=En Janies P. Harr, Ed. MEDICAL EATtBgLy VEGETABLE 3 NO AL OROLIO PREPARATION! A PORE TONIC MEDICINE, DR IHOOFLAND 9 S CELEBRATED GERMAN BITTERS Ft! itSPARED BY CE 0. !WI. JACKSON, Philade phia, Penna., will effectually eure Liver Complaint, DYSITSIA, JAUNDICE, ot,S Nervous Disesteem of the Kidneys, and all Diseases Arising from a Disordered Over or Stiinosels, =oh ~h as Coned -1 timlnw : r t ges,tullnesr!Eoodto the Head, Acidity of the Stomach, Natosea, Heartburn, Disgust for Potki, Fullness or Weight in the Stoprach, Sour Eructations, Sink ing or Fluttering at the Pit us We Stom will, aws ot the 'team. Hurried and difficult Breathing, Eluttering at the Heart. Choking or suffocating sensations when in a lying posture, Diminess of Vision, Dots or webs be fore tne sight, Fever and Dull Pain in the Head, Defimency of .Persittion, Yel lowness bf the Skin and Eyes Pain in the Side: Back; Chest, Limbs, &a. Sudden Flushes of neat, Burn- ingiiii the Flesh, Constant imaginings of Evi I. land greatdepree 0, mien of "pi} ePirite And will positlvely prevent tallow Fever. Billions Fever. AA, ___ __'l THEY CONTAIN NO ALCOgOL-011 BAD WHISKY! They will cure above diseases in ninety-nine saes out of a hatidred. Induced by 'the extensive sale and universal 30Plliarij of Rholland's German Bitters, (purely vegetable 'hosteof ignorant quacks and nnscru iulotes venturers, have opened upon suffering humanity the deed gates of Nostrums in the shape of poor whisky:Vilely compounded with injurious hags, and christened Tonics. Stomachics and Bit ters. - ~.'• Beware of the, innumerable array of alcoholic preparations in plethoric bottles , and big,beilied kegs, under the l modest appellation of Bitters ; which, instead of curing only aggravates diseases, nd leave the disappointed sufferers in despair. YOU WA NTSOME THING so 1 ST.RENG TB- ' EN YOU? SI YOU WANT A GOOD APPETITE? DO YVU WANT TO BUILD UP YOUR CON- S'TITUTIONt DO YOU WANT TO FEEL WELL ? DO YOU WANT TO GET RID OF NEB-VD US NESS? I; DO WANT EN4 QGYI Do you want to sleep well? Do you wank, a brisk and vigorous feeling? i s ti la do on, 1., HOOFLANINS GERMAN BITTERS. Prom I. Newt ..lksion. D. D., Editor of the En- CY :44f Religious now/edge. Although not.diSposed to favor or recommend Patent Medicines" general, through distrust of their ingredientsdnd effects; I yet know of no bufficient reason Why a man may not testify to the enefit he believed himself to have received from any simple rep on in the hope that he may thus contribute to thebettefit of others. Ido this theme e readily in regard to Hoof bind bind's German B tters, prepared by Dr. C. M. Jackson of this .ci , because I was prejudiced against them for in y years. under the impres don that they we 'chiefly an alcoholic mixture, jam indebted to ' y friend Robert Shoemaker, Egg ~for the reme of this prejudiee by proper eats, and for 'en '' ent to try them, when afferhigfrom greUt and long continued debility. he tiveof three patties of these Bitters, at the of the Sir esent year, was followed of e gH 4der luli g ni r r elle& and restoration to a degree gadfly and mentaliiger which I had not telt for lx months before; and had almost depaired of &thing. I therefore thank God and my friend for Waiting me to the Use of them. s J. NEWTON BROWN. PIIILADILPI3I4 ?Tine 23, 1861. .. :i Proms thaw. Jonyh H. Keisnard4Pristor of the Tesithißargist Ghtsreh. Dn. JAexsos—Dirt 8.2.:—.1 have beenfr tuemtly requested td connect my name with cam nenddllons of different kinds of medicine, but !ru ms. ifs h th im e e rrr oat i t n icax es e t e i n mz ; a b p i r t ro , f4r t yl.t a e 'brew proof in various instances, and particularly lu my owh famib'; Of the usefulness of Dr. Hoof land's German .Eitturs. I depart from my usual worm to express illy fall conviction that for general debility of the system, and especially Liv toinipleintit is a safe and valuable preparation. some cases it may fail, but usually I doubt not • be very beneficial to those who suffer from ',.eabove causes, Yours very_reopeotfully, - J, H. KENARD. Eithth below Coats street, Phila., Deo. 24th, mead Wifs of ALD ma ERM&NWUNDER. Ger intown. !OL2MANIOWN. Tune 1, 1881. D .0. M. Tsoiragg--Sir:—lt gave me pleasure. filtyears Rojo give yen a certificate, tes h German Bitters had done for me. I m am ow perfectly cured- of all those diseases your edicine professes hieure.,vis; Dyspepsia, Ohron rand Nervous debility, disease of the Kidneys. to. The powerful Jai:taupe it exerts upon Ner vous prostration iseurprising. I have been con sulted frequently in reference to your Bitters,and without hesitation, have recommended it for the abovecomplaints, and in every instance it has effectually cured. Your medicine has a great le4 r itation in Germantown, -Ad is sold in every Store. and in Most of the Grocroy stores ere. If any one should question what I say, let them come to Germantown, and I will prove to their satisfaction. that the Bitters have eured in this vicinity more than twenty cases of the above Incases. - Respeetfully, HANNAH WUNDER. Main street. above Rittenhouse. Germantown. inn i. I JUST THE THING FOR THE 804DIERS. Will buildgap the Constitution. and give health sad strength to ,116.11 overtaaked and diseased THE TESITIMORY FROM THEARMY PrtitsnaLrina,Acurnat 12.1862, 'Da. 0. M. Jacialsoa- , Dear Him While in VW „I a. owing to the change of water, I was taken w.ch a severe diarrlicea, which eeemed incurable, and which greatly weakened me. When we cached Martinsbiug. I feared I should have to ome home : but noticing some of your Bitters in ..he store Mr. H. 11. Price. in that town. I put based a supyly,and on taking it was speedily re stored to health.! The diarrhe=a was quickly checked, and I experienced no return of it. A number of my comrades, who suffered in thesaine manner and from the same cause, with whom I shared the Bitters, Join me in this certificate. I expect to tetarn to the seat of war with the Leg on. and shall oertainly take a supply of the Bit r sin myknapeack. I would not be without it its weight in gold, particularly on going into a meatone rgin. .1 f Yours. train I A.8..4),LTEM138. Company M. Scott Legion. BEWARE OF COUNTERFEITS. See:Ad the elikkatare of "C. M. JACKSON." If come WzArzim of,eaoh bottle. Pzincduld•Offioe and Hannfactorh of o. ein Ames .spitmmic. JONES & EVANS, uhroogssois To O. M. JecrsoN & Co.) PIipPIUETOBB. Ala'' For sale bY.Daussists and Dealers in erer7 wu in the United;Btates. and by . 4i1F.0. IL H. P. SIDIEWAIITZ, 20724:17-deed -8 AlitC-Vr12.2% 10/...41m - forsaie - it - 308FIM ow of the Diamondland friarketetreet. • - For sale also by • • ' • SIOIIOIF HNSN, Dormer Withheld sad JO FourthTO , street • ..4.. , a 2,4 iiir' .. '," -4 '* . ?'•• -: : -, ;• - -.."-.•''. '"‘-' ''' ' T'''''''''''''' ' '' . "` • • • ••' - ' f. '' V ''''H'''''''-'t:''•'.'''''?•."•''''.':;''fterr''''''-'2•'••'"''''-"s''-'''''."'' '''''''?;A''''''''''''''-'''''''''''J'-'g''-'.-'''''''''''-''' - *'Z-- .6 *,1±F1L ., 2A,t . r,...,z7.`.---, _ : . ... ~.!+;', , ,.., . .-7 ':,' '•.'., •• . ' - •'• .: ? ' •-.' 2.i . ;, I- • ' ‘;;;+. f,V 1,- „,v.,. , .,..,„., .:. 0,. ! ''vt • ';!..0 t i;p:,-..*i.:43 aJi 1* JaNY::xl-0i . E4i , ,c0 fir , „:„...- ::: T , 4 ~ ~..01.q..---..1 fa -.: .: 0: i ffliks I • - ::„.,: - Aglil.',- . ...F4 • 7.4 -, .. . ~,..;! -,,,,. .1. ,e: -=.; -.--- -. ~ . .... - ~ . m. ~ .) - 41, '''.;;Ll.: 'l7'l P , lit la :Tit •,t .•;..'' . 410' ''. i .-- '', ' .*:. .;-:'. . ' '`,:, 'k Nill . i II \\ , ._ ip _. ,_ ~,,, j , 7-. '-: ~ ,..t.: A • iL„L,.: ~... , . .-, - ---, .. : ;.,41 1,..:„ ~,, i 5 .7, v yi/ ~ • e P 0 :1 . • • ' y ~,,i ''‘ 101: \ ~ -, eN. dT ...._ ; m0i .,. ..t71.1 . __ ... 1 . 1 .. .' . .11 1 ,v 1 mf. ~' ~ ''— - -`' • ,-:, :- till t r '' • -, ~ , - '..:. : r ' .•. 1. .4 1 1 . I ': o i''' 11; ;71 1 j .N I -i " . . :' ,-. • 1...,.. ..:..' , . - . I hi . 1 ..:- ' -- ' l. if';;'.-. : A . := , • E . , c . L.. • . 44 -. , • ' . :.".. • ,i; : ~. . • e..., 1 ._ !.."..411:,:stif • • , ~.. .7..,Z.t, ••. ... . 1 . :•' .. - ; --- 7 \ ..1 .: ' . • • • . • , -. ApkvkikirisOre: : jrtATgs:. The following rates of advertising have been agreed upon by the'Publishers of tne Pittsburgh Daily Press, to takiceffect on and after the 10th day of November, 1662, on all new contracts : FOR STANDING IitIATTER. • PHR SINDLE'SQ.IIARE, EVERY DAY. On insertion '6O Two montbs.-... $9 00 Two insertions.— 1 00'Three months... /I 00. Three insertions 120 Four months ... 1300 One week. 200 Five mouths,... 16 00' Two week5.. . ....... 3 50 Six months._ 15 00 ThreeNeeek • WOO Nine mtinths.... •20 00 One .11.00-One Year....--.. 25 00 • FOR CHANGEABLE 111AwrEtt. - Which allows tbepthilege of a weekly cb ange - of matter. to be inserted among new advertisements. PER . SINGLE SQUARE, EVERY DAY, $lB 00 80.00 3125 75 50 Six months.. Twelve months ' Adniinistr. tors' Noticea. Marriage Notices ' • • ,Death Dltrtioca.eachinserrion - - All..advertisements ordered. in for one Month, or lege tirok,to be cash at the time of Or- - define OHd.RLEf3 MICNIGHT, Eve. Chronicle. POSTER & FLEE-ON Pitts. Dispatch, JAS. P. BARR, Pitts. Post. S. RIDDLE & 00, Pittsburgh Gazette. Orphan's Court Sale. Y. vurrtre OF AN ORDER OF 'FBE .1-. IA Orphan's Court of Allegheny county, the undersigned. administrator of the goods, and chattels of Ann Gotbitorin, deed, will expoie to s .le by'Vendbe or public outcry at the Court House-City of Pittsburgh. on Sattirday,Xle comber 201 n. 1811 . 2, at 2 o'clock : P. . All the right, titieonterert and claim of Ann Giattsttrin, late pf Allegheny county, deceased, of, in and to all:thatnertam treat or parcel f land, situate, lying and being in Shaler township, Alle gheny county, State of Pennsylvania, and bound ed apd described as follows; to wit : Beginning at a point . opposite the Pennsylvania Canal, on the line of property now or late owned by.Buffington's heirs; thence by astraight line to the top of the hill to a post, thence:by a straight line toaframe building formerly owned by Spang, and Oeiinpied as a warehouse, on the hank of the canal, thence acres the canal to the line of property owned by Joseph Buffington, thence by the same to the place of beginning, and containing ten acres. La ing-the Beni° tract of land granted and conveyea by Ruhrbun Buffington to Henry Gottsman bY deed dated 19th Goober, 1844, recorded in Alle gheny county, in deed hook, vol. 69, page 100, and the same granted and conveyed as the property of the raid henry Gottsman, by Wm. Alegi'', EMI. Sheriff of Allegheny county. to said Ann Cots man. by deed poll dated the 28th day of April, A. D., 1055. and having thereon erected a large frame stable, carriage and wagon honre, said property being commonly known as the Belvideer hotel Property. Also All that certain lot or piece of ground situate in the gifth Ward of the city of Pittsburgh and marked and numbe Stevenson in bounded lots laid out by James S. Sensn, and and des Jibed as follows, vie t Beginning on the south side of Penn street at the distance of 404 feet westerly from the corner of O'Hara street; thence along Penn street westwardly 24 feet to lot NO.1: thence southwardly by a l'ne parallel with O'Hara street 60 feet to a twenty foot ally; thence along said alley by a line parallel with Penn street eastward y to the line of lot No. 3; thews° by a line parallel with WE ars .treet tot he place of be ginning together with the privileges of said alley and the canal basin, and all such rights and priv ileges as are expressed and contained in a deed from the executors of James S. Stevenson, dec'd, 'to banjo Depretin, recorded in the office for re cording deedsand for Allegheny county, deed book T, 2d vol. 4-4, page 1; being the same lot conveyed by James iliakeley. Esq„ and Susanna. his wife, tollenry Gatza.an: by deed' dated 15th F y ebruary,.lB.o, a: - .d recorded is Allegheny coun t a'bresatd, ts vol. 80, s page 202, and on which there is erected a twostory frame dwelling house divided into two tenements. • Teems of kale—Five per cent. on the bid to be paid when the property is struck down: the balance to be paid into Court by the purchaser after confirmation of sale upon the dmivery of the deed. JOl/1.5T P. ROUITZEIL, not; tdeol 0 Adminiarator. J. H. CASIDAY. Note, Stock, Draft, fond and Mort. gage, Beal Estate and Ber• etrandlas Broker. OFFICE. ROOM N 0.12 BURKE'S BUILDERS. FOURTH STREET. Pittsburgh. Pa. Desirable Mill property and other Real Estate to the amount of FOB T H E sale low. SUBSTIT VIES FOB THE ARMY n Furnished7 rbY 's Building 4Jh H. CeASM OAr Yke t. THE ARDESCO OIL comr ANY ALNUFACTURE AND RAVE FOE AT-Rsale a aupenorartiole of Refined Ardesco 011, NON-EXPLOSIVE. ALSO, PURE E.FierzoLE. warehouse, 27 IRWIN STREET PITTSB URGE. PENN.A. DISSOLUTION—THE FIRM OF JAS, WARD A: CO , was dissolved on the Georgesa of November, 1862, by the retirement of C. Reis, and Andrew B. Berger, therefrom, The interest of Reis and Berger p gated into the hands of James Ward, and the business of said nrm passes into the hands of the remaining members thereof, who are to settle all debts and collect all demands, and continue said business, to whom the patronage of the old firiends of said firm is recommended. JAMES WARD, WM. WARD • REIS & MR ER. nol9amd 'CORNWELL & KERR, CARRIAGE MANUFACTURERS, (At the old established Coaeh Fenton.) DUQUESNE WAY, NEAR ST. CLAIR : Reonlrine done as usual, 117 Reads Read .1 HIGHLY IMPORTANT I I GBEAT RELIEF TO THE AFFLICT ED. and those suffering from weakness o sight 1 . 0 .. ALL. YOUNG AND OLD vial& on wish to experience great reltd in" your 3. try the world-renowned RUSSIAN PEBBLE. SPECTACLES. Purchasers will continue to.find p_erfes. Batista° Hon by trying these Rpootioles. Sold only by No. 89 t e ift p hPreel,Varttil l d l iti, The Russian Pebble inserted in old frames. desired. Air Bewa Imposters and Pretenders. WM. ELSMITH ........ JOB. R. HUNTER WM. H. warm & co, WHOLESALE GROCERS NOS. 112 SECOND AND 147 FIRST STREETS' (1629 PITTS'S RON . GUN BLANKETS, FOR.ARMY USE, W. WoCLINTOCK SON, 112 MARKET STREET. 0024. CURTIS C. STEINMETZ, 1 3111113/7, ROUSE CARPENTER AND JOBBER. SHOP VIRGIN ALLEY, between Wood and Liberty Streets, PITTSBURGH. PA. aus ir•Orders solicited and promptly attended to. INDIA RUBBER DRINKING ctrPs 1 and linemen ror soldiers' use for sale at 28 and 2S St, Clair street. J. Jt H. PHILLIPS. • ocdBtE Wholesale Grooeq and Liquor Store For Sale. WIRE STOCK AiITD FIXTITRES OF A " Wholesale (hoe cry and Liquor House do ing a goods trade on one of the beet businefs streets in the oity, is o ffered for sale, as the own ers wish to go into other business. For further pa r rtioularl,addrass snT-tf • LOOX BOX IS, Pittsbuieh P. O. A RMY BILULTS,. SOLD7I2I,B' GOODS I New styles : Mu cheap. at MACP.um - _A VW= sag 78 Marbet drat. b0t..414 _ !mond DAILY POST. CREED OF JAFFERSOR. Inaugural Address, March 4, 'SOL It is proper you should understand what• 1 deem the essential principles of our Government, and consequently those which ought to shape its administration; I will compress them within the narrow est compass they. will bear—stating the general principle, but not all its limita tions: ' "Equal and exact justice to all men, of whatever State or persuasion, religiois or political. "Peace, commerce and honeat friend ship with all nations ; entangling alliahces with none. "The support of the State Governments in all their rights as the most important administrations' for our domestic concerns,- and the surest bulwarks against all anti republican tendencies. • • "The preserVation of the General Gov ernmmt in its whole constitutional vigor, 'as the sheet'anchor of Our peace at home and safety abroad. "A jealous care of - the righ,, of election by the people, a mild and safe correction of abuses which are topped off by the sword of revolution where peaceable rem edies are unprOvided. "Absolute acquiescence in the de cisions of the majority, the vital principle of republics, from which there is no ap peal but to force, the vital principle and Immediate parent of despotism. • "A well disciplined militia, our best re liance in peace, and, for the first moments of war, till regulars may relieve them. "The supremacy of the civil over milita ry authority. "Economy in the public expenses, that labor may be lightly burdened. "The honest payment of our debts and sacred preservation of public faith. "Eacouragement of agriculture, and of commerce as its handmaid. "The diffusion of information and the 1 arraignment of all abuses at the bar bf public reason. "Freedom of religion, freedom of the press, and freedom of person, under the protection of the habeas: corpus, and trial by juries impartially selected." The Foreign Mediation Scheme. A New York letter, dated Friday last, "The European mails by the Jura reached our postoffice this morning, and the merchants and the business commu nity generally have been all day conning over and digesting their contents. The tone of the private letters from London and Liverpool bankers, so far as I have had opportunity to judge, indicates a coal victien in the British public mind that. the Russell ministry will be prepared to second the mediation schemes of France should the year pass away without further military successes on the part of the North. One writer, whose name al ways carries weight with it, starts a differ ent theory. •He says the reason the" French proposition was rejected was the offspring of a desire on the part of her. Majesty's government to do nothing that might look like a snap judgment upon the President's emancipation proclamation. Had that proposition been acceded the friends of abolition would have charged the ministry with a desire to in terpose between slavery and freedom. By the first of January, however, the eman cipation policy will go into effect, and the objection alluded to will tall to the ground. This shows what sort of ideas are floating through John Bull's cranium.'" Cobbett's Courtship. Cobbett tells us how an English yeoman Loved and courted, and was loved in re turn, and a prettier episode does not ex ist in the English language. Talk of pri vate memories of courts, the gossip of this little cottage is worth them all. Cobbett, who was a sergeant major in regiment of foot, fell in love with the daughter of a sergeant of artillery, then in the same province of New Brunswick.— He had not passed more than an hour in her company when, noticing her modesty, her quietude, and sobrietry, he said, " that is the girl for me." The next morning he was up early, and almost be fore it was light he passed the sergeant's house. There she was on the snow scrub bing out her washing tub. "That's the girl ror me," again criedCobbett, although she was not fourteen, and he was nearly twenty one. 'From the first day I spoke to her," he writes," I had no more thought of her being the wife of any other man than I had thought of her becoming a chest of drawers." Ho paid every at tention to her, and as young as she was, treated her with every confidence. He spoke of her as his friend, his second self. But in six months the artillery were order ed to England and her father with them. Here indeed was a blow. Cobbett knew what Woolwich was, and what temptations a young and pretty - girl would be sure to undergo. He therefore took to her his whole fortune, 160 guineas, the savings of hie pay and over work, and wrote to tell her that if she did not find her situation comfortable to take lodg ings. and put herself to school, and not to work too hard; for he would beat home in two years. But, as he says, " es the malignity of the devil would have it, we were kept abroad two years longer than oar time, Mr. Pitt having knocked 1 a dust about Nootka Sound. Oh, how cursed NODtka Sound. And poor, bawling Pitt, too!" But at the end of fonr yearn Cobbett got his discharge. He found his girl a servant of all work, at five poundsa year, in the house of Captain Bruits; and without saying a word about the mat ter, she put it into his hands the whole of the one hundred and fifty guineas, unbrok• en! Read What a pretty, tender picture is that the young sergeant, and the little girl of eighteen, who had kept the treasure un touched, orating with patience. her lover's return! What kindly trust on both sides! The historical painters of our Royal Academy give us scenes of true English courtship like that! Cobbett, who knew better how to write sterling English than many men of his own days, and most of ours, *bee not enlarge upon the Ensue; and dearly he loved his wife for her share of it; bat he does not forget to add, that there was mixed "self congratulations on the indubitable proof of the soundness of his own judgement." It is more than probable that eight girls out of ten would be as prudent and as goodif theirlovers would be as high-mind ed. Army Appointment Ralston Skinner, of Cincinnati, late in the Second Comptroller's office, Treasury Department, has been appointed Judge Advocate on the staff of General Rose crane, and has left for the scene of his duties. SAIPIIDA I have heard a good deal citthetenacity with .which English ladies retsitrtheiii per sonal beauty tdia late periodittifidife,i 'ba t (not to suggest that an Ameritaireyezieeds use and cultivation before -itititirquite sp- Preei ate the charm of Engliihu beauty, at • any age) it strikes me that al English lady of fifty is apt to become'a- ifreiture less refined and delicate, so far astor phyailene goes, than anything thut we-Weatern peo ple class ander the name of isilinan. She has an awful ponderosity, -dffitrame, • not pulpy, like the looser deveWment of oar ,few fat women, but massini,with solid 'beef and steaky tallow; so hat(though struggling manthlly againit Wet idea);you inevitably think of her aViiiiiide up of steaks and sirloins. Winds& walks, her advance is elephantine. : ea- she sits' down, it is on a great roan r iace of , :her Maker's footstool, where . h ooks as if nothing could ever move hoe, , !She impo ses awe and respect by the ; zunchness of her personality, to sach-a i degree that you. probably credit her with far.'eater moral and intellectual force than = ts, can fully claim. Her visage is us y : grim and stern; not always positively, - ;bidding, yet f calmly terrible, not merely, y.it,s breadth and weight of feature, but4r,,ause it seems to express so much well- . ailed self-reli ance, such acquaintance-voi the world, its toils, troubles, and (Utopia, and such sturdy capacity for trampliniAown a foe. Without anything positive salient, , or ac tively offensive, or, indee d '-.unjustly for midable to her neighbors t Ocrlias the - ef fect of a seventy four genletdp in time of peace; for, while you assufw yourself that there is no real danger, yewoannot help thinking how tremendous would be her on 4 set, if pugnaciously inolined,and how fu tile the effort to inflict any cpunter-injury.: She certainly looks terifeld- 7 nay, a hun dred fold—better able io e, care of her self than our slender frattia&and haggard womankind; but I have notletind reason to suppose that the English. dowager of; fifty has actually greater titpwiage, fortitude and strength of characiet.thAn oar. women' ,of similar age, or evema tougher physical endurance than they. Morally, she is strong, I suspect, only in society, and in the common routine of social affairs, and would be found powerlees 'and timid in any exceptional strait that might call for energy outside of the conventionalities amid which she has grownup. You can mebt this flute in the street, and live, and even smile.* the recollec tion. But conceive of her in a ball-room. with the bare, brawny arms that she inva riably displays there, aed all the other I `corresponding development, such as is ' beautiful in the maidealblossom, but a 1 spectacle to howl at in such an over-blown 1 cabbage rose as this. Yet, somewhere in this enormous bulk there must be hidden the modest, slender, violet-nature of a girl, whom an alien mass of earthlieess has unkindly overgrown, for an English maiden kilter teens, though very seldom so pretty as our, own damsels, possesses, to say the truth; a certain charm of half-blossom and delicately folded , leatiesputittlialtr -4!ouftifihood...allielded.., by maidenly reserve, with which, some how or other, our American girls often fail to adorn themselves during an appre ciable moment. It is a pity that the En glish violet should grow into such an out rageously developed peony as I have at tempted to describe. I wonder whether a middle-aged husband ought to be con sidered as legally married to all the accre tions that have overgrown the slenderness of his bride, since he led her to the altar, and which make her so much more than he ever bargained forl Is it not a sounder view of the case, that the matrimonial bond cannot be held to include the three fourths of the wife that had no existence when the ceremony was performed? And as a matter of conscience and good mor als, ought not an English married pair to insist upon the celebration of a Silver Wedding at the end of twenty-five years, in oraer to legalize and mutually -appro priate that .corporeal growth of which both parties have individually come into pos session since they were pronounced one flesh? ----...-.........___._ TALKS ABOUT WAR. n an army every man's power and pay depends on his rank—that is, upon the office he holds. If he is a private soldier, he has no power or authority. He has only to obey orders. Above the private soldier there are mol.e than a dozen ranks or grades of officers, going up from the Corporal to the Lieutenant General. • Every officer is required to wear thino While on duty, that show just what lits rank is.. These are called the badges or. insignia of rank. When you meet a Man at home in the street, you cannot tell by his dress whether he is a lawyer, or a doctor, or a farmer; whether he is a rich or a poor. man. But the moment you meet a soldier, as you often do, you can tell whetherhe is a private or an offi cer, and if an officer, just what his rank and his pay are—that is if you under. stand all about these badges or insigniaif rank. Let me, then, explain them to . you: Officers are either commissioned' or non commissioned. The commissioned officere are always appointed by the Gos 4 ernor of the States in the volunteer army) and by the President in the regular army. There are nine grades of commissione officers, whose pay range from $109 2 00 month up: to. $BOOO. The commissione officers all wear shoulder-straps. These pieces of cloth one and three-eights of an.inch wide and four long, bordered with an embrOdiery of gold a quarter of an inch wide. The color of the cloth in the shoulder-strap tells, too, which arm 44 the service the officer belongs. In the artillery the cloth is scarlet; in the in: fantry it is fight blue, and in the cavalry it is yellow. General officers, that is those above the Colonel in rank, and the staff officers of Generals, wear dark blue shoal= l der-straps. A second Lieutenant, who is the lowest commissioned officer, has nothing inside;, of ;the gold bordering of his shoulder straps. A first Lieutenant has a little gold embroidered bar, just inside of each! end of theborder of his straps, and parallel! with the end. A Captain has two such bars in each end i! that is four in each strap. A Major has, instead of the bars: of gold, k gold embroidered leaf in each end of his strap. A Lieutenant-Colonel, has a silver embroidered leaf in each end' of each strap. A Colonel has a silver em broidered spread eagle in the middle of each strap. A Brigadier General has a silver embroidered star with five rays in the place of the eagle., A Major General has two such stars in , each strap. A Lieutenant General has three stars, the centre one being larger than the other two. When you see s man with shoulder straps on, you know that he is a commis- ENGLISH WOMN, VT NATHANIEL nivritaint ZA. AND 19110 . IA Or Liar. sioned officer; and-You can tell what arm Ofthertervice be belongs' tb by -the color ofthe c,loth iri his '40114 7 ' and -what his • raids'ial+what is worked 'or embroidered inside bf-the border of hie straps: Non- commiesioned officers all wear Ark , rons upon both sleeves of their coats- be- - tweets the elbow and the' shoulder. These chevrons are made of silkworstedbinding, half an inch wide. In the artillery the binding is scarlet; in the infantry 1i ht blne,:and in' the cavalry yellow. ;The chevron is in the form of aletter ‘A' turn ed upside down, the point or angles be ing towards the elbow. - " A Corporal has two bars of worsted binding on each sleeve. A Sergeant: has three bars. An orderly Sergeant, three bars and' a lozenge or diamond over them in the open angle which: they make. . An' ordinance Sefrian; who has charge of the ainthunitionf thkeelbais and a star in silk binding. A Quartermaster's Sergeant has three bap and a tie in silk. A Sergeant Major has three bare and an an arc over] them, in silk. A Hospital Steward has al haltchavion of green cloth on each arm, and a "Caduceus, e ' or snake twisted around a rod, embroidered in yellow silk. The non commissioned officers are ' ap- pointed by the Colonel of the regiment, and nay be redticed to ,the ranks, that is made 'private - soldiers, again, wheneverle thinks they neglect their duty; or are guilty of any crime. The Corporals get no 'More pay than privates—namely $13.00 a month. The Sergeants get. $l7 a month; the Orderly and Hospital Steward, $2O ;. the Sergeant Major and Quartermaster's Semeant $2l. You see there is a great difference be tween the pay of commissioned and non• commissioned officers. Bat the non-cpm misitioned officers are supplied with food, called 'rations,' by the Government in the army, and with $42 t 00 worth ot cloth ing every year. The commissioned Fa cers have to feed and clothe themselveit This mak'es the difference less than what it seems to be at first; and yet it is 'too great. The duties of many non-cotntnis sioned officers are very laborious and, re• sponsible, The principal Surgeon of a regiment ranks as a Major ; the Second Surgeon as a Captain, and Third as a Linnteuant. The 'Adjutant and Quartermaster rank as First Lieutenants. UNCLE JESSE. An A.ddreas from Msrshal Kane: To THE EDI'TOR OF THE WORLD; The accompanying brief address to;my fellow-citisens I desired to have apPear in some of the papers of this city, but. on handing it to the editors of the only two morning journals which profess to be 'in dependent, and have a circulation among. people of_Maryland—,the _Sun and he Gazette—l am informed that they dare hot insert it in their columns because of the despotic acid lawless restrictions of the' Federal govertnient. I beg, therefore, that you will publish the article in the columns of the Troildr in order that it may meet the view of those for whom it was intended. Yours respectfully, GEo. P. Kmi. Battimore, Nov. 30, 1882. To my Fellow-Citizens of the State' of Maryland ' After an incarceration of seventeen Irtt fithriii four of the forts of the United States; now converted by the government into prisons, Which have no similitude but in the Bastile of France, I avail myself of the first moment of my return to my native soil to address a brief word to you. . In this imprisonment lam understood to have been the special victim of Mr. Secretary Seward, who, in concert with his hired minions, has omitted no occa sion to heap upon me accusations. which he knew to be false, and therefore dared not bring to the ordeal of a public trial. , To these charges the despotic censor- ship of the prisons in which Thave been' kept allowed me no reply; and I can owy . now promise that in due time and upon, a' proper occasion Mr. Seward shall hear from me in a way that will krocure for him, if he has not already acquired it, the contempt of every honest man and wo man in the land. Without having been held upon any specific charge, I am turned out of prison without any reason being assigned for it; and thus,- in my arbitrary arrest and re lease, I illustrate the most flagrant viola-1 tion of constitutional liberty. . 1 It wonid be unbecoming to the dignity of the subject tdeast abusive epithets upon the author of this gross outrage • but when allowed the opportunity, I pledge myself, under pain of forfeiture of the good opin ion you have always honored me with, to show that all that is bad in a man, unpa triotic in a citizen, and corrupt in an offi cer, finds itself concentrated in this indi , vidual. GEO. P. KAEE. ,e lll- *ATEDLILITABitII=• - '*— : Dr. BROWN'S hiRDIOAL ~ :Ale and ITIMIOAIrDiIIeeIO.SO i ..i ..-........., Smlt old deed. Plltshurghfa„ ,--1, 4 P lenet. • Dr.- RoWN bi an old olliten : .,-. I - of Pittsburgh, Andhra becmiat $, ' ' • Pritctioebgthelast twenty-live .., B years. Me linguists has been ' • - • ..e: - waned inostly-tePrivite and , , _ BurgicalDiseasie. .- ‘.. "'"I`" • I Mini ' 8 AND isnuErasa- An In need of a medical' friend. shouldnot fail tr. find out the sure Tawas of relief, The Dootor la a -,. regular graduate, and his enitnei,...u. ehal treat ment of a certain cleat offteues 1E a sue guy- BI antee to the sufferers of obtaining permanent re lief by the use of hissemediee *ng following hit advice. • . • • Dila BROWNITREXIMIK9 ' never. ,ftail, to titre the. worst• tbrm of •Venereil DisesamimPurittios nail lletohdous Affeoti o ns.+ Also allnisemea ariaingfrom a rhemeditary taint, which manifests its lii the.' form or kitten met.- oar , a treat low farm Jaf skin dis ease; o' iSin of wide this patlent is entirely ignOratit. To patio to • oted;'DT.Btown offer hopes of a iM e and a " lootn , . •- , __ ~,_.., ....g ..,. . , Dr. Brolat'greniediee for the alarmist 'trouble brought on often by. Mai mlitary habit of lemma: grgoitoatioh, - whiohthe young and weak ,tr laded often gh'e reliable remediocknown in the (mantra -they aro safe, and• make a ste•ady reatoration of health.. .___ . • - • MIR Dr , browh's 'remedies. never Sill to , care this painful disease nvi..PlW nars--he will warrant a mire. ,He alap treats Pilm , Aleeti Gonnorrhosu Striate* tirethid diar_ges; Female Wasknese Monthly Shipbresdim 'Diseases cif the Joint& 'Male in dm Nervous Affeetions. , Pabas in the Back and Kidneys. Irritation of the - Bladder, to gether with all dillegiee of an imPtiro 3^l""''' 14.1114111173rifthing• containing a ElV.l4 4l 3 VPat . will be ingli ls rainV ed. ' eine sent to any address , packed and seoureirom observation. Moe and Private Booms. No. 50 Smithfield tlWe Pi 04 `.." ) .. Pa. nols-dawda WNW GOODS. .ITAVE JUST RECEIVED FROM th e East a lime and'choice selection of SPRING AND SUMMER GOODS, forGents' and Youths wear. embraoints all the newest etrles COATINGS, CASEGMERES AND VISTINGS. W. H. illtoGNE ere 148 Federal street Corner Market Square. Allegheny city. my 9 TEETH EXTRACTED WI THO T PAIN by the use of an apparatus whereby no drags or galvanic battery are used. Medi cal gentlemen and their familieshaye their teeth extracted by MY process. and are ready to tectits us to the safety and painlessness of die operation, whatever has been stdd by. persons interested in asserting theeghtram hanngno knowledge of my process. *DARTIFICIAL TEETH inserted in every pole. and eduirr as low , as will ',g ran t th e WU at matedal rail ist. m 111741 lisettvat IHIQUESNE. BIRASS. WORK., r EIC/111"0,7 C 0.., 1111/PAOTIIII.IIIIIIOY tiaa LINTY :0i! , , • pnrxsEri i rvierAss WORK, A;NivEr*EAlll WITTE Alir-Partionlar attention.tolittial Oil Be4ner-, Bra* Osafinga of suporioraraoothniea made to er. ; Bteanaboat work and rePairhat goner, s7~ - Roaa' , Oil • %e;"•-ljai3 0 9' Beet* Lain. PI . Braoketa and 4.lenta: Conaer , B.T.,,OLA.o 1 . BET AND DUQUESNE, WA T. fel3af ' .1 °tang's Etatin . g . /kilo - 43 - it,: co: 'mom- Arazy AND ShITZEL . I 7na i ii, s i avr i s ' Where and all the delioadeo of the' reason will be oerved,ny b;rhe moat valatabli stria. EfilliOTING. 014 corner Virgin alley Mal Smithfeld et._ INIF , rt,t ~!•:"- , ,i• • , ,_. : 7 ' , . ~. iaHiniv..ti.iiii. L 'V - '' (- - L il i 1.... - SWEETS INFALLIBLE 'MIMI' b f, fired from the recipe of Dr. Sionlinrißweet, pi zipeticut th e i ltreat.beine•setter, , :anThas Insen I• inAlpptctice for. the last twenty years midi ". o stastortichMaAtiecess. As-an eaternalremo itis Without anvil . and *III allarbitcpain i-reiremlily,than any otherripiltration. i For' . etunatio tont. Nervous 'Discgdeni itih truly ,:ble,l: find as a cure -, far Berm, Wounds, :'ins: guises ; '&o4' its 'sdotbing;teslint; and •rful strengthening ProPertlesonzeite;theiust. er and astonishment of all who havwevor I. it a trial. Over four hundred certificates 01 rkable cures:performed by it Within the Inat r eats; atteat this fact .;? ': 1 R. L. sittgßs A, co:. • • • :Agent. reepittebarth... :.•17daweow isriumLui nAt4AkzElG if 0 t-E SALE, G R . N)8 18 AND 20 WoODB I Pi Jita9:if PITT V,14,0 HUMAN MEANS, DAvid UNIANDLRIa. HARBISON ♦. 0017 IN. 4 Special Partner, 843"1261R1X0/0/76' - s f: •eeaseeietowcaadleig. memit*Cci.J I LI OLESALE 9orner Wood and' Streeti,i __ ___ • folks • -- INITSB. en/guar.' PA , 4.17.11,110,1:0M.A.aV Affii-ENCIZI.,•• . ....,..., rirlfivollAs . TcArz i nciii,• - ttritopkiN -1..... att. II& Wsiter 4We/it; Pittsburgh; Pit., Isar° ared.to•bring oat or send liackpassemiters from r.to any ; Dart of the. 041. 901:#047 1 009r by 'steam or sailintrpacket: . •-• L SIG 2' RAFTS FOR &AIX peyablerbi any: o Europe.' ' _ —1... . • - . t for the Indianapelia‘ndtsnoinnatt Rail .ir ro• . 'Also, Agent for the old Bleak Star "1: of B. •• , Packets, and for-the Haas of Steamers salt eing be • eon Now Tork.-Liverpool, Glasgo w /mad alw • • , , - .• ,- • • t t•fell 1 EXEL - MILMORAJDO, (PORMICILT OOCET ...01:11•QrEsto COR FIFTH 3 EURITIEFIRLD STREMOI (OPposite the Poet °Ma) Tillaren B th i re j a l b S or C e w ß eltrin E d, if i e' pleaaec. to see his frfernds at all h our!. HIS Pr4leS. Wpm; Ides, and ciaan are pith° bed: . 1624,-amd JOHN LUNDY. Proprietor. m. E./432. & co.. lunquinvoss OP e No. .1 Carboni Oil, AND . 13 t IR3 N Z 00e on LIBERTY STREET' orpoilte oil w arran ted, 8u23:134 1 : RY W. BEAUMONT &MO. I IWO .. MERLY OF THE TWO- SIII,E 12 H. USE, dealerain Forelamßrandies, Wines, and . • .3; alsoi'Blackberry,- Raapberry, Wild Cherry. e.nd Ginor,Brandies.:Qld Monontaheas, Rye._ and other Whiskies. Jamaica. Ram,, dupe 'Hop Wineßitteta. &c."' - ' • 1 i e a , - Mo. B fildbertystesela • , ul osite Fourth street, Piftabunh, Pa, Ho Taverna, and Families eurtplied at mod erate p fits for cash. New Jersey - pdetfor fam ily or h purposes.... . isl-emd I, MarsZsIVA. 0 IX.i: NV'O`LiILE• , . . L I NO, MILLER a 004 WOMBT SlLiiiiiifiteff . MILAN. AL. • LEGIOLNy VALLEY naux,OAD. , APONee and Warehouse - P ll K=TiA I PPERTs, inMEB,ITROEL Man of Eluadnatins sad Luhrlested . Carbon 0* and Benssole. NO. 1 IREFYIWEES'OII., li r klbliNTED NON-RNIP.TANIME. aim's% on hen& 4. oeN:l3, WIL as -.CO. WHOLESALE GROCERS.; • And Impolite= of Winces, thumniis, mins, , act. ALSO. . • - liatillers iiiid - Dealeis • s• E OLD MONONCIAILBLA AYR WHIEp' Liberty. -:S&•€•eti • nogrip • ,PITTSBIIIIGH. 'pr. - ss, Founders, GA AND.STEANI'fITTERt' lib/ of Brass end Iron Ceara natide Ito corder. • • : _ . . 1: ..2/160, •• • 1 LASS ASTINGS, Or ALL KINDS i r i = ade at the ehottast notice. , •O t ' REFINER Y'S' FITTED UP. 4 '" 11111. All o en leftstßOWN &TETLEY'S, 186 WOOD.STREET. will-be promptly attende d te. "m The enilten of-this firm tieing practical mti !Annie& of linany mini' exvoriance in the buil nem. will insure to eve. tatwt n otion in every re itPeot. I - • '•• i__ lieflood .-- , ----. 7 • _ _, NA.a'ILONA. ."-01.G.,.; ARE NOW IiILUMFACTIThaIifi iivedi thk .of erti otre t T w e ld w bh o ff .. r an brillianoy in btentos - oi bola. 1 411 color' we *imam -to be °R i ff by .age or ex - iettnenrpnesed by , an 7 • umi natorin 'or tern markets.. Aft A profitable Oil to the eti .:ire can spoolally reoimnend It. Also. oar mannwtare of . CiUS;TIC SODA,' Used by all fame Soap Makers and Oil Refineries. which exesiii /0 PoX cent. ill itrania all the make of English' ?oda brought to this oonnta. Our man tarp of I SAPONIFIER, OR CONCENTRATED LYE SAL i. AC.' Are so well and, favorabl y ?realm wo trust the mention is aD . meat. All orders and inquiries -NW ha r- , .....41, at tended to b , addressing. ritift GEORLlE w C oixt Oldt atree twA t . ri lu tt r bx7 r. L X' Bait Manufneturingeomeenlf. ol8:Ird aerie 11? YOU WANT SOME GOOD .S.Eig 1 Fruit or prepared Mince Meat, mined.: and: all other kinds of Spices, cooking Bray Wine, New Orange, Lemon and Citron Peel go to. , Haworth & Brothers, in the Diamond, where' you will get a new crop of Fruit and lower than at any other house in the city. Also n_gemeral and' tun assortment of Family Groceries , Tea, Wines.. Brandies, and all other, kinds of Fordo land Domestic Liquors. H&WORTH &BROTHER; co i ner Diamond and Diamond allq. JOHN IPLEEGHIL, v .OE3 BE I: '1" , 25 Corli7 oido,nd EeAYer Oa, = _ Aii , i4wlß/v76.127. - l M e e - rolit f r.t u tto t rt i es e r i ej i strtentEli m i l ., siii , cdsa • • • :-_ WW2 ; ,, TO-THE,PIII3 111 7 0, -- Eht - Ponx LT' - --ly-blodeftwl all deem .• . -.nations. treat owtrAl and, •-•.;• • ilelleate - 41.1sordenvself-t abuse and digueletor Mations oomnfo it'd - eideht.2.to 'oaths td'ivotti"`U , ' , - • •4Dit 15 Z‘ arid 1 vr _moaned, 43a:route •witialsturtg publlsneeihe fixotof, deans q 0: the ishorpsitAnd •faleels neatest ate deeadfallg !hooked, and think Itt r A ,irma , sin very •lemelrei and :for contandnation: , • and' corrtfwbon --amass their wiv.ea. promising sons and, dense-tem. Theis familyoltoigt shotdd 6e oantid# to - IL'eej them _prance that th ey do die tweina s DraRAN SL UP. (otoePt PubUshing) Meratiya prat; dor Might - -be ioet "-ttsturatdonCertUtiditelseLy eledeet , atidf- P Ptuous. fenuttes liom tmd rased in itliorte* _lull as MusKrumw o.rd „who. oonapare:peoift inteumuet, eimeiscao., to doTtdrt and ;mita, mysteri4meli =befits °nut itistdpublleitTihotreveri ROW urtaiserow "este and gnarduisui are_ tbankfal,,,that thoir Wid-j•Wardt' prevfotely 'feeble y sad ofidelbratomonditlenitedismwspraec. have been Iwtored to' health and Vigovity DP, weeBBANBTAID.P.: maztv-lefbra:aillP after marriage throug have_boan eami much :tiff fering;• anti . ~el 7 ••mertifloatron: .k.c: -- 16r/&mator hem or ;mamma otontissions.. are gompjetelgoared - ln tiwery short oboe - of to by hp new Dwindle!. biohare r ouliar bihistrawahewsteseolmSounde ' tom the egetable . giUgdom, .11upttg.,Lon the " - falisop soft he t derannaltreatiteettlialitsa widen ed-band- gabstitntal the y e ti jr le dls omelets treatedwith market, su _Joshed over forty yearn (40): treat ment in horottale of b6th the_pgloix and: in the• United States leads itinkto iron With a -fair trial,•health and hisubbeSe• ' taus bloom open the ttow ,- palled.oheek i Trifibmamagor with montebanke said smacks- but coma and.bAenred J•flonstLmwtion andr - 01l -of , its liftidrea - -4D...eassee, which _l3o_ many...annually f111,:our. ootwitet• pa, can nowbe ..relieve.;Aprovidhtg they - attoltid`tdo it in thOe Nutt-partiontaremsmbehasflicktlrriarment - bymuotrinr a oopp of the AV.:dice.' Allyue&which kr giv en gratis td gate , 31trimgzthe ad- - vmatamo_uf-uwee,,fa- a -yeSTS- experaenoe and . o bservatiOn..oQueoqll yg.,las. soppier akill ..1.. - thektrilatrakat. 'or .'sturoisirte and who Is oonsuiti:dhs , theprofonlon.as weltsw room 53sentled-Wrepeotable :citizens; `Dublikstors, pro ,Inietous -of hotelse -- NeroEitaithneld street. near Diamond street. - krivate csommttat cations - from all rat* Pt UV junks% - strieft at timde4 to., Alrevtto: 15. lghg - de&IYAIIIN .rtfttitcritt ?ookAlke. I ItER'II3"H T.,14 4 , •.• 49 .St•, !phi:Jr r ee f 90narai 1s clotanve ..81ADF.'il) OR DER CHEAP EORCABE. , _ ' APING- RA-rGAINED 'lettoont , N, •___O w ither LAcdee, stneicat:OlclHS. 'CARRY and v.IOIVIDS; .;/ . 1110.11 Zan ba .04 rohaand , atprioastirbalowthvnirnal ailirfireat indacamanis offarod,O . cataikArs alaiffign " 11.1 i 66. :fey., ' • - alfga9 ,COUNIgIeN,,,./14111, flAtAßDelik IiEFX4IIINTS. • . - #7,•`!“.t? • Dialers x 251 Prpdrios and Pitt! ImswVinnuffultp:, was-. LiatrOrY•OTßAtt; stfirtol. '• " i• ' D.& TB it 0 /..P.1 3 ..E.V.L.; - .. . ~,A oef ;11 Lilt IS MllRRekar- 4 :11T TX- I GOR, W -,No.IIBSI3MITEVEELD 13TREi2, -1 WE HATE /UST it i evairri) A ' . 2 'ate °ad TRY.A 016 540 'lug 41 . 3 r- ' If? A. x...i... ia , o , 02 1CX 8 , 00111664 of ' Cloths, Caubilerepylrestings; *Sc% ALSO=A Urn . stook GENT'S FURNISHING GOODS, inidndine TontenAirie. Pdifer iDithniCNejekTiaa, and everything nanalls kitat.W.ha claim Furnish ins Mores. tmdarnpromptly ezenut. , d auf*Aya IDDITLEIBITILGH .1 Wood Street, of thd lialtirderc Piano kac tory,4sBtabliihed in 1836. UPPizno 7 octavo Centre Pianos. cembimitg. all the, men troll of a fast class Inotrm:nent with Tate iiiafeltios (Inderpitent). Highly important to: Lhe .critical Pianist. Lowfor oaah or accordance. __ WISE &BROTHER ."'" • PO.P.9lifkiPlele. To -BuiLDEas We aretow turttleiz of • 0 10 w• arePM irtrito ever from oiar,coAt TAR 509 LXBEiIiTY StrirEiT.,.. Beet guilty of Fe:mm*sr - pcAltreqr on' .otteN InciticteoN.,!*ttw A AM, ^:417,4",.1. OFUILIIH BiAfGEE f Iniportece lad 'IE I " Clot US; Batimiita, Vestings, TailoreThriarcanicti,..l63, 256 ' 1) Worth sidei'miTWMEPr47/4:: 0 e84 3 4 . .81EITXPIAVic. CO::: rialTrEir wiaaPAilekuNP. I PITTS3IIItaiL ,PA Warehouse. 1TO: 149 Pint end l2o- geo — olndeL." • Manufacturers of illsisof !and deseriptiOnvol Coal Oil. Retorts and Stdle, Qaa sad Water ..Pip e Bad Iron_,e Dee Irons, Warn BOxee; Bteel Pußleaylienswe end CouPlinL Also ebbing and Macluso ' *ice. sonntien made to order. • Having &complete wae@no stiratedoto the Ratmdryiall Peewee:7 Etta:cc winbtr eoridnll7 !Wended to ..eadzithw BAILEY, FARRELL &IVO.* '- - PRACTICAL, PLUMBERS , 94,q AND, 5T4421, • No.l29.Fourth Streetir , a NEAR SMITHFIELD' STREET • Tanks - andi - Agitatenirfor'Oil RefinetitasUal 'with lead in the taintAurole mannenks Alte new Preemie — of burning bi turning .the joints without Am m er ; „thsuses fitted nnwith got and Cold Water the beat style; with all the loodinv imnrefements Bathe, Waeh... ,, tanda.:Olopetfsipits. A largestook - of Pumne aindinad - Pipe always on hand.' . " • - ems. .TEEBNAN,4IE' cuortitt, Whole Elate and Retail -Groeerit, Inzoarns Asa DliMaist rs TEAS, *MIES, L.I.E)1 1 011S, 4Fe., NORTH-BAST limier of OHIO STREET AND THE DIAKONb, 'Ara f -Es.RETTY so20;17 LAKE SUPERIOR od,ipra INE hiIItELTEVO • WOl4 :GA.. PARR. de. C I Oc• Rtaittifiotworr Sheath. Braider/ and Bolt Ceimpr t . 11 ,4 Dec Bottoma.ltaisixt Still 80tt0r . 4. , rzpr 'Solder. &o. Also harm:y r / 1m . dealers in Vlet.t .P.hlUnleet hen. Constantli on hind.ni TooLa Warettotute, N 0.148 ECOND STREETS, Pit'abr.rgit, U.' 113 P Special orders of Conn er pattern. feLl•lrd FiNaIfIEENOTON IRON AND l'iir.Alt:WOßP-Ke 1.1. 4 01 - Cts , at EC EA ttntE L • Manufactarrallaf • aradseit. Fiona. A and T Iron. - Nana And nirouvat lao.SareAn; email Tititit Im4 17 Iron. imitabb. frinf" , } Works ate alioiptat tivo'CTIT . Enaltoula IWaiAir ' 4 warkokinemt.444saleiti, i' - BoDr'eiv r aicsa