a littstartt Errata the Bound Table.] , NOT GROWING OLD. wr W/LL2ll.lt C. ZICIZABDII. I cannot own that Tam grossing Though, with a sixt.e, you tell melt is true: What hare of error, love. do you look through When on my face such tokens you behold? "Too plain," you sae. "to be misunderstood Nor phantoms there. the footprints of Uld Time. And wiee brown curls, now silvered o'er with time Toi'd gladly see your error if you could l" ' 4l iriite MIT Yin's,' oh! let your voice drop low, • I've bingo the heat and burden of the day: And cannot thinkiach longer," do you say? "In the fbmifront, -with the strong to g 0 .,, Well, if I grant the furrows on my brow. "a /taws gray flags that o'er the trenches ve; Illy beast wa is beating yet too warm and brave To yield any youth pp to tb3 tyrant now What though the half of a great century's load Hangs on my stens—are they not lissome still: Are they not strong to climb the highest hill, And stoat to tread the lot gest, heaviest. road? If somewhat dimmed my as I allow. What but the least do .1 lees clearly see? And while no veil falls 'twizt great ends and mei Why meson days by Wrinkles en my brow° Within my heart what passions have erplred, - Whams youthful heat tinged not my cheek with shame! No altar cold. and ;till each holy dame. Of Hope, Love; Faith, to pristine ardor tired! Not ironing °Although on thhdlal's face Life's shadow sinks from Its meridian line; My brave, strong heart for all my days decline rakes sweet amends , by youth's immortal grace. And shotild my.days to threescore years and ten Go drooping on beneath t heir growing load, My heart. still young shalt male the dusty road Ikea like the path of life's freshniont again! EPHEWEIRIS. —Boston has a bureau of divorce. —Fine diamonds are found in Georgia. —Barbe-Blen silk is one of the spring novelties. —The Davenports are to be in Boston 4hla week -A neat parasol can be bought In New York for $2OO. ' ' —The Louisiana crop of oranges is -very pron:Mng. • Halibut ; re plenty in the neighbor hood —foledo•• shipped 9,500 pigeons to New York bat week. —s6oo per night for singing Rossith's Maas, -is what Alboni gets. —Pickpockets are almost too numer ous for mention in Detroit. —Rumor shys the CEcumenical Council is to be indefinitely postponed. —Five young Harpers have been added lo the firm of Harper Brothers. —Miss Burdett Coutts is a candidate for Poor Law Guardian in England. —Donn Platt has lost his office, and is filled with the gall of bitterness. —Teams were driven on the ice at Magnate as late as the 10th inst. —An exchange thinks that men, like - yeast, ,to succeed must work well. —T'areppa is to sing with the Ridings English Opera Troupe next season. —The initimnan's favorite tune is said se be "Shall we gatherst the river?" —Laura Keene's husband, John Bntz, diedi,nWwddialitc!n ya . d4m43%, week. —The income of Hon. E. 3L Stanton, according to officiatetme, is $ll,OOO. —The Vice-roy of Egypt has turned brewer and manufactures his own beer. —Mr. George W. Childs, of the Phila delphia Ledger, has returned from abroad. —Edwin Booth is still a disconsolate widower, but will find consolation next June. —the editor of the Philadelphia But. lain says "our gracious" in place of "my 'gracious." —A young -lady in California broke her neck in straggling to elude the kiss of au ardentlover. —More money is spent for tobacco than bread in New York. At least an anti tobacconist says so. —A philosophical exchange says "the way to fail is to believe a thing impossible and act accordingly." • --Grasshoppers are ready to eat up everything green as soon as it appears, in Marion county. lowa. —Henry Ward Beecher, after much pondering, proposes that all caroms at bil liards shall count three. —The Prince and Princess of Schaum burg-Lippe have publicly •abjured Pro testantism at Rome recently. ' —A ,dispatch from Berlin:mentions a rumor of the expected marriage of Mrs. Lincoln to the:Duke of Baden. —The Boston Postsays Grant has made one thousind appointments and one hun dred thcipand disappointments. —The Widow Van Cott, the successful Methodist revivalist, advocates the aboli tion of the use of wine in the sacrament. —General McMahon is to be recalled front. Paraguay, and the total abandon niint of that mission is seriously consid ered:, .• .4111 1 b going . to bring out Sardou's new and succesaful drams, itp str i e. ,, It is 'k il reach, but the original Pat remains -The London Spectator thinks that the i:ost of living foi all classes in Lon don' Is but little less than it is in New York. • • - =Miss Yam Stebbins' statue of :Cc& maim has been "resented to the Neny,Tsr*Ventrel Park by Marshal 0. --10 has leen decidel in Weir York that, s; wife who loaned her , husband $806; i. WY entitled io be cioisidered one of -4n 1847, hitirenty-four State prisons in this. °wintry, then were 10,885 con victs. Posting 111566;982 annui Ph and earning $ 1 ; 082 ,60., —The • death•rate in the over-crowded portions"of New 'York is said to be twice as heavy .0 in those portions where pea; ple have room,to live. Kililcnvi a nsideat of WIWI-. Ington, loWs, went to Chicago mit little sprgo Week, which termlusted on Thurikbfir idithtt bT bit Pine UP to"lds room, on the fourth story, drank end fall ing out of the window, under Which, on the payement, he was found dead by a policeman. —Farmington, Me., has 10,000 maple trees which it taps every year. In stifle of the main liquor law the people seem to tied the tap pleuant and profitable. - —lt has been discovered that the day lost in going around the world to San Francisco is Sunday. At least in that part of the country*Sundays seem scarce. —Connecticut Methodists have decided not to use cider or tobacco. Whiskey and opium are perhaps : even more repre hensible, but are not i r ncluded, we be lieve.. —An Albany tippler swallowed a chip from a molasSes cask with a glass of gin and molasses the other day, and it killed him. Terrible warnhig against the use of molasses. —An infant Trojan fell into a kettle of boiling water the other day, and as a remedy was soused into a pail of ice. water. It is now a question whether the child, was scalded or frozea to death. —The Boston Poet, in discoursing on the impatience of Americans, and, the amount of medicine they swallow, says a sick Yankee would swallow all North America if he could get well in six hours. —Mr. Frank Swift has accepted Fred Hanlon challenge to a velocipede race. The contest will take place on the 29th of June, over a course one mile long and for a stake of $l,OOO. Each party has deposited a forfeit of $lOO. —Major Bunsen, the Norwegian giant, arrived in this city yesterday in the steamer from Glasoow. The Major is eight feet high, measures sixty-two inches around the chest. and weighs four hundred and fifty-six pounds. —The Boston PM asks "if a an is a perfect brick, how many of them would make a house? " To which we confidently reply that some of the most reliable houses in the city are composed of two or three perfect bricks. --An. octogenarian Englishman tried to marry a widow of some sixty years, a few weeeks ago, but his daughter, a maiden of half a centtiry, saw him on his way to the church, , pursued, caught him and brought him' home. He suc eeeded. in effecting an elopement and marriage the next day: —An exchange satyr A man in Hol yoke armed two of hia neighbors with a mallet suds club to hint a burglar the other night. They went around the house in opposite directions, and meet ing in the darkness behind it, proceeded to pound and *Lack each other in a fash ion that would have been tolerably effec tive if either had been the burglar. —A number of charitable ladies in Rochester have formed a Magdalen Asso clation,,in hopes' of rescuing and retbrnt ing some of their lost sisters. A meeting of this Association on Wednesday was attended by 'two of the most notorious women in the city, who were kindly treated and have promised their co.opera tion. One of• them will probably be come Matron of the new refuge, and both have consented to allow the ladies to hold prayex meetings in their houses. One of these 'women said "she would attend church if the could get a pew, whereupon one of the ladles offered her half of her own. One, however, refused to close her house until the Refuge. has proved more succesSful than they generally are. The Rocheister ladies are energetic and chari table and feel assured of More or less suc cess in their delicate and difficult under taking. 7 SUN Culture in New Jersey. New Jersey has some eighteen estab lishments engaged in the production of silk goods. The city of Patterson con tains twelve large works. employing some three thousand hands. The chief demand for the fabrics arises 'from the trimming and notion trade of the country, the prices being twenty-five per cent. less than im ported goods, which in some articles, as. in belt ribbons, have yielded the market to domestic productions. This business was that established there in 1840 by Mr. John Ryle, who may be justly termed the "Father of the Trade." He has been a public benefactor to the place, increasing by his individual efforts the attractions of the city by adorning the grounds around the Falls of the Passaic at his own ex pense. He produces over three hundred gross of spool sewing silk daily, while the pay roll of the hands foots up $50,000 per annum. The Dale Company owns the largest manufactory in this country, and larger than any single one in Europe. When fully at work they have the capa city of "throwing" 1,500 pounds per week. Their machinery includes 1.629 spindles and thirty Jacquard looms. The American Velvet Company, which start ed there, was the first to attempt thd man ufacture. on' a large scale, of velvets in , this &mitt'. THAT indiscriminate young man, who became a monomaniac, and was arrested some time {tgo for going about the streets with a can 101 l of -Titre), and throwing the fatal fluid t:•ver ladies' dresses. Rem ,to have plenty of flamers. Scarcely $ week paeses.now that we do not hear of ' ,some person' availing himself of this new discovery in_vrarfare. On Friday night, as a gentleman was coming from Stein way Hall; hie wile's dress was ruined by some person who administered a large dose of kerosene oil, in such a skillful manner that the trick was not discovered until the lady reached her home. }laity ladies; have recently, had their .clothing spoiled by vitriol-throwers, and servers' of the operators have been arrested from time to time. It seems that when the oil of vitriol is hard to procure, the operator resorts to kerosene oil, or benzine. A short time ago, a gentleman and his wife were coming out of - the Fifth Avenue Hotel, when one of these,vitriol-tbreerets, who had been trouthint near by, ttem• Slady, drenched the lady's rich satin nap and then look leg bail tesitswer.L. ME ~~{ riTreanGn GAZETTE: MONDAY. APRIL 26, 1869, Thvglivekameattil It.. A letter to the Providence Journal lays: The writer on the first day' of April start ed to see whether he could And a place where the five Ms which are essential to secure success in 'business could be brought into juxtaposition. Men,. (that are men,) Means. (Including money, machinery, &c.,) Material, ?(of whatever . kind,) -Motive power, (easily procured and easily maintained,) and Market, (for the wares when made.) - "Business called him to Pittsburgh, Pte.,—an appropriate introduction to such an expedition—for there he saw what had been accomplished by patient continu ance, in the face of obstacles which are rarely to be met with in the present day, in any of the settled portions of our coun try. Men and Material met at that point many years since; but Market was dis tant, and not easily reached. The Mo tive power was locked up beneath the surface of the earth, and had to be evolved by_ hard labor and much skill,. and could only be maintained at great expense, compared with that obtained from water. But notwithstanding the difficulties by which they were surround ed, those noble-spirited Men, whose hearts were as strong (but , by no means as hard) as the lion which they fashioned, per sistently pressed forward, until a 'measure of success attended their efortS, which lb even now a matter of continual wonder to those who. have achieved it. There are in that city, "in a distance of thirty five miles of streets,- four hundred and seventy-five manufactories of iron, of steel, of cotton,of oil, .of glass , of brass, of copper," &c., tte. The product of these factories was estimated in 1860 at over $100,000,000. Pittsburgh is "like a row of factories thirty-five miles long, twisted up into a compact tangle. all belching forth smoke, all glowing with fires, all swarming with workmen, all echoing with the clang of machinery." Tna NEW Yens: Tribune gives some insight into the way detectives work to ferret out the perpetrators of a burglary. The safe of Wheeler, Parsons & Co. was robbed of $17,000 in watches and jewelry on the morning of last New Year's day. No positive information could be obtained of the manner of the robbery and the case was given up to the police. Each and every one of the employes of the firm was for many days subjected to con stant surveillance, none the less strict be cause of its secrecy. The constant and patient watching of the detectives, day and night, soon satisfied them that of all the employes only two, Jeannot and Gus tave Kendt, a machinist, knew• anything of the burglary, and of their complicity with the affair they were by no means certain. • However, these two men now became the attacking volute for the whole 'force. A French detective was installed in the establishment as assistant watch man, while another became an apprentice to the business, and was employed in shop cleaning and other disagreeable tasks, which doubtless sharpened his appetite for revenge en the parties who had sub jected him to such misery. During Feb ruary Jeasnot became very dissipated, was discharged, and made his way to Massachusetts, accompanied all the time by his faithful shadow. Shortly after Jeannot's departure, Kindt was observed .by hie shadow to be living in a style greatly beyond his means, dressing rather extravagantly, refurnishing his house and indulging freely in real estate- ... tion. An - intimacy had sprung up between him and the French detective, or assistant watchman, to whom he proposed that they make another raid on the safe, where he knew there was over $90,000 in pre cious metals. Pretending fright, the de tective at first refused to embark in the affair, but finally, after much urging; consented to remain passive while the work was being done. . Kindt prepared himself for the new enterprise, when the Superintendent of the Detective Agency, deeming that evidence enough bad been collected to condemn the burglar twice over, caused his arrest. A Pews fashion writer gives the ap pearance of a young lady in a model spring costume:—lt was a bright green faille skirt with a flounce of Chantilly around the bottom. , Her pander, was made of two flounces' ounded and very full behind, looped with- green rosettes. • She wore on her left side, suspended from green silk cords, an alm pouch chate laine, on which her initials were worked with black and it was terminated ‘ by long black tassels. Her bodice was Sq u are, and over it she wore a high lace jacket with falling sleeves open and wide. Her jewels were enamel, small plates in her ears, on which all the biped specimens in the garden of acclimatization could not be got in among long gram's; but on one there was a stork on one leg, on another a heron, on her broach an ibis and pigeon. The favorite colors are reds, violets and turquoise blue, because they are difficult to produce... Each subject is, whether bird, fish or dragon, encased by exquis itely thin threads of gold. A C1:11U0138 incident of travel is notes by the Albany Argus. A daughter of Mr. Robert Van Heusen, whO was sum moned from her residence at Oil City last week, to attend the funeral of her mother in Albany, XL Y., had secured, a state room in a sleeping car, and shortly after f retiring, was called upon ' by the nduc tor for .her ticket, when she di vested that her pocketbook, containing h r ticket and fifty dollars, bad been stole . bike made known her loss to the conducts*, who supplied her with another ticket and sufficient money for her wants along gie journey. Almost immediately aftenriqd some person, so concealed, with a s hasirl that it could not be discoveed whetheil it 'as a man or woman, sVpeared at the en trance of the state-room, -threw the miss ing pocket-book in and instantly distill pearold. Vpon opening' the pocketsbohlt the lady found that it contained he j iticktst and all the money with; the exception °fa ten dollar bill. . :: AN Exprgasivz licr op —.1.. Paris letter writer says: "On th morn ing of his quitting the Grand If tat for London. the Nabob 'of Bengal = d four coats 01'11ns:dill sable, e for himself And his three sons; the • cold weather, to which he is so unaccustomed, having rendered warai garments neCes sary. T4ie bill for these furs. amounted to 1 . 0 8,0,00 f., that is $27,000. His High ness paid the bill without • hesitation: Black sable of Russia is expensive: The set of this fur presented by the Emperor of Russia to Patti during bet recent visit `to St. Petersburg Is valued at SA ) guineas. ' ' '' LAST TEAR Mifflin Kennedy, a West Texas millionaire. fenced in a tact of 130,000 'acres, where he leer* Me hero, of about 4000 cattle, besides hymn, nudes sail sheep. . - , ' 44 " % ki 4l 4:4".afrm e*V.. . . . GAS =MIMES_ BILDOIIII & sl WWlssile Dealers ft Lunn Lanterns, Modellers, AND LAMP GOODS. also, CARBON AND LIIBRICATISO OILS, N 0.147 Wood Street. se9:n22 Between sth ma 6th Avenues. FRUIT CAN TOPS. • SELF LABELING . FRUIT-CAN TOP. COLLISS, WRIGHT. ' I • We are new'yrr eepD iir l dif tio u ittii4VllACeiie iitei Potters. It Is :perfeci,simple,and ao cheap as the lain top, having the names of the Yowls Fru i s stamped upon the cover. radiatlug m the enter. and an Index or pointer stamped u n the Pof the can. Ills Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently LABELED. by merely placing the Dame of the trait the can contains opposite the_polnter and seallain the customary manner. 270 preserver of fru or good housekeeper will use any other after o ce seeing it. is TRIMMINGS, NOTIONS, &O. NEW SPRING GOODS AT! MACILI73/, GLYDE & CO. virrm Silar. Frinirild and Purred. Also, all the beautiful styles trimmed with Satin. COTTON HOSIERY TO SUIT ALL. LACE COLLARS, LACE HANDELERCHIFS, LACE CHEMISE:ETES. FRENCH CORSETS, BEST DRAKES. HOOP SKIRTS, L all the newest styles. In our GENTS' FURNISHING DEPARTMENT Otra STOCK IS COMPLETK NEW TIES £SD DOWN, Jockey, Dickens, Derby and Bon Collars. rrw MORRISON 'S- STAR SHIRTS' !' Summer 'Underclothing. MOM M ACM:TM, GLIDE & O ap2t: GREAT AUCTION SALE CONTINUED, MACRUN 6: CARLISLE'S L'iTIRE STOCK OF Fancy Goods, Hosiery, Trimmings, EVIBROIMERIES, FURNISHING GOODS, NOTIONS, ke., &c. No. 27 Fifth Avenue, Having secured the store room, No. A 9 Filth avenue s lately worded by A. H. knelsh & Co., we have removed the entire stock of MACRUM & CARLISLE ?rem their told store, N 0.19 FIFTH AVENUE, And will coati/me DAILY AUCTION-SALES Commencing THURSDAY. April let, at 2 P. Y. and at /0 A. 31., a and I P. M. every day here aster until the entire stock is closed out. • . H. B. SAITHRON et C 0.., AUCTIONEERS. MACRUM • CARLISLE Invite the attention of their old customers to the elegant new stock they have j st opened at their new store. No. ST ris TH AV NUE. ' AT RETAIL, JOSEPH HORNE do CO'S, PULL AIIIIIOII,TMINT Kid ..loves, In all the bright shades and numbers. BLOM In Llsle, Silk, Berlin. bent , s DTlying Blom. HOSIERY, • A fall Line Halbrigitan, English Cotten, and Tartan Hose. Good Plain and Bibbed Huse !ss Cents. Gents , super Stout, noperlthe andAtarl no Half Hose. Ladles' and Genie' Travelling Satehila, TU MODS, 8. T. AND PIIIRCZO ,LICE HOOP 13XCIIITS. SUM LINE LINEN COLLARS ♦ND CUPS& lILLINKRY GOODS 'PINE PR NCR FLOWNRS, HATS MAIN ,ETs BINSONB,Tamm; JUST RECE/FED dT 77 Ake - 791ASKST STINE*. GO AX D BATT/Bre. rithilEB2'll6l"*~'Co., . . ANCHOR COTTON MILLS. PITM4IIiIdI“4H. Iffsauturtorists ofIF4VIE MIEDIUX aadLIGHS uses , AND 111•01011/1'..1 wli7miGlll t&lfb lIEJ 1= at = a a o cv O e ga W 1 1 4 0 Q M ITS P 4 14 144 100 cg 2 ..• cm E .. 0 8 . 1 rit c i% 0 M 124 0 - "s PI 12:1 z E. 4 gri t! Dot .4 , *O. NEW SPRING GOODS THE Print 123 87. spa riAllll, McCANDLESB & V„, (Late Woos, Carr & ONO WHOLTBALE MILLED& IN Foxeign and Domestic Dry Goods, lio. I* WOOD STREET. , Third door above Diamond allot. ) - nrrastntes. 17.ANOS, ORGANS, &G. - - - BUT THE BEST AND CHEAP AI MST PIANO AND OBOAN. Sehomacker's Geld Medal Piano, AND ESTEY'S COTTAGE ORGAN. The 54:1ROMAOXTB PIANO combines all the latest valuable Improvements known In the con struction of a first class Instnunent. and has al ways been awarded the hie hest nremlnin ex. hiblted. Its tone is full, sonorous and siren. The workinaashipt durability and beauty sums all others. rrices from $5O to $l5O. liccoMni to style and Anlthi) Cheaper thall all other so called thutd9 ass ?Lino. ESTEVIs iJOTTA.9E ORGAN • Stands , at the head of all reed Instrument& In producing the most perfect pipequality of Wee of any similar Instrument In the United States. It Is simple and compact in construction, and not liable to fret out of order. . . . . CARPENTER'S PATENT vox HUMANA TREMOLO" is only to be found In this Orgas price groin $lOO to $360. All guaranteed for lye ears. 8A8.% VIM a Bownatit, No. 19 ST. CLAIR STREET. PIANOS AND ORGANS-4n en tlre new stock of NABE , S UNRIVALLED PIANOS; HAINES BROS.. PIANOS: PRINCE & CO'S ORGANS AND MELODE ONS and TREAT, LI:MAY ilk CO'S ORGANS AND MELODEONS. oBesmorn3 smut. deb ! 48 Pllth :mew:. dole Agent. GLASS. CHINA. CUTLERY. NEW GOODS. FINE VASES, IHHINIIIAN AND CHINA. NEW STYLES DINNAR SE TEAT% BETS, GIFT. CTFS, SMOKING SETS, A large stock of I ' SILVER PLATED GOODS Of all descriptions. Ca fel l atl2.3= l ,ll aced Cridtt•beaVll:de. R.- E. BREED & CO. IMETTLER riONTINITES TO -TREAT ALL private diseases. Syphilis in all its !brims, Gonorrhea, /Meet, Stricture, Orchids, and all urinary diseases and the effects of mercury are comp s , ete' eradie.ated; Spermatorrhea , or ?Semi nal Weakness and Impotency. resulting from , self-abuse or other causes, and which producer sane of the following effects. as blotones, rodll , weakness, indigestion, consumption, aversion to society, nomanitivis, dread' of future events, loss of memory, indolence. nocturnal emissions, and dually ro prostrating the sexual system as to render: marriage uneatisfactosy, and thereiore imprudent, are permanently cured. Persons at. filmed with these or any other delicate. Intricate or long standing Constitutional complaint shou ld give the Doctor a trial; he never falls. •• A partienlar attention_given to all Pantile corn. ,tgainte, Leueorrhea- or Whites, Falling ; j i v a. Motion or Ulceration of the. Womb, pruritic Amenorrhoea. Menorrhagia.. D norrhoea. and bterdity or Barrenness, are .tarat• ed with the greatest success. • . It ls s elf-evident that a physician who Moaner' himself exclusively te the studyot a certain class Of diseases sad treate thOusands of cases ever , zaz i rt i l s i t ti a g e ar r t greater that specialty The Doctor publishes a medical pamphlet. of fifty fogesthat givesa full eXpopitlOn of venereal !and p - rtrate dismulcsAtt at Con be had free Mot:lice or fay. mall for two stamps, in sealed envelopes.' Zees/ as ntence contains distinction co the Sit filoted.'and enabljng them us determine the pre cise •hatttre of - tont complaints: ' -• The 4'essabfishinest; comprising ten ample roomss central. When it Is not convenient 14 visit the city, the Doctor's opinion catibe ob, tallied bYigiving a written statement of the eats; and medicines can be forwarded by mail or Oa press.- In some instanees. however'4 personal examination is absolutely necessary. while In Milers daily persousl attention' is. reqt hod, met for the aCconunosistion fauch-Datiento there are. emeriti:mute connected with the office that a - eprcr , tided with every requisite that le calculated to promote recovery. including : , medicated viper Nabs. , prescriptions are prepared in the, Doctor's own laboratory, grader his personal au persision. Medicos pamphlets et omea Irees or: by Mali for two stamina, No matter who:Tuiv failed, read what he nye., 'Homo t 1 ALMA° Burr e V , 18 ii. tO K. • • OMllO,_Ne. 9 wirias bT Court, Omar, CO House,, rlttatnintb. Pa. 14 .COS.A.DA.LIS,' Platt:MS THR - BLOOD, FOR BILE BY. IBRUEIGIBTB imunrwaraa. . . BECKETT," cumsnoAL p e rNEER awl SoHonor of alai lean iatid Vo T.93tED..- ARAIi eTRILPT.I.I glieny N. sect, AYMhie6tnlr . D. C.' lip, . • =4,,N 7.t•t• - • = • r to DRY GOODS. ; JUST OPENED, { aT DORE F. PHILLIPS', 87 Market Street. , Noslins, Dress ; Goods, SILKS, SHAWLS. FULL LINE OF K SACQUES, Very Cheap. MARKET STREET. ST. 100 WOOD STREET. 1100 WOOD STREET. El O&BPlTs AND OIL °LOMB. BRUSSELS CARPET; YELVETSA. The Latest Arrival FRORIL ENGLAND. IicCALLIIIII BROS., • No. 51FIFTH AVENUE,. haian riegelwa trawl gansr . la_a_nd /91- Eli GLISIALLELKET. E 26r1LE/4 ° They also offer a - • Complete I. ine of DOMESTIC CARPETINO. To which large additions are daily being made. A Display of Goods Equal iz o - &air . ani s r . esented In this market at. IicCALLIIIII BROS., .ro. f oi FIL TH .1 PE*M. , (84T.. WOOD L Slltintri*LD.3 ARPETS. We are now receiving our Spring: I Stock o f Carpets, &c., and are pre pared to offer as good stock and at l‘ y as lo prices as any other hone in the Tride. We have - all the new les of Brussels Tapestry, Brussel , Three Flys and- TWe Ply& Best a4ortment Of Ingrain Carpets , in the — lVlarket. ‘, BOVAIM, ROSE CO., , 21 FIFTH AT ahl:ernwT SAVE 1111:6 AND MONEY ITABLAND & COWS NAVE NOW, OFTEN THEIR NEW SPRING STOCK F FINE. C ,RPE7o ROYAL TAFEBTEY v LVET. ENGLISH iIUDY BETINTELS„ The choicest styles ever offered in this aaarket. Our prices ere the LOWEST. I Splendid Line f Cheap Carpets. GOOD COTTON ETHAIN CUM'S At 25 Cents Per it - COLLINS No. 71 and 73 FIFTH AVENUF, alba • (Second Floor). WALL PAPERS. W A. 1416. • WINDOW SHADES, os• New and Handsome Designs, NOW OPENING AT No. 107 'Market Street (NEAR FIFTH AVENUE,) Embracing a large and carefully seleeted stock of the newest designs nom the FINEST START ED GOLD to the CHEAVES r AR rims known to the trade. Alt of which we offer st prices that will pay buyers to examine. JOS. R. HUGHES & BRO. mh23:g4l WALL PAPER. TEE OLD PAPER STORE IN A NEW PLACE, W. P. MARSHALL'S NEW WALL PAYEE STORE, : 191 Liberty ;Street, • (rivet itstarwr.) SPRING GOODS ARRIVING DAILY. ritio REMOVALS. 08,....51V1N0.5: . :10L.' Tin ripriacs , :sksiseaSimc • TEMPORARILY TO No. 81 Fourth - Amnia, ir:rit i i i elga P wrih es al tsibr e. n r ims y. t rp . sanding le completed, when tho e ßss = siva' *. he located, he that building. - ••• • r ADrli SZORETABY AND.1111Z1,11151Ill& 1869. • aollt:bte :1.; . REMOVAL. 7 GrAZZA* attc 4 ll7-,t.4.11;e, bse reatored We . ogles to Nor 911' 7,IIPTH Avawux. LITHOGR4PMU3' unman oystsi IINGEIIIArk..CLEIS I Sgopesseoffii ik." to °so.. Scatatanult &AM, PRACTICAL" LIT/10611Wolitilliii, The war Beak. 'Llthocrapheo Ititialiebnieat 'test or enoritott.telnsi • meanest Onts„ Letter Heads. Bonds. sathelj, Choulare„Show airda t Diptothas. Portralee., vidws, ()Grethen*. of IN. Mi rt it lavninlY 2 OWN. NOS• TIV " NU * Plita.4l/1711.