v . - in Le tip Vitt* DOWN - 41 NING W :!I`llll DROP. NOT • PLAT.P 1 obl pasted gaud. and inlaid teener. And penmen's trick that nothing imams! AM I glaring light de r isiong crowd, -And love wefts lowed! Qtr! crowned king with starving eyes. Alm dying swain who empty ales! Obi hollow show and heart, Breatminl.tersottragic sr. 1 Yak, man! the .iglu watt; BMy s e on with an died pra I Beall you not react sir te. .gee Seamse-becauenn wanton mica - What cares Ike crowd for dying wives, FOr broken beano, or Muted. dvea I ?hey paid titelnmenet, and they-sayr Living or dead, on with the play. 'What! itmuyering,.taitay why, where , syoar art That stare was good; that trag.c start lirould make your tontine w re it not Titt it rebuked thr author's plot. ; - Illy wife is dying?" Ile tte , er wrote "Tits words thatetruggle in thy throat.. backyour money," did you say'. . - uslitdown the drop-i cannot play." Ming down the drop; the act is o'er; Peer bark has touched the golden chore, 1111 1dIe. - reading from Ilfs'a inner page, •Btands there i he Amor of the Mgr. But not upon the cold white core% rethere a word of sad remorse m a that crowd who heard him say, 'Bing don the drop--/ cannot may. , - EPHEMERIS.- la in Holland. —Senator Chandler is going tollEnrope. Hadson, the Mazeppiat, has mar zied. —Mr. George Peabody is coming home to die.' —The latest thing in dresses—nigh California the monntail trout are two feet long. —Blank•dispair—to miss a prize in a lottery—Punah. —Detroit has been having a discussion *bout school books. —Georgi is the newest opera prima• contralto in London. ' —An elephant race is to be a new Ben salon in Cincinnati. —columbus, Ohio. and Boston, Mass., are to have baby shows. —The Sunday horse-cars . question is troubling Newark; N. J. —Lester Wallack and W. J. Florence went Europe kat week. . —Commodore Goldsborough's wife' died in Philadelphia laat, week. —rish reschbling shad have been found in Like Ontario. They are shad. reckless paper asserts that Phan is pe.r-Pluitt.ming at New Orleans. —cast week, in Boston, the Indian Deerfoot and avelocipede ran a race. —Volpird is a prima donna,.,who sings slat. Pctenamrg for, $lB,OOO per month: Chicago Post says. McKean Bo chanin* is to retire from the stage, by re quest. —,Two sentimental girb3 in London ro mantically stabbed themselves with their 'scissors.. —lt is said that there are at least one million %Oats in. Great Britain and =I -10pen.air concerts are to be among Ihe.rational =memento of Chicago this summer. —Burlingame and the other Chinese mandarins leave Paris for Berlin on the 21st inst. —An eastern editor has discovered that often times the almevidest sort of sense is zatitimice. champion ten pin' player in Sa. - :vannali recently made Uvalde consecutive ten-strikes. —Punch calls the recently knighted musiciaß, Sir Michael Costa, an extra Opera Knight. —Cattle thieves in Texas are in the wholesale business. One the other day stole 1,200 cattle. .—Minnie Hauck's Parisian failure was almost compensated for 'by her wonderful „success at Amsterdam. ;, —The Prince of Wales is interested in the coming Derby and will be back in England in time to attend it. —An' exchange has discovered that there is a canal that every body still travels on, and that is the alimentary. --Chignons are said to be going out in pious Paris, because the Pope refuses his blessing to wearers of that historic pile. —Another underground railroad has been chartered for New York. Wehope it may be more successful than its prede cessors. —Carl Formes wore balmoral boots when be played ShylNk in Glasgow re cently, mad the Scotch critics were In d —The city bill poster at Lowell stuck the notices to milkmen, the other day, on the public pumps, certain that they would be seen there.. —Artemis Ward's mother has con cluded that the public does not Intend to erect a monument to her eon's memory, and so Is about to do it herself. =At Minneapolis , 'several hundred Scandinavian; met Ole Bull at the railway station and escorted him to his hotel, after which he made them a speech". —A 'flew picture at thepine - Arts Exhi• bid.* in Paris this year, attracted'a good dealor attention - beMse it was by Count de Waldeck, who la 103 years' old. —The New 'York Iffrad,pays: "It is proposedby a few ; gendemenl in Wash ingtom to get up a real English dinner to ReverdNohnson when he returns. -.4ames Gordon it‘nett has presented $1,300 to.the fir 'department as a reward tor its exertions in 'extinguishing the Are at his country re.sidence last September. -lawyers in St. Louis, in order to lasp an.outward dlitinction from com mon folks, hive adopted the Widow of wearing, at all times, swallow tail coats. c !mese thieves are not i•espectors of ,persens,_,as one proved recently, who picked a gold watch out of, the pocket of the English Chief , of Police at Hong —The Bolton has publicly revoked the ikfrAv4v , . A. - - - ~ - *;4 4 .`f"A "`",''"* AYrer..,44 law prohibiting Christhmsjfkons emtering Mohammeden mosques. The Sultan is men accused of leaning a little to chrls- Vomit)! himself. , • —Two Hawaiians attempted to desert in a tub , from the bark Oriole, of . New Bedford, one evening, when 25 miles off the Marquesas Islands. They returned, swimming, in about eleven hours, having lost the tub. CAN. —Among other celebrated works of art included in Mr. Corcoran's munificent bequest to the city of Washington; is in eluded the original statue of the Greek Slave, for which Mr. COrcoran has re fused $20,000. —A contemporary says, that ready all the brilliant complexions seen among the females of New York are the result of arsenic eating. Since the introduction of the "blonde fashion" arsenic eating has become almost a mania. - —The Lynchburg (Va.) iiepubikaa re ports the recent discovery in the gorges of the mountains, near Allegheny Springs, of a waterfall twelve Aundred fed high A party Was soon to leave Lynchburg to visit the spot and attest the truth of the report• —An ancient idea was that no negro had ever invented anything; even when this was generally believed it was untrue for the most comfbrtable of easy chairs— the one which reclines to any and every angle--was invented by a slave in Old Vir ginia, and now we hear of a valuable cotton plow produced by a Southern freed man. —Colorado is admirably adapted to the culture of grapes. The soil is rich and the air light and dry, so that there would be little danger ?i t the rot and mildew which prove so 4estractive to the crop further west. Wild grapes grow in great abundance in Colorado and Arkansas,. enough it is said to make several thousand barrels of wine a year. —A traveler saysthat if he were asked to describe the first sensation of a camel. ride, he would say: "Take a Music stool, and having wound it up as high as it would go, Put it in a cart without springs, get on the top, and next drive the cart transversely across a plowed field, and you will then form some notion of the terror and uncertainty you would experi ence the first time you mountedactunel." How to Lengthen the. 1. Cultivate an equable temper ; many a man has fallen dead in a dt of pooltion. 2. Eat regularly, not over thdce a day, and nothing between meals. 3. Go to b.W, at regular. bourn. Get up as soon's you wake of yourself,. azid_ do uot'aleep in the day time; ato least not longer than tea minutes beforeknoon. . 4. Work always by the day, and not by the job. 5. Stop working before you are very much tired—before you are "fagged out." 6. Cultivate a generous and accommo- dating temper. 7. :Never cross a bridge before you come to it, this will save hail the troubles of life. 8. Neter eat when you ere not hungry, nor drink when you are not thirsty. 9. Let your appetite always come un invited. 10. Cool off in a place greatly warmer than the one in which you have been ex. ercising ; this simple rule would prevent incaleulable sickness, and save millions of lives every year. 11. Never resist a call of nature for a single moment. 12. Never allow yourself to be " chilled "through and through ;" it is this which • destroys so many every year, in a few days' skimess, .trom pneumonia, called, by some; lung fever or inflammation of the lunge. 13. Whoever drinks no liquids at meals will add years of pleasurable existence to his life. Of cold or warm drinks the former are the most pernicious; drink: ing at meals induces persons to eat more than they otherwise would, as any one can verify by eperiment ; and it h. ex. cess in eating which devastates the land with sickness, suffering and death. 14. After fifty years of age, if not a day laborer, and sedentary persons after forty, should eat but twice a day, in the morning and about four in the afternoon; persons can soon accustom themselves to a seven•hour interval between eating, thus giving the stomach rest ; for every organ without adequate rest will "give out" prematurely.—Hall's Journal of Health. THE splendid locomotive America, which was built at the great locomotive works of Patterson, N. J., in 1867, and which was awarded the gold medal at the Paris exposition in the same year, has been purchased by the Rock Island rail road oomlany, and will open the new route to Omaha. An effort will be made to take her through to San Francisco. This locomotive is the finest specimen of workmanship of the kind ever manufac tured in this country, and cost $60,000. The boiler is silver-plated, s the smoke stack of German silver and the engine , house inlaid with hard, wood. The ten der is beautifully veneered, the word America being set in with different 'va rieties of wood letters. All the bright work is splendidly polished, the bell, whistle and dome being heavily silver- Plated. The locomotive left for the West on. Tuesday. TIML , ILLILII, it is reported, are to be laid on the enUre length of the railroad' from Paris to MareeillelL The Change from iron to steel will require /87iM tons of steel. Prom experime nts made by the Company , it- has been calculated that in the viehat7 of the stations iron rail will not last over four years, and on the whole line not over eight or ten year& The steel rails, it is believed, will last thirty or forty years. The:. bridges are ale° to be constructed of steel as soon _ ag iron ores suited to the manufacture can be obtained in sufficient quantity Tarr Illinois Legislature has passed a very stringent law for the manage ment of drunkards. It classes them with idiots and insane persons, and gives their persona and= property to the charge of guardians •or the Overseert of the Poor. When any ode has been declared • insane or a drunkard, and a guardian has been appointed, the arrangement must exist for at least one yehr, except the lisOlhit is previously removed for Udeuendact,, PITTSBURGH GAZETTE: MONDAY' MAY 17 A. , Irsuldneon-e orreepozident sends the follcr!ing letter as having heenpieked np a few days since in the hall of . one of the hotels in that city and nye that in many jeapects it- giveS a correct idea of the uthaisuons of hundreds of the disap pointed: Wasneetwros, D. C., April 26, 1869. 2fy Dear Sir : I bad purposed writing to yen as soon as I got my appointment as foreign Minister, but as II failedin that I have since been waiting, Macomber like, for . "something to turn.up." You may net be aware that I came on here -at inauguration to be ready to see our great Captain as soon as he had the pow er to dispense. I had two trunks packed with recommendations, beside a long roil of the names of our fel low-citizenathat was too cumbersome to put away. I had some of the most influential men in our village, including 11 saloon keepers, 2 merchant!, 9 farmers, 74 government contractors du ring the war, 1 soldier (drafted), 2,489 politicians (very influential in their win estimation), and I believe also four or fiVe honest men (which latter I had to write their names legible), and 1,941 sound, constitutional country lawyers, besides Various. other names a friend of mine wrote for me during the time I was treat ing all bawls for their signatures. With these important papers and a valise full of letters of introduction, methought the case a clear one for at least England f Prance, Spain, the German Confedera tion, or mayhap Russia; was not p_articu lar as to location—eye to pay.' Had an interview with the President; asked me what I wanted, told him minister, consul or collector in a small place like N. T., was all I aspired to; said I would do well In being precise as to exact position, and suggested that I should call again .' In the meantime, before I could see him again, Motley had done me on England, Curtin, on Russia, Washburn was booked for Parley Veils, and I concluded that 'foreign misaions were not much after all—very dangerous travelling by water, as those steamers race at times—could not make the port of New York on account of Grinnell, and went back on New Orleans myself (after I heard the new Collector had been con firmed,) on account of the yellow fever. Saw the President, told him I thought an auditorahip would do. Asked me which one. Said I was not particular. Presi dent suggested I would drop in after tied made up mmind. In a day or, two had heard those been filled, and attributed my failure to not having my name writ ten in place of one of theirs. To show just where I was, I send - ex tracts from my diary: • March 24. Hotel bill presented includ ing refreshments 20 days, $2lB 75; paid on same, $l2; balance, $506 70: drew on wife for $4OO. -' March .27. • Wife sent $l5O by mail, borrowed from a neighbor , changed hote l 25th so • this will keep me until I can =again. most of my recommenda trunks at first hotel. March 81. Saw President; said per hapsl could get a clerkship if I knew the department I would prefer; to call again. April 4. Saw the President; said a clerkship in the Interior Department would suit; replied no vacancies, call again; that 2d Hotel is not what I con sider a firat. chum house; changed to board. ing house; left valise and overcoat; tent to wife for $2OO, April 7. Letter from wife; says come home; sent me $4O; sold the "line-back" cow to getit ; all right when I get an of fice ; advanced $lO on board. April 9. Pocket picked on street cars ; only satisfaction :I have had in Washing ton ' • no money in the wallet . three hotel bills and meta. of bal. due fie' washing; I hope the thief will not be found dead with those papers on his person ; I shall never get the office. April 12. Landlord wants another Advance ;•• I will leave these one-horse .boarding houses at ones; saw the Presi dent ; told him a messenger's place would be acceptable; advised me to tall again ; changed boarding.house, or rath er left the last ; have not put tni at any ; take my meals as I want them ; drew on wife for $lOO. April 16. Rather chilly weather; lett my "other" coat at that last boirding house by mistakt; wife sent me $10; could not raise anymore; advises me to , "not be a fool." 4:30 P. it. Have been so busy in looking after my wife's letter have not dined; did not have any appetite for breakfast; I shall eat heartily; two days of fast sharpens the appetite and helps di gestion; people do gaze at me wondet tully walking around this cold day in a summer duster; I am sorry I forgot my coat; saw it ozi the boarding house keeper's son—jdst tits him. April 21. Saw the President; did not know me; glad he did not; asked him if he had au _old suit of clothes he could give me; told me to call again; /won't do It for him or for any other man. What shall I do? Alt! I have it. to-morrow I will write to a friend in Now York and have him send me his pass on the rail road, and I think I will go home. - I think Washington a very unhealthy place. Will you send me the pass? I have concluded not to call again upon the Pres ident. Yours truly, ELUAII POGRAM.' Tim broad gauge Mtlroad Aracks of England have nearly all been taken up. So few remain that the London Shipping List says that "the brittle of the gauges le over. In the fight between Stephenson' and Brunel, the genins'of the North has triumphed Over %hell:tan of many defeats, and has added another to the list of fail. urea already so large. *l'he Great West -ern has given in at last, and, in the plane of the broad gunge, they are laying down the more 'convenient narrow gauge." , Amos J. °mammas has a card in the New ,York gun, in which he esys that to his peroonal knowledge Xt. Young of the Traune sent associate press : ; newsto the Philadelphia Post. He once ordered 2dr. Cummings to send such news, and ,the order was obeyed. When the leak was discovered, Mr. O. refined to send:further news, aud, he intimates; was therefore discharged from the Trilmite. - - Tau itochester century plant is in bloom. The bud broke and first showed itself on the 25th of 'April, and on the Bth inst. it was four feet night inches high, growing from three to four inches a day A straight.stem, starting from thdoentre of the plant, from four five inches in diameter. - Tun Metropolitan Record gossips about prices in New York as follows: Bulls of but! linen, ready ma e i Cost $18; Mar muslin - ar, seines and piquedresse cost $B6; organdr ;60 cents, al, .. Italian h; u brown or widt4.lstrar, costss, , atif ,lut'f ' trimmed; taMartide carte 51; Cents . . 1 , . .1- . , 1 ' l / 4 ; • - . , . '- ". 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'% ' e --. 1 ,", , ,..4- , :...4---0%.... • .* , - ,, ,,f...- • • =4-6 , -4--t-tf... , ,,K , % , -- ,, ,, , ,... t . , - 4 0,-,..,..-, ... , „.. , , ,,,..,,,,,,,--0- . . 1 ,-- ~... ;44:1,,,5_.ti,;,-,7,4 , . ' ' - A.. 4 i l . - 47 t,-...-4'. ' -vy. _ . . - • - ::: .. . asT OP E NED AT JOSEPH HORNE t CO'S, The Mr/teat wort eent ever bronsht Se the sear. het of the Latest Novelties far Use Yes . Trade la H~TSAND BONNETEsi , FINE FRENCH .FLOWERS wnimns - , nuns, mins% RISBONg, anaes, oRNAMTNTS, LACES, CRAPES, FRAMES AND BIINDOWNS DRESS TRIMMINGS, KNOTTED FRINGES, HOOP BEIRA, FOE BETS, HOSIERY, In every Am and quolilar• GLOVES, of every deoellptlon. KID GLOVES, of best makes, including a spleadid line of all the Bright Shades, and In all ambers. - PARASOLS AND SUN UMBRELLAS In every oinalltr, at the very Lowest Eastern : sate. 77 AND 79 MARKET STREET. mni NEW, CHEAP AND GOOD 101) FRINGES AND GIMPS In all 'tyke hid colors SILK LOOPS FOR SA PINE ASSORTMENT OF 8A THE NEW COQUETTE FAN P Also, a lame variety of SILK PARASOLS a SUN U • White French Whalebone (Ally GO eta, a per, THI NEW hrple and Mexique Blue Kid A splendid anecortsrient of COTTON HOS n WRITE & 8841 BALBRIGO LACE CHEILISEITES. all SILE llCAliii, EMBIOLDMRS, LAM, pent's Spring tro MACRITI!d. GLYDE Inv 78 & Btl Isurket Streel NBW SPRING GOODS & CARLISLE'S No. 27 Ptfth,Avenue, • Dress Trimmings and Buttons. Embroideries sad Lefts. Ribbons and "lowers. Ham and Bonnets. Glove fitting and French Corsets. New Styles eine ley's Skirts: Parasol.—a , l the new stiles. . Sun and Rain Umbrellas. RoMen—the best English makes. • Agents for "Harris , Seamless Kids." Spring and Summer underwear, Sole Agents for the Beads yatent Shape Col. ars. "Lockwood,s "Irvine," ' "rest End," "Elite," he: "Dickens," "Derby," and other tiles. Dealers repotted trttb the above at MANUFACTURERS' PRICES. MAORTTId dr CARLISLE NO. 27 FIFTH AVENUE. toT4 GAS FIXTURES WELDON & KELLY, Yamaha's:era and Vieoleaale Dealers La Lamps, Lanterns, Chandellers; AND LAMP COOD / S. Also, CARBON AND LDBBICATIND OIL N 0.147 Woad Strlzlet.-- ut tl2l Between sth ailieth Avenues. FRUIT CAN':'l'ol4ll., SELF LABELING , Alija-CA - TO P. I COLLINS PITTSITRGIT, _II • L We'Arti now repared to' andply link/ire and Potters. It le Perfect, straple. and- aa eheaDre , the plain top, baring the names of the "'moot' Truitt 'stamped 'upon the cover. Misting from the center. and an index or pointer.ttiunp upon the top of the can, _ Itis Cleariy t Distinctly and Permaneatly . • . LA33,1311411311:10, by surety placing the same or the fruit the can contains opposite the later and In i po the customary manner. t - o preserver or sealing you or Rood housekeeper will sae any oth er atter ones seeing It., 'obis WIPER OBININET TOPS 'A aseartiosat, /111 , NitIr• 11. COLLIXS, $p11:147 Sd Arrana.mear Smith Isla St. WINDERSONZA - 1111101111ERC 206 Merry street, Dealers la Dram.. sad Patent Medlelneh ' ' I i , j 1809. ow c=, st- 1 0 P 4 g Nal 04 a ta 42A A l E" 7l ra 1 1 co 0 04 . E 4 out 41 Pol d NEW SPRING GOODS JUST OPENED, AT THEODORE F. PHILLIPS'; 87 Market Street. Prints, Mullins, Dress Goods, SILKS, SHAWLS. PULL LINE OP _ SILK SACQUES, Very Cheap. ST. MARKET STREET. ST. argl , QUES ISOLS. =I ( IIIeCANDLESB & CO ? Late Wilson. Carr & C 0..) WHOLNSALE DICALz2B IN • Foreign and Domestic Dry Goode, Gloves -No. Oil WOOD EITIULNT. Third door above Diamond Midi. NI WALL PAPERS, HOSE M WALL PAPER AND WINDOW SHADES, o New and Handsome Designs,. • Brow OPENING AT No. 107 Market Street (NEAR PIITH AVENUE.) Embracing a large and carefully selected stock of the newest deafens from the FINEST ISTANC ED GOLD to the CHEAPEST ARTICLE known to the trade. All of which we offer at prices that will pay Mims to examine. . JOS. R. HUGHES & BRO. . GM . i . e a , CO. WALL PAPER. THE OLD PAPER STORE lAA NRW PLACE, • W.P. xtue,,srumv s NEW WALL PAPER STORE, 191 Liberty Street, (NEAP. MARKET,) SPRING GOODS ARRIVING D . MY. =he GLASS. CHINA. CUTLERY. 100 WOOD STREET. NEW GOODS. FINE VASES, BOHEMIAN AND CH/NA. 311 W 8 DlN i alt SETS, TEA SETS, SMOKING SETS, GIST curs, A large Brock of SILVER PLATED GOODS of all descriptions. Call and examine our woods, and we feel aatlided no one need fall to be gilled. EL. E. , BREED CO.I 100 WOOD STREET. C R. INIEUMR ONT D INIIES :TO TREAT .E ALL private diseases,_ Syphilis la all' its banns; Gonorrhea, 'Ellett, Stricture. Oreille and IPA urlaary diseases, and the effects of mercury: am. -completely eradicated; Spermatorrhea or. Betel nal Weakness and Impotency, resulting from self-abuse or other causes, and whieh produces soma, of. the Allowing effects,. as Moieties, lasadlly• eakness, indigestion, consumption. aversion to society 'unmanliness, dread bf future events,' loss or ;acorn indolence; necturnal'esimion‘ , and neatly an prostrating the sexual system sale • render tuarriame unsattsiattory, and therefore ' imprudent: are permicently cured: Persons at. Mted e with these or any other dellibste, to trimpe or long standing onititutional complatht should give the Doctor a trial; be never fails. A partirular attention _given to all Female obits ' Plaints,,LeueorriteaortWhitealling: ,znation, or Ulceration of the W omb, Dvarltis; ni spnaritis, Aenorrhoek, atria, Dyrnsers. , • norrheesscandbterility or arrenness, are .treap: ed VIM the greatest success. ' ' • • It s.lfwrident tomehysician who pinnies ; himself e xclusivelstudio! a certain Mos • L of Mauro and treats thousands of case* avers year must acquire greater skill in that speciall y than ono in general practice, • - The„ - Doctor publishes a medical; pamphlet' or firlF Pageathli gives.* lull exposition of venereal . , ana private diseases, that can be hid fret Monti:le or by mall for two stamps, sealed envelopes." 'Zvery sentence contains iota action to Um At. . Meted, and enabling them to. determine Mope. else nature of their complaints. They esiablishmeur, ,, comprising ten. ample rooms, Is central. When It is not coavenient. to 'Malt the city, the Doctor's opinion .can be ob.' er airing • wristen`stateMerS thts essay. and medicines can be forwarded by. ma ll i or ex ,press. In some inatacee however.examination Is absolutely lacoesSary a ' p w e h on b others daily personal attention is mulled, and for the accommodation i finch Patient, there are'. MO with UlO Mho that arep-p... 1 1 = 1 r e ar every e requlahaa that M. calealimed"to promote recovery, including 'Medicated vapor baths. Ali prescriptions are'prepared ln the' Doctor's own laboratory, getter !de person r al or. asrvlston. pamphlets at .onics, by mail tor two stamps.. No Swatter who have readwhat he says: HoultalitA.M. toe ir .13undayis Mc WEEP. M. Mee Wirt mum. olw.ftvtot. /Stem 2410 ' barrels iffillTE v llreak Whits.l4/44119? eautbsc I B. WI DRY 4/00D19. PITTSBURGH. oAßigmezrD annsktis CAMS,' VELVETS' SA The Latest • Arrival FROM • ENGLAND. • MCOALLUM BROS., No. 51 FIFTH AVENUE, 71' T i and ovril Ptsto GUSH a1.a.u.5.1.T. They a/so offer a Complete I inci of DOMESTIC 'CARPETING: To which lugs tddltions are &1117 befca made, A' Display of Goods Equal To mules . sated In this MMUS In IieCALLII.3I BRO S., AV. bl •• 171P711 VIEJIYIVIA • ' (BET . W OOD & BMITDIPIEILD.3 opDhOOS CARPETS. We are now receiving oar Spring 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 styles of Brussels Tapestry, Brussels, Three Plys and Two Plys. Best assortment of Ingain Carpets in the Market. BOVARD, ROSE (t t 1 ' FIFTH ATEIII3E. SAVE ME AND MONEY & COWS HAVE NOW OPEN THEIR NEW SPRING' STOCK FINE CARPETS, Royer.aximieraN___ TAZZSTBY ZNGLIaII B9DY BBITISIELS. The eboleest styles ever offered is this market. Oar :niece are the LOWE:6T. A. Spleadfd Lille of Cheap Carpets. . GOOD. COTTON CHAIN OAR PETS At 25 Cents ,Per Kard. mamas]) & anima% No., 71 and 73 FIFTH .1:111NInts AUCTION- SALES. EIECI BOOTS, SHOES AND CARPETS POE THE MILLIOJI. AT SMITHSON'S EMPORIUM, sa AND 57 riFTH Avainnt. Mews. H. B. BMITHBON.B CO., proprietors of the well knoWn Mammoth Auction House are creating an excitement consequent upon the ar. rival of new goods which are being sold at re .momarkably lot: i f:ices. floods °fevers' variety k: _the finest sewed ots, the moat rashionable bal. ral galte and anklet shoes, slippers, ko., blankets, flannels, Meths. cassimeres.' eutlery and carpets. Call and examine. No trouble to show goods. Ladles , . misses , ,and children's Intl at almost your own prices. 'TMAII goods war. ranted as reoresented. n 024 BY A. LENA= BEAunrin.— . SUBURBAN PROPERTY, ON PERRYSVILLE ROAD, AT AUCTION. • WEDNEBDA, MAY at o'clock,wlll be sold, on the premises of Mr. W. 8. lIIBSzLL. on the Perrysville Plankroso, 01:10 - mite north of Allegheny 'MX BUILDING ;SITES, of three to With'. acres N e y a f c e h. acre o s l e M u a iftliyConae nndi s. Gr, b o unddl:n veight Yard! fruit, evergreen and dellelots trees and abrubbery: a fatless rtteent of the Anita of the climate -in bearing. Commodlous stsble. car riage and tenant housea under line root: rain wa ter cistern, az , d pure water spring at the door.. The Cotrage contains seven rooms, three closets and pantry. No. ill. A four fore lot adjoining Wove, with stone foundation for a, home. Apple; pear or.. chard, and other Improvements. Nos. 3 and 4. Mach :pursue iota, covered with primitive forest. having very tine building sites, and never-Ming springs. Nor. 5 and 6Bach . for -e aeres; lawns and for eat, and fronting 614 'feet on the Perrysville Those dealrona of proeuring lovely rnral bermes find In this property an nnsurpassedcolleo on of beautillwbailding sites Lot No: I;par- titularly, is areally magnificent piaft.coMmand.: leg rich panoramic views, and abounding in Unita orthe richest varietrea- A 'Critical IrlatiOn or these premises Is respectfully sol bboardwalk from irsderalstreet to th e door per. ta dry walking In all weathers: Terms of sale wll b- liberal. Plot of grounds and photograph of buildings at the office of A. LEGOserE, AueU•Acieir:: • iso rederaystreet.Aneehemy Z 2712 ItpCK THE , BABY ' EARNESTSPATENT CRIL 806 0.24. i ',Emory& - Fruited Peraiture itleutaCiarere, &e ft • • _ 1180 A. - traTll le t ° Where ay be _achfound fall emantaleet of Pub boner end Aen, farattare. daze • • R EAD►-lli Piminisr THE BLOM ken BAilit By ZVERIMIrmi. tet:ota IN THP'et/URT UP'QUAKTE.II, suet NIL. - o, allesheny tuanty. ln the tuatterOtihe vacation of -oauton street. May 8. 1869. L Petition qt. freeholders , presented, and, on motion of A. K. Brown, Attornev tor pott ttonors: rnio - franten to *how cause wtry Canton' street,Atro. rn-Boannerre,strett to. the, mononia. hells rival' d osed 1414 b.. ward ni Affsabikrzb. .4oela not no and vacated. - - - " - , . • - ' , A. /A. BRA-int.; -' ' • . .-, • ,‘,,' -,4 .i , ;11..;. _Ai. 11.186.8414 f saytO4S.etair '' /Atone) s ter routionars; 1 (Second Pico ri ON 4 00. ,'• 4 ' 4 jr'''