The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, May 19, 1870, Image 2

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    THE DAILY GAZETTE
• OFFICIAL PAPER
Of Pittsbnigh, Allegheny City . and
' - 6kzi6iit7ttLogr ll . 3 :
Jitikalkhom."_ea_pnak,eut Hey!..t.
•
THURSDAY, MAY 19, IRDi.
BONDS In Frankfort, 95;
PETROLEUM la Antwerp, ttat
GOLD dosed 1zi . .,15ew York yeatarday at
. . .
WE era Indebted, to Jon!:
Esq.. fora copy of the normal repori of
The Auditor General On 'railroads. cantle
- Lna telegraphs.' Acta - tit/Timm:.
ot.Wubington, D. U.. brut alio placed!,
under obligations for public docanarblit.
Tau amiltoze voted without „moleem.
tooth New York 3"PewiNvy Ser' 4sl '
of thfun apprecistind Die privilege of suf.
frig. 90 highly "repeated" aid t h ereby
got themselves into legal trouble. We
hardly thought any of the freshly made
dtisems would so woo take to Democratic
Ir IS by no means . a Cheerful fact that.
In proportion to population, yittsburgh
has more depraved Ina fallen women than
anyother city in the- Union, not even ex.".
ceptlng New York or New Orleans. The
eviller' been steadily growing and the
anthoritlea are powerless to render a bet
ter condition of society.
Tins Mennen Bonandeserve the thanks
of the entire community for having com
plied With the respectful demand madr
•-through these colturina .for the revocation
of thelioense granted to that den of ini
quity and rink-hole of pollution on Third
avenue where Collins was murdered a
' few days ago., Nye tope that the Board
will as promptly act on other similar
houses when It is discovered that a min
takeints Made In,licensing them.
jar. GEORGE K. •ARDERSON hag gives
hie cement to run-for the State Senate, to
succeed the pnresoinded Lowry, gho, I
himself, will be an independent candidate
if be can prevail on the Democracy to
make no nomination against him. The
opposition will hardly acquiesce to the de
-man& of the saintly aspirant for fresh
hooor7and the upshot may be the elee
flail of a--straight out I:mocrat, and a
worse calamity than such a result might
happen to the people of that district. .
THE INDIAN RAID on the emplop.a of
the Kansas Pacific Railway is fresh eri
&nos that mild mannersand peaceful talk
will not aoomplleh much in dealing with
the red men. They can only be brought
to terms by harsh measures, - killing being
a healthy thing in meet cases. SIFEDIIDAN
knows how - best to-deal with
. therdknd it
is to be hoped that he will vigorously
• prosecute his campaign against the (Arendt
tug tribetrand teach them that it is better
to be law abiding and peacable' than mall
' clous'and aggressive:
Olin of the refined and elegant 'writers
of that great journal, the Chicago Tri
bune, easel:ended. by the recent delega
tion of working;nen from this city , to
.aelduillon, says of. them : -.Jenne of
these rosswitictraing operaiites do noth
ing all day bat , strike nails on the head.
Beraelnakia bolsi. ell the - rear - rands.and
nothing mare. The man Who is at pees.
eat before Congress, at the • suggestion of
his unprincipled empleyer, to point to his
hands and ask protection, or ihns,44
is the mime thing, does perhaps mil n g
'at ail, but, with dull, steady, menet° one
Manual energy, strikes one spothour after
hoar." This, the gentleman thinks,
gives him the right to call Pittsburgh
worklnacien "the idiots of r division of
labor." Knowing nothing of • this writer
but what we litre see, and knowing what
we do about some of these "idiots," we
would be willing to wager that, in a com
petitive examination for any position ex
- Opting, perhaps, that of sensation news
paper writer, the idiot - would Outstrip the
other person. And at the same time he
would make better holm thin the other
one dose letters, and stake more effective
blows at hie nail - than.this other person
does it—protection for instance.
REMOVAL or THE CAPITAL.
. Mhoreoative Cimittee appointed by
.rational
the Conve ntion which assembled
at St. Louis on tho 20th day oOctober,.
A. D. 1889, and acting under the uthority
),•
conferxtd, upon them for this purpose,
• .
• have olledaCenecittiirs,' to be composed
, •of delegates from all the States jaad Terri
.
' taxies, and from the District of Columbia,
to assemble at andonati on the :sth clay
of Oelober nert;iii 'consider the question
, . .
„ o f t h e mama' of the Capital, and to.' tehe
• rich action thereupon as shall be deemed
wise end . proper. We subjoin the text of
• . the call as follows:. . .
Thli Convention is to be composed or
• .three (8) delegates from each Congo*
'r *mat Detrick sin 46) ironzeacti State” it
large, tiros (B)=from, each Territory, and
• -- . throe (8) from the District. of Columbia, to
' be sprinted( by 'the Goverxre of the
' - Stales and Territories resrctieelY. end
tbeblayew of the city, of Vashingtoti. f
~ .. If for any reason the Governor .of any
' State or Territory abed fail en' fuse to
- . appoint delegates, the appoiniol;n ' t shall
be made by a Convention called for that
• ' . ,
- InCeilecueskaue of the proposed removal
in Congress, in the pr een, in "the forum,
and among the people, directed and 'than.
Wed the deliberations and action of
-` . the Con by
vention 'which met. at St. Louis,
dontentrated the value of organized ac
Smits behaltharedoveloped to strength,
have exposed the weakness ot the opposi
tion, and leave no morn to doubt that
speedy success will follow vigorous and ,
. - falththl effort.
To the argument Inuted'enthe faCnstha;
the political poWer of the nation—its
muses of population, the seat of its great.!
set agricultural, mineral, commercial, rae,, ,
chemical, and reanufactraing capacity and
• . wealth, its greet railroad centers—ere all
-
found In or . rapidly tending toward the
• . - ander; that in that region
it be found
and developed the ;that ,typetof Arrert;
oth chatacterand enetly• that tbertf, NI
.` from the exposed border; :but ',etching
.
, ••- iota oriel vigor t,b' every ,quat , Lof its,
- wide domain , the home of Its. lanai'',
attentive and admilVeliongrwvt will
•:, - -.:l* safest in war, and in OD
at ~ tcmm
Weeper:slot grad,ln. ' . !lit! the ,
...., I _,'.: :lade and_entre; itiod,,tgeograpbt,
liber-to
, 1 'oil, terri ithatt reprise/dative,
11ther , arid Indireeeilheeletiell' Met Preeti•
--
--eel vexed le reeet:of ionoval d , , only
00 1 1 ;9 Ulm berg
tad, viz:
.•.,'W.,.. lIMOIC 'Mew! el eehing -
Nrsmelthell
the
-;.•'' •of eare . renthilsrblio build
: , --..... --',. itegtisi Wliam*: a/ VV ta
:. .110%,...„.1141111412g1:1,-.10olino:
' be helped to trea
' - 7 ' i''l.-'.-i i ndeed wh i ch
1
. e`new Capital become, • neoitffiti.
provide 'dulls accomriodaOw for the
,_ . lethlieservants, charged with the duty of
1 SiveteArtif and 'Oefocing the
- -, .-
~ The weeknemof the - demon
latinuatailasqm of the .
.' ' ' • 7 - , at il Witten that thi ' '
. _ , = Cdlllll=lls
ill/La elin• WO Z
. ttfthit Meieetti Of the PeePhtlei tC.II
'.. eht lt, Of etiee llf6l ( IPM 1011 : - /ina tO 1
', •Weeeitheet eleleallell .feZ tbe re-
~ ,,O terosl to its new and piquant/at home.
dwe invoke the Interest and the cc.
-. firtice of all Mewls of nroareirla the
. md,
that this Convention, Inisembon and
in tharlsow , may not be teetreethY •ei the
. 003ssiem and the Intermits committed to It.
7 ,
ME
47'4'
En
CAUJIPSTiara•HAMiIk. 'L WITNESS
The Sermon Preached at the Anni
versary of the Pittsburgh Church
Home, at at. Peter , . Church. Pitts
burgh, on the Third Sunday Atter
Easter, 1870.
Ili lII*.
ol
~, RY~tcu~ißr 33''6 dl b word. OF 4. ,0d. do 111
tithe eameoftMl 4Jss'o. CoIn I"
''Aisc' -it
, . front the•seend of the
evening's service, la very appropriate to
thihmassion on which we are n ew Roth
together.e The w ork , ifilch'
iisiis done
that institution who. e record for the
, je .., wo. h ‘ ,..„,, joint rent, is emphati
cally ° done in clot. name of!the Lord
Jesus"—done in the,w ay Ile ban appointed
. ,
—done. to thew of whom He eaid.--"lnin
much an rt have done it mato one of the
least of throe my hrethren, ye have done
5 unto Mel" (To 'do) leao Ikt.'..oftee to the
Entelitihtmd-thefsouis o_ tree bir4ten or the
neglected child, to furnish a retrea t ,and
..
resting-place for the - declining yeare of
We- . helpleka 'aged .poor, to, call forth
Cialstian'Atidity to ouch exercise of its
blesirnintiiiien ilia - ill lead through the
supply of temporal wants to the longing
for spiritual things, to sanctify bonen".
lence by religion, to point the beneficiaries,
of Christ's Church to Christ; the Head of
the Churth, to give 'cope to the zest of
, Chrintian women in the service of Christ'n
Church—theoe are the — noble objects of
I the Pittsburgh Church Home; and en
I much of its success as by (lod's favor we
are permitted to perceive, tends to God's
glory, because it is tiros "done - in.the
1 name of -the Lord Jesus."
Ocir tett, brethren, gins us the rule of
all our action—of every wont and deed,
Iso far as it-is the subject of conscioun co
-1 'hien and reflective purists. "Whitten.
over 'ye do,"—in your private life. in your
public relations, as well as in your morn
professedly religious ralling—"whietro.
ever ye do in word or deed, do all in the
Iname .of the Local Jesue"—that is,
del all as redeenited be His :great atone.
I moat and as living by 'His imparted grace.
Whatever be the immediate object you
propene tit aceemplinh, lot it be a means
toward the remoter object of the glory
of God; let it lie in than plane of vision
that looking at it, you nee beyond It is the
distance your . crucified awl exalted
' Savior . All we do, can and may and tunat
to done in the name of our bold Jesits,',..if
1 , we would, according to our voestion , make
our life an aceeptable oblation to (ind, as
bis.rsuch,crildn:S.
command,.Sl by adoption. red"mod by His
de
''il
; tlte!i ' a, tor ' general in
its prescription. may. Ito I said. well guide
our discourse thin evening to the conoider
ation of those principles of Christain 'le
evidence which govern each institu
tions as this our Church llomC. And in
order that we may grasp those principles
and their application, permit me to throw
my remarks somewhat into the form of an
argument, demonstrating the purrnoe of
Christian benevolence. in its twofold re.
lotion to the life below and the life to
come.
I. Christianity, then, is sent into the
world to show and prove the Gospel of
Chrim by putting in operation—loo-fur
nishing living examples of the truth, and
of the method which wan divinely oppoint
ed for the conversion and salvation of the
world. The Church is in the holy scrip
, tares oalled"the body of Christ"—and that
phrase convey. the. implication, that it.
f members are now an the hand and the '
' eye and the feet of Christ were to His
work on earth, when Ile was present in ,
a mortal body. Clain now works in and
by Ills Church. The member of Ills body
l idur beats bilp to the needy, in the hand
Of Chris! dispensing HI. bounty; the ono I
who ministers consolation to the stricken I
soul is the• tongue of Christ, speaking
peace; the ono who visits the afflicted, is,
as it
peace;,
fear of Christ going on er
rands of mercy; and ea the many activi
ties of Christian benevolence, are, in the
fulnees of the figure, the identification of
Christ's . Member. _with Himself in the
work of lightening the sorrow., healing
the wounds, and taking away the e'lns of
this alnful fallen world. w
Consider, then, the motive power and
• ..t-tclanc i cherfirt.....l C6rtnen 'work I.
the days of • His., ficsk, ;It was love to
.. , I k, sou r.. hr ... v . said •in order.'
to influence the souls of men to faith in
Him as their helper and redeemer, He
.showed himself their helper in their tem
pbral toiletries and 'needs. The world lay
helpless and miserable in its sin, under its
condemnation. It had no power Of self
renovation; it was. as regards Its own
effort., utterly helpless, without any means
of 'extricating itself front its fearful core
&hon. Our Lord Jesus Christ, from His
throne in Heaven, beheld this hopeless
humanity, and His heart - filled with an in
' finite pity and love toward mankind. Ile
'originated a new hope, and began a new
I inftution of good into the guilty mass. He
came Himself to earth, and nutted Aimee!f
to the fallen human nature that He might
clew and restore it; and bring it back to
virtue, to happiness, and to God. He
made an atonement for its nine, suffered
its miberles that. lie might take them
away, and give hearted eternal life. He
became in this way a fountain of good to
man, and Ida love was tho source of a
river of - divine grace. of wham healing
Waters man might drink, and in whoae
waves his defilements might be trashed
away:. The point, then, Is this: That of.
all the good that come. to man—the epic.
heel good, the temporal good—the first
'cause, and source and origin in our Lord
Jesus Christ.. Christ gives, and. man re-
COWIN; and this relation of • divine grate
and love teethe guilt and the misery of
Man:Lto his spiritual and temporal wants
LIU the` eentril t principle of practical
Ohrietianhty
Nei-, of that of which Christ: is the
fonntaire. His Church, His body, this man
ifold complexity of member* who irativid.
• ually are called Chrintians, in the channel.
And, therefere, filled as it.,4s with His life,
ilialrlclit th e expreintiontofj lO at t life; its
Milani is to gint,de ding/ mad, to distrib
ute the health, the happiness, the purity
and the holiness which Christ-originates
and impute. Christianity, then, brethren,
in hilts: essence a system of giving—a I
npeouli,by which r -those "dad have diem-
Relies received are henceforth to dispense;
in which than who are filled with the
flowing streams of the love of Christ are
to pour forth that love upon the world, if
" 0 bo.flidi inti 7 I, , ist , Task out the Bill of ,
tlitippi erorid and wltife it !holier, and no 1
ha el•.•• _ . " I
'The Church, then, was Dent into the world
not only to preach a doctrine, but to show
it in active operation—not only to tell men
to do gOod, but to show them how—not
only to ask them to be converted, but to.
show them what eeittserted people are by.
lining ezampler—not only to proclaim till.
I ration, but to be a, coin= of the swirl.
And this it is which de the &Serener,
, between the christian and the worldling.
I As regards the individual, while he is of
the world be an do nothing but receive
of Christ's grace for conversion and regen.
ecWit. but Iffy, he Lae Wm . m e one of
' been, /a eater. into s new relation,
not only to Clod but to his brother man.
He is then not only a receiver, but a dis
penser ; it is for him to understand the
word of the Lorf /IMO, lee fie esaid,llt is
more blessed to girefthan,tdriceive." He
ha. that which he can give, and therefore
he Is blessed ; and that which he has to.
give, be it, money, be, it prayers, be it
teaching, be it, infinefee.ke Ittexampleo.-
it ,b444tgi Id &Mid tiofdlopense in
connection with Christ's invisible gifts,
so that it is a blessing to the reca t Orhe
Is not only blamed - himself, be:
' comes a ehannel of blessing,"a loess of
I grace, a power foe teen in the *WA ... •
"flotbilhmse.- so 'low -419 . 0.11!* fa.
membersteL Alle."body, or , Chrutt,.... Vos.
are made alge to . be ;tin,, Wide and feet;
Hie eye and tongue , to eer and to dial
pense His goodness and Ills love,
_for,,,Ll*
redemption and restoration of sidfnli lick
faring humanity. And as your capacities
ate lath fa your rule of, duty. ," Whaterl
er ye hr,,ist,eford or deal, Aid . , all in the
r,a,ft. or the Lord Jeliii." 'That rale is
- gemmed up in one word, fore—love to God,
i andil to euretitielghbor.
wirth ",Thott
feb shah
vis
i t . Geld, s4l thy heart,
Ifni, tad with all thy
r i h. is the find tad great com
mandment. And the second is like unto
it: Thou shalt bra tbtneighbOr as thy-
Altai prithesetwo,anruhandments hang
radii lair and'the pAildistil B."
ll—Christ's love, their. originating in
Heaven, and flowing-down to earthiln_the
channel; Wroth -1i themotive OW- 1
it elan vs t riii.,:.,.o4 coirrenw; l
ly, alrtnie c thin:actildty lethargy/re I
Mon of this Divine-gift cif"kve orcharity. ,
concerning which Baia:Paul sings such a
1 11 0lieSohnitt Witte - VA chapter cd.
' lst
Corinthians. Let to :arirlairie, thin, an
', °ther step" in our argument and ask, how
I does this inward force.' Christly lore find
I its proper axproinderd. The answer is. in
' two trays. corraspandent to the objects of
our love. Lows to. God ands its expression
PWSPIGH DAILY. GAZETTE THURSDAY MORNING, -MAY 19, 1870
.
Iniconihip; love to midi in all the..
, rnied
alkitlea Ciifolence and charity.
And fiat of worship—tioi.expressioif of
,
' love to God. Now, by worship credo not
mean merely prayer, for prayer relates to
ourselves and our wants, and is the asking
from God that which we need for ourselves
or others. Prayer in the availing our.
selves of our privilege of coming, to a
Father who towel us; but it is not so much
e ~,,r e seien of our love towards our
Father in Heaven. —The-woaship which-is i
the expression of onr lime towards God is'
rather an Offering tolfini,, an oblation, an
ascription, than a petition: And, there.
fore, if, we really love God, and seek to 1
express that love, what form an our ehris ,
Gan activity take, but that of making offer. I
logs and oblations and ascriptions—of . giv- 1
ing praise and thanksgiving—of offering
'
homage and adoration—of bringing- the I
best we have and are tb set forth His hon. I
or and glory. Tlds is the principle which 1
:governs no much of the liturgy-and order
of the church. God condescends to ae. I
rept of our offerings and our worship, and
to account them pleasant in his sight, be.
cause they are the expressions of our love I
to Hint: 'Ho 4icigns to be in need of what I
we can offer to him, that he may open a I
way for the activity and - work of love.
For this reason he armpits houses of wor. I
ship to be temnles of. his", presence, that 1
.
ma love may make them costly and beau-,I
taut offerings, such as is tills noble house I
of prayer. And so with
,the 'worship we I
offer; let it be the offering of ourbest—the i
best emotions of our hearts, the best lan
guage
of ours lips, the largest measure of 1
our material possessions; the adequate ex-
• premien of a real love, the true setting',
forth the honor and glory of Him who is
our King and Lord and God. -
And so the love to man, which re the '
other part of our Chriatian duty-, finds its
expression In acts of benevolence and
charity—in the fact that the perennial
stream of heaven-sent bounty does over
flow and sweep through. the channels of
the Church—through and out of the
hearts of Christian believers—Lin all -the
manifold ways by which human poverty
and suffering can be relieved, and human
sin tan be taken away. Just no the laic
to ilud finds its outflow in the worship of '
the Church, so the love to nom with which
Christ fills the heart He has accepted for
His own, is intended to find its expression
in all acts that may do goal to the balies
and the souls of Ulnae who need Chriat's
sympathy, and therefore ours. And as it
is as member* of Christ, that we are elm,
bled thus to carry on Chriat'a work by our
charity. so, brethren, it needs to be cosist
ed on, that:works of benevolence and in-
Agitations of clarity are just as much
patina the Church's organization and ae..
] tivity, is are, houses of worship, or public
]
serviceilof prayer and praise_ Unless the
Church - is 'active in them..alte Is nigh unto
spiritual death. "lie that loveth not his
brother whom he lath seen, how tan lie,".'
nobs the .kpOstle St. John—"how can lie'
love God, whom he bath not seen V! The
thing is impoesible:
111-But DONT we advance to another
consideration: the principle that oll.Chris
tan benctridenre to the bodies or minds of
men—all Christian interest in the tempo- i
ral welfare of thaw who appeal to our ,
sympathp—is a part` of, and included in I
our interest In their spiritual welfare, a
means to win them to Christ for their 1
etemal salvation. The exercise of charity 1
In and by the Churrlt has this end in view 1
at all times; it ,demonitrates the loving ]
power of the Gospel of Christ, and to wins 1
men by this demonstration to the love of I
Christ, to the communion of the Church, I
and to their final salvation. Benevolence
iu things temporal is a part of charity in
things spiritual. To give bread to the
hungry. water to the thirsty, clothing to'
the naked, to comfort the miserable, to
tend the sick, these have value in
[Christianity as means by which to win 1
souls to Christ. and they are Christian
acts of Toney as they are done with 1
that intent "in the name of the Lord
'Jesus,' and so point the soul to Him I
111 the Saviour from eternal so well an I
] temporal misery. And therefore the true I
Christian, whose sense of his obligation.
is commensurate with the blessedness of
] his vocation, will endeavor to do his work
of benevolence in organic relation to the
I Church of which he - IS a member and in
furtherance of her witness for Christ—
helping to build up and Wake effective
Church institutions ind• Church charitiee,
that the source of his clarity may be seen
' In the love of Christ, and•its end the fieni.
' °natation of Christian trutit,in this war
I anrr nti '4 oit o so ut sl o d u ri r e before i's men,f i l iii -' ;l l l '6. ey 1
may see your good works, that they...may
glority"—not you, but "your Father who
is in Heaven:
For, brethren. let us honestly confront
the fact. that lie before us in the experi
ence of human life; and let us ask our
selves: what demonstration of the troth of
Christ, showing him as the healer and
roatorer, the Redeemer and Saviour. the
loving helper and friend of humanity, can
we give to the stricken, suffering heart in
the pang of its bitterness ? What proof
can we show; that Christ done love th
s oul he chastities by rweverty, by sicknais,
or by misery Inch as life teems with—but
th veis acti aympathy and help, which we,
who are Christ'e, are under ohligation by
his law and appointment to extend to them
in their misery? What testimony can
you • present to the rebellious heart,
stricken-by Nome severe blow of Provi
dence, that Gad is a loving Father, but the,
evidence of your love as His children, and
as brethren in Christ. Go, as the minister I
of the Gospel has to go, into the house. of ]
the destitute, and there discourse to them I
of the love of God, and the abundant pro-
vieion He has made for the happiness of
Ills creatures, while that creature of God
to whom you are talking is suffering the
gnawinge of hunger or the other miseries
of want, and of what worth will be your
words,—your empty words-to bring sub.
minion to a heart which feels , that it Ice
hardly dealt • with, or to infuse Into. it
faith and street in the toying Father.
of all. 'lt le true that God's love ban made
adequate. . . provision for all ; hie s ,
matures ,• bat the special way: In
which He has made - provision. for I
that suffering creature before you, is by' .
your Chriatian benevolence: and .unless
you furnish that demonstration of . God's
love, by obedience to Ills designs In giv. 1
ing of vour abundance to - minister 'to. its
necessities, your words are idle breath.
In the lower strata of our camel} , peeked
civilisation, them are thotte,:—and they are
many—whom yon can only bring to trust I
In God, by giving them reason to treat in 1
yon.. (to il's prandence and care comes to I
them through your charity, and unless
you can thus prove to them that God has
cared for them In giving you the command.
and the heart to help, you have no -proof
in all your armory of argument aid exlhor- . 1
Wien, that will avail to consists tient
that there is a God in Heaves , or that'
there is .a. Saviour who died that they
wain, view the matter on the other
side. ' Suppose your benevolence goes Into
the houses of misery and sin without re-
lig. ion—earetnlly holding -lack, as yon I
minister to bodily and mental miseries, all
'allusion'to or connection with Christ's aid-
vation, for the soul, what will your benev-
olenee avail to lessen even the temporal 1
sabring you propose to relleie? .- Of all
the sad sights which this :present igelw 1
to show, the 'saddest is the terrible waste 1
of unsystematic charity, and its utter In. 1
adequacy to lesson Stek sum of human 1
misery, because of the unprincipled Im•.
posture, the selfish greed, which.• benev. 1
olence without religion has fostered. YOU ]
fling y'rsai theughtless dime to a beggar,'
and think you have done your duty, when
Briley be that the'rteiplent of your, char. 1
Sty is Ldrunkiriwhowill abuse your dole
in pampering his soul-destroying appetite. 1
'heaping up to hintselt, by your charity 1
further misery here, and deeper damns-
don harsafter. You go more, systemati..
ual/y fmrforki audi le ;,• i legal. pro. I
vision: Tor the o SO,' reig tone the I
comity-tax shall keep . h m from starvation, 1
gad. insert/Jot gratitude forChristiansym .
reply, you raise up in historian a lawless :
spirit of discontent which grudges . at the I
hind that helps, andwilbs'thit the *ate 1
.ould seize upon and distritritii*** ] ]
f Ontr,- well earned wealth, from tehlebit i
has taker. by .eamptilsimt your poor tax, ,
pl.wellßA your, ether. taxes. Yon'atantt-':
tats Imre i othpi Appliance hi . . do
good SO . them, for die (' bristly sympathy
of the Church, and so you lead them to
hate the Choral oaths oath& ' institution'
of the aristocracy; Where they. hire • rib
pima, and no interest. You provide:mono'
by ions benevolence without.realgiow — by ,
all your Magnificent provisions of law, by
year private gifts, by your indiscriminate
response to every all of suffering, to raise
ups class of. godless_ poor, without Deli
atom hops - or • moral principls—and yet
you hope that they iwill - be orderly', frugal.
sober,ll4TA onlioiT to liolp thepneelves by
honest Industry, as the resulttof your be
ambience without telleon. You canna
do it by such means. - The work ,of the
.filturclr oftimin, 1n both rt_ sell
&in and charity must ozz upon 'beat the
b°4lland-th-64"3-a your benefloiatt, - Or
u r - if reiie - will be , Tatiana, . and the
inerisarr'the more you aim to restrain
them.
This, brethreii, Is the truth that of all
others need co preach lo those &wit—
that the Church of Christ to Chziat's
.
muter, to the poor, and that religiorimust
gohand in hand with-all clutritable
lions of *lust sort ** tr. if we world car
ry out our Genre proilsion for dealing
with the woes of humanity. Yourillity
as Christians, as churchmen, in these slays
especially, is to build up church itattitn•
tions; which the relation of charity to
religion is demonstrated to the face of the
world, and charity - as the handmaid of re
ligion brings the recipient, of Your homily
•tothe-lithurch of ~ f lissist. --for ihe regains
tion of their lives,' and the ',titration of
their souls:. • Tilsit . thlei r . wan done in old
Blocs weather secret of the Church's tate•;l
Cuss in es:Swelling the world in the hest 1
centuries!of christ lenity-- Christianity in
vented charity—lt prodneed the name and
the thing of ell those Institutions - which
proclaim thesympathy of -man for man.,
There were no hospitals in the world be
fore
the Church found them out; there
were-no almshouties , before the Church
taught her children the- sacred duty of
providing Mr' the helpleati Poor, there
were no :ISfigdalen asylums before the
Church•attempted to deal with the social
evil, and rescue the fallen woman 'frosts
'her sin and shame; the hated :Mime of
bedlam is the_ world's corruption of the
Chrifitien title of S. Bartholomew's hospi. 1
tat for the insane; a Inzaretto is
the monument of the Church's, care for I
the leper who is in the condition
of Lazarus as he lay at the gate
of Dives. And it was the glory of all
such Institutions at their first foundation: 1
that in them tlChurch made charity the
handmaid of religion ; that this churchly
character imprt seed their , beneficiaries
and inmate 4 with the sonde of Christ's
love for them, ands° lifted their hearts
to Christ through the Christian charity of
their benefactors.
And especially is the obligntion to - this
course of action lobe impressed on Chris•
tians and churchmen at the present day,
because the exigencies of the ever endur
ing conflict between the Church and the
world imperatively demand it. Two
dangers threaten the Church: In the find
place, the world has learnt the power of
benevolence over she hearts of men, and
if the Church let the witness of her char,
hies go by- default, the world will use ire
pretensions to superior philanthropy an
a weapon against the Gospel. , We see in
this age what was never seen before,
efforts to impress benevolence into the
service of infidelity, and the means em
ployed against Christ, with which Christ
endowed the Church to win the world to
his allegiance. The world has adopted
the policy of separating the material and
spiritual interests.of mankind, and, under
the plea of providing for their tentporal
interests, ignoring their spiritual need of
salvation by Christ. e have now a
philanthropy whirls is boastfully infidel
—which, under the plea of emancipation
from sectarian prejudices, throws out re.
ligious influence altogether frosts the
scope=bl its operations, and.which, by its
spurious appeal to the masses no philan
thropic, seeks so dentroy the evidence
which charity is, of the truth. of our, re
ligion. It taus its no-called social science, 1
its political schemes; it peeks to gain con
trol of the educational instil miens of the
people: its cry being, heal temporal mite
erental ignorance. and leave religion to
take care of Itself—wisely concluding
that if it am succeed in securing that reli
gion be forgotten. it in quite as well for
its side se if religion be denied.
Collateral with this development there
seems Ito be danger on the other side,
that Christian people, well-menning and
with the best intentions, may fall into 1
the snare, and in helping all objectt , that
appeal to them under the name of benevt ,
hence, permit the Church's charity to fall
out, of sight, to the destruction of
one;-half the demonstration of Chris.
tianity. We may think that we''
are doing all our duty when we give of I
our means to feed the hungry. or to min- '
hoer to the sick, without any reference to
the agencies by which this is done; but 1
the lactic that so fares eve choose other
agencies thin the church, se the almoners
of our bounty, so far we trcaken the pow
or of the church to convert the people,
and per far we act its unconscious tinter.
niain to the spread of the gmmel. For,
brethien, • the non' we divorce charity
from religion, the more we seem to total ,
religion useless to mankind; and the snore
we build up charitable institutions whose
tnese to christian truth in dubious and
itecertain; the more we help in converting
our churches into mere talking- places,
wh ere•Wortia. and words only, are the
rent medltnn,.-thawases.... w..aksa alset•
Benny In the estimation of the world. If
the church of Christ is only a place where
Donnie go to read a few prayers out of •
I hook on Sunday, antho Staten 10 a cotamon.
place ezhortalion upon general morality
—lf this is all we can sheer it to be in the
eye of the world—we need not complain
that religion is fallen into neglect,—and
our churches are left in their emptiness
as memorials of a dead imperstition—we
ourselves will have produced that result,'
because we hare not done oar deeds of
charity and love, - in the mono of the Lord
Jesus." Whereas if wo make our church
to as they ought to be, the centres of all
our elms to do good—if we cluster round '
them our benevolent institutions and so
bring religion, by the means of charity,
into contact with the daily life of the peo
ple to whom we are- sent with the mes
sage of salvation, we shall show that re
ligion is not an empty name, but-that it is
indeed the power and the wisdom of God.'
and the effective witness for Clod in a
world of sin. When we contrast what our
parishes sad diticeees are with what they
should be—with what christianity wee in
the first ages of the church. it is difficult
- to mellow church life could have fallen
so low as it is among no,-or how, having
fallen so low, it can impress itself at all .
upon the minds and hearts of the people.
A church open only twice a week forpray
ers and aermons,—surely brethren, this
' in not all the 'visible Christianity in the
',.world—this is not all the force Chris
tianity .to oppose to-this multi
form, intensely 'active modern life withits
money-grasping, plezusurelovlng dlistipat
ed materialism! 'Surely the Church bass
something else to show, as the , embodi
ment of Its spiritual power in being the
channel of Chriat'is love—Christ's infinite
love—to lota and ruined men! We ought to
have means of authoring men's hearts
and Boobs to.our parishes and churches,
and by them to Christ and Clod, with the
strength of all their warmest feelings and
best affections, in church institutions and
activities, the instruments of • a living.
working body, instinct - with - the life of
Christ and the love of . God—parish and
diocese alike swarming with demonstra•
dons of Christian activity—our parish
day schools, and night schools, and indus
trial schools, and' guilds. and sisterhoods
for missionary work and district visiting
—our diocesan hospital, reformatory and
college, as 'well as our Church Dome—
instrumentalities for all purpOses of Chris
tian charity--every one of them bearing
on ita front the broad twiner of our Lord,
and so by every act impressing these it
reaches with the knowledge of God and
the reality of the 'aural of Christ as &ref
uge for the soul,aa well as a relief for the
Against this tendency to separate char
ity from religion, and eo to weaken the
evidence for the religion we profess, it is
our duty, brethren, as Christian believers,
to guard ourselves, by giving our time,
our energy, our money, our neaps of influ
ence, whatever they are, to mike the wit
nes* of the Church effective;' in both
parts of worship and of work—the one
the expression of her love to God, the
other of her lees to man—the ono beer
ing witness to the soverelgnty and majesty.
of God the other to Ins mercy to Christ.
I. epak to you, brethren,in presenting this
argument, as churchmen and churchwo
men. lam not pleading the cause of a,
benevolent enterprise before infidels and
heathen. L assume that you - believe in
the - church of which you are members,
and that you desire other elm to believe
in it, andis Its .meseage of Gospel truth.
I point out to you, therefore; the great
mearraby which- you may g i ve its Gospel
moisture e frobroti theopleof the world.
Show,WIX - oittilittich isaliving church, a.
-working chnneh, a. charitable church,. a
church that -Wes the , people 'for Whom
I:Middle& I amfees I cannot understand,
therm ndiarheart of those who can come to
these assemblies of the church and'offer
op her pretties and prayers and , Interco's.'
Mous, •Icralitk receive the holy sacraments
at her hands, and recite her creed; and
think that these are .duties; or privileges
essential to their own-salvation, and yet
who cannot give back lathe church, under
whose maternal wing* they enjoy all
these privileges, the means to gather in
others to be partakers with them of their
spliltual blessedness ; but must dble out
to her the scanty pittance withagendiging
head -- and bestow - the bounty ; Of their
gifts uponother agencies which - are •not
hers, and coma. it a recommendation of
any (Nees that:seelis :their. aid, tiik.t . 4.4.,
not a church restitution . .The i great re=
ligiatte sod et -the present nay iS4PACtIy
imehlheititetions as, dull veteerdleii ad
corn - ltinoth,e Witness' 4. ibasity with the'
witness of religion; and none an do this
effectively but institutions which are
written all over with their churchly char
acter.
It is for this reason, on these broad
principles, that I ask your active interest
find earnest cooperation builtityr uP
your Chat& Flame... leak you, not-mere•
Iv to give at the collection this evening.
though I hope it will,be a bountiful one
but to be large annual subscribers and ac
tive helpers of it in whatever way you
can. •It combines charity with religion.
It offers a home to the aged and helpless.
where their declining years may be reliev
ed front This pressure of anxious arant,ind
they'may have leisure for prayer and the
.preparation for eternity. It oilers 'memo
also to lift the orphan and the worse than
'prphluonut ;gatdtri L and vice of the
Altavista sad sew eie'te feed and clothe them
' , frugally - but subetentiallj, to 'give them
. the - element* of neeesetry , education, to
find them homes where they can learn to
earn an honest living; and mere than all,
to lead them in their fender years to that
Lord and Saviour of whom in their other
surroundings they ' would hear only
I through the gibes' of profanity nr the
fearful oaths of blasphemy. Tim aged.
' and the childtile helpless at either ex.
trernlty et mortal fife—these are the ob
jects of your charity; and-the-institution
which cares for theme church institution,
thoroughly churchly in its intent and its
effects—combining, as I eald,religion and
charity, in the living witness tot Christ
which the chuich was sent into the world
to bear.
LOOK. AT THOME HANDSOME
SPONGES!
Mediterranean Spadini. of all elude.
Mediterranean ;pongee of all etude.
Meditereedieui pone. of all kind..
Mediterranean Ste.Mee of Kind,
JAMES E. BURNS & CO.'S
Dittlo STORE
Corsa Peas v 4 111:$h 014 I. Clair) NM
THRICE ARMIES
Tittles Is he smut who keeps within reach
hie heed • erectile that at one and the woe th
strengthen. regalate and pug(' big Mt*:
when enfeebled. disordered and corrupted.
Such le the. thou-fold opseld iew of Hostetter
gtomseh &Hem and heath the great uperlority
of that standard vegetable retthm". over all
medicines that are merely auks and nothing else.
The effect of the ordinary utdildret nee... end
extracts upon the bowel* IA alantroap, and ,Woo
the depraved blood or bile - Aber Pwnleth e° berth
. Octal ellects whatever. le dysiwietthand liver eau
plaints all the fluids and Ousters of the body are
more or less Infected. and the towels are Often
badly constipated. An uninodified lute:Rut—
deinthe for Instance—does Ingultely more harm
than good In such oaths. In Ithatetter't letters
on the other hand, the aimulating seed tonic ele.
meets aro qualified with aperients and statue:
tic Remnant. The finest tautly. and blood de.
purenta to the vegetable kingdom are Intentalsed
with those of a purely Invigoralleit nature. and
ender the operation of this adraireble entablnathm
the three hunartant prOodunes of instgoration. M
utat!Oo and purification go on together. The ra
pidity with which the disordered °Renitence re
turns to its natural condition under a worse of
the Dithers •Is dee to this cause. gooey dlstureed
fel:taloa of the bode is favorably .fleeted by the
ratios.Pthlsienthe of this oempreherunve and well
balanced preparation. Ass general rule the bow
els are subject to taregularinth. and the gelds lia
ble to buoute valeta:l. and bens the Hitters are
especially-v.l.lde u an alterative. corrective an
lertgorut. in all HOUR 'there the Dude of In
termittent fevers infect the alr.lllli healthful Ven
dable elixir should be taken u • pretend's medl-
IZPAAW- 11 14 ,4 : 4 0(:) 346, kmi :1
FABER &
VAIN DOREN
367 Liberty Stree
PITTSI3I.7IIOII. TA.
STEAM ENGINES,
IRON AND WOOD WORKING
ALACHIN
Steam Peps,
Engineers and Miebinists' Tools,
STEAM - FIRE ENGINES,
BELTING,
Woolen Machinery, Machine Cards
fairldanntantnrers' and Mill nap
pli
tarnies.she Ad
o connssh ta ort no nt sup tice.pl on hand and
y
114301.1,110,-;lll.l..teik. ortlj
NOTICE
Third Arrival of Spring
DRY GOODS.
Bell & Moorhouse
21 FIFTH AVENUE
Are Offering Great Bargains in
Dress Goods,
Silks, Shawls,
Linens, Plqu.s
and Chintzes.
ME
HORNE & CO'S.
Hosiery I Gloves !
Zstaandva and tholes asarianonta al
Prices Unknown Since 1861.
' JLLZN ' ANDANN KAN
COUILVIOII2INWE VON at '
. LONG TOP. KIM ebelw shades. at 11.011.
NJSOULAR JUDE stansu 11086, 36
.
• . •
PLAN AND SIROLD:ooTroN noes. 10
OTTTOS HOSTSHT. es ono or So.
, SUPSIS STOUT HALT DOOR.' 05
MINTS SUP= ruti HALT DOSE. SS ants.
Also oplerakt assoOmmicSASHITLIULSH 31,S
DOW RUNDIMS, LAOS IrADOT ROWS.
large Additions to Stook
un gem*. to *bat is WINN tb• gairsuon
.Wlrolasata &MA Cosh Anion:
17111 Ti 19 MARKET STREET
JOHN STEVENSON'S SONS
&
.3 - 2 E w ELERS,
93 Market street, Pittsburgh.
' - cram DOOR nom mina
./voligs qp2 ... v . 2 mpg larrjni
rizwr wit th y doe
I'
ii g
ta+.l. l o: gni,' i ' Ards: s at
& E)
ig.r.. Nall ft.Lilsolag
„MAI 484 itea Vir .. ..r ....
ikt aul
1 9 :7! 'i n . ' I TII •M i l l P' '' ' .
kg Aaszaws
•.
* Fr 4.
;Mt by ODD. A.
24, kik • .
. •
NEW ADVEBTI
IVII. SEMPLE'S,
180 and IS2 Federal Street, A Ilmheny
Quilts ! Quilts!
13. 4 1 Quin.
timer o , mb so Qum".
Honey Oomb Ctle (MUM
Honey Comb Omit. Quilt.
TABLE COVERS
Bleatbail and Unbleached Table Linens,
Tarter Red Table Damasks.
Sheeting Muslin.. all ;ildths. •
Bhlrtleq Muidina. •eri cheep.
Lace Curtains.
Parasols and Sur Umbrellas.
AT . TBI:I • LOWEST MUOES.
ITS AND BONNETS,
Ribbons and Flowers
Table Napkins and Towel•
LINEN SHIRT FRONTS,
Hosiery, Notions, &c.,
Wholesale and Retail.
-SENLE'S
Mend Ifitt Fedtral Street, Allegheny
THE BEST BARGAINS
OFFERED
This Season
2111 CENTS.
Idles' Heavy British Cotton Stockings
AT 33 CENTS.
adios' litary_Brittilt Cotton Stockings
- AT EXTRA BARGAIN.
AT 3 PAIR FOR 11.00.
I Wild Super British Cotton Stockingo.
AT 20 CENTS.
Men's Heavy British Cotton Sack
AT 26 CANTS.
Yea's Hcary French . Cotten Socks.
MERINO TIATI . Z A- i " iJd?7I;ERWEAR
AT VERT LOW. PRICFA:
MINIM. DOTS AND CHILDREN 8
COTTON STOCKINGS
AT GREATLY RFIWORT PRICES AT .
Morganstern&Co's,
steciomon To
IMACRTSI, GLYDE & CO.,
Nos. 78 and 80 Market Street.
BUY THE GENUINE.
CLARK'S
"0. N. "
SPOO COTTON.
GEO. A. CLARK ,
BOLE I AGENT
1-
Sold Everywhere.
1,000 GROSS
White Chalk Crayons
100 GROSS
Colored Chalk
CRAYONS,
V4,l4`%teta.'l4ll:l , Z , 7ll3"ttr=
ens vary and vary ohne at present and have
coatracts tnade (Tr a contlaaed wanly. Oar stook
iroraTtellars h al atr rd Miler gig
th elSnlv la th coant e
ter...7. and haring soectati ipU
ratca of
beng.V:4l/
J. L. READ & SON
No. 102 Fourth Avenue
SPECTACLES.
THE EYE
Dr, PRANKS. the celebrated Lecturer on the
Mfg. and: Manafeetarer of Patent and Improved
Spectacles, has returued to Pitteburib, and Is 00W
at the ST. CLAIR HOTEL.. muse he ad.leett Ida
fat , famed Spectacles to OM eetive vision from an
esmalitelloo of aeon w0w..., to .ft . 44 "
by day as by artifictel het Isabela MUM.
from 16 to 26 years. Dr. F. maybe prof esstoially
consulted on all elseasee of the Human Ef ma
hen a leave stoekaf Ili Spectacles and Sla
for sale. About 4.000 wars of thee. SNet auies
Uwe sold on Dr. Maks bat visit to the space of
Ohne months, Myths the most mitre satisfactlon
to alone the medical gentlemen end citizens of
Plttebungb have by certificate testified. •
Ile particular and enquire at the Ladles' lkilisnos
on Teens Asset. for Dr. Vilma. dike. ROOM 22
M. Clair Hotel: . apladtret
"HILL & ADAM'S
SEWER PIPE CO;"
65 and 67 Sanditski §t.,Alle,gheny.
irdtrfirazTaniF"U•
0. G. Nreb!=N, Agent
DECORATED AND PLAIN
Marble and Slate
.31ANTLES,.,
• , The <1.10=1.4.9
Smow =1 4 .,,,,, m.a
. Z.=
i r5..= 71, 21 . 37 Mr.M2'.
ir IM M : SifirrAVIVAIVEV
" r rtaiiil7. - k. w . w. wALLerr
ll TH:$ Una STY LES Of
1 3 . , t. - • - ', , 1, - ..R . T'.
At tlie lkidieat Vticiees, at
WATTLES & SHEAFER'S
.triiimair.trross. •
I"."'L
NSW ADVERTISETS
GREATTARCT i AIN&
Summer Dress Goods,
WM. SEMPLE'S
ISO and IS2 Federal Street, Allegheny
Mack and Coinred bilk Poplin Drew ,
Wash Poplins In Beautiful Clone ?Mature ,
Groot:rale Blank Plias for &toques.
Black and Colored Prelle nUts.
Black and Colored Poplin Atriums.
Wiped and Figurod P. K.a.
Grenadines. Plain and Illsrlttll.
Black Silk Sacques
BLACK SILK BASQUES,
Plain and Striped
Szeinmer Shawls,
BLACK LACE SHAIVLS;
SUMMER SKIRTS
Cassimeres and Jeans,
Cottonades and Linen Drills
Wholesale and R.etai
SUIPLE'S
Ind and In Federal st reat,Allegheny
n a Par with Go
YE NOW OFFER
Our New Stock
DRY GOODS
NOTIONS
AT
EASTERN PRICES
RDTERA ARE INVITED TO
Examineour Goods & Prices.
ARBUTHNOT,.
SHANNON &CO.,
.1•To.115 Wood Street.
Genuine Preparations
om the Celebrated House o
PETER SQ UiRE, LONDON
Granular Effervescent Bi.C,arb.
Potsaisa, Bromide Potassa, lodide
Potasla, Citrate Iron and Quinine,
Bromide Ammonium, Carl'. Lithia,
Vichy Salt, Hisslngen Salt, Cit. Mag
nesia. Seldlitz Powders, itc.--To pro
tect Physicians and the Public from
spurious articles of this character,
purporting to ha “direct imports.
bottles of the genuine will
in future bear a otrap label over the
cork, with the address and fac simile
signature of the manufacturer. P.
SQUIRE; and on the side Ms trade
mark, and also address of the Im
porter and Sole Agent JOHNSTON, sI%ON
Cor. Smithfield St. and Fourth Ave.
P. S.—We have received oar usual
Spring supply of Mineral Waters,
Saratoga, Star, Congress, Kissingen,
&c. Also, 'another suly of As-
tringent Red Gum Loze p n p ges, and
Mediate of Ammoniate Lozenges,
which have proved such a great suc
cess in 'England and this country in
cases of Relaxed Sore Throat, Brom•
ehltls. etc.
mr.rnn
C. D. ASNATIIAL 1. G. ARNSTHAL.
kRNSTIIAL & SON
Virginia and Louisville
Tobacco .9gency
SEGARS
Fine Cut Chewing and Smoking Tubules,
72 SMITHFIELD STREET, Flttaborsh
m 71125
WATER WAT PIPES
Chimney . Tops,
HOT AIR & CHIMNEY FLUES, &C.
A Wire and wortment. C011.111L1117 on hand.
HENRY A. COLLINS,
• ••• . 133 BISCOND AVENUE.
To Oil Capitalists.
M=M!
The BRADY'S BEND IRON COMPANY
eelt Itdote of land. fdrborina, pommel , . to near II
chatty to the nevr ativrthr 'gallon Armed...out Rao
Thor will atom MI, LOTS on the bank of the Al
on•n/ RITer:111/iar, nen,all.eonvenlent
building slies.
. D. BLACK. itupertaeodept.
BRADY'S g 1). MST lOth. 1870. myl(tierg
WELCOME
ANII GRAIN RAKE.
lterneara. M eg WM . Interest and troy none bat
the Welcome Vooth Wheel nate. It la the
ZmTslitt PolorolitrZu'4%,
the common rakes and can be workml o r re child
Verrl i rrn o trei n t4 ' lrig r airgri .'4l°=
without dea l er to rake or driver. an admmtene
nonther rake. Stanntnetersd InGinametses.phln
VA intact gatga. WY; ""1
_
T. T T.
Trego'ATeab'etryToothwash.
Lthe met pleasant, clic . ..Peet and best Dentifrice
e l
sited r. rem ljeriest;lniredient.
welts:Ae Teeth!!
=sig e tiarf arose thl aith !
ta ranleslan o Tartar!
Clams and Purifies Artifini=th !
le a garters:tide toe M. I
MAW, aCrhowietshi.
Tin asleep ••,. •
- -
.
'PILE REMEDY.
'wAmami TILE REMEDY has isevar finnan
(not even In one COW to cans the vary worst eal.ei
of Eatne.liAtag.Blevitagriles. nose area ere
sillated aboald lanownstelY WI on thalr notenalla
and tat WAILNLEII PILE REMEDY. It la
00.
molly for the Piles, and Is not recommended to
W other abbrs. It cared many casco 010 m
thirty years means. Elice*L. Ws by drag"
Ebb
myr=b,'
DREKA,
meow= AND arr An. Imo. Eii
FINE - STATIONERY,
swiewitm. mum. PARTY =A susunseii
CARD ENCIDAYMI. MONOGRAM. ARMS.
LIININATING. do
W 61%
Fir Orem by man blooms Dmaipt abanti ,
lkod for sainylbc.
1033 Chestnut St., niila
ADVERTIBEIYI:MrS
NATifERN
Pacific Railroad. .
To Railroad Contractors.
Reshot Proposals will be retalaed at the ofhoe of
the NORTHERN PACIFIC ItAtLROAD COM
PANY. No. IMO BROADWAY. comer of Coder
eot, Nora :tort, until WEDNESDAY.the Ist dey
• • .. •
r Jane, IF/0, et lit o'clock. noon. for the Ona
sown Bridging and Ballasting of that per
the Northern Medlin Itisilroed In the Ptah
Nitending from the Malice of the SI
IME
Milli I==Nl
On O. distance of about 230 rollefO. In
• • .
ding everything requisite to complete the road
, Car it single track, and necessary side tracks
.a the rail shhothtMattt.
ME
The weld Company Rlll Woo receive propane's• at
he game time and plard. for lbw timber . eres.tlea.
and •
for the• Iron rail, miker and extures for the
road as above. The Iron mils to be dellverel on tbe
dock at Doluttl.ltbanellota, or at the creasing of the
blisalsaippi river. and the ilea received aecordlail
to blank foram, which will be ready for illetribu
tleo oo W EDYEBDAS. May 4. 1870, at the omen
. .
Um Company. as above. wham plans of the
Mares. and Imps and profiler ul the road. with
ME=
IMENEE=
and a
pent re%erve the right to tried
A. deemed to he for the interests of lb
1111=3
circulars rontnittlnu full Inform*
a fumlrbed on nppltention, by malnr al
to EDWIN F. JOHNSON. Chief tratneer.
• .
to the President of the Company. at the Whet. N ,
120 BROADWAY. ea above.
J. GREGORY SMITI
raided Northern Parifir Railroad Co
NE. You.. 41.11:26.1h70. ncllo
PLAN im; MILL MEN
•
And Others,
TAICE NOTICE ! .
The undersigned has latter, Po tent of the Med,
ts;d I ' g- e t : t s Itt g 0" ,T
for houses. The weather-lsoardinit. by this pt.tent
Improvement, being more particularly Intended for
vertical use. anti combines great durability and
boast .of ePPeidands; and It in so constructed as
to entirely
frontetuse of Joint etrips._and
rx,erTh;vg,. gn,Ve' f alo g :L'i
the weather on the timber.
inside lining and wainscoting by this new method
are ao constructe as to form perfect panels
m cheaply to byt e ordinary litroltut boards Mona
thereby preventing the shoeing of the Mints front
ni4l,Vii'V,d,A7g=We're,ll,lV.`Al'a.of what
Is commonly anode as the -Moulded Weather
relLorial and
Ifs
shop 117h2s1=eogligil
Pewit:
To G. A. Mundorn. the right of the territory
south of the firer In Bald county. ,
To MeQuorran A Douglass. the right for the lint
wartl, Pittsburgh.
To Rill,Patterson ..t Co.. shop rights for their
mill, Mat '37lcCl:e"."fto"r'Ve borough of McKee.
Pn l r in . Parker A Pahl. for First. Second. Third and
FVF'?evertinifaTr:feiNly'gjaia their mlll In Bev
anth ward. city of Alleghen Y 1
.1.0 .
Dunhara..SaLtt coilef,ii,Jgeh4Trunr``larg.
All Reeno. are warned agalost infringing upon
either of said patents. and those wishing to
pur
chase will please anti. or address cue. at No. 73
- ffralthheld street. Pittsburgh. Ja e: ANDERSON.
f.
]OILY (I,IVORKMAN R. RICIIARD DAVIb
WORKMAN & DAVIS;
Succcssors to WORKMAN. MOOD E A CO
antaibra and Deaden In
,Carriages, Buggies,
SPRING & BUCK WAGONS.
41, 44, 46 and 4S Bearer Sl.,
den mr N Wurli got en 10 au
warranted to g ive le satin( action ever,
n particular
I cf g A no l t el "‘ I
-
F.1 . ,%V.,""" 7 , " • • ' "
atent Quick ballter and holl-Bottl.
11. fliCtlikßlS EitiVlS hasten Purchinteiil the in
torinAlKAZ.Nan. Fei t f lj the ! P bTalgg: i t%
bereaf ter be oontinosit n tbe old stand. under the
nem< stylc of VPORAMAN & DAYI/3. Order.
solicited.
.12 1 111AAT I M 1 _ .
Late wi th Citizens' National Bank, Pittsburg..
CANE POLES.'
. .
!have • lbw assortment. of Cede Poles lei
over from last year. which I otter at • very).
Woe. Pull...sting Bholsl4 order eatly.so lis .
Insure their orders Minh
/MR Oiled. .
CS DOWN,
, 136 Wood Street.
nunNo MACHINES.
F
The best and cheapest Mating thschLece to
the valuta. Rice $6.30 each machine. WI sad
IMMO
PINCHING IRONS.
In.ye N.t received en aseortsnent. of Pinch
ing Irons, en article need very much in the east by
the Lidice ter curling their hair.JAM For rd
BOWN,ie DY
ES
135 Wood Street.
BUTCIIERS,. TAKE NOTICE I
hay. the anent mermen% of Ctrealar
Spring Balsam, with glass sash end enameled
fronts. complete In eve' Vert end mumnind
sale.
PEARL COAL.
Schnabel < Walker
COAL, NUT COAL & SLACK
nratta.V4III.IVORKIS, near rlitaborgb
OMee and Yard: Corner Sandusky sf.
and West Eenn.B. 8.,
mr1 , 56
OscarF.Lamm&Co.
Yonghlogheny and Anthracite Coal
TITTSHUAGII. PA_
OFFICE: ROOM No, 54 Gazelle Building.
*Phyla
COAL! COAL!
YOUGIBOGIIENFGAS COAL CO.
W. W. WALL/I.OE.
6....a.nj are now oresared to furnish the
best Cad of any atm or duantity. AT FAIR NATE&
°Mee int Yard adjoining Me Connelsville Batt.
mad Depot. foot of TIT atzest. Pittatrtirgb.
Orders addressed to either Moe, West Newton.
Pa. or to Yerd, will be pennely attended b.
NI. P. 011ERN, Igeortari. —
aet f.•
•
Charles IL Armstrong
DZA.ISE.
Youghiogheny and Connellsville. Coal
WARN - Erg
CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, &c
CARPETS. \
SPRING STOCK.
Fine, Medium and Common
C./IR.F'E TS:
Onr Stock ls the largest we have
ever offered to the trade.
Bovard, Rose & Co;,,
al AVENtiEJ
April Ist, 1870.
SPECIE PAYMENT
Tron , ale We Weer Cfienne 010 be ClTen tall
ineeub onto re. nt.
NFarland.&Colli7
CARPET STORE,
71 and 73 Filth Av
T One pekee are the lowest In thle market-
CARPETS.
New Rooms! New Goods!
-NEW PRICES!
liWe havewlthth lestegurete4 the npeettee of net Net ,
nomis e
JAMES SOWN'S.
13! Wood StreaL
./AXES SOWN.
136 Wood Street.
COAL AND CONE
=
ALLEGTIVIT CATY,PA
MANUFACTURLIF3 OP
CONNELLSVILLE COKE
DEALERS IN
.
COAL. BLACK AND DESULPHUBIZED
OFFICP.A.ND YARD, corner Butler and Morton
'Deets. I.Arty andßimer streets, Ninth Whnll
also. Second street, th ward, and et fora or
Roes street, P. &C. 11. Depot. Second mut.
Orders left at either of the above online, or ad
dressed to me through Pittsburgh P. 0.. ing melte
Wtti=ii
. lam p gr, 5. ! t
Wm. Smith. Caton u i co.ler
„Mitchell. Stevenson &C.
Co, Bisect' d. Co., Graf
Ae. Bradley Part. Bro. & Pun.
McCurdy & Co, flame. draff & Dull. Wm. M. Veber
& Co_, J. B. Lyon 'a
Co.
James Marshall CO.. Al.
len. McKee & Co.. Union Depot Moan. Connell.
'the IL B„,Psumsylresda IL H.. AllmVssuy Vsu!l
IL It.
COAL COAL ! ! COAL !! !
DICKSON, STEWART 84p0.,
• .
MAU conierod their !Soo to ]..
No. 567 Liberty Street,
amer aty no= X 111) SZCOND FLOOR,
figVNVLVAMA:to
CreOretZdatagt
iMroXigttraelt oradeus.ed thorn
ttnoogb tko boo sttoodod to prosoptlr.
Resumed !
FIi4EST DISCLAY.OF
CARPETS
Ever Offered in this Market.
LOWEST PRICES SINCE 1861
OLIVER McCLINTOCK & CO.,
"3 Fifth Avenue
NEW CARPETS.
eduction in Prices
TO CORRESPOND WITH
WHOLESALE RATES.'
McCallum Bros.,
No.SIFIFTI-1 AVENUE.:
ABOVE WOOD STREET.
. lIPHOLS'YERERS.
-
Manufacturers of IPlilffo, HAM and nustc
MATTILZMIES. }nether Milder. and Ciliu.
Church Cushions, Cornice Moulding. and ad kind.
of Canetattorc work. • /ciao, dealers In Window
Shades, Bud. Green and White IlttGanda' Cordai
totals. Etc. Partioular attention ta give n . talt.,
tug up, cleaning and brushing, altering and rater , :
1 11113 , tVe of cleaning emxt la the only arm IW
sened ...dll4 t.rtoMrtidiarcZtbrfipoo ati:Lßt.
dmt and Vermin. Rhe rivet eaning has bt:n
rzujireau....6.ogar till tall for and de. i
,
ROBERTS, NICROLSOIi & TBOMPSON,
trphasieren. and Pr wistasof
eam Carpet Beating Establintunent
N 0.127 WOOD STREET,
• TnAS . ifsr Yffth A•eex. Pittaburgb. pa.
GLABI3,.QUEENSWARE &o
100 WOOD STREET.
-LrEtN
CM=
China and Glass
FILTER PLATED GOODS. NER
AND TRA SZTB.TEA TRAYS
manctrrLeur
bg.l mntpo
_3
wARE andItoCOMMONYIPTV STONE
001q5 at lay
R. E. BREED & CO.
—foo — wi~i st
REYNOLDS STEEN It CO.,
124 , W00d Street
Important and Deal. , In
FRENCH, CHINA, FINE CUT OAS ANL
Queensware
lwrpeet ueurLmeat at New Yer . lr priced_
ESTABLISHED 1828.
HMS ItIGDY..:ALLDLIet 11101W...11 0 1ri. M. CM.
CUST & CO.,
No: 189 .Liberty St.,
;Mai tifittrerWn Ittrak
TT* alleptloo allviLftni goods 113 abor
lr difoott . to o tork i. lroo 0 rte 4 dtrer ,o l
U =l t"
• fell. " =doillnbla s lot of the ob. ,
rarif. 1_ . ap1,13
WFIITIIILR
CONTINUES Ti) TREAT ALL rim AT* 01EINA
sIDI. Syphilis In all it. forms. all urinary diseases:
and tha *Soots of airman are alnwirtair emdla./
Wit Spermstonhm oir Seminal Weakness and ho
potency. mulling from self-Cm. or other ntt $
LA=ertpar tome itririfea tat. ,corr
lensiptlon. eversion to
of mirmaina......`
of future event.. tom of memory: tratoMara Don.
tumid imilmihno, oaf !Many asprialtr= Ma ma
mstem as rander amlrstriga a •
.renamenerd
Waitro Imprudent. tars
perMiUmmq
Melded Mitt them or my other delloate
Intricate or lung etandlog constitutional enesidMa
!Mould give the Doctor a Utah ha never fails.
A Panicutar MD:nil/maven in all Venial. Mai,
labor," fl!nrtlts. tr . O Y . grutil " rrurillit
Amenorrhoea llenerrhaele Dlornenerreree B eat MAW or Ilareseseel. are Drama Mtn the great
sat ."*".. • ' Irian oho ronan
M aleMa el jaraalWhig reirratty of a mitain elatt
pamphlet of eft .
nellYsigivii dapoattja of emerald .2
Mammas that tap be lad Imo at ulnae ore!
. .Zainrir too Manua In weed envelpes. ErerY
mows* earMilris insinsetion to the aMlete' arm
!Menne Sheet to delerlien• the Mee , * nature ot
erjeletne lee ample rooms!
Is cant ml. When It Ls amriterit to Malt thi
eity. lee ghee
opinion can he t obtained by Drlng
of the rase, a nd snoN Mae* mei
: 1 4Z:si r ' eValn ".. inatenr "" ls alssolate "'W g
ni"rniiral 'gar dally Vanlural "ft""l4
'Ant. th
ethatg: ep.tment. erutu= :111,11 , )
prodded alth may ...Walt. Mt;
ache lated to prud., Reeler], blettelleg meell
pee este. All prescriptions are prillare
to t tote
a Doctor . * ram labraUny. ander Ida Perme,
mpentrk Nedloal lemplik,ts et glace Me. r
py man for two Idampa . N o matter who have failed;
ppay •11,. Mums DAN.to ‘i P. st San
dap Igq rSt ffice, No. V YLIE B T.I
friam Hotrel MOM, nth
R
Om" OPIWANEWrIi4M.TefiO.
WTYTICEIO tt
410TISACTORS.--Seall
J.:71 IPAOPOISALS for the Geneline me Muse,
Moe of Lorimer Krone., frj=eta=i
DAT. ITir d "
tem eeeesyte the dolt t.t. nice% awl
.
J.: moo= • se , }:
co o l
recrElTrartatii i 4ida ° 4c ,
bold•ra . 0t Overdue lllnalcipal Bonds ca 3
• City gt Inttalramb,to forangsd tamp to thl.,<,
olloar io .Froagat. No taterwrit be allowed og - .;
1 1 1 ; attar ot"2: -
sayll Usgigew Coatroller.
I
'x
,;t,_
ma