The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, October 26, 1869, Image 2

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I (atm BVILDING, 84 AND 86 FIFTH AT
OFFICIAL PAPER
.A.Odesaway _ad Alla.
abosy County.
V TUESDAY, OCT 28, 1869.
Tztz temperance aindldste for Gn
i erntrrin-Oblo, at the
- recent election rer
*dyed, all told, 640 rotes His name,
It *s Simnel Scott.
t 170 Biuibtrry American feels "Wis•
tiedAglatiery large majority favor the
repeal of the new election law" which
ecinsbifiktlle jte . Rer,sl with the township.
electiciai: vlui American hopes that the
actmill belevaled by the next Legisin
tam.
IT is bettered that Paris will be quiet I sedl
to-4W The Llberalleaderapercelve that
an tirdlniety and nnsucceutful outbreak
VOW. fi4tantly result In the To-inaugura
tion of every odious feature of the old
pawing governmentlothlc.h the Emper
or. luurproposed to abandon. The mlll.
Uri precautions, for preserilng the prom
of limernetropolla, are retxulad lobo of lila
mottcomplete prealsbni.
.Metricalle Pal predicts that the
Tennessee Legblame, under lie react
tknsfinotitrol, will do little else than
to Bide': it nye:
“The'erd' tereftrdaireinitinuci to be
the innioduction of bills to repeal every
- stifagyipd anything matted by tho late
Beleasbilftri legtsitturia Nothing is re
estetilinielurtelescape threats of deatrua
tiolt. , 'The free School eYenent, which
Undone so much for the State, la on the
'u - h 1111Patitie."
a
rinianon thiane-has very promptly mil
if
sattklbe, public expectations, in the re.
ntoortitß. Hittutwerm„ Esq., hitherto
Attortiertjerteral of the Commonwealth,
fort_gula rery responsible wet. The ,
apriett has been tendered to non.
Cainicaaritnurrilk% hteli a Judge of 1
tiamPtddadelPia.Oommon Pleas. He is
Trebel:lam a hail' brother of the late At
torsereeentrik of pronounced Republi
can poll Ake, and of 'admitted professional
atilitka:. ,While our own preferences
wto*dloitve taken a diderentaireethm; In
ming the *Lawny, we cannot but an.
guinea teethe Governor's decision.
t UßfiniPleeilept In the late disastrons
sirtilatton in gold, in New York, haVe
rwEirtio4 to forgery to sustain themselves
lariitoperillir.oplolon. They have printed
wiener, purporting to have ham written
fikeorrlfrsof, the President to his brother.
Isplrt
poiltini in-which Oen. auszvr is
rereSeetted rut "eery much annoyed" at
agiViNigoccalations, "he tries not to be
infiterseed by' them, but fears he.:18."
Tide - jotter .is branded as a forgery
tbrougtiont." Neither the President nal'
Ai idle base ever written a lino in any
*gip: - drreutkig or recognizing gold or
mow. Vier speculations. Nor, either dl
or indirectly, have either of them
41 iiiiimiertitertst therein. --
et?trAurt Illibusteting expeditions which
Istrp:uur ahoresfor Cabo, one at.= an
oUterrill4,o,ll -regulerlY Foam to gnat,
fetching up either in some convenient
tgscau, port, or on some desolate West
imp to tinserel at their leisure
imeittg themselves. Every man wants to
IltistAluMl, and' a sbipaoad of sympa
thialog libmarors curies not more than
Itiateeoldter toninety•nine
The JOUDAN expedition was the
only one which seemed to escape this
r:.,10 t!lat. one now rinds, to its bitter
rand
Cuba, that the native prela
*is titole;Maly rank the foreign volun
teer,. .The whole miserable !mahouts is
yasar Its end, in spite of the persistent
satareonneutatlons of certain New York
hatiLthgadelphla journalists. •
.
4. -- 'TUE CHILDREN IN BLUE.
• , ,Atlinng the eighty-one applications
il. tangly made in geptember, to those already
•on .the files of Superintendent ktrFas
.-- - 'Limit*, there showed a total -inflater of
nearly eight hundred orphan children of
---,
the soldiers or Pennsylvania, for whom
a Sta'i:iehools, (specially provided for thive
. little 'ones by the public - gratitude, hid no
..., 4 1 _
vosining accommodations. And this
-was the.pumber, too, notwithstanding one
hundred and shay whereof these orphans
t : ' ,II ; : ireilif iarislly admitted to these imam.
:' .-6‘ litini daring the ' same month. This very
Aii**. number, of unsatielled claimants
1 NePott%the - . protecting care of the State.
..f:. ,
.lititiat illaibe the disappointment of their
3tsLiMPretations to the error of the lam
!,Tasgbletture, in its refined to grant the,
..‘. ~
*•` : . ilbli 'apprriPrllition asked for by the
i.'‘:• ljupeshiteralt, under which all the 1
1
';'. _.•Y.,bildeen of the State" would 'bevel
• '' g- ; beet, tilrenlate the Homes-
• 11,, -:‘ 7. Tiatkollicer requested an appropriation
.
c.:3:1• 4 •• vit 4494.700. and received but $4g0,060.
z! /4 4 .flibiii voilly penny-wise abatement of a
:;" -- . 0 i':tio•aimage claim might have been more
•,:•• 'fl thia caved by, the equal retrenchment of
....\:•;$ '7itunitilbr More useless expenditure. .We
: 2 ,1 "41ndleat say that the cost of th e public
1
"..gctutitilf, or thlietvenseeof the urea:vans
1410X40411-abeat the Capitol, was ! ii, or
• 't •6-•' - 7_, • -_lblarfir all, so Mich money thrown sway.
',., : 7 , illin the contrary, we winsome that a large
- ...•• , :iiirceniageof each of these, ana of' other
..,,. *,-. , :iteint:•:!bicti might be specified, was
l' ~. •. 'VrallY to . be . Justified by the increasing
.- • ; 14lentandli of the public service. But we
.
.
o
f , iiiiSta welt satisfied that, when it came
I ' N
... 'fiiiite . 'economy
pln candie.ends and Cuttr
e
i '-',,' parings, the $44,000 mid far better have
•-P. _Attar cureff in the directiona Vats sped - I
''
.'
• '---- —-. - closingthe - tleies -1 1
',.)?::, , lied, tha n In a the
iirall our charities - to hundrVds
k,-l - 'l-: , CAI onstrfielplese depeadents _ upon the
:',:";.i.j '-' popular gratitude. Retrenchment Mould
:-Abac* itabaireted- the entire range of the
. 1 , ,. •4 , - . a .;pUblic disbnefemeras Wore resolving to
,-,- 'deny the f t:lnt dollar, of thole sacred ad,
.-r.; gallons which we have crannied to Su
--
'-• L , -t vedutendent . Dierantoan to be des-,
ch 1 4 14,•
~ • Tbe reedit yea will show a deficit of
•• ,Ir: 470)00.. The applications for admission
-,-• -; imirittaCtaumtPeetedly as rapidly lnarosed,
-' ' but it is believed their limit Is now fore
..--;• '. . l'-iiliiesh, 'l. - 'tinkly liberality now will
hove l . ped E clothe and educate hundreds
ofthese orphan children, the graves of
sty'llibiblic father% dead for the sake of ,the
IX a hlic, are wide open to plead for the
~
.. , e of their Uttleenes from-destitution
r , and ignorance, and a future perhaps of
gyp;: .The next Legislators 'should not
it , :s"` . lernne ono mill lees than 100,000 to the
i-hrgesed work of gratitude. mercy and
provident statesmanship which our old
, :g Sommonitralth. lies been the first, and is
still the faemost, of the States to M ad er:
take. We can see th e limits of t
sad thatit ta yearly hereafter to diminish,
•
.'' ....44dit will not be credit
take ack
able to Penney'.
Vanlieraa its people shall b Weir
Pada • from, or give a half banded sup.
r . poet
to, the buskins which they have so
• , . wisely, and for the most part generously,
-.,;-:•-ialisiertaeil. - -'
We are justified by results la reposing ;
, t i - th e klealmaeonbileilee hi th e capacity and
/ • ' fidelity of the SuPerititindmt. ' Let the
• s' r : ',fillatiiiWitlicielthbeaainindfhl of its own
-:.,..„.duty;sathatofitcerhilawell discharge 1 his
,-,.
.;+ !; 4 '-t* 011
St t 4- ea then hippie thai not
Coneteridevr withinour fixiderainnix
r' datto
etf,liee .:irfluittir children, and reproach.
t ~
'''':',..iiielthtiilthicb has .tabbeil hem and them a
;;;.ICile-far better 7 Mend thin even the meet '
;;;:isiiircleitiik States couldever be. - . :;, 7
...':
1 h 1 1 '.;,.,'":: -
1' . .:Vle-bek of e.tins ::illt: ** /*l'4. '
1 C : --'-' ' ‘ ,ll - ele th at they shall adtbei.Peallibleit9
~.,.;„ tAr-r.-. --
' 1 '-': OM "Pri:PW!
UICLAL DisuitErioni
We are constantly provoked to believe
that the "lost cause" of the slave holders'
rebellion still lives In the Supreme Court
of the United States. The sessions o.
that tribunal, for the past three years,
have been a consteuit occasion for national
alarm, and a constant stimulant to the
lingering disloyalty of the party of seces
sion, North as well as South. The con
stitutlonality of the Reconeuruction Acts,
iiiid of the financial scheme wh ch has
liven a legal-tender currency to the mo ,
ple, have tren, dnring this period, If wq
may credit the uniform purport of all the
.outgivinga from the precincts of the temple
of national justice, steadily menaced by
a majonty of the bench. Olaservera ot
the course of events, from the hour then
an execrable assassination remitted the
Republic to the misfortunes of a Preti.
dentist usurpation, cannot deny that the
reviving hopes of treason have been tu
b i
derly and unceasingly sheltered beh d
that tribunal. The entire South would fi ve
been long ere this at peace, without its
seductive reliance upon an ultimate pro
tection, under the sympathies of a Court
which has never failed to vindicate the
most frivolous technicality of forms at the
expense of every high national interest,in.
variably sacrificing all paramount obliga
tions to the Union to a legal quibble, and
as uniformly encouraging a revived re•
galenite to the settled policy of national
otteffication, by Its destructive blows al
ways fatally aimed at the public repose,
but fortunately thus far falling short of
the mark.
The rebellion could not have been fin
ally crushed without regarding the Con
stitution, as it was, es a fundamental law
for a Republic of peace, and no more so
for a state of-intestine convulsion, which
arrayed nearly two millions of citizens
In the deadliest of struggles with each
other, than was consistent with the speed
iest restaration,of that peace, in the final
submission of all the people of the Union
to their supreme allegiance to the Repub.
11c- The three years of that struggle,
from '65 to '65, witnessed, to theinterests
of the Federal Union, as that Constitu
tion had defined it, Almost monthly sac.
tikes, of the lesser Ideas which it cover
ed,
to the one great, centred and over
' ruling principle of a popular union—
not in a confederation but in a Republic,
not of thirty-seven States, but of nearly
I thirty-seven unions of citizens, bide.
pendent of State lines. That was the
Constitution, as its framers designed, it,
bat it never came to be thoroughly ex
pounded until submitted to the critical test
of a life or death issue for an united na
tion—the *melt Of batti_ which is the
last arbiter of a Republic fighting within
Itself for its life, as welt en the uitima
1 ratio of contendingempions.
As we abolished the domestic institu
-1 tons of slavery, so, in countless other
directions, we of necessity disregarded
minor Constitutional details, that the Na
tional Union—which was the Constitu
tional essence of our public law—might
be maintained pure and inviolate. The
greater comprehends and justifies the
less: a limb bete and an excrescence there
were lopped off to preserve the National
vitality. The Constitution of 'Bl in
teems protected the institution equally
with the vital dogma, tint the last was
held, as it ever must be;'llainotint both
In law and in fact. Intim was dumb 1
while them Mon hied in its rtunpa. Riulll
the Supremo Court dared at the moment
to attempt-to arrest the- emancipation
which Ltd no warrant in the Constitu
Clonal letter, but which the essential
spirit Of that inattnaeol clgetsn° °l .4 4
injunctions or other civil process of what
ever sort, the tribunal would have gone
to the same doom and - at the same hour
with African slavery. Its Judges were
wiser than to interfere ; they dared not,
although perhaps they would. That
emancipation was, at that day, justifiable
only as a wee measure, to preserve'.
the Republic at whatever cost of detail.
Why waa its constitutionality never
questioned by the Court, in the interval
pricer to the adoption of theXilltb Article
in,Dericmber._ll36sl„ )3;cause the light of
events, in the political field , Penetra t e d
under the fillet Which theoretically
should make Justice always:blind-J. ,Yet
its Miniateels Who then, for more than two
yam confassedly.ignormi an obligation
Which was char In the constitutional
letter, have given more than one proof,
and bare signified . tt by more than one
additionaluMisee,,Rust they are eager to
exhaust every verbal quibble I n order to
overturn the accomplished results which
they dared not offer to- arrest. Tender
coniallette es s, -altiatikarrAq w to 0 4 01 = 0
when discrithinterMitsid 1 A thisrpeye for
„expediency, the memory of which curious.
ly Illintizak the Mesent quickening of
their pettettlonsof judicial responsibility!
The arguments; which assail the cornett
tutional validity of the reconstruction or
legal.tender acts, would, with infinitely
greater propriety, hare maintained the
existence of shivery as a Republican in.
saltation, In the period between the Lea
cow; proclamation and the adoption of
the SUM Article.. We heard nothing of
them thee, and the Coast listens to them,
now, because, then,theszgmnent was not
safe, and now . this august tribunal re
gards the political situation na fleatible.
Time-serving Judges may imagine that
they know wherkto be discreet, and when
to be bold. But, If they reckon upon the
pouter patience nose, adder any decrees
whit:V*o gro theletitleit:the stuitest
step toward undoing the needful acts of the
-war Po,rer.thtang.the rebellion, in sets
tatnbirthealiength or lit jirpletittng the
life of the nation In Ile extremity, they
will Make a anistakOlo 'parlous to be
passed over Wilhottt. a nitwit cOriection
and remedy of the moat radically Search
fug application. •, . :', , • -
It Is aliPele a grave public misfortune
that wet should be that perpetually.
harassed with the menace of a judicial
lubstfirkace. to ; undo 'the work Wm:
which ended the armed struggle or which,
has limed to heal the wounds It inflicted
upon the Republic. It will be in the end
a misfortune for the tribunal which shall
thus assume e responsiblidy as astern°.
ous as mischievous. The Court, consti
tuted as It is,, may forayer carp at details,
and the effect •of its work will ,be mesa
tired rather by the malice or the folly of
lea &0401tthalt- by the material conae.l
queeCeit . Faulting from such decisions,
It can, no doubt, gaiety proceed to de-
clare the unconstiratioaality of military
trials tha year ,in tee bees ut use.
oittemized
State of illaidesippi, ghat
estate is in fact so near' to its
renewed. Federal , eitt3ia, and because the
three years of Its provincial gbverracent,
under the military hands which Con;
gm:atlas provided, have in fact largely
I'o-established the proper:enthority, over
its population, of the principles and in.
otatiozia of the civil law. Because it Is
hoar safe to decree a
_llerh in that direr.-
tion to the Figaral tight of government
in Mississippi, tho Court will sO pro
nounce. But suppose that the decision
now-looked for bad been given in a
parallel case three year" since' Under•
-
stand what Its effect would then have
been upon'tho bump:ding work of recou
stnool2ll the disoiganthed ttelltlei of Abe
Booth. add then specify, tfiou an, one
yoUlj, pOinrOrlegl4l4l6 cif erel*P 3 In the
Constitutional relations of the two
Period& Ttle% Owl would not has°
dared to pritsounce the indoxient—thee
se, ealld asto•diy--trtsicb, In 11365 or '438,
wont have PsnOatt the Peden] power,
1421*filltii410041*iCtili El** 40
theimPlidMeProbleilidieiele63lll.ol4 '
.Tite 4 110 1 0. 6 " .411 a Yen" ' ease
LleniOni p 1 x/6 ' l - 4th
lief Meld
prtilell cititeldiel WO ' liaat , %sib'
il.p.---':"..f:r::::64:::%:''
;~;~a~~~
ME
has for years been regardless of 'the for
mer, and constantly vigilant for the lat
ter. Its decision will be acquiesced in. I,
In any direction it can novrdo no harm.
But times have changed, not the law.
Our Judges, who can never forget to be
politicians, and nt least one of whom iv
accused nt a still vaulting ambition, read
so far correctly the signs of the hour.
They are shrewd enough to see precisely
bow far they may go. They are sure to
go far eimiugh to confirm the public
view, which has for years regarded the
Supreme Court as a venerable congrega
thin of political trimmers, whether bow
be storm of the rebellion, or sit-U
-lmer airs of a restored
tranqu
And they are shrewd enough to per.
mitre that, when they would rise from
email details to the larger essentials, in
the business of undoing the work of the
Nation since '6l—when, for example,
they should venture upon a pialn dechira
lion of the Invalidity of that financial
scheme without which the Union would
have been wrecked in the storm of battle,
nr of the unconstitutionality of the later
political measures which were indispen
sable for the par_ifleation and reconstruc
tion of the dislocated and wholly nngoy.
erned States—the Supreme Court wil
Invite an issue the magnitude of whirl
its members arc quite able to comprehend,
and the results of which would strip it of
its test shadow of a claim to pronounce
upon any political questions, under any
pretext whatever.
—Since the foregoing Was written,
comes the announcement that the Court
has decided, in the Yerger case, not that
military trials are extra-legal in
pi, not that the reconstruction policy of
Congress has been elaborated upon an
nnooneaitutional basis throughout, not
that the needful restraintsof the strong
military arm shall be wrenched away from
over an unorganized population whose
only law is yet the will of the nation, but
simply this—that in this time of peace, the
writ of habeas menus will lie from the
lower military court to the higher appel
late civil tribunal. Only this and noth
ing more The careful discretion of the
Court again supporta the above line of
remark,
A SINGULAR COXIIIIIATION of discord
ant elements may be witnessed lu Cln
einnati. A determined effort is being
made by the Catholics and Unitarian. to
bring stout the suolition of thp use of the
Fable In the public schools. In opposi
tion to this movement are arrayed the
Epi; oapahans, all of the protestant Trin
itarians, the Swedenborgian' and the
Jews; Rabbi Lillienthal. of the latter
belief, being very active in his opposition
to the proposed chango. The question
le becoming on absorbing one In the
Queen City.
Texan are enough landscape, portrait
and godre painters. in Pittsburgh, to
make e periodical exhibition of their
productions ' very instructive end beau•
tiful. if some imitable place could be
procured, where the artists would plane
their works on exhibition, and hold pub.
lie receptione.wc think an important etep
fucward would have been taken and the
art taste of oar people generally would
gradually but surely reach a higtnr a ate
of cultivation. Wo understand that
icome inch project Is spoken of among
our artists. who should not allow It to
drop to the ground..
Iv is von rarely that an earthquake
of such violence as that of Friday le felt
in any country so tar north as Now Fog•
land. Judging by the reports In our ex
changes from thrit regkin, the sensation
must have been decidedly a peculiar one.
Bella rang In Boston ,and Conootd, and
the crockery rang a running accompani •
went all the stay from Rhode Warp) to
- As the Beaton Poet says, it wse
a very shocking affair. and when we re I
member how Falb predicted that, on or
about the twentieth of this month, the
South &mellow Coast would be shaken
by an earthquake of unexampled force,
we begin to thluk - ttud this Yankee 'bud.
der was in sympathy with some frightful
calamity in the Southern Continent, of
which we are soon to hear.
New moon has been Infused into Har
vard, the oldest of our universities, and
,progreas with improvement ere to to ex
pected. The address of the newly in.
.angorated President was a sensible and
prowl deg one, but one of. the best signs
of Improvement In oar Opinion is there.
cent !substitution, by Professor Lane, of
the Continental prantumiation of the an
cient languages. All over Europe mid
Asti the Coollnental pronunciation la
used. and a Pernan scholar, meeting a
German &wan can conveles with him In
Latin, white, however familiar with the
language., an Englishmen may be, his
prontininsilon debars him from any but
• written er printed use of it. Thereat
*probability that the It prom:lndio
floe is the ancient ono. Since even the
most ardent Anglican amid scarcely be.
lieve that Cicero or Virgil used the-Eng.
bal. method, It seems but reasonable to
adopt the former, which im now nearly
ninvercaL
Tax Earl of Derby, so long one of the
moat prominent of Euglisti politicians,
end the leaded of rthe'Coneeisatish party,
who died on Saturday morning lest, was
the fourteenth Earl of the name. lie
entered parliament in 1821, where be re
waned for three years • dent member.
In 1824 he made Ina Xi:widen speech, and
from that time forward
took .en and
from
in di of theleadintrquestlets which
ettita'ed that body. In his youth be
was. in common with moat young Eng.
Women, a Liberal, taking advanced
lima of the Trish and Reform questions, -
it was owing much to his efforts that
the West Indian Emancipation bill wan
passed. Be entered the House of Lord'
ae Earonkfttabley derliag his father's life
time. Se liA:the prot.ctionists in the
time of them= law agitation, when the
roe Trader! tiinutplied ad signally. cod,
at his fsther'S death; 1851, ho became
tho !EarlriLyear before !he .wee called
tiptin to construct his .tiwo cabinet. Ile
kaa been three time; . rgeklaterl, ind bee
conducted tame of the wet memorable
attacks of the ePpualtaino.. Poring . our
late war be was'. nitra,Soutbern
views end hee.fcit many years always
'sided fignitiiCnilf 'Liberal' movements..
lie was Chan*illor, of , the, Liniforsity of
Oxford, Knight of the Garter and trees.
istor of 1101:11601 Iliad into English
blank verse. The new Earl le the moot
prominent and promising of young Eng
lish mateemen.snd, as Lord Stanley, bow
already made himself known-ow a lower
in the English Parliament.
•
Avecuato and uteri& dlecOVell bap
beennsade by a workman who, tome time
oco, in varnishing various metal pieces,
scorched himself most dreadfully. - In his
sleety, and without an instant's roller
tidn, he thrust his injnied - hand Into the .
pot aintaining the Varnish, and iminedi•
ately felt himself relieved as U by en
cbactment. Me - repeated the operation
fors day cr t A'o, and in it very short time
his band was perfectly Cured_ This dis
covery egmted attentionht his neighbor.-
hood; he treated man'' , similar cases suc
cessfully, and in deptanber, 1868. he was ssfully ,
sent fur to Metz, in order to cure the men
injured by the explasion.of the powder
magazine. no is now in Paris; having
been sent for to try'his 'varnish on two
patients in a hbspital, and ban succeeded
60 well that a erne that had been reserved
for szonparizon,,to be treated with nitrate
of sliver in the inilitiary 1111r..11;17 been
given up- to him to bo: managed in his
way. ,
Ire an address on - iisocial wience" be.
fore the .tilefeurn OW' at New York,
Kr. Brisbane mid he had Air thirty year/
been a student •of wird reform, snit had
investigated to GraeCe and !rather the
mese of the evil whith dogradedwomeo.
So denounced thodsgulawsi add the
repo doctrines inert be retied, and
aught mitigkimaimuld Ova from the
rdlogrituovernant,:bit ttieraltais a deep
er artiLtobel;tosiaked. hc&mt woman
co be eleratied. ,, . 11e- prophesied the
time when one great kitchen.would eery°
diXifornittelif andline:took do the work
df no? einlerell 4 s oo WiTter : ,
•i-,- , '
MOH DAILY OA 21611 E : T I'ESD At MOT ?NC, OCTOBER 2R, 1869.
Wrote Wew 'Vert to t mrago.
Three great railroad linet. tram Chicago
paint toward Tew hark the Michigan
Centrd, via Detroit`
et
Canada, the
Michigan Southern, Cieveland, and
the F..rt Wayne, via Pdtsburgh. All
make shout the elme through time, and
charge [Fe Fame thee b..re q_o), but
each ha, pa special friends, who invaria
y travel ca n it, and Yr it immeas
urably NOllltriOr tai oh the rest in comtort,
agreeableness and stlety. The g. sot
frehzht war which has been raging during
the Summer and Fall =prang rather from
the rivalry between leading New York
and Pennsylvania Hues than from that
between these Weatern roads. Ordina
rily the rate for Ilrst.rate freight train
New York to Cuicago Ic $l, wr hun
dred pounds; but during the past ticialln
ban ranged from 25 rents to 41.
RAILROAD bISTANCCS I'ILOM NEW ToRK
I=
cEi!MItIZI=EII
yin 111Viltir1:1.1..L,- t,
15 0,101 •••• ••• '''' ""
1 Cent, I lan an
n
S
. ... . .
at , al I. real , A I,u I n ( ~• 11‘dn
I• Ls 1ia..11.1{.b I
In 1857, before the Pennsylvania Boa
bad any Chicago ainnecuon, the other
rival lines put on d quick time-t able by
which passengers were brought through
in 31 hours; but aftlr . eicht months' trial
it was abandoned 'on account of the
greatly increased wear and tear of ma
citizen:. Since thin, by tacit consent,
the through lime on all the tholes hue
stood at about 38 hours. But the Penn
sylvania Central, having Teased the Pitta.
burgh. Fort Wayne and Chicago Road
for 999 yearn, has now a through line
from 60 to 84 miles shorter than those of
the other companies. Practically, the
differenee to its favor lances only from
49 to 73 miles, as It will not permit trains
via Allentown to hose via P a uit make ny better
through torte than tsdelphis.
Still, 49 miles is a good deal, even in s
long race; and a tea' weeks ago the
Pennsylvania Company made a sensation
among railroad men by announcing :
"We propose to avail ourselves of this
advantage in diatapce, and take jrassen.,
gars front New York to Chicago in 30
hours I" This woke up the Northern
lines; telegrams flow back and forth from
New York to Chicago; three men who
carry 500 miles of railroad, apiece, in their
pockets, met at Niagara 101 . a few hours'
talk, and then the New York Central put
forth the bulletin: ( cif's shall carry pas
wingers through in 29 hours The
* Erie, it was fancied, would reduce fares,
and not try to compete in speed, but its
managers promptly responded: We
will make the same time 63 the Central I"
On Monday, August 30, the new ached
glee went into effect. All the linen claim
nearly an hour to which they have no
valid title, tor they count their departure
from New York by New York time, and
Baer arrival here by Chicago time, which
is 54 minutes slower. The acaual running
Schedules, by New York time, are:
L3,..5. LOKI,' N.Y. Ar. (1.1 Thro. 11ine.
r... 0 &Erie 11 1, D. to.
'rnmylwaula. m. 10 14 m. x 10.14 m.
The number of strips on the entire
journey, and the nvertom rates of speed,
ito•lnding nil zioppages, are:
anus.
y
M
..... •vd Y o•t
mer. ......... • • • • •• -
In going East, the l'enneylvania line
makes sn en average nearly 31 miles an
hour. and accomplishes the entire tourney
in 25i hours. 'lbis is the most remarks•
hie rneeiel ever done in America; for
the to aver grades and , sharp curves over
the Alleglonlea cannot be gamed at a
higher sr, d than Pi mile, an hour, ettPu
by divehug 'rains rind luting the most
powertui •fteu.ve• Toe delay to
he made op on the Fort iv hofl,
almost an air line and has no count-der
ablegradiso 1 cause West by this route.
Istould detect only one datar nee be
tweet" riding mme the fast train and an
ordinary express. in citing up all ma
chinery, from the hugest steam engine to
the tiniest watch, can is takeu to have no
pivot fitting exactly in Its bearings, but
to leave a little freedom both for om...end
shake" aati the "side shake." Upon this
train the shake" is very lively. At
times the ear rocks like a cradle, and the
motion is not gliding, but gall,,plng.
Where the track is crooked, It produces
. nearly as much seasickness as a roiling
ebip. At great speed, even upon a
straight line, an Merin -illy in a reit of
half an inch in a hundred feet may make
the car wheel boned like a hall.
The swaying motion is greater upon
this than upon the Northern lines, for the
Lastige of the Fort Wayne Is ea inch and
a half wider than that of the Pennell
vania ; and ears which hung the track
closely as far as Pittsburgh, have a liberal
C hide shake" Mr the rest of the way to
hicago. On Lae Western division the
train runs 35 miles an hour, includingall
stoppage& Passengers weer that the
wheels do not touch the rails more than
about once in a hundred feet, and ono
man who itVC9 beside the track declares
that he has only been able to catch a
glimpse ot the passing train twice within
a weak, though he has watched for
It
every afternoon. The Michigan Central,
one of the best American roads In e ehar.
enter, equipment and manegemeril.aines
not lag in the race more than once.
When receiving the train late from the'
Great Western it has made op almost an
hour and a hall upon the fast time-table
In 384 miles. It illustrates admirably the
gain which well conducted lines have
made daring the lest dozen
en years In com•
fort end security for passgers_ Upon
through trains it runs the Pullman cam,
which are simply incomparable. Its first
class day coaches are built with unusual
care and strength. The company boast
that they have carried ten millions of
passengers In these coaches within four
teen years; they have never drawn sdrop '
of blood ;rum any-person inside of one of
them. People who kept outside have
been hurt, es passengers ought to be if
they will stand on the platforms.
Last month when the new time-table
went Into effect IL E. Sargent, the Su- •,
perinteedent. sent out circulars enjoin
mg the utmost vigilance and care upon
all employes, and he went out on the first
train, watch In hand. Theresponaltdlity
for a hundred era
thOusand lives is an.
oppress weigh noon any man, be he
general, steamboat pilot, or railway engi
neer. Every engineer bad been spa.
daily instructed, to avoid excitement, to
keep his train well In head, and
under no
circumstances to pass any point ahead of
time. But one, in his nervousness, for
got how to handle his brakes, ran by a
dining station-where he should have
stopped-four minutes ahead of time,
tore one cylinder off his engine upon one.
Corner Cif a trelght train which was just
getting upon a siding, and narrowly es
' raped a great disaster. Ile was a careful
man, who bed been eleven
re
in the
,employ.of the cowl, and had never even
scratched the print of his locomotive be.
fore; but he was discharged on the spot. 1 I
( . The two greatest improvements we have
made in the way of safety arevatent plat ,
`forms sad patent brakes, whielt aro both
in are upon the Michigan Cen
t ral,l and
ought to - be upon every road In u tra The old fashioned platforms-built
'lwea k' ower than the sills of the err -are tho I
spots of a train. .In a collision
they tear up like 'waste paper, leaving
the bodies of ihrionches to run into each
other trio "telescope," and carry mud
latioh sirs death among the passengers.
The new platform.2iMiller's -Is on a lev
el with the sills, and• Its strong timbers
about directly against them. instead of
the okl play of a foot or eighteen Itches
between two cars, it leaves Only about
one inch. It is a sure breakwater against
"telescoping," and in any 'Mock it helps
to bold the train firmly to the track. Of
patent brakes there are two -the "My.
CIS" and the "Creamer." Bath enable
the engineer, to any sudden danger, to
apply the brakes inetantaneously and
firmly to every wheel in the train by pal
ling %little cord which bangs beside him.
With the "Myers" a second pull of the
cord takes off the brakes and permits the
train to back or go on. With the
"Creamerthahe brakemen must be sum
moned to their posts to unlock the waled
aain. But so great Is the momentum of
an g ordinary train of Ole passenger
coaches running 45 mites an hour that
even with patent brakes it cannot be
stopped In less than 1,500 feet. In com
fort our great gains are sleeping and
dining cars, perfect ventilation which
keeps out all dust, and a duel' spring
which. In slimmer,
for makes the deer lly
to
open automatically the passenger
go out and stay open behind him, =din.
winter (the spring being reversed) opens
fprthe passenger to come in and. closes
behind him.
Went of Buffalo and Pittsburgh none
of the linen are double track- Making
the fist time is a much more difficult feat
'than it was In 1867, for the trains then
ran 15nly two passenger coaches. while
nisi now run four or flee. On. all the
lines many people rash for the fast train
because It In that, but the, following seems
tame It-talx. statement of Its 'mints as
,tvutparoti with one Whlek,COuittaltelt ,
thhipeight h ours in lopippy frpp;
~~<--
New Yoe.: to Chicago: Comfort, mate
rially less. Coming by it spoils two
days, or brings one here at the disagreea
ble hour of midnight. Passage by the
siiiwerirain occupies one day and two
nights; but the traveler makes his toilet
on the sleeping car on the second morn
ing and arrives reedy for breakfast and
a good data work. Danger, but very'
slightly increated. At some points the
train runs tidy miles an hour: but even
that is not uncomm n upon an ordinary
express for short dietenees. Much of the
gain In time is through diminishing the
number and length of stoppages. Be.
sides, whenever an unusually quick train
Is put upon any road the employes are
correspondingly alert and vigilant for it.
During the eight months of fast running
tvi el or years ego there was no serious se
adept upon either of the routes. Des
tructinil of tracks and machinery: fully
doubled. Any rate above 20 or 85 miles an
hour brings an Increase in wear end tear
tourfold greater than the Increase in
speed. A. heavy train running 50 miles
an hour racks and strains its rolling stock
incredibly, and at every curve end ine
quality strikes the reilslike a =non haIL
It is safe to conclude that we shall not
improve much upon this timetable until
our road beds area great deal more per
legit, end wagon crossings on the level of
the track abolished altogether. Rot II
this rate of speed were extended through
to San Francisco we should go from ocean
to ocean in four dap and a quarter.
That will be accomplished when toe same
competition which now stoxitii us Itemise
the Alleghenies shall whirl us over the
Rocky Mountains and the Sierras. Al
ready we are making a good beginning.
The Pacific Railroad Companies will
place upon their line early in October a
lightning train *imposed exclusively of
Pullman's sleeping, hotel end di ping
can to run once a week, in Connection
with the fast trains from New Tork„to
Chicago. It will carry passengers across
the continent in Ave days—a gam of 4.8
hours upon the present time table. The
fare will be either $55 or $5O extra, it is
not yet determined which, to cover the
additional expense of fast running, end
of drawing heavy dining cars over the
mountains. The passenger can breakfast
in New York on Tuesday and in Ban
Francisco on the following Sunday."ln
these days, " says Thaekeray, “we no
longer travel, we only arrive."
A. D. R.
THOU Mil NGI T ME LI VS
LU NG-VW
othe of We truest wad moot suggestive Ideas
411 be obtalood Irmo the coPnoo of the 0..,
M=M
NES=26
mote prevalent than twee which afire% the lunge
and pulmonary Usage. Wbriber we regard tang
....es 'in the Relit of • merle sllghtehheh,
Et!l=Zl
MEIEEI=;iI
nolMng tL. pulmonary atracturc, It M algray.
Dr.'s flint with eau sad lbectici.ling of disaster.
n co duo of maladies should the physlcil
PNII2=;6I
Efiff!M=l;
for it Is la them, that early and edictal:A total.
mcot Is moot desirable, and It Is thea that d.ger
eau be warded or and a cure erected. la
flit
LCAti cunt Tou have • 0 . 41 c 15s
II lb. neatest value In all thaw conditions • As
Au:ratio, a {Dale. a autilout tad resalOsth
.oefurto• nature and sustalnlue lbs roomers
, lye power of the system, Its beautiful wort.
• -
lop, In ban:navy with the reenter functions, as
be readily observed by the um of we or two boa
ilea: It will toot areal uo the <bath of morbid
,tharallaiss Lhat disturb the harmonious wort
ines of Um enamel economy. The /mermen,
mash. the pstentl rendrstlan, the frot • -
btresttd with Mu.' will soon glee olsee to th
nerves! sod proper worthrge of health and ele.or
o krerrented er per !once of .vte 111 lr y ye
par enabled Dr. Error, In the roropoondln. o
IXSLI.CIIItIr. to ;lye new Tote
rahnha Ira Moran° sad at Ws War liala aVaCri7
‘• th , ••• nt••• L catarrhal and
.4 so slain. certainly fan In .nnir
rw. <wowl by sod. aporeortale
1.17100 CURE In to thorooso and
eL
an) our wbo bar czar rsed It. 10D
r be trltlteut It LII the bowie. I
a!lN=2=i
Ml==Zl
The attention of patient...fa nett
•
n,rp,vritity tuvlted to Ibis o
vidltion to pturm.i of LA
LW.
Uw 11.1.r.SER mar be C01.111iLC(1,..:21.,....1.,
anti , 1 o'elebt C. at lie Orelfe , lo
161 Liberty area. bed froze
1 M."
M=:=;1;1
Sommer bp • de illtallee reaeon, he en. •
deo r basin of tom shich aaaaa p 1.....
'hie period of the 'ear end. the la. Millie..
corn Mersin! enervated be the pcsownolt heal.
sod the weekly and dalleato almost proaarsuid.
This Is ora a Inmorablo vonditloo le which to an
tes..? the rim , •Ines ol October and Ito rial
tos go. mad night goes, nod CM. Vlesilly later -
MM.. foyer. ordinary. Millans attacks. .ad
floneoMiera aro own or less
talent ec'er7 -
ahem. tem especially is beat llse weer. Om on
I:47,b 4 hetli M unfunny anwoolpnae. Is sederto
, nt ,,,,,f,a 4 .7.VlNLie,r , : l, f'; , ?brlV•OT .:::;al
ratil kl7TAll7:"rtileue:F.franTd9ll:4
rr4ej I fill
Li, vegeta:le Imi leo . i d fergazoas ,
ainooth. and tern ho tor.. key.
while tt glent. linemen. and •Ipor to theatre:oaf
traiasttera. glee Pool to a?plaw so: l i tavor
erePerol=ettirlged ad " Pc l l:rn f L IZ g=l;
v. gamble lonia atilt, and aorrectisea. =Miele,'
wins • diginstreetlmalsot from which evert not
loos else/est han be., dawned, this rosewood
rarell ts In
th'lrit"wiTO 7?: ' vel
Illonn. bitch le it
oolsloo of ntstbahaleord
Ineninefe of .to medical professloo. sod the gen•
end verdict of the p10131;e. Slot an Verret., nf
(11"1Willetel= a.= a Into rpTptirrilT t end
S
More eitensive 0.1. MO any Wed° sorer advert
timbals the columns of the &Mu Itio PM..
1111:OT CAN TOPS
• • f
I:7:
-
We man& prettaflad t o tavrarroraenr and
rotten: r perriati, tatipta. sad ... won
Imertv:e.: gr,=:. from
the Oster. an Manx orratatarOm.P..at .t.
'bloom) atiloaaa.
It is Clearly, 114sUhdfirand Penaluggal
zaLla
LaIIEnEELM ) .
t *adze ea masa•at the talt tlak
r: ta:ertaPire?:=XitlVAlZ
ee P erVII we way other after naps
coal -
, • Wall
DIVIDENDS
eurroivlDEND NOTICE.—The
.1111.rectomett the iStasnmebrt and Lamr
resonrine *ME* Compaq hsei this dy de ,
eared • alTilland of
PINS CCU OLA 1•
far tte 12111,11 1911110. p 1 bl t" Ibe al" a
tin TreStUrff baßlusppbari fonbwith.
'NO. MOLD, Tiessuna.
151cAursetraa. oet. 7. W. . mann
i W ~ggRTiSDMENTB.
WATCH REPAIRING
In All Its Drant..hes
• •
rTuhthineusetrtnciucuthr.lex aud dale's* n well us um
C/MEL171311,-I,V ItErA.II3LV.I)
Most
ExPerieli fi ci.d. d kil a lf n al Workman
T.'s ICU/LASKY, lime with
w rn 3SU When Iv gm SIT un n ,uov.„ who
to•y • oos W Dim ha With
JOUN OTEINANSO9'I9 BONN a CO.,
v 3 Markel Street, rittstotintb.
I=
NEW LARD•
UCIFiNED
FAMILY LARD
Alin of tbli
10'1 roln .81b.
wii;jjzia, MAO. C o m. rut prle
Lim; AddreiA
PROCTER & GAMBLE,
Cincinnati, o.__
BITY
YOUR
watches and Jewlfy
werrues a smear:atm
lot Firm avEarvc.
✓
We arananataatly rtcgd•lnt •n , and
rina,tiontf, and Da 1 tbem • • mall
Call stana. " •
l'lrder•Tl.X€l & BiILEIA.F.MIEI.
Ds.
Awiptw EAnsfrr.
.
GEB.IIIIIN PEITIOrtiriG
-,.. .
. curai}ll pt Oc astir. 1 0, the rystem Is
subJeit to. Cllaitro. 1:41 Pears .trait.
9ges ho tiOjx i tut nA. t. sad tram •WI
:4r• f -- '
NEW ADVERTLSk.
.
" GOOD 11ARGAISS
TO-DAY IN DRY GOOll5
WILLIAM SEM PLES,
No. Ixo and IS2 Fedeng Stieet,
ALLE6III2IiY CITY
AT 25 CEICTS,
Double Width Alexander Poplins.
it C 1101 C IL COLOKS.
AT 50 CENTS,
Doubit Width Imerinn PopUm,
DIES NY ittAg I.6 OO o -. DS PLIORTO
A rsv.c Lys E. o 13AliCi east
AT 37 t.! CENTS.
T 3 0•U II L.V. Wln•rvi
CHANGEABLE POPLINS
rut.L YLRD WIDE
AT 16L60
Ciiangeuble Dress Silks,
AT 87 1-2 CENTS,
WATERPROOF CLOTH•
AT $l,OO,
Waterproof Cloth.
lIIIRGAINS IP
Heavy Country Flannels
Shirting Flannels.
Country Blankets,
Cassimeres and Jeans.
Heavy Bed Quilts,
Beaver Cloth,
WILLIAM SEMPLE'S,
Nos. 180 and 182 Federal Stree
ALL EA HRV T City
Tl] IS WEEK !
6! 1-tr. Heavy forded Brown Poplia
heap at bt.
62 1-2 c 4-4 gilt Finish Black Alpacm
twat bargain; worth SI I-Ic.
it lilted Poplin worth 61 (-h.
Black Bilks cheap
Boma Cloth cheap
Blvd Poplins cheap .
ONE HUNDRED
NEW ARAB SHAWLS
.e. Beall Plaid FittllelL
if. HUTT White illannelL
r. Heavy Red Flannel'.
Ellett Ilea e y Gray Twilled Flannels.
WILL OPEN ON MONDAY
• Itti OF
Sacquea, Wrapl;, Walking Costa,
DUOLDWAY JACIECTS,
♦ll Avt billet al very Lot Price
PAISLEY SHAWLS.
BUM BARU MS3III Tl'Zell"'
WHITE BLANKETS 11- 4 ' ALL WOO
p.m) TO 33.00. ♦ BLIIGAIN
1111 , ..e . TICHIRO
ItSe. TLUD WILIC /TATTLER TICKING
E. R. GARDNER,
N 0.69 Market Street,
VW Corner Inflict and Forirti
*Omni,
RAMALET'S
RAT PARLOR
No. 22 Fifth Avenue
A FULL STOCK
Of All the New Styles
HATS AND OAPS
11 . 11 E SEASON.
DRU GGETS,
CRUMB CLOTHS,
EXTRA
BRUSSELS CARPETS
Direct Importations
13=1
Jro. till FIFTH as-Extra
FgESH _BANNED GOODS.
The .obserlber Is1•111ff tO 5t.,11 a
suck or benne leal.y waled toads ,44
=I:11741i rx c . t i v as : mg]. 0.14,
m 0001278 FANOI4III TO11120,"
Whudow's and TIMIODULOTUR are,
Bardllo Raab iipatains,
Pine Apple and Strawbrrrics,
Terkel Golden Patents,
ihn.o .Ith the greets t cue for ova cans 13.4 e
and msmutel to give isi.t.faation IS the lag.
I=ll re sod Dearars itapplltd by the mei of
Woolosale prtee. by
Corner Liberty and Ninta Streets.
getuiPo
rt&DA_McCANDLESS & OD.,
irIiMMFALIVINg
Voidgn Boa D9 /II ", Dri
Ita 110 11M01113131XE.,
'TiI Coors AJNIMPR i7p iim
AIME trGAII.-1
8
Cal B
'VW bill""1"
ass na Arr, We &COS •
ME
NlVi' A DVERTISEMENTS
COMPLVITE ISSORTABNTS
TO-DAY AT
WILLIAM SEMPLE'S,
Nes 150 Is 2 Federal Street,
SirliPed W °Olen ShatoB,
Arab Shatri
l'a tsley ShatniA,
Blacti Thi bet Sho wis
and Chtlarerar Hats,
Hibbon to and Flow' re
Sash Ribbons and Ties,
Stockings and Gloves.
Ladi~a' Underwear,
Cloth and Eta/moral Skiarta,
Hoop tikirts and Owlets,
Handkerchiefs ,
and Collars,
Hate Switches,
Wholesale and Retail
WILLIAM SEM PLE'S
Nos. IN and 18t Federal Street,
DAiILY ABBI.
N 4 W GOODS.
Fine Nal,' Rows,
)Vide Nash Ribbons,
',mites' silk Searle.
Boman /laid Ribbons
LITIMIIIf LIAt SAND KNIT 00008.
Ladies Wool Shawls,
Ladles' Wool Vests,
Childretue Knit Saeques,
infants Knit Hoods.
REVERSIBLE SATIN PLEATING
LADIES' AND GENTS' HOSIERY
A Coraral.te 1..1ne/
CHILDREPs o BiLliOltiL HOSIERY
Gents' 8; Ladles' Underwear
BERLIN & CLOTH CLOVES
All sLyicA of the Of
Taper Costars,
Handkerchiefs, Laces, .ec.,
MACRUM, GLYDE & CO
CARPETS
Oil Moths, Window Shades,
DRUOGET SQUARES,
At the Lowest Prices Ever Offered.
BOYARI), ROSE it CO
UALThY,
1111111111
♦BOVL WOOD bTYLTr•
Tba best , a market; M •
sow( a nano:new
ALl.l"AitiliN 1 (ATI
IMEM
Set Jewelry, dr., de
ALL/. II EN Y CITY
Black Silk Fringes,
I=l
Boulevard Skirts,
Gents , White Shirts,
78 & gl Market Street.
NEW FALL STOCIL
DRUGGETS.
ngrain Carpets,
El FIFTH AVENUE.
=Ea
NEW FALL STOCE.
CARPETS
The First In the Market
THE CHEAPEST
CllOlO7 PATTERNS
Two-ply and Threo-fir
CHEAP INGRAIN CARPETS.
111 Z TINIIST Lllii. OP
BODY BRUSSELS
e'er 40.ffbron in F'lttatrunign.
Savo Wu am 4 mosay by buying Ilan
IieIIBLAND A COLLIIII3.
No. TI Uta 13 /17Th 3.11.331.
r=
ELEGANT' CARPETS
The Latest .d most beaottrel &Woe nes
WM , IS
TAPESTRY OR BODY
33FLUSSEL , g 1
received by direct ltriportat!on ft= Ice.
land.
3C11=4-MTIGI-C3r3EV'X'SES
Of Om:slut styla to lane qusaUt
011178
IffeCLINTOCH
& CO
23 Fifth Avenue.
ftEn NELFM STREELS,
PHILADELPHIA.
13A.ILJEIr
Jewelers.
GRAND OPENINGI!
LlVlCallfertrrVaNig ` t:
Watch. Jewelry and-Illverware.
rum Comp, Dm -
Bridal Gifts a Specialty.
BAILEY I CO. bare Om W a A saaa sup.
the liVorl o , ano nrlll at all Wass Oa pleased to r
nalva mil &bow visitors WIMP Muir establlel
meat.
BAIL ;Elle et CO..
gB If M4RB6E STOKE,
CHESTNUT AD TWEL no STREETS,
NobiNtadelplala,
lexturr J.A.XLS,
Tad old ■od r 1114.4.1
A. & D. H. •
umbra FRUIT JAR.
XibtZrunrisr.t" cumv",
OFFAMVP GLASS JARS,
Wttl *lnk. IS stoat sad ft 110* /1
& D. H. CISABIBERA,
111 WATER WEREET.
asms
B TocaiaL ,
-•:. TAmou.
So. 1:1118031151sset,
.;..~. .r - ~ ~..:..
~_s. ciao .
VELVETS,
Lyolo- Ztll,l
NEW STOCK.
BATES & BELL'a.I
DRESS G(lODs.l,
FROM 371 c. UP.
Ii
\ BATES & BELLA
~I CAgBI~iESEB,
CLOAKING CLOTHS
WATERPROOFS,
'BATES & BELL.
JVIST OPENED
BY
JOSEPH HOENE & CO
Lira& QUA-LIT/MI
ARAB SHAWLS,
ur 81.11176 D AIMII.IJ3Z.S. gOOTCH PLAID . ALL
11
Reversed Satin Pleating,
•
Ta• Later , Novels, la Oka. Trliasidag.
gelid Satin Triaming,
4a.dPa. Pta,
Fiala r a nd Plaid Bleats Braids,
calk, Satan sad Pairs{ BattraiS.
dewed Plaid Gisss
Slack sad olod V Ribbons,
Las. and C Bilk re kiirdies.
Merino and Wool Underwear
La sll slaw.
Cb.U4'• MOrtl3o Drew.
Ladles' Me Boilinsad Telt Skirt
HOSIERY.
I.ll,lnwWoe. Anaortment
Rec. , and Wool lilO.R.
Fleeced Cotton,
nolo Morton.
Tartan,
n - Iglon tonlpoi,
VICTORIA •ND nTUART C•51.11BICIUL
BUS& In oil Ono..
Gems' Rolf Boon In Wool, Ilertso and Bnpor
Btoot Cotton.
AT VEST LOW DST PS ICIRA
77 and 79 MARKET IMMT.
FALL TRADE
Now Goods!
New Goods !
RCRUII i CARLISLE'S
No, 27 Fifth Ammo,
NEW DIM TRIXIIINGS,
HIWF AND
ND
BOW ItIItIIONS 11E L•TEXT
NOVELTIEB IN NATN. NEW
81 210P.L1MIS R IH " Inrat IODIL
GLOVES AND HOSIERY
A eamplese wortatent for 7.4 L.
INBINO AID WOOL
Shirts and Drawers
ALL KINDS AND SWIM
RALSIORAL AND
ZV I:TA TARN, LN&T SHAWLS,
CILOANCY cas uOoGOM uS. NUTLUNS AND
FM&
lbssamila sad Dash es sappMed Mae. Nita.
KAMM & MUM,
14 . 0. 27
j'IFT)3 AVENUE.
THE B I BUTT ORGAN
Tb: 1 :11, tarZn n T mi ttng carps:mei 7.0 -
Homo Volta Stop-Tos .111mazio.
Tim Smoothest Ts I* Ortrem. ' • •
Tete Moot Vortom Toned orgoi4
;he CrOrgern par. ir Sittsheig,
•
Tem Heft orgma for. •
Mose.
The Okeopest Orerma bar IMO 4=11,7
INES
BURDE.I3 ORGAN.
tat7rd aaa faked at*. Fa •
stfacalvad and for tale at onaltaaarces
Wee. B. 'LIMES 11,11.111aa
199 Wood strati.
Sd pee Agents Sartaa Mutat artga.
•
C.A.U'TTON
We .11 aUtation of oonsoners to Oa O
of 414shanal. Lonl 011. 11 tt
too 5.4 uu. ico.u. cat. boa 0/4 . 04 OPP I .r"
riot 011 a. .
OUR Limp (up
WARBANTED,PUIVE.
T= =J r" --
.4::,===
riumna&watimw
CALL AND BEE
7111 BZW
• I
China Sets, ParianStatiLett,
Van* =4 7.0 ArtMN. smai raPe.1.6141.11141
1111 Trads
• EL RIGBY Agr k ,
No. 189 LIBERTY 13111CBEG
IL—LA... agenda. at of Me Widta
()nand Raze nu lanalq and Dotal asa algal. an
Una. awl
IaELTIR6I. . .
WAIMEA ErlD GUM BELTING
A y. oat:4 and t e .a rriall..ll7.=
J. H. P..LIPIS.
lb awl SISIALTU meet.
DIRECT IMP
, d :IAIMPLER
1. u ` Co.
ASTBICAN MANS
NAVIES MUM
CARAVALLA CLOAKS
The Celebrated Ho
.AJLEP.A.CA.S ,
3. EILLIMXIIL
CLOA KS
DM
SIIITK
NEW GOODS
BATES &BELL'S.'
COUNTRY BLANKETS, !f
LEM
I 1
PILEIXI.III.eIes.
BATES & BELL,
SHAWLS
AND
NEW GOODS.
BATES dr, BEILL.I
•=5 . 0
. r i 1
11 0 1314 -A pH
-
z .4 .4 w
PA PI gi2 1 g 2
EZ g e ° A 5 41
•,
VI Fi
E H s
Z $ O 4 l cio
124 to t
Nal b ig
114
L I. ANDERSON & SONS,
Book and Job Pri nts
67 AND 69 FIFTH A 01.
Dispatch Banding, Pittsburgh.
• itN
Saving exis tame Mosul of TTpoo. sad ?gm
OMAN , Zoo the SAPID esecalkok of -
PAPER BOORS,
Would twiweifilie solids the sehrinfli WE Ow
Va.. he 11;er es with theft oftle2; Chi tar
as hanrl4 them flows lISLTLX, eett
AT THE TIME AGRFXD \ON.
AU Kinds of
ELECTION PRINTINC .
ritomezmaz Raccecrrign.
warms
'DR. WRITITEIR , '" 4
rosTEsevi TO TREAT' 01.
A ,
146114•166 41•1,140Allarts Is
m. s c g Its bineasan
tirli‘M ,,ni,.= i la==., alig
ail or oabis ammo. ••• saMk
=. . tallawkts eftes, as blmsba.
.luS.th..tt, =esoa " 7 1 ZuMI
a i LsalanT y
~.s.. .a rtin. MasAss•a3 ... ..
frat m ar di rralan ...T. :.
Vaud .4 Or u. b
taw
ca bag aisattos aluslaafaxal san 1/12
swaths Dams •trab MIMI'
41. pectkal isi asunAlosierrin lo all
Meals, Lescarstas or V Inas.
.ea
sabola so Ullagrabou of WI Rank.
=Ca •••• 1 1.1. 6 -. X tabaskakik ,
. 4
. . j , =Mama air 1541:mia• 111110 ,
It laself-asletsztill • kbisildsa at* sesliMill
himself esarutnly to slairuktry
•f Cation sat Mats I .
oraabu i sra We=
S:s . rta==
Dastas pakil.M. • sieklal
elw Wes Last glat• ik bol l ! szpothloura
awl ;abate amasses. tau soar lo• kat Mb*
at to mall ku Also •LII.L:a .... I.
,111== - b - D
-7- 11 ,7 1 - • - thump
aLa WPM of alas eamplabb. ,
TM eirataidlelitit . VII
masair Laatna. af It *Mos%
SO
stata s , Um a episbatan .paal As
taw b• amalgam Staimact•lsla••••••
mil sax. be brwankma by at SW
Mai. 3. mg* Mamma. kannaris.• preakre
Wm:Mao& a Urania"
ottionsrsonsl aassUsiniesall
Mt tbsbstatiao t limb an
mama saaavaa4 'Mk Wage =r4
=kUWZlaamil Imp . Iff.1 1 : 114M
Boom , . rpm tabstabak soda kb sa•
aialr trapkllaslik .„, r
= s. X•d ,
e sabot mirk
0•14.4. he MY. n o =l o takineni
14.aarr . ~.it. • r.kill 6.•
• A PrILE . PAIREBS,OI..Iaime a
AO. , amossigews et ApsW•WWths&Cietittis 4
, Inktu-wwhishworhhas 1 Who IMOINA eat
eee Mem trial. The PARING. 0011156,4L11 1 1)
. 6hlCll4l..l4aCtlttilo. tato asawthrse wow*
went re!. Owns tws% aid else wir itedlwary
sum apple. It volhare testae slid* we
tuner required.
Drtte;hppiew sell nisch kisbaf Irtis alssel
I Cl wish std. mackisit . this when quartited Vi tba
I iC I s fan usosmeasst ;
Ligitning St Tuni Tab Apple Ildem
otycleitAsz.
tale. Irtla;MlS 144 Raiarl
JAMES BOWN,
U 1126 WOOD STREET.
...scoter P. BUBTOW
• coo , • r• •
vr • to moors AL* MUM •
woe lano/..5.
=le • Os c01t... „MX",
t't pawl. o.Cillat.
tot ottOCdot n.-
lootliset kat. nabs
ban S
IVO Meth. tials• tor
Tim tab MO .6
orto the Jm. met woo&
lsk.
Pt COU EITIL
'J r ' br Or. Asoto're von Wu. as
, ...taste
,Or. T. O. =my, Mom .
InastAwreiCetTrbOt.4l
ORTATION I
„1:03.ET Sr,„
AND MAKINGS,
AND CLOAKING%
AND .CLOAINGS.
'Tse4hoe Brand of'
331E1.'`E tab Caneke
69• ZWME
T
MIES
4 . f• - .'i''-' - •••:•%.F: ,,, : l . -X,1,.:?,:,,,Iti.;,;ii-..,:::,,:;:t':,'""
. '-''''-*l'''-''f'ZYV:.--,,f,,.;,ke,,vd4,,
v
I=s
ARABS.
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EEO
BEE
NM