littsburgt att. GATHERING :TRAILING AUBTITUS. • DT vase Y. In April, when the daya Vera bright, And growing longer in their .e.tpe, When buds were shaking off their sleep. • And all the airs were full of hope; We walked torther. you and In mood that sometimes pensive grail: For memories of a gladness part. Eclipsed the present to ear view. By crooked footpaths fling, traced. Our Way along the fields we took; Climbr d brokentence and loosened w And crossed the stuillolr. lalatog br ook. - • . we readied the" hills, beneath whose bite The river flows with ceaseless bound. And lanowingthe enchanted Ont. Knelt with our faces to the ground. For those who come with lofty tread; Ana careless, andlseerning eyes. • May often go with empty hands. 1% or Ind this treasure where it ileJ. We bushed the withleires away, Old remnatmant • won - out year. And shouted with ecstatic glee' The tower is ewe! the now er is beret" • • • Our thoughts assumed a gayer nue; Beneath tke magic touch or epilog Beller and courage bloomed anew Among a 1 blossoms of the years, Bay, where shall I another end, Whose sweetness thus thb senses • W hos, snaffles content the mind. . • :Nature's brave tnersengee, that tells 01 pretent good. and goJd to be; ilubriat companionship excites brave ?Metro In you and Me is night cast obi. habits off et • a nobler growth appear; -And i t rent all seasons with &bethought . ••T e lowoe is here I the flower Is here!" Taunton Gossite , DstrielPS phy eidan is a b omeopathiat. —4llinokiii shipping 'strawberries east. —lowa has a wooden-legged velocipe dest-rian. • - 7 -Three score and ten are the years of Caleb Cudng. —Hugo :through a letter, has shaken hands wi general Cluseret. ,Bayard Taylor is American corre spodent fora Moscow journal. Preach physician prescribes spark- Ihig Moselle as'a certain cure for goat. .7-Bix thousand dollars will pay for a small cottage at Newport for the season. —Butter color and green are men tioned as the newest colors for Parisian The Bosten Port says just as the trees on the common leave, the loafers come. , s • • ' -/,-The Sunstroke seasonopenedbrbddy. Several caws occurred last week hi-New York. • -L-Northers cabinetmakers are gel:dust a great deal of black walnut from Ten nessee. hiss Burdett; Omani has spent i 14000,000 in bnilaing s market house in tondon. • . , —On Thursday the ladies.of LouWill° are to decorate the graies of the Gonied erate -Ten, $y lingo's, sons of Victor, are 7:psiikititin.nowtspaper, called Le Rappel, -- - -Boston to of establishing a l l We man's man's Bureau." What mysteries it would -contain, to be sure. - -President Grant is in excellent health, and weighs more than one hun dred and fifty pounds.' ' riegress in :oeorgYtt was recently arrested for stealing Some good ch3thes in which le be baptized. - • -"-A neti . England editor advlses his readers never to allow a tender feeling to degenerate into a soft one.' —lt hi said that nearly four thousand persons starved to death in the Metropolis .cif Merry England last year. - —The pioneer mosquito has been noticed. His trumpet solo was very fine -indeed, scarcely perceptible in fact. —Water is so scarce in India that tigers are driven to seek the settlement where they can quench their thirst in low-caste blood. ' • ' - —A man in Connecticut has invented a new machine, with which, it is said, one man can sew sin hundred pairs of shoes in One day. - -What inanimate objects show a die lite to solitiide? Velooipedes; because they'll never travel _without somebody. E Wiii-to•the. Wisp. —After the passage of the liquor bill, a sequel to "Gates . Wide Open" and."Gat6 Ajar," will be published, entitled "Bars All Closed," *says Quilp. —A Hiniroo doctor at ,Bombay claims to have a cure for lepriff, and mucli eitement exists m medical circles in• that part of Mit world because of it. —The Cincinnati Commercial ", says "Delaware has erected a new vihipping post and pillory. , It is the only public bnprovemerit, to speak of, in the'State. —Horace Greeley, editor of the New . York Tribune; m about to publish in-that journal a series of articles on il p o jiti ca l economy, designed to elucidate e policy of protection. ' -Mr. Frederick W. Seward said to - have bought Mr. Thurlow Weed's inter est in the New York Commercial Adver tiser, the editoiial management of which he willessmim.. !The New "fork Trilune thinks qie 'Alike was "re - - season and weatker National game EPHEMEIUS. a jOuntal too of intentional that , 'BRIMiiiOa whom wiallom king nut for, an ding his 'sojourn Toned himself m il:Qua of kero- bas been. &env- Y.; and - that lTertbil itself 'OS , a summer resort. It already has a semi nary for the youth of botheezes. —The opinion is gaining ground in Phibtdelphia that the numerous so called mad 'dogs, which have been shot recently in that city, have been merely suffering from fits, to which most , canine flesh Is •heir. . —Archbishop Plantier, of Nismes, said a short time ago to an, ultramontaine friend, "France is still the eldest daugh ter of the Church; but, then, you see, in all large families there are children that turn out bid." —The school children of the 'Quaker 1 City, have, by, penny contributions, raised sufficient money to pay for a monument to,W ngton, 'which is to be placed in front ci 'l ndependence Hall on the coming, glorio s Fourth. - —o' the day when the Figaro an , • noun d that Wile Christina Nilson. was seven ournalists and newspaper. rclport-, era cal ed upon-the cantatrice in ordar to obtain particulars for their papers. -A man's wife is the best 'Mayer, his best counsel, his best judge, his best ad viser and also the eheapsst and most rea sonable, says an Eastein 'iditor whose better half evidently does not indulge in spring bonnets and Paris fashion. —A. festive stone cutter in Detroit drank so malty times from a whisky bot tle that he was unable to distinguish be tween the month Of that and the muzile -of his pistol. In attempting to drink from the latter the top , of his head came off, —The celebrated authoress of the "Heir of Redclyffe," Miss Yonge, has gone to Paris to consult several leading psychia trists. The lady has recently upon sev eral occasions shown unmistakable symp toms of hypochondria, bordering upon insanity. —One of the weightiest reasons which induced the Pope to refuse to confer a cardinalship on Archbishop Ilarboy, of Paris, was the fear lest the new cardinal should become the most formidable can didate for the Papacy after the death of Pius IX. —The wife of one of the ntenzat*liii killed by the nitro-glycerine :;expleeiMlYik Bergen City, sues for five thoneate4o lars damages. As she recoYeredliiiili several very small fragments'or her band, the price set upon herless &a:not seem exorbitant. -.'young scamp in Missouri. varied the now (iommon tragedy by shooting the woman who wouldn't allow him' to becoMe her `'eon-in-law. The youth who might in. other-circumstances have be come his brother-in-law, then despatched him With a load of buckshot. —Lovers of humor, and admirers of that most comical of living, men, Mark TWain, Will he pleased to know that he has minipiled a new volume of his works which will very shortly be issued under the- peculiar title of ,"The Inucments Abroad, or the-New - Pligrttmt Piave - as: —Where mad-stones come from risnidly we don't know, but one now in the pes ectralcin:orMsfor James B. Lockhart, of Athens,'Alabama; is one which he t )rik mit of, the , stomach of a deer in 1846. It is dark brown, porous - rind egg shaped; is two inches long and 'one Ind: thick, and resemblea.a calculus. ' —At the race in Boston on Friday. be tween the Indian Ifeerfoot and a bicycle,. the red man beat in two straight heats; making" his first mile' n sm. 44 sec. and his second in 4m. 541 seq. The veloci pede time was 6 m. 4 sec. for the first mile and not quite,so good for the second; so that fast young men would do better to keep an Indian than a velocipede. —IL was not Mr. 'Fisk, but George W. Carleton, the publisher, whe purchased the Worth House in New York. The first rumor arose from some correspon dent, who, hearing that a htige building had been sold, very ,naturally thought that Fisk was the _buyer, and was per haps anticipating the result of his libel suits by investingsome of their proceeds. —An exchange says that in Mercer county. Illinois, hunters easily make $l5O a Week by killtng wolves at eight dollen bounty per-well: This would be eigh teen and three-fourth wolves per week, and the load Mr. Bergh should at once interfere . to prevent the, probably in tensel,agony WhiCh the odd quarter must suffer each week at such a brutal separa tion: r —The various temperance societies of the 'United States are said to have a total membership of 2,400,000. Of these the Father Matthew Societies , have the larg est number, 600,000, ; and the' good Samaritans: , and Ten:piers, "each number about. half a million members. The Sons of Temperance 400,000, Church . Temperance Societies about the same number, Temple of Honor 800,000, and the of Temperance about 200,000. —The Philadelphia Luger says during the /past week the following vessels loaded ; Itkvetreleuni n cleared front, this port: Brlg - Emchetta, for Triest, with 53,784 gallons; ship Westmorelmad and bark Johann, for Antwerp, with 463,131 do.; brig Altaireht, for Mayaguez, with 1,000 do., and back I.Eiboramus, for Havre, with 132,721 - do., making a total of 381,286, gallans for the week. Four ships, ,nine barks and eight brigs are now _ A NEW door-plate tuts been. invented *hick answers- the•pnrpose of door-plate and letter-box. It is so arranged that by llftitiit a small movable plate attached by. the brnges to the be* of the plate, it leaves an opening large enough to admit papers or, letters, and It also i bas tut.,at rangeclePt that- VY. lifting • t4e l small it Elm llarA PITTSBURGH GAZ A ittajiktiMty of Money. , Th e re is and must tie : L general scarcity of currency throughon the countrwite -1 cause that article - is so - superabundant. eve doubtless a - paradox to the unreflecting ; n everth eless nothing is more certain. The hie ry of this coun try for the last fifty years shows that money has always . . most same, and the rates of interest m • t advanced, when there was the largest ...lute amount in circulation. The r - ..n for this is obvi ous. As a currency i expanded, specu lation is excited, pricesere greatly raised,, ei3i and it takes a much larger amount of money to transfer equal , amount of merchandise, while ,e operations' of those who are engaged in influencing and controlling the immense amount of transferable property of all kinds held'for spectlative purposes absorb all the sur plus, and leave the money market in a stringent condition. ' Money, we must recollect, is scarce not in proportion to its actual quantity, butte the relative demand for tt. When, •sfore, In addition to the natural wants (if - tinne, the, speculative , interest comes, into market, the extraordinary demand 1s certain to-create a Pressure ; so that; practically, it Stos-awaysitteattrite, atilt' is now true, that an expanded currency will be most:searee whin It le most alma dant,;- that collections will be - moat un satisfactory when;._ the circulation is largest; and that .thesates of•interest will be highest when the outs of the banks are most extended. This important les son -the people must Ic are ; , and if they would have money plenty and cheap, they 'must insist that the amount. shall be reduced to its natural limit—to that point • where it is at par with specie. 'rhey cannot have an easy and reliable money market until that . which is called money Is truly so ; and we incur, no risk in predicting that a satisfactory state of trade will not arrive until the currency of the nation is equiva lent in value to the currency of com merce. . . Has the Chamberlain or his .Commis sinner ever Beene band of bounding tie ten? They dress in the unembarrassed style which for ages has been the cos tume of the male acrobat, and which is very like that in.which they were born. As they stand in a line With the men, hands on hips, the difference of sex is at first scarce preceptible. Nor, indeed, do they indulge themselves in any reserve of gesture such as might be cherished es a relic of modesty. They form pieces of a pyramid with the men, and when the pyramid is resolving itself to bits, are held by the heels, or distorted in any fashion permitted by-the laws of gravita tion. It should also be observed that the ladies ate subject tothe most perilous portion of the business, for the • obvious reason that the spectators have paid their money on an implied understanding of the sort. To do these women justice, they do not shrinx from feats that aston ish as well as disgust. A few years ago there was only one Menken, and she had a hard time of it if she were as sentimen tal as her posthumous Sapphics would suggest; but now we have got far beyond the wearisome "Mazeppa." It is a bad sign when a people hunger after cruel sport, and this female aerobe- Ling, if we may use the terra, is, not only unseemly, but cruel to a degree. • If the women are closely watches,4tfiejtBr to receive that their neiv& - Atteliiit `fit for' the sad work. Behind the grin of the mimethere is Ulook of natural fear and "disfrilst, as if a ghastly finish to the exhi• bition were constantly in sight. Their limbs, too, the arms especially, tremble when. the teat in hatutmust be repeated or prolonged, And what sort of training do these women undergo, brought up from early girlhood to such a calling? .-Thu.rsday afternoon last three 'little boYai aged five, seven and nine years, sena of Mr. John George, whc; resides near the canal, about a quarter of a mile below the locks at the State dam, left the leeks in search of flowers. going up the side of the hill near it. They had gotten but about fifty yards up the hill, when they came to a little dogwood bush filled with flowers, against which a large log. about fifteen feet in length by two feet in diameter, had lodged. The boys ap proached the. log from the lower side, and, unconscious of the danger, seized the bush and bent it ever to pluck the blossoms, when the log, thus freed, started forward far enough to catch the children and pin them to the ground, its weight resting upon the breast of one , and the limbs of the others. Their screams soon brought their mother to, their assistance, but her strength vrattnt; no avail for their relief, and all she could. -do was to send a messenger up to the locks for her husband and wait for his return. It was ten minutes before he, with other help, arrived, and, in the meantime, the child caught on the breast, aged seven years, had expired, scarcely living long enough to tell his mother that he was dying. The anguish •of the parent, as she stood by her child, watch ing its little face as it blackened with itsaf focation, withoutpoWer to afford It fend; Cannot be pictured. In words. Wheal:Ct. George arrived the log was removed and the other children rescued. Dr. BVearce was at once,sent for. He found the two children rescued tote but slightly bruised about the legs, the .log being kept off of 'them by resting upon the breast of their brother.—Chillicothe Regiateri:May 10:4 , . Women Gymnasti. A Frigntiut Accident. SIX 111771 DICED THOUS/MD dollar' worth of manufacturing , stock -has. , been sub scribed for a cotton mill at ColumbuN -Ga., and seventy-one others are in.tyro cam of erection at - Savannah and other points id the State for , the manufactUre'of cotton and woolen goods. One factoV at Augusta;has a capital of ,$0000pq; find last year turned out nearly six and, a half million yards of cloth. Atizona Cotton Pactory, established . at Claiborne Parish, Louisiana, since the war, is now paying a net .profit of 24 per cent. per sunhat.- This income is realized on' a capital of $BO,OOO, and with a partvf the machinery counted in the capital notiret at work. New Orleans is soon to - have a cotton mill with : ten thousand:spindles. Tun new Spanish COustituthin - does not seem to meet with the approval of the liberal journals of ,Madild, The, ob jections may be summed up, as follows; 'rile Constitution ,prpvides neither Ifor a democratic nor ,a monarchial .f.orm of government ;'but contains, an amalgams' tion , of contradictory principles,' Which are unsatisfactory -to both, Liberals and Conservatives. •Bo far - from being a bond of union, the Constitution; it is asserted t will - prove to be thfr source of new 4141 : WEDNESDAY. MAY 19, 1869 iMJST'VPII.tM'AT':: . : . : JOSEPH HORNE & CO'S, The largest sisortment ever brought to the mar- Yet of the Latest, Novatiles fii\te May Trade In RATS AND BONNETS, FINE !REND!' FLOWERS, WREATHS, DEES, WHEAT, 3EI. X,33, 3E3 Co 'DT .19 , LACES, CRAPES; GIMPS, ORM AMENTS FRAMES AND SUNDOWN& DB SS ,TRIMMINGS. KNOTTED FRINGES, HOOP SKIRTS, COR SETS, HOS,IEBE, In every else andirtailt3.. GLOVEL•er trrerr description.. KID GLOVII23“ot beat 'sashes. inehuting a splendid Ilnick all the Bright Shales. and in all number). - • • • • • ; I- PARASOLS AND ;UN UMBRELLAS osj every *in' Lowest Eastern Rates. 77 AND 79 MARKET STREET NEW CHAP AND GOOD GOODS FRINGES AND GIMPS In all itylea and color,. SILK LOOPS , FOR SACQUES FINE ASSORTMENT 01811.1 lIE NEW COQUETTE FA/:.PARASOL SILK PARASOLS & SUN VIBRELLAS. White French Whalehpue porsets, Parple and Mgique Blue Kid Gloves • A. splendid assortment of COTTON HOSIERY WHITE & BRO. lILLERIGGAN 1108 E. LACE ciErainyThi s. au styles, SILK 'emirs. Gene a Spring Undergarments. MACRUM, GLYDE & CO, 78 & 80 Market Street. NRW SPRING GOODS MACRO 6: CARLISLE'S .ziro„ 27 Fifth Avenue, Dress Trimmings and Buttons. }t-mbroideries and Laces. - Blboons and Floweri. Hata and Bonnets. Glove fitting and French Corsets. ° New Styles unto ley's Skirts. l'ars4ol.—all the new styles. Sun and Rain Umbrellai. Hoslery—she beet English makes. Agints for "Hurls , Seamless Kids." Spring and Summer underwear, Sole Agents for the Bemis -Patent Shape Col lars. "Lockwood , s "Irving," "West Bid," "Elite," Ac: "Dickens," "Derby," and other styles. • Dealers supplied with the above at MANUFACTURERS' PRICES. MACRITM. - 8; CARLISLE FIFTH AVENUE my 4 WELOON IPELLY, laartuhatarers aad Wholesale Dealers is Lamys, Lanterns, Chandeliers, • AND LAMP GOODS: 'AII6:O4ILifBON AND L'UBBIOATLNG OILS. 'XIMNZINFL., aro. • N 0.147 Wood Street. 8e9m22 Between bth and 6thAvennes. `" FRXIIT CAN;TOPS. SELF LABELING ,- • , FRITIT-CAN T()11. - ?. :co-LT.ll,s WRTG-I IT. .- • • • • • - _ lit-e-M4tl i t prepareCtemmpti TinnerV and .rOttenli - iperreCtOthaPle. and as am se the plain top, havLog_the tames of the various Fruits 'stamped upon the cover, ridtatlng from the center. and an - Index or pointer stamped ape* the too of ttsetn. , . , It is Clearly, Dlstbetly and Peniumently . . , .t6A.l3E4Liph , • . by merely pladlna the Dame of the'llalt the can 000talna r ocosite the_ pointer and sealing In the customs milliner. No preserver or fruit or good boneeke per wlll use any other aner mica seeing It.. . . . • . mla26 , WATER PIPES, *moonily Top! A Large assoitant, I spli:bE7 UENDEIIIIION;Lak BROTEMESS. : .0m übgtz itt•tk Poor., Rne, w.r.sumtqa• . .77=1 Also, a large variety of lraly 60 ets. a pair TUE NEW EILBKOIDERIEB, LACE, to NO. 27 GAS FIXTURES gExirr . H. cormas Aienue,noar Ilimltbtkeld Et. -r-, .--,-;1 , 4:;;;--j .1% ...,,F;? - 7,•PAP...s . ; 1 4 r, 1 C 9 V 4 qr , V*4I4*ArMM , !MPX trW V 4 1,4 , tll r"1 ,4?-:44 , leStkitVA,l4o 214 ekt:.* - " x +i {e}ttc~. ■ •--x 1 •• I :', ~, 12 • 2 ' a ... 'i., • 'D 1 = la a oci , --•:, ' i i i : 0 b oi We ' Al it4' iq m Ili 4:::• g 11111 +I. SI W 4 Z I=l W 2 . 1 124 Me Z i p a w r 4 a 0 1 .4 ..... , ,;„,, ua a va E-1 01 IFI w E 4 I" • 0 I P o 11 0 • W 4 I :4 0 VI i l ta 1 ' 0 4 1 i; E-1 4 * - ', • iyk , r 4 b E 4 I , 4 4 - pirl , , ci , , NEW SPRING GOODS JUSTOPE`TED. ' dT TIEFAIIIIffiE I%IIIIIIIIIPS', 82" 'Market Street. Prints, 'Muslin!, Dress- Goods, 811,1 - CS FULL LINE br Sit. K. SAC QUES, Very Cheap. ST. MARKET STREET. S't spa rIABR I IffcCANDLESS & (Lite Wilson, Carr & Con) • wawa:mug DEALIMB IN - Foreign and. Domestic Dry Goods, • . No. 94 WOOD MEET. Third door ►bore Dishunid alloy. TITTSBTIROIL PL W A. Wlromr SHADES, New and Hudtk)me besigns, NOW 0 ENINQ 107 Market Streik AR runs AVENUE.) EmbraclnCs isege and carefully selected stock of the newest designs from the FINEST STAMP ED GOLD to the CHEAPEST ARTICLE known to the tradg: All of which we offer st prices that will pay buyer. to examine. JOS. R. HUGHES & BRO. stal:01 , WALL PAPER. lig OLD; MEI MU 151 NEN PLACE W.l O . MARS EULLVS NEW !WALL PAPER STOEE, 181 Liberty4tred, SPRING GOODS ARRIVING DAILY. alli6 . CHINA. CUTLERY. GLAS, 100 WOOD STREET. I L NEW GOODS. ; FINE VASVS,. - i I 110)ItraWki4 AISID CHINA. 1 1 NEW tifTTLF.3, ' 1 DL"K tir2IITS, , - it . GrIFT GUYS, in to mot.: Iwo BETS, al a 1 A large stock of ' 5 ... SILVER 'PLATED GOODS il of all descriptions. .. Call and examine - Our goods, and we feel satisfied no one need feu to be suited. 4 1- • • .' R. 7, .E. 'BREED 4 CO. ; 1 100 -MOOD• STREET. DR. wElrrridEß CONTINUES TO TREAT - ALL private diseases, Bt Apt3 hills In all hit forms,' Oonorrnea. • (} test, thl , Orchi. and all urinary,diseases, and tae effects of mercury are completety eradicated; Spernuttorrhea or. betel nal Weeknesd and Imnotenbe, resulting , freM self-abuse or other canner, and ,- Vrbich. produces acme of,the following effects. as blotches, bodily weakness, indigestion, consumption, avension to society - manliness ; unmanliness ; dread 'of fature.hsenes,. loss of memory, indolencertursal emissionB;. and Malty so prostrating osedeal system as to render! marriage ' trosSAisis tee% Ina therefore Imprudent, are pennaanntly intred. ‘Persons limed with these or any otherdellyte, Intricate so Or long standing ritititutional Com laint should give the Meter a trial; be Stever f is. - , A•particniar attention Ivan to all Peptide com plaints Leueorrhea or Whitee, Falling, Inflame Motion' Or Ulceration erne Womb; °Tuttle, pruritic Amenorrhoea. Menorrhagia. Diemen. norrhoes. and !sterility or Barrenness % are treat. ed with the greatest success. It is self.evident that a physician who confines himself exclusively to tite•stedy of a certain class ondiseases and treats ,thousands of eases every year _Must acqulre greater skill in that specialty than in general practice. Tile Doctor 'Oubliettes, a medical pamphlet •of nflY pages that Pieta full exposition of venereal ana•private diseases; that can be had free at office or brmill for ll= stamps, in sealed enveloped. Burt sentence toilettes, instruction to the , arl Meted and enabling them to determine the pre. else attire of their coinpltants: • • .Thee' establishment, comprising ten , ample rooms, Is central., When it s not convenient to visit _the city, the Doctor 's opinion can be obr lathe! by giving a written Statement of the case, and medicine* can be forwarded by mail or-qx.. Press: • In some instances, , however, a personal examination - is absolutely necessary;'while In others daily personal attention is resit ired, and for the accommodation I such patients there are apartments coniketed with the ollice that !repro. 'sided with every requisite that is csOculetwi•to promote recovery, =Chiding: medicated vapor baths. All prescrlPtholl are prepared in tbe Doctor's own laboratory, iinder his personal' see petvhdon. Medical pamphlets at 'oMots • Item or Or ninil for, two Atm*, - No matter who • have Adieu read what be sail, Bouts U tO it. heudays 11t M. to SP. 14 - tilliCe,_l4o. 9 WYLIS LiTREET. (near Court “ifolite,s Pittsburgh. Pa. 111/ Nan% ilintir447- E ‘ —‘ ° 420 ' barrels . Try- w ; B. riod . 5 BRUSSELS COPRAMYER gie FROM ENGLAND. McCALLUN BROS., No. 51FIFir1-1 Rare 'veered eteant.ra t3amarla and Man-: hattan the VIP.ItY .I.i.EWEbT 13TYLEX of the E.I.GLISH DURRES. PAPJM!I, PAPE“ ALICIP OF =I EMI (REAR MARKET The latest Arrival They also offer a Complete / Line of DOMESTIC CARPETING. To which large additions altiliiillctkniergtde. A Display of •Goods Anal To any ever presented- la this nierket- /14 LOWEnr PIIIOEB. McCALIAIII 1111,013., ~o ax FIFTH' ormrEzi 023: !a( BET; WOW) D . - " • • :••, • CARPETS. We are now receiving our Spring Stock of Carpets, .'&c.; and` are pre- pared to offer as good stick and at as. , low prices as : anyliher . ,honse in the Trade. We the new styles of tinsSeli Tapestry, Brussels, Three 'Pips and'. Two Plys. Best assortment of inkratiCcarikis ' in the Market. . • BOYARk itosy.,-*::.Qo-,.,- • 21 FIFTH A Di 1 ' zitd:dikwT AUCTION SifaiES BY'S, SMITEBOI & 00. f - • , pooTs, siliweAAalitAarETS: -, FOR TSv , _ At, SMITHSON'S EMPORIUM, . • ,as AND 51. ,1127fTH A, • E r, •o{: Messrs. H. B. gh! &HEIM CO.; probrtwtor of the well known Mammoth •Anction,House spin Creating an excltement consequenttipon, the, ar rival of new goods ,which_ are being Sold markably low price:siGoodirofetetTvarietyi a , ht finest sewed hoots, the most, raihtollolo moral gaiters and anklet sboek blankets,' 'fishnets, • cloths. - cassimeree; emery. and carpets. Call and examine. , , , Zio trouble t t 4.. show goods. • Ladles'. • misses* and children's Pus at almost your crltn prises. All goods war ranted as renresented. acriA BY A, LBOGNIS BEAUTIFUL - SUBURBAN. PROPERTY., ON PERRYSVILLE ItOAD, 9N WEDNESDAY, MAY 19, at 3 o'elock,will be sold, on the premises of 31"..W..5,1118551.L. on the Perrysville Plankroad, one glue -north , of Allegheny SIX 81111.D1N6 SITES, Or three to eigh, acres each. viz: , . - • No. 1.. Cottage and' GrOundS; eight acres beautifully planted and distributed in vina yard! fruit, evergreen and delicious , trees Aind shrubbery; LPL ass rime nt. of the Omits-of the climate in bearing. Commodious'. stable. car riage and tenant houses under one root; rain wa-• ter cistern. and pure water spring at.the door. The Cottage contains seven rooms, three ,elosets and pantry . No. 9: A four acre lot adjoining abate, with stone foundation tor house.. ptile r pear or chard, and other improveinents: Nos. , 3 and 4. •Itach four acre lOts.tovered with, primitive forest, having very tine building sites, and never-failing stprinirs. • • - • Nor• 5 and 6 Each tur.te acres. liwns andlor est, and fronting 214 feet on, the ,Ferrysville Road. Those desirous ofprochring lovely rural homes will find in this property an unsurpassed collect- Mon or beautiful building atttes Lot.no. 1, par, ticularly, is &really magnificent place command log rich panoramic views ' and aboundtegln fruits of the richest varieties A critical examination of these premises ,is. respeitfally solicited. A. boarclarralk'from Federal street to the door per mits dry walitie g weath-rs:.? . Terms of sale wit. Plot of grounds and photograph of Imildius at the office of . AG, IMO GAVE, Auctioueer. 159 Peseral street:Arectieur mvl2 BY A.IIIILW/MIB. VOVIITEEN ACRES ilia Man- SlON,'at Homewood Stat!on.oii n PennSylva a -Central, THURSDAY if FTERNUON, May 20th, at 43i o'clock„will basold on the premises, at Homewood etation, on Pennsylvania Central Railroad, the very desirable residence and' pounds of I rank Va 3 Gurder, Esq., handsome ly situate near intersecti on of Homewood avenue and ,Frankstown road. The improvement is a neat 'indwell built two story Brice Double Dwel ling, in good conditt n,containing tell roomn.beli sides pantry, Wash house :aid coal house, marble mantle In parlor, range in kitchen, hot and cold, water up and down stairs. Also. a good' stress spring house,and a good stable wills tenant tionse over. ._, • The grounAi comprise fourterl acres' u nde re stood cultivation, wittia young orChardor chaise fruits in bearing, also,small irate and firemen. led shrubbery. , ' This lutatiun is nusurpisded for pleasantness, auditor extensive and beautiful views. The-at tention or those desiring, an elegant sulierban property is invitedloatils • bale and 'visitors Invi ted to examine sf•-• sZ"misis. • The sale will be DOsitive, wittier lI.J s il l be a special opportainin ty for purchash„i a'slr.orahleArinie i riy.. .1203.1 t ) ea• 81011 given to plummier. , 5 .... ~: . d. MCILWAINE. 1 v,. atekklit_tH SCH &FAIDAZ DIPOBTESS OF WOES, BIOMES, Gil, ac.; witoitiAzt ''s. . . ,• PURE ME'`:HIE 409 PENN STREET, `l, Have, Removed tO 'NOS. 884 AND 888 PENN , Cont;. Itl4 l venth St., (toi:xcnirly Canal, JOSlariip'6. - FDIVH li;co4 ltos.isis4 'ilia, tin; 19i laid 11611 "ruin TB Z . usex , .1 - . - ,,:iiiiittrtAartralal : ' . pew ' Distilled Pdre' Eye - "lildsliey. QUO - • zee- t o ! .. ~ = ~,• ME