The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, March 11, 1870, Image 2

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    El
fiaptis.
omcL PAPER.
Allegheny City
and inalleni COUnlar.
or/Icm
1111111115101 81, 018 i lira
FRIDAY: MASCU 11.-1,10
Bow ; - Frankfolt, 96}@,961
unlit at Antttorp,
Gina Cloud to New Zork yesterday
AU*
Titsfiluldstrfaud Act of 1858 (Per
limp. 915) toe that "It sheilbe the duty
of-the Commissioners to open books,"
diet, "and ftom time to time, se the funds
psid in shall justify, apply the same to
tha payment" of the laterostof the public
debt. In use of the Imperative void
width we have italicised, the Billientilt
bin simply reiterates the old law. A
print this diy, which divides the pub
lit co tempt between Its stupid ignoranee
and In reckless mendacity, recently
mead that the low was not imperative tol
its terms, and that the bill yea therefore
an improvement. The misstatement whit
very petty, In every respect but one:. its
Impudence was sublime.
•
Tux present organization of the North- I
ern Pacific Railroad Company includes -
Warne of the most prominent and Wines
tial. men of railway experience -In the
country. livers: Cum, Thompson, Fir
go, Ogden and Felton, offer to us, by
their names in the directory, -- an effective
guarantee that this great enterprise
will be undertaken In good faith and pros
ecuted with succem. We learn from the
New York Pest that .
The directors will provide for an Im
mediate surrey of all the routs of the
road not yet surveyed, for the lune or
the bonds and their sale in America and
Europe, dan generally for an energetic
prosecution of th eir enterprise to a speedy
o?mpletion.
Brows, hilmoini, situated on the Ilia
sourll Pacific Railroad, about two bandied
miles west of St, Louis, in the midst of a
splendid prairie - - region, is one of the
mat thriving towns in that State.
d
ing Is progiesiing rapidly; a large woolen
tacihry is about to be established, 'to
gether with laundries, machine shops,
an. The people there raise a great deal
of grain, for no finer egricultursl !tease
is to be found this side of California; and
Whey are too far_ west to compete:for
the eastern markets, they are g okig
io
lime what is better—markets at home.
Western Missouri, Kansas, Nebraska,
Daltotah, -Montana. and even western
lows, all admirable whom-growing re
eons,- are all too far away to enter into
oomnetition with the growers of that
'eteesPeest of the Missisalppl in the mar.
keen of the Atlantic cities; and hence
they must create home markets, as the
people of Sedalia are dolig ; tmt to do so
without hazard of homy loss at lint they
. msut have protection.
Tas Spnatir ., of Peneiyivania has direct.
al the unthrumeat of a untumadona
witness at ,its bar. That witness to the.
puticcdu friend aria protege of a 'woe.
ty Of Beniiiirs, but It may, therefore, be
presumed eat be will not be harshly dealt
with. It is even probable that Yr.' W.
W. Irwthie about to achieve simony sig
nal success in the Senate chamber than
that which seems to have been a mistake in
the Corendtbee room. This arraignment
is in deference toe public sentiment rthich
respects the powers of the Senate more
than the honesty of udividnal members,
- and thogronnd will the Coalltion lave
- now recovered will not, if they knciw it,
be lost by any fresh blender. The Truss
' user-elect wu temporarily in peril of
losing the coveted office 'altogether, but
we are afraid that the danger his now gone
by. As the rest of this farce is to be
played with open doors, the public can
_ better judge of the purposes of the major.
-
sty by the results which they will ildi to
achieve.
A REMARKABLE TESTIRoPIT,
We quote a notable *sage from a
lecture dellieredon the 4th inst. at Wash
ingtou,`Fa., by W. D. Mous, Erq.
ain a Democrat, and opposed to the
Fifteenth. Amendment, but I desire to
Pear my testimony to the character ot
.the pure population of the South. 'After
the pongee( the conscript act they out
numbered the whites five to one. • They
could have arisen atany time and -utter
ly annihilated the white population, and
lbws were not wanting evil men to , make
the suggeetlon. They remained; how.
emer, the ume in obedience, docility,
fekhfainese ' and order, • as before the
War broke cut. There le nothing like it
in all the teams of history, and I. never
knew or heard of a race who seemed, In
my judgment, to live so near to the
Divine teaching as the negroee of the
South during the rebellion. Their ccin.
dent was epitomised in a single remark
made to me by a very aged one among
them. .We'se Meths childrenof Israel
st the Red Bea; all we has to do is to
stand still and see the salvation of the
Ludt' -At allthe times and underall the
elreanistances I will bear testimony to
the unequalled behavior of the Southern
stegrorm during the war."
'4fl _
ICI
‘OItPOWATE AGGRANDIZEMENT.
We print the text of • remarkable
proposition which is now under Leah's•
tire consideration at Harrisburg. It is
simply and modestly entitled "air Act
supplementary to an Act relating to cer
tain corporations;" its proper designation
• should be "art Act to legalize any amount
of watering th e stock If any corporation."
Lacidentally, this little bill, releases such
corporations from any iMtlel Mx upon
their watered stock, but that is compare
Lively a small tap Into the Tressriry butt;
ana wo should not worry. about it, la
these days of more ambitious plunder.
But we' hope to see our legislators
'steady hesitating, befoM they grant the
' authority, which this bill will confer, for
the introduction into Pennsylvania of
the Pith and Vanderbilt tactic, In the
reatuldeinent of our great corporations.
If • railway or a mining company, for
example, makes large 'moats, the public
policy should require that the fact be
patent, that the steckholders should re.
, alive the direct temlit thereof;and that
the 'morporedirm should be strictly limited
in Its powers, and' to the specific ends con:
• templated in Its charter. If its profits be
large enough to invite competition, it is
di for the public interest that competition be
immediately encouraged. It large profits_
may be covered rip in fresh enterprises at
home or beyond the State limits, sad
the surplus cursing* carried always , to
the capital account at the mere
pleasure of a directory, we may fear
that some of our already powerful corp.
rations are ultimately to become the mas
:
tars of the Commonwealth. Strictly
within the purview of their charters,
these companies should enjoy the fullest
and most encouraging protection -by the
, State;bnt there is every great and steadily ',
increasing danger that the people of
Pennsylvania onty, before they know it;
•be themselves subjected to the protector
' ate of one or more menoPolles so gigantic
- fn capital and Laflamme that even our
Legislatures shall be" reinlarly counted
• among their dependents and xecironed
upon their monthly paprolls.
• It Is manifestly unwise hi a • people
jesbaua of their own supreme power to
Ode the least of those ;descants which
ought always lb maintain and vindicate
that power In defining and circumscri
bing the 'pedal privileges of incorpo
rated capital.
Yet it 1s probably a waste of time to
address such considerations to a body
which, from the hour of its organization
to this date, hu been doing the work, not
of the people, but of their.too powerful
creatures.
VHE FRACTIONAL CURIISI*CY.
VijhsLever May be the difference" of
speculative conjecture, as to the amount
of our paper currency which will In last
be presented for redemption, atter its
payment. in specie Is tendered by the'
Treuury and the National banks, thsre
may be no doubt on one point. The
fractional currency will disappear from
circulation, after: resumption by the
Treasury, as rapidly as it can be gathered
np and its place suppliedby silver change.
The qualities which must 'tulips attract
the public regard for a paper medium, at
any time convertible into Cash, do not at
tach to thif form of emallcbange. We
'shall all of us prefer to use paper rather
than coin in our general business tune•
actions, beCinSe the int is so much rior e ,
convenient, economical and really safer,
ascent far the very smallest sums, as
*filch it would not be too much to claim
Oat the small coinswould really be more
'Convenient and less liable to inlnry grad
loss.
We Bo not believe that a single dollar
of the greenbacksand bank notes will per
manently 'disappear from circulation by
reason of a redemption. As feat as paid
in, either to the banks or to the Treasury,
; this paper will be paid out again to the
generalpublic,which will not for &moment
doubt its valid cash value. Nor will any
amount, of consequence, be tendered at
all for redemption. The knowledge that
~ the paper is good for its face, at the pleas
ure opts holder, will make it not only as
good as the bullion to that holder, but
actually preferable for all his business
usei. A few old women, here and there;
who continue to potter about In breeches,
may perhaps be seen sneaking iato bank.
doors and broken ogioes, to change their
papa into the metals in fact not a whit
more precious, and sneaking back again,
a few days later, to re-exchange their in.
convenient and unsafe coin for notes.
Bat the :communityin general will keep
its gold and silver, where the metals
have always been kept, in the vaults of the
bankers, and continue to do their hal
oes' in piper as before.
One meets, daily, wiseacres who,
gravely insist that a cash resumption is an
impossibility, in the face of nearly seven
hundred millions of paper against a stock
of len than halfthat amount in gold. It
Is altogether idle to attempt to explain to
such people how it resumption, based upon
a matured public confidence, has always
been inaugurated. Your arguments and 1
deductions, from reason and from expe
rience are alike wasted,..upon a numskull
who is too stupid to understand how a
resumption Is to be accomplished without
the actual and immediate exchange of
every paper dollar in the country for it s
metallic eqtdeslent. ' What astaninin
discoveries hi r the abstruse region ci l l
finance, are re titled to such people in th
euy, simple And quiet experience of a
general resumption I That expeNenos is
the only thing that cal teach them!
We have $89,950,039.98 of dirty, rag-'
ged and half illegible scraps of paper,
called s postal currency, which. no body
wants to use for one needless moment.
These forty millions must be redeemed at
once, and that is about all theredemption
which will be asked from the Treasury.
A considerable percentage of these greasy
stamps his no doubtbecn lost and destroy
ed ; but the residue will be forthwith
absorbed. Bought up by bankers and
brokers, its place, will be tilled by the
silver now 'hoarded, and the Treasury
will pay for it in great part with peper.
The wooer It shalldhappear from general'
use, the better pleased w 11l every one be,
especially since a dollar or two of silver
change In the pocket will practically em
body about all of the personal experience
ors specie resumption. Senator Cameron
will do a timely service, therefore, in
pressing Ns Motion for the retirement of
'them vlle alapludere before mid-Kramer.
•IN PEACE PREPARE' FOR WAR! ,
The truth and wisdom expressed in this
old and hackneyed phrase never had a bet
ter illustration than is found in the Maori
of the war of the Rebellion, wherein the
manufaCtuzing North and the agricultural .
South ter.ed their strength and endurance
in a long and desperate struggle.
Although the traitor Floyil, Buchanan's
Secretary of War t robbed the northern
arsenals of the greater part of the arms
which the Government bad prepared and
stored up for the common defence--mm•
ufactured almost entirely id the North—
land thus gave to the rebellious Booth the
advantage In the first year or two of the
contest, yet the mechanical skill of the
North wu to immeasurably evertor to
that of the South that the traitorous
apollarlon was quickly repaired and the
scale of battle...turned. While it is true
chit our brave men in the field gave us the
victory, it is equally true that without the
unexampled activity of the mechanical
and Manufacturing skill which was be
hind them,. supplying them 'bands/di,'
with all they needed, with arras, ships,
and all enact& of supplies, they could
not have done it.
During the war the diverse Industries
of the North kept it in a state of un.
wonted prosperity; while the absence of
those diversified industries in the South
sunk that whole rellions section into
abject poverty. While the North wag
sell:sustaining, the South was in a large
inetintre dependent upon foreign blockade
runners for Its supplies of arms, clothing,
medicine, sic.; which, as we know, and
as they sorely - felt, were wretchedly had.
equate. These was not the means on that
-aide to keep even their rallroadsend their
rolling stock In order; while on air side
that groat Interest flourished during the
war SI it had never dote 'before.
Never did men defeatist cause, whether
good or bad, with more desperate and ob.
stinaniiithiery than did the rebels con.
tend for theirs. They fought till their
country mu desolated and impoverished,
and they themselves were in rags and
starving. On the other hand our armies
were better rapplied In everything they
needed during the last year of the war
than the first.. Mauled of becoming weak
through exhaustion, like the Booth, the
Norttcgrew strow and stronger as the
struggle progressed,. until by its neaten.
dons power it finally crushed therebellion,
and then turned round and extended a
strong and generous band to lin ttp its
. fallen foe. -
Wo know, and we ought ever to feel
and gratefully acknowledge the Divine
honey in this great triumph; yet there
was no miracle in It. The Northhad it in
the elements of perennial and unfailing
strength, while the Ninth had not. The
one had diversified Industries involving
highly educated and numerous kinds of
skill; the other had long confined itself Us
one branch of industry requiring little
else than brute force to carry it on. The
people, who were educated at all, were
taught to contemn the skilled artisan, and
when the day of sore trial came they
found thennelyas helpless and destitute of
resources. They always advecated tke
princiPbeof the trade. They preferred
.==E
to sell to Europe the product of their one
grest rude induatry, and buy from Eu
rope the{ products of skilled workmen; sopared
fol . . it. Of prowess they had a re when war came they were not p
supera
bundance; but in everything else they
were sadly denclenL They rushed like
an unreasoning horse, into the battle, for
they did not count the cost. They stole
our arms through the weakness of the
chier magistrate and the treachery of his
war minister, and seemed to imagine that
that would do. That was their prepare..
tion for war. In the ordering of Provi
dence, the North, although robbed, was
strong in its creative power, in the skill
of its people, as much as in their patriot.
Those who are ruling the policy of free
trade upon the Congress and the country
are doing what they can to put us into
the same helpless posture , before the
wheld that the people of the South found
themselves^ in when they undertook to
try the sttength of their arms against the
more skilful and versatile North. The
people of the North were taken almost by
surprise. They had no time to make any
direct preparation. They were disarmed
before the tocsin sounded, and treason in
high places had well nigh bankrupted
their treasury; but He who sees the fn.
turkand makes provision for it, had made
provision for the emergency by scatter•
ing profusely the means of production to
an indefinite extent; and through the
combined skill of artizans and statesmen
the nation, broken and impoverished,
rose like a giant, and. as its day was so
was Its strength. Its diversified indus
tries were the means of Its saltation and
its triumph.
- -
Tee Oneida Disaster—Account of the
• coublon by a Survivor.
The following are interesting extracts
from a private letter . from Surgeon J es.
Baddards, of the Oneida, to his father,
Rev. William Suddards, D. D., dried
Yokohama, Jan. 81:
"We left Yokohama at S r. 11. on the
84th, and at 6:41 were run Into by the
Bombay on the starboard quarter, the
whole of which was carried away. She
[ struck us full with her sharp iron stem,
land cut everything off as with a chisel.
The wheel, steering gear, spanker boom
and gaf f and poop cabin were all carried
away, and In fifteen
of water; minutes she sank in
fourteen fathoms and out of a
tersodnosianofdtNnytyn-tiienve.
3 1:if: e ters
ce an ai d one
fifty-four men are left to teitthe tale.
"The ward room dinner was just finish
ing at the moment of the collision. It
seemed to me as if the whole side of the
ship was coming bodily in on the dinner
table. We ail rushed on deck Immedi
ately; everything was In the greatest
confusion.. As I stepped over the hatch
combing I saw a larce steamer just leav
ing ma. She wet hailed by our executive
officer, and requested to stay by us, but,
as far as I could judge, they steamed
away as fast as they could go. I walked
aft on the quarter deck and law that every
thing was smashed to pieces: I then
looked oTC:the quarter and saw the extent
of the damage. I believed then that the
alio would go down in two minutes, and
rapidly concluded that every one must
look out for himself.
, As I realized the position I noticed
that the ward-room boat, which hung at
I the port quarter, was manned by twelve:
ler fourteen men. I jumped on the rail
land asked if an officer was in the boat.
, The men said "No," and seeing who I
I was, they said: "Jump In Doctor," and
seizing hold of [me, two or three of them
dragged me lino the boat. lat once took
I charge, Ordering a man at each fall to
l i r e 1 whe n n p order i li:t i v es. ing r e t s e ta nt y a e ll
thus until within three or four minutes
of the ship's going dowa. During this i
time the boatswain and two or threemea ,
got into the boat, making the whole num
ber seven en. We were still hanging. at [
the davits when the ship began to roll in
that peculiar way which precedes found
ering, andthe boat was dashed against
the
i ide et the ship, threaten
the deck
to dash
her n pieces. I looked on and
saw no one abaft the mainmast, and gave
the order to lower away and hang by the
falls. The fall got jammed and had to be
cut stray with a knife. Had we been
three minutes longer at the davits It would
have been too late, as she went down
like a shot after starting; and the suction
would have carried our boat down with
the wreck.
"I may mention-here that when the
boat was brought up to Idaho she nearly
sank alongside, and on examination it
was found that seven pieces were broken
pints
wstarboard
k s e i d p an and och e ou t the
__ .
place.
"
Tidy must have been done by striking
the side of the ship, and convinces me
that we could not have saved more
in our boat, as she would bare filled and
gone down with a beavisr load. As the
coxswain cat the fall a junk WES seen
ose by under sail. We started for her,
intending to bring her alongside, If pos•
ethic, and save life. Being under sail,
however, and going free. she rapidly left
us, and in about two or three minutes we
gave it up, and on turning to- goed back to
the Ship, found she had disappear. We
pulled to where we thought she bad been,
but seeing and hearing nothing, finally
headed for the shore sad landed at , about
8:10. st once went up to a Japanese
house, engaged three guides, and started
off for Yokohama, twenty-five to thirty
miles distant. We crossed five moun
tains on the way, and had the most
fatiguing tramp you can imagine. We
I arrived all safe st four o'clock in the
morning of the 25th, when I spread the
news and sent down assistance to the
wreck. The vessel was found yesterday,
but " no bodies as yet.
The English Consular Court is inves
tigating the smatter. All the officers of
the Bombay have been examined. - Oar
turn will come tom orrow. Mr. Belong,
the American Minister, is condnethig the
oroceeffings on our behalf. Yon will
know the result by the next Pacific mall. .
detain San Francisco March 17. 1. landed
on shore in undress uniform, without a
cap, and only saved my watch, by baring
it on. I have been very much shattered
by the recurrence and subsequent fatigue,
but am now much better and begin to
feel like myself. All Tokohamshas been
extremely kind to the survivors.
"The feeling against the captain of the
Bombay for not stopping is intense, and
if the court attempts to whitewash him
violence may be attempted. No vessel
that has ever been in eutern waters was
so popular as the Oneida.. Even English
officers say they would rather the mis.
- fortune had happened to one of their own
vessels. Of twelve office n, rs eating dinner
at the time of the collisiol am the-only
one left."
A letter from A. L. C. Postman, Secre-
Untied States Legation at Japan, re.
Wing to the disaster, says:
"The matter is now being investigated
and the result Will probably not be sr.
I rived at for some eight days at least.
Lady Parker, Wife of the British Minister
to Japan, was a passenger on board the
Bombay, and is one of the witnesses.
Some swearing,l hear, is going on,
and then! to a good deal of feeling on the
subject, now fortunately repressed for
the moment but liable to lead to napless.
unless. The Oronstook was chartered
to, recover the remains, if possible, of the
poor fellows who went down, and she Is
now in Susquehanna Bay, and her boats
are in active service along the coast.
Thus far only a skylight has been picked
up.
The State Treasurer Elect.
Mums. EDITGES : The redoubtable
Gen. Irwin, State Treasurer elect, has
become contumacious on the hands of
the Committee of investigation. After all
the ..tmncomber about his fitness, bon
eaty, etc., we would not have thought
the General would have refused to dis
close the truth. Bo it is however. Dot
is there not a remedy ? Is there not a
mode by which this contempt of legisla.
five inquiry can be punished ? I for one
think there is. Though the office of
State Treasurer is a constitutional, one,
the party elected to fill ft is the creature
of the Legislature. • The Legislators
should exercise not only the power of
selecting that officer, but should also ex.
ercise a proper discrimination in making
suchselection. Now, I take it, that for
a sufficient reason, and Irwin refining to
account to the State teems to me to be) a
sufficient reason, the Legislature would
be justified in. either reconsidering his
election, or deposing him from his place.
- •••-•"""-.414"...
PTITSBURGII r•Ana _GAZEITE: FRIDAY MORNING, MARCH 11, 1870
BURLMQUE.
TIIE DECA.i. .OF
tr,oni Ire New York w0r , ..i.)
Looking back over the long list (of bur
lesque actresses) one is astonished to find
how exactly alike they all were in their
capacities and experiences. From
Thompson down there does not now re
main In our memories one of the divinely
formed but artificially spoiled beauties
who was worth her weight in wadding
as an actress. Thompson, who has been
on the Marra since she was fourteen ' es
sayed Our. Nan at Nlblo's to prove that
she bad a few histrionic talents . held, in
reserve, and not only utterly failed to in
vest that parr with any indiviauslity, or
to give it the slightest original meaning,
but brought to the Impersonation the few
1 narrow devices of burlesque, and wonher
I applause by singing a song from "Ixion"
and dancing a jig from the "Forty
"Thieves." Lisa Webber was afforded
a similar opportunity in the "Tem
pest" to make good her claim of versa
tility and . ability. - But her Arid
proved a series of wriggles, and
the voice of burlesque sounded
coarse and offensive when set to the
etherial poetry of Shakespeare. Ellen
Holt, probably the most gifted of the en
tire brood; swung a few nights between
levity and lasciviousness it the Waverly
Theatre and then disappeared, Notwith
standing she CllllB here to make a per
manent stay. That she might have found
profitable engagements in New York if 1
she had possessed any real ability is
shown In the fact that Lewis, who ati- ,
peered with ner, has been playing ever
since at the Fifth Avenue Theatre, hav
ing cut burlesque entirely, and proved
himself a clever comedian. It would be
useless to enumerate the experiences of
the other ninety•Elne. The summing',
up is Ws —ey were all beautiful, but
worthless in th any dramatic sense. The
success' which attended them is due, in a
neat measure, to the susceptibility of
Noodledom. Miss Thompson Is eruthrin
edin &great many old ladies' hearts and
albums as &greater than Bidden. Paint,
it is. well known, has fora long time
been a symbol f purity a on and off
the stage, - and the wdy house
jig is the music of the spheres
to people who never heard anything bet-.
ter. If inflamed young men and sym.
pathlzing old ladles had not made pets of I
the balesquers, taking them to their
bosoms the moment they arrived and
keeping them ever after as Idols'upon
whom they weld shed jewelry and
dowers without any danger. g
having
them • returned—if, I say a numerous ,
crowd of noodles, Who cannot distinguish
between art and &asininity, and are con. ,
tinually mistaking a hurrah for hallelujah,
had not given to this ephemeral looseness 1
the patronage and applause which it did I
not deserve, the Christian instincts of the 'I
gallery would have damned it with tea.
tempt in six months, and the high-handed 1
conduct, of some of the artistes them. ,
selves must have finished the good work I
in accordance with the laws of nature in 1
less than six months more. -,.
When Thompson and her troupe went
away the lesser burlesquers seized the 1
opportunity.. Pauline Markham was left
behind atlammely for iwhile, to exhibit
bar person to the gang which Ur. Oro- 1
ver's attractions drew out of the East
Side purltens. Here she was aestbetical•
ly. studied by a Shakeeperian commenta
tor, and,her beauty and talents extolled
In a magazine article, the English of
which was so superior to the taste which
dictated it that it attracted a good deal of
attention.. At the lame time an addle
brained admirer was publishing his folly 1
to the world in another, but perhaps not
so objectionable away, by sending upon
the stage of Tammany every night the
moat costly presenter of jewelry end I
dowers for this actress. Not a night
passed during Markbara's engagement
that bracelets, diamonds, pearls and other
ornaments were net carried lip and laid 1
at her feet. Many a poor bat respectable
and good looking girl, who would have I
been au honor to a sewing machine, read II
I that magazine article and heard of these ,
,presents, and after seeing Markham and ,
, estimating as a woman will with quick 1
precision the abilities which had coin- 1
matroanmde!rhaithe both, flung
o b r ene wein if ttpa ti ressl E rto l l
pieces in some traveling show.
Finally. Markham, having exhausted
the resources of her admirer andher own,
gathered up her spoils and went also
away. Then the field was opened to a
crowd that leaked even Markham's tal
ents and inspired legs. The bevy, which
then assembled at Tammany, still under
the names of artistes, were too notorious,
too brazen, and too destitute of Abe com
monest stage smartness tq be tolerated
anywhere else in such aggregated seers
'rated form. But even these retained the
peculiarities of the original troupe. Most
of them wore yellow hair and swaggered,
had th eir defenders in front, and insisted
au flowers and jewels sad high art criti
cism, which I am free to say they ob
tained. The Tribune found • "sweetness
end light" in the performance which
was. absen t in Pechter's efforts.
The root of the whole nuisance is in the
presentment of plays which haven° other
than a sexual charm. Essayists and Ma'
wine writers may use up the daisies in
praising the beauty of women who are
professionally stripped for exhon, but
this fad remains, that the only women
who can be of any value kith° drama, and
who alone are worth the notice of alder,
are those who bring to the profession their
womanly traits, of which modesty Is not
the least. '
The arrest in Chicago of the most con.
eptcuous burlesque actress in the cons
try, for a street tight with en editor there,
in company with a no less notorious
beauty, whom ladylike qualities and vei
-1 yet voiced amiability were so loudly ex
, tolled here, points no less unerringly to
the disgraceful results which are sure to
follow any departure from the Irksome
propriety of the decent drama, and, hap
pening just at the time that Tammany-is
extinguished in its own nastiness, leads
to the hope that the vulgar vacuity of
burlesque has bad its day.
• On the other hand,- • Cleveland paper
thus notions the debut of these performers
in that city on Monday night: 'There'
was little or nothing of the broadness of
costume or action with which the blonde
idea is generally associated. - These who
went there to bludi went disappointed.
Miss Thompson is a clever and quite self
possessed young person, who knows her
business thoroughly; and, notwithatand.
lug all apprehension, was, last
sight at
least, thoroughly well behaved." •
FIDIIIISIII 14t0311.
- - ,
The Philadelphia Ledger Bayer We a
few days since noted the fact of an agree
ment by several of the railway and
canal companies as to the payment of ie.
terest and principal on bona made be
fore the passage of the legal tender act,
and which, under the paya ble esio of
the Supreme Court is in coin.
That agreement was to pay in paper with
the promise to make the payment equal
to what gold was on the ist inst. at the
end of one year, if at that time, the de
cision of the court stood as the law
of the lend. The Lehigh Coal and
Navigation Company, which is aparty to
this arrangement, has obligations of the
character in question to the amount of
$135,000, mature on the ist beend of
this sum $43,000 has already ac
cepted In paper, with the expressed prom.
tie that the payment is to be made equal
to coin if the judgment of the Court bolds
good for ono year. Aziong the. parties
who accepted payment in paper on the
con ditions named is one of the Judges of
the Supreme Court of this State, and that
too after having demanded coin and pro
tested the company for nonpayment.
The movement on foot for a total abo.
lition of the income tax will probably be
suceeesfuL The nettle Ways and Means
Committee having decided to reduce tax•
anon thirty millions of dollars, it will be I
proposed to abolish the income tax, which
does not yield an annual revenue of more
thin twenty tant.- By such a course
a s k Congress will be able to reach the
desire end without bein by at
tempted legislation lookin g g
ato nn
aoyed
reduction
of taxation on specialinterest rather than
on a general one like the income tax.
But, the Secretary says that the tax being
paid by 250,000 • persona, it is the moot
popular se well as the most equitable
source of revenue with the people.
Ile
will•not oppose a reduction of the tax to
three per cent., leaving the exemptions as
they stand in the law soon to expire, but
prefers the present rate of five per cent
on all amounts over $l,OOO.
The heavy fall of gold excites comment
in Congressional circles.' The opinion of
the shrewdest political financiers is that.
specie resumption will not occur this year,
notwithstanding the recent decline in
gold •Rumor says Kr. Boutwell holds
thlaview also. ' -
Secretary Boatwell is strongly- urged
by many leading men in different parts
of the country, as well as by some of the
banks, to make arrangements for resuming
specie payments. The Secretary dechnes
to give ant Indication as to his views on the
subject. It Is understood tinttter will
be broughB up anti discussed Cabinet.
The . Plrgan Rald
The following is .Vincent Colyer's re
ply to General Sheridan:
7o llsn. Folio B. Brunet, Chairman, I
Pittsburgh :—Sinc—Gen. Sheridan strikes
out at me almost as wildly as be did, at
the poor Piegans, ant with abort as arch
justice. He Says that in my ettract from
Lieutenant Pease's report of the massa
cre, in order to do Injustice to Colonel
Baker, and to deceive a kind hearted
public, hsuppressed the fact that Colonel
Baker took one hundred women and chit.
dren prisoners. If the General thinks
that it relieves the blackness of the picture
any to say that in addition to the ninety
women and Arty children, sick with the
small pox, killed, there were one hundred
women and children also taken prisoners,
I will add it now. Lieutenant Pease, I
notice upon a closer look; does not make
it quite so bad as that. He says there
were eighteen women and nineteen chic.
dren (none over three years, and -the
majority much younger), some of whom
were wounded, taken prisoners.
The General seems quite to forget that
the same Government which -Owed him
in command of the military of the West,
. ... . ... .. .
appointed us to do our :humane Work
among those Indians, andvirtnally mikes
tu 4 in
it our duty to stand in front of these elp
lass outcasts, women and children and
to say to every one who may tack
them: " Cease your Moody work, are
not the guilty." Of the outrages et
the poor settlers of the border he says
that "I want it to go on." No, General,
you know that yousre not justified la any
such an inference as this. Because I pall
'aside the curtain and let the American
people see what you call a "great victory"
over the Indians, it don't follow that we
do not want the van who perpetrate the
horrid crimes you portray with so much
I seat, justly punished. Strike, if you
must strike, the guilty, not the innocent.
Faithfully yours,
VIIRCYNT COLTER.
..
. 6 Papal y."
At a time when so grags interest
is
taken in the question of Pa md infallibil
ty, a declaration made some years oby
Archblehop Purcell. in a discussion ag with
Alexander. Campbell, is worth reprinting.
The Archbishop said:
"Appeals were lodged before the Bishop
of Rome though be was not believed to be
infallible. Neither is he note. No en.
lightened Catholic holds the Pcpe's
bitty We an &rile' Is eflaillt. Ido not, mad
none of my brethren that I know of. do.
The Catholic believes the pope, as • num,
be as liable to error as almost any man in
le4the universe. Menlo man, and no man
U infallible either in; doctiine or in
morals.. /tiny of the Popes have sinned,
and some of them have been bad men.
I presume my worthy antagonist will
take his in brush hand, and roll up his
sleeves, and lay it on them bard and
heavy; ao isW I • and whenever ho uses
a strong epithet against them, I will use
stronger."
What the Archbishop then declared to
be believed by no enlightened Catholic Is
now,'cording to the testimony of the
Catholic World, the prevailing °Onion
among the Roman Catholic Bishops and
theologiaits of this country.
The protests of the Catholic theologians 1 1
of Germany ageing the doctrine of infal.
libility are becoming very numerous. A
pamphlet by the Rey. Dr. Michelle, for
many years a prominent elonmpiron of the
interests of his Church and .distinguished
Professor of Philosophy, bears a title of
the moit'sarygent kind: The Otani:batty of
the Pope to the _Light of the Catholic ,
Truth, and the Humbug (the original
word) to which the Leant Defence of it
Leads. The author says that "the heal.
1113114 of the Pope can as little become a
dogma lethal. four persons can be defined
to exist In Trinity."
O. BATTLER lute appointed a colored
boy named Charles Sumner Wilson, of
, 3elem ] lase., to a cadetahip at West
Point: It is not Improbable that mue.h
prejudice will be menifeated toward him
at first, but with B. F. Butler at his back,
he can rely upon securing all the rights
and privileges - accorded to any cadet in
the Academy.
Tmc American colony in Egypt has
been interested by the marriage, on the
71h, at Cairo, of Dr. J. A. S. Grant; the
resident English physician and one of the
physicians of the Government,•to Miss
Ada Torrey, daughter of Mr. John Tor
rey, of Honesdale, Pennsylvania, Milted
States.
FOR IMPORTED
41 WRITE CASTILE
190 P,
Tor Imported White Castle Sap,
For Imported Waits Castile Pap.
Far Imported Milne Cants Soap,
For Mottled Castile Soap,
For Mottled Cattle 00.9.
Tor Mottled Castile Soap,
For Mottled Castile Soap.
M
io
Sold by the s.„` ere tar or be the pound aid
la email rake , at the eery lama prleae. at
JAMIE E. 331111 N M .!L cio• we
DRUG STOICS,
leave Comer esot ea Serb Streets. (old It. Claim)
Where san till bud a emaple.• restatement of
P.C. 11.nrs, chemicals. ?cameras ad Fluent
Meelleines of all knee.
•Iso, Inglith and batch Ala by the task at
slam donee. Si she lomat aka.
CONIIIIMPTiON OF THE LUNGS
If there Is any one eimounlon that necds to
mom carefully Imorrised epos the minds at
those •object to the ellments of the Mods and
pulmonary organs. It is the Important fact that
attautton should be pall o tho Ent twilinthrt
of three abeam.. In the start a fro demo of
sock rnedlrtues u DE. KEYSER'S gIf.CTOR.A.I.
sump will he gun to arrest the 41.4.14 and
reatore, not cell the healthy fanetions of the
tangs, bet also of the whole body. Of all mese-
diet for diseases of the lungs and contingent
organ., Dr. Key sssss Pectoral Syrup ban .toad
It of years of emperls.....4
■nd • starts person who as ever taken it that
will at speak Mehl) of its virtues.
Let any one ailetad with a cough only try ono
bottle, and as earl as it !stasis It wOl cues than.
Dr. Keyser ham an aloe stashed to las Great
Katsina Btorr, whorl all manner of chrl►b
diseases are successfully Dated. erPosall7
then of tin loop and pllmon►r7 argau, and
be would respectfully lane Mail who are suf.
falai and lave failed to got relief Dom other
sauces, to ilea his saii#od of treatmoat • trial.
Not lon. Mae, a lt{►l7 ralasta lautistabs
cotacted with the newspaper Pass of la all.
calla at Dr. E eeeee 'a aloe and took Ids medi.
gar. and was cured by la s than bat a bottle. '
Another gesilma, who Wad roughed all win
ter; was cared la lass Max wet.
• 1 lady. weakened and attenuated. with taut
doughhag. w&s nee to Woos& tato rangwed health
mad Tiger,:iss &shad when eke got the good
aaadletue that tared her. The same/ was, at
Dr. Xelter,a. •
• child. pony and pale and emaciated. was
won weed by a bottle: or two of Dr. Keyser's
Pectoral Syrup.
• led, on Liberty street, lap's longs w.f. Dr
dimmed, was restored to perfect ' : imeitisnltial
cootleusel nee of Da. ItICTIDx•D . 1.13R0 MIA
aid Dr. Buyers reataii syrup.
' A xentlemaa next dOor to Dr. Newell Store
UT. no wiß recommend Dr. K.lmet'e Preterit
lint , In all eases; less than half a tattle eared
•
DR. Ni 1611 6 ,6 GEOCAT MEDIUM !TORE
AND. NICDIOAI. OTTIOD TOR CHRONIC
DOMAINS, 116. 161 LIBTRTT STREET. Of.
la ►oars tuttll 1 o'cloiA. and Dom 7106 and I
toll at nltbt.
MatrAzi Al. .
SHAPING AND BURNING.
It le not elevens', to pommy from the trop
to Sluts In order to experience the extreme. of
to sod gold. Thorned. stadenteell the lout
sentences of thts therzometrical change Steel
or every otherdel. es the sunmelbe.eltis
out the trouble if merlnt °Yee ebe Ulf easel. , A
word with these snrolonte 7 Asters. Wham.
they doing to expedite their return tot medium
temperature I—to brest the eh Ile and bestial the
freer? Are they dosing themselves' with origins.
thereby Imperiling the aoandeese of their toles
nod impairing the vigor el flea brains end ner ,
roue eyr? Some: of them are. no doubt, but
not the issriority of th'r. It la believed. The
Tithe of Hodetter4 Strom% Bitters see harm
less and certain specific for fever and ague Is tos
deraoed and appreciated In etiolate of the eosin•
try weer pee•epieleels pielrall. The residents
of greet lecalit'es begin to tate It early fa the
epilog as a protection against the mama by
alai
tnape.r IVlZlr t d = treggretAgr:
nits of lore people, b...t the greeter umber.
If there t he ny fixed feet to tberapeatles. it In
Chile toot t Mitten are a far better eafegoard
eared by
periodic resslaritestre.
sliced by unwholesome exbalations than any ,
drug or compound In the materiainedlea
orofession.• Thls aeserleell le =Wee lehusal
port age
respect to the acuity. but bete, an Imeat
truth. and one th et nes rly concerns the health of
IVTAreIOTTDIVITVII V A I[ i i=O 4 .
Vonaded es ample and us Wends' f
ellollmany, it &les diPproval.
To break ors chilli and Pones, *swell netn
Tent: teela,there Is nothing se mli•bke 1 103
wheleenee vegetable restorative.
FILEarO BIONONGA : ILA
0b President sod Des
gre.thlsoCrepsoSr hero do .Isreol aDI desd
Z LLA AND al/MISTY- Via
CENT 3 per skere, payable la Dm Stockh r olders
g:L.Ba ,
rittibur „ , JlA , ;me w : , Twi,
. .
~,-,- ,:- s. - .-% L.. - ,.,,' ,.. ."-';'..i , ii - ,; i E=7>erk-V:-•;.:,,,,i.i.-Z..q..-3:-.,,,,,kAz,-,-,-.4,,,,.--W,k.4.4-A-,-4-444. ; .... 0..1 , *_;, - -- ,. . , .. 4 - . 4 . 1.1-,... , ,, ir.n:;:r;kiii4W -, 0--- , •:-. 1 J ~z,t,-...-.:1,,..11 . .- - >kig..-,..,, , ..i.--, -1 - . .V.
rr , -- ,-, .."! - .-?2,..A'R ,, . ,.5- J' 4 :• , ''' , .i . ;' . E` l, ';'- -, :; ';z:.-el-'4.,-,is,l-.45.i.tr:._.;...&44. -• , -.-0- 4 '. - "." ,, A , - - ,....,..•v.g.,,...- • - F , -,4.xp ,, r - r1 , ..kr.,4- ,,, ii -, -- , : - . ,, -3... '.`;',,,,,, -- .-.:e , ...,, , --- • ..,---,
' ,+
,-- v "---... ,, g .. . . - ‘'' , - , ,u .",-;:stm,.. ~,,,,t,14,,,-„,......,,,,61,;.,ip„."1.ft_
1` ':~Y h a: ~L'4 3i..
NEW ADVERTISEMENTS
MARCH 9, 1870,
WILLIAM SEIdPLES,
Nee. 180 and 182 Federal Street,
ALL LEIHYNT CIT
==za
HATS AND BONNETS,
rEbons and Flowers,
CM WEEPING DRY GOODS,
C: .simeres and Jeans,
AMERICAN POPLINS
In all the Leading Colors,
SHIRTING CALICOS,
STRIPED AND
SPOTTED PERCALES
WILLIAM SEMPLE'S,
Nos. 180 and 182 Federal Street,
£LLXUIIZWT CITY
40,1k.ISSINIDEELES!
M 50033. 031
FINE AND DO
BILL & If
• (SUCCESSORS TO
No.Bl M r. Ift
LESS TIM GOLD PRICES!
Splendid Bargains.,
it 70e., Ladies' Real lid Glues, ulna
price WI.
It 76e.. Good Whalebone Corsets.
It Ili°, Extra quality Conets,warth $0.60.
It 16e., log's Lined Buck lilts.
It ilk., litn's Lined Bark Far Top Gloves.
I pain Childcare' Wool Stoekings far lie.
! pairs lea's Wool Wired Seeks for !it.
10 boxes (100 Collin) lea or Bey's Papa?
fallen for 60e., aes'd Mies to snit.
It 07 1.0 e.. lan's Bag Grey Shirts and
Drawers.
it 60e., lea's Fine White &rho Skirts
aid Drawin—sllghtly
Bargain la lolled Edgiest and I daertia gs.
Bargains in Polled White Muslin flirts.
Bargain In golfed Night towns, Chemi
gents, la.,
AT
lORGANSTERN d: Co's;
XACRUM, GLYDE & CO.,
Nos. 78 and 80 Market Street
.hD
HORNE & CO'S.
Second Anival of Ninv Goods.
NEW SHAPES HAT AND SONNET SHAMES.
TINE PZINCH /LO.WLBII
BONN= AND THINNING RIBBONS.
NSW STYDIN IN BASH AND HOW BIBBONS.
Tre.b mOrtmcnt of
LOWS COLLARS AND CUPS&
LACY. TRINESSO COLLARS,
LACS TIMMS') UNIX SLITS.
ILLUSION WAISTS.
CHIMIZITTIS AND LAPPIN%
TUcINED MISTING,
TUOILD HAMMON,
TVCLLD
OILOANDIII SWISS.
•note dm Lot -
LADIES & OILBMI RUNT COTTON HOSIZAT
At tA. Alm
ALZIAIPDE.I KID CILOVZS
In dusk sad Colors, and all en*.
Lrt.7~i:r,:r•.l~~: l :fr➢JttA ~Y~
WHITE LEAD ANDLOLOR \YORKS,
Lj SCHOONIANEB t SON,
Hanursio.rers of WRITE LEL% SLED LEL%
BLITZ 'LLA.D, 11111015. LITIUSGE., PUTTY
and all colors DST AND VW OIL. •
0117015 AND MOTOR!.
10, 4611, 04, 416 and OS, 'Rebecca Urea,
We tall attnitlon to the rearantee fasted 60
our Strlcily Cara White Lead. and when we Jay
a "puny earboatte of 1.40 I Ira main ••eheml
calla pare. , that 1,, fret from Acetate and Hr
dime, sad therefore la white* and skperiot, both
V color and animism properly.
00 AHANTEZD . te be • punt Carbonate of
Lead and orbiter than any In the turban, aid
winthe wpm thleaste mite
tl f
on. Cali ;menage If oontal.-
t.g amalters
ITPHOLRTIMEBS
Ilhaufacturers of SPRING. HAIR and MUSK
'SATIRIC bra. reatber Roisters sad lios,
Marsh Cushions.. Corsica Monidiags and aU
Mods of Upholstery wort. Also, dealers In
WladowthadealluLt3reettand Whlta
ordallasels Partleularattentiou 'Urea
us (Amax srs sleazing and brushing. altering sad
relaying oarstria.
Oar asod• of eltanieut harpet is the otey way In
which you ea reel issued that the colossus
preserstd sad the goods thoronahlY treed Rom
all dust anti vermin. The price for elms:dart=
pmu molly maimed. Our estrous will call for
and de7iYat all hoods Imo of chart..
ROBERTS, NICHOLSON k THOIPSON:
17001sta/en •nd Proprietor, or
Steam Carpet Beatiag Ltalillehment,
No. 127 WOOD STREET,.
mbT:u 15.2111Gh
NOTICE TO SHIPPERS.
NRW ROUTE TO
BUFFALO AND TO THE NORTH
The ALLIGESNYVALLNY ItAILEOAD CO.
an vow prlpared to obit. Frelght street 5D11ip,a441.113/IEIRS.
lip,a441.113/1EIRS. wad all potata t. WEETWILN
.IForrite‘lipprf -
-w. W. C. 1171.1DITIi. sea *pat,
Corset rite sad 111 k atnets, Plum:anti.
J. J. LAWSZSICS.
°must ouputntamid.st.
=I
NOTICES
o.s42L
dultr.ot Welglu - aid I
OP/ICI:
N 0.5 FOURTH AVR., Pittsburgh.
-Wont
MARCH 9, 1870,
WILLIAM SEMPLE'S,
Nos, 180 and 182 Federal Street,
♦LLYOEWT CITY'
Nick Alpacas at 371 c
Black Al.acaa at 50c.
Black Alpacas at 37ic
Black Alpacas at 50c.
Black Alpacas at 37ic
Black Alpacas at 50c.
Having purchased over $lO,OOO
worth of the above DOUBLE WARP
ALPACAS, which for weight, color
and finish are not excelled, if equalled,
the attention of my patrons is invi
ted to dem, feeling assured they are
the best value I ever had the pleas
ure of offering them.
The Goods will be received daily
until all are delivered
WILLIAM SEMPLE'S,
Nos, 180 and 182 Federal Street,
C.A_SSIME-RES
t "liTetrileVsr
MESTIC GOODS
OORROUSE,
Biala • BiLL.)
ML gvenu a
STOCK.
A NEW
77. ". ea:VI:TWIT Z. 117, IRV'
GOVERNMENT SALE 1
By euthority of . the Hon. (MO. C. BOY/T
-WILL. !cemetery of the Treasury. I will refer
at Paella Auction, on WZDhIPIDLY, the 161.0
last., at 19 Y.. at the Custom Boles aforesaid,
that portion of the Karin Elothltal Lot whiets
Is separated froth the Eloapluil banding by Pre!la
running perallel with the Pittsburgh Scd
Cleveland railroad. This property eontalme be
tween two and three sores. and Is boated clots
to the line of Allegheny City sad is unanspathed
for mannfeetusleg pangsel on. to Ste Ptha .
smith to the eltles of Pittsburgh uldArAgiseei
and Its gultAlet for moving freight be key direc
tion—the ?Manage, Tort Wayne and Chicago
Railroad !armlet the sipper line, .4 the MU
burgh and Cieselaud •Itallway pealed °Tat the
{roved; Fretls .beet forms the lower been.ry
while the Ohlo dyer Is but three or four hundred
yards ott.
TrAlte—One•liftit esab,the bal.. in four
equal enured, peyments. the Int of which
shall .Ith made on the 16th or June sm., with
interest from the day of ale nista paid.
Tell details will ba glees at thee and pines of
• All bids to be made subject to
to the approval of the Secretary of
the Treasury, the Department re
serving the right to reject .ant or
all bids if deemed to the interest
of the Government to do so. • .
- THOMAS .STEEL,
SUOCL3BOIIS TO
ALT
pa.kNiNo niILL MEN
AHD Onin39.
Tb. us derstaned .haa letter. Detest of the
United States for the Improved emanation of
weather•otrdtag, tradde hated and of wainn•
toting for 00001111.. The 'mother -boarding. by
thU patented Improvement. beteg more portion
-luly,lntendtd for ventral ate, end retetdolag
Mat darabUlty and beauty of •DPlStiliCe: sad
lt Is to eeastractad at to entirely avoid the ate
of 10101 sad to prtreat linter from eater
lag Um Mato, or the fantod or the showing Of
the itdats 07 action of the ...rather on the Lb&
EMU. Quanil
El=
EMI=
PITTSBURGH
"E'ROPIMETIORIEI
M=32
01
CARPET'S.
Oil Oloths, Window Shades.
DIUJUGET SQUARES,
it the Lowest Prices Ever OM&
BOVM, ROSE & CO.
ALLIGHZNY CITY
straviroo. 01 CUSTOM.
I=
TAlig NOTICES
her.
Lunde naiad and wainscotted by this SOW
method are so comtrusted as to form Perfect
hamlets as chosply as by the -ordinary gooring
boards *lone; Unroll Werehtilleihe showing or
the johns from say aim, snail:ovine no refuge.
Pir bogs.
He hos also anchored the patent right of what
is wantonly known as the "Moulded Weather
boardiag."
Hs her &spored of the following territoria • and
chop right to Allegheny county, fez both
pop
"'ltt.erfandorg. the right for the territory
south of me Meets in satd county.
Ts;M/seen I Douglass, W. right for the
11l ward of Pittabmg.
'To McKee A Douglas. rho right for thair
miD. Striternth ward. - Plitaborah,
To HUI. Pottorson I Co.. shop rights for their
mill. Sixth ward, Pllifbargli.
To /Lie:. Steillaret for the borough of HO-
Heenan.
To ratkOZ Paul. for lint, Seeped, Third and
'Nrth wordy. elm of Allegheny.
To Seed Broth rr, chop [tent at thelt mill. la
&yeah ward. eity of Allegheny.
To Dunham, Saint I Co.. for the boroughs of
sbarpstrargh end Siam also the toworldna of
Staler and Ind.an.
All persons are warned ogelust lef,Engles
upon either of sold wears, and those wining
to porthole will plan all address me, at
Ito. TS imlthield street, Pittsburgh. Po.
J. C. ANDERSON.
M k il '
C/ 'F4 .g 4
0. - ; 1 4
All
Vita 1
goilckal
.az .0 ra 1
-. 41 j fill: 1g a
i
Hm 12 4144 1 15 171
A ''' ';.'
rjoiroto 11
E c " 4°2l4 i m
F . ' g
m 1 d 1
g g Z
0 l2 4
CHOICE AND RAE
CONFEMONS,
FOR PRESENTS, AT
GEO. BEAVER'S,
LLfIN!UiILIZ
jJIi - -
HEADQIIMITEBB FOR
A merican Watches
WATTLES & SHE&FER'S,
101 711111 AN Laos
Lit at, laodi and To a /Mule= Iratelien.
to BILL AT TIM Vray
4 1:4 i t e . assor . atest [ADIEU' BOLD
as spit. "
Bleb ' Is Insl E l44; B•sta
• lug bbl• sale
hit J. B. 041.191131.11, 141 If Mau
THS. &c.
OIL CLO
REDUCED.
DRUGGETS.
Ingrain Carpets,
81 FIFTH AVENUE.
EXIMI
rrzw - csi
POSITIVE. REDUCTION IN PRICES
ire lan now reoelytnn oar
NEW SPIUNG STOCK!
g ax,r,ltT.
halt& and 'americans Brussels and
%vestry Carpets,
"mug .. SIB
Which we offer Tifte
yard len than the lowest• last rear.
This being the mtg.; redac ee
tion that has been
mad.
th fors mal ln ears, Matra oar New Stock
worof Pereheeera
it'FlßlAND & COLLINS.
71 and /3 Fifth Avenue.
• . IPICOND FLOOR.)
NEW CARPETS.
Reduction in Prices
TO CORRESPOND WITU
WHOLESALE RATES
IcCALLIIM BROS.,
51 FIFTH AVENUE
ABOVE WOOD STREET.
f 11•2 •
itECAMICTION IN
RPETS
Fora Short Time to Prepare for
SPRING TRADE.
OMB/ NeCISNIVCR & •CO
Have marked that , good. 001,12 below last sot
6W.! moos. Poll non of
Car Pet s,
Oil Cloths,
Muggels , /0.,
EASTERN PRIM.
/"" l 'r.rn. e nr Crigti b ==
re=. bi
OLIVES IeCLINTOCK & CO.,
23 Fifth Avenue.
GOAL ANDOOKII
ttillillill3ll , I ' I
'eleetiss nit
TougAlogheny and C,onnensvide Coal,
And Ilallulleturer of •
COLL, SLIME OD DKULPHIMIZED COM
071101 , AND YARD, mum Boller sad
Dooms street. Libettg. :ad Cltmer stmmts.
Math ward; Leo Second weal, Eighth 'rust
sad et foot of Rom street. r. C. B. B. Depot.
Second ward. •
Orders left at either of the share oases. or ed.
drugs to me through Pittsburgh P. 0.. re•
ochre prompt asterason.
Beer tow Dom Ime esteptMgs Homer, Wells
Co. Wm• Smith. Delon MOO, 13. 3. Pow
ittmrl.lll.tohelt utelshelmou Co...Bissell
Co.. •
__ltZ, gl trtf , ., ,Br lV. l :
wm. x. yams J. n. Ly e D e a nmes
Nershall Co.. Alien. McKee a°Co., De-
Ylllloellragnreß., Permsyrreale
8.
COAL COAL!! CgALIII
DICKSON, STEiVART & CO.,
Halter removed taar 011 a to
NO. 667 LIBERTY EMBEEr .
Ctheithr city Math 11111)11ZUONDZLOOIL.
ire um elMtred es famish good 6 IONUELIG.
REMY Luxe'. NUT CIOAL usethecue., as SU
M r " U =Me their oath. er Wizened to
ttuvagli the aea. wui be stheethe to
ereaour
Murray 41 Lanmads
Florida Water
The most celebrated and
most delightful of all per
fumes, for use on the hand
kerchief, at the toilet, and
in the bath, for sale by all
Druggists and Perfumers.
Patarwr
ITRADE MARK
DiTlitan'S
sxmia-vnoow
1
Lamp
KEYS•
Joll.:OrixCia...TAS. aLLT..I7,OIri. LIDDALL
HUI STEW BREWERY,
• SPENCER, MEAT is CO,
Xaitsters and Brewers of dk,
PORTER AND BROWN STOUT.
PiT~BBBeB, PA:
ROZZAT 'WATSON, =stager.
THE BIHMSTRiI
mosimmist
NO. 59 IVILAIIIK.
lovry artide Ass iteri redoes
80 deg go. Bat. sodowisteiy/bF 0
OFFICIAL
pirrsßtritGH
rnorosaLs.—sealed 1 7 'ropo.
PALS anti be received at Ay Wooer cue,
ites Room RC it et th for tb e iuilo -1
fruit 5130,000 bustle. ef clean Nut Covl, to T.O .
delivered se the Lower Water Worts:3le 000:
btu/leis of cleaa Nut Coe, to be delivered at the
Upper Wwer Work.. Soli waist ottecalle-!.
semis artless, dor plugs, Sad nap Tee., Th.
et.re ersetsect to carouse.. ADM larli, se.
ceittliiiie Ull March 31. telt. Tee Conerittie
"Mg* "Ilaht4rlVVed.bel;;rented . •
eut.
CiirT Codettotheu i S 017 riot
plTeghpacili, PA.. March 11. h. /1110•
CEALED PROPOSALS twill be
u.colt,:in compliance with a rem. loci
of the (NOUnfillt, passed lebnlary 1070.
Also, a let of Joe Plinths' to bet o ghee eat et she
same Um. Yen*. destaiug thl
erecuacas Or the wortto be rarelsheri at this
oSee.
rob 7 U. 31c00WA.N. OR) COntr.
NoTicE.
In the Miner of Opening blip 81,1
•
Folios In beret... , even that the amestment 111
sonde by the Viewers for the opordes of Rout
nueet hat been Sled In soy Mice for collection;
that If the sums tm not laid within WM , . On , e
from the dote hereof. Ilene will be Cad tines . ..
for nislost the properties weaned; until tertnn,
costs and fee., and the same collected by leen
process.
J. If. SLAGLE, City Attorney,
No. 10(1 Iftfth Avenue.
rirrentrantL Yeb. 92.1170. - fe24vAhl
NOTICE.
ru . the latkr of Opestiog of itwocd Strezt
•
Nerhee IS hereby given .bat the assemment list
mule by the viewed In the opening of Aitroad
street has been filed In my Ogee for colleellon:
that If said asSeessiente a . e not Paid
thirty days item the date hereof, lieus will be
Wed therefor &goad the properties flasks
with Interest. costs and free, and the same C l.
looted by legal process.
1:0. 108 Fifth Avrnur.
rfinustou. Vet.. 23,1810. fe2.1:000
41,LEGIIEN 1 _
...Z.V.f . r3,4,1V.U. 7 1 1 0.
°TICE II
Owner. of Vaal letats, west of ;Federal
street, who hare faked to oomp.y with ihe Reg.
tetry Law. are beretry notiled that they will be
required I. return descriptions of their Property
for registry (to present deed. or title paperal to
this oftlee within the num cf thirty dare from
the dots of this advertisementi. otherwise they
will be held ll.ble to the penalties Eel fOrth la
the clause pried. herewith appended.
=ROT FROM REGISTRY ACT.
Stale Laws, 1669, Page 014:
• • •., glool&tito duty of reglotertng nro'.'ortY
Do neglected or omitted, or net be cosonlled with.
Iylly a• may be deems' neeeSsary to In
-17 completion or the pimp', then arter
• notice, by public •dver , ilsement In
Use edictal papers of the city, to the owners or
rest estate in said city not registered, and a
written or printed notice anal' have been .erred
emai
sr owners, or. delivered on the
property. should they fall to have Itch record
made. then and to that ease they shell be ■ublect
too boa of vie Dollars toy each month of nett
neglect. deltas Dom the termination of said ad
vertisement; and 10 ease the same he aealeeted
for the mi. of Blz. mouths, a Ilerk , far tbe =ea-
Was.ted Ines sad costs shill In bled and collre
ed as manfelyal claims are now of rosy be bens
after by law collected; the ra'd flues tabs wad
Into the City Treasury; ibe notice to platter
[MIME to neater VrePetri may be O.= . 0
to ambr•te the property of any particular sr
or [action. oraolnumber of wardi, or the tell •
large. • • •
CHARLES DAVIS. .1
CITI 114011.10E5.
Entrl
'Crrr watunreau • N Cr men. I
haulaunwuCaur.rA.; 11111.1.
NOTICE IS HERE BY GIVEN
that the asseutaent. made by the Vlewere
for the cocaina or FULTON STREET, DM
ward. bas been filed to this office for examine
lion. and 'can be sees here until Mandl
11370, When It wW be returned to Coahuila
C1if1.1“.19 1 k rLd. .
12==
EOM
~ . 1
CARBOLIC BALVE.
The important discovery of 1
the CARBOLIC ACID as a ,
CLEANSING, PILRIFVEIG, and 4
HEALING Agent is one of the 1
most remarkable results of 1
modern medical; research. 1
During the late civil war it I
was extensively wed 'in the }
Hospitals, and was found to I
be not only a thorough disin
fectant, but also the most won-
derful and speedy HEALING 1
RERIV.DI ever knowi.
1
It is now presented in a
scientific com bi nation with .
other soothing and heating /.
agencies. in the , form of a I
SALVE; and. having been al
ready used in numberless cases %
with most satisfactory and ben-
eficial results,we have no hesi
tation
in Offering it to the pub- 1 L
lic as the, most certain, rapid,
land effectual remedy for all I
gores and tricers, no matter of
how long standing for, Burns, I
Cuts, wounds, and 4 every ':
ABRASION of SHIN or FLESH, 1
and for Skin dbeasee generally.
Bold by all Druggists. Price 25 cents.
JOHN F. HENRY, Sole- Prop'r,
No. 8 College Plate, New York.
DR.
. . NiTECUMER. • ,•
i •
riONTIAIIES To TREAT ALL i
114, Drlnte au. .. a saptaw in all Worn., La i
nary filatai= ed . ; ettectul b lermitLtr d e .
nal V7 ' Clh i nea. and Isitpotenc;, resultlis Dora I
seltntente or other cause., and White groeiseell
some ot the following . erects, as blotches, UAW
tenseness, Indigestion, eonsorention, aversion so
seclety., namsnlinese, dm 4 of nature events. I
lew. of Wa•ory. Indolens isootarnel esolastotte, k
sin Inauy so nonstraldng a sexual to to 0
rooter marriage tmeatisisetery, sad therefore
Improdent, are•permacally cored. rare?. afs
rroneVadine egsTatti:::l d e=atgrt
eve the Doctor a trial: he never fan..
• particular attention even to ell Female mass
Violate, Leueoresen or White., Tailing, Wants
mation or Ulceration of the Womb, Ovar. • '
pratithi,- Amenorrhoea. Menorrhsnla, Dimness
naryboes, and bterllity or Barreatness, are COW.
ad With the (restart manewl.
It Is oclVOTldentthat a phyticlart who contact r 4
himself exitinstrely to the Mar of • Corwin .1...
'of 4100110. and treat. thousand. of canto Irron
Wt sequin creator fkillln that macialier
4.l " te " Vcirrrib Plus n medial Paniniii
or t,: : T .l .T v r y. f .ot.... .tegr....... , : n tyl vth & e 4 :
=would...bites them Ls dettrendas the pros 4
Clan nl=ll of their ComPlerate.
Toe atebllshloo o conDriting ten =Phi 4
50..., Is mistral. When It is not onvirentant ta 1
rialt On sitY. Me Doctor's opinion can be oh.
ratt=i i nt •
eon lTt i tarAtrtr of tnegnos.
RIII Some instances, however, • personal y
Woo Is abeolately neeessarY. 7 : , d .i . , la ,
=1:11 tiortnil, l l6"2, "th ... ... 1
I,l=ireftrar"'llle Varilirat%'"lnuedPrrA
Dientoto roticreety,nneteling medicated . ..Roe I
bathe. All prescriptions Sr. Dr.liortia hi Lrft .
DOeter's Mil taborat...dnr hi. Awreo.. l ..-
oervldon. Medical pamphlets at o co Doe, of
by mall for two etaraps.. _tie. Innt•lr Who nn.•
Wed. read what he ems. Hours 9 •at. to ll_
deadeye 11. lc war. K. Ofece s .bio. 9 VM.III
wraitiT. MCAT Court ETPIII6. Catuburth. • i
OR'S GREAT FINAL
G SALE
CLOSIN
0 0 TIOS
Progress at
Is Now in
ER'S,
BARK
ET s9piß,]o]mvr,
di in pries, and must be soldliis
CM
Mil
Y.
city Attorsu-I
I==