El litangt Gaiittr, A yam' LETTER. Th Is letter is from hoz, see the pmk Hush all 4 , Ttr the sheet: It was covered. I know,by her Inuoceot. blushe , So shy mud so oreet. How calve the beginning! I fano. nit:most. 'tis a whisper, •. My dear!' How her pen hung around it. that term of en deartneat— „ . . En much sweeter to hear: Ab, what a sweet letter! 'She e e l me g lad an now 1 am awazt Well, I'm glad i soris-I'm glad b e can miss me. ...Pm sort) , to slay. She FELTS she has cognt ed • The hours se they vanished since sae said "Good by.;" well so have I, and the hours that must follow. SJ lazily by, Ere I tell her "Good morning, , * And hold, just a moment, her nand in my own, And perhaps I may I;bs ner,if no one le looking, Or We are alone! . . How How I wl*la the days were thorter 1 „„. She rays she Is iongtng to see toe again. •.• For she has toinethiug to tell sue, the dear little chaer. T o sweet for airen : A , tee Truitoil erdlng— ""Your tr heart forecer • r "r I• • Os, maalcal word* They r i g through my heart till It .. .echoes are swee er • T. an singing of birds'. EPHEMERIS. —Florida has water mellons. —The wheat prospect in France is bad. —The Richings opera troupe is in De , --Kentucky has whipping posts as wel 'as Delaware. • —Some cherry trees in St. Louis blos somed last week. .—The Worrell Sisters have learned to ride on velocipedes. 3lonnons consume large quantities of St. Louis lager-bier. —The i llanlons have Opened a veloci pede-hall in New York. —Marklemon, the editor of Punch, is coming to America again. —Schamyl has received the Czaes per mission to reside at Kiew. —Snuff-taking is beginning to come in again at the French -court. --John Hancock learned how to write his name at the Boston Latin School. —Prof. Agassiz has been appointed Regent of the Smithsonian Institute. —Pickpockets work industriously at their profeseion in Chicago churches. • Oregon paper speaks casually of Brick Pomeroy as the noted obscenist. —One:fifth of the whole order of Jesuits is said Co be now at work in this country. —The Boston Poe objects to being call , ed a prolfinchApaper by New York joar , meas. —Rumor again Says that Robert Bon ner is :trying to buy the New York Herald. —lt iit: proposed to stock 'Ciiiiindelgrui. Lake in New York State, with tilieif mil lion fish, —Jolin Allen claims to have signed temperEtuatt pledges twelve times since Christuids: ' Cincinnati missionaries preach to the police, and in Harrisburg they preach to firemen. • ' train four miles long, consisting of 372 cars, was'draWn byone engine across the Mississippi river the other —One newspaper has surely predicted correctly concerning Gen. Grant's.cabi net, but which one it is we dont know. —The ghost of a lynched man in Col -credo haunts the house in front of which he was hanged, and makes it uninhabita ble. —The Royal St. James Theatre is now managed by Mrs. John Wood. It is called the most aristocratic theatre in London. —At Bolton, New York, Sims Smith, a bachelor ninety-two - years old, was married the other day,to a widow •who is younger. • —Edward , Laboulaye has been offered $l6O per, night and all expenses paid to -lecture in America, and he has• accepted the offer —An exchange says: Gen. Augur, who was tie handsomest man in , the army by brevet ,during Ronsteau's life, now Utiles full rani. 7 -An exchange thinks that pulverized coffins and charred - horse_ liven; jbim a large portion of .the component parts of cheap coffee. —Report says that Hernandez, thepan tomimist, attempted to kill his wife re cently and succeeded in getting into gaol in Nebraska for 14 yes rs. —The Paris Figaro says that Miss Min nie. Hauck saved the life of Leonard Jerome, in the style of the undergrpund Thilroad scene in "After Dark.'' . —Mrs. Lucy Stone htutheen !lecturing in Cincinnati • She had a very large and exceptronally audience,, and her subject was Woman's. Rights. . . —ln perlin a man sat four 'bonny in a barber's window on a wager. He repre sented•itt 'wax figure and wouldn't laugh, altlionfli the folks outside made all sorts of grimaces, • —Dion Boucicatilt is writing four new plays. .For any one else this would be, an altliost Impossible taEl4,. but his plays are solnuch alike that four at: a time is really not a staitliiirntutiber; -Mr. Colfax, it is said, was 17,000 feet abovethe sea when hi popped the 'clues .. , • ton; when he received the affirmative an swer he was probably higher up than that, in fact quite above all-mundane things. —Young men in want of a wife should go to Russia and try to win Anna Caga- AU," who is young, pretty, intelligent. well educated, heiress to one= hundred millions and heart and fancy free. She lives In Mioscow. —The Louisville Courier-Journal says: The Washington correspondent of the New York World; who professes to re- peat in that paper the ponversation of. Gen. Gnint, is probi.bly° the greatest fal sifier in the World. —We do not know who ixpe lunatic author of the following .conundrum,.but we think we may quote from "delicious Artemus" and csll him an "owdacius cuss:" "Why was Mahnmet like a man in church with a bad - cold? Because his coughin' had to be suspended." —We constantly see letters addressed_ to persons in this city in which Pitts burgh is spelled without the final h. We wonder what a Philadelphian or Mica goose would think of the writer who would leave their h's out and direct epis tles to Piladelpia or Cicago? —Cincinnati has a sharp stick with which it is now after those dishonest milk men who water their stock. Oh Tuesday two were arrested and examined, one had twenty'per cent. of water in all his cans,• while the other had only sixteen per cent. of water in his cream, and thitry-three per cent. in his Alin milk. Each one was fined $l5 and costs. —Ed. li,2_Hatch, of Conneaut, Ohio, offers for $20,000 to ride gaily over Niag ara Falls any day next summer, as he be lima-the descent to be possible easy and safe, Last year another man proposed the same -thing, the money we believe was put up and then the rash man was never heard of again. Let Hatch brood over this before he sets ont on his jour ney. —New York people are having their own share of sleighing and ours too this season. The Steuben Courier says "Since the first of December sixty inches of snow have fallen in Bath.i, There is a heavy body of sno v throughcut this sec tion of the State, and healthy freshets may be expected in the springs. The Dandee Record says : We are now get ting more than our usual share of snow in this section, and it has been upon the earth for seven-weeks and is now so deep as to seriously interfere with laboring in the woods. —The Pennsylvania Railroad Com pany has offered $l,OOO reward for the capture of the incendiary who set fire to its property at Altoona. The Common Council of Altoona have offered an addi tional reward of $5Ol • There have been several incendiary fires in Altoonaduring the past six months, and the people are much excited on the subject. Quite a. number of robberies were committed during the excitement attendant on the fires, and some daring' thieves actually carried off a sewing machine from a pri vate house. . -,-Grant went to..churc.h on ' Sunds,y, Ile dpne ,so. before,Jizid-nfy .do so again. •A correspondent, , It i 3 thiiught, succeeded in getting into the nett pew and writing notes at hirnin !he back of a prayer boos. He wrote shall say you favor Female Suffrage anii,fpfi opposed to the Alabama Treaty." Grantis supposed not to -have paid any attention -to the book, but „observed just then that a re mark of the preacher was apt and so sung out "Amen!" The delighted correspond _era then ran out of church, reached his hotel, and In great excitement wrote off 'to his paper the full Particulars of a pri vate conversation with. Grant, and how he was warmly in< favor of Female Suf frage and as warmly opposed to Mr. Johnsoit's tfeaty. • FIFTY YEARS 'AGO From the "Personal Recollections" of Ronk.= Burcassrmi, ESq., a veteran iron master, who writes in the Cincinnati Ga zette, we make the subjOined interesting extracts: In my early experience with iron, pig metal was converted into the malleable form by the forge and triphammer, and lutmniered iron was - ahnost the only kind used. Occasionally small lots of Swedish. and English rolled iron were offered, but met dull sales in the Western Markets. , The Swedish made pretty good wagon tire, but the English was brittle and in ferior. • • Our markets were supplied principally from the Juniata region, slid the names of Shoenberger, Gloninger, 'Lyon, Shorb and others—pioneers in the business— stamped upon a bar of iron,- was a sure guarantee of its excellent quality. S 3 strong was the prejudice in favor of Ju niata hammered iron,, that : for many years after good rolled iron was made.the coun try people.would not buy, it if they could get hammered, and still kept inquiringfor their old favorite brands. • The price of bar iron at Pittsburgh,. 1811 to 1816, ranged from 10 to 14 cents a' pound, and 25' cents extra for plow mold, plates. It was brought from Juniata in, wag:, ons at a cost of three to four cents. 'Some forges were built in Fayette caunty, Pennsylvania, in-1812, but the quality, of: the iron was not equal to the Juniata. TWo forges were put up on. Paint creek, near Chillicothe; in 1818, and made very 'giiod iron. • The first :rolling mill erected in Pitts .burgh %Vas in 1812, by C. Cowan—not to 'make bar iron, but to supply his nail fac tory with, nail rods. , Some, small round and agitate bars Were also made, but no heavy iroa. It was a small mill. In 1814 another -rolling mill was built, larger than the first, to which also was attached a nail factory., The cut - nail is an Amer ican invention. . When these nails were first introduced into Western Pennsylva ihey were considered ' a curiosity, and, although offered much cheaper than wrought nails but feW persons would buy them. It, was not many years, hoWever, before they came into general use. They were at first cut by small, Porta ble machines, and headed by band, with two blows of the hammer. One of our pioneermerchants--now in his 78th yeir , conducted this business in. Cincinnati ' in 1814. • The price of nails at this place and Pittsburgh about that period was 4d, 25c; 6d, 20c; 8d and 101, 18c a pound; wrought nails 40 to 50c. Nail factories at Pittsburgh were profit. able. Mr. Cowan, the first to conduct one on, a large scale, retired with a hand- 1411 . 3trRgli. - a4.2:ETTE : VitthAt," 4 some fortune, saidEa id his successor, Captain . Tt.e Captain had quit. . a seafaring life, sad came out to kittstitirgh with some which heinvested in a rolling mill and nail lietm. He was a man of great industry, and' Of the strict est integrity 'Once, during a financial crisis, he got into trouble, andhad to sus pend payment. This was a dreadful blow to hls high sense of honor and punctuality, but he met it manfully. He called on his principal creditor, the bank, and asked for an extension. What security Captain 11. do you propose to_ give us? inquired' the directors. There, gentlemen, said the Captain, holding out his great rough hands (for he was a gen uine worker), there is my security. There was a hearty laugh, buttthe security was accepted, and in a few months every dol lar was „paid up, and the Captain was himself again. 14 after years this kind :of security was favorably considered by the banks and the honest and indtistn ous mech anic or manufacturer seldom wanted for assistance. As nail factories and rolling mills in creased in Pittsburgh, the,prices of nails and bar iron declined. I find, upon ref erence to my books, that nails were , sold at 14kal 7 c, and 25c for the keg, in 1817, and . sir iron 11c. In 1818 bar, iron sold, in Cincinnati, at 12ic a pound. In 1825, 6c for hammered, and sic for rolled iron, were the current prices. During 1857 and 1859 nails were sold as low as 3a4c, and iron Nc, but these were ruinous prices for the manufacturer. In recalling to memory the' iron busi ness in its various forms, as it came with in my own knowledge, since 1811—west of the mounta:us—it has been profitable to those who conducted it with prudence. Many persons failed from bad manage ment, or unfavorable locations, but the majority made money. Some very large fortunes have, been made by it. I am no advocate !Or high tariffs, but in this business mod erate protection has produced such a home competition as to reduce the pi ices of iron and nails to about one-third their former rates, to the consumer. England is the largest iron producing country in the world; making about three and a half million tons annually. Our own country is the next, making over a million tons, and, with our vast mined of coal and iron ore, there is no reason why we should not double this product in a few years, and finally get ahead of England. It appears that the principal resource of our wealth and prosperity lie wider the earth, as well as on its surface, and he is a benefactor to his race - who con trives the best means for their develop ment, either in mining or in agriculture. A recent discovery, in Pittsburgh, of con verting the ore into malleable iron, with out the- intervention of puddling, gives promise of perfect success, at a saving Of ten dollars a ton. I saw an attempt at this in 1819, but it was then,a failure. - The Debts of the States. - I The debts contracted by the several States during the war were substantially a part of the vast , national debt incurred , -- by the people in the suppression °tithe ' , rebellion. The in' Commissioner of the Revenue, n 'his report, tarnishes • , some interesting**, showing the gen • eraireduction of theistate indebtedness since the war. The figures of the debt in the_winters of 1860-41, 1865-'66, and in November, 1868, with the increase and reduction, are as follows: • Maine-Debt, in 1861, $599,500; De ceMber 31, 1865, $6,161,600; December "31, 1869, $5,053,500, _Reduction in three years, $lll,OOO. •• , • Nets Hampshiri -Debt in 101, $31,- f 363; June 1, 1866, $4,002,070; June 1, 1868, $3,487,412. Reduction, $514,658: Vermont-No debt in 1861; in 1865, $1,650,000; In November, 1868, 61,169,- 000. Reduction, $482,000. ' - 3fassaehusetts-No debt in 1861; 1865, $8.254,864,1867, $11,002,09; November, 1868, $13,868,672. Increase since 1865, $5,500,000. • Rhode lelcnid-No debt in 1861; 1865, $4,000,000; November, 1868, $3,140,000. Reduction, $860,000. Connotteut-No debt in 1861; in 1865, $10,400,000; in December, 1869, $8,133,- 500. Reduction $2,204,500-, New York-BeptemberBo, 4860, 634,- 182,976; 1865, $49,688,530; September, 1868, 644,968,786. Reduction, $4,618,- 736. Unapplied balances in the sinking fund would reduce the debt to $88,884,- 448. Sew Jersey-1860, $104,000; Novem ber, 1865, $3,018,800; November, 1808, $2,219,697. Reduction. $700,102. , Penntylvania -November' 1860, 964,02; 1861-62, $40,575,420; Novem ber. 1868, $32,799,786. Reduction, $7,- 776,634. „pa/aware-No debt in 1860; in 1867, the debt was $1,240,000; December 1868, $605,800. Reduction, $05,150. • Maryland holds productivetnortgages and liens to the full amount of her debt. Ohio-Debt in 1860, $14,250,173; 1865, $13,060,582; 1868, $1.0,629,675. Reduc tion since the war, $2,530,906. indiana-Debt in 1861, $7,770,233; in 1864, $8,687,960; in 1868, $3,101,587. Reduction, $5.586,873. Michigan-Debt in 1861, $2,388,842; November, 1866, $3,979,821; • Notember,' 1868, $8,651,078 Reduction, 04842. Attiseisl4D.,ebt in 1861, $10,277,161; 1866, ; $11,168,564; November,_; 1868„, $6,10,06.;•: Reduction, $5,190,11L • IV4consfrip,- - Debt in 1861, -$100,000; 1865,,-s2,6o,467;°NOvember, - 1808, $2,251,900, Reduction, $440,467, Ifirtritroatrie'yiTB6l; had a debt of $250;: 000,.which tas increased to $450,000, of which, in:, 4568," there was outstanding, $1100,00.: , •_„, , • /oica is,Oucof debt, • Missouri's. debt. in 1860, $24,784,000; • January.lB6sl s37,ooo,ooo,october, 1868; $20,667,000. Reduction $16,448,000, The State holds' collateral bonds .for $3,800,000 of the debt. ' '• ' - frentusky, 1865;' owed 0,264,846; which is now redhced to $8,610.000. The debt unpaid is held by th&-litate.in trulst for school and other funds.. -, The debt of Kansas is about.sl4olooor Nebraska is out of debt. _ California; in 1865, owed $5,290,640. Expended for the war, $33,809,868; now. owes $4,695,500; discharged! and paid off, 0,992,500. ' • We gather from these details' that the States which were not ititOiebelliorif iii January, 1801, owcar.`aif ,6 oo6 lo . $137,69:3,825; that during the. vat I tNs was increased to $218,307,00, WhicltApm has since been reduced to 4157,118,104;_; This present indebtednessincludes over $5,000,000 incurred by Xassachusetts for special 'internal improvements'during the last few years. In additiOnVthe pay ments on the national debt, - the people should be credited with the payment of $61,000,000 of State liabilities.--N. Y. Tribune. • 29, 1869. DEN'tISTRIr.: TEMI EITI4CTED 1 wrrELOTTr E 0 11.311C i . No mama IdADE WHE ORD N Eu AB E.D TMDLIL TEETH ABE L FULL SET FOB es. AT DR. SCOTT'S. / 1178 PENN STREET, iD DOOR ABOVE HA-RD. ALL WORK WARRANTED. CALL AND EX AMINE SPECIMENS OF OENIIINE VULCAN. mr9:d AT GAS FIXTURES WELDON & IiELLY, • Manufacturers' and Wholesale Dealers In Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers, -- AND LANIP COODS. Also, CARBON AND LIIBRICATING OILS, 'I3ENZTNE, eke. N0:147 Nyopd Street. 5e9:1122 Between sth and 6th Avenues. FRUIT CAN TOPS. We are now prepared to supply TINNERSand the Trade with ourl'atent . . SEVP.LABELING FRUIT CAN TOP. lit. PERFECT, KM PL Eand CHEAP. Having the names of the varirun fruits Stamped up On the Cover, radiating from the center, and an Index or pointer stamped upCin the Top of the can. It Is clearly, cltiiiinctly and PuItMANENT LY LASE RED by merely placing tna name of the fruit the can contains OD pogfte the pointer and sealing In the customary nianner. No preserver of fruit or good HOUSEKEEPER It-ut use any other after once seeing it. m ad 25-cents for sample. COLLINS & WRIGHT, 139 Segond avenue, Pittsburgh PIANOS. ORGANS, &C. BY THE BEST AND CHI EST PIANO AND ORGAN. Sehomacker's I Gold Medal Piano, AND ESTEY'SICOTTAGE 'ORGAN. The SCTIOILACKF..It PIANO combines all the latest, 'valuable Improvements known In the con struction of a fret etas instrument, and bee al ways been awarded _the MR hest premium ex hibited. Its tone Is Pill, sonorous and sweet. The workmanship, for durability and beauty, surpass all others. Prices from $5O to $l5O. (according to style and nnish. )1 cheaper than all other to ddled fret class Plano. ICEITEY , B cIaT4VIE ORGAN Stands at the head of all reed instruments. in producing the most perfect plpe_quality of term of any similar Instrument In the United States. It 1, simple and corpact in construction, and notHata. to vet on ol order. OARPENTEIVii PATS i 1 " VOX RUMANA TIMMOLO" is only to be found in this Organ. Pries from $lOO to lOW. All guaranteed for five. rgBARR ) WASE &BTJETTLER. i iirg• N. is ST. CLAIR STREAM. IIANOS AND ORGANS—An , en tire new stockf KNABIC'e UNNIVALLED PIANOS; - HAINES anoal. PIANOS: PRINCE Ir Oire ORGANS AND NINLODE• DNB and TREAT, ..I.NbILLEY .11 CO'S OROA.NB AND MELODEONS. CHARLOTTE HUME. deB 43 Fifth %Tante. Bole Agent. RIERCEL.NT TAILORS. V, IN QUETERS 47. 10R CLOTHING. BOYS' & Logan, CLAM STREET. Gray NO. 47 ST TIEGEid, B ° Mate ennui with W. Hespenheide.) ArEnCEICA.Prr 'TAILOR. No. 53 Smithfield Street,Pittaburgh. sesrm , NEW F E GOODS. • splendid new stock of CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, tea, Just received bp HENRY WEYER. Merchan Tailor s 13 Smithfield street. NIT/ML VAJ'ERS, ER - REMOVAL WALL P TILE OLD PIPED STORE IN A NEW.P4DE W. P. NA.IIOIII.A.LIG 1 flu remoyed from 87 ROOD STREET to Wp. 191 ir/BERI T K a few doors atawt ST. ULAIU WALL • • - A.t ,j3t,tot. Near 1 1 141/ areacie, To sAa4a room for new gpojy ‘ i, we will Bell IfS:;,, ; FOR T r atßtt:',...trAlrs The itoek pow at0re."14,3r14,":611t::i4; T l 7/4, payers to iaveat };. CaA 2,i4t,t ; 30$. R. ROGUES & 8R0. 4 pi* ' • • . • ' DYER , AND , fiCOMUa n ILANCR, .• • Oles;4ktib scoUnkit..; . rio. a er: cr.,aunerAninairr And Nos. 185 and 187 Third Streets • i PITTSIFFITROVE PA lOW 1 11 (1) BEAYBB:IT, GEORG. N~xfAOTIIHIN. Or TIDIES AND TAFFIEIS, ORTIADI 1 kinds of FRUITS, MIT% PICK JELLIZA, ic., ac. And dealer's a] SAUCES FEDERAL ST., Allegboll• TRIMiINGS, NOTIONS, &C. Man NO. 19 'FIFTH AVENUE, 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 OVERSKIRT, "BELLE HELENE, "richly embroidered:3 l i elegant street or Skating Skirt. RICH RIBBONS FOB BOWS, SCARFS AND SASHES. ROMAN STRIPES AND PLAIDS. SATINS, alt shades snd widths. FLOWERS. PLUMES. HATS AND BONNETS, LADIES AND CHILDREN'S MERINO DN DER WEAR, The richest and latest novelties in GIMPS, FRINGES AND BUTTONS. We especially direct attention to the great ex- cellence of the. HARRIS SEAMLESS (Reunion) KID GLOVES , ' over an others. and for which we are the Sole Agents. A complete line of GENTLEMEN'S "STAB , " SHIRTS SUSPENDERS. GLOVES. HALF HOSE.UNDERSHIRTS AND DRAWERS. SELLING AGENTS FOR LOCKWOOD'S PA PER GOODS, and all other popular makes. & CIRLISLB, NO. 19 FIFTH AVENUE. n0'2.5 GREAT REDUCTION IN PRICES woolen Goads ,at a great Sacrifice. LARGE STOOK OF YARNS, In all Colors and Qualities. LADIES' AND MISSES' WOOL HOSIERY. GENTS' AND YOUTHS' ONE•HALF HOSE GLOVES OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, Ladies' & Gents' Wool & Merino Underwear. HOOP SKIRTS. FINE VARIETT OF EMBROIDERED & LACE Handkerchiefs and Collars. PAPER COLLARS AND CUFFS OF EVERY VARIETY, for Ladles and Una Ue Jobbers will especially do well to mill on us 1103 r, as we wish to sell most of our goods before stem• =Laing to take stock. MACRI73I, GLYDE & CO., 78 and SO Market Street. PRICES MARRED DOWN. BARGAINS IN ALMOST EVERYTHING. REAL HEM STITCH. all Ilneu. HANDRER cHIEFS,I7c, 19c, AEO and upwards. TAPE BOP/EKED LINEN HANDHER CHIEFS WO, 9C to 500. AL oar Lt&rd at ole-half resrular prices. 'All the new BALMHEAL 'SKIRTS and Brad ley's latest styles of HOOP !DUETS, at the Lowest Prlces In the City - . tiENTS , MERINO VEuT and DRAWERS, 40e to $15,00. AT EATON'S, des No. 17 Fifth Avenue. GLASS. , CHINA. CUTLERY. J:1)1 HOLIDAY GIFTS. FINE VASES, BOUNIIIA.N AND CHINA. NEW STYLES, ' - • DINNER SETS, TEA nETS, • GIFT CUE'S, SMOICING SE largel stock of SILVER PLATED ' GOODS of all descriptions. Call and examine our goods, and Ire reel waned no one need fall to be Belted. E. BREED & CO. AOO WOOD STREET. SBEETINGS AND BATTING. HOLMES, BELL & CO., • . ANCHOR , cOT , TON MILLS. Many rsoturers of 111,WV7 and LIGHT ANCUOR AND Nsesow AfiVETINGS .AND BATTING: delS "104.0 AND STEAM FITTING 31. CO m OPZIt JOS. SAYX..OMY *NC , r..coorn co.; PRAM ,rotprozrts, iAS ,AND STEAX - Iffinutatravers of Ma's iND BRAM WQRIE. everletelltVrSailil kin r4 . l,ll OMB PIXTUILLO 6:i• of Me.faud Walnut Streets, j ll . rmrstitrAGEf ; . • " 3 OS q:',4-$1:10111"URES. H. LYON, • Ler of Weights and Measures, No. 5 FOURTH 8 aurxr, tßetween Liberty and Ferry streets on nromntly •ttanda4 to HAIR AND PERFUMERY. aijOHN PECK,. ORNAMENTAL HAIR WORBER AND PERFUMER. No. Third street. near Smithfield, Pittsburgh. Always on hand, a general assortment or La dle., WIGS. BANDS. CURLS; Gentlemen's WIGS,TOPEES. SCALPS, GUARD CHAINS. BRACELETS, &c. Milir Agood Price in cash will be given Fry RAW HAIR. Ladles' and Gentlemen's Hair Cutting _done ta In the neatest manner. hr.iuri DRY GOODS. 54• ***** KITTMING !EXTRA HEAVY BARRED FLANNEL, A VERY LARGE STOOK, NOW OFFIpRED, IP GOOD STYLES. MILROY, DICKSON & CO., WHOLESALE DRY -GOODS, OA& WOOD STREET:- DRY GOODS AT COST, FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY. TO CLOSE STOCK. THEODORE F. PHILLIPS, 87 MAIMET STREET.. de2S CLOSING 'OUT SALE OF DMZ" 451-4001)S J. 31. BURCHFIELD & CO'S. No. 52 St. Clair Street. All Wool Grey Twl2led Flannel' for .37 worth " Delathes for 20c. worth 25. Slightly Boiled Blaokketa 44,00-Worth 46,00.. Waterproof for $1,65 worth $1.56. Popllus4bralfj4e.tworth.6o.: • , Kid . Gloces for 41,50/worth 01,00. Paisley Shawls sl63llltrorih4SlU.DO. - - Velveteens SI, 00. worth Oleashed Muslin 16,4 c, worth 16.' trimbleActied.3lwilln 1513i4. 7loith 17. ' Cheapest And beef !Lock In tlie ST knowl- CW4lt. near Liberty sireet. " ' • ' 'de2e; rho be- 011,McCANDLIZE & CO. , IL i t e wu tio u,te ar es I: II * d Cu had tO the watnatatax MIAIhERS ' ura b Foreign and Domestic Dry 6E00118 4 el l . - • , No. 94-WOOD 5T.0.00.T. • :• T. anplv e inda 'Third door Above Diamond • •a . It i , . , • PITMINCIEGEL. PI w i t h ap; CEMENT, SOAP S • 103 tA ARTNIAN & or tough, NO. 1 Smlthlield street. 3lanufactnrefreemecu- N't a Ws Felt Cement and Gravel Rooting. terlal for Bale. Ins; tore, No. CEM i. MOVE HYDRAULIC CEMENT DRAIN . Pir i....Ty • ;LAT./L . • . ' OR j Cheapest and beat Pipe In the market. A! P ' E - r T i ~- - ROSENDALE HYDRAULIC csitzwg for B.r TREA- . - • +BABES. B. B. &C. A. BROCKETT & CO.' ' 0 Once and Manufactory-240 REBECCA ST.:. Alleaheny. Aar Orders by mall promptly attr.n. de d to. le 22:r93 '.. . ' .• 54. Id a with wan ance you .0111111 most r: w A. z 24". • Z • C w•• t e 9P n E-1 04 ' 23. ;.T; M .n and being IC i 71: MI ma .1. them El r. ds is lak- =I he is were . H. Ird, in st N Mr Ake 13 a ea -hat me the ley 3 in 7es ner ?,, 121119 EMI EMI II