IE! ins littibut Gaititt. THE AWAITING - •,... . . . A TiLiGitlarr !SOY EICHILLZE. ~• -. Do I not hear toe gate turning? , Was it, the latch that then tell? No! tbe zephyr murmurs Tea:lo4 Through Is quiet poplar OIL ~... . 'Menne! Uwe tdge4ow was parted. Rustling W tie one tbr onsh I c'crept, No! &Mita, ed bird then darted From the pee. and onward swept. 'he still air Is Wending. aspersion& .. In g sws n is sendlnc r the silvcr pond. ' , i I !t lightly moving tVelsstrewn Path? 1g ;run Is proving sat the vi eight it bath. white sblmm'ring at, It's sheeny WI? there Is irinum*ring hadowedyewen *ill.. e from heavenly clearness all happy descend. . unseen in h, r nearness, d with kisses her Alen d.. A TOICe. with tionlylo a; i Not the oleo Ripples u'> , Hear I hot f.! Overthe Nol the ti.ll g 11 Illpermes ft I , Do I not ree Shining wit No! the pine 'Elaine% the And Boni wh i The momen t Melt she Camel And waken HEXER'S. .rers are scarce in New —Farm la Hammbire. —One of N Las the gout. —Train, w San Francis .. •Seventy -t the milk of 0 —Bucyrus : . d Youngstown, Ohio, ob served Sunda . as decoration day. —A..negro, lecturing in Georgia, as serts that Adam was a yellOw man. • —A - wonderful violinist, only seven years old, is astonishing Kentucky. ' —Rice birds are belieing their name by eating the wheat crow in Georgia. —San Francisco is not yet a quarter of a century old a has 150,000 inhabitant's. —Newark c ergytnen have decided that it is immoral run the horse cars on Sunday... ~. , —A large n tuber of freight cars for, ' the Pacific • oad arrived in St. Louli on Monday. - ' .. —Bavaria s adopted the Werder sys eix,Elll, tem of breech oaders for herinfantry ar (1 1 Jaeger regime ts. —Happin , is defined as being per fectly satiate iwith what we have and with what we aven't. —sBo.ooo is' the heiviest income re .turned in Iowa„ and Gen. B.T. Winslow is the happy tassessor. —Flowers-were so scarce in Augusta, 31e., that the decoration ceremonies were postponed for Oie month: I —That: tut-t u-tnnitte Pfau, the pfau- 1 ._ . _ 'I most man in s profession, is not alto gether pinn-lt,l6ss having had another pfaulr —ln Itli a_delicate school mistress punishes re tot 7 pupils by dosing them with thict eof rhubarb *lnstead of 1 spanking them. , ' •' ". . —A. henpecked, unfortnriate man says the most remarkable organ In the,world is the; organ of speech In woman: It is an organ without stops. • j - -Newman Hall says the matter of Bi vrYorks' blonde actresses en heard from last, was in • O cheese factories squeeze A COWEIi are of less importance than the settlement of the Alabama difficulties. _ —A little ill named QUlllpy living at .Kendallsville, Lidiana,'.while the family -was at supper, went to • the swill barrel, fell in and was found there dead. —Rev. Dr. Fowler; of Chicago,. cells the theatre ".the suillotine of the soul." He probably means that it cuts off the head and leaves the legs!— World: —A temperance society has been form ed at the Veejee Islands, and the King and Queen and one • hundred and 'sixty persona in the town of Ben are niembeis. --Arch.duke Louis Victor, youngest brother of the Emperor of Austria,. is now in New York. He is said -to look exceedhigly I like the unfortunate Maxi -The Continental Hotel and furni tare, at Long Branch, were gold at auc lion last week for $130,500. The orig inal - cost, a year or , two ago was $350,000. • —A Bt. Louis court has fined a man 1100 for ehooting dead a bey who was picking a peach from his orchard. ,Boys are very plenty and peaches very scarce about Bt. Louis. . ' —The Boston Advertiser admires the art of chromo lithography and suggests as appropriate subjects "The Barber—af ter Beard; The Miner—after Cole; The Walk Home—after Church." •' •• '' —An exchange says': "The 'Marquis of . Bute is celebrating hhi new religion by pilgrimage and prayers and tears about Jerusalem." We, should like to know , whether that last is teen or tares. .. —The West Yankee notion is a grand one, being nothing than a tnine.eo n „- tinentolirallWay . frem 4 Affitatic to,the a - Feeble., across a:ape and d ais .. • It wili, hardly be compll ted in our day and gen eration. - • • - ' - " • 1 •` —11: process Ina recently .been iiiveited in Midrigaii by :Which Marquette, ore vas be convertedilnio malleable Iron: In forty Fi mlnutesi 'Prdoteged and ' - the irgordA73., : —Nine WillianiTmoses tedetute the: greater part' qrthi !equestrated of the PlePeseg ttli(4or.of4loo3l towardidefivirii the sipeaees of , an edifice werthy•Oftlie fluevollettitni . dr Pletedeetticuta -- -"-: ,/ , • 10,• _ 444 - : t h a . ,d i ty. . ofl6 , 3u - bil received ..telegram hum the, frown-re ,gioaa of 79tdarsd, the ban* of*l4o had to tniverie 800 miles ,to oideito reach.l4lsinfors, the extreme telegraph office in North ;amp°. ...guogarrndsee niftily all tbe wine made in the +Marian empire,' about thirty minion aims:. It is tiOrth .the spot sbout•two dollars aim:rely but notwith. , ;, I • '•ra. , 'MWM standing its cheapness only about one per cent. of it is exported. —ln Waverly Place, New York, a family of three persons reside. The papa, ilkfittol*n yeartrold. the mamma fourteen, and - both attend - school. _They have a small.child, who makes the third memller of the family and is only a few weeksold. —A beautiful lady in a New York street car lately actually refusied to accept a seat from a working man, saying he must be tired after his day's labor. It has been ascertained that the lady came from Philadelphia, and resides on Green street. 11 he King of Hanover appointed Dr. - Oen° Klop to edit the works of Leibnitz, and that gentleman has issued five yob umeslready, but the Pruesian govern ment has ° caused the work to be sus pended, because the Doctor's feelings are too Hanoverian. —Last week there were in Chicago three homicides, eight accidental or sud den deaths, six accidents or affrays re sulting in life long mutilation, if not in death; and two suicides, with ten appli cations for divorce in a single day, This is a pretty lair week for Chicago. -Quite an extensive task is under taken by a Society - in Springfield, Illi nois, which proposes to form a collection of all books, pamphlets, and newspaper and magazine snicks, relating to Preal deni Lincoln and the war. It is the in tention to deposit them in a room in the foundation of the Lincoln monu. meat. --Smoking is to be prohibited in the Boston streets during the coming jubilee. Smokers could wreak a fearful vengeance by rfusing to attend the jubilee at all. So many men are smokers now that they ought to b; &tower and refuse to be con stantly slighted and treated by a con stantly decreasing minority as if they were drunkards or lepers. —The steamers Germania and Hansa, formerly belonging to the Hamburg, Bremen and New York mail line, com manded, by Captains . Koldway and Heg emann, are to sail on the 7th of this month, as the second German North Pole expedition. They are to be furnished and equipped for a two years' cruise, and are to follow the wit coast of Greenland, and attempt then - ce to pierce the central Arctic region according to Dr. Petermann's plan. The railway - dyer Mount Cenis, which is' temporary method of transit only un til the tunnel is completed, is called the Americanrailway, Its inventor, Mr. Fell, who built the one up Mount Washington, - being styled an Ainerican; and we were promised ride in real American cars. The time of starting was 7A. Ir. There was a great crowd of all sorts at,. the sta tion, a lively fight for tickets at - the ,pox oille,e (for the perfect French system has not yet reached the other aide of the Alps) and then we waited till 7i o'clock before - -- The train ready to go consisted of an engine and two first-class passenger cars. The carriages were about half the length of ours at home, with seats on each side, so that the passengers face each'other as in an , omnibus, and with windows at the sides from which it is difficult to see out when one is squeezed In tight on the seat with his back to them. The cars are also very narrow, the track being only three feet six or seven inches guage, so that they are not much more cbmfortable thin an omnibus: The fare, first. Class, twenty-five, second class, twenty-two francs, from BUM to St. Michel, the time occupied in the„passage being from four to five hours. The locomotivea of these trains are small, compact and powerful; their trucks, as well as those of thecarriages, set well in the middle, so that they can turn very short curves. The track has three rails, one elevated in the centre. Besides its ordinary driving wheels, the locomotive has two horizontal wheels which press this third rail on either side, and it is by this strong traction that the train is pulled .up. The carriages have corresponding wheels for the centre 'rail, bat their only use is to keep the train on the track. Both the cars and locomotives have double sets of brakes, one for the ordinary and one for the centre rail, so that they can screw the cars to the track with the grip of a vice, and render it almost impossible for the carriages to run. away. There is every precaution against accident; and •I should only fear the snow storms ot winter and perhaps an, avalanche in some places high up, which are not roofed in. We began to climb the hill directly after -we left the station, exactly as a carriage drawn by horses would do. In `Tact, our track ran parallel to the carriage road all the *ay. was just as steep and made ;the shbrt turns of, the latter. Oar train seemed to be a huge.live reptile, with legs claws, and crawled np bylts own power; it literally dug right up 1111, and we felt.ourselveS mounting, and looking back, could See the steep incline. Of the Curves, wherithe wheels got a good grip of the rail,•„we moved :with ease and more rapidly than on a straight pull, where the. locomotive evidently labored more, and we rose more slowly. _ • The steepest grade on the road is one foot in nine ftet, but this is only fcir short diatatices. The rise of one in twelVe is more tOmmon; and the least' (of which , any notate taken),ls one M. twenty•five. The, curses :are so short as , to.be startling,. :We seemed to turn in a space as small ,eaan ordinary wagon could. The short esparteves are on a radius of only , ;120' feel,' that is; our train would run round a eixple'ol4 • 240 ' feet in diameter._ Out , track Irifitall the time in sight, behind 'I /and beforis;iiinning along th e steep hill. aides, and ` Constant like a coat: . pressed letW. B * • 1`1 . 04'4a.7n 'uP-With triumphant ease, ritthighniong the grand snow Peaks llke *eisunquerop, The. valleys ,open behind yda, with their rivers and brown villages, the. great .panorain a expanding with every ieVplution of the wheels.`' You skirt Precipices and look down upon nestling villages and 'green fields; yoMptish your way no among the Inowy regions, th sto n e hots tit . the bagging, half naked,. , dirty peasants, and the refuge houses of the 'road. are Whisked plaid. rocky head.' asi' :~~' ~ a !MM (From the IlartforeCourant. Felps - Rallstay Oyer the Alps. • Pews, April 24. ;aa': ~:1~. .. - , . . • • • ' :44 PITTSBURG:if GAZETTE : lar.ds, through tunnels and covered ways, over deep gullies- and tracks of ava "tench* rifling always higher and higher, as by no expenditure of strength, Into a purer air, among peaks of. 'train snow, among The silent sumits of the enduring Alps. The day was superb, with-blue sky and fine air, and it was so warm, even in the snow region, that I needed no ovencoat. Our view was for the most part uninter rupted and magnificent, • The summit, level is about 6,400 feet above the sea,and before we reached it we passed into a coy: ered way, built of wood at the sidei and arched with iron, and were immtirred in this, in the ascent, descent and on the level for four or five miles, I should tnink; dark, unpleasant passages, made worse by the smoke and fumes of the locomotive. These covered ways are absolutely neces sary as a protection against avalanches in many places and against falls of snow for long distancei. Through the chinks of the boards I Could see snow piled up Ligh along the way. The summit station is in one of theie long sheds, and is gloomy enougn. We made the descent more rapidly than the ascent, swinging around the short bends with considerable velocity. i The brakes were jammed hard down un til I could smell the odor• caused by the friction. On the descent I saw the frown ing forts of BrumOnt d'Essilion, on peaks h;gh above the abyss, through which the Arc foams and roars, connected with the road by a thread of a suspension bridge over the gorge, called the Pont du Diable. The forte are being demolished now, un der the agreement between France and Italy. Lower down, and about ten miles up the mountain from' St. Miele], we caught sight of the rubbish of the open mg of the great tunnel, .which enters the mountain at Fourneau. It is to be eight and a half miles long, and. it is expected to be completed in 1871. It is no doubt a great and interesting bore, but if I de. sired a pleasure trip, I think I should prefer the raid of Mr. Fell over the mountain to this hole through it. I talked with a locomotive driver on our train, by the way (an Englishman, as they all are on this road), who insisted that Mr. Fell is not an American. He knew him well, lived near him in the north of England, and said he was not an engi neer at all, except so far as this invention was concerned, but was a dissenting cler gyman.. He is certainly a dissenter from the ordinary line of railways. The en gineer was an excellent specimen of an intelligent, illiterate English mechanic, with a drawl and nasal twang in his speech that a Cape co man might envy; and he.gave me a great deal of valuable information about the road, which I might here impart, if your , readers cared for valuable information ' which I suppose they do not. He wa takin' a day h'off for pleasure, he said, and goin' down to see the work on the big bore. 'Twas a nasty , bit of work this of run ning twice over the road daily, as he did, and only getting twelve pounds a month, .for the job, especially in the winter ; with the snow-and beastly wind. There have been only six days the past winter when they couldn't run, on account of snow, and then the passengers had been carried over the break on sledges. lie explained to me the construction of the locomotive, the application of its power, the working of the breaks, and the wh ole thing, so that I think I can build a road out to West Hartford, over Prospect Hill and to the Tower if anybody desires, when I re turn. Sealed proposals, enclosing stamp and photograph, can be left at the Pro bate steps. 1 said to the engineer that I auppORCI tlTmposstnrE - for the locomotive, with three rails to get off the track. Well, he said his machine got off once last winter. The fact was, that the thing had got the upper hand of him, and run away with him. He spoke of it as if it were a horse. He was running with the locomotive alone, takin' her down the mountain, not mindin' exactly, when he found he had got on so much steam that he couldn't hold her. He was gobs' down the one in nine, round them ere nasty curves, when she started. He shut off, and jammed down all Abe brakes,, re serve and all, but she only appeared to go the faster. Away she went, like the -- (so he said), whisking round, and at last bounded off and went slam ag'in a rock. "If she'd, a gone over the ravine on t'other side; I wouldn't be here to tell ye of it." A Novel Hallway Incident. The Titusville Herald slys: In our yes terday's issue we menticned that a part of the track of the Oil Creek Railroad near Gray's Mills had given way, and allowed one car to sink into a bed of quiek sand. We have since learned that the break occurred where the track was, laid _across a peat bog, and that it took place while a gravel train which had been run on that part of the track was being un loaded. Three of the cars began to sink rapidly, in a few minutes after the work of unloading commenced, and in a short time one of them was below the surface. An attempt was made to draw the other two on the track, but it failed, and dur ing Sunday afternoon and yesterday the cars continued to sink, and at last ac counts they were about twelve feet below the surface. About two hundred and twenty-five laborers were at work yester day on the track, but the relaying of it has been found more difficult than was at first supposed. Duringlesterday the paisenger trains were run as close to the break as poisible, and the passengers, baggage and express freight, were transferred. The trains were delayed but a few `thinutes. It is expected that the track will be repaired by , thit evening, The-bog, is quite large, and where; the track crosses it is about one hundred yards broad. It was sounded in several places yesterday, and found to be About thirty-eight feet deep. Tau effect of the coal miners' stisPeu- eion on transportation is reported by.; Manch Chtinkpapifthus: About tWelviti' hundsediboatsvuthu Lehigh Canal; /*it / "Pr e o ''4l / 2 6/ ligi W which' '0180:VIOP-; Sand men are t hr own OA of 00 1 0 0 3 1 4e* Tee, Lehigh'aid liituOehannS•;Rallroka. has now ,butorikt, coal train running. On. Wednesasi twentymine coat trains were discontinued, throwing out one hundred: and seventy four'.; men,. or - six to, each train. Ail the regular coal trains onfthe Lehigh Valley. Railroad have been dia. =tinned.: - • , A COIUMBPONDEBIT writes from' Salt Lake City, under date. of May 20: "I hearlumors of approaching trouble be tween President Young and the Mormon contractors and the • Union toad., 'The directors are East; safe ontiof the reach of arrest, but the road may be seized by the' persons who built it. President Young'e .patience Is nearly exhausted, and the ad. muted debt to hini is $BOO,OOO, and the unsettled accounts are $BO4 00more; =in URSDAT. JUNE 3, 1869. ' GAS 7rJELDON & KELLY, ltanntacdarera and Wholesale Destiny to Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers, AND LAMP GOODS. OLRBON AND LITBRICATENO MLA, - 33 , pizirorm.. &o. No.l 7 Wood Street. neknr, Between sth and eth Avenues. UIT CAN TOPS. EU • • T.CAN.12,01) ' . /.. • I '• ''..tA.k3lC-1-1.11:;,:•1- ': itHt 4 l ,\ A - 2'' • 1 :1 • P•ci . 1 ':i> •••,: `.l Irh 'are now prepared to supply Tinners and Potters. It 19 perfect,. simple. and as cheap as the plain. top. having She Mutts Of the yarn grafts stamped .upon the cover. radiating from the center. and an Index or pointer stamped upon the top of the can. • It is Clearly, Distinctly and Permanently .T_sA333o..Talarl s by merely placine the name of the fruit. the can contains opposite the ,pointer and sealing In the customs'' , mannsr. No preserver of fruit or good housekeeper will use any other after once RP mine it. mh2.5 WATER PIPES, CHIMNEY TOPS A large assortment, fild Avenue,near Smithfield St TRIMMINGS, NOTIONS, &C. DESIRABLE GOODS JUST RECEIVED HORNE. & CO. PARASOLS, SUN UMBRELLAS,, KnOtted Fringes, black and col ored,(Gimp Trimmings, Guipure Lace, Dress Buttons, all shades, Sacqae Loops, Eine Silk Fans, Invisible and La Pannier Hoop Skirts, French Corsets. Latest Novelties in Hats and Bonnets, Ribbons, Fine French Dowers, Trimming Satins, Embroideries, Lace Goods, Linen Goods, Paper Collars, Cuffs and Skit Fronts of best makes. Gent's and Ladies' Underwear, the Patent Pantaloon Drawer, Morrison's Star Shirt. EVERY DEP.A.RTMENT COMPLETE. 77 AND 79 NIARKET STREET. torn NEW, CHEAP AND GOOD GOODS ! FRINGES AND GIMPS In all styles and colors SILK LOOPS FOR SACQUES PINE •SSORT)IENT OF SATINS. THE NEW COQUETTE FAN PARASOLS Also, • large variety of SILK PABASOLS & SUN USHRELLAS. White French Whalebone Corsets, ' / Only 60 cts. pair THE NEW Purple and Monique Blue Kid Gloves. A splendid assortment of COTTON HOSIERY. WHITE & BRO. BALBRIGGAN HOSE. LACE'OECCIIISEITEIL all styles. BILK SCARFS, ENIIROIDERIES, dent's Spring Undergarments. MACRITAI GLYDE & 78 & 80 Market Street. NRIV SPIIIIIO GOODS MACRU3I /c, CARLISLE'S No. 27 Fifth Avenue, Dress Trimmings andlii!kiirul. gmbrolderies an.; Lica. stbpons and Bits 'ad Bonnet!; Move fitting and Frencb Corsets. 'Mir Styles tires leyle Skirts., Paeasolr—Bll.the new, sty/es. • :Ben and Bain Umbrellas. - • liosteri—ttie besi . Bniatili Makes. • Agents for .•llarris , Seemleek gide. Spring sad Summer underwem: • • Sole Agents for theitiOsili z ratxxi Ism "Lockwood's ttirristios • " 1174r,iite; vAlkal." , Dlckeris,*.t Gttiwim; 9 . 1 I the-abet DiAIIXTFACTIJR VI.Sy P - ;•• r • • • . FIFTH Altzx oini; CIOTIIO, UNMAN OIL CLOTO you WINDOw TicANcIPARENT ., 2: WINDOW ell ADllth T' an TAtiL4 AND NV OIL .CLOT 3. 1 ‘ Nymitr t.• •• ..1.• 4Di 11 SO and 1118 *Kt 0 MEE _,r A I - 4 _. - , , HENRY H. COLLINS. BY LACE, &e. 001- , t. IWO other 1••1_, f I . pas. r j . , ,f' Ell NEM IMRE F LIPS. sued ---, DRY GOODS. O 03 L ID P=. O p 4 z wag ci z ,t 1 P 4 g G I E-'4' 8 ral 0 44 I=i 1 " 0 E. "1 ra via r 9 I=l te4 p c:4 iro t ql 6.4. NEW SP ING GOODS JUST OPPENED, THEODORE F. PHILLIPS', 87 Ma ket street. Prints, Magi s, Dress Goods, SHAWLS. sum, -rim LINE OF SILK • Si A C QUES, / - Very Cheap. S 7. MARKET STREET. S 7. ap3 Cl!tli&ilecVirti?cWeet Co., waoLzatiat DEAL&RS IN Foreigut and %medic Dry Goodß, No. 94 WOOD STREET. Third door above DI fond &LIM I PITTSBIJR6II. WALL! PAPERS. . PAPER Ai rim • WlNDOldif, SHADES, -• .OF New and Handsome Designs, • NOW OTTNING AT C L I No. 107 Market Street (NEAR FIFTH AVENUE,) • Embracing a large 1.10 carefully selected mock of the newest designs Irma the FINEST sTemr- ED GOLD to the CHEAPEST ARTICLE known to the trade. All of which we offer it prices that will pay buyers to exaMite. JOS.• B. HOMES & BRO. mbkhge - WALL PAPEIL THE OLD PAPER STORE IN A NEW PLACE, NIT: P. M*IIALL'S NEW WALL !PAPER STORE, 191 Libfrty Street, (NEAR MARKET.) SPRING GOODE, ARRIVING DAILY. nlll6 GLASS. CHINA, CUTLERY. 100 WOOD. STREET. NEW GOODS. FINE TI7ASES, BOHEMIAN I AND CHINA. NEW STYLES, I • DINNER S ETS TEA SSIDEING SETS, 1 GIFT CUPS, A large stock of . SILVER PLAITED GOODS of all deicriptions. fe Ca ta .4 Tong: gticiedbrigditze. R. E. BREED & CO. 100 WOOD ISIMEET4 Mt. WHITVIkit caNTIMEipli TI) TREATALL i private ameasest Syphilleitt &itstrm,' all nr ary diseases, and the effects of merc ury are , 1 completely eradicated; Spernietorthes or semi. nar eakness and „Impotency, retuning Jr9P l self.% nterotiether+ cense', land *Web , prouticet 1 • acme of the followlegeffects, ss blotenea, bodily weakness., indigestion, commloptiOn,AVention so society, . unmenlineSs," dread of 'future 'AVentif,' loiti or memorY. indolence, nocturnal !einissione, and •lnaft se. prostrating the sexual system as to render. mutate urmatisfactOry; and therefore Imprudent, are' permanently cured. • Persons Sr. Aimed with these or any other delicate, intricate or long standing coestitutional complaint should give the Doctor a trialtrbe never falls , -,. A.pertienlar attentionirtven wall Female com• Plaints, Leueorrhes, or Whites.. Yelling, Want. merlon or 'Ulceration of the Womb, oval It* pruritis,! Ansentsmitoea. ifenorrhagia,- Diemen. norrhoes, and btertlily or BaiTenness, are treat ed with t4e /greatest ewes& 1. , , it li selvevlaent that a physicia n late* ' co infines himself exclusively to this study Of a certain elm ' atolls:l l i:sea and treats thonertuta -Of-cases every L e al butt a irsig r .:=4 . lll / 1 4k , thett:IPONglala i jite, Wolog•tsaldtanee rtmedieal pamphlet • of . an/MMta t t il l= °l tb' tg ai k il l ial i:4 3 l n gsTa rag ' ' •bribY Mall Mari tarp stamps, In'sealad envelopes:, Myer/ sentenott.tiontajas=mwpon4 iit the af• Aloted,lind etiebangthern to:de , Dope Pre' 'elle. natitlelot there complaints. = ".• '• ' " = t• t The es= abilshmen in comprisili t ten ample ..nwem..tblefiltral, % it Is not nvenierm to visit um vity,', the' tors, ophti can be tob taine.l by giVizigA written, statement Of eel:sae, and me4loluils can be forwTil tri ' mall: Wog -- press. in 'igolMe lastenees, oweVer. b• Pen • w examination; Is , absolutely , me ters , ' *idle' ' others daUltpersonstsittentlom la • tired, .All fOr the anommediVon r finch patted there are tfiterweilh":4lr conne cted 111 the .I„evarit reqn te •or pr9moto i recovery, liletilding •meillested•rr. spy., .balks. All prescriptions, ate prepared, rlt .the Doctor's own laboratory WslierSollaitm, peryition. Ifedicat vampblets'itt time* ' iree,ior by mall t tor two stamp's.- •:fito matter-who• Dave failed, read hesayil.;:multre V A.*. toilp.m. Sundays l*ltti - to BP. W. .011lisli,' No. 9 WTLI II riTiliCra. inear..ooort Reuse./ Pittsbnrithi.l%'. • gURNIOTRIRON gi:& Dam n, soft. t. bat); .beet; 'Xiegeri u Drug, L. and ?slt Xedittatm , ‘• • ' in3in ~ . `I _=.l ~` CARPETS AND OIL OLOTEIN NEW CARPETS: ut • m 0 112 0 o ;41 CHEAP CARPETS. WINDOW SHADES. BOVARD, ROSE .& CO., 211 FIFTH AVENUE. ziy:4Alaser • C I AL 3P3 0s 'X' SS . WINDOW SHADES, AND LA E AND NOTTINGHAM CITEtrr4_IINS, New Stock Just Received. LOWEST PRICES EVER OFFERED. NeFAIMAND & COLLINS, BRUSSELS CARPETS ; VELVETS, &C. FROM ENGLAND. McCALLUN BROS., 51FIFTH AVENUE; Have received ateam•ra Samaria and Man hattan the VERY NEWICaT STYLES of the• ENGLISH MARKET. Complete Line of DOMESTIC CARPETING. f. ; ). To whlei large additions are 41.1 9 being - made.' A Display of. Goo s Equal To any ever 'presented In tb s market at LOWESP PRICES. IffcCALLITiII BROS., eiro. 51. FIETIE .1' •E.trUE, , ap23:10 (BET. WOOD & SMITHF • LC.) i 5 BOW 0(.0=1:NG. Boys, Youths and Childr.n's Suits,: For Spring and Summer :wear. . GRAY&LO myl2 47 SIXTH STREET. (late MIPHERSON & MURLA I NBIIING, No. 10 Sixth (Late St . Clair) Street. (Suceossors to W. H. BIoGEE A; CO.O Have just received their carefully selected stock of Spring and Summer Goods, and; will be glad to show or sell them to old and new customers. ; The Cutting Department wilt rtlll,be superin tended by Hr. C. A..3II:TIILA.NBIfI G. , 1 take pleasure in recommending t e above firm to the Liberal support of the public. mlal:181 W. . McGEE. B TIEGEL, ° Mite Cutter with W. Hen' beide,/ MERCHANT TAii..olll No. 53 Smithfield Street,Pittaburgh. se26:= NEW SPRING GOODS: L . A splendid new stock 1 cmoriti; attssrmEßEs, &C., ;tut received by MENEM .111EIrsark. melts Merchant Tailor. Y 3 Bmlthaeld street. WINES. LIQUORS; &c„ SCHMIDT & Fli. WINES, BRANDIES , ,GIN, &C. PURE RYE .409 PE:ft- Have Removed to, Cor. Eleventh St.; (iorrnerly Canal.) irosopmt mav on co • CO - • • M05.•185. 167,1619. 19/: 198 and 11/IN!.. Mum STuncT, PITTOBITRON: . - popplo. Nam e d— pare Rye - • • Also, timers I n goszlep-.was.mx • gututes,ziont.'ae. latidtaids • FINE CARPETS. OIL CLOTHS, lattlia - MIN 18,1869. • BARGAINS No. 71 and 73 . F1F111 AVENUE, • The Latest Arrival They also offer a MERCHANT TAI A hill assortment bt all kyles a RIIIRCRAN'r TAILORS, IIiP4)RTMiI9 WHOLIANALE DEALLER9 ar =I 108. 3841 - AND 886 PRIM, =I (Sr Cond Floor) ORS. (1 sizes of ; GAN. St. Clair.) 1 DAY, ISM