been imperilled
176 bottles of champagne wine, besidee
almost nightly, ever since.
bottles of stronger liquid, and 1,490 ci- I
gars, at a cost of over $2,000, in cols-' AUTOGRAPHS of 'Weber, including a
brating the landing of the French cable at , complete partition of an aria belonging
Doakry. . I to the opera - "Oberon l " compOsed ex
1-
THE Red Stockings base ball club, of Pressly for the famous Engl ish tenor
;,ham,Bra
are Nanounced for sale in Dresden.
Cincinnati, arrived home from the Pacific
They are part of the estate of Herr Gust,
coast on Saturday. Californians called
a lately deceased amateur.
them the "Bloody Calves-" To day they
play a game with the celebrated Athletics, I -..........-
of. Philadelphia: , I
1•
EDWARD IL HOPKINS, a man sixty
seven years of age, residing in Cincin
nsti, a few days ago attempted to cut his
throat with a pocketknife. He was for
merly Chief of Police of the city and had
recently suffered much frOin illness.
Holum C. Partoris,' a Boston mer
chant, committed suicide in Northfield,
Mass., recently. • He telegraphed for his
wifo-And nephew to follow him on the
next train from Boston, and shot himself
in his brother's barn before their arri al.
.1
A CALCULATION has been made that
enough rain fell in Rensselaer and ft.
ny counties, N. Y., on Sunday and Mon
day of last week, to supply every man,
won= and child Upon the face of the
earth - with two and a half gallons of
water per day for a year.
A LADY Wnlking on the street in Ro
chester, New York, brit week, discover
ed her dress to' be on fire, and before it
could be" extinguished by several gentle
men who flew to her succor, quite a large
portion of an over-skirt was burned. The
fire was thought to have been communi
cated by some , careless smoker.
THE Western States are remarkable;for
snakes the present year. The KilboUrn .
City (Wis.) Mirror has an accorint of the
killing, by citizens of that place, of forty-
nine rattlesnakes, which had sought refuge
under a large stone. Eight of these
snakes were four feet long each and had
reached the age of between five and seven
ea
yrs. •
GENERAL BUTTERFIELD declares that he
has discovered that the gold ring . were
tapping the telegraph wires during the I
gold panic. They have been tapping
them ever since, he says, and have used
the information thus obtained'to forward
their interests in Wall street. The names
of those concerned will be given to the
press within a few days.
A worms:tale in one of the railroad
shops at'Atlanta, Ga.,
persistently said he
had had a revelation that he should die at
12 o'cloci,on the' 12th. and at his request
a fellow-workman promised to toll the
bell of the works at that hour. The day
and the hour came; the man dressed
himself in his best and lay down upon
his bed to await the speedy coming of
the dread messenger; the solemn note of
bell was sounded, ut the man did not
die. .
ON the Genesee Valley Railroad, N.
Y., on Sunday week, a band-car, on
which were four men and one woman,
was coming down from ficottssille, and
on.a curve met a locomotive. Seeing
that a collision was inevitable, the men
on the car jumped off; but one of them
MIR seized the woman who was sitting
on the forward end, ;vith her, feet hang
ing over the edge of the platform and,
threw her down the embankment. None
of the patties were seriously hurt.
l Wheeling, last week, Thomas Tin
gle, a young man, went into a drug
store, purchased a pound of laudanum,
tepresenting it to be for the firm in
whose emplov.he was, and while the bill
for it was being made out, he adroitly
managed to extract the cork from the
battle and swallow about two ounces of
the contends. Antidotes and a stomach
pump were promptly administered, and
the young man's life saved. He was
then turned over to the care of his rela
tives at Columbus, Ohio,
CUES AND NOTES
- -
LISZT has three oratorios under way at
once now. I . -
) •
MouLAccui and her ballet troupe are
in Buffalo this week.
PATTI, while singing at Homburg re
cently, lost her voice and had to take a
rest. • • ,
TAMBERLIII, the tenor of the Spanish
revolution, will sing in Madrid againthis
winter. . + i .
Gouziou is hard at work , on - a new
opera, taking Corneille's Poiyeucte as a
subject. 1 ,
$40,000 in gohl is the price that Nillseu
is to receive for singing for two months
in England. ' , •
..
DRESDEN utterly refused to tolerate
Offenbach's Via Porisiennne, and it had
to be taken off the boards.
EDWIN. BOOTEE is playing at the Wal
nut street theatre in Philadelphia, and has
his usual immense audiences.
Mozart's suberfloete Was brought out
i.,
in Vienna re ently with twenty thousand
florins wort of new. scenery.
Tait Mendelasohn Quiritette Club is
about to start upon a tour to Chicago.
Miss Jennie Bask is tho 'dualist.
MRS. ANN S. STEPHENS:has written a.
new comedy, 'which ,is I shortly to be
brought out at . Laura Keene's theatre in
Philadelphia.', ,
A.si ' whole Orchestra of woolen with a
PIT'ISRL2:II OCTOBER 1,9 1 1869,
Nzw Yonz Homeopathists are raising.
funds to build a monument to the late Dr.
Gram.
A BOY of thirteen, livit(g in . Modena,
Michigan, weighs two hundred and two
and a half pounds.
DR. SNIAIIEL LUCKEY, a well-known
Methodit minister, died at his' residence
in Nochester, N. Y., last week, at the
age of sixty-five Tears.
Ar old fellow named Hazlett, of Medi- 1
na, Michigan, who has lived for fifty-live i
years in a state of single•blessedness, 1 3lr. Extra Ilc avy Gray Twilled Flannels.
has niN k ried an immature maiden named
Celia 'iver, twelve years old. . ---
' FRANKLIN PIERCE was the fourteenth Wl •
LL. OPEN ON MONDAY,
President of the 'United States..• There i
are fourteen letters in his name, and, the i A LARGE STOCK OF
first letters ot the christian and surname
being F and P, stand for fourteenth pres
ident. ' ! k.
theHoNsa.tiEwanaw.lArtrinotiMsecPoir
itensporse„l,Cniteartkiveos,f
rites from Switzerland, that LI• health
s improved. He will return to Amer--
I a
inn the steamer Russia, which leaves
ovember G:h.
THERE seems to be no doubt that the
o-called Lord Hubert Leroy Ainsley,
who married Miss Lilly Martin,' a rich
and beautitul belle of Staten Island, is an'
impostor. The father of the bride gave
herlloo,ooo as a wedding present.
' THE city editor of the Chicago Post
makes the following acknowledgment
1 among his "personals:" The . editor of
this column acknowledges the receipt
this morning, from the authorized source.
ot a personal item of the masculine Per
(suasion, weighing nine pounds."
I Mn. SMITH LoNOSTREET, a relative of
he rebel general of that name, and Mrs.
Gildersleeve, the well known authoress,
were married in New York- city, last
week. The wedding was brilliant and a
great number of literary people were
present, among others Horace Greeley,
who appeared in strong clothes, thus de
scribed: 'Tail coat, kids, white cravat,
dancing pumps, a rose in his button hole,
a boquet in his band, and fairly drench
ed with patchouli. Of course, he' created
animmense sensation when he' kissed
the bride."
Extraordinary Case.
In Bane county, 111., an indictment
has been found against Rev. Isaad B.
Smith, for the drowning of his wife in
th early part of June last. The facts
are‘thus related: At the time stated, Mr.
Smith, with his wife, drove in his buggy
to attend a ministers' meeting, and in
the,evening started for the house of hia
brother-in-law, about two miles from
Elgin. About 9i o'clock he reached the
house, in considerable excitement, ask
ing i f wife was there, arid saying that
his buggy bad been overturned in cross-
Ing - s small stream, he and his wife being
thrown out, and as he had not been able
to fi nd his wife, after getting out himself,
supposed she might have gone on to
the house and lets him. H
ong said urther,
that his horse was very headstrg, and
when he saw water, would I go ) into it, no
matter haw hard you might try to turn
him—Mr. Smith thus accounting for the
overturning of the buggy. He gave de
tailed accounts of the accident to different
persons, alleged to be contradictory in
important particulars, and this, with the
fact of the horse having been found
standing still in the water, with the
buggy resting on the aids 43n two
wheels, and the body bf, the wo.
onl ten. feet - distat, led to
investigation. It also leaked, n out, after
Mrs. Smith had been 'buried, that there I
was $3,000 insurance on her life, which
fact
fri r. Smith had concealed from her
end M s. Ha also denied there wae ... .arz
more insurance on her life, but closer in
vestigation showing a further accident in
surance of $6,000, he admitted his un
truthfulness, 'saying he had concealed the
tact through the advice of his father, in
order to avoid "tall;.'.' , After 'considera
ble time, the whisperings assumed such a
form that .the matter was thoroughly
canvassed, and the reverend gentleman
was believed to haver had some agency in
bringlng about .the 'accident. Public .
oOnion in Kane county Is,. however,
veky nanch divided, the millister' , . frirt..l: ,
being very earnest in their ittiv,)... lc) 01.,
his innocence.' Dr. J. Shugart, of tire. i
Northwestern Life Insurance Oomph-.
of Milwaukee, who paid the lite poYe2, - ,
says he has known Mr. Smith since hi,
early , boyhood, , atPrinceton, gives
him an excellent charadter for morality,
and says he was a prof?" ge of Owen Love
joy,r and enioyed the friendship of Abra
ntl
ha Lincoln. - It.remains for the trial to
tam he facts in this' rearaikable and dis
til:, hig cave'
PFILSONAL.
`SETI LABELING
FRITIT-CAN - TOP
COLLINS & Wlll - 01 - IT ;
PITTSBURGH, PA;
•
We are tiovr prepared to supply Tlnners and
rotters. It Is perfect, ample. and as cheap as
the plain_ top. having the names of the various
Mita stamped upon the cover, rullatlng from
the center. and an index or pointer 'tamped ingot
the top of the can. .
. . 1
it Illi Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently
T.4.&33E.TiErI. -
by merely placing the name of the fruit - the
can contains opposite the pointer and sealing
in
the customary manner. No preserver of fruit or
good housekeeper will nee any other after once
seeing t. inZ5
•
IPES. CHIMNEY TOPS. &C.
A large aaortmera.
' RENTtY B. COLLIYS,
em14:1237 Id Avennemear Smithfield St
DRY GOODS
WEER
GI 1-2 c. nem Corded Brown Poplin,
cheap at Si, •
G 2 1-1 Silk Finish Black Alpacas;
great bargains; worth Si 1-2 c.
37 1-2 c. Mixed Poplins, worth (II 1-3 c.
Black Silks cbcaii,
Empress Cloth cheap.
Black Poplins cheap.
ONE HONORED
NEW ARAB SH /OWLS.
25e. IlearT Plaid Flannels,
25r, Hum Whitt Haunch.
Ucary Red Nandi.
Sacques, Wraps, Walliing,Coats,
BROADWAY JACKETS,
All new Styles at very Low Prices
PAISLEY SHAWLS.
1 11 BEST BABG AINS IN THE
HITE BLANKETS 11-4 ALL WOOL,
•••,
63.50 TO 0.00. .A.BAIRMIN
12?:c• G0..t.) TICKING.
25e. YARITWID.y. FEXTYIER TICKING
E. R. GARDNER,
N 0.69 - narket Street,
\Vol Corner Market and Fourth.
oc9:True.,
zi i 5 - Z 4
st , 41
5
cza3o s A: F i.
=g li gi .12 U 1 '°' ZZ
t=s l t a E 4 A tt 4 z
Pa ic .4
rli : cn I
•eci a jopig. E-4 pm
13:3 GI on .t 4 itt i 1 iT3 =
ro2 mg r 4 pl P:1 o-. 4 ; A
E- 4 T 62 SA ra ;.1 F l i ,
c:. g o o 0 6 0
,4 ~1 2
ma 0 7 .4 1 f 4 1
Mei. di ; 4; 4 r i
A of
Fa -
, 03 to%
p 4 Z
I• 4 IN 4 ^
McCANDLESS & CO.,
‘..J (Late Wilson, Carr I C 0..)
WHOLESALE DEALERS IN
Foreign cud Domestic Dry Goods,
No. u 4 WOOD STREST.
'Mad door above DimondMyth
PITTbSITAGEL rAa
WINES. LIQUORS, &o.
SCHMIDT & FRIDAY,
WINES, BRANDIES, DIN, &
WIWILOAILE DEALEUS za
~PURE HIE WHISKIES,
409 P.l1 1 1 STREET..
7 zoave *moved* to
NOS. 364 AND BS6 PENN,
(In% Eleventh St. (formerly Canal.)
jol4.Epii & CO.,
D( ps. 1155.1117,1149,191; 193 amid 193,
r .
Ilan BMX% PITTEIBITRea.-
a:savvier:was _ .-
Copp Dbdilleil Pan - Rye Willo l %.
Wm. duals la •74:11131601-11 151113
4voss.. )5191% aa. • 14116a11i,'
TALISIMINGS, NOTIONS, *O.
TRADE. kijia-k-NT CARPETS:
-) " New Gobas! \
tezt End-most beautiful designs ever
New Goodq!
LT
TAPESTRY OR
11ACRtil& CARLISLE'SI,
No. 27 Fifth Avenue,
Nv.V7 DRESS TRIMMINGS ,
GIMPS AND
' BUTTONS NSW sASH AND
BOW RIBBONS IHS LATEST
NOVELTIES IN BATS. NEW
STLYES EMBROIDEEIkS•
NOVELTIES teur. DiGOODS
GLOVES AND HOSIERY.
Shirts 'and Drawers,
ZEPHYRS, BALMORAL AND'
FANCY YARN, KS CT SHAWLS,
CLOAKS HOODS, NOTIONt. AND
F GOODS.
Merchants and Dealt - rs supplied at low prices
MAORUM & CARLISLE,
NO. 27
JOSEPH HORNE & CO.
ARAB SHAWL,',
IN BTRIPED AND
AScus. ms PLAID . ALL
t3HDE
The Latest Novelty in Dress Trimming.
, Quilled Satin Trimming,
Fntinen,
Ylalu and ?laid Hercule Braids,
bilk, bean end Velvet Buttons,
o Plaid Wass Button!,
l'i.C.S'cmct and Colored Velvet Ribbons,
Lama and Silk thrdles.
zapouTz,ns or
A complete urn-Meta for Fall
MERINO .&111) WOOL
ALL KINDS AND siZES.
FIFTH AVENUE.
'4l-11143r, OPENED
BY
EXTRA QUALITIES
Reversed Satin Pleating,
Merino and Wool Underwear.
In all size. 6110
Child's Merino Drersea,
Ladles' Slerino Sklrte,l
Boultvardd Felt. Sl:lrs
HOSIER"Y.~
. .
An Unsurpassed Assortment
•
Merino and Wool Ribbed,
Fleeced Cotton,
•
Plain Merino,
. . Tartan.
Ea: Islam Striped.
VVITORIA AND STUART CASHMERE
HOSE, In all sizes.
Gents' Half Hose in Wool, Merino and iinper
Stout C ottonT
VERYA LOWEST PRICES•
77 and 79 MARKET STRE.a.
5o1:,
MERCHANT TAILORS.
FALL STOCK OF
MEN & BOYS' CLOTHING,.
Sow Receiving by
GRAY & LOUAN'S,
N 0.47 SIXTH STREET,
LATE ST. CLAM.
607
p. 31'.A3E1,13 1 -4 10,
FASHIONABLE' •
MERCHANT TAILOR,
Bteps constantly on hand ' I
Cloths, Cassinteres and VSStings.
Also, GEN V.:PATEN'S FURNISHING GOODS.
No. 93 1-2 Smithfield Street,
PITTSBURGH, PA.
/ErGent's Clothing made to,order in ttg 3 l,a r y 3 t
stylcs2 : __ -.
NEW FALL GOODS.
splendid new stock of
CLOTHS, GASS/MERE% ,80.,
Just received try MOULT
43: Mere:mat Tailor. 7$ Smithfield street.
IVERY STABLES.
ROiERT II fATTERSON &CO
CORNER OF _
Seventh Avenue and Liberty`St.,
PITTSBURGH, PS.
Wlll on Saturday. July 31st. 1869. an •
on each succeeding Saturday,
holdan Auction Sale of
1
HORSES - CARRIAGES, BUGGIES
• WAGoNs,
And everything aPPertaining to the Horse.
Parties, deal• ing to sell will please leave their
notice of consignment on or before Thursday of
each week In order for advertising. Prompt at
tenUon and good etre will be given all Stock left
tousle. -
JOHN H. STEWART, Auctioneer.
• trZ•m6o
JOHN U. BTIVIALST. ...... 11.PASTSIISOS.,
ROM Us PATTERSON &
yalirraiar. AND I
CObINIISSXON STABLES'',
Cp, BERNIE MEER & LIBERTY ET.
PITTSMIROB,
av26:lit
EfF,EITIN GS AND BATTIATO.
HOW,S, DELL & CO.;
ANCHOR COTTON MILLS.
erritissvaca Q.
•
itspziatitsvirs of EILLVZ SODIUM sad weal
amm Lan MEAGINOIAL
lareliCrry Callt - AND .BAVITNIII.
ictournts. -
CfiATZEIt 4111111 GO SS InfLTINGI
Mao, Gum Packing, liose. Gaskeph ite.. al.
ways im hand mu to? Ws, urtrlesale or retaG.try
Stottllo4l4=4
CARPETS,
3MECUSSEI 2
Just reeelved ( by diriet importation
and.
xxEctrarmorcallis
Of the latest styles In laige quantltlef.
OLIVER
.MCCLECTOCII
k co.
23 Fifth Avenue.
CARPETS.
, NEW FALL sToqi
Oil Cloths, Window Shades,
DRUGGETS.
DKUGGET SQUARES,
Ing+in. Carpets,
At the Lowest' Prices Ever Offered.
BOYBO, ROSE t CO.,
.11 FIFTH AVENUE.
selS.d&T
NEW FALL STOCK..
CARPETS;
The First in the Market
AND
THIE CHEA'P EST.
.
CHOICE PATTERNS
Two-ply and Three-ply
CHEAP CARPETS..
THE rnmsT Luzz or
BODY BRUSSELS
Ever Oirered in Pittsburgh.-
Save time and money by buying from
31eFaLL.M)
'No. 71 and 73 'FIFTH AVENITS,
an2s:d aT
NEW 'CARPETSt ,
EAESII..DI,YORTATION
Paicbased by our ~lrdE MoCallum from mann:
VELVETS - , BRUSSELS,
Tapestry Brussels,
TEE FINEST
Assortment ever offered in Pittsburg
ALSO, A. FINE STOCK OF
THREETLYS, INORMS,
COMMON CARPET
A FINE ABSOLT3CENT OF
Well Seasoned Oil Glotll6
BROS..
Jfo. 51 FIFTH
COAL AND COWL_
COAL* COAL!! COALM
DICKSON, STEWART 16 CO.,
y i lving removed their Once to
NO. 567 LIBERTY STREET,
(Lately Cits Floor x 11) SECOND MOOS.
Are now krAp_ared to Dullish rood TOIJ9HIO.
MUSKY lAndr, NUT amt. ORBLA.CK, at the
lowest morket price.
All orders left at their oboe, or addressed to
them woe& the mail, will be attended W
oromottv.
EDUCATIONAL..[
EGAB AV INSTITUTE, 1521
C, i l nd 1529 SPRUCE STREET, Philadelphia.
Pa. ENtiLIBM AND FRENCH. idr Young
Ladles and bltsses, Boarding and Day
will reopen on MONDAY. Septe - o ber 20.
FRENCH. is. the language of the family, and la
constantly spoken in the Ins D titute 'B .
MADAME ERVILLY.
T ItB Principal.
DR. WEITIVIER
ri r ONTINVES TO TREAT ALL
t'.l VrtThte 2stee:itealaStigbeitikclill S PI lireirtertien' ill
tZnkee!gles:dard'ea:o7.=,tlFelitttulfg from
self-abuse or other causes, and - width produces
some of the following effects, as blotcnes. bodilY
weakness. Indig a stion. consumption. aversion tO
soctety -unmanliness, dread of future events,
l o ss of ;oetoory. Indolence, nocturnal emission% •
s od amity so prostrating the sexual system its to
render marriage unsatisfactory, and therefor*
imprudent, are permar,ently cured. Persons af.
mood with these or any other delimit& intricate
or long standing constitutional com latest should
give the Doctor a trial; he never fails. - •
A particular attentionsiren to all Female com
plaints, 'Ancor:hes. or Whites.
:natione,o o Falling
Inflame
pral . Amnahoon MeeorrWagia, Dyscell.
. .
norrhoes,
and eV-rally or Barrenness, are treat.
ed with the greatest success.
It is self-evident that a physic! sai.who confine*
himself eXchtsively to the study of a certain clean •
of diseases and treats thousands of cases every
year must acquire greater skill in that 'pectin?
than one In general practice. • .
The Doctor publishes a medical prop e let 'o
art y pages that gives a full exposition nere
and private diseates,th at can be had free at adlell
or-by mall for. two stamps In sealed envelopes.
level senlencebtintthligatitics,txtion to the at.
il dl e ur n'ature e ot the& compisints. determine the ?re.
Tits establishMeLits
e irrtatnir ten ,Itianb. a.
rooms. is central. yt n it 11 1101101111-111 1 1 110
visit QS city, the Doc 4 opinion tan be ob.
tune I by giving &written statementef the Csse,
and medicines can be forwarded by mail or ex..,
press. In some Magnets. however, a personal
examination is absolutely necesitary. while In
other* daily personal attention is reqt !red, mad
for the accommodation t f such Patients there are
amirtments connected with thatloe that are pro.
elfish irttti every requleltS. is_ ealculat.o to
trastriss.tejeo__,plee:clAptirLeinaksg_t lier= ble
Doctor.. awnlaboratary. snorer ids personal
Illedleal pamphlets at °Zee as.
rssefor. WI stomPa. AID Matterwho
failed, read
read mum he sayi t L ii rs. to 11
-. WI 14 10 Sr. • 1:19
IRAN VMS. 1 WIZ , •
MI
Necon4 Floors•
AND