- ;,24- 0 :Jutty Gaidt FAREWELL; 2.I7CELM, BRUCE. Now Spring returns but not to me returns The versa! joy my better years have known ; Dim 'xi my breas life's r ying taper burns. And ali the joys of life with health are flown Etattrtill - and alilv'rick in th'lnecnistant wind Meagre and pale, the ghost of wht I was, Beneath some !lasted tree I lie :eeit'd, And count the silent moment s as they pass. The hued armee ts, whose onstaYing speed No ar, etanatop or in their course arrest; 'hose night than shot. lycount me with the dead, And lay roe down in peace with them that rest. Oft morning dreams presage approanh'ng fate: And moralise dreams, as poet's tell, are true; Led by hale ah es.. 1 enter Death's dark gate, And bid the realms of light and life adieu: h ear - the helpless wail. the shriek of woe; I see the 'nudely o are, the dreary shore, The sluggish streams that blowly oreeo below. Whim mortals visit and return no more. Yammer, ye bloomieg Erldril ye cheerful plaint! Enough for me the etraretiVarire lonely mound, Where melancholy with stillallence teigne. And the rang grass sra.yes o'er the cheerless There let me wander. at tt e Close of eve, .• Whet e sleep site dewy on the laborer's eyes. Thp world' nd all Its bnEy follies leave And talk with wisdom where pir Daphnia Iles. There let me sleep, forgOtten. In the clay. When death shall shot these weary,sehingeves, Best In the hones of nu eternal day, Till the long night is gone, and the last morn arise. --Boston has a full crop of ice. —Queen Isabella is going to Rome. -The Richings opera troupe is in Bos . ton. San Francisco will revive its Vigilance ComMittee. • —Joe Van Winkson plays Rip Jeffer cle to-night. • • —Robbins sell for fifteen , cents each in Lynchburg, Va. • —Brougham says his burlesque isn't a hit at Stewart at all: -Nasby and Hans Kreitman were a the inanguratiop together. =Fisk has bought John Brougham's htterest in his new theatre. • - =-Stilts' have come into fashion in Har risburg as rivals of the velocipede. .—Japan has recalled. all of the lyonng ellowi she sent out to foreign ports. '.--Hot•honse 'atrawbenies, cucumbers and tomatoes are on sale in New Yok. —Turnip Seed ls the name' - of a 'Geor gia Legislator. He onghttabe planted. An English tragedienne s munedlitar riott, is coming to America to play Ha . m. let. -The four-wheeled velocipede is much more popular than the bicycle now in . New York. —ln. Cheyenne babies are bartered for - whisky, a dollar's worth of corn juiee -paying for one. —The furniture of the boudoir bed.' room and dressing-room of the Queen cf Spain cost $60,000. —A New york surgeon denpunces vle locipedes, asserting that the exercise nec essary to propel them is-unhealthy. • —Twenty-seven thousand dollars a year is the neat income derived from his effice by the collector of the port of New York. EIN —Count von Bismarck, procureur General and nephew of the Premier, has ' married a daughter of. a pastry cook of Berlin. —Carrie Moore, the self-styled skato rial queen, has been astonishing Boston recently by riding a bicycle through the streets. • —A:New Orleans journal says Jeffers' son Davis has no disease of the heart, and never had better health to enjoy - than at • Tuder, Historian' and Pro fessor in William's and. Mary's Colleses, 1e proprietor of an inn at St. Catharines, —Wilkie Collins calls the Woman's sights movement giving men's work to poor women, and letting men shift for themselves. —We. see by the Roston Taperi that Jauatischeck is in New Orleans; what we have kutd here is, we suppose, merely her' . .Dopielgaelager. . - \ Mali Gazette• blames Mr. , Thornton for the failure of the Alabama negptiatious and wants Mr.-John Bright sent here'on a special mission. _ - -Chicago has come down to one horse - street cars, such as were in use 'on some ot,tile roads hero years and years* when Chicaio was a mere infant. , • -At York, recently, a youth of over "Sixty and a maiden` f more than a hen , dred imminent, both colored, were united •i n merit*, "nftir a courtship of one day. .—Chinese are sueeesafully cultivating tea in Tennessee. The day may tome 4. yet when Tenesee will be preferred to Bohea and Young - Jones to Old Hyson. : —.Sens* the professional *le of the . suiting gymnasts who. were here not -• long ago, Is merely-a transpesition of zones, which i s :the , real mune of the • scrol?ateL • - • 'the - Soho) , lkill .44.ven furnace are Stringing to. mann faetnro iron' directly - from. the Ore: An expeint:Made' recent* Was entirel y FM •d. powerftllatetykAW nal, weighing twelve tOniVand mounted on wheels, has been Imilt-at Worcester; Maseachrtette, Vibe moved abotit fhe country where4er • 4 11 ; Eitunor:SeTe t l 4 et;24rt GnelVe.next reception, Mr. Mculurei. of Pennsylrii ' ids, will , be introdneedby , the President to Itessie Stuart and " 80 - tie 'et:l4e' Key stOne 0.0 111 . • , . , --The Boston Post WalitEr., the : veloci-j Pede schoole of that city to apply m the Legislature for apPropriationts .beeeeee nearly all the other schools in the State hate - done By --"Well, rve :.:dug- my cellar," :re =irked Quilp to his friend. "Yon I why „you're not going •to build a. house ?" . - • t 1 1 t - %:i; 1 4 ) ' = EPHEMERIS. !EMS ISZEINE EMI . "0, yes; I've started lon. home over atthe cemetery." —A man in England ''hcaped coals of fire" on his hearth, and with deliberation sat down on them. He revelled in , this luxury until he was quite consumed. He is supposed to have been mad. —Those saddest of all words, "it might have been," are appreciated by the nine thousand nine hundred and ninety men who expected to be in Grant's Cabi net, but whose appointments failed to reach them. - . —The twenty-three remaining veterans of the war of 1812, residing in New York, the youngest of whom is seventy two years old, live in garrets, almshouses, and one . in the cabin of an old canal boat, in abject want. —Anna Dickinson has conquered the admiration and everlasting fealty of Des Moines and Mount Pleasant, by hiring a locomotive for $lOO, on which she anm- Misted the distance between the two places and lectured at the latter place for slso.—Chieago Post —The Chicago Post animadverts against a pious action of Senator Scott, on the supposition that he is a Democrat; The Post should know a little about politics before it meddles with them. Mr. Scott was elected not long ago by the Republi can Legislatttre of this State. —Mr. Peter Cooper has given $20,000 to the Cooper Institute to puithase a com plete set of mechanical models illustrat ing every form in which power can be applied to machinery. The models will be piocured in Germany, and will be about two thousand in number. Valuable iron ore has been discover ed in the neighborhood of Chicago, Le banon county, Kentucky. One gentle man in that vicinity has sold the ore on his farm at eight cents per ton, the pur chasers removing it at thele own expense. The ore is said to be of excellent quality. —Dr. John L. Finlayson, clerk of the Jackson county (Florida) Circuit Court, was shot" from behind a tree, by an un known assassin, last Friday, and killed instantly. Major J. W. Purmen, who was walking with Dr. Finlayson"at the time, was also badly wounded, and lies in a critical condition. The Christian GenUeman. A Anode= *titer thus describes the Ohrhdialt gentleman: Hp . is above a mean thing. He cannot stoop,to a mean fraud. He invades no smnst in' the keeping of another; he be tniyalmsecrets confided to hiaownheep ing. 'He never struts, in borrowed plum age.:-..--Xttnever takes selfish advantage of our mistakes. He uses no ignoble weap smut in controversy. He never stabs in the dark. He is ashamed of inuendos. He is not one thing to a mans face and another behind his back. If by accident. hecontesitn possession of his neighbor's counsels, he passes upon them, an act of instant oblivion, He bears sealed pack a,ges without tampering with the wax. Papers not moant for his eye, whether they flutter at his window or lie open be- fore him in unguarded exposure, are sa cred to him. He invades. no 'privacy of others, however the sentry sleeps. Bolts and bars, locks and keys, hedges and els, bonds and securities, notice to tress passers, are none of them fOrihim. He may be trusted himself out of sight, near the thinnest partition, anywhere, He" buys no offices, he sells none, intrigues for none. He,would rather fail of rights than win - them through dishonor. He will eat honest bread. He tramples on no sensitive feeling.. He insults no man. If he have rebuke for another he is straightforward, open, manly. He cannot descend to scurrility. In short, whatever he judges honorable he practices toward every man. . A “Small Sin" Among Women. One of our small sins is our small jeal ousy of each other. It is wrong to say t• at women cannot be friends together; we can—true, firm. enduring friends; but we doubt it any young woman's friendship ever existed free from jealousy. If we are not jealous about men we .are about women, • and guard our • rights against &vision with the vigilance of a house-dog guarding his domain. No man can understand the unresisting pettiness . of jealousy that exists between woman, friends; no man knows it for his own part. and no man would submit to it from his friend. But we accept it patiently, knowing where the shoe pinches from the shape of our own feet. As wives and lovers we are perhaps the most exclusive and the the most jealous women in the world. There is scarcely a woman in England who would allow her husband to admire any other woman, or to make any other a friend, * or _to show frank pleasure in her society. There, would be pouting, or tears, or tantrums, according to individual disposition, and the whole harmony of the•• household would be swept by the board; the Practical upshot of which is that men make friends ouhdde their homes, unknown to their respective Juno's.. This cluusgestlur comPleilon of the whole affair, and makes what wOuld baTe been only a friendship, if it could, haVa been frankly acknowledged, an intrigue instead. WE ARE crsy in doctor's hands, and look upon the dicta of the , profession with tractableneo. .It is a little startling, though, to note the physicians and sur r geons of London divided into two bodies as to the treatment of so unions a corn. plaint. as' rite do fever. Twice has this sica l ubject been debate' by • the Royal Med and chirurgleil Society, and the real question at issue was, whether, on • the whole, to treat this &tumoral and painful disease, or to leave it alone, -The eupheuistic expression for the latter course -is • "to give mint water.' l : The work which seems-most successful!' that .of the • nurse rather than that of the doctor. • At one of the,principal London haspitals the 'chief points are: 1, Absolute rest in bed, insured by. swathing the legs and arms in cotton wool, and by supporting . the -feet by pillows,. so as to relieve the itom,ents from their, weight. 2. The removal of the_pressure of the bed.clothes by *cradle. $. "The removal of local pain by smearing the affected joints with - belladenna ment, sometimes strengthened by robbing down thf.a. ct In it. The .Lanced •is shockOthis simplicity, but suggests nothl 'lts stead. la EMI ~~~+e~Y =INN EN 11,) PITTSBNIIG,EL- GAZETTE : An Old Maid's Views. Some one who avows herself an "old maid takes a very cheerful and salisfacto xy view of her social situation in the Troy Times. Her views will be of interest to many: It always astonishes me, when I take a realizing sense of the fact that I am an old maid ! Why, you'll scareerybtlieve it when I confess that _I once had lovers by the legion, and - offers were as numer ous as flirtations are now-a-days. I wee, - always in love. I don't remember the time when had not some Willie or Frank to dream about, and write love let ters to. and as I donned my long dresses, some handaome Charles Augustus was sure to keep my thoughts employed until another with greater fascinations superse ded him. You need not imaginer regret them now. No, indeed !. My life is a pleasant one. No one annoys me. No husband flirts with other men's wives or young girls, breaking my ~heart. No husband calla me "my lore' ,in com pany and "old brute" at homel He does not growl at milliners' bills or" ex travagant watdrebes. He never sits looking at me, wishing I were as hand some as Mrs., or Miss ,J—.• He does not wish my eyes were as divinely blue and my hair as charmingly golden as. Katie's, over the L way. He never Casts Isly glances at pretty girls, throwing them kisses when'my backis turned. He doesn't marvel how he ever came to marry me, when there were So many handsome women" in the world. If lam ill; he is not Wondering . how weeds would, become him, and lle should be obliged to have an expensive funeral. He isn't thinking what a jolly widower he would make, and how .eager pretty Jennie F— would be to many him, or how gladly Flora J— would lift up• her bewitching broWn eyes and promise to be his. He does not complacently fondle his elegant menstiche before the mirror, and think,tevery one must „pity • him, and• -, ,reitiet, • (girls especially)that so handsomoa. man should be bound to so plain looking a woman. He isn't watching me continually to see if I fulfill slimy duties as a wilt; to criti cise my every movement, to be annoyed at the weakness of the tea, the toughness of the steak, Or the lateness of the break fast. Thank the gods—no! lam a free woman.T. I do as I please, :go where I please, , think, breathe, sneeze, wink, cough, eat and sleep as I; lease. Old Mother Hubbard had her dog, Dame Crump had bd." pig, but I have my call An intellectull anim*.too,.one that has more natural intelligekee than many chil dren. Tabby andi enjoy ourselves in a rational manner. She never speaks a cross word; neither do I. Together we sit and think hours at a time, by the i open grate, and draw great morals from the Bre , Tabby has a quiet tem- perament and we never quarrel. I often hear pe3ple exclaim that old maids are always gossips. Not:so. I don't care if Mary Jane has stolen another girl's bean. I never feel interested in the Cost of Susan's new bonnet or Jennie's silk dressei. Ido not wonder that• Mrs. C— should be extravagant, or Miss C— should flirt so much. What do I care? Tabby and I occusionally remark upon the folly and stupidity of certain persons, but we do not mention it out of our.own family.- My cat is not communicative; neither am I, Yesterday I met one of my old lovers. Once he praised my eyes, my lips, the beauty of my hair, the freshness of my manners. He professed to love me, but he met a prettier girl and I a gayer young man, and so we parted. He is married now, has a cross, faded wife and seven children. He looks old and weary. I felt sorry for him, but I smiled atmy folly in even wasting one thought upon .him. Would I give up my jolly life of an old - maid ? Never I My hair is growing gray, but I don't use "Hall's Hair Restorative. " My face has some wrinkles in it, but I don't use "Laird's Bloom of Youth." My fingers are not white and soft and dimpled, but Ido :not bathe them With "cold cream," 'and wear old kids.,' I don't tear out my hair with crimper. 'I never wear long Ands that sweep the ground for half a ftne.. Ido not wear humps on my back and double up with the fashionable "Grecian bend." I don't have to wear eye-glasses and pre tend I ant nearsighted. I am not Obliged to wear a butterfly's wing on my head in February, frgqing my ears until they are purple. I don't have to go shiv ering in low-necked dresses, nor howl opera music until my:throat is sore, nor study attitudes before'•my mirror, nor twist •mY tongue out - endeavoring to learn German; .nor fall in love with My, dancing reastik;...L..l - „:am -not under the- , painful necessitrofinueesing,my hands into No. 6 gloves when seven is my number, nor, do I pinch my feet in little shoes until existence seems a burden. do not have to sing Italian dittiea in,a, languishing manner to some sentimental youth in tight pants and waxed mons.' tube. lam far more independent in my plain merino, with my hair in a little knot, than Miss Flora McFlimSey is in her silks and sparkling diamonds. I can look at a gay Young man, and he does :not. flatter himself, that I am, dying for love of him. I can go to: church and lis ten to the sermon, not caring for. the stylish hats and handsome dresses of my neighbors. • I can enjoy my friends' sue ceases' and riches, feeling no envy. 'I can See lovers kiss their sweethearts gOod night without a pang. • , k Tongb,9ne. "Talk about bedbugs," said Bill JOnes, -. who had been echoes the Plains; "you should have seen some of the critters. I met inidaho last spring. I stopped one night with some settlers. 'who ell' in - a log cabin containing only one' room and a loft. :When It cadie.llmey to.go to bed they, strung's blanket &gosh t h e M1.4d 1 0 of the soon:kart& the ;settler"it-jamlly,nlePt on afield° of find • glyn mcilhe tothe.r. I laid down- togo to sleep; the gen to gather like lunch eaters around a free 'lay out.' ‘'l tried to liter up and keep away from 'em, but the - pale' ••Ter - - mints Would•catch hold of the bedclothes. end them off froni me. They #idn't think nothin' of claggin' loundlhe room if held on. abutit ml blight, and then I looked tognii;lor limzie_way to escape, Therrifaan ladder ' reacn ue uP into the loft, And.;l thought' the best way to get away fromithe 4blood suckers was to climb •up , thar, so Lind.' There wasn't any 'bugs in the loft, so I. laid down, congratulatin myself 'on escape Wok I heard the ladder . Pretty ( ague ken''es if somebody was emillik t up. ltimeby I saw a bedbug raise' himself np through the hole In 'the dont' aulll' i r k bloodthirsty earefuny around the loft: Soon's SM . uklu t _ me he motioned to his chums below ;" tau cues, and cried - exultinly, "Com uP, hell here.—Cineinnatti ~: ~y =23 TEETEu PrED NvrrxitiEnt; • NO CHARGE YAM IPritiat'AU3Tl7/OL&L TEETH ;ARE ORDERED. • • FULL SET !OR SS. AT_DR. SCOTT'S. pz..NN STREET. in DOOR ABOVE HAND ALLAtezur wARBANTIm. CALLA-RD scr AMINE SPECIMENS oF GENDTN - Z VIILOAIs ITZ. mv9:4•T WELDON & Manufacturers and Wholesale Dealers in; Lamps, Lanterns,l . • Chaldeliers, AND LAMP 'GOODS. Also, CARBON AND LII4RICATIkG OILS. 7 33-ENZILITE, - ato. N 0.147 Wood Street. - • Between 6th and 6th Avenues. We are now 'prepared to supply WEBS • and the 'rade with our Patent • szrar-LanEraxol, 'FRUIT CAN TOP. Ills PERFECT, SIMPL E and CHEAP. Hating the names of the carious baits • Stamped upon the Cover, radiating from the center and an Inde.z. or pointer ' stamped aeon' the Top of tke can. It is •• clearly, diqinctly and PB.RMANENT• LT LABELED by merely placing the .- - UMe of the fruit the can contains • poslte' the pointer and sealing in the ,eustomaty manner.; preserver of fruit or good HOUSEKEEPER • win 'use - any other aver ' • once see.ing It. • Bend 25 cents for sample. - COLLINS WRIGHT, 139.Becond stymie, FRU/bur/Ch. -Dim ME' BEST AND CHEMED. 4,„, UT PIANO AND owerr. • Sehowacker's Gold Medal Plano AND ESTEN COTTAGEORGAN. T h e .898ONACIIXII PIANO oomblitea all the latest valuable Improvements known In the con struction of a ilm class Instrument. and hu al ways been awarded the big heat 'premium ex ./OW.OI. Its tone is Tall, semitone and sweet. The workmanship. for durablltty and beauty. lIIISIVISB all others. Prices fromsso th a nlso. laccorant to *Lyle 420 . lash.) cheaper " all other so called fist class Plano. • ESTAY I I3 OOTTA9I: ORGAN tOtands at the head of all reed Instruments. In producing the most perfect pipeguallty of tone of ant almllar Inatrturient In the United Otates. Is Is simple and compact 111; Construction. and ;lot Itatde to ass out of order. Th s rm ARPENTZE'S PATENT ;•• VOX HUMANA OLO" to otay_to be toned In this organ: Price front $lOO tn 1550. All guaranteed fatalve Dialps AND oRGALIVIS—An en• 4 tlre new stock of lINABET UNRIVALLED PIANOS; BAINES BROS., PLLNOS: PRINCE & CO , B ORGANS AND MELODE ONS and TREAT, LINSLEY & 300 , 13 ORGANS AND MELODEONS. L 1 jap no : i ok\rti At Te 6 Low Prices. Gray & Logan, fe d 47. EiT. CLAIR STREET, TIEGEL, _ -- (Late cutter with W. Etspentkeide.) anmEtomsatirr TAILOR, > No. 33 Smithfield Street,Pittaburste. yEiw FALL fff*)DEL, . splendidtew Kook • - • . • of otorss, .c.asszartiloss, &c.; Just received, by indarair AOC- .gerchaut • 13 f!zniiittlel4 sixeet; • CRINA, CUTLERY. ___ • • -1100 WOOD STREET V NEW GOODS. ....._ FINE , VASES, - • ~.. BOHEMIAN . AND ! EIIINA. NEW ITYLEI! ". i Dal2.l4l,glT B B i , SMOKING SETTS; SE*B, ' , ; 4311 7. CLUPB ' 5 .,.. , . A tate stock of p, T I SILVER PLATED, ' UOODS . ' *of an desefiptfons : • ' &all Ond examine 011 i goods, 'and 'we feel satisfied no one need Taft to be welted.. !R. E. , Bit.taiii, le: di). 1 I .'PEARLAILL' FAMILY ,t. fara StcrA , Three'lltu. Ogilisi to FRENCH : FAMILY: This , ""uwi.4 OS, oe o•34.'ent-wifi ß eap intainrk ; ; • • roarstobertsulemi ual to boatMcriout. warn coax ILO AND 00EN , A.'-t ; - t • lii- YI .ZRUZIITiantOo ).04074 , 15•14. , 9. , 119164d • . ; ,1,P441th 1111 W.• r . lfilfAs : litiliVo.l47,'.': , . . ... m.riir weight' and sesam e : g ~ lico:tyoupmf BriqCIST, , : , '' ~.-'• :(Between Marti/sad Ferry streets. v O P II . III I T r f laMlT,at . tlll 4, 4 Af 4 %; ; ... .. ;,aTtlai • STONE . • t frAlt AN'at;' LARD; moo; tindtbdeld street, 8010 Manntaoturern_of arrenis Fett Cement and Grayel Booting. ma. Oriente sale. , • 115116 EIN it:;.,,..4"-,,,.*-3;i-akkrzrjk‘....,:‘,,ss,?3=7l:ll4-2.11,11,,,,,, '*;Zk3 ',i'11Yi2,",,-Sf,..e,,qlMigitn7-, - - • . '''An• .0 #1 ''',sl,kir-''1,t;.4,54,,r-a-40F,61,,rei•-",..,-, ~,, ' - 5 - - - L;.. 4, t r •,, .f.,d,`Fter.?`.4, 0-q,4,-Vt,..f.X,,,r,,,z,„,,,,,f,,;,,,,,,, _F, ,e,LopVt-'l'l,-i`z<4l:!viacyl.-"v5,,tY1..,74,:_„, • - '', AeF=. •", -..g4;2''-te54.123.*-a"..3.-,V;;‘,:',7,'-';',;.-....-T.,,,,,. •-= Vl' VP - -- ,- . 4 '...-A,,147.1-44:.•,-.:._,:::y.cr,,,',L3,..-;=.:.-4.•,•;.,-:;.,77--,r,4,,..,,,,... ~ , —..,: _ •? . . -...:- ~t;".., -.1-5,ff5z..,4A4.-..,.v• r1,..2a:±7404,-;`,7,giV1:f.,..312P.."4.1-.7,,, K&t..4,4 't . k tal Pre Mit.ls6* - ' WM, ' t'ltlgi, ME i, 3~ ,s ESN =1 = . . • • •R CH 15 1869 iiiii62ll GAS FIXTURES FRUIT CAN, TOPS. PIANOS. ORGANS, &C. ROB, ICRAHE & 'MEM" No. 1,9 ST. OLLIE STBSET. • :4 = Bunan. 43 Fifth avenue, bole Agent. CHANT TAILORS 1$ WOOD ,OTIMEET, FLOUR. 11E21 HIV L~ %~ L ' RV rimmo ~~#. KITTABNING EXTRA HEAVY BARRED FLANkEL A VERY LAME STOCK, NOW OFFEIiED, IN GOOD STYLES: 'M,RQ•y:•::.:.. , ... - : ': : : . .: . .,.. - : - . •,_ . .. : :,. - . ._.: . .: .. :......p1q0 - N'.•.,:•':. C.Q WH OLES.;U.E DRY GOODS, WOOD STREET. . • t ci z . , U. 0 1 - 2 g t cts t l ' A z m a 0 frls 4 K 4 Z 4 ,it - 4 • cm Z .4 0 " 11 . g E A r' m 4 1 Z ' P il P 4 IS PI 0 it PI 1:14 Ca ,-". 4 id m 0 • OK x 1 cn 4 Pk 1-7 z re 4 o ra Z PM It b" im }-( 0 A- i-9 1 IA r 4 g d 4 4 . •:4 -Z _ DRY GOODS AT COST, NH THIRTY DAYS ONVY. TO cmosr. STOCK. mignon' P. _MIA% 87 21.41iSET:132.rBEET. rIALEIS, IitcCARDLESS & 16," mate Wilson, Carr d Co.. IiTOLICEditE Dzazzas IN• Fotedign and: Domestic" Dry Goodly No. tit WOOD STSBET, Third door iktit) Y. Than/4)41141C% ' WALL: PAPERS. WALL PAPER. • THE OLD PAPER STORE INA NEW PLACE, mulutgEtaLL'il NEW WALL PAPER 'STOW 191 Liberty. Street, ; z immixisixtrro . lipayrja , Gams iveßivnui DAM": nibs WALL PAPER, ME • -'' Bisatiltd Designs, ror;kAimpsiii, 'Dirinc9*pciais Ina. inimtautßa, uow . .reoswini to peat variety at . No. lor.-Market Stieetil nr,TH / tingiuic. , mh3 .., larangt W. STYLES BATS AND cips. J. 41. B . IO ETVED AT MCCORD & Co%;' ~;: ;;~ . EIMIE 54• t~ 64 raTastamiEt. ME 181 WOOD STREET. • - XEW CARPETS ! '" • A STOCK • I JD - • IN . THIS MARKET. We simply request a comparison of Prices, Styles and Extent of Stock. Therlarirbit adsortmtMt.of low Mieed gooco Ip any. establishment, East