El tta littsbutge4 Gaidtt. HEAD OR HEART f DT R. R. STODDARD The loving tongs you sing tome, _lhrith such a subtle art. My poet, are they from the head, Or are they from the heart "F It rent so b m en w ear he , or ere in the skies, may ar, From cloud, or room, or s tar— A misty Spirit file- When S.mnier dente are deep, And all are fast asleep— The ?Spirit of whom the flowers, . In the tong, dim hours. Dream with,their Lips apart— • • Wno gives, as be goes, \ To illy and rose _ • With rapture d , rab. 11, A kiss that saps in the heart. • Where. when the morn is come, • We dud It as dew— , Pure, perfect, divine! Such are these songs of mine." 'Not from ,your, then as you said, False one, songs, but:from your head. "Deep down bet ealb the tea, Whose dreadful waves are whirled • About the roots of the world, • Where death and darkness be, A little creature lurks. • Who upwards worts, and works: Thorou, , h the waters vast, • Thorough the waters green, • Tin, up, until at last , Thelight of day is seen— When lot It has budded an isle Above the seas, —' Whereon , he heavens smile, And Hang m a fruit er th oe n the trees wole yees,ar through • •• And the islets one great, vine! bueh are these songs of mine." And if your songs, one your art, art, Are from the head, and tram the he I woudernow wiitive this is ? Yon answer Inn with kis%est —Hearth and /Lyle EPHENKRIS. -36,000'oranges per day is New York a dose. —Cincinnati has a fine new public library. —Spiritualists are rapidly increasing in Michigan. - —Old man Dumas is writing the history of the hog. — . Maple sugar is being abundantly made in Indiana. —Grace Greenwood is heavily down npon bloomers. -A large crop of castor oil has been raised in Texas. —The French Emperor is said to have become a spiritualist. —The Empress of Austria hopes soon to be another mother. • —Rents are said to be advancing in Philadelphia this year. —Harrisburg has recently had two nights of Italian Opera. —Only 25 members of the Maine Colo my are now left at Jaffa. —ln January St. Louis had eleven mar riages and twelve divorces. —lone Burke is going to marry a Brit. ish captain and leave the stage. --Wilkie Collins is going to write , plays instead of novels for a while. • —Boston icemen are filling their hotises with that product eleven inches thick. —14,0 t p0,000 • worth of school houses were built in Massachusetts last year. —Louis Napoleon is said to be writing a history of the French Republic of 1848. —A statue to the mythical hero, Wil liam Tell, is to be put up in the Cantonof —Kossuth is very miserably poor; and looks old and decrepit. He is living in Genoa. —Rev. Phillips Brooks is to deliver the next lecture before the Y. M. C. A. in PoSton. ii—London had received Napoleon's speech fourteen minutes after it was de livered. - -;—Camden, N. J., expects to build five hundred new and substantial houses dur ing 1869. --Charles Reade thinks of publishing his autobiography. It would be a Reade able book. —Victor Emanuel is said to be so poor that he can't give any more balls or din - ner parties. —A man named Sweet will try to ride a velocipede three thousand miles in - thirty days. for $5,000. —Welchnasn, prominent during the trial of Mrs. Surratt, is now a reporter on a Philadelphia paper. —The latest report is that Santa Anna is trying to induce Count Girgenti to set up as Emperor of Mexico -Bull Run Russell is going to Egypt with the Prince of Wales. The London Times sends him as correspondent. —A fifty-thousand-dollar necklace of pearls is to be the first gift of the King of Bavariato his young Russian bride. —There are only about one hundred and fifty Mormons in New York waiting -transportation to the promised land of 'Utah. • —Maggie Mitchell is building a thirty thousand dollar brown stone front house on 126th street, near sth avenue, New York. —The orange trees of Florida have re covered from the effects of the late serious frost which killed most of the lemon and lime trees. —A New Yorker proposes to pull dn the Palisades along the Hudson, ow and. "build with their material a mole from the Battery to Governor's bland. • —The sugar crop of Cuba amounts to about 500,000 • tons per annum, and of that amount but about 84,000 tons are produced in the disturbed sections. —The vine is being• extensively culti vated in lowa. There are said to bethree thousand acres of grape vines within a radius, of fifty miles around Keokuk. —The New York Herald has savagely attacked the Romeo of BootiCsnd the Juliet of Miss McVickar, while itstye the Mercutio of Edwin Adams is perfect. —lt is said that every farm of 160 acres -in eastern Kansas is underlaid with 1,500,000 tons , of coal, or nine timesmore fuel than if the surface were covered with heavy timber. —The Lunar Eclipse of January 27th, it is stated, could be seen from the sum. ' F E mit of the Sierra Nevada while,the sun was still above the horiz:his phe nomenon was caused by re s a t ion. • —Mr. Edward Stephens, a son of Mrs. Ann Stephens, the authoress, has been made the recipient 'of that doubtful com pliment, a nomination from the President to the vacant consulship at 3ianchester. —Mr. Jay Gould asserts that the Penn sylvania Railroad Company seeks to build up Philadelphia and injure New York. This assertion will probably be news to Philadelphians or Pennsylvania Railroad men. / i —Some anti-hydroPhobistin Patterson N. J., went around the other night and poisoned all the doga that could be found. Great was the lamentation and fierce the rage of the owners of the canine corpses nexti morning. 1 —The writer f the Junina letter's, who. wasinever defiltely known, his a rival in the author f the Girl of the Period papers, who is asserted by various people to ,be one or the other of the famous women in England. • —A woman in Ridgeway, Lenawee county, Michigan, lately sued a saloon keeper of the place to recover money' spent by her husband for liquor, and after in exciting trial, a verdict of $65 was rendered in her favor. —On Sunday the mills of the Lancas ter Starch Company, at Lancaster, New Hampshire, were burned down. The fire was the result of an accident, the loss was about twenty-four thousand dollars and there Was no insurance. . M. Gachard, a French millionaire, died recently at Rochelle. He had made a fortune by selling fish bait, which every expert who examined it pronounced a humbug. But he advertised it liberally, with the usual consequences. -An iron company, composed of prom inent citizens, has been incorporated at Erie. ' Ten water lots adjoining the Erie and Pittsburgh docks .have been pur -chased, and more than one hundred thiau sand dollars have been subscribed to the capital stock. —4lounod is in Rome at work on his oratorio of St. Cecilia. , He was presented recently to the Pope, who is a musical enthusiast. The Holy Father requested him to play,' and was so delighted that he . kept the poor composer at work at the -piano for full four hours. —An exchange says a marriage has been arranged between the Prince of As turias and a' daughter of the "Duke - de Madrid." The Prince is very young, and his bride elect is not yet born. It is sad to immagine the blight of young af fection in case she should happen to be . a boy. —ln= Wednesday's paper we gave the following easy, puzzle which was so mis printed that we give it again corrected : ' In Boston a grocer once had but 'four weights, with which he weighed any number of pounds, from one to forty. I _They consisted of I, 3, 9 and 27 pound 1 weights. —ln France the passport system, as far as it concerns Englishmen orAmericans, has been abolished. As far-as' relates to Englishmen the system wai ' 'abolished several years ago, but it is only after long and unremitting efforts of General Dix that Americans have received the same privilege. —Fuad Pacha, recently' ambassador at Lisbon, presented Donna Maria with a splendid neclace of diamonds,' the two most beautiful of which the Queen, had converted into earrings. "I hope his Royal Highness will not be offended?" asked the Queen.. "My master will be but too happy that your Majesty should lend her ear to anything coming from him," was the reply. —On Monday night after eleven o'clock; the house of Mr. Charles French, near Camden,N. J., was burned to the ground. The family was all abed and barely es caped alive, Mr. French receiving severe burns while rescuing the women members of his family. The man or Men who set fire to the house failed in their projected wholesale murder. but deServe hanging as much as if they had succeeded. AN American citizen who was in the Theatre of Villanueva, on the 22d nit., and witnessed the riot and massacre in the streets of Bavaria that evening, says that the origin of the outburst was the shooting of a young . woman. Re says: "A very beautiful girl, the daughter of Aldama, one of the wealthiest and most noble of all Cubans, wore upon her left breast the American flag, with the inscrip. tion, 'Long live the Republic of Cuba' upon it. When that stirring song was being sung, the whole audience rose and cheered this young woman and make arose tpm cknowledge the salute—all eyes were now-bent upon her—a low, mean, cow ardly Spaniard shot her.with a revolver, killing her instantly.. Two American gentlemen occupied the box adjohting senorita Aldema, whose names ; Ido not know, but one of whom, seeing Alie pis tol pointed at the young lady/e. breast, drew his revolver, and a second after the Spaniard had fired, blew the top off the head of the cowardly assassin.._ Instant ly the whole theatre was.the scene of the greatest cenfusion, and.the Spanish troops rushed in and began firing upon the masses of the huddled together, unarmed, innocent men and women." • TEa seam slot es DRAM—The French Martinis d'Onrches, by, his will, founded a prize of 20,000 fr. for the dis covery of a sure and simple means of recognizing death to be real or' apparent. Dr. Carriere ihtends to claim the money for a process which he has employed for forty years. The system consists in placing the hand, with the fingers closed, before the flame of a lamp or candle. In the living person the members are , transpar ent and of a pinkish color, showing the capillary circulation and life full of actinv ity, while in that of a corpse,on the co trary, all is dull and dark, presenting nei ther sign of existence nor trace of the blood current. 1869 PENNBURGYI :GAZETTE: FRIDAY, ,FEBRUARY 12, New York Masaplerades .and Estrava _ A New York correspondent says: 1 was asking a lady what was the char acter of the masked ball she visited the night before at the Academy of Music. "Splendid!" she answered, with enthu siasm. "Iv'e been to masquerades every season-for the last fifteen years, and never saw so much dress. In paint of elegance it `laid over' anything in New York. I didn't see anything objectionable. We came away early." "Splendid'." I should think so. One lady wore a white silk with train three yards long, flounced to the waist with black lace and puffs of black illusion, and had diamonds to match set in black and white enamel. Diamonds means dia monds, too, at an Academy bail: Fringes of them two inches deep, and three rows of these strands for the necklace; a spray in Moorish setting for the hair; brooch for the corsage, and bracelets of stones among two or three gold bands. White and ruby colored satin opera cloaks, trains four yards long, arms and throats, - strewn with coral jewelry, white point over-dresses, are among the elegancies of costume. No doubt madame saw only what was sumptuous and gay. But the gentlemen who looked in about two in the morning were chary of their reporti. The ambitions young women who dressed in Belle Helens, are she devils in red satin, and in tights with velvet jackets, imitated the humors of the worst ac tresses with great success. To say noth ing of the dancing, 'which wasn't so bad as it looked, it is to be hoped, the sirens of the ball, many of them, had to betaken home drunk, and were bundled into their carriages by the maliers,Vithhumorons comments, as they ,were lifted from their helpless and careless postures Private -luxury has probably reached its camas in this country ia a Fifth Ave nue house, between Sixteenth aud Seven teenth streets. The rooms were described as fitted up with furniture having India camel's hair coverings. after the style long admired for the boudoira of duch esses in England. The ro , suite for Ithe drawing•room was bugnt from the French exhibition; the doors are of very fine bronzes, imported, with' the family monogram inlaid in solid silver; te cur tains so fine and heavily wrou h ght as to start the rumor that they were of round point, in which case they would cost two thousand dollars a window, which even these princely Americans - are hardly ready to give. Some of the finest diamond sets at the Exposition were brought over for the lady of this house, whose jewels compare with those of the highest nobility. The Fruit Prospects. A Rochester (N. Y.) paper says: "We have heard no complaints in this region, thus far thli season, in regard to the in- ' jury of the peach buds, frofn severe weather, and it is hoped they will not be killed this winter. In some places in the West, the mercury has fallen considera bly lower than in Western New York, and in some parts of Missouri and Illi nois it is reported the peach buds have been injured." A letter from Champaign, Illinois. states: "Many rumors are afloat in regard to the condition of the peach buds. That they are killed in many places is doubtless true,Lut in the majority of the peach orchards of the , State, there Is no doubt of an abundant supply of live buds for a good crop. Few people - distinguish be tween fruit and leaf buds and a less num ber are familiar with what are known as dormant leaf or fruit buds. Hence so much contradictory evidence in regard the condition of fruit buds. The Annapolis (Md.) Republican states: "While in conversation one day during the week with a friend residing in the inte rior of the county, we learned that the fruit growers in his and surrounding vi cinities were greatly alarmed lest the fruit crop this season should prove a total fail ure. The long continued mild• tempera .cure has had the effect of placing the trees in such a condition that the first cold snap occurring, of which we will proba bly have many, will undoubtedly exert a very disastrous influence over their yield. A TEtzoruar to the Chicago TriZune, from Jacksonville, Illinois, gives theso particulars of the mysterious murder of General McConnell: , Never has our community been more shocked than it was today by.the circu lation of the report of the murder of Sen ator Murray McConnell, who has been a resident of Jacksonville since 1820, and taken a prominent part in all matters per taining to its Interest. He was found at 8:45 this morning, in his private bedroom and office, upon the floor on his face in a pool of blood. He had breakfasted . ritlt the family about 8 o'clock, and was een in his room alone, reading, about ten min utes before his lifeless body was dis Co vered. No one was seen or heard to enter the room or premises, which axe located on one of 'the main streets of the city. Five deep trashes, like those made from the blows of ahammer,were found on his head. The jaw bone was broken, and the skull fractured in several places. There is not the slightest clue to the Motive of the perpetrator of the deed. He was perfectly lifeless when found. The General wain his seventy-first year. d Major McConnell, his son, has offere a reward of one thousand dollars for the apprehension of the assassins. The Cor oner's jury have been in Session all day, but have brought in no verdict as yet. The greatest excitement prevails. GunaT excitement has been caused in Fort Wayne, Indiana, bY the urea of John W. Vannatta, charged !with having caused the death of his wife's sister. was is stated that in April last Vannatta married to a Miss Hor n, in opposition to th we e r w e i:tbkeenar dhcekr efterentps.arteOmnothge onfigreht. of the wedding all the guests assembled freshments, and the sister of the bride died in consequence. Recently Vannatta proposed to elope with another young lady, and in one of his letters tO ber con fessed that he had poisoned the coffee served to his wedding guests. lAH FOB WRITING 17PON GLAse.—A solution of fluoride of ammonium is re commended as famishing a ready means of writing with a pen of any kind upon glass, and is also adapted for labelling bot tles, cylinder tubes, &c., in the laborato ry, as well as for marking theara degrusees upon hydrometers and other appt of similar construction. . • A RECEN T telegram froniSan Francisco states: "Ore from the Tamescal tin mines, in San Diego county, has I been success• fully worked. Mercantile, tin, weisiblug eighty-five pounds to the ton, has been produced in this city. A considerable quantity of ore has already been taken out, and will be sent here for working. EXTRACTED vcrirx4iiiotrr I.."..trir NO OHABSE MADE wEr.t.w . A.urrncrum , • TEETH ABE OBDEBED. • PULL HET TOE N. • AT DR. S9OTT'Ei. 111175 PENN BTR&ET, 113) DOOR A.33OVZ SAND ALL WORK WARRANTED. CALL A.1 4 1D AMINE SPECIMENS OF GENUINEv aLc,el uI99:IIAT GAS FIXTURES WELDONB6 S.ELLY, Manufacturers and Virtolesta9 Dealers in Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers, AND LAMP CODEX,. Also, CARBON AND LUBBICATMI OILS, fiNENZILNIE, &O. N 0.147 Wood Street. ee9:1122 Between sth and 6th Avenues , We are now prepared to stip4y TINNERSand the Trade with our Pate6t . SELF-LABELING. FRUIT CAN TO*. ills PERFECT, SIMPLE and CHEAP. Having the names of the varlet:is fruits Stamped upon the Cover, radiating from the center, and an Index or pointer stamped upon the Top of the can. It is clearly, db.ttnetly and PhRDIANENT LT LABELED by merely placing the name of the fruit the can contains op posite the pointer and sealing in the customary manner. No preserver of fruit or good TIOESEKEEPER will use any other after once seeing ft. Send 25 cents for sampl,..?e. COLLINS dr. WRIGHT, 130 SeCond avenue, Pittsburgh. --PIANOS----. ORGANS, &C. -------------------- BUT THE BEST AND CHEAP.. ' EST PIANO AND ORGAN. Sehoniticker's Gold Medal Piano, AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN. The SCROMACEER PIANO combines all the latest valuable improvements known In the con wuc t b n e n awarded class e i nstr s m e en t tp. r a mi uhmas al ex- hiblted. Its tone Is full, sonorous and sweet. The workmanship. for dursbility and beauty, surpass all others. Prices from $5O to 11150. laceotnir to stylefirst and finish la , t no.. chper than all other 80- called elus Pea ESTEY'S COTTAOE ORGAN Stands at the head of all reed in in producing the most perfect pipe quality of tone of any similar Instrument in the United States. It is simple and compact In construction, and not liable to set out of order. CARPENTER'S PATENT " VOX HUMANA TREMOLO" is only to be found in Pricefrom ONO to $550. All varantoed for live years. BARRI SNARE & BllTErnagAL._ No. 151_LE- s Kr CL . DIANOS AND ORGAM—An en tire new stoek of SNARE'S UNRIVALLED PIANOS; RAINES BROS.. PIANOS: PRINCE k 00'S OR6AN3 AND ALELODE ONE{ and TREAT, LINSLEY a CO'S ORGANS ARD MELODE ONS. oserts.orra.zuzzan. 43 Fifth avenue. Sole Agent. PiEROHANT TAILORS. 47. 1111111QIIIRTERS 47. BOYS' CLOTKINO, Gray & Logan O. 47 ST. CLAIR STREET, BTIEGEL, , .(Late Cutter with W. Efespeuhetde,) INMUCTIANT TAIIARs No. 53 Smithfield Street,Pittsbhrgh seZely2l VEIN' FALL GOODS. NEW A splendid new stock of CLOTHS, CASSLHEBES, tOC., Jost received by 1110111,T MEYER. sell: Merchant Tailor. 73 Smithfield street. GLASS. CNINA. CUTLERY 100 WOOD STREET. HOLIDAY GIFTS. : FINE VASES, BOHEMIAN AND CHINA. NEW STYLICS, • DINNrR T EE 3 S E , Ts. GIVT CUPS SMOKING BETS, A. large stock of SILVER PLATED GOODS of all deacrlptlons. • CO. Call and examine onr goode, and we feel Battened no one need fall to be gated. • . • R. E. IgT:lar. C • 100 ----------WOOD STREET. WALL PAPERS, WrALL PAPER - REMOVAL. fno. OLD PIPER STORE IN A NEW PUCE W. P. 311LURSIIIMIAL4 remoTed from ST WOOD STREET to NO. 191 LIBERTY 91.1BEEZ few doors above ST. CLAIR. DYER AND SCOURM . A.Am icr J. LANCE, DYER AND SCOURER. Zio. S ISM Cridia STRUT And 303.185 and 187 . Third Street, ETS AND OIL CLOTHS, A. rt. F - • BOVARD, ROSE &,,CO., BOYAR', ROSE CO. Window Shades, BOYARD, ROSE 6: CO., fe9:dftwT JANUARY, 1869. I'FARL4ND & COLLINS, ANNLE CURIAE SALE TWO WEEKS LONGER Greater garpins than Ever will be offered to close out Special Lines of Goods, at YOB CLINTOCK 6 . AND COMPANY No. Z 3 Fifth Street. 43 WS PITTI3BIJBUIL. A. Hi 01.4 CLOTI,IS 21 FIFTH AVENUE. CARPETS. Will CONttinue their 71 AND 73 FIFTH. A.YENUE, SECOND 'FLOOR. SPECIAL ANNUNCEIIENT. TO MEET THE OENERtL DEMME OP THOSE who nave been deterred from purchasing until after the drat of the year,we have concluded to continue our • MEAT REDUCTION SALE FOE A YEW WEESS LONGER. This is posi tba last opportunity to secure bargains is CAT:WETS , Oil Cloths, Matting% &c. Good Carpets for 25 cents a lard 51 51 51 Fifth Averiues CATIPETS, CARPETS, WCALLtfIi BROTHERS, re.AILITM BROTHERS, WCALLITM BIiOTWEES, 51 Fifth Avenue, -~: ~:~Y ~t+4 f~ Oafis, BELL ANCIWIt COTTQN MILLS. z ) - errrss3 Oa. , ilanvfacturers of /WAVY WM indLleHT AN4IIIOB AND IL&GNOLIA svvarri.rms AND BATTING THE NATIONAL LIB INHUME tOiiIP4NY, UNITED STATES OE ANERICA, WASHINGTON., D. G. Ch"tergctrloWicinlyVs,°lB6r. gr."' Cash Capital - - - $1,000,000. Branch Office: PHILADELPHIA, FIRST NATIONAL BANK BIIILDIND, Where the general business of the Company its transacted. and to which all general cOrres pondence should be addressed. \ DULIGOTO S. day Cooke. Mises. E. A. Rollins. Wash's. ,C;H. Clark, Philada. Henry D. Cooke, wasp, /John W. Ellis, Clueing. W. E. Chandler,Waah. W.G. Moorhead. Phila. Jac>. D. Detrees.Wasis. Geo. F. Tyler, Phila. Ed. Dodge, N. York. J. Hinckley Clark, Phila. H. C. Faunestock.N.T OFFICERS. C. H. CLARK; Philadelphia. President. HENRY D. COOKE, Washiuston, Vice Presidit. JAY COOKE, Chairman Fir.ince and Executive Committee. EMERSON W. PEET, Phil., Sec' y and Actuary. E. S. TURNER, Washington. Ass•t secretary. FRANCIS G. SMITH, M. D., Mmtle.ti Director, J. EWING. MEAItS. M.D.. A Med. Director. ••lIIEDICA.L. ADVIc•ORY 'BOARD. J• K. BARNES, Burg. General U. S. A., Wseb , n. P. J. HORWITZ, Chief Medical Dep't U. S. N., Wa,hington. , D. IV: BLISS, M• D., Washington. SOLICITORS AND ATTOB.NEYS. W3l. E. CHANDLER, Washington, D. C. GEORGE HARDING, Philadelphia. Pa, This Company, National in its character, offers, by reason of the Larg , Capital, Low Rates of • Premium and New. Tables, the must desirable means of insuring life yet presented to the pub- lic. The rates of premium being largely reduced, are made as favorable to the Insurers as those / of the best Mutual Companies, and avoid all the 1 complications and uncertainties of Notes, Divi dends and the misunderstandings which the lat ter are so apt to cause the Policy-Holdota. Several new and attractive rabies are now presented which need only to be understood to prove acceptable to the public, such as INCOME eRODUCING POLICI and RETURN rRENI 13x,POLicY. In the former, the policy-bolder not only secures life insurance, paytiote at death, not will receive, fi living, after a period of a few years, an annual incomeequni. ts, ten per e cent. (10 per cent.) of the par of his policy. Th lat. ter the Company agreeS to return to the assured the total amount of money itehas yam?. in. in ad dition to the amount of his policy. The attention , of persons contemplating insuring their lives or lticreasing the amount of insurance they al offeredav, is called ..to the special advantages by the Nat Tonal Life Insurance Com- Rim' • Circulars, Pamphlets and full particulars given , on application to the Branch °Mee of the ,01:11- pany in Philadelphia, or its General Agents. iIIGrLOCAL AG ENIS ARE WANTho in every City and Town; and applications from coinpe tent parties for such agencies with suitable en dorsement. should be addressed T.O THE COM PANY'S GENERAL AGENTS ONLY, in their respective districts. oitsx.e.AL AGENTS: E.W. CLARK A CO., Philadelphia, . For Pennsylvania and Southern New. Jersey. , JAI COOKE A CO.. Washington. D. C., For Maryland, Delaware; Virginia, District of Columbia and West Virginia., IBA B. iIIeVAY it ..CO., Agents for' Allegheny, Beaver, Butler, Mercer and Washington counties. For further particulars address B. S. RUS SELL, Manager for GeneraiAgent, Harri3ol4,Fsburg, Pa. au2.5: ENTERPRISEINSIJIRANCE CO, , OF PITTSBURGH, PA, Office, No. 424.- Pr NN BT.. UN NATIONAL TRUST CO. BUILDING.) D_TEECTORS : Bobt. Dickson, Iv Oliniddell, W. •3, irridal, G. biedie,'Pßuren, F. 'Kirsch, L. 11. Myers, T. Ringwincli, 'Chris. Siebert. L. J. Blanchard, . Weisser, [Y. Schildecker. E. H. MYERS, President. ROBT. DiCKSON. 'Vice President , . BORT.J. GRIER. Treasurer. e13:x7:7 .1. J. ALBIETZ. Secretary. • IMPERIAL FIRE INSURANCE CO., OF LONDON• ESTABLISHED 1803. CASH CAPITAL PAID UP AND INVESTED AYH EXCEED- Difi 88,000,000 IN GOLD. Insurance against Fire effected on Houses and Buildings, loloods, Wares and Merchandise, Steamboat /Cc. Pohetes issued payable in or currency. Air United states Branch Orm, 40 PINE STREET, New York. All losses of the United States Branch will be adjusted in New York. J. Y. ifIoT..AIIGTIT-4114. •, Agent.. PITTSBURGH, PA. Office, 67 FOURTH STREET. MB. McLAIJGHLIN'at also Agent for the Man hattan Life Insurance Company. sebtv"l2 VirES'rEBN INSURANCE QOM PANT OF PITTSBURGH.. LEXANDER NIMICE, President. WM. P. HERBERT. Secretary. • CAPT. GEORGE NEEL% oene r a 1 Agent. 00ice, iiISI Water street, Spiny & Co.'e Ware., house, up stairs, Pittsburgh. _ _ Will In:are against all hinds or Fire and Me rin. Basks. A home Institution, managed by DST rectors who are well known to the community, and who are determined by promptness and liber-• silty to maintain the character which they have assumed, as of tering the best protection to those who desire to be insured. Preharonii: Alexander Nimick, • Joan R. McCune, R. Miller, Jr., Chas. J. Clarke. James McAuley, William S. 'Hyena._ Alexander Speer. Joseph KirkPaUleze Andrew Ackleu, Phillip Berner, David Id. Long. Wm. blorrison. ncto 1). Hansen. INDEMNITY AGAINST LOSS BY TINA, CARPETS. ABOVE WOOD STREET. BATTING. co., OF THE FRANKLIN INSURANCE CO,OF PHILADELPHIA. 0V1TCH,43 6 &431 CHESTNUT ST.,ttear gra. L Dissorosts. Mules ir. Eancker, Mordecai IL LOUIE Tobias Wagner. David S. Brown.. Samuel Want. Isaac Les, Jacob B. Smith , Edward O. Deli, V eorge W. Gaud', _ George vales. CHARLES G. BANGS President. EDW. 0. DALE, Vice President. W. 0. BTEELE. secretsri.ero tem. J. GARDNER covrix, AGINT, _ Borth West corner Third and Wood Streets. nitalitwlb 13ENNIFELVANIA INSURANCE COMPANY OF PITTTSBLIRGH OFFICE. No. 10)( WOOD STREET, BA.NR. 03 COMMERCE BUILDING. • i This le a Rome Company, and insane Kabala lon by Vire exclusively. LEONARD WALTER, 'President. C. C. BOYLE, Vice President. ROBEET PA.TRICE, Treasurer. . 1 HUGE McELRENY, Secretary. DISXZVOIIe: LeOillird Welter. GeorgeWlison, 0. C. BaYle, Geo. W. Evann. Robert Patrick. J. C. Leone, Jacob Painter, - J. C. Vielner, Josiah Ring, _ John VoeOley, Henryßopitine, A. AUIIIIOI2. Sproulk . 3s, NATIONAL INSIJICANCE CO., OF T 163 CITY OF ALLEGRI3IMI Oflice. No. 80 FEDERAL STREET. entrance on nteatton Avenue. FIRE INSURANCE ONLY. . W. W. MARTIN. President JAL E. BTEITENBON. Secretary. 'DIRECTORS: A. H. 'English o.H.F.Willlams J. Thomnstil Jac. A. Myler. Jae, Lockhart, .k.s. Myers. Jas. L. Graham,Roht , Lea. C. C. Boyle, Jno. Brown, Jr. Deo. iierst, Jacob Hoy. oci7;n34