n 0 19 1513 littsbutdy Gaith lai houghts are gentle waves that run le Myer to thee their gcdr•en sin. ; - Eton glowing airs that, with the sun, - Fondle their beauty o ' er and 'es— Olad mounting larks, by whom' s given, ' All tnelr sweet joy to thee. eir heaven. Mc s- MI bop ' s An violets that ateak - To sweet life sound thy biome ng Spring; . Swallows that o er thee playful wheel, And trac deuceay with happy wing: • Motes that in thy sun. and bless Their hours,-wlth thee and happiness. My songs are bees that to thee rose Of thy dear beauty murmuring cling: Where'er thy Mayor gladness cling. i Thy hovering boom on happy gluws; . Thy flesh of sweets, bow catithey see , Nor murmur. Joy and love tot ee. • MT dreams are living stars of ; ne, Hung over thee, their world, y night; ilil , e Is one warm Summer'smoon That clasps thee In a throbbing light; All my glad,muments can but be Moths lured by thy sweet light to thee. —Hog cholera troubles Buffalo. - Chicago has's "Kindergarten." —Base ball has negun again in New —A. wooden railroad is being built in 'Wisconsin. • —Portugal has abolished slavery in all her colonies. —Fall River, Mass., has 523,000 spin dles and . Lowell has but 490,000. —The German cabinet makers of New York are now striking for higher wages. —The Japanese government is said to be going for the Christians worse than —New York talks of opening the Mer cantile Library reading rooms on Sun ,daya. --Mere is said to be an astonishing quantity of Prnsssic acid in tobacco smoke. --Gillmore Simms has written another story and actually wants somebody to publish It.. —Canadian ladies have, many of them, learned to use snow shoes and do it a good'deal. ' —The latest idea is to run machinery at Buffalo by the water-power of the falls of Niagara. —Two new public libraries for the German working classes have been found -ed $n Boston. —The New York Express thinks Binck ley is inclined to go, into the whs,cks pork business. 1 ; • • —A $.150 bouquet was .recently pre sented to Miss Kellogg by one 'of her foolish admireis. --Om of the Philadelphia skating rinks has sold its ice, cigar stumps and all, to a desder in thatluxury. --Verburn sap is nothing to Um 'maple ispivhich has beguu to distil in Vermont sayi.the Boston Post: —The' Thirty-seventh convention of the Alpha Delta Phi : Society will be held In New Haven, lisy , l3th. —Chicago has a club; It is its first so dal one and is:described as being exceed ingly-select and gorgeous. —A Democratic paper thinks "Grant may In a good tanner but he is an nn commonly poor cabinetmaker. —General Rawlins, the present Secre tary of War, was, it is said, a charcoal burner once whenpe was a boy. —54,000 is a pretty sum to give - for a fiddle, yet that price was recently paid in Faris for a Strailuarius violincello. Leypold & Holt will in a few days publish the first volume of "The Villa on the Rhine," Auerbach's new novel. —More than three hundred Americans we said now to be in Roine, and they *keep on thronging in until after Pas - Aim week: dire Lydia Beecher, widow of Dr. Lyman Beecher, and mother of Henry W. Beecher and Mrs. Stowe, died last Saturday, aged 80. —Prof. Blot thinks of going to South .Anterica,fto start a soup factory on the Pampas, to put up and hermetically seal soup for the World. •=-It is estimated there are 255,000 threshing machines in this country. We do not; think this includes irate parents and provoked pedagogues. - -Captain Nathaniel. Shaw, a promi nent citizen of:Portland, Me., and Cap= ; tabs of the Portland Light Infantry, in ,lbe war of 1812, died suddenly last Fri ' •Aayt_aged 82. —4here are twelve convents in.the Catholic diocese of Philadelphia belong. bete various orders, and containing f ed si ten / esi , 5 7 novices one 47:postnlants:.. • .- •gplutti Ofitue of a bright Sunday aften2o-iinjp, chikfiyzemarkable for what .. 11:kasetttAnny beantiftd women." This ' rinitailabli'lltitiment is frOm the New assiismicd .4dkrtissr ,:;Yoric • • MI • • ;•iwrospeach growers and hucksters are ilegkellek,to tell,-their annual stories abort 'short crops; etc. An exchange `', pit's it Pi about time for .the ruchasess to 45 , Istart some stories of the other sort. ,„ • . • ,E , l (-1;Itla reposed to have a general cede. In thevarloua !attain which the EEO =MEE Biel* langdage is spoken and read, of the hundredth anniversary of Sir Walt* birthday, Which occurs on August • 15th,1871. \ • _ _ _ ME .married woman, in London . per: itudedher husband: to allow her to tie ie legs and arnm, and when she had him nicely ironed she 'proceeded \ to pay off her old grudges against him b y, gimging Ont his eyes with ato hie-knife. \ • EMI —Minnesota has a law absoluteli,pro- hibiting the destruction of quails Instil • the 'year' 1865. The birds were IntrO=. ducpclin.lB4s, and great pains have beep taken since to preserve and propogate them, and they are now quite numerous. —Rumor says Fisk has proposed to rim the Government on contract, and if Grant SONG. EPREMEBIB. says no, Fisk will spare no . money.' until he has a controlling interest in the Gov ernment, when he will run it in spite of Grant. It its supposed he will get this controlling interest by buying a majority in Congress and if necessary in all the State Legislatures. —Some time ago Mrs. Harriet Prescott Spofford wrote a 'story which appeared; we think, in the Galaxy, all about a ghost who always appeared in front of a rail way train and confused the engineer. That ghost has moved to Chicago, where it insists on lying down in front-of rail way trains and being run over, but it takes more than that to confuse a Chicago engineer. —A. monuluent, to cost $25,000 is to be erected to the memory of Alexander von Humboldt in the New York Central Park, and it,is hoped that it will be completed in time to be dedicated on the 14th of next September, which is the ' centennial anniversary of his birth. Among the persons interested in this enterprise ale W. C. Bryant, J. C. Fremont Baron Gerolt and W. Steinway. The Hair Thief. tFrodi the New York Btin.l Many of our readers will remember an account of the theft of a curl at the Tam many 'Theatre, published in the Bun a few days since, and being surprised and startled thereat. But this is by no means so uncommon an occurrence as would at first appear. The thief happened to be detected in this one instance,,which gave the matter publicity • but many New York ladies and their friends can testify, as doubtless those of o,ther cities, to the fact of returning home from opera and balls,and even promenades, minus a back curl, which on exaniination, in many instances, proved ,to have been cut off, and not lost, as they at first supposed. THE BUSINESS OF THE HAIR THIEF Is as much a trade or profession as that of the counterfeiter or forger, though per haps not so extensive - as either. When we consider the' amount of hair Worn for the past five or six • years by every fash ionable woman, we can form some idea of what must have been, and still is the demand for it by the trade; and when 'we reflect again as to the comparatively small number of women in France, Belgium, Germany and Italy, who voluntarily sell their hair, we cannot but admit that, to supply the market% not only of - those countries. but of Great Britain and Amer ica as well, the hair derived from such sources must be altogether inadequate, and the insufficiency be the cause of en couragement to the hair thief. The plan of the hair thief is to obtain admission to a crowded ballroom, such balls %tare given brthe Liederkranz So ciety, the Arlon. and others, but more generally where full dress is worn, and not costumes. Here, in the over-crowd ed loblies, or upon the floor he carries on his operations. Sometimes hq is in league ,with a woman, who accompanies him to the ball, and has an additional advantage, in having access to the ladies' dressing and cloak rooms. A capital opportunity, as well, is afforded the hair thief among the spectators seated in the galleries; and another and still better one, perhaps, du ring the hurry of departure, and the crush attending the final exit• Sometime's he watches his chance, and ; quietly anti all unnoticed clips with the, point of his shears the precious curl from its attach ment and secretes it about his person. Again, during the dance, or in passing from one partof the house to another, a flowing tress or ringlet will become en tangled with some gentlemen's button. The hair thief is ever on the; alert, he Is ever watchful, no opportunity misses him; he at one becomes officious in his efforts to relieve the lady from her embarass ed position, and with a . skillful move ment relieves her at the same time of her hirsute appendage. • NO PLACE IS SACRED TO RIM As is the case with the House of God which he enters for the purpose of pur. suing his nefarious calling, so also is the chamber of death. To him all places are alike, no one is exempt. It is hardly six months since the follow ing occurrence came to the knowledge of the writer. • A wealthy and aristocratic family residing in one of our np-town streets was blessed with a daughter, 'a lovely girl of sixteen, of rare beauty and accomplishments. AlmOst perfect both in face and figure, which last was grace. ful as a willow, her chief glory, neverthe. less, was in her hair, which was of richest chestnut color, and flowed in shining ripples even beyond her waist. "The good die first," and the beautiful, the poet might have added, for this radiant creature, this being of such rare beauty and goodness, remained not as a joy to those wholoved her, but era the bud bad yet matured into the full blown flower, death claimed it for his own, and while in the calla' and statue-like repose of that sleep that knows no waking upon this world, with the splendor of her soft brown hair framing the Sculptured beauty of her face, she lay upon her conch, while yet no one watched beside it, the hair thief gained admittance into the house and into that chamber by some mysteri ous taltsman, some ' secret ' open sesame, with sactiligious, hand, robbed the • fair corpse of its silken treeies, to add the grxefa 9f the stricken family, a dre4ol;and a horror that no words can deahrilie• TAXING 11l ::VAla TAG NAtAtito Pr AV; &RICAN SavenS.4—Prof ; John Wilson, at. Edinburgh University, 'writes to:. , thOJ Athenceunt to complahrthatoontrehruary 2d he received a note from Dr. James Bryant Smith, styling himself Prafelsor' of Organic Chemistry i n . Yale Cige i gls, and stating that he and ,Prelb man and George Smelt. were over unit, country for the purpose:Of Whitt:n and purchasing minerals for their ,G 01,,, lege, and that on their way from London' to 'Dublin he had unwittingly got Into a wrong carriageat Chester, and txmn eon- , 'eyed to Liverpool, while hiscompanions had gone on to Holyhead and thence to Ireland. His baggage, coat, and all his available funds, had gone with them, and he was without money sufficient to enable him to come to . EdLuburgh,e where his friends expected to arrive on the follow ing Sunday, and where he should be sure to meet them, as he was not aware of their intended movements at Dublin. Prof. Wilson at once forwarded an order for 51.,—as he himself, as well as Profs. S. and 8., were well ktfown acquEttn tinCes.' ' The Edinburgh Professor wrote afterwards to Dublin and. London, with- out tracing, the errant Americans, and has every reason to believe they have never leftlfale College. PITTSBURGH GAZETTE": 'IIIURSDAY, I CLIPPINGS. Locomarrvic boilers, it is reported, can be kept free from, scale by introducing about oncein three months twelve pounds of zinc in half ounce pieces. The zinc is said to dissolve and cover the Inner sur face of the flues with a thin coating. BtnurEsE LrrEn.ertruz. —lt is ai an nounced that the Emperor Napo eon 111. has just received from the "Ki g of the Birmans". a present of twenty- ight vol umes of Buddhist manuscript. They are supposed to fOrm a work entitl d 'The Triple Basket," written on p leaves and bound in 'cedar wood. • , Swam of the railroids in this State are replacing the steel rail with the iron , rail, for the reason . that experience is begin-. ning to prove that steel rail cannot.be made uniform by the process now in operation, and that hence, with imperfect mixed with perfeet rails, on long railroads, great risks of accident are daily incurred. TnE Massachusetts Society for the Pre vention of Cruelty to animals announce their deteimination to stop the cruel prac tice by butchers of bleeding calves,. which is done for the sole purpose of making the veal white. Some butchers are in the habit of keeping calves with out food or drink for .one 'week, bleed. ing them daily—a cruelty as monstrous as it is unnecessary. • THE son of the Rev. Mr. Montagne, re siding at .Whitewater, Wisconsin, was delivering a college valedictory address a 'Short time ago, when, in taking his hand kerchief from his pocket, he pulled out a pack of cards, which fell to the floor. "Hullos 1" he exclaimed, "I've sot on my father's coat." \ The worthy divineo who sat in front, was more confused than his hopeful scion. Tan proprietors of plate glass works in a Massachusetts town are experiment ing for use in table-tops, mantels, etc., with a new article resembling porcelain, made from cryolite,- a mineral brought from'Greenland, whose name the manu factured article will take. They are also turning glass to the novel use of mould boards for ploughs, for certain western prairie lands, whose soil Is very destruc tive to iron. JEROME CLIMAX relates that eight reap ers, who were eating their dinner under ark oak tree, were all struck by the same flash of lightning, the explosion of which was heard faraway, When some people passing by approached to see what had happened, they found the reapers, to all appearance, continuing their repast. One still held his glass in his hand, another wag in the act of putting a piece of bread in his mouth, and a third had his head in the dish. GREAT interest is felt in England in reference to the newly invented, already patented, procedure of Mr. Heaton, Di, rector of the iron furnaces in Langley, near Nottingham, by which common raw iron is converted into "steel. The pro. cedure is of a chemical, and not mechani. cal nature, and it saves much time and labor, and reduces thescost of production several pounds sterling for each- ton. The main Ingredient in The process Is nitrous natron. Experiments moderately showed splendid results as to the tension and strength of the steel produced. ' BRIEF TELEGRAMS. —The yellow fever prevails in Peru, and is very Revere Arica.. —The Lehigh rolling mill, at Allen town, Pa 4 was bold at auction yesterday for 10,000. —Earthquake shticks have occurred frequently recently in Chili and on the Peruvian coast. —Fall returns.of the New Hampshire election from all but three small towns give Stearns, for Governor, 35,760; Bedell, 31,996. —W. H. Taylor, a prominent produce merchant, of Toronto, eanada, known on Change as the barley king,has absconded. His liabilities are heavy.. —The citizens of Minneapolis, Minn., have voted in favor of inning one hunt deed thousand dollars in bonds to im prove the Falls of St. Anthony. —Savage and Smith, who murdered Lieutenant Commander Mitchell, of the United States navy, in October last, were sentenced, at Sank:limbo°, to ten years, respectively, in the State prison. —The Pacific Steam Navigation Com pany's line new steamer Santiago, from Valparaiso for Liverpool. ran on a , rock in the Straits of Magellan, January 25th, and sunk, All on board were saved ex cept two sailers and a child. —Smythe and Edmunson, boot and shoe manufacturers at Montreal, Canada, have failed; liabilities 1.125,000. C. Dor win it Co., brokers, in Montreal, have also Suspended, one of thsVartners hav ing absconded with a considerable amount of money. -- ate Ar zona intelligence says : In dian depredxtlons and murders are nu merous. The people are becoming exas perated and a war of grftssrainination is auggested,,o9X Wait ere et the, Ii zov- , ernment resat --Incliant tat bolt county bile plowing his I by the savaged l'ed; and the fad OM: Immediate], the ladians ales that;.-Gloncesi that the gale on wiiii one txl:the n devour on the .fishil 'Hanka that has ` , for long time.- .A.a ft Mir have been Ilk felt that some.of the Nesitow...mus aievee re , tnrm artseteral!were Meg lir*: disabled: condition. ... • ~.,,, • ~07IF .. : !,. : 3- ;4lbditt tweilitiudre&tmAitW lines; ,iilriedfdiebseik . etered4ll the tind-,. m soiliver DepOptew Talk?' 03114, trfthefiesdtitly .bpipectdril A e Sent to thereMieringploclti'arieMult cie.lieV, to Sfiown that they Were. ill :more or le*. diseased. ' Over two-liiiiiiire4 car ? ' ;MIMS mine in the dame i let ,' and It la believed the rest of them- have 'been i teit'Apen theitiarkef.''' : i•-•AL destructive tire 4*3tilreil at Atoka, Mhinemtao'bit SiturdaY #iglit. it con sumed eight buildings, iiiteolVinit_olos_it of mooo, 4 with an • Imicirance of Vo,WM The fire Was porobably_thit 'filmic 0.0 ITA, cendiary., The' victims are Richardson & Currier M. E. KellOgg;•Morten ,It', Co.:, George Kelsey, W. ‘B. Wilson Rites & Townsend. J. - J. Coachman,: Cutler & co., Murphy tiz Roan and...E. E. DaVia. —Solemn Pontifielar , Mane, , Wag ‘g brated yenterday morning arthe -drag of St. Peters and St. , Pauit phia, on the occasion of removing there mates of Right Reverned Henry Corn well, first Blehop of Philadelphia, _to j the vaults under the Cathedral sanotuat7 the rear of the main altar. Among the clergy present were the following: Bleh op Shanahan, of Harrisburg, an O'Har rah, D. D.,- of Scranton; Bishop Egan was consecrated in 1810, and died in 1814. Bishop Cornwell was consecrated in 1220. -- - ",-:;.~ MARCH. 18, 1869 DENTISTRY TEETH arniterm 4 •sivrruotim. rem: _ *0 CHARGE BLADE WHEN ABTAW/CLIM A l Ul 1.11 l SET JOOB 0 AT DR. SCOTT'S. ST. P 11243115 T 2 zET. Doom.Asovs. zum) ALL WORK WARRANTED. CALL AND EX ITE AMINE erzmurmrs my9:dasT GESIDNE VULCIAIi . GAS FIXTI7RES WELE,ON do "yOLLY,;. Manufsoiurers and Wholesale Dealers In Lamps, - Lanterns, Chandeliers, • AND LAMP COODS. Also, CARBON AND LUBRICATING DLLS, 173ENZEL,M, 41c0. N 0.147 Wood Street. se9:n92 ' ietweeti sth and . 6th Avenues. FRUIT CAN TOPS. We are DOW prepared to supply TINNERS„„ A the Tiede with ear Patent SELF-LABELING FRUI'II CAN TOP. It's PERFECT, SIMPLE and CHEAP. Having the names of the various fruits Stamped upon the Cover, radiating from 'the center, and an Index or pointer stamped upon the Top of the can. It is clearly, distinctly and PERMANENT • LY LABELED:4y merely placing ths' name of the frhit the can contains op poslle the pointer and sealing In the customary manner. No preserver of fruit or good HOUSEKEEPER .win use any other after once seeing it. Send 35 centi for sample. 130 Second avenue, Pittshurgh. PIANOS. ORGAN'S, &C _ _ BUN' THE BEST AND CHEAP• EST PIANO AEA ORGAN. Schomaeker's Gold Medal Piano, AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN. The SCHOMACKER PIANO combines all the latest valuable ImproveMents known in the con atruction of a first cLuslinstrament. and hu al ways been awarded the big best premium ex hibited. Its tone is SilLisonorous and tweet. The workmanship. for durability and beauty, surpasa all others. Prices fromsso to 5150 , (according to style and Sillah,) cheaper than all other so- called first clue Plano. . asTriva cotrion oita&N Stands at the head of all reed Instruments. In producing the most perfec; pipe quality of tone of any similar Instrument In the United States. It is simple and compact in construction, and not liable to eet out of order. CARPENTER'S PATENT " VOX HtIXANA. TREMOLO" Is only to ! be found In this Oros. ,price front 5100 to $550 . All guaranteed for Ave years. (- BARB I KRAIDIO /METTLER, No. IS ST. CLAIR STREET. VIRANOS AND ODGA.NB—An ea .& Ups new stoek or KNABE'S UNRIVALLED PIANOS: HAINIS BROS., PIANOS: PRINCE & CO'S ORGANS AND MRLODE ONS and TREAT, LLI4LEY & CO'S ORGANS AND MELODEONS. • • 8 BLUME, 43 gltth avenue, Sole Agent. MERCHANT TAILORS. BOYS' CLOTHINT4 At 'Very Low Prices. Gray Logan, re • m 47 ST. CLAPI STREET, B , TIEQEL, ° Mate Cutter wltti W. Herperibelde,) MERCHANT TAELOR, No. 33 Smithfield Street,Pittabetrgh. selern NEW FALL dOODS. _ A splendldinew 'stock of CLOTHS, CASEDIERES, tea, Just recelYed by HENRY MEYER. sale: Merchant 1%114, 7 . 3 Smithneld street. GLASS. OHI CUTLERY. 100 WOOD STREET. NEW GOObS. FINE VASES, BOHNIIIAN AND CHINA. NEW sTyttli n 1) • ~INDI TS. • ‘.: 7 1 -t.ll eaTE.o liT 8 - 1591 # 11,11 .1% Moils( - I. 1, 11111 PLA TED GOODS desariptiona. . joods% end we flooded tit oliteload fta tt be Jolted. E. BRZED. , &. Co. 7 ' 1 1E041 :Viiioo-BTHEE'ri.' FUr:nt; • • . PE MIL L RUT NIB' ti„.o,. ! ,, ! ,,,,,* 7 lxi S f+.l3*.e : i k i.eltuk to 'FRENCH - - FAMILY--.FLOUR. This Moor wilt .ordrisi sion out ) whon egos dohs ordered. rr!414 11 :11/4•l' ELITE BRAID , Egnal to best 81. Lo . •• rum. lIINLVIIRD BRAND, titt i Te ; b o i zi s agiii.iolosi Ohio Plow. UJS AND CORN KRAL. B. 'V LOPIEDT Ma i Bept: v. : . Punt. ohat. VEIGEM4.te.=NIUSME, IT . b LYON, . • er of Weights and lleaaareo g • `o. I rounm B CBES% tlietween Liberty and Yett7 streets aPra tormant,v • aitT, \ 1 1-3 1111.1171 AN LAKE, Phi. 124 liatithield Etna.; Vole Manufacturer* at screws Vett °meat sag gravel Roofing. Ma. fer isle. pail , z r f. r 6:6.6eat:-77z4-`.. DRY GOODS. ......». KITTMING EXTRA HEAVY BARRED FLANNEL, A VERY LAME STOCK, NOW OFFERED, IN GOOD STYLE& MILROY, DICKSON & CO WHOLESALE DRY GOODS, 646 WOOD STREET. . • c 5 . u. , 1,, . . 0 ft 4 0.4 FA ad 111 - P 4 w De, &I rai Z . ig t 1 1 : 1 z .1 0 a. g 'Xi rl m 4 tn I l'i 3 9 A cc PA ci lv la .... 4 ca 4 1 b i w pi i :2 0 r 1 ., o Ret i= Z< ro o z 174 Z lei © oa 4 4 ffi } -4 p p i Cri ' 4 4 Z DRY GOODS AT COST, FOR THIRTY DAYS ONLY. TO CLOSE THEODORE F• PMILIPS, 87 MARKET STREET, (-yam, McCANDLESS & CO., •,..1 tLate Wilson, Carr it Co.,) ' WHOLSILLLS DEALERS Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, N0..94 WOOD STREET. Third door &bore Diamond allay. •PIYTSBUBG& Pim WALL PAPERS. WALL PAPER. " V V THE OLD PAPER STORE IN A NEW PLACE, W. P. MARSHALL'S NEW ; *WALL PAPER STORE 191 Liberty Street, (NEAR DIABEETO BPDINer GOODS ADEIVING DAILY. AM WALL 'PAPER, • " • In Bete 'and 'Beautiful Design, For. PARLORS, NALL% PINING ROOMS aid CHAMBERS, nuw Faceavlng-In veal yarletrat, No. ,107. ,Market 'Street, NEAR EIFTE{ AVENUE. Jai IL SUGliElll di BIM NEW STYLES . - SAWN AND CAPS, JUI3T ZZOTIVED AT Mill IffeCORD & -CO's, Mit ,181 WOOD STREET. - 1118 OARFETS AND OIL 0L0T1313. NEW CARPETS.. S P roCiK. ,• I‘T • PiL. Yt '•• g . • • IN THIS MARKET. We simply request a comparison or Prices, Styles and Extent of Stink, The largest assortment of low mined gocal In any establlaLment, East c r West. McCALLII3I BROS., . . Aro. 51 • FIFTH . 47mEXUE, ratil2 (ABOVE WOOD.) CARPETS. We are now receiving our Spring I Stock of Carpets; &c., and are pre pared to offer as good stock and at as low prices as any other house in the , Trade. We have all the new stiles of Brussels Tapestry, Brussels, Three Plys. and. Two Flys.- Best .assortment of Ingrain Carpets in the Market. BOVARD,- ROSE & CO.; 2I FIFTH AVENUE. mh2:d&wT OLIVER 1 I NceLINTOCIC & COMPANY, Hive lust received and are now opening the Largest importation of the most beautiful Cg 7C"‘ - EA , t Ever brought to this city, *being Imported bl Ahem direct from the most celebrated manufac tories of Europe. OLIVER MeCLINTOCK - & COMPANY; No. 23 Fifth Avenue. SIVE TIME IND MONEY ITARLAND & COLLIN: Hare Now Open Their New Sprhig Stock. OP Fine Carpet ROYAL AMEINEetflt, • - TAP.ESTItY VELVE English Body Bra The Choicest Styles ever in this Market. Our the LOWEST. A SPLENDID LINE CHEAP CARP' Good Cotton Chain AT. ;a T , ' , 25 . CENTS PEE Y 11111UND & 71 AND 78 MIRA amt (NEOGINDLooR. A ROoTt3 44NER, • - Az wynximors t initat'noints essocasnox stninnit Rspeciah las 4 et. Olair Street, Pi ttsburgh, 3 al attention given to the designing halldlnit of O PUUS aad PURL BIRLD BT BOL IBRIEL