2. ' 'Cts littsintrO etaytts. TO MY FRIEND. You think me ' , good 101,rue. " rand It is well For yon—for,me; and tilittl.vett tell What I am eXte• for bdtperytibe - taind. Than weakitrtAny faults-and kin d. I love yanked y; would bave utrfriend, ; Coacernintaviti'airsplelct tit end: t You see youriel s tellected.see not me, lint something ' though str Ting. I mays. - Yon cud but sti fl e ineelfmy heart you knew: pn staudtwlthotte bit sunlight, aridleok through, 'the dark. net windows still and never see .The Inner chambers' soil and potterty: ;r hlie I see you in atlight clean and white, w ud shade my eyes, and feel my night more night i rlend, call me good: paint the lair picture still: I attail grow like Lt. wit - am- earnest will, Wiltuptry - t_ hrfair draught in emytivre-- - - • Froth your dear till I have midilt It shall be mine, - for we catch:good at. sight, Who long tot' it.laCw#,catelt light from light. Foctild,the high harmony, of better law Ter musie conquers man,- arid yon stali'drate Diy wand' rl .:g discords sweet, with silver call: lily pulses act, with yours to Tice and fall. RELIGI9ITS INTELLIGENCE. Rev. Newman Hall contributed an article to the Independent entitled, "On the Rela tion- of Husbands and Wives," in• this week's issue, in which he gives the teach ings of. Paul upon that subject. The editor of the lidepsndent thinks, in many respects, . the teachings of Paul are not as applicable to the statiaTof society now as to that which existed at time hp wrote. It affirms the Scripture argument against woman's civil, -.7 social and political rights ,is precisely like that against Republicanism, from the teat, "Honor the. King." The article of Mr. • Hall ought to be widely read, and the caveat of the editor will be understood. The new Baptist Church 'in Elizabeth, New Jersey, is built in true' ecclesiastical style, and in the most approved church fashion. Caps, cornices, pinnacles, tur rets, minerants - and devices abound in all conceivable places. The pulpit combines the altar and the cross. Dr. Miller, the pas tor, is said to be churchly in his feelings. He wears a silk gown, and had his right to do e so stipulated in the call. Ekime of his services are liturgical, and chants, Gloria in Excelais, alternate reading of the Psalms abound. • - Among the best 'tokens, from the South em States, of a better state of things, is the resumption of the various departments of denonainational power. We are informed that the Committee on • Education. of the Southern Presbyterian General Assembly have more calls for aid than they have abil ity to "meet. One year ago there were eighteen young men receiving aid to 'ens• ble them to prosecute their ministerial stu dies. Now there are sixty nine.. Informa tion has been received by the Committee that there tare seventy-two candidates for the ministry, and it is suppoied not less than one hundred are desirous to preach the Gospel. , The Rey. W. P. Moore has received a • call to the' Presbyterian church of Mancha ter, PresbYtery. of Allegheny City. • At a meeting_ of .the First Reformed (Dutch)' Church, Brooklyn, It. Y., on Sunday week:, the handsome sum of five thousand dollars,was received in the collec tion for the foreign missions of that denom ination. Last week Plymouth Church, Rev. 11, W. Beecher, Pastor, elected three deacon eases, namely: Mrs. Morrill, Mrs. Fanning and Mrs. Thalmeir. The Independent says the membership of this church is nearly eighteen hundred; its revenues for Pew rents during the past year amounted to about fifty thousand dollars, and its gifts for benevolent objects and building new mission_ house will reach one hundred thousand dollars. . An exchange represents that a theatrical entertainment was given in- Cincinnati,, Sunday week, at Which H. Thtme Miller, President, of - the Young Men's Christian. Association was stage director; Rev. Dr. Morris, of Lane Seminary, was star actor, and Prof. Doane, author of "Silver Spray," led the orchestra. If people am be induced to attend, it is proposed to hold religious meetings in two pt the theatres in that city. Tie Committee of the Parent Missionary' Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church =have assessed the Pithibtirghl ,Conlerence, thirty-seven thousand three hundred and forty-nine dollars, as the amount to be raised by the people within its bounds, of-the eight hundred'and fifty thousand dollars ap propriated for the work of the society. At tie:late annual meeting of ihe Church Extension Society of the .M. , E. Church, at ( Philadelphia, it was resolved to raise one millipn of dollars as a Loan Fund,' with a view to; loaning; sums of money to feeble chorales. A special meeting was held to consider the best means :of raising Ull9'BEll3l. Several of the Bishops spoke, after which Rei. Thomas T. Tastier, Sr., an influential local preacher, and enfold retired merchant, spoke; and concluded with an offer to g,ivl ten thousand chillers to tbe Fund. • Messrs. ' Spencer and Long, laymen, each gave ten thutisand dollars. _ Although this movement has just been inaugurated, live personshave already: given ten thousarul dollars each, malting one-tWentleth of the million pro posed to be raised. • The Supreme Court of New Jersey have • 'recently decided that a minister Of the Protes tant EPiscopal Church, who is barred out :of the church edifice and parochial school • house by the Wardens -, and Vestry, has a right of 'action'- for "damages 'against them, and that in such a snit a verdict for substan, tial damages should not be set aside. The Presbyterian Synod of ' Missonri recommends the, Se:miens of the churches neverto admit a member without the promise _to abandon all ungodly amusements, _such as denting, playing cards; theatre-going, circuses, -raffling, drinking intoxicating liquors to excess; worldly visiting on the Sabbath, dealing In -gift, enterprises, and other improprieties calculated to bring re ': _preach upon the cause 'Of Christ. ElciefXnatipi the noted Baptist reilval has , determined t to locate his home at -Ban Diego, California. The Bishops of the Methodist Episcopal • Church;; after the Presidential"election, for warded to,Eleneral Grant a letter of congrat latiori, in which- they a state that as their fathers' congratulated Washington on his accession to the 'presidency, so they. would ,congratulate 'lnterest, duty and, grat- itnde combined to induce the nation, the letter ( states, to call him to the Chief Magis tracy. Reference is then made to the qual ities displayed by General Giant in the field, which are epecially„demanded in the! Cabinet, and the glory which:,s.rowns his •arms will,they: trust u be env' xecled by the higher glory that will crown hie. counsels. `The letrercloseis witha brief referenceio the principles' involved - in the election; the ex ecatlon of which will tend to' restore the States to their proper relations. The Rt. Rev. Bishop Domenec, of the Pittsburgh _Catholic Diocese, performs. a prodigious amount of lalicir," - accOrding to the accounts which appear in the Catholic, from weekto week: The prosperity of •the Catholic Church in this diocese, in all its departments, is doubtless due to a large ex t.nt to his unceasing labors in the Episco pate. The Catholic of this week says on last Monday evening the Bishop delivered a lecture at New Castle, Pa., to a very large and attentive audience, composed chiefly of Protestants, and• on Tuesday he Confirmed about ninety persons, some of whom were converts. Rev. Dr. John Hall, of New York, is attracting large crowds to hear him preach. It will be remembered about a year ago be was installed pastor of the Fifth Avenue Presbyterian church. The audiences are so large that the pews cannot hold the people, and camp stools are regularly placed in the aisles for the accommodation of-strangers. It is said of Rev. Mr. Barnaby, a Baptist minister at Harwich, Mass., eighty-one years old, that he has not missed a senuon nor a meal for forty years. _ The Bishops of the English Church have united in a formal reply to the Pope's invi tation to them and other Pretestants to at tend the CEcu, menicid 'Council. The origi nal is in Latin. The author of it'is under stood to be the Bishop of St. Andrews. The doeument acknoiviedges the indebt edness of the English Church to Italy and Rome for Joan) , things, for which it is grateful; dwells on the fact that it has the same creeds as the. Roman. Church, but re pels the accusation of heresy and schism, and declares that the Church of England was a Church long before the Pope's au thority was established. It also calls the attention of i his Holiness to the labors of the English Church in dis seminating the Scriptures among the peo ple, contrasting its course in that particular with what it alleges to be the opposite poli cy of the Church of Rome. Among the changes. introduced by the recent revolution in Spain, none is of more interest to other nations than the removal of the restrictions placed upon the burial of de ceased foreigners. Heretofore Spain was not an agreeable country to die in. The- English' residents in Spanish seaport towns had to be buried in the sands below high water mark, and in the inland towns no rest to the dead foreigner was allowed in either consecrated or unconsecrated ground. For many years the members of the British Le gation had to be interred beneath the stalls of an English livery stable, and it is report ed that the body of a young attaché was, Some time ago, torn up from its resting place, in a lonelyfield ) wher% it had ,pre-i i vionsly,,heen depoSitid in 'secret +The„sav age The peasantry seized the remains, of the for eigner and threw them ignominously into a ditch by the roadside, whence they were removed to the livery stable. At last, as a great favor, a "Holy Field” was allowed to be established at Carabanchel, a small village three miles south of Madrid, but no one, except. the English friends of the deceased, were • allowed to be present, guards being , stationed to prevent the ap proach of Spaniards. The London Times of December 2d, however, contains a letter 'giving an interesting account of the funeral services at the burial of the young English' engineer, who had for five years been em ployed on the Hemues Canal. This, gentle man had endeared himself to the workmen under. his supervision, and for the - firstlime in this history of Spain, a strictly English . Church service was attended by a mixed congregatihii, professing different faiths.. The change in the' treatment of foreigners is encouraging, as it shows that-Spain is .emerging from that condition lir stolid in difference to tbe advance or civilization which has made its name a by-word and 'a reproach, as the emblem of contented ignor- ftrosrlionts.—Much effort has been ex pended in obtaining yhosphorus from its mutend combinations, instead of from bones. the usual source of supply. It is said that by taking one pEut of apatile, or phosphate of lime, with, two parts of sand or pow dered flint, with the addition of a Sufficient amount of charcoal, and by keeping the mixture at a red heat for a suffieient time, the phosphorus will be disengaged and pass over. The silicle acid, or silica, combines with the' lime, setting free The phosphorl, which is then decomposed by the carbon, and the phosphorus is liberated. LETTERS from Montreal. and Quebec s ay, the Canadian autb.orities are indignant at the ly . nchirig of the Reno brothers in Indi ana, in violation of the promise of the Uni ted States government at • the, time of stir render. The . Montreal Herald; says the itmericait,govemn2ent was , strictly respon- Slide for the safety of these men, and should be held tir account, and if such things are to be done, extradition •must ;cease, as the Ca nadians cannot send men over the border to be torn in pieces by an Unauthorized rab ble, no Matter, what their crimes. Trim Skye Terrier is: so called.because he can go to the top of Ararat at one jump. Professtir Snoggle (who,stutters horriblV,) says the Dog Star is not , a star , at all, but a P-p-pup-planet. The discoverer, of the Dog Star was of the opinien that it ' was a' Newfoundland, although a ridiculous story Henry,in Ward Beecher's Star ;Papers at tributes the name PDog Star", to an ex pression made use of by the philosopher when he discovered it: "I'll be dog gortedt" Columbus Journal. BATAILD TAYLOR advises persons ' going to Rothe to select a beggar and "give' him a stated weekly allowance. He'will soon come to expect it only on the regn!ar day; and, moreover, he will privately manage that you are not importuned`by his brethren —at least in his quarter of the clty. In my ease, this plan - worked -very satisfactorily. My beggar greeted me with a bow and smile for six days, held out his hat on the seventh, and'allowed no one'uf the neighborhood to make a claim tmon 4 me. • , CULOIURE GAS is now qiect in toughening and reflnina gold, by being passed tbrotigh" the melted metal, which is 'covered with a layer of borax. ; After a fewliours - all , the sliver present is converted into. chloride of silver, which floats on the surface and may be poured Off still liquid when - the gold has become &Aid. • The borax preventi the loss of silver -by absorption of volatilization. The gold attains. by the . process, - a fineness of 993 pFts in 1,000; the loss is abbot the same as in the usual methods. ,!.;•i P. , 4 . 7' :4 i4;cYlt.•'x~ .?' PITT- SBURGIT GAZETTE: SATURDAY. DECEMBER 39, 1868: !Funerals In Spain. DENTISTRY SETH EXTRACTED icnrr .PAtett ao CRlAtailKADlrlitHrlg ABTEPICILL , TIECTR ANS T u rD. °.•YCLL BE AT DL SCOTT'S. $1 nark sistirr, Does Alum HAD. • ALL srositiw . Augi - writip_. - CALL AND NX AMINE -APPANIENNii• Olt B EN IRE yDLOAff- ITE. my9:dAT GAS *FIXTURES wiap:Tx KELLIr, Maiiiirsotand Wholesale Dealere In Lamps, Lanterns, Phandelids, AND 'LAMP GOODS. Also, CARBON AND LUBRICATING OILS, iiiINZUVE; &o. • N 0.147 Wood Street. seg;n22 . DetWeerifith and 6th Avenues. GLASS, CEINA. CUTLERY 100 WOOD STREET. HOLM GIFTS. FINE VASES, BOHEMIAN AND CHINA, NEW STYLES, DINNER SETS, TEA SETS, CIFT SMOKING SETS, A laige stock of i SILVER PLATED GOODS of all descriptions Call and 'examine oar goods, and we fetid satisfied no one need fall to ue bulled. R. E. BREED & CO. 100 WOOD STREET. PIANOS. OROANS. &O. Bllr T. &To nES ANDTEG A AP Caw "' Sehomacker's Gold Medal Piano, AND ESTEY'S ; COTTAGE ORGAN. The t3OIIOMACTICIER PIANO combines all the latest valuable lurproVenients inown is the con struction of II first class insutunent. and hall always been awarded - the highest. premium wherever ez- Whiled. Its tone is fall, sonorous and sweet. The worlaarmshin. for durability and beauty, surpass all others. Prices from 00 to 111150. facoordincto style and &alba Cheepsr than all other KrTcalled first class Plano. - • • - _ ESTETIS OOTTA , III ORGAN . Stands st the head.of all reed instruments. in pro clueing rite most perfect pipe quality of tone of any similar Instrument Riche United States. It is gm pre and compact in construction, and not liable to get out of. order. , - ceßpErrnatis pAnrsT iithmtwe. TREMOLO'` la only to bo found in this Organ . Price from 4100 to $550. All guaranteed for, live years. BARR I KNARE & DEEMER, • - No. LR.ST. OLAIR STREET. lee lANOS AND OBGANS—An en tire" new ato.k of . • KNABE.S UNRIVALLED PIANOS; • HAINES BROS.. PIANOS:. ' • PRINCE k CC'S ORGANS AND MELODEONS and T SEAT, LLNSLEY CO'S ORGANS AND MELODEONS. • • ,- • CHARLOTTE BLUME. deb _ ,43 PUth avenue, Sole Agent. SEWING MELCHINE% - MEM GREAT AMERICAN COM- A. RINATiON. • • " 0 • `Burner-Lou oyzOntaNu AND SEWINCE'REA E. ET SAS N° /PAM, "1 00136 1 7 1 14191103LETNT A N LY TULNUOALLY Tait 01:1z,.mrEST. VrAgents wanted to sell this lifsettlna 4,.."3:lAxasz.my, -Aiejit for Western Pennsylvania Corner 7Erra arm! MARKET STREETS,: over . Elcbardson's Sewaßy Store. . nfl rdEROELANT TAILORS. • B • • Mau attest wltil9.SMMateide.) 'mEwmßE ,%mrr No. 53 3 rulthileld' Street, Pittsburgh. de11:421 VEIiV FALL GOODS. A splendid new stook oC CoASSIMES•doc. JU5t receitestby BURT• MEYER. sel4: MenhaistHon 73 Smithfield street. MECHANICAL'ENGINEER. 11 - - , EncEv.o4l3EvuErry MEOTIMTIOAV ENGINEE E . . ' And Sollidtor of Patents. (Late of E:P. W. O. Railway.) Offiee. No. 29 FEDERAL STREET, Room No. • up stairs. P. 0. Box WA ALLEGHENY CITY. DaAOHINEET Of all descriptions, designed. • BLAST 21:11111A0Eand ROLLING HILL DRAW. L INuEI farniabe Particular. attention paid to de signinSCOLLIERY LOCOMOTIVES Patents-eon !Kennelly licited. - AP An r, VEXING , DRAW. reig , CLAM so ;for Ameitanies. every; WZDI4EWAT UHOHT. aol 'ere CEMENT, SOAP STONE, &o. 11110AU110 , . €IIIENT- Miff - PIPE. . . Clhaaarai raid heat has marke.' Aul*, up- SENDAI.* - liYDItAIIGIO CialdlNT tar Bala. R. B. at` BEGOIEW * CO. °Mee and Miiiiefseim7-24 . 4) PPIRECOA Allegheny- air Orders by mall prOmptlY sttedided tn. te22:198. 30 . 1suspno • Ls • • . Mums eotitthi*.BßD war, To arrivo and for solo by" ' mcsaNE a aka% 0 1 0; „11,10 d HOLIDAY PRESENTS! HOLIDAY PRESENTS • ROMAN SILK BOWS. 'Lace 40calems. LADIES LACE HANDKERCHIEFS. Rosewood Handkerchief and / Glove Boxes NV I ATCH STANDS AND CHM CASES, WRITING DE9IS AND ALBUMS. The finest and cheapest asmortment of WAX AND CHINA DOLLS, TRAVELING CASES, • CARTE DE ViSiTE BASIS-Drs. LADIES' & GENTS UNDERWEAR, LADIES FINE - KNIT OPERA ROODS, The New Striped Felt. Skirt. wooriErr Goons at Coat. Fine Embroidered Slipper Patterns. Beantilal Embroidered Outdone. GLYDE St. CO., 'TS and 80 Market Street, illieR1111k: MIMI, NO. 19.1011 ATOM THE NEW. SKIRT, "LE PANIER PERFECTION." `•THE FAVORITE." "THE POPULAR," "THE RECEPTION' • THOMPSON'S TWIN SPRING, • "WINGED. ZEPHYR," "GLOVE FITTING," CORSETS AND PAT ENT • •PANIERS." THE NEW GORED OVER SKIRT, "BELLE HELENE," richly embroidered; an elegant street or Skating Skin. RICH RIBBONS FOR BOWS, SCARFS AND SASHES. - ROMAN STRIPES AND PLAIDS. SATINS, all shadei snd widths. - LADIESRS. PLUMES, HATS AND urnmETs. AND CHILDREN'S MILRINO UNDER WEAR,' The richest and latest noveltiei In GIMPS, FRINGES AND' BUTTONS. We especially direct attention to the great excel lence of the ,HARRIS SEAMLESS (Rouilion) KID GLOVES" over ail others. , and for which we are the Bole Agents. - A complete line o f GENTLEMEN'S "STAR" SHIRTS, SUSPENDERS. GLOVES, HALF HOSE, UNDERSHIRTs AN o DRAWERS. • SELLING AGENTS FOR LOCKWOOD'S PAPER, GOODS, and ali otherpopular snakes. C Intl SLE, NO. 19 FIFTH AV.prITE. nots A MERRY CHRISTMAS • NEW GOODS FOR THE HOLIDAYS. DENNISON , & HECKERT, NO. 27 FIFTWAVENUE, Have Jest received a large and judiciously assorted stock a EMBROIDERIES, LACE GOODS, THIS:DUN kiOSLERY,' Kid Gloves. Handkerchief Patterns, Zeph3rr Goods. Starts and GentsPttrntshing . Goods, and Notions generally. suA selection is afforded in special novelties HOLIDAY. PRESENTS, to which the attention of lady readers is specially DENNISON & HECKERT, deS 1110; 27 FIETIT.AVENUE. pnicEs MARKED DOWN. BLUME% ALNO?ir EVERITHIISCI. REAL HRH EMIT cif, all Linen, HANDREII CIiIKE'S, 17e, 19e, isglc and upwards. • Tern. tti., ENE.IO LINEN HAN D/LERCRIEFB °Mc, Se to' Boc. All ourll&Telatole=half regular priees. All the new AI a.L.BuItAL riKattTn Bud Bradley's latest styles of ROBY BRUM!, at the Lowest Prices in the City. . , • tiENTtis MERINO NEST and • DRAWERS, 40,3 to $5,00. , AT'EATON'S • • • No. 171 l iftla- Avantto. deb • • - CRACKER BAJUMES._ ~4,,-..-.1..1 _ l . ... i. l , ?Iv) , A - „hie ~.,0 ,...:t,p,,. 4. , 4 ,41.*: , -...1.;„.0t45?,..1.5,.,..—.-ri2i. , :elt"'Aif ... ii „:,14,,,•:.:-:, ~.., ...„. ~.r.., ..,..,.., ._ ARE strptaßni .ty ANY moll - , .oTririsiii i'rititi CITY... OMIC V O r T A CI T I Z I n aild ß la u vek Plattaßis.so O A. For Sale by Ivory Grocer in the City. Bakety, Nti. 91 Liberty St. '' ' ITESTERD AY pro-DAY, &N )1 poem to is books by Edward Henn flieliebnertll, A. Df. VA mo:. bevelled ho a rds, 14. •Vlli,e is &rem:nimble lineal, nod 616 f likolY in ',A -' trlet a great deal 6f att. - 11,16n Iraperln Rtutrio. .The tnost etrophythe' rlehe.t. And inoer tweed poem which rcevin. caps hove Imodneed.n.—Loisaols CO I .4STANCE . ATLMER, A Starr of the Seventeenth C'eutury. ()no Tol, nou. lOC Wt. , the blot . a ~C onAtitnee -Aylnpu" , 1.. laid In the time when New Yera was witutch - colony and Eng land .Wl/4 ruled by 0 . 11111 well. 3he - condition of Manhattan 14hitbi and the aurrounding count* . is rrapinealw ketched ; the ways and manners of our Dutch and Itugllitt ancestors are reproduced with wonderfilltidvilty, and at the alma time with& live knees and hump , * which throw le charm around a story valuable tur f:8 historical accuracy and of ex citing interest. - • ROBERT S. DAVIS, 4108•Triis Oa. WOOD -STIIIHET CLoYMIEJI).. , , g CHOICE LOT JtST REOBLiE BNO3Ei'IBI Liberty Street. tio26:trati ' GOOONEW CESAE BREAD IN DEAR TILER& 3anquirp fort WAMYS Bread loaest trod best. The . Initial* W." on irret7 lonf. Take none else. ikuiran ` - av~..~: E GuwSi'w.C;if.N~ > '?,~;:' , ''i;s l . u.~' - sz- '-%^~~. F" CHRISTMAS AND NEW YEARS, GREAT VAIIETY ARTICLES SUITABLE FOR. PRESENTS, FOII LADIES, GENTLEMEN AND CHILDREN. HANDKERCHIEFS, COLLIES. FURS, 311:TFTS, AND. BERTHAS. FANCY ARTICLES FOB THE irrnie POLES. ALL NEW AND CH.•IC& UOORSI , • WHOLESALE AND RETAIL at WILLIAM SEIVEPLE'S, 180 and 182 Federal street, Allegheny. CARPETS AND OIL CLOTHS 51. II -BFI TH AVENUE. -V04401(PR0T.4 1. 4 GRANO.: • CLEARING SALE. OF • C.A&PIX 6 M3'gii;. TREMENDOUS REDUCTION I'cpie CEM9O2,, UNTIL WE TAKE STOCE.. lIITALLUM BROTHEIT. , del4 DEF.IIIIIEII, 1868. • FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY. CARPETS AT RETAIL . LESS THAN .WHOLESALE PRICES. We offer FOR A. FEW WEEKS ONLY our goods , at a large reduction frourn.gu lar rates. Our stock is fall , and complete in Nall departments, and we shall sell the best qualities and Styles', of rpets atpri. ces at which we onnot replace them,. giving our•custointrs an opportunity of obtaining bargains that May never be of fered aggin. This special sale:will con. thine only until the time of ( taking our an- nual inventory of stock at the end of this M6FARLAND & OOLLTITS, Nos. 71 and 73 Fifih Avemte. A viNIYAL ' RZIITICTIO3I. . . OUR REGULAR ' DECEMBER CLEARA?gCE VALE Is now fallk Inaugurated, at urkes' that se cure BETTER RARGATRB THAN EVER. BE poRE, •- - 'CAJEUMErrS, OIL CLOTHS,- ,-MATTINCS, / • &c., &c., &c., . - , : 0 - iod,.. Carpets 'for r. 25. . coot§ q:Y.OI OLIVER 31'CLINTOOK ,MW COMPANY, No. 23 Fifth Street. IR-10. - Tiiiirj 4 C,9lCaCOlNT ! CARPETS,( COMA C.Z...CirinEESI, cbi°4 ced, We offer our , stock atreduced prices for a SHORT-TIES before commencing to take stock. Now is the time to buy: BOVARD, & CO., 21 FLEW AVENUE. detti twir F" iii COLD 'WEAUR. QUILTS, FLANNELS, BLANKETS, sHATVLS. ]Firns, UNDERWRUt, . . . BLACK, BROWN AND GOLD.UPLKD WATERPROOF -'CLOTHS,' NEW AND DESIRABLE ' • • r , 7Cisvitisk ..grgodis I• i. ARI - VERY' -- - LOW 'Pitalt3-Es,l WHOLESALE - AND kEirAit: wil ll TA.x..sZw.iVis; . . 180 and 182° Federal street, Allegheny., FINE 51. 3owE:'bc,i;Lii r 3ui=o' DOMESTIC 7 EIOLIDAVS. BATES & BELL HAVE IN STOCK; Shawls, Furs, Cloaks, Dress Goofis.' Cloakings, Silks and Velvets, LARGE VARIETIES am LOW PRICES. det7 BAILEY, F.A.REEL &':`G4 Or LEAD, AND ELOCk