10 tin dapits. —The Czar has signea the pledge. --Motor's is fifty years old to-day. —Vieuxtemps, the violinist, is writing an opera. —Punch. calls pearl powder the flower of loveliness, —Key West is plagued, - already, with yellow fever. —Can Porter be found at the Aurora Itorie ale house? —Two dollars a dozen is the price of eggs in Arizona. —Report says J. Russell Young is. to 'become a broker. —The spirit of the South—the cotton -.Fla.—Lowell Courier. —Velocipedes are to be need in some of the bull fights in Madrid. —Kentucky is again shipping tobacco down the Mississippi river. —The first through passenger, by rail, from California is C. F. Jenkins. —Punch calls the smoke of the Thames steamboats an-in-funnel nuisance. —Miss Rye is to bring a new colony of one hundred servant girls to Canada. —Brick Pomeroy's New York paper coats him enormously and doesn't pay. —The House of Refuge in Philadelphia was slightly damaged by fire last Thurs day. —Sangalli, the danseuse, took to sing ing ballads" recently and it said she sang —New York talks of importing En glish glow-worrns to beautify the Central Park. —Five million baskets is the expected yield of the Maryland and Delaware peach regions. —Verdi is to write a grand opera for the first performance in the new Opera House in Paris. —Hay- is so dear in some parts of nbrthern Vermont that the cattle are said to be sA,Uirving. —As the Alabama has gone to the hot. tom - of the sea it is natural that 'rash should settle the claims on her. —The sword presented to Gen. Wash ington by Frederick the Great, together with many other relics of his country's FaMer, , are for sale in New York. —Eleven hundred persons in England Tay the tax levied-ork all who keep more than ten male sefvants in their houses. —The suicide mania Is alarmingly on the increase, add it really seems to be a crime,to stop which, nothing cut be done. - -A journeyman baker in San Francis. co blew his brains out to secure a holliday which his employer refused to grant him. —The tree-traders are said to be disap pointed because the English cotttributlons to the Free-trade League are but about *MOO. —A female gymnast in London fell from a rope fifty feet high, and was caught by a party of gentlemen, without sustain ing any injury. —Recent excavations, made at Madrid, have unearthed heaps of• the debris of the conflagrations of many an auto da fs of the Inquisition. . —Punch skis Reverdy Johnson as the representative of America, has gotten all of the dinners and now Motley is coming after her desserts. —The police of New York are going to erect a statue of a "Metropolitan" in the Cypress Hill Cemetery, where dead policemen are buried. —Mr. Howard, 11. B. Minister to Chi na, having received his instructions, will go to his post by way of Europe, in order teconsult with Mr. Burlingame. —A sycamore tree in Belmont, 310., measures forts feet two inches in circum ference. The trunk is hollow, and will -comfortably contain twenty men. —The veil is now taken in France on a lease, so . to speak, terminated at the end of each year. Three nuns of Paris have just laid it aside for orange blossoms. —General Dyer now being vindica ted, the New York World wants General Fitz John Porter's case reviewed, so that he may be vindicated by court martial. Pitman,-the • inventor of the phono graphic system which bears his name, has published, at Bath, England, a complete •edition of the Bible in phonohraphic charadin. —A Ne w l m7Pert farmer, who , has ten acres of onions, ha estimated that he will 'walk one thousand miles in hoeing them. •We wonder , how . many (item* Wow, lean," will bee4ed in peeling them. —ln Pull, Personslwitting to see XIII "- son perform must secure their seats two week s in advance. While for e Patti, whose pop l ahi y ut little on the v im , - Oily a week or ten days is necessary. • —lden''oradvanbed fashion in Puts row wear silk coats. If they are becom 4/kg We can't ace why thpy should not be • 'worn' milli its they, are no more exptunilye 'than Some of the - imported cloths now --An M. C recently in debate shouted ' , Amiens P,htto, amlens Socrates, sed ma. j(ir Vinitas." The reporter next morn- lug made hie ar/ePh7" read, "I may con Plato, I may CUBS Boefatee, said Major —The London Jockey 'Club has black. _ balled the,Dnke of Hamilton, liPho,, in re ', - wage, proposes to sell all his horses and ; gilt the turf. If the late Marquis or Hastings had been black-bailed perhaps bls life and fortune might have been saved. —The Englishmen who Oppose the proposition to iegalize marriage with a ideceased wife's sister, urge- that suds' a lonise would result in most horrible 'y':;;;.c.4,17.1::: ryLl ..rig.%:;:i:liii;,::;;:a2Y;;;,j,,15:;;;;;;;:.4' 4'4E' ...1,C1*4%1•13',,V24."-41%*01-5*P".41-4.%#l44".t.t6ZASAXtlcig44i.V.,tte r 'f-4 :Tl/2..1%*-/X"Wi'"W";;;SCAP:'.I-.?-441**Mt;`" l t tv,S.,g , „4: .3tWa -47,V " ' 4 , V,,s• trotto,,, 4.,,ktti jealousy, and that wives would never al low their slaters to Visit thara when their huOands wart) at home. - 1 ' -7 one hundred thousand dollar dia. mood has beetfound at the Caps of Good HopOind fulled to the list of the leading gems •of the world. The native who found it was are that it wa s very valu able, and succe ed in selling it for five Nitit hundred sheep ; en oxen and a horse. —A Boston paper says: The statistics of our city show that marriages among the native poreatiort are decreasing. The single and simple reason of this is the cost of married life. Young men are not afraid of the blooming institution, but they can't stand the depleting ex pense. —The Young Men's Christian Associa tion of Milwaukee has voted, by a ma jority of two hundred and sixteen in a vote of nine hundred,.to keep their libra ry open on. Sunday. We believe they were right, although, in many places, a vote dh the question taken among a simi lar class of men wbuldhaVe resulted dif ferently. —All of those other men who have pet schemes concerning the management of the National Treasury are howling about, Mr. Boutwell be cause he has one tot', and besides has the opportunity to •carry it out. Put any other man with a pet scheme into Mr. Boutwell's Place and the howl would be just as loud. —On Wednesday last, a woman in Camden; while standing outside, upon the sill of a window which she was wash ing, in the second story of a house, fell sand was seriously injured. A similar accident, it will be remembered, occurred in Allegheny a few weeks ago. House keepers should take warning by these dreadful occurrences, and positively pro hibit their maids from needlessly risking their lives by this method. of washing the windows, particularly as, we understand, it is quite as easy, to attain the same de gree of cleanliness and brilliancy for the sash and glass without any, risk what ever. I Fashionable Costumes and Barbaric Dbplays. I said a good deal in my last about opera patrons and patronesses.. Since then there has - been an amusing attack upon the fancy costumes decreed to be necessary for the more expensive parts of thehouse. The Ibntleman, it is said, must wear boots which are not even Wm . :met-Proof, and in which he cannot walk for five minutes without inconveni ence. "He must put on, a coat, waist coat and trousers of ridiculous make and material, in which he cannot possibly ap pear in the day time, exeept in*provin cial town of RllllBlll. Ile Must wear a white cravat, which never looks quite creditable after it has once been used; gloves which are destroyed by the mere process of putting on, and off, and a hat which would give intense delight to the street boys ' in his neighborhood if he ventured to go forth into the 'sun or rain with it. - As for the paraphernalia of ladies upon such occasions,no earthly pen but that of the Countess Asterisk who writes descriptions of the fashions for mil liners could atempt to describe it. Their very bangles and black hair are enough to consume a captain's pay and allowances for forty-five years and a half at least. Some of the ladies have now taken to wear profusely deco rated helmets, of a red or golden color, and which are understood to be worth literally more than their weight of the most precious metal. It has come to be a fact, universally asserted and widely be lieved, that the scantier a lady's dress may be the larger is the amount of money which must be paid for it. The rage for ornaments is so great theit the price of diamonds and other ornitnental glitter is rising yearly, and a lady of determined views may very easily spend a Captain's whole property on gloves alone. British travellers used to be a great deal too ready to• laugh at the demure female bar barians who were wont, but a few years ago, to stand in the street of Moscow, at fair-time, in the hope of attracting admi ration by the pecuniary value of their clothing. The custom which these peri patetic philosophers so often rebuked has been,for some time past, adopted into our natioal manners. The price of an Eng lish lady at a play-house or a ball may be estimated, at a moderate average, as about three thousand pounds sterlir g, of course, exclusive of the inestimable Value of the dame herself."—London Corrrespondence Chicago Tribune The Telegragn from Europe to India. The new line runs from Thorn over the Prussian frontier to Odessa and Nicolajats;, through the Crimea to Taman; then through the Cducasus to Schuba on the Black Sea, which it crosses, the breadth at. that place being 170 versts. .Emerging at Cape Adler, it is continued by way, of This and Erivan to Teheran. The passage of , the Black Sea at Its great est width has been avoided, partly • be cause soundings both in. the Black Sea and' the Caspian have shown that the bot tom of -the sea desceuds'precipitously op posite the high mountainty and partlyl on account of the. 'boring' snail, 'which is a .danserous enemy to the cable tind;man alies to penetrate through the suirbund ing wire into the interior, where it' re mains and devours everything, of vegeta ble origin, even the, guttalgrctus itself. The shortest crossings have, therefore. ;been chosen. and the cable is protected by a wrapping of copper-wire, which, be- sides ita durability, Is poison to•these creatures. The new line jointhe one existing to • India at Teheran j a n d will be finished in the present year.: Hoping for a liCoHamm on'the Other tilde of the Atlantis.” . , American stocks and, shares suffered considerably, because they are evidently viewed with distrust, and though they may be taken on continental account, English holders, if they are determined to' sell what they posses, will be enabled to! escape the apprehended sacrifice, if any' serious discussion • should arise in re. lation to the Alabama claims. A partial collapse ott the other side of • the Atlantic would Perhaps be a salutary less ft for t i . who ' ate 'encnCragin,g war *dietrient tikatnet this coimt4. .Lon. doi . Ilerald, 'My 8. PITTSBURGH GAZETTE: M0N.1: 0 4,74.. MAY 2 4, 1869. WPPINGS. WORE has becm, resumed in several leading ,coal mines of the Wyoming re gion. This may be. - the precureor ofre stun iNpintionamalongpolls.thea fewwholedaly7.;igs Child wanbomWhich balarteedlizteen ponnds avoirdupois on the scale& - A inur been called the ''Welconicefitranger,"-afterlhe great Australian gold nugget. ' • THE Eighth Congressional. District of New York is the wealthiest rn the United States. It returns to the Revenue De-' partment this year fortyltiveineemekover $100,000,1 and more than-one thousand which are-over $lO,OOO, The. largest Is that of A. T. SteWart,43,olo,2lB. BARNET BitrunTon, on a wager of thirty dollars, carried two bushels of wheat on his back and three bushels in a wheelbarrow from Mapleton to Ocono mowoc, Wis., seven and a half miles, within five hours, and without stopping to put down his load for a moment. ... JACKSON KIRKWOOD the murderer of A. Knowles, at Wamp'Furnace, Penn sylvania, about one mo th since I was ar rested south of Fort ayne, nd.,' and it taken to Newcastle, Pennsylvania, where his trial will be held. He was- accom panied by his wife. 'Kirkwood killed Knowles with a shovel, Over which they were quarrelling. , , , BISMARCK said, recently, to a promi nent member of the North-German Par liament, that he knew .both Napoleon 111 and Francis Joseph were in favor of peace, but the leading ladies of their courts (meaning the Empress Eugenie and the old Arch-duchess Sophia), were constantly trying to bring about awar with Prussia. FASHIONABLE preachers in Paris now raise the wind for benevolent or church purposes by arranging lotteries of a very peculiar description. The prizes drawn are no other than themselves—that is to say, the winners have the right to claim their services as preacher& &c., for three or five days. The idea has, in several cases, been a very successful one. A strenrewnst citizen of New Or leans got his portrait cheaply the other day. He paid a trifle at auction for a fall length portrait of President Pierce, re presented sitting at a table piled with public documents, and holding the scroll of the Constitution in his hand; then sent for an omnibas painter and had the face altered into his own likeness. DISGRACEFUL proceedings took place recently at Falmouth, England; where a young woman was buried with extreme ritualistic ceremony, headed by a twelve foot cross. Incense was used in the church, the rector meantime kneeling at the coffin. The service was interrupted by groans from a large mob, mingled with hisses and laughter. I A scuffle followed, in which the'reotor's surplictwas torn. THE New York Sun of the 17th asserts that Mr. Greeley is the author of John Russell Young's exposure. It says Young's letters were submitted to Mr. Greeley, and examined by him, four days before,they were printed in the Sun, and then asseverates that they were published in the Sun ,becanse Mr. Greeley took no steps to punish or remove Young, con cluding: "Mr. Young has ,hinnself to thank for the commission• of the offense, and Mr. Greeley for its exposure." -,‘ IN the Paranagat District, in the South eastern part of the State of Nevada, dis tant from Austin perhaps 180 miles, is' a remarkabie mountain of salt about 70 miles south of the mines. It is, reported to be about five miles in length •and 600 feet in height. The body of salt is of un known depth. It is chemically pure and crystallite, and does not deliquesce on exposure to atmosphere. Like rock,• i t requires blasting from the mine, when ce it is taken in line blocks, and is as transparent as glass. Tan Portland, (Maine) Transcript says that Mrs. Caroline-E. Brown, of Water ford, mother of the late Chas. E. Brown, 1 "Artemus Ward," a ft er waiting long; by the advice of friends, for the public to erect a monument over the grave of her son, has determined b put up a grave ] stone at her own expense. In -further ance of this object the editor of the Trait. script has sent to her the sum of $31.50, principal and interest, placed in his hands as contributions towards the erection of a monument. Mrs. Brown has never re ceived a cent from the property of her son. . A'sts.n in San Joaquin, California, has in his possession a surveyor's instrument, on the front lens of which is plainly seen a beautiful landscape, with all the varied hues of nature. Some fifteen years ago, according to the owner's account, the in strument bad been in use, and was left standing- for a time, on the plain, in a scorching midday's sun, fronting a wood land. When again brought into use, a correct picture of the fronting woodland, with all the various colors of the land scape, was photographed on the lens, and has remained unchanged to the preseni time, BEN. WADE has been visited at his home in the "rustic village " of Jefferson by a newspaper correspondent. The "old war horse" received the correspond ent graciously. and made no secret of his views upon men and things: Ile thinks the reason why Grant dislikestim is ow. ing mainly to his being "down" on. West ,Poilit, and a disparaging way in ;which lie spoke of it; which Grant did not like; tlvat there should ,be no difficulty'in de .termining which is the true Republican party in Virginia, by, noting which one the late rebels support; that, Grant's pol icy will be a vigorous one, both in regard to the Htt-Klux and the Alabama claims; that the logic of Suinnet's. speech itt , iryc-, sistible; and that a _lab3r party **Mild , provea failure. A. CORRESPONDRI'M c , Of the Boston dd. vertiser, writing from ,New Orleans, says' that "'at the Booth the' prevailing dislike for our section will ertipent in Unpleasant fashion Three sudh bgly-chknoei have happened to Yu*, eorresnotnient two Nooks. One watonZelslgidg' where a hrutal Texan 401 inaie/ y lounging in the neighborhotiff ,of ,those whom he imagined to: be Northerner', andunaking disagreeable:remarks about the d—d Yankees. Again, while taking an uneasy nap on a railroad train one stormy night, I was waked by the load invectives of a burly planter who Was saying' to .a friend, over their freshly Yenal whiskey bottle, that' 'Daum the ankees, the whole crew , of them; be never saw any of 'em Without wanting to blow the tops of their •headcoff,?, and . so on. The third •was at the Troup House, •in Selma, where the landlord devoted all his spare time—and he seemed to have a deal of it—to describing hie exploits in of- • tering gratuitous insults te'egpet.tlikffiters' aid ecalawap. 'These instancealnlghtte offset py a dozen_cases of`petanitiatEnd; nett." • - WELIWN' 4- :AUF9 L Y , Maisatieteren aatl Wholesale Dealers la Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers,- AND LAMP COODS. Also, CARBON AND LUBRICATING MIA , BENZINE'; moo. N 0.1.47 WoodffStreet. se9al22 Beiween bili aria 6th dvernites. SELF, LABELING,: • ' ---:•;,.• ','• - ....- -;$:),•;,;..:;.•:,. ~• FRTitio; ti:Abikjilar3;' uiakttuaixt;i. viL..: ~., .. .1 ~ •,,„ , ". 4:i7j...htN.-;:::•'ri . , ccitraits , & AVRiCrIi,T; 1. r;:r.1ik.:..'1.e3 . • C. P I T TS PITI Cq: i k. 1 43‘:41 i:": . ;;?• --.--, We are now prepared to snimly Thiners and Potters. It is perfect, , simple,. and as cheap as the plain top, 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"3Dlstln;.tily,ret P.ennanes,tly by merely placing the name , of the !run the can contains opposite the_ pointer and sealing In the customary manner. preserver of fruit or Rood housekeeper will use anr.other after once seeing ntliZa - A large assortment, HENRY It, COLLINS, apH:h£7 24 Avenue, neat: Smith field St TRIMMINGS, NOTIONS, &O. DESIRABLE 900DS JUST RECEIVED HORNE & CO. PARASOLS, SUN UMBRELLAS, Knotted Fringes, black and col , ored, Gimp Trimmings, Guipure Lace, Dress Buttons, 411 shades, Sacque Loops, Eine Silk Fans, Invisible and La Pannier Hoop Skirts, French Corsets. Latest Novelties ia Hats and Bonnets, Ribbons, Fine Frencli' Flowers Trimming Satins, Eni,broideries, Lace Goods, Linen Goods, Paper Conan, Cuffs„ and Shit Fronts : of best makes. Geiat'sand Ladies' Underwear, the Patent Pantaloon Drawer, Morrison's Star Shin. EVERY DEPARTMENT 7wra7 AND 79 MARKET STREET. . NEW, CHEAP FRINGE _.ilea and SILK LOOPS FOR SACQUES FINS AiiBORTMENT OF S?I•FINS, THE SO COQUETTE FANI PARASOL' SILK PARASOLS & SU ?- ri URBRELLAS. White French Whaleboni) Corsets, THE NEW Purple and Mexique Blue 1 Kid Gloves A splend id assortmen tof COTTON 1-10S1ERY. WRITE BRO. BALBRIGOAN HOSE LACE 011 EMISEITES, all styles. SILK SCARFS, &e. Gent's Spring Undergctrinents. 1 • MAC.RITIVL GLYDE & CO, nky7 78 & 80 Market Sireet. NOW SPRING GODS MACRUM do CARLISLE'S No. 27 Fifth Amine, • Dress Trim Ming. and Buttons. • • • - Embroideries and Laces: ' ••. :" Ribbons and Flowers. - Bats and Bonnets. ' Glove fitting atuttlfronch Corseta. : New evies mrsdlePs Skins. t“ . ' --, Parasdle-401 the new styles. • enatind Rath Umbrellas. • I , • Boater)-the beat Zagllah maker. Agents for "Harrtei 13earahtu Stir.” Spring an Slane_ ,ez"N/44141rOarfl • mole Afte!)te. tor we Bemis . pato:wittily. pot- Wir. ta '•Lockwood'sil '!,W est 414" ” ertvh7.44lll 0 4ker atTles. • Dealerp,supplled with t.e abwre at DlANll#ACT:tlititfttqz tdEs.. MAORUM OARLIStE MEE FIFTH - A VEX m 74. DMOND • ILARE,.H , -• 'kW %field Aron; folik alma oureatt It., Creapr4 14a °nivel • lIITE Bile by GAS FRUIT CAN TOPS. ATER PIPES, r OLUMNEY TOPS 33 . y. COMPLETE. ND GOOD GOODS AND GIMPS In all a Also, a large variety Of Only 60 cum.a pair. E MBROIDERIES, =EMI 1114 for WIMP tot Aztp, • --• .:. - ;• • 3 1, 7. STr,' • r . 2 qSl) ' )1,7e '4444.1450",1:*44,:: ~. DRY GOODS •.; - . 1, fr. f -,. , . 4M :,,,c,p. .-. _ , : . • pi , •ft , , Iffi , tu abR --. OD , IM ----.... • 0 -si t) - el =c) ig_ 4 jai - _ m ini d • `7=--.--'!",..a.,,,T,1 , Pi g M co z PI 1' E z. o v 2 u 2 , rig . ki •., to . w • _ E-1 ••• ' & N . I=OPI t 4 •-it% 14. c NEW SPRING JUST OPENED, AT THEODORE F. PHILLIPS', 87 Market Street. Prints, Mnsline , Dross Goods, SILKS, SHAWLS. Fula, LLVE OF SILK SACQUES, Very Cheap. 87. MARKET STREE'II. apa CAIIMcCANDLESS & CO" (Late Wilson, Carr & 00.,) WHOLESALE torraxics IN Foreign and Domestic Dry floods, No. 94 WOOD STREET, • Third door above Diamond alley, • WAIT, P4EuBRIS, WALL- PALPER WINDOW • - SHADES, .Near and ;Handsome Designs;, ROW. OPIMIG AT No. 107 Market Street ()TEAR FIFTH A.VENITEO • Embracing a large and carefully selected stock of the newest dealtrus from the FINEST STAMP. ED GOLD to the CHEAPEST ARTICLE known to the trade. All of which we offer at prices that will pay buyers to examine. . JOS. R. H U GHE S U BRO. mh23:01 • WALL PAPER, THE OLD PAPER STORE IN A NEW PLACE, W. P. BEELESHALL'S NEW !yrnr, ; ; PAPER SThR . 191 Liberty Street, (NEAR MARE T,) SPRING GOODS - ARRIVING DAILY. mh6 GLASS. CELEA. CUTLERY. NEW GOODS., FINE VASES, BOHIGHL&N AND CHINA. NEW STYLES, DINNER SETS. TEA Oa% " SMOKING SETS, GTFT CUPS; A large stock of SILVER PLATED GOODS 'of ui descriptions. feSsialMAlnarge igity:llZe. B. E. BREED & CO. 100 WOOD STREET. .. DR., .WEEITT,_44 .. fIONTINUES - TO. i tlilgAi.T -ALL 4% - tioVerV e , 1 1 1:t 4. 13Mett i e ; ittAtr. lif,!a l i 4l 3 l urinary diseases, and titoeffeet• 'Of Mercury' are completely gradleatubpermeterrherk ,or, demi nal Irea.nese and 4mPotencl. Molding fro. self-abuse-or Other names; and winch produm ecme weak ofM e n o i l gowtnign effects, aabloteret. bodll,consumption, aversion to society. n umanlinellsOrread of future events, lons yr menity. la d oi ellee.,notitureel , omission., and noollioo Prottragm the sexual gystein as to ' render marmite-tin team; and therefore imprudent, are pernnimpily oured.• , Pewee ati filmed wl ,tli these pr any other delicate, lotricate or long staidding-solititutiOntil Complaint should 'give the Domes trial; %never (ans. A particular atlentioti_i Yen to all Femalecom plaints, Leutiorrime or W 'Met Tilling, rodent- • =Skin 'or Ulceration of the ' Womb, ales:111c pintails. Amenorrhoea. KenorriksArk, DYstr4l - and bterility or Barre . eft • ' ed with thergreatest sueitees. i - i,ii • i in L - .. :ioftillt.iissitaallet:ituivja ?Prrat il tt e bit Pb E lS cl ei r f if we g h tl is T nn : l i c" year must acquire greater akill in that specialty than one Monett* praettce. 117 ThO POotor u p e ib i lishes V niedleat pamphlet Of Panel tMit' vela lull expotition of venereal •an private 4 es, Oat can be bed free mince en li Mall Mr ,two stamps. la sealed pes. ire sentence' . contains' instrecUon 'tom e a lbite 'Mid enablitot them to Ifeterintati the' pre. elm • asters O r - oWAOOPIDishas• , t . tent : The eslablielimem, comprising ittnt rooMtas central.'" wheal. is not eowrenient Milt the (MY, the liostor's opinion can be oh- ' Ulm.] bv giving a vrritten otatement oe case, and media/nes can . be , fbrwardetb illy m an or ex prem. ln, wail lattanees. however. a persenal eireminatiOne it abrolutely nceersery. while in -ottere dailypersonsbattention is rent freili-nnA Mr the accoinittodation t f each olticAte there are apartments' comitecited with the once that are nro vided wit& evert requisite that lit - calf e vel ro promote recovegy r . including „memos . apor batbs. 'All nreecrons ' ark Prefla in the Vector's own labbnatory.tuder his, onal su pervision. Medical pampldeli at in tree; or Be mall for two, stamp No matter whir have failed, read what he Hours (lA.*. to El Pt. Sundays 1* 1M WIP. 1.• inseyott wymis , quicsT. (iimmeb utat,....._lurit r. IHI rnw TE relB WhltetLime. % tr fcasuritia.l , 1 4" 3:.~_ky r ~ !MUSSELS CARPETS, HMS, /10. 1 The Latest Arrival • .F.ROX ENGLAND. McCALLITM BROS., No. 151.EIFTH" AVENUE, rethanAi ateam"rg Samaria r and Man• YLES of the ENGLISH MARKET. They also offer a Comple;e 'line of BODIESTIC . CARPET/111g. To which lar g e additions are daily bein g made. A Display of Goods Equal 3',Tvg..htillo'ipsr.esented thls market at . -mccALLuit BROS., V*. 4 r.E.4474- ; ap23:h9S(BET: WOOD & 831711PfieLD; tilE r IS, 1869. 49. Pt Po .1M WINDOW SHADES, LADE AND NOTTINGHAM CITIELTATNS, New Stbekjustateeeiyed. LOWEST PRICES -E,VER OFFEBED:' • Myl9 lU,el , 4 i I ‘ g-= u s ." a . 4 a ij_. , . J. L. A. Z. STIMNBOR. & S'tEVENBON • • rTITSBIIPSH. PA. DISTILLERS AND DEALERS IN I • Pure Rye;. Wlaiskies. BRANDIES, WINES, GINSAC., No. 87 Sec.ond Avenue, sp2o TABLISHED BY A. & T „Or RALLY, 181:4. W. M._ GORILY,• larrtor,,pnArE GROCER, No. 271 Liberty Street, Iltruccr„P OPP. EARLY ROM.) se :ylB . - STNYLN..- um A. :. Air STEEL , E & LSC!N, • • Commis:slots- Dierchanta, AND DIGALZRB IN FLOOR, GRAIN, FEED . fete. No. 93 OH/QSTR.E.M. near East Carsiiidori, 1 ALLEGHENY arr. PA. W. C. 41.1tBISTROZtG, Successor to Fetzer .t Armstrong,,. PRODUCE COMMISSION AERCHABT, inns No, 25 -MARKET STREET. Krms. ... JAB .P. ItICEALUT. EIL .. COMMISSION M.ZRCHANTS. AND DLit...T.4S IN • MTH,' GRAM, SEEDS, MILL FEED, It., 349 Liberty St., Pittsburgh, T . J. SLAINcrEALIta Wholesale and Retail Grocers" srukitalio.'3os 'PENN STREET. LiDrFTLE, ' BAIRD az. PATTON, Wholesare Grocers, Commission Mercbante ealers Inrroduce, Flour; Bacon. Cheese, Pleb, Carbon and Lard 011, liOn, NawVass; MUM:. Yarns and all T": 46 burgh Mann attires tenerally. mie and 1116 o4COND ET, roniFszurronTh----r Erg; ._ N&WALLAC.p Whole §s IIitIM I ROCEES AND PROD GCE DEAL. . No. 6 BLYTH STREET, Pitet &burgh. lamrss JO/171rIlOtrat...V.DW.. 801 3 1 11/..,..W1t. H. BOMBS. MEWL HOUSE &BR,OL, rata u • cesson,to JOHN I. HOUSX . CO., Whole- Grocers and Conanlsedon Mgrchnlite, Cox ner. of Smi th field end Water Strewth. Pittsburgh. •• •f. • - KOOFINO BLi OF VARIOUS QualitieS atid .z•-pathaniar/ittetttbSti tolaihigeßlate and piarlut tatteatota. particuipat tad antes 4 1 Vjarlit ". No. 48 never pAvenue, • ` PriT B iMlieli. PA 'au' vsts I.Pir THE . COIIitT OF irintiaTica A, SESSIONS. et Allegheny Vuenty. le the bolter of the Tgestlon o r Canton streetMWS, 1059. Petition orrreeholderg ea u en neal, On motion' of A. 11,11rown, •Attorner Tot-petl &tonere, rulergrauteg to hallow eauaetwily Canton street, bozo ldtarnepe street t o the attaihnge• liele-rlverle the' 14th 'trim' or Pittsburg:J , ihoehtzult btelosed and Tgentetl. - nw ' • . J. W. AZ .fdd. niylo:j64l4lo ' • 'Attorneys for Petitioners. _____ ____________________________ . - . x 4 1 .1towitasos kr,o., ..,, 1..5.r OP 'CARD if ;SEERY. CONPECTIOSiiItr ter, CREAM and DINT.Sti SALOCII,, 83 Smithfield inreet, cotter of DiaMond' alley, Pittsburgh. 411 0 • Parties. and families an :with, Ice . ' Cream and Cakes on short notate • MERRIMAN X& 'MATHER% • 514 and 6 lau4bert tm z inne damen,, Denlarc In Arnim sa /*AM 044IPETS AND OIL CLO BARGAINS AND MeFARLAND & COLLINS, . Nor 71 and 73 FIFTH AVENUE, (Second Floor) iMEOZ4EItS OF PITTSBUR6H, PA 11 Y -.~