01 gittiut exaittts. 1 , SLEEP. . BY JOIIN JAMES PlA'_? `Thelmtlit crawls oyer the river. Hiding the shore on either side: And, under the veiling mist forever, Neither tear we nor feet we the tide. ' . But curl skiff has the will of the river, Though nothing is seen to be passea; Though; the mist may hide It forever, fbrever, The current. is drawing as fast. , Te matins - sweet from the far off town Till the airwith their beautiful dream; 'The vetoers were hushing the twilight down When we test our oars In the stream. EPHEMERIS. —Drra has a female lawyer, -Mark Twain is in New York. , --ißMois expects to have an enormous peach crop. —New Orleans markets are supplied with strawberries. • —•ln spite of Lent, New York still has • fashionable weddings. --Judy inquires if the "Rightful Heir" is the son of "Real-rnah." —lmprisenment for debt will probably •be abolished in Rhode Island. --It is said that a cargo of ice hes been shipped from Boston tolapan. —Some of the French cities have ban ished velocipedes from the side-walls. —We in the United States are said to use 365, \ 900;000 postage stamps yearly. ' —A v(estern critic calls a certain fe male orator "an ornament to both sexes.” —llleyerbeees daughter is about to be come the wife.of Baron Adrian •of Vienna. —The oyster beds of Virginia measure 640,000 acres. Several oysters lie in one bed. —Favorite 'reading for office-seekers— " Put yourself in his place:"—Boston Post. —The New York 'Commercial Adver tiser has a pet pickpocket named Wesley Allen. —The revolution In Cuba has very se 'nously effected the hoop-pole buainess of Maine. —King Lear was ;not . performed in - England once during the madness of George 111. • —A report of the destruction of the Eddystone lighthouse was recently cur rent in Landon. —On Monday night last a woman in Alton, 111 s., shot and fatally wounded a man who insulted her in the street. —Lord George Gordon, not he of the riots, but probably a descendent, was re cently fined in India for drunkenness. —A lady in Tennessee received on St. Valentine's day a $l,OOO U. B. bond, anonymously. That was a comic valen- tine. —The Government of India is stow txy ing in some degree to mitigate the horrors of the famine by distributing food among the natives. ' --Missouri wants to have a State en tomologist, with a,salary of about $3,000 a year, whose duty it,will be to kill tho grashopperL, —A little boy recently died of hydro phobia on Long Island, though his mother persistently sucked the wound, - hoping to extract the poison. • • - —The wrens and blue birds in Virginia decided last-fall to forgo their usual trip to the Sunny South, and staid in the Old Dominion all winter. —The man who paddled his own canoe (the Rob -Roy), when last heard from, had been doing "Abana and Pharphar rivers of Damascus." —A Richmond lady. being asked whether she considered the Black Crook an objectionable e?Ehibition, replied that she "so* no objection to ladies going." —A very cold snap has nipped vegeta bles in Southern Italy, and the novel spec tacle is presented of - orange trees laden with ripe fruit and the ground covered with snow. —A Richmond piper has discovered that it is only an unfortunate affair when a white man stabs a negro to the heart, but a diabolical murder when the position of the parties is reversed. —A new fbg-signal has recently been made. at Portland, Me., which .is so ar ranged as to blow a large whistle for ten seconds every minute, with a steam pres sure of one hundred pounds. —Cleveland is clearing vessels for Lake- Superior after ice, . The captains have in- StrUCtiolla if they find no ice in Lake Su perior to take the schooners overland to Alaska if ice cannotbe obtained nearer. :--Btirlingame and his Chinese are the present sensation at Paris. -The, Ameri; can Mandarin,. with ;his. handsome pres ence, courtly manners and pure , French is recognized as a valuable addition to court society. • —A New Cork paper knows of a con ductor on a New York and Boston rail way train who has two wives, one in New`York and "the other in the - "hub," so that at whicloverend he stops he has hOme and a hearth to go to. " —The Neiv . York Maid, referring to the number of condemned murderers, who have confessed themselves to be the murderers Dr. Barden, thinks that as there were -So many of them there must have Veen %regularly organized battle.. —Mrs. Rebecca . Harding Davis may not be so eloquent a woman as Anna Dickinson or Elizabeth Stanton, &may not have the gall dipped pen of, Galt Hamilton, or, the Aupreme nonsense of George Francis Train, brit she is a most sensible writer. We have never read any article on the great • guestioh of the day, which struck us as so sensible, logical and just as her essay in Putnam's Maga zine for February, called "Men's Rights." ln ourNipinion, such advice as it contains is worth much more than all Vat elocitetteri mod, all the brans poured. out on the thltar of *Affirm's suffrage. 'Every depttident girl, 'every struggling woman, emery paretit thould read this ar ticle andwe feel sure that among them all it would ; to some, prove areal friend and guide.. —,fix Ohio exchange calls Miss Olive Logan "the female contortionist:" She certainly is blessed (or otherwise) with remarkable facial mobility. During her ltuftre here the other evening, even while she was vehemently denying that she was afflicted with the Grecian bend, it was apparent to all beholders that she had the "Montreal wricgle" to perfec tion, and might from her see-saw motions be classed under the Round Tables head ing of "Teetering Women." flow to Take Out Ink Stains. It is certainly very much worth while to knew how to take ink spots out of col ored,clothing. The writer, "on a sum mer's day," *hen It seemed as if one had-enough to do to support life without extra trouble in the torrid heat, once up set 4 bottle of ink into her lap, over a linen dress, striped with brown and white and trimmed with many rows of brown braid. Aghast, the first thought was that the dress was ruined; the second was to dip the skirt at once into warm water, -rinsing as much ink out as possible, but •what was left made a rueful sight—hand breadths of doleful thunder-dark color, over the light summer dress. Quick, it was again plunged into a warm solution of oxalic acid—hot, that it might take ef feet sooner. Care was taken to dip only the spots into this liquid (there are some people so stupid they will need to be told to do this,) and in a minute they faded, of course, taking the color of the stripes with them. The linen was rinsed in warm water again, and wet with,a dilu tion of ammonia, which changed the skirt to its original color, and the dress was as good as ever, Henceforth I keep high and sublime courage over all ink mishaps, sure that acid mid ammonia and will make all right again. The pro cess must be gone through as quickly as possible, when once begun, hut it will cancel old ink stains on wool, cotton or k linen. Effects of Cold upon Metals. Fritsche, of St. Petersburg, has recent ly communicated to the Academy of Science at Paris, a notice of a remarka ble change, produced by cold in the mole cular condition of tin. During the pre vious winter, tin, exposed in St, Peters burg to a temperature offorty degrees be low zero, was transformed into a fibrous semi-crystalline substance, which became divided up into coltimnar fragments like basalt, and in which empty spaces were formed by.the very great contraction of the metal. This took place in a mass of tin weighing forty or fifty pounds, and about twenty-five inches in diameter. In the course of the discussion which ensued upon this statement, it was men tioned that the organ pipes of a church in Rassiehad become so much chtmgcd by frost as to have lost their sonorous qualities. It was also stated that frozen quicksilver presented a similar appear ance to the tin. A temperature of one hundred degrees below zero does not pro duce the same appearance as forty degrees below that point. In the former, case the tone and consistence of the metal resem bled that of silver. Attention was also called to the fact that iron car axles be came very brittle by frost; and that many other metals at very high degrees of cold would probably experience the same mole cular changes as were shown to occur in tin. Velocipedes. The attention of inventors seems at present.to be - directed to the construction of velocipedes, and new machines of every description are reported. Thus, a New York mechanic has devised a mono cycle, or single machine, which consists of a wheel eight feet in diameter, with a tire six inches wide, or two narrow tires on Its outer edges, with two sets of spokes connecting with a double centre, which fills the place of a hub, the two sides'of which are two feet and a half apart. The operator is lathe middle, and propels the wheel by a simple yet curious apparatus, in which both his weight and hie muscle are brought into play. In Detroit a three-wheeled velocipede has made its appearance, which is"descri bed as follows: The wheels are forty two inches in diameter, and are propelled by means of a double hand-crank, no treadle being used. On each side of the hub of the forward wheel is a grooved pulley, and attached to the straight pot tion of the crank are two emote. pulleys, the four being connected by belts. At each revolution of the pulleys the vehicle is propelled a distance of sixteen and a half feet, and when an ordiaary rate of speed is attained, it runs quite easily. Its weight Is forty-nine pounds, and the in ventor claims that it will sustain two hun dred pounds.. • - PBOTZCTION OF STAIRWAII3.-411 much frequented buildings, as museums, libra ries, schools, factories, railway stations, dre., great inconvenience is'often experi enced by the wearing away of the stairs, and various devices are made use of to protect them, such as plates or bars' of metal; &c. These, in turn are not very desirable, if thin, and if th ick, are even sive, and apt to trip up the feet. Alum inium bronze is now recommended for this'purpose, as. answering all acquire ments: In one• establishment, where plates of common bronze, half' an inch thick, , were worn out in six'weeks, alum inium bronze plates, of one:eighth of an inch, after eleien months' use, show scarcely. a trace of ebraston. Thiebrenze consists merely fof copper, alloyed with 'eight or ten per cent, of aluminium, and If as durable as re ported , would be by no means too expens ive for use. • • A"COAL-CUTTING NACITINS of a new form,:-worked entirely by hydraulic pres, sure ' has been presented for (=mina tionto the London institution of civil engineers by 'llr. Chubb, - who claims it to be a great improvement in respect both to , economy and efficiency over any method .now employed. The arrange ment consists of twelve plungers, , set side by side on a steel bar, connected with a hydraulic pump, and so arranged as to be capable of Ixtending into the coal about three feet and stall, A pressure of about ,twelve tons to the square inch can be ex erted. The apparatus hat been in Wales, and it is stated that . with it two men tau rea ily break down twenty tons of coal in:: n hour ' the whole in large pieces, with no waste. f'ffTSP•URGR GAZETTE: lONDAY MAC lE jl, 1809. Tun ambitions projects of. 'p rase % have recently been illustrated },y the pub lication in Paris of a Char' of E uro p e , entitled Count Bismarck's m a p. The idea of this practical itare is taken from another map, public ied some time ago, giving Louis ITP.poleon's plan for the best rearrangement for the countries ad joining Prance,. The kingdom of Prus sia, although greatly enlarged by recent. conquests, still spreads out long lines of unprotected territory, and requires de fensible frontiers. To rectify theboun— dary lines and control the approaches to the numerousfortresses, a more compact territory is needed, together with an ex tensive seaboard, And the map exhibits the grand proportions of what in the im mediate future will probably form the Empire of Prussia. The frontiers . pf this vast dominion are described as fol lows: On the north a line runs from Vis tula along the Baltic to the frontiers of Holland and includes Denmark. On the east the boundary line is so drawn that, while it avoids Cracow and Vienna, it includes the whole of the Aus trian kingdom of Bohemia. Turn ing then in ;a western direction, it takes in Bavaria, Wurtemberg and Baden, leaving out Switzerland, and terminating on the right bank of the Rhine. Holland and Switzerland are to remain as they are, and the entire left bank of the Rhine is to be yielded up to France, the ,fate of Belgium not being specified. Prussia re signs the Rhine provinces,but compensates herself by annexing the whole of Bohe mia, Bavaria, Wurtemberg, Baden and Denmark. Austria loses Bohemia, but is to be allowed to develop herselt east wardly, and to expand into a grand Dan ubian empire. The Russian limits start from the north at the month of the Vistu la and strike off eastward at the city of Cracow, which is included in the Dan ubian empire. The line of the French empire follows the left shore:of the Rhine from the frontiers of Rolland to the fron tiers of Switzerland: Berlin is indicated as the capital of the Prussian empire, while Hanover. Posen, Dresden, Prague, Stuttgart and Munich are classified as the seats of Viceroyalties. Tan ARAN ISLES, an Irish barony, eighteen miles in extent, and containing a population of 3,209 souls, are situated at the entrance of Galway Bay. These isles are famous fot their shrines and'holy wells, the remains of twenty chuiches being scattered about in different parts of the group. The Inhabitants subsist prin cipally by fishing, and are represented as quiet, orderly and hospitable. They, hoWever, have recently presented a peti tion to the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, asking that a gunboat should be sent to settle a difficulty between them and the proselyting agent of the proprietors, two old ladies, who exercise quasi sovereign ty over the district. The trouble arose from the agents prohibiting the importa tion of bread from the main land, at the sametime appointing as Government baker a person who was forme ly a school master on the islands, but to whose academy the inhabitants refused, r send their chil dien. Bread was dec .1 ntrabandi and no. boat with bread • board was al lowed to land. This blockade lasted for three months, when the people became impatient of the restrictions, and com plained that three thousand three hun dred British subjects were deprived of the privilege of free trade in bread through the absolute dictum of one awl,. and asked for a government gun-boat to lie sent to ply between Atan and Gal way. On this gun-boat, if sent, the bread will probably be Imported, though that method of obtaining supplies is not mentioned in so many words. This Inci dent is an illustration of the trouble aris ing from the baronial and manorial rights that still exist in Great Britain: The English journals mention with some glee that the first questions submitted to the Gladstone Cabinet are the petitiOn from the fishermen to destroy the bottle-nosed whales, and this memorial from Aran to import bread under the protection of gun boats. • Trrx Albany Knickerbocker takes a new view of an old subject. It says: Moralists are very much shocked at what are regarded as the indtcent cos tumee• of actresses in extravaganzas. Nothingihowever, is said of the actors who wear only fleshings, relieved by the scantiest of tight-fitting colored drapery. Ladles may innocently gaze on feats of equitation, of evolutions on the trapeze, performed by actors, every one of whose muscles IS palpable to the naked eve; but men are reproved by the press and the pulpit if they sit in front of a stage on which handsome women appear In short skirts. Perhaps if men in common life wore petticoats and women the tight.tlt-I ting dress usual with men, the communi ty would be shocked at male performers in nothing but fleshings, and moralists would inveigh against the indecencies of the arena. Immodesty, we may there fore conclude, is altogether a question of skirts. CArTAryt DutnEsitE, commander of the steamer Pereire in her late disastrous voyage, commanded in 1854 the little steamer Vesta, wbieh collided with the ill-fated Collins steamer Arctic off the banks of Newfoundland. The Vesta had a great hole knocked in her, and seemed destined to sink; the passengers and sail ors . flew to the boats but the captain, brandishing an ax, declared he would fell, the first man , that embarked. This bold act re-established - litter. Thecargo and ballast were carried aft and brought the ship.upright again, with much trouble and patience the hole was temporarily mended, and, thanks to extraordinary 'Me, the vessel was brought safely into the port of Bt. Pans, Newfoundland. By this time the unhappy Arctic 'had sunk, with three hundred people on board. Captain Duchesne's conduct won h him the Cross of the Legion' of :Honor. EDITCATIONAL.—The plati of "class bantscrlptions" devised Harvard Tint , verslty, to increase the available college property, it is asserted, promises to work well. Each class is urged to pledge $lOOO per annum for ten years. The receipts already are $18,280. A project of a sim ilar character is worthy of the attention of the Alumni of the Colleges in. Penn sylvania, now embarrassed through the absence of endolmneuts sufficient to sup. port effective staffs of professors. COMMERCIAL FertunEs.--The Balti more American furnishes a table of the most important commercial failures that occurred in five principal cities during the year 1868, taken from the registry of brilillock, Sprague & Co., commercial agents. The whole number is 482. Of these there were, in New York, 295; In Philadelphia, 03; in Bqstoti. 59; in Balti more, 87; in Chicago, N. DENTISTRY TEETH . EXTRACTED WITIELOV'T PAIN I NO 011ABON "ILADE WHEN ARTI7IOLIII. "I'PINTH AVM Ln7 roil ONDIENED. A PUL . AT DR. SOOTTI3.I %Ts FERN Wr=ST. iD DOOR ABOVZ HAND • 4..DLWORIC WAS.RINTED. WILL AND RI MUNE EIRECLILENB Or e11i171,2a VIILOAE my9:ll&T M e7-T: zi *Ai 40 3 WELDON & KELLY, Nanupteturers and Wholesale. Dealers In Lamps, /Lanterns, Chandeliers, AND LAMP GOODS. Also, CARBON AND LUBRICATING OILS, BENZINE, deo. N 0.3.44 Wood Street. se9:n22 Between sth and 6th Avenues. FRUIT CAN TOPS. - We are now prepared to_ supply TINNERS and the trade with oar Patent SELF-LABELING FRUIT, CAN TOP. It is PERFECT, SIMPLE and CHEAP. Baying the names of the various fruits Stamped upon the Corer, radiating from the center, and an Index or pointer ' stamped upon the Torptstf the can. It is clearly, dt.ttnctly andTSALSIANENT LY LABELED by merely placing tha name of the fruit the can contains op. polite the pointer and serllng In the customary manner. No preserver of fruit or food HOUSEKEEPER wilt use any other after • once seeing it. Send 25 cents for sample. COLLINS et WRIGHT, 139 Second avenue, Pittsburgh. PIANOS. ORGANS, &C. ITY THE BEST AND CHFLAP• B PST PIANO AND ORGAN. Schomacker's Gold medal Piano, AND ESTEY'S cOTTAGE ORGAN. The ESCHONACZEB PIANO oonibines all the latest valuable improvements knoWn In the con struction of a seat class instrument. and4as al ways been awarded th e his hest premi ex hibited.‘ Its tone Is full, sonorous and sweet. The workmanship. for durability and beauty, all others. Prices from llso to $l5O. (woo= to style and finish.) cheaper than all other w ealth° Ant class Piano. 103TILYT OOTTL B YE OBEIAN Stands at the bead of all reed instruments. 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 ret out of order. CARPENTER% PATENT " VOX HUMANA TREMOLO` ts only_to_ be found in this Omar . price Rem $lOO to 5550. Ail guaranteed for Ave Team • v1.1:1:11.11:141:10:1100:41 No. 12 ST. CLAIR STREET. 110111iNOS AND ORGANS—An en- Ure new Mock of ENABIPS UNRIVALLED PIANO'S; HAINES BROS.. PIANOS: PRINCE & CO'S ORGANS AND MLLODE ONS anti • TREAT. LINSLEY & 00 , 8 ORGANS AND MELODEONS. .: 331.171113. 431Plfth avenue. Sole Agent. MERCHANT TA ILO RS. BOYS' C.I.OTHING At 'Very Low Prices. Gray & Logan, 47 ST. CLAIR STREET. rem • • B (Lete Cutter with W. Hespeilbelde i ) MERCHANT TAILOR. No. 83 Smithfield Street, Pittsburgh. NEW FALL GOODS. • A splendid up! stock of CLOTHS, CASSIMERES, Jost reoetved tIY HENRY MEYER. sea: Merchant TalloriT3 Smithfield street. GLASS. CHINA. CUTLERY. 100 WOOD STREET. NEW GOODS. FINE VASES, BOHEMIAN AND CHINA. NEW STYLES .. I.lot SETS, _ TEA SETS - ' SMONINb SETS, 131:11T CUPS, A lens dock of • t SILVER PLATED GOODS of all descriptions. --- Call sod examine our `goods, ind we feel Battened no one need fall to be suited. R. E. BREED & CO. 100 WOOD.THEET. WALL PAPERS: WINpOW SIM)Eg. A LARGE ASSORTMENT 07 NEW TRANSPARENT A OPAQUE SHADES, !JUST EiCOUTZP. At 107 Market Street. mum, 'arra AVENI7IC. SOIL atoms a ono. WALL PAPER - RFAIOVAL: TUB OLD PIPED STORE lAA NNW PLICE W. P. XABINHALL Hu rotund from SI WOOD STREET to NO. 191 LIBEETY STREET, stew doors above BT. OLLEEL ISW'rit-I:DPOr T7E/LAMM CIO3E I 1869. Full and Complete Assortments of HOUSEKEEPING AND DOMESTIC DRY GOODS, Sheeting Muslin, Pillow Case Muslin, • Shitt:ing Linen Sh eettngs, .• Pillow Linens. • *White Quilts, AN ENTIRE. NEW STOCK OF CARPETS, OF ALL QUALITIES. =MUMMIES arCPC3O7O6O, In Desirable Fabrics and Material. CAISSEIIEBES, TWEEDS, tiFEAS, FOR NUM AND BOYS' WEAR. EMBROIDERIES AND TRIMMINGS, HOSIERY AND All Departments of the House will be kept Well ksupplied during the. Season, by daily additions of New Goods. WILLIAM sEmpLp, NOS. 180 AND 182 FEDERAL STREET, 54. ..... .." KITTANNING EXTRA HEAVY BARRED J FLANNEL, A VKRY LAB E E STOOL', NOW o.tileJEltED, IN GOOD STYLE& N'ELROY, DICKSON & CO., WHOLESALE 1 DRY GOODS, e 046 WOOD STREET. O ' . t j cs le t 0 i 4 (1) xi Aw ' ir 4 02 ° 1 Z A. 0 2 64 r. ril i a. ce . g = Z OA. E 4 -. 04 % KC 0 Al E.. ;14 4.za Z = wig N tn 0 la a l is' iz I" -, W 12 rfi ' ral 14' 0 111 la Aie ! :4 2 '- FR Z re t 0 k 0 12 Z Pi ' . , kw' a g , Pa ,ri , O . . d .4 . z - CARRacCANDLEEIS CO., Wilson, Our Ai C 0.,) . 2 WHOLIMALZ SDELLIIBII IN_ Fo!eign and Domestic Dry Goodly • No. 94 WOOD STREET, '• Third door above Diamond alley, ' ' PITTSBUREIEL PA, OAK TANNED.IE LEATER BZLTINU of s attnerior onalitYl also round textile!. Belting of different sizes. A large stock on hand at the lowest prices. . d PHILLIPS, rag J Sixtli Street. CM DRY GOODS FOR THE '54. FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY. THEODOBE F. FMS, =I Table Linens, Table Napkins, ; Doylies, Towel Zings, Towels, Teile DRY GOODS AT COST, TO CLOSE. STOCIL 87 MARKET STREET. dela DOLLAR SAVINGS BMW. NO. G 5 FOURTH STREET. CHARTERED IN 1855. ASSETS .... . „ 1 Open daily, from 9 o'clock A. M. to ' 2 o'clock 4 Y. DI., and SATURDAY EVENINGS, from; May let to November Ist. front 7to 9 o'clocs. - : and from November Ist to May Ist, from 6 to Ski o'clock , r - Deposits received of all snits col not less thaw. l i ONb DOLLAR. and a dividend of the prone; declfted twice aear, in June and December:l Interest has been d e ela red semi-annually in June; and December since the Bank was organized, at f the ritte of six per cent. a year. • \.3 Interest, if not drawn out, is placed to thee, credit of the depositor it, principal, and bears they same int crest fromthe lit dal a. of June ant; December, compounding twin slew., withoaf, = ! troubling the depositor to call, or even to presen t ; ; his passbook. At title rate money will double 1r - less less than twelve years. . 0.. Books containing the charter. By-Laws, Ballet , and Regulations, furnished gratis, on applietti.3 tion at the office. PaxsitmsT—GEOßGE ALBRER. '• :. VICKPBEELIDENTS: _ ' ,-; John G. Backofen. A IL Pollock, M. D.io - Benj. Ir. Fahnestock, Robert Robb, ~.. James Herdman, John H. Shoenbergern. James McAuley, James Shidle, I-',", James B. D. !deeds, Alexander Speer, r , ' Isaac H. Pennock. Christian Yeager. TRUSTIES: Wm. J. Anderson,l Robert C. Loomis Calvin Adams__Henry J. Lynch , Johu Marshall, _ W alter P. Marshall, Johu B. McFadden, C 4 Ormsby Phillips, HeuryL. Ringwalt,,Ll Wm. E. Schmertz, Alexander Tindle, William Van - bark. Isaac Whittler, :e Wm. P. Weynisui.• .LES A.COLTON. John C. Illndley, George Black, 111.11.13nrgwin, Alonzo A. Carrier CharlesA. Colton, John Evans, , Jan J. Gillespie, William S. Haven, Peter H. Hunker, Richard Hays. James D. K nunr elly - , Tnnasi—CHA D. 3hiltDi rP'I•A.I - -a‘n".l . l ROCK BABY EARNEST'S PATENT CRIB SOLD ONLY ST LEMON & WEISE. • _ Practical Furniture llannincturere s us IfOIThITII AVENUE. L ...are may be 'bands fall sasortment of PL`- , ,- lore Chamber and Kitchen. Furniture. de24,,:' DISSOLUTION. • • lIERETt.§,FI FOREexisting bk.tween the. undersigns: al , oing business - .in the name and style of 111 4 NOLDS. ALPERT it CU . u the utanufaetti - 7.-.F: and sale of Boots and Shoes in the - city of i'le;a7„.4 burgh. is this day dissolved by mutual eonseq'r.s . The business will be continued by-J. B. Bie,)-.; NOLDS and. Wit. NOOSE, who have Dill poV.:.:, ,to use the lirm's name in settling up the busn -C e - f • - , and - who wUI settle all claims against said •, and collect all debts tine sato ann. ~ J. E. ualsotaps,E: ••• • • • •H. ALPERT, • - AffjpAr.. Wtl7tseP—J J. • , • NEWMY E. ER. W sista. . PlTNlnlidtgULTabrogaty 113, 1869.: a. 2. swum Jt N. BB& SWINT . /4 'MATT, • AllettirpscrrultAi AND ORNAMENTAL - CARVERt-c ) .? No. 618anditeky Bt. -Allegheny, Pay • Wire amortment of NEWELL BALIATMCB constantly on hand. 2UI) of ill descriptions :Amu). - "ECO °MIZE WOITIt •rvEL, Using the . • - • SHOE COMM:tin GOTEP S( ..i the only true and easily regulated . - made; perfect in Its operations and truly ic 'A here also eovernor can be seen at. the otle,J4q PRROR VAL BECNETT,Mee.hanloal and Solicitor of Patents, No. VD Federal Allegheny City, the only agent tbr this Gove,k,- - . in • am: the West. , se INDIA RUBBER Hose; Um* Packing ski Caskets of atop Belting Companies wit. afactura at as low as this quality of goods can be betillpf..:il:: the manufacturer AMU always on at the India Rubber - Drpot, 20 and 28 te:,_=...„.f street. .0 II PHILLIPSZ, - 8010 /..gents fu r the C0mpart,....,.; U .MatB. II =I GIMES, 42,310,804 OL BE