The Pittsburgh gazette. (Pittsburgh, Pa.) 1866-1877, August 22, 1868, Image 2
Ell etayttt, CHILDREN ON THE SHOIEE. We are,belidog little Oa the sands, .4. We ace mak ing d little rooms very ge,y, • We are buoy With our acid our hande,." We are sorry.that time tilts away. 0 why arc tLc minutes in Buell haste telly won't they In/ tOeUr play ' Our 10210115.0111 our meals are such wastel.-;- We.ean dine - very well another day. We do not mind the tide coming in— We can dig it a cunning little bed, Or leave our pretty house and begin Another pretty house In its stead; We do not.mind the sun in our eyes --- - When it makes such a dazzle of the wOrld, • That we can not tell the sea from the skies, - Nor loOk where the flying 'drops are hurled. The shells that we gather are so - - • 7 - The birds and•the clouds are so kind And the' winds are so merry wltitour hair— It is only the People we mind! Papa If you come CO very near, We'ean , t build the library to,day; 'We think you are tired of being here, And perhaps you wonid like to go away. There are just one two we won't refuse, If they come bto help ns now and then. But we wantonly friends to be of use,- And not all those idle grown men; Perhaps, if we hurry very much. And don't lose an instant of the day, There'll be thee for-the last lovely touch i'.o..iere,tir sea sweept It all away.- 0 childrent-tbusiTorking with the hake- There's nothing SO ;errible as rest; i Plan only how all , may take a part;. . It's easy for each to do his best. The gm sweeping-up at set of sun,- Can never make youryuil be In vain;, ~ • : It covers the thing that you have done. ' - Bat the joy -of the doing shall remain; . ' turttludirs Magazine ..... . GUSHING GIRLS. . . The Bound Table of last :week.has a Saturday Review article, *mu- which we take the folloWing extract: , • The gushing girl, then,i4 to be' thin and addicted to moonlight, which always arouses',' • In her a tendency to bask and: swell ,with unutterable thoughts, - to gaze fixedly on some bright_•particular star to sigh pro roundly, land to quote largely from -some . vertsweet poet, Lalla Rooks being usually - pieferred—"l , never loved a dear gazelle,' i. etc; .Buneet, also., has on the gushing girl a', remarkable,," effect; and twilight ' she adorea. The hooting owl, the chirping katydid, the swooping bht, ' all the innp -amiable sounds of. summer" evenings, wrap . • • • her soul in a.sort of • celestial -ecstaey, and generally lure her into fresh fields and -pastures new 'of 'uncpMted - and lovely'verse .of the most tielartcholy'description, where. 'from she'commorili derives great, consola tion and'a cold in the head,. As ,We have Intimated, she is partial to poetry, ;without,; however, often. venturing ,wl,,thin the sa-_ cred precincts of composition; . atthough al-• most always she has. a friend, a sweet fe male - -friend, who writes the loveliest poetry you can possibly imagine. Novels she reads, of course, but only those of a very lugubrious description, where every body is indescribably miserable for three vOlumes, and, the , hero and heroine are satisfactorilt killed at last, locked in each other's arms. Yet with ail this tendency to the melancholic in literature, , the gushing girls rathet good humored in her ordinary workaday aspects, is rather happy than oth erwise in her domestic relations, and is usu slly blessed with a most intrepid appetite. If to other women a new baby is a well; spring . of incoherent pleasure, to the gush ing ,g.trl it is a perfect fountain of idiotic • delignt, and plunging- her into an absolute epilepsy of admiration until she fairly, foams at the mouth with!delirious eugohstic •;nonsense. In much the same spirit she makes it a point to fall head over ears in love with the fat and rather uninteresting tenor, and raves wildly`about the handsome but' not embarassingly ' intelleetual .tra gedian, and has photograph@ of hiin in all' his principal characters; does her thinking, or- wbatever, mysteries she may substitute for thinking, in the most exaggerated su: perlatives and spells language hyperbole. She:is frank to a fault, and within an hour after introduction will have gushed forth •, to you the entire story of her-woes and ! disappointments, her yearnings and awl- ' - rations.' is' a weak, clinging doWer, she --tells you, torn and wished by cruel blaits, and she, comes to you for condor:, and protection„ which 'if she is, pretty, as she not enfrequentlY is, you are not loth to stye her. 'lf she .stngs„ it is always some plainttire little ballad of despair and death' in a minor key,i likes "Fair, fair with golden hair, under • the, willow she's sleeping," and she - plays • 'occaiion ly with much feeling and. freedom an etheralized and every much' ,mixed up' - version of ""The Dead March in'Saul. But she greatly prefers the hafp 'to ano, k bequse it is so much ;more romantic, and so much more patronized by, the poets, , ant because, as she.'sits by it with back flung curls and upturned brow, she has the opportunity• of comparing herself to St. Cecilia; • or, to • one of those very:wingy musicalseraph@ - of religious 'art. • Lovers, Of 'chunk, she has in, plenty,',hccatise ,every one takes her fa'net 7 -and every man does who'is at all dark,'andhis'any pretensions be considered , 'geed' looking perion • eleiated in, her fervid imagination from a desirable and possible to an actual adorer. Whether' ho cares • for ' or. ,eien • .knows ber, is •a 'Matter of the, purest; indif ference; all.t.he same he serves her phrpose of Setting . thefratthli Wheredn She shall shape her fantastic 'When the ictdal love. th isoff • doe@ come andthe edge gea e worn the noveltYu •-tods -har:,..not 'very -differ ent from other . girls • in,, a ,similar.predica ' meat arid She - aniazed to, find that the all important cpzesq9u settled in` the most com • znon 7 plaCe way., imaginable, n vilthout elan ele vow or any allusion- to two, hearts, etc:, or two souls, etc.; without ed muckas aug-. .gesiing a single appropriata snotation. ~From thisamazement she nevm _lly recov ers, imd, ; from the day , of her Marriage, or, at least, froin the, end of her honeymoon, her gushing days may be considered fairly over, - : . • • . °Oil at any r ate ,t the disease takes a differ ,ent form. .On her lobes , and her' husband usually overflow theaurplusage of her emo tional atterances, and moonlight and weep ing willows are held of very little acbount. That Is, if her marriage. be happy; <if not, she commonly develops' into that peculiar style of •marital , ,querulousness whose chief i.y in life c,onsistimimparting fci the world what trials.one's I husband arid 'dbildren are, . and what smack and =complaining martyr ;;is one altogether.. The , gushing , girl who iloesn?t marry is the amiable old maid whom everybody knows, 'Witlf - spit-curls and the saeredinentory • Of'alOrit love.' 'Site 'reads • poetflstill; but : . otitotecit :km takes .'great —l - fit e le j r, ,the amatory entanglements. -of younger friends; and generithy, just ;sit jolly 'anti Aiarinhig an old maid as one could havev Take her all' in all, from first to las%-the gushing girl is by no ' means the W orStt and her aneed fa',eertainkt rireferable to ' that *elf-bred iitdifierpoeolll4''ou find time ip the'mfdstof*propinal to estimate `the itim;kant; of , g toier's,prohahle income.. M. :mensal! 2ov -, Werznoo.—Although ,•only'beginning, Wooster University' is ablo .to•day to buy out , many 'of our Western There la airC.oly 4ftaii ; for, en. Alowinent Of f120,9601'Mbui1414,;q 5 ,9 00 : These are actual ilivre,s;i,epiventing;,real property, cash and'sound notes, find &p.m; include $100,000.0r more, -which -19- about Italf promised.'and more than half sure, for endowing Professorships 1 ' 1 ' • A "STUNNING" WYE LEITER. The following is sublime, and we recom mend it as a modelletter to writers: My dear Miss F.--t4ery time I think of you my heart flops up and down like a, churn dasher. - Senaations of unutterable joy caper Over it like ~younfl goats over a Stable roof, and thrill through it like Span!sh. needles through a pair of tow linen trawling As agoling swimmtth with delight in amhd 'paddle So swim lin a sea ;of glory. pis_ ions ofeestatic rapture, thicker than the hairs in a blacking brush, and brighter than the hues of a humming bird's pinions, visit and bore on their invis me in my slumbers; ible wings, your image stands before me, and I reach out to grasp it, like a pointer s napping at a blue-bottle fly. When I first beheld your angelic perfections, I was be wildered, and my brain whirled around like a bumble bee under a • glass tumbler. My eyes stood open like cellar doors in a country town,• and I lifted up my ears to catch the silvery accents of your voice. My tengue refused to wag, and in silent adora tion I drank the sweet infection of love as a thirsty man swalloweth a tumbler of whisky punch. Since - the light of your face fell upon my life, I sometimes feel as if I could lift myself up by my boot straps to • the top of the Presbyterian steeple ' and pull the bell rope for singing schopl. Day and night you are in ray . thoughts. When Aurora, blushing like a bride risen from her saffron couch; when the jaybird pipes his tuneful lay in the apple tree by the storing 'house; When the , chanticleer's' shrill clarion heralds the 'coming. morn; when the :awakened' pig ariseth from his-bed and grunteth, and goeth for his_ morning,.refreshments; when the drowsy beetle, heelahls. droning flight eultry noontide; and'when the lowing re come home atmilking time, :I think of ee; and like a piece of-gum elastiC, my heart 'seem to stretch clear across my bosbm. Your hair is like the mane of a sorrel horse, powdered with gold; and the braes pin skewered through your waterfall fills me with ,unbounded awe. Your forehead is smoother than the elbow of an old coat. Your eyes are' ,glorious to behold. In their liquid depths I see legions of..:little Cupids, bathing like a cohgrt of ants ix an old army cracker: When ,their fire hit me upon my manly breast, it permeated my en tire anatomy like fcload of bird-shot would go through a rotten apple. Your nose is, 7from a chunk, of Pariah marble; and your month puckered with sweetness. 'Meter lingers on your lips like honey on a bear's paw, and' myriads of unfledged kisses are there ready to fly out and light somewhere, like•bhie-birda out , of a parent's nest.. Your laugh rings 'on my ears like the wind-harp's strain, or the bleat of a stray lamb on a bleak hill-side. The dimples on your cheeks are like bowers in beds of roses, or hollows in cakes of home-made sugar. lam dying to fiy to your presence and pour out the burning eloquence of my kve, as thrifty housekeepers pour out hot coffee.. Away from you I am as melancholy as a sick rat. Sometimes can hear the June bu's of despondency buzzing in my ears, anafeel the cold lizards of, despair crawling down my back. Uncouth fears,like a thous and minnows, nibble at my spirits, and my soul is pierced through with doubts, as an old cheese is bored with skippers. -My love-for you is stronger than the smell of Cofffs patent butter, or the kick of a young cow, and more unselfish than a kit ten's first caterwaul: As the song bird hankers for the light of day, the cautious mouse for the fresh bacon in the trap, as a lean pup hankers after new milk, so I long for thee.: You are fairer .than a speckled pullet, sweeter than a Yankee doughnut fried in sem= molasses, brighter than the topknot plumage in the head of a "museove duck. -Yon are candy kisses, raisins, pound cake, and sweetened toddy altogether. If these few remarks will enable you to see the Inside of my soul, and me to win your affections,. I shall be as happy as a woodpecker on .a cherry tree, or a stage horse in a green pasture. If you cannot reciprocate...my thrilling passion, I will pine away like a poisoned bedbug, and fall away from the- flourishing vine of life, an untimely branch; and in the comimg years, when the shadows fall from thehills, and the philosophic frog sings lila cheerful evening hymns, you, happy in another's love, can come and drops tear and catch a cold upon the last resting place of . ' Jursus EPAMINOMEI 3itIGGLICES. EDUCATIONAL. The Central Culver6ity.—A Card from Mr. • Cornell--How a. Poor Boy can Pay tOr his Education. Bra: The numerous appeals which lam , . receiving from young men for assistance to enable them to pay ,their way while obtain ing tm eduCation •at the Cornell University, rae'to reply through the Tribune. I would lidor,m - all who may desire the infor mation that, in,eiganizing the University, the trustees aimed to arrange a system of Manual labor which, while it would be com pulsory, upon none, would furnish all the . students of the University with 'the oppor tunity to develop their. physical strength and vigor by labbr, the fair compensation for' which would pay the, experises of their education. Students will be employed in cultivating and on, a• farm of employed, acres, the various productions, : best suited ,tri Furnish the college tables. These will include. Hie stock for producing milk, but ter and cheese, and to be killed for meat; grain for bread, and'Yegetables and fruits of all kinds suited to the climate and soil. Mechanical employment will be given to 'all in the machine shop of the University. This will be equipped with an engine of 25- .horsepower, lathe 4 plowing machines for iron and wood, and all the most improved implement's and tools. for. working in iron and wood. 'Here they will manufacture tools machinery, models, patterns, etc. The erection of the additional buildings required for the University will furnish employment e for years to students in need of it. There will also be'eniployment in laying outgrad- ing, road-rnaking, and improving and beau tifying the farm and grounds of the Uni yerkity. The:work done by students will be paid fot at the ;current rates paid else where for like services, • ; The work will be done under the super :vision of the professors, and , competent superintendents and foremen.' 'lt will- be the constant ain't' of the , trustees and faculty , of -the Univereity to . render it as'attractiVe and instructive as pos.sible,' and especially to make it conducive to the health, groWth, .e.nd,physical vigor of the tandems,, besides affording them the. meami of'. self-support and. independenc.e while receiving all , .the advantages of the University.. With such combined facilities for instruc. tion and maintenance. all'the expenses of-ti .first - ClllBl3 'faulty and' of:tuition being paid by tho endowment, 'trust.' that no person who earnestly,dealres to be thoroughly ado cated will fin& difficulty.in becomiugi so by his • own , exertions, at lhe Cornell Waiver eiti.• 4 '• • yire ; already Aave students who entered three months in advance of the, opening. of the-`University to .avail "themselves of the opportunity . to earn ,two dollars a' day • haying. and herveS ,:'"and thus make a sure thing of it.'.' Such boys will get Mt cdtication and make theiriaark faille world in ?heir use;of it. - • • 'lnOnclusion'l twill .assure . the, boys that `ff-theY will perform one-foarth as much PITTSBURGH GAZETTE : SATURDAY, AUGUST 22, 1868: labor as I did at their ages, or as I do no* alBB,yeankof 'Age, they will find no diffi culty Ikpayinttheir expenses while prose— olingltb*Audies,at Ithaca. ..,.Yoursrespectfully, Ezne ColiNsal" Traacii; N. Y., August 10,186 g.. Girard College. This institution was not the subject of a favorable report atthe neat meeting of the Society for the Advancement of Science, held at Chicago. A paper was read devel oPing the plan for the resuscitation - of the Cincinnati Observatory, established in 1842, and upon - the death of Prof Ormsby M. Mitchell allowed to fall into, partial decay and total disuse. Prof. Vander Weyde, - formerly of Girard--College, but now Of New York, then said that he was pleased to hear of this renewed interest in science, but ho could not avoid at once urging the ne cessity of earefulness in the manner of con ducting the new institution, and of stating the facts concerning a backsliding. He had followed Prof. Bache in the Girard College, and found it given over to politics to that extent that its usefulness was not only im paired but gone, at least in great part. The magnetic observatory at Girard College, built without iron, was used for a carpenter shop, fallen wooden nails being replaced: with iron ones, and the meteorological in strum'ents being carelessly stowed away in the closet where the servants stowed their brooms and rubbish. He had soon retired from his professorship in consequence, and I returned to New York. ENTISTRY TEETH EXTRACTED wrraptir PAIN ! NO CHARGE RADE *HEN ARTIFICIAL TEETH AREIORDERED. • • ' A.7IILL lOTT TOR Pk.' • • AT DR. SCOTT'S.' STE PENN STREET, 3D DOONABOVE HAND. ALL WORK WARRANTED. CALL AND EX AMINE SPECIMENS CF GENUINE VULCAN ITE.. my9:d&T GAS FIXTURES * GAS FIXTITiVES AND , 103 a etricleliers, FOB (MS AND OIL. dust received,- the finest and largest assortment ever opened In this city. • WELDON & KELLY, 147 WOOD STREET, CUR. VIRGIN ALLEY. mlalm= CEMENT, SOAP STONE, &c YDRAULIC CEMENT. •SPAP STONE. PLASTER. CHIMNEY TOPS, WATER PIPEB. HENRY 11. COLLINS. aplB.o7C , 25 Wood street. TEMENT DRAIN PIPE. Cheanest and best, Pipe in the market. Also, RO SENIIALE HYDRAULIC CE...1 .S IEI. fur Asle. R. B. & C. A. BROCKETT & CO: °Mee and Manuthetory--244.1 REBECCA BT., Allegheny.l Zir Orders by mall promptly attended to. r , Je=rail MERCHANT TAILORS. SUMMER GOODS. 8074% Tout and Ctilldren's IMIEMER-C ASS - MERE SUITS, LINEN SUITS. DUCK SUITS. FLANNEL! SUITS. at.I'ACCA JACKETS. In everystyle, of the greatest variety, suitable for the prer.ent eaAnn. lientienten :Ind n One as sonnies', of Will lE •nd BROWN DUCE SUITS. ALI'ACCA and FLANNEL. COATS, &e.. .every garment ocldg apeotally made tor us by toe best Eastern houses. Our orlems are as low as good goods can be told at by any firm East or West. GRAY da I.OOAIV, HENRY MEYER, MERCHANT TAILOR, No. 73 SULTEMELD STREET, Pittsburgh, Pa Constantly on hand. a full asaortment of CLOTHS VESTINGS, &c. sp20:081; TOBACCO AND CIGARS. lii A =ALMA IIR ALL KINDS OF CEAF TOBACCO AND SEAMEN No 8 SIXTH STREET, (National" Bank of Com• tierce Building, ) • ; • PITTSBURGH, PA. Branch of 17SI Water street, N. Y.. - • spritn77 ; • 'DANIEL F. DINAN. WRCELSIOR WORRS. VA • 11. at W. JEIVILINSON.• • ' MAnuractarers and Dealers In Tohacco, Snuff, Cigars. Pipes. 4b., 116 6 lIILDICIIAL bT., ALLIWIIENY• CONFECTIONERIES. HENRI HORITACII;' Confectionery and Bakery No. WO 814;LTIIPTELD STERET, • Between Seventh ind Unity. p , fl p ,c ixo tillj 411011Cirr4M .7 -- 7GEOACEELELEII4 ---- ' Fancy Cake Baker & Confectioner, • • • AND Di:taxi/ I IN FOREION & DOMESTIC FEIIITS & NUTS, _ Mo. 40,. corner Federal and Robinson atreats, _Alle gheny. SHP Constare - .y ,on hand, ICE CREAM, of varlons flavors. PIANOS. ORGANS. &C. BUY THE . BEST AND CHEAP EST PIANO AND ORGAN. SChOMiteker% . Gold . Medal Piano, AND ESTEVS COTTAGE ORGAN, The 80.11QMACNRIC PIANO combines all the latest vithiable improt.ements known in the con struction of a first class instrument, and bas always been awarded .the highest premium wherever ex 'Stilted. Its tone Is full, sOporous and sweet. The workmanship, for ddrabllity and beauty, surpass all others. Prices from sBolto $lB9, (actording to style and finish,' cheaper ti.Mti all other so-called first class Plaho. ESTXrB OOTTA , IN ORGAN Stands at the beaded' all read instrulnents, In' pro ducing the molt petted pipe quality ~of tone of may dollar Instrulnent lb the United States. It Is sim ple and compact In conotructidnf and not liable to get put of order.. CAR " PENTER'S 'PATENT VOXinnii.ANA TRXMOLOI' Is only , to , be found in this OrgatiJ •Prloe from $lOO ,t 4 All guaranteed for, dye yearn . • BARR, SNAKE 80.11 r 'No". 111 .- 11. T. CLALHVITELdikte.T. Altai SEWING HE GREAT iiiirOliCAN COM BIMATION. ' r BU,TTON•HOLE ;OVERISEANINO . , AND SEWING ]kUCU=. IT MAO NO EQllliift , - BEING ABSOLUTELY THE BEST - FAMILY M'AoHINE= IN THE WORLD, 'AND ' TBII4B.O3ALLY THE. CHEAVEST. aor Agents *anted to sell this 3tachlne. • C',HAIEI. Cr 33A3Ll191ilirir, Agent Ibr.Western Fennntearde. Corner FIFTH AND MARKET STREETn t over Mebardeou'e Jewelry Store. my2:464 ''SEW FALL DRESS :EtoOPS;. In-the latest Stiles and Fabrics, JUST' OPENED_ AT IWX SWI%O I 180 and 182 Federal .81., Allegheny. NE " CALICOES; NEW MUSLINS, NEW FLANNELS, NEW cassimmuas, AT POPULAR PRICES. WM SEMPLE'S, 180 and 182 Federal St., Allegheny. 47 ST. CLAM BTIMET DRY GOODS NEW GOODS: L ?IL BURCHFIELD & CO'S, No. 52 St. CZetir St. NEW PRINTS, • NEW GINGHAM'S, • NEW DELAINES, ALL WOOL BLACK And WHITE PLAIDS for AR cents. worth 50. • WHITE ORIGIN') PRINTS, black dicurc• WBITE GROUND ALPACCAS, du. , BLACK ALPACCAS, BLACK DOESKIN CASSIMERES; BLACK AND BLUE CLOTH, •BLEAvIIED 'BASUN*, IRISH LINENS, TABLE LINENS, TOWELS AND NAPKINS. A FULL ASSORTMENT OF GOODS, ALL ENTIRELY NEW irir Remember the place No. 52 St. Clair Street, Near Liberty. west aide MARKET STREET. prr 87. GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES 2 TO CLOSE' STOCK OE' DRESS 4:400135., 87 MARKET STREET. THEODORE F. PHILLIPS. Jew: 87... Ar A RTCZT STREET—ST , z w3' . i O c e, , • r, ' l ' l gra Z = ' 2 .Ra , , ..L1 I:cs " —. 4 viv -.1 ''' e . , n , 01 ,st u* I A wpm 1 . 6 , F. 1.1 % rl 4. rr4 CTS ' " pA 4+, E -la t 4. ...., Pr. 4 r.... a "'8 e r :', pa M t; ' v 'Pm . 3 ''. w PP fi E--; •et r , ;, . 3.-- . 1.4 • = 4> A 2 rt a 0= .4. c,A „,l f= 7; oWA li t "•01 .11 . 4 4 168. 168° NEW GOODS. NEW ALPACCAS. NEW MOHAIR. BLACK SILKS. HOSIERY and GLOVES. SIDOETCX 7 , rir No. 168 Wylie Street. AEI 168. 168. t4r80:n90.1 CARRY McCANDLESS & CO., (Late Carr & Co:,) ' WHOLESALE DEALERS IN Foteign and 'Domestic Dry Goode, ' No. 94 WO(.)15 . Third do9t alckve plapooni,3 atley ,, : PITTS/MUIR , P. A. . Attt AND PIiaiFIDYIEIII4; trim' Oitak _,'' Oinalitentallialv trAin.wicklutgx AND PF.IfFUREII, No, A4a bird etreet.tnoartimlthdeld, Pittsburgh. ' Always on band 4 itAgemertit assortment of Ladles' WIGN , BANDS,VIM'S* Gantlemen'a WI I 8 TQ- i PRES IRIALPff,.GUARD CLIAINS,BRARELETI3,. dc...i A good. Price In cash win be •given Tor RAW r AIR. Ladles' and 'Oentliiirteit'a .Bair Cutting done the neatest manner.'- •- . • , mh2ml OA iiii:Celt) 7.14:113)zi: . . BINOAII.LT - Wan. QINGERLY Aucceseers ki to OW. P. BOOIICIIKAN I CO.. PRACTICAL LITHOORAPHERIS. The only steam Lithographic Establiihment" West of the Mountains. Business Cards, Letter Ileada, Bonds, Labels , Circulars, Show Cards, Diplomas. , PortraltstViews, Certificates of Deposits,lnvite. Bon: ani% AO., Not. 7511 and 14 Thiri street; PittabUrgh, VVM. ,SEMPLE P Nos. 180 and Federal St., ALtEGHENIT, NOW OFFERS A si atE yr AND COMPLETE NEW ROIL DRY GOODS' AT TEM LOWEST PEIOES,, WitOTAMSA.I.V. RETAIL, TO WHICH DAILY ADDITIONS WILL BE•BIADEf DURING THE SEASON. TRIMMINGS AND NOTIONS. AT MACREN, GLYDE & COOS, 78 and 80 Market Street. MOSQUITO NETS, MUFFLED AND STAMPED APRONS, . SHETLAND SHAWLS, • LADIES' WHITE UNDERWEAR: A full line of HOSIERY; MORRISON STAR SHIRTS, GENT'S PAPER COLLARS,. LADIES' Do. AND CUT FS, TRAVELING SATCHELS, . 'A fullßne of JET SETS. SILK A: BULLION FRINGE'S, SILK ..t SATIN BUTTON'S, all colors. A Complete Assortment of White Goods SWISS, VICTORIA, LAWN. • LINEN, CAMBRIC, &c. HOOP SHIRTS, la all the Newest Styles. SID GLOVES, at all prima; UENT'S & LADIES' SUMMER UNDERWEAR MEN'S JEAN DRAWERS; LOOO LALMORAL HOSE; 5,000 Lbs. WOOLEN YARNS Speel ul I ta. te..5 to Jobbers M.ACRUBI, GLYDE & CO., IS and SO Market Street. MAIO pßicEs - rtiAitimo DOWN! AT MA CRUM & CARLISLE'S, - No. 19 Fifth Street. • • ALL GOODS GREATLY REDUCED! ON A.NII ArTER. JULY IST. - , . 'HOOP SKTIITg. (LadJea;,) for 50c. CORSETS, (Real Frenell,) SO LINEN HANDKERCHIEFS, 3 tor:. ... . 25 Rio noLovEs. (warraold,) 4 7 0 0 10 . . PAPER COLLARS 900Tda t SPOOL. COTTON, (gocal) 5 POCKZ,TI3OOIO3, worth 506. .. .. . . . . 25 MEN'S, SUMMER CNDERSHIRTS.., .. .. 50 MEN'S JEAN DRAWERS :". ' ' • 'is All kinds Bonnets and Hats at Half Cost. 'GREAT BARCAINSI KINDSIN ALL O4- , GO ODS. Special Bates to Merchants .2 Dealers. nwortrins, a, CARLISLE, iy1:581 19 FIFTH STREET: GLASS, CHINA, CUTLERY. 100 WOOD STREET IOELIILNA, GLASS AIVD • . _ . QUEENSWARE, • !AMY= PLATED..I;I7,IIII4 PARIAN STATtJETTES, ' 8 . GLASS, • ' o ` Aryl otber STAPLE AND FANCY - ' ," GOODS, a great variety, - . • • . /00 `WWI STREET. • • . .• RICHARD E BREED & CO. ii 100 WOOD STREET. BUSINESS CHANGES perlb'As fat, ErTioN:-4, T,he,lpar#4l:ker - pera ,ptere existlugtween .She ,sub ere, Under the firm of • •, • • - • - ANDERSON, 0008 & 01:14-;- . , Is this day dissolved by xnatial 'Oonsent: - The bnst newer the late' rm will be settled by oar succes sors, Messrs. A N DKRISON W 00.113, at theotdoe of the,rlqobargh Steel "Works. • • • r - IL ANDERSON:' woops, . The underslanetl - havhig_dtsposed;ot his Uterest In the late arm of ANDERSON; COOK. & 00.4" to Messrs. A N DVAtSON & WOODS, begs leave to vo ommend !tic successors to the patronage of the'eas terners of the former tirm. j, l'lttsbargh, July Rlstb, ISGS. - JY2a NEW STOCK HOUSEPEPING: GOODS, 180 and 182 Federal St., Allegheny BARGAINS IN 180 and 182 Federal St., Allegheny CARPETS''AND' `OIL CLOTHS. MANUFACTURFXS HERE and in. Europe HAVE NOW AD VANCED PRICES, but we of fer all kinds of CARPETS for the present at the very low est CASH RATES of the past season. Having made aU our contracts previous to any ad vance, and invariably for cash, we are enabled to sell lower than they can be pur chased this Fall. - McCALLUM BROS., CARPETS. NOTWITHSTANDING THE Manufacturers' recent advande in prices, we will continueto offer the Largest stock of 13rnssels, Velvels and Ingrain'Carpels in the city, the lowest prices reached this sea , ' son. Just received, a few pieces of a new and exquisite patterns of 114:iyal Axminster. OLIVER 1111LINTOCK , & CO., No; 28 Fifth Street -71" - 73 G' TT Pl.' ri" Aik. I MC Sir WINDOW SHADES, FLOOR OIL CLOTHS, THE BEEP GOODS iTIOWEST PRICES. IicI'AELAND & COL'S 8, Reit Building to 11, S. custom !Jona el Post Oilkir OP WE SEMPLE'S, LINEN MMUCEIRCMIES LINEN SHIRT FRONTS. LADIES' STOCKINGS, MEN'S SHIRTS, Wirt SEMPISS, CARPETS ! CARPETS! 51 FIFTH STREET. NEW 4pAItPETS, CORNICES WELL SEASONED TABLE AND PIANO COVERS. Nos. ,71 and 73 nth Street, aultvritaT ESE