The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, February 01, 1870, Image 2

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    13
ittoan* Gap*.
WPFICL
at n summit, 84 MID 86 finz
orricuu. 'Arm
01 0 0 40.03.. Aume...l wadi Allo.
Ebony County.
TUESDAY, PED. 1, MO
Pinelsom at Antwerp, 60f
11. a Bonn at Frankfort, 91}
GOLD closed In 216 w York yeits play
at 121 f . -
Panics Pima, 'Bos►rmats, who
shot Vraroa 'Nora, Is fitty•flve years of
age. lila latotitu , wee but twenty•two,
and was to have been =weed on the
-
.0 15th of January. The invitations to
4 the wedding were Issued prior to his
Solna this winter the trains have run
reolarly Mid without serious difficulty
between Omaha and Bactsmento. The
Pullman "hotel express" can are so com
fortable that the long trip across the con
tinent is made without fatigue or suffer
ing of. any kind.
A new max or Tiattenaranto be
gine to attract public attention. It is
styled the Automatic system, and has
been invented by a Mr. Little. It leant
ddently predicted. that this system will
effect, by its celerity end economy, en
entire -revolution in the postal and tole.
graphic business of the country. It Is to
be thoroughly tested at once, by an ex
perimental line already erected between
Washington and Balt;more, which Is to'
be completed to New York by the end of
Yebrnary. The Baltimore and Wadi•
ington adore are to be opened this week,
for the ins Unction of operators, the new
maclduery being simple and easily mars
tered; trulanditing intelligence .ten times
taster than by the old systems and Baca
The wire to be used is thus described:
- The Company la putting up the reoent
. ly Invented um:up:mind wire"—a steel
core covered with pure cropper—which,
with only belt the weight of an ordinary
Iron telegraph'wire, hoover three times
the , tensile strength, and nearly four
tiaras the 6ondnetlvity. The first coet of
the wire Is about double that ordinarily
- employed by the old telegraph comparp
lee, but the new wire is claimed to be at
lean ten times mare 'durable than the
common iron wire, whilst its vast super.
forty as a conductor of electricity will
enable the new Company to telegraph
through long circuits promptly In the
hairiest storms, when the ordinary wires
are rendered useless.
COLORED V. Ft. SENATORS
• The Chicago Republican raises the
qiestion Whether Brant R. Ravicui, the
colored ..Senator elect from Xissiseippi, is
constitutionally eligible to a seat -in the
Semite of the United !Pates under the
prosiclon that no person shall be a Sena
tor who femme been aim years arssident
of the United Mates.
Nei as lar:Ußfna U a nails of the
United States, of course he has been a
rsedsitt as long as the constitution re
quires; but the question hieges upon the
sidulof the person in question prior to
the iieweige of the dell rights MIL This
- again tarns upon the question whether
the tidier dictum of the Supreme Court of ,
the United States in the_Dred Scott mac
eau had the force of law. We hold that
it bad lot; that the decision in that axle
braid'bunt 'ailicted only the legal statue
of one man; and that the earcepingdicheri
denying the citizenship and almost the
hood of colored people was merely
incidental and gratuitous; a mere opinion
for the utterance of which the Court bad
no warrant in the constitution, mat ques
tion not being up for deehion at all,
except in the case of one person chanted
Dit even admitting that that decision
had . the force of law before the act of Con
gress declaratory of the . citisenship of ne •
groan it could not affect the right of this
colored Benet= to take his seat; for If be
has not been a citizen of the United States
nine yaws, helms st least been a resident.
Tie was at least a man; and as he has at
no time been either an alien or a shore,
what was his legal stiles prior to the
psauge of She civil rights bill? Did that
bill change his relations to his country, or
Winder hie, allegiance from any other
sovereignty to - it CertainlY not That
being so, that act of Congress was noth
lug more nor less than the recognition of
a prwexistlag feet, an over-riding of an
oliter dictum It made no - citizens, but
only declared that a certain„ class
of goofs are, and always were citizens,
notwithstanding the oft repeated denials
of that fact eminaUng from high and low
garters: This being admitted, Mr.
Dimas cannot be debarred from a seat
in the Senate, enable rlghtto iteannot be
called in question, nor will It be.
That this first colored man whe ever
was elected to a seat in Congress will fill
the place eflefferson Davis, the chief of
tha...l2dertilhute-ItAstpc.tboas strings
retributlye turns In the affairs of men
',bleb transcends anything that the wild.
_ eee- beagleatlon . would have conceived
touters ago. •
THE BEAVER CANAL.
lA. following paragraph is from *Har
risburg letter to the Meadville Raps&lkea:
nbe bill to enlarge the Erie canal will
ba the bill of the session. It W es t e rn
importance to the people of
Penneylauds, and proposes to transfer
the ken of several milUous worth of
bonds now In the State's strong box,
taking in lieu thereof tho mortgage bonds
of the canal company. To the people of
Western Psnngteaola the Dill is of gm*
value. The Improvement should be
made, but whether the Et presentatives
''''relrei Other parts of the State can be 10.
docent to see the quartion_th the same
light, le 8011 a matter of doubt. Until
the bill Is placed on Its pangs and the
membars have an opportunity to consider
Its provislone no estimate can be made.
bat It has some able and zealous intro
„
ship canal from Erie to the mouth of
the Beaver, in connection with a slack.
water improvement of the navigation of
the Ohio from the letter point up tothis
city, would be of greet Importance to the
people of Western Pennsylvania and
urge populations besides. But that Is
not wine the movement now in progress
tientemplatee , -er Web la simply an enlarge
ment of the Canal to the depth of eaten
feet, Deception Is practiced on this head;
but if intelligent men are deceived It will
be .Mzetylk neglect to Institute proper ex.
amination.
A ship canal we have steadily edvoca
ted, and do not mean to be put off with'
anything less, it we do help it.
But how shall this enterprise be accom
plished ? Certain journals and individu
als say. "Grab part of the assets of the
Sinking Fund." The Constitution de.
clans plainly that this shall not be !Ione;
that the Sinking Fund Is the pledge to
Maisie:a, In all parts of the Common.
wealth, that their burdens shill some day
be relieved, and to the public creditors
that they shall be paid their just demands.
What care the manipulators of this
scheme of plunder for these high canal&
orations? They are intent on unlawful
gales more than on the enlargement of the
Beaver Canal. They have said to us,
In
decided terms, that there was money to
bo made inthis enterprise; but they filled
to mad= luPPort-
But, say these enterprising gentlemen,
"Bow else can this desired -enlargement
In nada I Wa ny, Ant, that the pow
, •
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enlargement taus talked about Is of no
special consequence. 'We say, second,
that business men of Pittsburgh have,
within sixty days, invested Aye millions
of dollars in a railroad to extend from 'ihe
head of Lake Superior to the Pacific
ocean. A city, with such individual re.
'sources, can . do all that is needful to its
interests with the Beaver Canal without
stealing, under the forms of law, any part
of the Sinking Fand, which is made invi
olable by this terms of the Constitution.
Is it not - strange that all the shouters
for 'retrenchment and reform," are con
epic:nous in this gsme . of plunder ?
This fad is suggestive. Will any one
explain it?
THE ERIE CANAL SWINDLE
A correspondent of the Philadelphia
Post, st Itardsbarg, has recently "Inter-
viewed" Senator M. B. Lowry, and Canal
Superintendent Reed, In that city. The
writer reports, at some length, "anbatan-
belly whet was said by" those gentlemen
The letter is long, full of their repetitions,
and replete with their rulastatementa of
the actual and prospective situation, but
it embodies many fatal admissions, by
this man Lowry, of the entire accuracy of
the terms In which the GszarrE has
charactellzed his Impudent proposal to
rob the Slating Fund—a sacred trust of
the Commonwealth—under the pretense
of constructing, opt a ship canal, but
merely a seven feet ditch, for barges to be
loaded and unloaded M Erie. We quote
Said the Senator:
The company has already secured the
power for the enlargement of the chan
nel, but they now deetre to get the tests
legion neceesary for the slackening of the
water between Pittsburgh and Beaver,
by the construction of locks 5 feet long
and 75 feet wide, and chutes In the dams
SOO feet wide. This will cost from two
to two and a half millions of dollars for
the river navigation.
Would not such locks answer better If
tamed half around the other way, or In
it the habit of Brie snows to drift along
filch ways 1 Again, nye Mr. Lowry:
The proposition Is to take $8,000,000 of
the Pennsylvania Railroad bonds now In
the Treasury and replace them with
bonds of the Erie Canal Company. It Is
asked by those personally interested In
the proposed improvement, it this work
Is to be of such a great !meccas, why
cannot the bonds of the company be put
on the market ? This can be easily an-
. .
swered. It has always been known that
capitalists shave the securities of any
work which is In the course of construe
tihn. The lowest rate of discount on
these bonds would be 10 per cent. more
thin upon the State bonds, which would
make a difference In the coat of the work
of $600,000.
The'Beastor then figures the income of
the work, when completed, upon a bust.
nem of 1,600,000 tons at fifty cents per
ton, or $BOO,OOO. Certainly, this does
not look like a - pros canal. He puts the
cost of the work at $8,000,000, thus:
The cost of the work la estimated et
15,000,01K1, and then there would be sn•
other P,000,000 leaned by the company
foe stocking the canal and for arranging
the present debt.
LAgain he disclaims the purpose to grab
the Allegheny Valley bonds. These are
not gcrod - enough' to meet his views, and
the financial necessities of the ring. No!
he is after something better,—thus:
We do mot propose to remove the Allot.
gheny Valley Railroad bonds from the
oinking fund. because they will be of no
use bus until 11172, when they Commence
paying interest. In 'lemming the bonds
of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company.
we expect to show , hardness men that
there is no question about our bond.
being as good security as those we take.
The swindle grows every day in Its
proportions. The job la to cost eight
millions Instead of six. A three million
theft of Allegheny bonds from the Sink
ing Fund will not fill the bill, either in
quantity or quality—they must takelwice
the ammint,and in something available
now to the hungry crowd. -
He commends the "free canal" idea of
GOTIEMOi Seymour, of which the
Gammas has already spoken, thus :
You are aware of the recent conven
tions being held in New York, at which
Horatio Seymour and others advocated
the enlargement of the Erie Canal, and
making It, If neoeseery, a free sea from
New York to Lake Erie, which le at the
northern extremity of our canaL It Is
one of the grandest sel3emes ever
brought to the attention of the American
public.
Here is the Senator's certificate to the
present owner, a man who has not known
Slr. Lowry, nor permitted his name CT=
to be mentioned, la Ms family, for twenty
years, until this project for a common
plunder has brought them together, hand
In glove. He says:
Mr. Reed, who Is a heavy owner of the
stack, does not want any more than his
Internet ocst him.
And he concluded by reiterating that:
General Reed did not desire to take a
cota out of the prefect, and that his per.
mew was to give the stock for what it
cost.
Who - then, is to nuke this mane
Who are the parties who, If we believe
the literal admissions of members of the
ring, made to us verbally, and reiterated
in vitiate; the to steal something by this
grand operation? Who are the "pur
chasers" in Erie, Pittsburgh or elsewhere?
Mutt we call upon gentlemen by name.
to give the public that information which
*a know they have? How, as Mr.
Lowry said; "does it take two millions to
deck the_canal and arrange the nretent.
I
debt?
The'
•
The Senator and his crowd see some.
Rey , . .*
We do not know that we will Introduce
the bill this year. The cry of thief which
has been started by this railroad compa
ny huNntanidnated public: opinion and
the prod io much that we are not die.
posed to touch it this winter.
Whoever started that cry of "thief,"
evidently bit the true ingues right on the
head I Never was a more wholesome
crack given with an honest "bit of a
twig" No railroad company started that
cry; it ilea style of clamor as much out
of their "She as It la in the way of the
Senator from Erie.
A positive good has been done, by this
cry of thief. Hear Mr. Lowry's 'amen.
lotions 1
priblie opinlon has settled, that this
is • project of corruption, I will withhold
I the bill, and abide my time. It cannot
perish. The members from the West
Were a unit for the measure, but some
have become weak-kneed from the bit
ter attacks which Rain been made open it.
Those weak-kneed members have
found out that the people arc after them.
What thunder they will hear, before this
bunness is forgotten I
As to exchanging the bonds In the
sinking fund, that is no new thing. It
has bean already done in the case of the
Allegheny Valley, Railroad bonds.
Aix i lir. Lowry, two wrongs don't
make a rightexcept in your ethics.
Yore friend Irwin, as Treasurer, was
guilty of that first violation of the Consti
tution, and you think you have placed
him there to do It again. Walt until he
gets there, and then malt until hermit:cede
In doing your little job I
• Here is a gem from the too-talkative
Senator's month I
My only objection is, that the channel
is not made • ship canal st once, but It
will be one, within twenty years. If it
costs in Its coustruction M 00,000.000, It
will be cheap to, Penrurvlvanla. It will
be • free sea from New York to the Oulf
• of Mexico.
I 'Observe that this admits our own Ob
jection that, Instead of a shijacanal,noth
i lug better la really proposed than a , big
ditch to be navigated by Erie scowl'
I Observe the magnificent ideas of this
champion of sinkinglond rabbi:lll4
Let hire and Miring get once inside of the
treasury-door, andthey will laugh stanch
a trifle as too hunalied esillions of cost to
our. Oconmonwealth I When will the
faugh.of the tax-paying people come In
A free Sea 1 Pray, what then becomes
of the tolls, the income of the anal, the
$BOO,OOO of annual profits, which the Sen
ator figured up?
Never have we read a more pitiful
story, of the.mentai dlsorganizatien of •
fellow.creature, than this faithful Inter
viewer has put into the mouth of hL B.
Lowry, Senator. Ile has himself, either
from imbecility or reckless rage, exposed
all the naked details of one of the most
Impudent concoctions, to defraud the
Commonwealth and the public, ever
known in the history even of Penneyl
Tanis.
We have recently asked some very plain
questions,—intended to reach and expose
the bidden engineers of this raid upon the
money and credit of Pennsylvania,--of
persons who can answer them, but wilt
net: The public has waited, for some
time, but in vain, for the information
which it is entitled to receive, and which
it must and will hear before it will trust
the active leaders-in this business with
one dollar of their means, either public or
private.
An article appeared in yesterday's
Commercial, which was replete with
abusive epithets and puerile falsifications,
hut which was intended to evade even a
show of a reply to our straightforward
interrogadons in the public behalf. But,
in that article we see such clear ear-
marks, revealing its actual authorship,
and that author a citizen who has had
more than one personal conference with
us in reference to his canal , project,--and
these car-marks are so !significant of an
audacity in misstatement, an impudence I
of false accusation, and a stupidity of
practical perceptions, which would other
wise
astonieh the public,—that it is new
our duty to be still more plain.
When we had first directed public at. I
tendon to this contemplated raid upon I
the. State Treasury, under the cover of i
"reform" and through the aid of themost
corrupt coellton ever known to Penney'.
Tanis politics, we were waited upon by
one Thomas J. Bigham, a citizen whom
our people came to know pretty well,
years since. He . protested against our
imputation's upon the practicability of this
scheme of enlargement, and then became,
as his wont, garrulous, and gushingly
communicative, More than that,—he as
sumed the rola of the tempter, and dis
plane to us the inducements which, pc).
tent no doubt with citizens of hinway of
thinking, were to be irresistible with us
also. He was and is our authority—let it
be worth what It may—tor the
statement that the Reed interest, nomin
ally exczeding one million in the present
canal, had been offered to J. K. Moor
head and others in this city at sBoo,ooo—
in cash and the balance in stock
of the new company—and then declined
by them; that this interest was then bar
gained, under an option to last one year
from last May or Jane, to another party—
"a Wryer and a broker," said Mr. B.—
"In this city ;" that, then, the Lake Shore"
Railway interest made offers, but too_
late, to Mr. Reed, whose hands were
thus already tied ; that the "friends"
lof the enlargement, including him
self and his crowd, were now trying
to "bay out" the "lawyer and broker;"
that a bonus of some extent must be paid
Ito them, but, no more than could be
avoided; that it would bele order to per•
mit a little plunder, but no more than
should be found necessary; and that soon,
I perhaps witlon the next forty-eight hours,
he would give us' all the names, figures
and facts. That promise he has never
kept. Did he mean to keep It ?
Now we charge Mr. Bigham with
being a put, In this Intended raid upon
the Treasury. He is one of Its engineers,
and as such, It. advocate. He writes, or
he Instigates the writing of the articles In
the Commercial. He knows all the facts
in this compact. with C. IC Reed, and,
aithoilgh again and again invited, does
not disclosolhcm. Why I We now call
upon Thomas J. Bigham to step forward
and tell the truth, the whole truth and
nothing but the troth, about that contract
which, as he himself says in yesterday's
Common:Mk is in existence between C.
Reed and—Slolllo very secret party.
We quote his exact words :
General Rend's interests are quite
evenly balanced, he being a stockholder
la the rival railroad% if las contract were
not is existence be would Sell to the rail
road, and no man knows thin bettor than
the paper doing the work of the New
York Central tom blnalion.
.What contract Is that r It &vises of
the Reed interest—to whom? on what
terms? Let the public have the names
and figures, Mr. Bigham, or you will
stand indefensibly accused of complicity
le a plot, and with a ring, neither of
which will bear the dayllght—and Mat
would justify any public suspicions t
EARL .GARDEN iND HOUSEHOLD.
TO VITT A HOT= WE= CLEANING.
The English journal, Lard and Water,
tells us how, thus: —First contrive so that
the horse shall not hurt you, then tench
him that you are not going to hurt him.
It Is almost always thin-skinned horses that
become savage while cleastirt,t ,
out of four inches of.spailtandie, a rot.
ling pin bit, so large that the horse can
not open his mouth; common brass rings
screwed into each end of the wooded bit
will enable you to fastest it to the head of
the stall. This alone will generally make
a horse quiet. It was Rerey's plea, and
lee= to occupy the horse's attention.
Cut, If be is very restive, put on knee
cups, strap up one leg, and 'clean him on
dean litter, so that if he falls be may not
huit himself. Then take a sponge and
wue hint all over with or without soap,
accosting to his condition; dry him with
a coane cloth; after washing a hard brush
is neceurary. If ho will stand it, use the
usual hay wisp, but If he is very tender
skinned, be content with the cloth and a
'very soft brush, which will be quite
'enough fora horse with a fine silky coat.
Washing in bunting stables is made &great
ceremony, preformed by two grooms,
with hot water and soap, while a boy
stands ready to cloth each part when fin-
Med, but I am convinced that all horses
in condition may be safely washed In cold
water.
wagon, CARTS, PLOWS, iND TOOLS OP
EIIiBBANDEY.
Let us remind the busbandm,an that
now Is the time to overhaul his Imple•
menu and machinery; to examine and
have placed In proper order such as any
bo needed In early spring; not to put off
until he Is ready to use them the repairs
that may be required. How often Is It the
case, whilst the farmer!' grumbling about
the weather preventing his getting ahead
with his work, that when bright Sol does
make his appearance to gladden the heart
of man after a long and dreary winter,
and to fructify the earth, that the teams
are stopped, and the plow, the barrow,
the wagon or tbo tart are found to need
repairs, and must be sent mile.% perhaps,
to the smithy or the .wheelwright, there
to await its turn for the operations of the
mechanic. No wonder so many farmers
tall In their business, when each neglect
Is so apparent among them. How often
In the spring or fail do we find the imple
ments used In the preceding season left in
the fence corners, exposed for months to
the scorching sons of summer or the frosts
of winter, and many a crop is ' , lid, the
proceeds of a large portion of which le re
quired to pay mechanics' bills, which
might two been saved if the implements
had been properly housed after the season
was over for their use, A word to the
wise Is sufflcient.
LET HOESIE EAU THEM NATULAL GAUT.
It is bad policy to move a teamout of
its natural gait, especially with a load. It
Is far better to put on a (offload, •nd even
a little more, and give the horses their own
time for moving It to Its plum of destine"-
tion, than to make two loads of It and
hurry them. There tea certain degree of
rapidity of action peculiar to the muscles
of each class of animals, and indeed to
each individual animal, and If they are
pressed beyond this, fatigue follows
quickly, while within this limit great en.
durance le Witnessed. To test this, let a
matt attempt to move /da arms us rapidly
EMI
I, ell DAILY GAZETTE . : TUESDAY MORNING, FEBRUARY 1, 1870
as a bird does Its wings, or his lige In
walking as rapidly as a little boy, and see '
how greatly he will become exhausted.
This will convince him of the folly of
attempting to make his heavy draft bor
ers move with the rapidity of the pony or
fast trotter. The law of nature is that
heavy bodies move slowly.—Northwestern
Farmer.
HOME TOOTH COBH.
A variety of Indian corn, called Car
ragun, or borne-Looth corn, has been
lately - introduced Into France from Nita
rangtta; which is asserted to be superior
in many respects to those already known
to . agriculturists. Ono point of excellence
In Una coin consists in Its availability an
a fodder plant—the yield per acre being
nearly four times as great as that of the
ordinary varieties; and its Cultivation for
this purpose alone is highly recommend.
ed. It attains a height of twelve to
eighteen feet, and, when fully grown, the
stalks are so stout that they require to be
divided longitudinally before they can be
fed to cattle. The yield of grain is said
to be from onafourth to one-half greater
than that of common corn—but it pro
duces more brim In proportion - and less
starchy matter, which however is of un
usual whiteness. The principal objec
tion to this corn le the length of time re
quired for it to. reach maturity, and the
necessity of a very rich, fertile soli, with
plenty of moisture for its successful cul
tivation. Where these conditions can be
combined, and the season Is - long enough
to permit the crop to mature, as in the
Southern and Western States, it is pro.
liable That its cultivation might be profit
ably introduced into the United States.
DOIOLITIC =arm.
Bally Lune —Edget.—One quart flout,
one pint milk, one egg, one tablespoonful
of butter, one of sugar, a little salt, two
teaspoonfuls cream tartar, one teaspoon•
fal soda. If made from Jewell's prepared
flour, the salt, cream tartar andsoda mint
be omitted. Bake half as hour. '
Vegetable Oils, more especially linseed,
simply rubbed_on to the egg, hinders any
alteration for a sufficiently - extensive pe
riod, and presents a very sample and al.
carious method of preservatiotf, eclipsing
any methods hitherto recommended or
practiced.
Jenny Lind' • Puelding.—Grate the
crumb of Walla loaf, butter the dish well,
and lay in a thick laver of the crumbs;
pare ten or twelve apples, cut them down
and put a layer of them and sugar, then
crumbs alternately, until the dish is full;
put a bit of butter on the top, and bake It
man oven. An excellent and economical
pudding.
Praia Cake.—Two en* of flour, one
cup of soda, two eggs. one-half cop of
butter, half cap of sweet milk, bait a tea
spoonful of soda and one cream of tartar
sifted with the flour. Bake slowly in an
oven not too hot, and cover with a paper
until nearly done. The paper, If put on
! when the cake is first set into the oven,
prefents it from rising In the griddle and
bursting open. This last is a good rule
for all cake..
Esetnce of Beef —Take 'pound of fresh
beef, as free as possible from fat; cut it
up into very small pieces, or, what is bet
ter, shred it with a fork. Sprinkle Over
it a little salt, and put the meat into a
stout stone bottle. such as mead or Scotch
ale comes in; cork tightly, and tie the !
cork down with a string. The cork is
usually f t put until steam begins tot
escapefrom thetbottle. Stand the bottle
in a vessel of cold water, which should
slowly be brought to the, boiling point,
and kept at it for at least font hours. To
prevent the bottle from breaking against
the side of the vessel, it should be secuc
ed by a piece of cord. Strain through a'
piece of coarse linen; then let theliquid
stand awhile In a cup, and with a spoon
carefully skim off any :at which may
have arisen to the serface. It may be
seasoned to the taste with pepper and'
salt. The liquid obtained in this manner'
is one of the most agreeable and highly
nutritious articles of diet which can be
prepared for the sick.
Removal of Iron Rust.—lt is stated
that by allowing articles coated with iron' s
rust to remain a. short time in kerosene
oil, the rust can be readily removed by
afterward rubbing for a few minutes with
cork.
Soups—A good soup contains the nu
triment most needed,' for a trifling ex
pense, and shouldim found'on every tattle
at least twine . .. areek,.ence a day would
be better. A few points are very essen
tial In making a good soup. Beef la the
beet mcat for the purpose, as it contains
the most nourishment. A shank bone
well cracked, that the marrow maybe ex.
traded, which you can purchase for the
trifling sum of fliteen cents, will make
an abundant soup for-a family of half a
dozen persons twice. The bone should
be put to soak In cold water, allowing a
full quart for every pound of meat, and
by a very gradual heat come to a slow
simmer, which should be kept up five or
six hours.. Soup should on no account
be allowed toboll, except for the last ten
or fifteen minutes, to cook the vegetables
in finishing. For the first hour of sim
mering, it should be frequently skimmed.
Salt and pepper and savory should be
cooked in it mom the first, and the rice
added at last for thickening. If vegeta
bles are desired,' they should be neatly
sliced, and the soup - Strained finally
through a sieve. Great care should be
used to skim off the fat as it rifts, which
*ill be necessary for some hours. If soup
is allowed tocool and used the second
day after making, it will be all the better,
as then all grease can be entirely,, re
moved. Very delicious soups can bo
made in the same manner, 'from game,
fowls, mutton and veal, and thickening
them with a little arrow-root or corn
starch.—Car. Smartt lifendernan.
To Mari Paint.—There Is every aim.
ple method to clean almost any kind of
paint .that has become dirty. and if our
housewivesehould adopt it. ii would save
them a great dual of trouble. Provide a
plate, with some or the best whiting to be
had, and have ready some clean wane
water, and a piece of flannel,* which dip
into the water, and 'squeeze nearly dry;
there tale as much Whiting as will adhere
to It; apply It to the painted surface, when
a little rubbing will instantly remo en any
dirt or grease. After which: wash. the
part welt with clean water, rubbing it dry
with a soft chamois. Paint thus cleaned
looks as well as when first laid on, with.
out any Injury-to the most delicate colors.
It is far better than using soap, and does
not require half the time and labor.—
Qoaehmakee s Journal
For Row Worm.—P. washed sulphur;
22 grains; carbonate of potash, S grains;
lard, 1 ounce. Mx. Continue the ap
plication atter the apparent cure, Li order
to prevent a return.
Rat Poison—Recent experiments have
shown that squills Is an excellent poison
for rats. The powder should be mixed
withaome fatty substance, and spread
upon slices or bread. The pulp of °Mont
is also good. Rats are very fond of
either. _.
2's Olean Black •010176.—Duisolve ale
ounce of tdcarbonate.6l ammonia In one
quart of warm water. With this lla t dd
rub the cloth, using a piece of. flannel or
black cloth for the purpose. Ailey the
application of this solution clean the
cloth well with clear water. Dry and.
Iron it, brushing the cloth from time to
time In the direction of the fibre.
Steeeteniny Stone Zara —A housekeeper
writes: 'Saving some stone jars is which ,
lard had been packed, until they became
unfit for use, I made them parietal,' sweet
by packing them full of fresh cath, and
letting it remain,two or three *leeks.
suspect this course would be equally ef
fective in any case of foul earthen or stone
ware."
.AGBICULTI:II . I.AL
Tax lova Homestead estimates the av
erage cost of producing a bushel of•mheat
in lowa at not less than eighty cents.
SOUS one says that a cow's temper can
be determined by breathing in her nosh
When genitive breathed lew times In
her nostrils, if she 16 kind ahe will hold tip
her nose, otherwise she wllicatch it away.
THE Amitrican Farmer, Rochester, In
speaking of the profits of butter making,
mentions a farm in western New York,
of 173 acres, from which is annually sold
butter to the amount of over WOO
There are thirty cows kept on the farm.
and the milk is churned by dog powers
Besides this, the farm has produced the
present year, 1,160 bushels al wheat, 1000
bushels of sound corn, lxlcide a large
crop of hay, five acres of sweet corn sown
In drills for fodder, potatoes, oats, etc.
As interior county of New York relied
this year poo,ooo worth of peppermint.
Trut northern apple crop is just appear.
lug In Florida, and the price of a good
apple Is just what would buy three or
anges.
Tax veterinary editor of Wan' Bpirit
of the Times recommends the following
for scratches In a horse: "Take sulphate
of zinc, ono drachm; glycerine, two
ounces; apply every morning.
A FACTOR! for the preparation of ex.
tract of beef In In operation in Houston,
Texts. The feed Is highly condenied,
only twelve pounds being derived from
0110 bullock . WIC pound pr the extract
contains 100 rations of soup, or one gal
lon 800 rations. Twelve hruidred pounds
of this commodity are shipped monthly
to Europe. It Is made use of by the
French cavalry. A:good deal is sold In
'New Orleans.
Ass: of the two principal firms in the
garden seed business at Westhersfleld,
raised last season 2,500 pounds of onion
seeds, 7,000 beet, 1,000 cucumber, 1,500
pumpkin, squash, and melon and 1,000
bushels of ears of sweet corn. The other
firm did two-thirds u much. Twenty
font women are now engaged in doing up
the germs in packages, and half as many
men are driving their little carts about
New England, distributing the germinal
"garden sus."
Mn. BENJAMIN BAKER, of !fey West,
Florida, has sold his crop of pineapples,
this year for nearly seven thousand dol
lars. The crop was gathered , from less
than an acre ands half. lie hasone hun
dred and fifty thousand plants, which will
burn beefing next year, arid these cover
less than seven acres of ground, and if
sold at the same rate as this ..yesee, will
net him sixty thousand dollars. The
pineapple crep of Florida next year will
exceed two hundred thousendelollara
Tas Prairie Farmer gives the follow -
ing Preventive for lice on caliest—Take
of carbolic acid, one dram; of i glycerine,
one Pint; mix and apply by !molds of a
stiff brush, once a day to such'parts where
they abound. Besides, keep clean stalls.
vAritcose OR BROKEN VEINS.
Tlaimeada of perailse euffer -pc Is! nal Ye
out with a broien dOlllO Eoo4cool l of the rein
of the legs. Which In our Uwe ari canny re
lieved and frequently IoserPilh l o of 0000 ..° 4
=air ou. only be ems se they do sot know when
and to whom to apply fornUel. Now. to dire
the neettf-Itaformallon to cases like this: num
m . o. a proper duty on part orqhe nevreP.Per
Press. and It elves us greet pleasure robe Ode
to recommend all such to r r. L77tlLe, OP 167
ROOD ISTLIZZT, whose rut somber if ePIAt•
antes, sad .ble great skill Is Weide Menn e.
real:dee bin to afford , the greatest anoint of n •
Ilef that the preeent state of selenu eau &gold.
Denton these variant, conditiose to whisk we
hare referred above, they an otter sberoes of
Ineourenleure and sulterlig, ink asswelliegt
Ind abnormal growths, witiolt the Doeior. with
his appllzu res. la aure'to relieve.
Then slain the abdominal *natation and
sinking feeling molter to ft mates. lanaMea of
terrible striding and aahletii foe them the
potter
bee belts and SePPerltie
deentreeted as to manes at leanhatnenlty hone
• !torten "lin lid do not nomad nodality
Its Doctor's .perlemni toren s honed Of
over thirty ran: besides, a •stural aptness for
this &pm thent of bill profession, maker tam
in.. limn ordinarily Anita'. Tim lam inn that
Is 01001104 upon faints genet *loan by as
gigot of the proper means to cornet Ms present
arils, ought of Itself to ■. snaelezi cause to
enlist not only trio attention or Pon.on. Dm
selver, but alto motor all Intoltlynot CnYtloint.
Dr. Kityorr'. lake aWt Kedlotne ISters. 11IT
Liberty street.
JA.XtlinY 23, 1110.
A BODY AND KIND DISEASE.
each U dyepepsts. The stonmeh said the twee
an too tattmatery allied for the eon to eager
withodt the ether,@o that dystepsta and der
pond. heelers Imetramble. Smarm edded. toe. ,
that trrltallee of the etommell Is emelt Invade
hip etoomPattled by tuttaUon of the temper.
The Invigorating and trangulthleg opemtlen
or Hoetalter's SAW, to most poverfolly &rel.
eped to eases of Indigestion. Tin first greet of
MU agreeable tonic I. ermtortleg and 000001 . -
.410/. A mild glow pervade@ the system. the
climate neemlnese In the realm of the St...eh
It leeward. and the nervotti mammas.. watch
obancterlsee the disease to abated. This Int
prrrerseui la not transient. It Is net eueocedtd
or the Teton of the old mammas with super•
addedforee. as Is always the ceSeerhea
Ee=
Etch (lowa se. Ifs to Ins, art • nelnanent aw.e.
.lok of healthful laolioratton. Bet this to net
all. The aperlrstt and oust biller, urenertleo of
the pravaritdon are scarcely inoonditry In Im•
pwlence to the lento virtue. there over
flow of blle, the there - fonts thew [Touln within
pr,rwr Iloilo. and If the blleary tress In toast
and torrid It lo toned and Perentatod. The elect
sr/ At tins dlocharotrog ore.. la ealutary, awl In
ova of covtlpartoe the asthatile settee ii test
ruiltient to proanue the [mired Maeda gaaalnall
od 'dawn polo. She 111141. atm) 'moth.*
healthy eysporarlOw Mtn threurfoes which IS
particularly desirable at this waeon when Sud
den lapel. of raw. narpleaa.twil at her Are opt to
cheek the natural perspiratiOn and erode.. eo , •
Renton of tee hirer. maths and colds. 77. Net
ortferuard oporaolt ell atm.. tit /Wang eroos.
n tete th e anti Vagetable tkaaaorallre caeca.
hall) P,Wrt,l,".
NOTICES.
9L le7o.
arNATIONAL REIFININO and
STORING CU - 111 e mmnel meeting or
the Stowable dere of the N Wore! dog leg eat
hearing compeer, for tee rltftsm of oflleora IO
sera :or theta...log year fre other boalease,
II be eel.] at the Ilatl ol A.Mlerreh Bros.
No. s* teeth street, .ate It. char. go SON:
DAY. r. grimy TVS, o,lgoe.k. A. U.
josintr J. LLS. Mar. Seere WY.
WltiTtatt BaTlshe
Jnuar: 92.1270.
ariN .ELECTION FOR DI
REClOttli ct Vale hank to • elve forth
Tr:. ' lsV3Ornt l ano h e e .lnt e l :AV; Witt
Litt' Nth. IST% botweva the bows of mole
aog two. JAB. U. RIL .Bo te L.
Cr.
ALLoIIECT VALLZT itanAo. o CO..
r s ittabargsh JAprokry 111111,11170. I
arsToc suouneus
MeIVA NESTINO.
The Regular Leda). Menlogo( the !Rockhold
ere of tha - fUlegbeid Valley Railroad Cedoooof
.111 be held' at ti. OPTION. OP. TEMA COM
PANY. No. AR Pike Wed: Plttslaroh. of
%MOHR-SALT. rebroary 034. MM. it it
o'clock A. mi.. for the palmate of electierobted
of Mashers Bar tie eldest tear. sod for the
trousacting tt Loch other boalassa as may to
predated.
)4111:003 BALLANTINE, Ilearetan._
IariLNAP FORT'PITT FOUN.
DET Ciit: ITITIS111:114111. PA.— rba
Ittattra lathe Btookbolder• of Ills Con
p .-wlllbe Diva at I. Illtb street..
117150 al.'rebruary atb, at 11 Wale.P. N.. M
whicli that there trtil b.. aliattaa for SZYSH
(S• DIRTAITOI4I, . •
JtXtutU statoaLr. Traatara. •
DIVIDENDS
too LIME= CoN7JUIT,
°TrlC3 crrner 51314 and Itaitroad Srata. I
Ir'''THE BOARD OF DIREC.
Toner tat. ComPorj ore lb ed. , de'
dared from Um 011111114! tba Oast twit.
mambo •dlrldond of TWZI.I7It FOR CINT,
and Ora 0100 OlSCAAlfifrOt pot soot. tlMeredft
of UP lAdtti.cAr . ljerionqiC, Tmal.4ol.
T. A: WiTorr,Amturi. • 102.0
A.DinIRTISEMENTS.
NEWELL INSTITUTE
Tba SPRING 81A13104. of Os moltbs.ll,
comn;ence on TUESDAY, Tentnarynnt. Term,
=I
fl. 'mutate cam iammati wimps far 8.1
sta.. ooners;,t wo. riant anterr
=I
In • asr•Lie• - D%Mtic - A/5 5 TENN
irraszr,
ESTABLISHED 1881.
LOGAN, GREGG Co.,
HARDWARE;
52 irOod Street,
(Four doors above S. alsorleiZtetola
Country Etarehasits are tavitad .
can aid alumina oar 'Ma t whoa hi
Um City. -
A. fall" wank of Machining*. marni
indtba and Carpenter`, 'feels. Spiv
owl. Flies. &battler Banta& Lana
ILeallbar. dia. always on hand.
pa/ :123
Mei : -)1:11
Anotbar lot of '-
Ladies' Gold Watches
=
WATTLES as [MIMI%
nil firm AV15171..
BUNTING CARE .lILL JILW*LTD LIVER
WAT(11168 fpan 3111.00 upwlrd..
werruas & 611E41111811.
JOHN T. GRAY,
House and Sign Painter,
onsuviait arm GaAsztort,
No. 34 34iith Street
,iap;tl Mato Rasa rittsburgh.
' •
,t,,,,...,,,,..„,,,,m,,,,,...,.,„......„.„.,,
i,..,........„,.....,..,,..„..,
~
._ ,.,._..i. , ..,,,,,.,z„ ~..... • ~..i......,,,,,,-, 1 ., v.. . 4, - - q,,, - . 51.4,t 74- - ,=.%,---* .C.-- - .-----,"--" -' ' ....
.
. nI QI I- BA 44 Vtr'Z*l-oiKqtgirie-SIX4O:-OAS 4'' - • . • . -,. . 14, 4 it - k - f - , ,, , -- 4,4 0 . - "ia s - :p z , t,,, ,4',.4-i ‘, -- , • : ,-. 1 , 5. . .1,7,-- , - ..„: : - : ,.. . - :-,,
-AiN.7-4r, ,,, f ' 6. 44s- ,e,
~ Zta, e ,
. .
SATURDAY, JA
.~PECZ A T
WILLIAM
FEDERAL STREET.
At 10 Cents.
Light and Dark
,Calicos,
4REdT BARGAIN'.
At 12 1-2 Cents,
♦ GOOD ARTICLE
BLEACHED MUSLIN
At $2 , 75,
LADIES' EMBOSSED FELT SKIRTS
WORTS $4.00
' At 87 1-2 c..
8-4 TABLE LINEN
♦ !law sroca or
Black and Colored Corded Poplins,
WILLIAM SEMPLE'S,
Nes. 180 and 182 Federal Street,
ALLX4iIHI/ . IIIY CITY
PRICES REDUCED
AT $l,O O.
CHILDREN'S FINE FELT. SKIRTS
C
AT p.m
LADIES' BEST FELT SKIRTS
Warrantol Partect—wortb
1:31=1
Ladles? ,Braided Felt Skirts,
Decided Bagelce— , eort➢ •1.511
AT HALF PRICE
LADIES' API) CHILDBMS
Superior Cashmere Stockings
.112
lACRIM,GLYDE ot Co's,
78 and 80 Market Street
EXTREMELY
LOW
BELL
IVIOORHOUSE,
Will Open Daily This Week,
Prints,
Casshiieres,
Mnslino,
Alpaca,
.LOW PRICES.
HORNE ' & CO'S.
In order to still further mhos stock, before
twang oar mead f , we vl/1 tonnage
GREATLY REDUCED PRICES.
Many Goods Below Cost.
Woolen Goods, Bindery,
Glom. Undirweir.
Embroideries, -
Nillinery Goods,
Bash and Bow Ribbons,
Satin and Bonnet Velvets,
Dress Trimmings,
Clock Loops and Ornaments,
Boulevard° Skirts, to., Its.,
AT RETAIL BARFIAINS.
17 if 79 JII.dRHEI STREET.
,144
MAO
T. T. l
TREGO'S TEABERRY TOOT
.
.I•the MO. , ptesolit;abeapert god best Dual-
Moe r•Glar. • • ....
WIIIIIIXteII fres from lentos.; larredleati: •
It preserve. and. Warren the Teeth!
invigorate. sad soothe. tot Gomel
Phtrille• sod parioater t bresth!
• Pi, rents acternahl•tion t Tartar!
• creme sad Portage Aril alai 'Pettit
le • superior ankle fer •bildrea I
11614 by all Dry...e11...id laid.. '
• Proprietor... 111. WlLen Phdadelptilit.
• Tonal. Or J. 0. MATTI.. Pluelooreb. aid
, l lt Y. BRODOIthe 1. JAZ:Trim
. . ,
PITTSBURGH. PA. -. L. H. 1,17LT011...„.. ...... ..
FULTIIN &
rit- 4 : 42 .TWA-t• ErI*::4IDXDS;
GAS ANDSTEAM FITTERS,
. , ,„
VIM Avenue, Steer 'Bleb Street,
JPITI7IIIVIten. SA.
Lead rip., Om Hose, GM MM.. Maks,
lath Tuba 'and *ash viands. Ina Pip. and
Minas, Als and Baer Pomp., lad Steam Calm
always on hand.. /inbila and Pli•Ilt• Buildings
Maid ap *lok Ulm, Water. and !Imam Haattag
Anpersta. 4.1510 s pre.. tly attended to.
DREKA
Imparter andratall dealer 141
Engirt errwrzornairsr;
wENDINO,yisiTina ! ,PAIITY AND BUAINESI
.CiAZDaxazavrera, -
NONO6 MUM nstnaigNiliill h
Orden= ettelvaprompt Mention.. lima
6t
' 1 • 1'" 1.4 1. 111311 Chestaist 11111,..rbna.
HALIJB
Xitrni was. prali_Etianicom.
Assaus,.s Itxxisainis cm= vrmargu.
at o = l n
tzWfrlL . C 'o c o
= r C t o r
Ta
nevot NRO.lstm.MX.uat
t Ca.U../ON.t= t argh.,
Sllatilrbutk. taiggA
NUARY 29, 1870.
TIES AT
SEMPLE'S,
and 182
Nos. 180
ALLEGHENY CITY.
At 8•24 75, a New L e ot of
LADIES' EDDIED CLOW SKIRTS
WORTH $4.00
At $1.75 a Dozen,
Linen Table Napkins,
A GREAT BARGAIN,
At 25 Oents,
WHITE HOOK TOWELS,
At $1.50.
WHITE HONEY COMB QUILTS
A Complete Stock of
HOUSEKEEPING.: DRY GOODS
WILLIAM SE4PLE'S.
Nee. 180 and 162 Federal Street,
N . COPICTE.
Can Remain in Pittsburgh
BOORT TIME LO.TGER,
AT THE ROBINSON HOUSE,
Corner Duquesne Way and 7th st.,
ROOM No. 7.
FORA MORT TINS ONLY,
PROF. B. S. PRANKS, M.D.,
Lecturer ea the Brasa eye. 'Ma dUrseces and
spreteolea, Ortie:au and (kunst, Ur the New
York lloccital,wrd BTe and Ear Inlinnaryorlth a
lune arca of hie Patented and 11nPurred
tacks far sale.
x. a deddiditY. dl albs ire sad Mar
Prof. EDWARD C. YEANEB. Optician
take groat nn cote ie stating teat I have used
the your:dimmed tom) rye , . hent
miry nave ri ven me caw' mob e lattal.ciJoe.
lave never before bad a pair W entlrOy suited
tom) yid" and that enabled me to mad to tong
wan *a little tneonventanim.
Ex•Prtsit tr. B.
I have had the Improved Eldadmlew edrinde
to myeieht from ma exam•nallon of She eyes
Mena. by Edward 7. Treats_ Y. D., which en.
ablea me to ea vary elm rly, ea: and math W
PM than with an , have meretoto y.
re aced- •
. ABRAHAM LIN OUL.Ntrtesit
We have every mtlaisatlon in mom mandlag
Dr. ZDWAN.O 13. rtIANICEI• littera,. and pa
tented apeclante. to •ha emilldence cf our
mns. He la an onUctan of rare saleatiga atall•
ant adapts Ids spectacles with great and re
marl able scat totals va• toes dimes.. or the eye.
He Selects spectacle. for as with the gest patr,
at ter ant eminent, which oesiblad r• to read
with greater MAI - vetoes. and corn:Mt than these
we already poem.. We with great thearralnem
recommend Item to all rchalr eg spectacles. •
. O. CURTIN, es-Gov. of PenntylemilA
A. L. ItUatilt• Adit -Oen. of Peensyleanta
L. It. 110 1 ttnEWIL Y. U.. Pena sweat. rib.
4. .DICK. Beater, Yeaoellle. Pentlayleanta,
Maytag lad the pleasure of eaamleivp Dr. EA.
Ward IS. Wank , . P meet Improved I/pentacle.,
me And them. experimentally. really 'Meanie
aide to deter lye vision.
7be lenses are ironed. pothned and centred
try, maddasery, matnerearlealy aceerato to pro
duo. a truly perfect lens. d earn, We roma
men ..hem. -
John W. Geary. Governor of Pennsylvania.
A. Domes ea Dishonor shush.
John Dmkson. M. D. Penn street, Plttaborga.
e. • . tturett, M, (Ornate) Penn Meet,
Plsteintrol. •
James L. Monariend. President Merchants
BaUunal Pant. Yradv ille, Pennsylvania.
It gime o. mark ;demure to say tbaiere bate
laroeeted Dr. K. S. Pranks , very @hankie se
e rimed% et Buechel. .4 Lenses, and and
them esoottently ealeala , ed to remedy nob tm
wertrehone of vision am ens be benegtted by tic
masetialmeed let the marnracture of elo
slam •ta or remarkable manly aud beauty, mad
side very meek to their va at.
Wr r.commend him erUtk etsrerteleras to the
mundane* ..f alp woo may r. quire Ma services.
Man. trends Joanne. deer. tory of kerma
0. dater. M. D., Heenennrg. Pa,
We have examlned what we oohedve to be see
as ...Meet of beret...ea manntsetured ander
Dr. ad, and B. ers,k retest. Unlivable edgy.
ted to the various
the
ot that endue.
It dedeste organ. the limes Sire, wlkUter the
Imostred vision Is the vault of distal., or Ike
blunt weakens Incident to o'd me.
' Wenger.. the sysenneas of . )rants the
beat we have ever Been, and as such recon.-
seed them.
Vs u
TTZ . 7 . g ' an 10at:I141..,
lMoe boars feels 9 A. m. to 6 T. W.
.A.TV
GREAT INDUCEMENTS,
No. 91 Federal Street,
CLOSING OUT SALES
WINTER GOODS,
RECARDLESS OF COST,
To Make Room for Spring Stock.
u.. Old Ladles' Cays..wtolesale sad n.
aim Colore d Covets 415 e.
Chloaren.• Balmer', Hose fr sae.
Lad lee , Heedlereelefd, 100
Ladles. New Style , UWeneas, 500.
• . •
..
Ali 0111.' Other Goods in Proportion, a
MIS. S. C. ROBB'S,
91 Federal Street, daeflhenV.
."111
READ BEAT I READ{
conNii
Beamed in ono minute, wlthaut . l4“diar cr
Merin/ . corner; Hanley' and Diatwawl RoW
Itanroved In a fhw minutes• •11 operatloua per
formed without pain or bloodshed
Parton comfort inimedistalyl • •
No nelsoodoe medleineundl •
.
• No ion het after oparatiotl
Zniaraed and BUS Joints wasted soocosst.l7.
Trost-Bite and Chilblains cared Ina tror dui.
. Satisfaction given or money xayAnd.d. Good
CUT References given. • .
OM. noun ix= s At.. to 12 11.. WI I JO *X
r. x..olxithao.9 con J. Y. .
Renieniber 09 filzitt hrs., old
•
°t. Clair.
UNSTSII4IION. Sittsburgh; No.
•
MO PERSONS HATIROISIIGIr
11 BUILDINGS. 'WITH STEAM POWICE, TO
1111111,—W•sted. to mat; for • Wm of parr
wl 'stones* of boylng. • luso lmlldlog
, -
doom powrr. Mid rsitahl• for naimantarlag ie.
rioultaral
to
had otherilibtrohohlhra•
at fur to or corona Rd with • foundry. 1:11.
armor. tit. LOOM or rittaborgh Ortfersol. , or
oath point so win odor% river or rallsomi cont
laholealloo. • . .
for telt or oals
rms.. 'moths such property
wUI Moire oddress, with Dartlealsso, [trio(
unseat of toot tool. amount of wow, root had
who a per session esn bo had.
6. HALLO 1:
ES•6 W% IO . 0h 41r. 1 .
12.
.0.1. WOMAN
&ANN
PUBLIC NOTICE.
•
Having Dena awhile , " EIAB sad OAS MITES
iIISPICCTOR fee. Allegheny Oonnty, notate I
g iyaa out natal tin neceunry ealeo &ad
Mechanleal Teattng Kathleen tan be progieledi
De tonna at tae OIPICF OP TIDE NA.
TIONAL It/ONDILT AND PIPle WORE&
Treaty.tahil anat., sea:Peng. Pitteintegli.
TL. lIIIITH.
=I
C Alin ia ci rPa; our c l o l o
WHoLliglitai DMus ter
rozeign and Domestic Dry Good%
. 40. 114;11"
Vast AO= BLOTS Ditaß4l4Mbuies.
ra
FIRST MORTRIBB BONDS
AND
VINCENNES RAILROAD.
Total ammo% to be 1amed...511,600, 000
Capital Stook. pald to 2,100, u 110
•gottm.ud Coss of goad, (140
Nattmated Earatogs par Silo
Net Earnings per snetunl....
Interest on the Lean Per ed.
11,000
AU. emit of Int•rest per sullov 1,5119
Assonst of Net Earettn gm per
The Beads follow the completion of the Read—
haw the Union Trost Company of it. T. as their
*Seal Register and Transfer Agent—and are
sold at present at IlAaod ae . nined Meseta.
•
They bear examlnotton on.: pompon... bet
tor, it to bettered. pap any Other note before the
polite. to the Axed sad utiehattgeoble element'
of d! W. theority owl Profit.
. . -
They bear good tuterest—geyen per cent. Gold
for forty yeare—and are eleuted by a Mahlon
_Fund, and 1 . rot Felinity, upon the road. Its
outer and net Income. the Pratte:llm. and all
presele and future property of the Coin Peal.
They depend upon no new or hatf•seitled ter-
Worth 37 1-2 c.
ritery Ibr Ott' Oen to ply lbelrintanst, but 11pOIS
assumbsit that • rsff road butte throneh the heart
of such • region Offers better security [or both
Interest and Prhsoloat Than • road to /So both
through the most Witty extolled wlldereses or
sy•reely eettleff ttrrttory.
Large Size.
ALLIIIIIILNY CITY
1:9211
FIEM:C=
Gas and GSS Mater Inspector
ADVERTISEIbIENTS
THE
HE THE
CHICAGO, DANVILLE
4.609.000
A. 039,30 0
819,7611
110, 600
I of Goad• per tulle
=
I=l
d, well . de Wed and productive eluntry;
Tide Ballioad Possesses .pedal advanteden.
running Into and out o! the Cltyof Weekdo.
important Railroad Center; In rarintag
through a line of villages and old farming set;
gement , In the richeet Tarlton °retie State of
Illinois; In running near to depoella of Lion Ore
of rat extent and value, and over Itroad fields
of the best coal_ In the State—which minted in
terests are Its monopoly. And beside's the local
and other business thus seamed, there will be
attracted to this road the considerable traffic al-
ready springing up "from the Lakes to the
gulf:" ...nth Its Boathern Coanoctioni It toms
•. Trunk Liao •tt miles anorter than any other
route from Chicago to Bashrtlla.
Thom Bonds are therefore otead upon altasity
sod • Bottoms that a tom rears moat Inerttably
donate—and competent Padiaa say treble-la
'value.
17M1.11.1r1lt! Nttfws Was PM pries le WA pat
latillf put into to Roads. sold Trost or Dads
k plat Sato NOTHING BETTER.
Tsmobtets, Ishlk Maps, le., an hand for db.
tributloa.
Bonds MST NI had eUrecily of or of out
agents In Pittsburgh,
8. NrCLEAN & CO.,
75 VOICTIVrit /I.I7MICIME
W. BAILEY LANG & co.,
MSROH ANTS,
64 CLIFF B 2 BEET, New York,
Agents for the Sale of the Bonds.
321:1111,11111
72
1
4 4 -
4d g 1 101
z
Oir 4 ao
.4
W 11
4 0
j 0 g 4 pa ri
F /1 4. M °° 41 Ai IPI a
' ? g .
E" us ti/ Pt im
I E 4 l 5
0 V 1.4 0 i rCi
M ' 4 g
P=l 4 PI as . 1
0 12 41
LATEST OIL STILIKE.
,fthicur, .
arc . .
zoolrov r h
- , • • , • nursszaysl
:To some area headed SUMP& Jon ...le . 1 a
see what spleedid lergslan are Whited to the ``or
gems storA of harlot and Boomer Clothoslan
prepared end exhibited to .
Tile felled LUtitsxg to be ealoyed 'menthe
hiss who copy.lt lo neatly dressed la • milt o
new hunter Clotbaswkich gthhn So
as not to &Wide. the freedootortd.atoi l a
clothes .re to .e Out at B. C. TaattertitArl'il.
To Risottos lrecatoarg. dean spend vast saws
ortolan , where szsortlousle people charge U.W.
prices for .sallsOtotory clothing. but °oat. and
I get the worth of racy dollaryou spend.
I •••• B. C. TruoanarA3VlL o l
TRAr..lot the Been sort. Orsetioed em 7
Hui.:and all day. at the .81. No. 11. idothleg
Ham :Then the people Win their doh. gad
Unwe the, get their clothe.. BY.IT maw frea to
bay at aßtlaiem. Trade traniendois But
theStg No. II Clothing BAIL •
LOOK AT TEM ElllOll2l.
rrVortitl=7,:rlTlAl,'• • •
nesting part colts roc 018 worth $llll. • • •
POO wasts f h litt or enott Ire worth PO each W
saltrth 110..
Black sul •
• Boys , salt for $0 worth 410. -
a.dkvy-r. ;way taws too smarms to mosa
blnikr.'l.lllo":l7 7.¢."7=t171/7.
TE.V4IVIONTALLN;
lierebenta Fire Ina•. Ce., Mem%
a=
MARKET FIRE INS. CO., N. Y.
- 4LESET3. 11669.811.40.
Connecticut. Fire Inn. ,Co., Hartford,
testis, $400,000.00.
NOWARD i. auoaas, *gest:
Samoyed to 108 70171M1 AVENIII, botarete
Wcod and Ongtodald
J Walk) .
O n"'
AND
•
• QtrF o ENSWARE: •
A langeassortioent et new patterns and Asses
last resolved. Also Mated and Brltrants
Vases sad Parlay Ware.' now opening end fat
oda at eery low prises at . • '
H. EIICIBY ac 00 9 8.,
Ns. 189,LIBEWIT STEM.
ies
Om.= .I . 7Thllcraoll Aso Coo
linsTALOan Con?ANT.
Piranaosailf. January lfes.• arro. , •
FYTIVE soninuoLDEßs.
onion Yo. 21. TortlaCreek Division Bands
doe robrusry 1. 11110. will be pall on aria after
that date en preseatatton sad delivery, at Ins
First liatioaal Bask of Fittalsorgh.
211 JNO. 11. FOAM. Ja . TreU4r.
THE ADRINISTRAT
CLOSIN
zomrsr 4ar
Is Now in
BEK
No. 59 md&reir
.Eveiiiarttete has been reduce
80 days. /Mk epPoklavegyfor
BEDUCTION IN
CARPETS ,
For o• Short Time to Prepare for
! SPRING TRADE.
0011 KeeIINTOCII k VD_
Hate marked their owl. dawn below last eta. _
eves priect. Fall liars of
Carpets,
Mt Cloths;
Drtslligsf c”,
•
EASTERN PRICES.
lisre Osrsatus an les secured by thew sullei•
iqfcts=,7ll..!ge "k""""""""
OtIVEn kcCLINTOCK k
23 Fifth AYOBUO.
6ARPETS.
I=l
NEW FALL BTOGIL,
Chi Cloths, Window taider.
DRUGGETEL::
IiBIIGGET sqtAnm
Ingrain Carpets,
Li the Lowest Prices Efer_Olerel.
ROVARD, ROSE & CO,
21 MTh AVENUE.
rEBIIII
HOLIDAY GIFTS.
Positive Reduction in Prices
PIANO COVERS,
Jffosatc,
Atininster,
'Willem Anis,
Crumb China,
etc" Ste.
MUM BROS..
Jr.. it rlrrs airs.runt;
AZOVZ WOOD IMM=:
WOOLEN NUGGETS
AN , r,
I FELT CARPETS,
/I, 2 , 2 4. 3. 3i and 31
YARD WIDE.
BORDERED SWAIM
Suitable for Prelore.
IMIG ROO CRUIIII CLOTS, •
Woolen, Linea and Cotton,
►7' LOWER PRICES .111/11 LIST IBUOI.
zourlthstaar the nadtalatabed taalf
III'FBLAND & COLLIWS,
71 and 73 fifth Avenue.l
BUBINES3 CHA.NGEB.
Ftin • .
bt.B.7,aril..c.tiT,rarg."autt d m ,
lowest to &wept C. MAW
[hoses' Brown. All pees°. s Mowing thaw.
select lodeleted to uld lees plesnonall sal
wale Immediate Parreeet, and all Detach. here
Log claim. will present the uses L. Joba LL. Wet
son, at onr Mice, ell lroderal stmt. hd 00.8
autkorLsed to settle all become..
JOEIMPH C BAILIFF,
• TUUNaII INOWN ,
AA
/AMA K. CA 4 , Btht:
' Actium:err Cm', /a . ist, AMIN
•
Di retiring from the DTIAOf AV7•II
Carsenst I would take she opportunity ..... naf
ring my thanks to mg Mang. for *hair pan
riILOM4 sae srauld rasPna:nin rot nit •mmalir •
nee of tnesa Wen for tha Ern °Uinta: •
sAILTIfIf AV BTOWN.' .1 0 1aalbeis, Chas
SP ads Pipe Flitese.B3 Federal stmt. .Alles=
City Ps.. would ve taro their tbsata I.
Masi sad ttwo pahlla seasodlyr forth. fa. Tarr *,
Itheral Darrow do riot • parted eatand , ag over
tea arum and would manually • gads • ea..
tlanatlon of their raternard favors for the aid
arterial draw Jaffa*'
VAUBOLIPTION.
Vire Porn., J. IffdaT, tt
• • Joroart IXTO: • IF
The erns et BYITIM kW/SWIM lad this dal
bets dissolved bl metes/ easiest. WY. V&A.
WICK r
L. EL BYITH.
WK. WASWICI....
int badness of Its late Ina let I be melba
and eontlased M Me vaderileued under the left'
•
wee et .
•
L. H. SMITH & CO.
tarraut a. sitrru.
. . ''.DR. WEEtTiThra
M rrprort - TO somAir ALti
1
private dlseasesatakllls to Ito forlaket
."...=...;......... ar
WM seats's! and Lobotomy, LefesaLLS
mll.aboso or othor 01=24Ni= •
rZsrolitigtostloa, =so "MUS ..
lou 07 . . I grotonso. mogul — ..
Orot a llogy laprarrall__MtatMxisal . ar t trmt.
~
113, 7 4 7aar u .morlimeemd,
* oßt7otloaal oissaToll
drNllthil=a • b arms
aM
- Wootton to atelsobi •
pl A mats rv eßsrstosaor
1
1 , 4ssl us.irjawd or amizThais oe th. rat . L .., L = Ms:ll 7 ..... = 7 ,
alia s to tbe atatayota llortats &LW -,
of Lamas mil Imola tb....t of or=
voiN•looss, war* ists, MIII ta OM
tame Gm Is mama laradrola •-•
Tye Dootor gmbllabeo smallest ....., v ,
Pagortlat alvas SIMI salesolrlem Mom
Ma prtrato dlsomesma allays hod Om as
dr by mael for
ego Mato% la sealed oamlorm
=orsibloar S. tosinsUos maim alb
ma lia w Losl to dm:WM sew Ism .
...tt....,xmarnsmobot
..:..,'.
Pm
ridAVitir. the '. oINoIoO.OIN be Ob. -
ati tm r imossm 3". l.
.... e:qt . .... rd ba forarard ut . 7:=o , l by7mall ° 77 .3 er 7a rlo ,
rro rarroa a tio ' n ' t=Mi fatal
Ma aossomoodattoo stoma, patarom on
soliaNNedodUalleolleilbstare •
Mrs =nary matins UM la lor :
mark M. Itatadtog MoSoa.
NU S oodrOlonS am proposed - LT=
Docto's OM, labomtory. =dor Ms oma lop
wrsts,. Weelleal posapblets at °Zoe Com. of
by moll ter two •Olostok No suitor wan Om@ '
falloel, bool what be aryo. Roaro9.l.N.W
ISan4kys_ DI as. to 111 r. N. Moe. Igo 9
sfrrttrry. (near roork Rom., 141.1•Togra . , •
FOR SALE. —ENGINES AND
BOUJCPS. an. and reentd4l.343. 'Asa
stantlY b"tazaug Imo..
Comer s•Testacadb and Ma Meet.. •
solzat Plttatbarsb. Ps
OR'S ORBIT FINAL
G SALE 1,
003
Pr,ogress at -
ER'S,
ET filitritm]mtr,
d in pries, and muse be odd (11
Q
12