11 ttlf littannti Gap*, .4 SHALL DIE ALONE:I When the rich gold and purple of Life's sunset Lies In beauty on tue silent seat When on the shore I see the white robed augel And hear his whisper, •'6od has °tilled for thee,"— _. .Iryes lit with love will watch me on the seashore, Warm human hit as will iovilly preeszny own: But can bear them with me on my journey Out through the dimness of the world unkiownr , . And this great beauty of the earth and heavens; The holy night whole glory initialmy Ight, soul, The softened amethyst of fadgw The stemming stars on ntglit's emblazoned scroll— The rosy tight of morning on the mountains, The tender purple of the distant sea, Whatl love now. from henceforth MI fOrgotten. of their beauty can I bear with me ""Alone. alove." sighed gentle hearted Pascal, and yet I think. thatnot alone when we die: 'Though aG this earth dimly fwiln4 from us, ....triewe alone if one kind Filen(' is nigh ! One who bath said. "to, lam with Ton lways." The way- worn )l iars who I. at Galilee, 2,aking good w and heating all the people, Who it and led for love of you and me. Oh. not alone, for Heaven's onr Friend and Brotber His th'on', sun stand, with ns upon the silent seas' ore. Ills band shall guide ns to the world unknown. EPHEMERRIS. —An exchange calls a pugilist a knock nlist. —Patti and liillssen have become warm friends. —Brownsville, Tenn., is to have a cot ton factory. Many emigrants manage to get to Galveston, Texas. —Scranton, Pa., dailiuses two tons of Baltimore oysters. —Amateurs in Hartford brought out Stradella recently. . —30,000 Mormons and 8,000 Gentiles' live in Salt Lake City —Weston, it seems, has again started to St. Paul from Maine. —Someone thinks the stars are wicked because they sin-till-late. • —Garabaldi's novel will be published in English next summer. —New Hampshire has an iron post marking her northeast corner. --A. tri-weekly paper is published on a Mississippi river steamboat. • —193 convicts honor the Wisconsin State prison with their presence. • '--Social idosyncracies is what an ex change calls Temperance Societies. —St. Petersburg has been troubled this year with , snow twelve feet deep. —Charles Sumner is the senior Senator, he has served eighteen consecutive years. —A book has appeared in Paris called " The Devil, his Grandeur and .Deca deuce." —Louis XV, putt costumes are very ' fashionable nowt/ iA 441§, country as ball dresses. , ' —There has been so little snow inHos ton that the livery stable keepers are • groaning. --Judy thinks the acme of meanness 3vould be to tan a dog's hide with his own bark. An unpublished novel has been found among the papers of Eugene Sue, and will soon be printed. —Louis Blanc has completed his ,Hia tory of the French Revolution, which will be published in twelve volumes. —Three thousand men are new em ployed in grading for the Boston, Hart ford and. Erie Railroad in Connecticut —Silk culture is being carried on quite extensively in Nevada. One nur .sery alone contains one million worms. —Texas is said to, be totally devoid o I three things: Public libraries, reading rooms and YOutig Men's Christian Asso ciations. ' • —A Boston paper states that a man in that locality' is riding a 'hog through the streets, as a preparatory practice to mare aging a velocipede. —Lent will soon be here and the carni val season is at its height. Merge and other followers of Anion are reaping bountiful harvests. —But one Revolutionary soldier now draws a pension, but 878 women claim ing to be- widows of Revolutionary sol - idlers axe still on the list. =Baltimore is having the Black Crook as a moral drama, divested of all' the ob jectionable traits. It is needless to state that it is not very popular. —The white handed working man and aristocratic Democrat, Gen., Sam Carey. of Cincinnati, is a cousin of Ex-Governor Senator Fenton, of New York. —The boot-blacks - and newsboys of Chicago have been giving a concert, do big all the performing themselves, to a large and well-pleased audience. —President White, 9f Cornell Iluiver • silty, has received from Berlin a most gorgeotis chain It bears a profile of Mr. Cornell carved upon the upper part of the back. ...-Rnmor, which we know is not al ways to be relied upon, says that Mr. Horace Greeley hrs bought anew coat. We shill not take the responsibility of the assertion. —The:New York Commercial Adver tiser says - the clock at the Fulton Ferry possesses two characteristics of a brave man: it always turns its face towards • you and never runs. -Martini has so far recovered that he can go,out of his house for a drive, and can carry on his voluminous correspond 7 once with innumerable Spanish, Italian and Sclavonic revolutionists. —Three yes.rs ago a young woman 'of Harseilles was awarded the crown of vir tue. A few days ago she was one of the three women who had their heads chopped off for poisoning their husbands. . ' —When Poe wrote his wonderful poem about bells, he forgot, to mention those Carried by the - venders of skim milk. We could give him, if he still lived, a vivid account of them and their effect on hu man nerves. Several of them perform during the titliter part of the inhrldiig in t he neighbol i ffand of. the Eltiawrrz build- ing. - • —Urquiza, .*:Clittatur of the Argen tine Confederal:Rh:44u one of the richest men in the world. In his palace are ca nary bird cages worth thousands of dol lars each; and upon his estates there is in progress en artificial lake which has al ready cost upwards of five millions. • —Robert Herrick,, the cavalier poet of the Commonwealth and the Restoration, was relited to an ancient family of the same name still flourishing in Leicester shire, and a search among their papers has disclosed letters and papers by the poet, throwing light on the COmmonwealth era. —A fair lady of our acquaintance told us the other day that if women did have the right to vote conceded to them she hoped they would not at the same time receive the privilege of being pall bearers at funerals. We were quite unable to relieve her by either a decisive, negative or affirmative. —Luxemburg, although a little place, claims more public attention than many larger territories. Not long ago she. ap peared to be the tit-bit for which the con tinent of Europe was to fight, and now she again claims attention by possessing two virulent cattle plagues, which she is ready to disseminate all over Europe. —Last night Miss Anna Dickinson, with her usual eloquence, lectured, as the posters Aaid, on "a Struggle For Life in the Academy of Masic." If the Academy, with its narrow doors and " steep stairs, had caught fire, even Miss Dickinson's eloquence would not have been capable of desciibing the struggle for life which would have taken place with far less pleasing revilts than those of Miis Dick inson's lecture. —From an exchange we glean the fol- lowing: "The first Episcopal Cathedral ever built in New England was opened for the first time on Christmas. It has been fully_ organized, atter the English system, by the Right Rev. Dr. Neely, the Bishop of Maine. The youngest diocese in the New England States, that of the State of Maine, is the first one to have its full cathedral system. Chicago, Buffalo, Pittsburgh and some other,cities have al ready adopted it." We &mild like to see this adoptive cathedral of the dioceie of Pittsburgh. , —Again Chicago has a terrine, whole column senaation item. This time it is "a beautiful girl of sixteen, who throws her self under a train of care. Body.terribly torn and mutilated. Love and parental severity the cause of the rash proceed ing," all in large letters at the top of the column. Further down the reporter says: "The unfortunate victim of self-destruc tion was `a young girl of rare beauty and intelligence; the cause of the deed, frus trated but undying love;' the manner of death, crushed under the wheels of a lightning express train. The patticulars of the case are truly terrible, revealing as they do an anguish of soul such as few himan beings are ever called upon to un dergo; and ending in a tragedy almost =- Paralleled in its appalling incidents." Her name was Hannah Wiedman. Gftosts. We have already noticed the fact that ghosts are reported to have been seen h6vering over the scene of the late ter rible steamboat disaster on the Ohio river. A correspondent of the Cincinnati Commercial offers the following as a pos sible explanation: The talk about the appearance of spir its above the wrecks of the ill. fated United States and America recalls to my mind a remarkable natural Phenomenon which I. bad occasion to witness about two years ago, and which may, perhaps, serve to explain the strange apparitions in ques tion." The members of the Boston "Orpheus" have for years spent the 17th of June, the anniversary of the battle of Bunker Hill, at the Black Rock House, situated near Hingham. on Cape Cod. This hotel has a splendid piazza in the rear, overhang ing the rocky shore, and it has been our custom to illuminate the rocks with blue lights, and to witness the truly splendid scene from this piazza. One night when I and a friend of mine had just lit a couple of light's, and were creeping away among the rocks, our attention was sud denly caught by seeing our friend: stand ing on the piazza reflected, in the shape of giants, from the sky above the hotel. We shouted up to them to turn around and see themselves, which they did; and their waving of hats, etc., was duly responded to by their counterparts in the sky. Their figures appeared dark, very distinct, and surrounded by light. In this case the re flection in the air must have been caused by a peculiar state of the atmosphere, per haps by the abrupt termination of a bank of fog. The outlines were steady and clear, the light being bright and still. It now strikes me that a similar state of the atmosphere may have caused the so called apparition on the Ohio. The en gine fires would tarnish the light, and men standing in front of them would serve as reflected objects.' The moving forward of the boat would constantly de crease the distance between the reflecting surface and the reflected object and light, and thus gradually en'arge the image; and the flickering of •• the engine fires would also explain the indistinctness of the figures. • We often tried to repeat the wonderful spectacle at the Black Rock House, but always without success; and on the night, in question, it only lasted a few moments, the second lights already failing to pro duce the images. HOUDON'I3 WASIDNOTON.—It is stated that Houdon, Vho was sent over from Paris by Mr. Jefferson to execute a statue in marble of General Washington for the State of Virginia, had great difficulty in designing an effective position for the sub ject of his chisel. After waiting some weeks at Mount Vernon without making a commencement of his work, Houdon at last secured the desired animation for the figure by hastily et etching an attitude ac cidentally assumed by General Washing ton in expressing his indignation at a per son who demanded an exorbitant price for a pair of fine horses offered to him for purchase. I 141113 - R4-#: . GAZETTE : TIIESDAYi JANUARY..., Religicin lu Ruud& About fifty vents from„Nijni Novgo rod the population of a large village was gathered in Sunday dress upon the ice. A baptism was in progress, and as we drove past the assemblage, I caught a glimpse of a Min plunging through a freshly cut hole. Half a minute later he emerged from the crowd and ran toward the near st house, the water dripping from his garments and hair. As we passed around the end of the village I looked bask, and saw another person running in the same direction. Converts to the Russian Church .are ' baptized by immersion, and once received in its bosom they continue members until death do them part. The Government is far more tolerant in its matters of religion than that of any Roman Catholic country in Europe; I think it might even reprove Great Britain pretty sharply for its reli gious tyranny in unhappy Ireland. Every man in Russia can worship God accord ing to the di tee of his own conscience, provided h es not shock the moral sense of civ ]ration hi so doing. Every respectable forrpma of Christian worship en joys full liberty, and so does every re spectable form of Paganism and Anti christianity. The Greek faith is the ac knowledged religion of the Government, and the priests, by virtue of their partly official_character, naturally wield consid erable-power. The abuse or undue em ployment of that power is not (theoreti cally)" permitted, however much the. Church mayl,manifest its zeal. Every effort is made to I convert unbelievers ' but no man is forced to accept the Greek faith. Traveling through Russia one may see many forms of worship. He will find the altars of Shamanism, the • temples of Bhudda, the mosques of - Islam, and the synagogues of larhel. On one single avenue of the Russian capital he will pass in succession the churches of the Greek, the Catholic, the Armenian, the Lutheran, and the Episcopal faith, He will be told that among the native Russians there are nearly fifty sects of greater or less im portance. There are some advantages in belonging to the ghurch, of State, just as in England, but they are not essential. I am acquainted with officers In the mili tary, naval, and civil service of the Gov ernment who are not, and never have been members of the Greek Church. I never heard any intimation that their religion had been the least bar to their progress. —Harper's Magazine. Tam simnel festival which Mrs. Col. Colt (in Hartford, ) gives to the Sunday school children on her domain, was held this year in one of the large halls. The Christmas tree was composed of gas pipes so twisted as to represent branches, wound with evergreens, and a thousand jets of light shone:among them. All the children had presents given them, and all had a splendid collection. A large por trait of CoL Colt hung over the tables, the frame surrounded by a wreath of ever greens and flowers, and the top sur mounted by a cross of pure white came lias, and the hall was otherwise deco rated with evergreens and flowers. Dur ing the evening, says the Times, a little gold box, which Mrs. Nichols Beach— Mrs. Colt's sister—brought from 'Europe, I was exhibited, to the intense delight of the little ones. - It is about tour inches long by three broad and one thick, and tend :Ong a spring, an enameled medalton on th top sprung open, and ant flew a little bird, hardly three-quarters of an inch lone, but of the most brilliant plu mage. .He would warble and sing ' for awhile and then suddenly poppet of sight. The cost of this little toy, we are told, was $1,500 in gold. FORT TICORDEROOA. — Whe antiquaries of Vermont are at present vigorously en gaged in maintainlyt the truth of the fa miliar account of the capture of Ticon deroga by Colonel Ethan Allen, accord ing to which that officer both pla nned and captured the fort rushing into it before daybreak in Hay, 1775, and demanding its surrender "in thq name of the Great Jehovah and the Continental Congress." Alter the lapse of nearly a century, it is alleged that Allen had nothing to do with the project, further than to belong to the storming party. Accsrding to the testi mony now adduced, it is asserted that one Col. John Brown of Pittlifield, Mass., first suggested the idea; that Benedict Arnold was the chief commander of the forces; and as to demanding the surren der of the fort in the manner cjmmouly described, that Allen was an atheist who did not believe in Jehovah, and that no Continental Congress had yet come into existence. l!Mail A CANE Or SUSPENDED ANIMATION.— On last Saturday, a farmer named John Foster, about fifty years of age, living near Van Wert, Ohio, while seated con versing with his family, suddenly dropped out of his chair, apparently lifeless. Medi cal assistance was soon obtained, and up on examination life \ was pronounced to be extinct. Accordingly preparations were made for the burial, which was to take place on Monday. . Arriving at the grave yard, the coffin was opened for a last view of the supposed inanimate re mains, when unmistakable signs of life were discovered. The brow was covered with perspiration, and the body had every appearance of being In a natural and healthy sleep. His friends were prevailed upon to take the .body home, where it re mains up to the present time in the same condition. Gas. GRANT was quite jolly at Balti timore, Friday. In company.with Farm gnt he sat down to an elegant dinner which had been prepared at a snuff fac tory which they visited. No touts were drunk, but, as- the conversation became general, witticisms passed, and the guests thoroughly enjoyed the intormall ty of the oecasion. • Farragut Wittily tuned the laugh on Grant, when the lat ter said that "smoking waa not a vice'or the Admiral would smoke," by replying: "the General forgets that I am no longer a Vice-Admiral." In the same vein, when after passing through the building both were weighed, mid hawse found that Farragnt weighed 151 and Grant 155 pounds, the old sail°, accused the soldier of hiving "bumixierized" four pounds of tobatco to make up his•weight. FIRE DAMP in mines, it is stated, can be completely destroyed by, means' of a new invention recently explained before the French Academy of Bclence. The process;is as follows': A strong electric currentlis passed through a wire compoe. ed , of alternate sections of copper and gold, soldered together. The short secr tion of the tine gold wire is surrounded by Sour of sulphur, which ignites easily. The electric current causes the gold to become red hot, setting fire to the sulphur, which burns out any noxious gases. The mine Is hi this way purified before the miners descend. TEETH FJLTRACTED wrrixotrr I.4Lizqt BO °MARGE MADE WHEN ARTUICIAL TEXTII ABE ORDERED. A FULL BET FOB Aill DR. SCOTT'S. Ins PENH simarr, ED Dom *soya tusto. ALE. L WORK WARRANTED. CIA,U.Lff IT MILNE. SPECIMENS Or OENITDKL OAN my9:dAT 7.‘2111 0:40 WELDON & HELLY, Blannihetnrers and Wholesale Dealers in Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers, AND LAMP COODS. Also, CARBON AND LIIBRICATING OILS, 'BENZINE., ate.. No. 147 Wood Street. ee9:1122 Between sth and Bth Avenues. FRUIT CAN TOPS. We are now prepared to. supply TINNERS and the ?rade with our Patent SELF.LARELING FRUIT CAN TOP. It la PERFECT, SIMPLE and CHEAP. Mastne the names of the varte us fruits Blampsd upon the Cover, radiating from the canter, and an Index or pointer stamped upon the Top of the can. It is clearly, dt , tiuetly And PERMANENT LY LABELED by merely placing tha name of the fruit the can contains the the pointer and sealing in the customary manner. No preserver of fruit or good HOUSEKEEPER will use any other after once seeing it. Sebd 25 cents for sample. COLLINS & WRIGHT, 139 Second avenue, Pittsburgh. PIANOS. ORGANS. &C. -nineTHE BEST AND CHEAP. Ail EST PIANO AND ORGAN. Schomacker's 131 old Medal Piano; AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN. The SCROMACICER PIANO combines all the latest valuable improvements known In the con struction of a first class Instrument. and has al ways been awarded the big best premium ex hibited. Its tone Is full, sonorous and sweet. Tne workmanship. for durability and beauty surpass all others- Prices from PS to SlllO. ( according to style and finish.) cheaper than , all other' so called drat class Piano. EWEN% COTTA , IE ORGAN producinge head of all pipetruments. In he most perfect quality of tone of any similar Instrument In the United States. It Is simple and compact In construction, and not lianle to set out tit order. oARPANTERns PATENT " VOX HUMANA TREMOLO" Is only to be found In this Orgaz Price from 8100 to $560. All guaranteed for dye years • }WM ENAKII & BVETITLEIL No. IS ST. CLAIR STREET, • IpiANOS AND OIIGANS—An en tire new stork of SNARE'S. UNRIVALLED PIANOS; BAINEB BROS.. PIANOS: PRINCE CO'S ORGANS AND MELODE ONS and TREAT. LINSLEY a CO'S ORGANS AND MELODEONS. 43 Fifth avenue, Bole Bleat. mai) 'Alt* ity B ° (Late Cutter with W. Hespeishet4e.) AirEatC33..A.Prr 7TAMOII. No. 53 Smithfield Street, Pittsburgh se 5:111 NEVALL GOODS. '‘'‘ A splendid new stock of CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, &C., Just received by HENRY NIEYEIC. sell: Iderchsat Ttllor. It Smithfield street. DYER AND SCOURER. EL J. LANCE, DYER AND SCOURER. Igo. 3 ST. C1AA.133 And Nos. 185 and 187 Third Street, FITTRATTROH. PA WALL' PAPERS. N EW WALL PAPERS, For Halts, Partors cC Chamberal NOW cram% AT 101 Market St.,near Fifth Ave., 70s. R. HUGHES & BRO. selB' ARCHITECTS. RASS Jr. MOSEII, ' iatcurr - ruvros, • INUIT HOME ASSOCIATION BVILDINOS. Nos. I and 4 Bt, Clair Street. Pittsburgh. Ts. Special attention Oren to the deals:du and bulidlng r I army Houtimi Nita pasta° ntivaltwo4. , ; 3/09 IWTJI_:3 3{l Geosmiti:DEATrard, anTxrAcitrAliin or ' ORDADI CANDIES AND TArnsp, And dander In all Matto of FRUITE.NITTII, PIC/E -LL% PSAVOZ24 ;UANA', t 0.,, An. • 1191 IMMITIAL ST.. ►lla[penT• M P iDl ; iILLYON,• • liter of Weights andlltenure% Rio. • FOURTH B BEICZT, tßetween Liberty pad Pernr,Oreetir ore immnntly attanO,pd tin Wt. at AND PERFUMERY. sjORN PECK,. ORNAMENTA L HAIR WOHN.EIt AN) FEHFNAIEH. No. ill Third street. near Smithfield, Pittsburgh.. Alivivon hand, a_general assortotent ot La diet.; US,' HANPS, CURLS; liantlemen's WIGS. ()PEES. SCALPS, HUARD CHAINS. BRACELETS. &e. Zir A good Price In cash will he given for HAW HAM. Ladles* and Gentlemen's glair Cuttingdone in the neatest manner. mitteli NOS, NOTIONS, &C. F ALL ASSORTMENTS OF DESIRABLE GOODS A..r JOSEPH HORNE & CO'S. TRIMMING SATINS, • • IN BLACK, ORANGE AND ALL COLORS. PLAID AND STRIPED SATINS. BLACK AND COLORED BONET VELVETS, BONNET AND NECK RIBBONS, HANDSOME SASH RIBBONS, SILK SC 4RFSe LACES AND LACE GOODS. EMBROIDERIES. New design. Another tot. BOULEVARDE SKIRTS, IN STRIPED AND BRAIDED. Just received. WOOL AND JELRINO UNDER'S') EAR, all sizes and cinantit . ea ELORRISON '8 STAR SHIRTS • MEN'S MERINO AND WOOL HOSE. LADIES' PLAIN AND FANOY WOOL and MERINO HOSIERY. FLEECED COTTON HOSE. WOOL ',LOVES AND MITS. • ALEXA.NDRMS KID GLOVES, WOOLEN GOODS S, HOOPsKIRTS AND CORSETS, AT THE VERY LOWEST PRICES. 77 and 79 . Market Street. gala ECRU & CARLISLE, NO. 19 FIFTH AVENUE, THE NEW SHIRT, "LE PANIER PERFECTION." "THE FAVORITE." `•THE POPULAR," "THE.RECEPTION. • THOMPSON'S TWIN SPRING. . r "WINGED ZEPHYR." "GLOVE FITTING," CORSETS AND PAT ENT • •PANIERS.• • - THE NEW GORED OVERSKIRT. "BELLE HELENE, "richly entbrolderedian elegant street or Skating Skirt. . _ RICH RIBBONS FOR BOWS, SCARFS AND SASHES. . ROMAN STRIPES AND PLAIDS. SATINS, all shades and widths. FLOWERS, PLUMES, HATS AND BONNETS, LADIES AND CHILDREN'S MERINO UN DERWEAR, The richest and latest novelties In GIMPS, FRINGES AND BUTTONS. We especially direct attention to the great ex cellence of the HARRIS SEAMLESS (Ron Mon) HID GLOVES" over all others. and for which we are the Sole Agents. A complete line of GENTLEMEN'S "STAB" SHIRTS, SUSPENDERS, _ GLOWS. HALF HOSE. UNDERSHIRTS AND DRAWERS. SELLING AGENTS FOR LOCKWOOD'S PA PER GOODS, and all other popular makes: MICRO & CIRLISLB, N 0.19 FIFTH AVENUE. n 075 GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES Woolen Goods at a Great SEuxifiee. LARGE STOOK) OF YARNS, In all Colors and Qualities. ' ADIES'• AND, HISSES' WOOL DOSERI' GENTS' AND TOUTHi• ONE-HALF HOSE GLOVES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION Ladies' k Gents' Wool Is Serino Underwear HOOP SKIRTS. VINE VARIETY OP EMBROIDERED d LACE Handkerchiefs and Collars. • PAPER COLLARS AND CUFFS OF IL EIFF VARLYTT, for Ladles and Gentle men. Jobbers will especially dowell to call on us now. SA we wish to sell most of oar goods before 'rim menellag to tale stock. NACRID - M, GLYDE & CO., 'TS and SO Market Street. A. MERRY .CHRISTNASI 11E7 GOODS FORTHE HOLIDAYS. DENNISON & HECKERT, NO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE , Hare est received a large and judiciously sem ted stock of EMBROIDERIES, LACE GOODS, TRIMHINCIS, HOSIERY, I • Slid Gloves. Handkerchiefs. Slipper Pasterns. Zephyr Goods. Souris \ 1, and Gents Furnishing: Goods, and Notloni generally. A splendid selection la afforded In special store'. ties suitable for HOLIDAY PRESENTS, • co which the attention of lady readers ls *Wally called. DENNISON & HECKERT, deb` H NO. ST FIFTH AVENUE. pnicEs NARKED DOWN. $A GAINS IN ALMOST En[MHO% REAL HEM STITCH, all anLiun p en, a H A N DLER. , CHIEF BOBLEBED 1 4 HEN w HANDKER CHIEFS 634 e, Be to 50e. • All our H &TS at one-half regular prices. the new BALMOBAL elilKTd and Brad ley's latest styles •or HOOP liKlitTel, at the LowestTrlees In the Cltn BENTS' MERINO V.EtiT and DRAWERS, 40c to PAW. • AT EATON'S, - N 0.17 Fifth Avenue. des KITTANNING - EXTRA HEAVY BARRED FLANNEL, A VERY LARGE STOCK, NOW OFFEWED, IN GOOD STYLES. MILROY, DICKSON & Co., WHOLESALE DRY GOODS, 046 WOOD STREET . - 0 c , P 1 $ll pk a ; E 1 Z 4 2 i 1 4 0 12 W o Q u i I A 1E .1 . I I W... gig , ilk it .i. 'A pri. rin 0 W r 4 5 -ki 00 Im 1 ;frti Ps. 4.111 ' 0 14 , oma =I 00, 11l Pi cn 1 gl I. ° ." E fp 4 'i 0 ' rt 10 pi 10 4 Fi Ila rl ia . A 6 't z DRY GOODS AT COST, FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY. TO CLOSE STOCK. THEODORE F. PHILLIPS, ' 87 MA.REBT STREET. de= CLOSING OUT SALE OF DRY GOODS d. B. BURCHFIELD & CO'S. No. 52 Et. Clair Street.l All Wool Grey Twi:kd Flannel for 37 wort 02c. • Delaines for 5100. worth 25. Slightly Soiled Blankkets 24,00 worth $6,00. Waterproof for 21,25 worth Poplins for 37%c, worth 30 . Kid Gloves for $1,50 worth MOO. Paisley Shawls4l3.oo worth 00.00. Velveteens 2,00 worth 52,75. Bleached Muslin 1112 c. worth 16. Uunbleached Muslin 122 e. worth 17. Cheapest and but stock in the city. No. 351 ST. CLAIN near Liberty street. 0 11321 ?Letrn r ilsoll , m li ca.,) " WHOLE&LLZ MALI= fl Foteign and Domestic Dry . Goods, No. 94 WOOD STILKET, Third door above Diamond alley. CEMENT, SOAP STONE, &c, 11DIARTNLILN & LARE, No. 124 Smith Arid Street, Note dianulheturers of Marren's Felt Cement and Gravel Roofing. Ma. redid for sale: -ias,ao HYDRAULIC CRUST DRAIN PIPE. Cheapest and beet Pipe In the xauket. 110.0,2i1MLIS hYDa&ULIO OAMIENT toi sale. B. B. it C. A. BROCKETT it CO. • Mee and Manufactory—A4o REBECCA BT.; Allegheny. air Orders by mall promptly atten. ded to. 1t22:r98 Fil YITTt3BITHE/R. PA*