THE TURKISH BAC-A.TELLE. , Ola Susan was a fisherman-. A Mar sulman was be,— Thouth ciamarous In the market place,, Too selfish he could be. II Though honeat,he "booked" all he con d. With net a sins he was gay. And though-hls hands were filled with rCC II aales tie never had his way. For he and other dihermen abate-e dultan'a onr,e • A [ but they turned and aald. Thls La the Bos-paor-us. To . Meeevturning on he called The prophet's aid in vain.— To mare ankh for prolate, that His neighbors thought insane. When once about the close or arty His own domes nearly gone. Ile - tbonght to try his nets and see If he should longer mourn. Th,e nets came slowly in to shore, l'illed.with ahe .%y we ght, • And Ha. can, though no non are seen, His hones did not abate. • For la his net there lay a sack— The Sultan's seal It core: NC &VG to In-sult an honest man, Fete sends tole to the shore? - . He bore it to the monarch straight, Though "npathlhe toad he bent, . I The Sultan In the palace was On business, Unmet, In-tent. He heard old Hassan tell his tale, And found his story Ude; The sick tai Hausa urought,tkoagh old, The Sultan thought he knew. • He toldilm to bear back the sack, Though his bare beet ar N sore, And toe.° two bears now proved to be A most decided bore, . . "till, throw It la the deepest wave, AgdAe deep Ws deep can tte L whea t he stirs r's dark and still, • Ana no one out to sea; And take this bag of gold youratlf, For honesty has charms.' So. Hassan, though a Mussulman, Then had two sacks in.arins. , . . The Sultan Smiled, the deed was done. When Hassan Mutinied beck; "An honest one shall Ali his bag; The false one fills a sack." EPHEMERIS, —The tailor of Napoleon is bankrupt. Queen Isabella meditates abdication. —Suicides have taken place in, Central Park: -Murderers in Utah are not hung, they shot. . -Bismarck's sons have been visiting tiladstOne. ' —Americans throng - the grounds at the Sunday races in Paris. —The. Chinese In California wish to have their political disabilities removed. —Verdi and twelve other composersiare to compose a requiem mass in honor of Rossini. D —The London Time. has been attack ing the timelonored celebration of Der by day-. - —.kr. Reverdy Johnson is said to-ihave _ spent $15,000 during hie short but torn: tient 'career. ' ~ ,..-, --1 —The members of the old Anderson troop are to hold a reunion-at Carlisle on the 21st pro". ~,--"`" • —!Williamsburgb; New York, has a weaver who Ja one hundred and twenty seven yeari Old. . 1 .4,The statue of George Peabody.Order ea-- by - the:London merchants la almost ready for erection. I • —A. sufferer advises persons going over the Union Pacific Raitroad to take their eold victuals with them. . I —Switzerland has about 900,009 cattle, worth $42,000,000; 552,000 cows yield $30,000,000 worth of milk a year. , . - —ln some parts of Kentucky all the to bacco has destroyed by the fly and the farmers are replanting with corn. —The English papers regard it as for tunate that only one suicide is reported, resulting from losses at this year's Derby, and that was only a coachman. —A shoe string saved a little girl's life in New . Haven the other day. It caught on a nail as she fell out of a third story windivi, and held her from 'death until assistance came. -... —Miss Emily Judson Harris, daughter of the President of the Boston Common Council, is to read the Declaration of In dependence at-the celebration of the 4th of July at the Hub. , - —Rumor says that after Ex-Secretary Catholics and their Duhcntties. Seward reaches San Francisco, on his Avery remarkable lecture was deliv. western - tour, he will take a pleas i lretrii ere n . osep s Catholic Church, New di St. J 10 to Alaska, to personally inspec t much discussed purchase. York, on Sunday evening last, by Rev. ' =Miss Adelaide Phillips is to get Thomas Fartell, on "The South-Catholics sl,3oand their Difficulties." A large number ft for what singing.she does during of Catholic clergymen erepresent,locv the Peace Jubilee, while Pampa cupying seats within th e Rosa Is to receive five hundred-dollars per have the following report: chancel, • c day-for her services. --Musa Mary Gray, of Geor ba s , by At eight o'clock precisely the reverend gia,, gentleman ascended the pulpit and said her own efforts, caused the bodies of fit. that there seemed to bee misapprehension teen hundred Confederates,who fell in th e Prevailing as to the nature of this pro. posed lecture, since a good many expec battle of Franklin. Tennessee, to be col- • tad him to enter into politic, while he lected and decently buried. proposed to give his views of the condi -The Prussian capital has been provi- Lion of the country in general, and of the dad with water works which cost $2,- South In particular. It was to be the first 450,000, and the capital of the Austrian 'of - a fur of con versations his l own , In r r e e e g y aor in d to d Empire is having a "New York hotel". Pra eo n P itl e y gi n 've w his c opi e nio w ne. put up at a cost of about $2,009,090. the freedinen all he had to say is that —Women are gradually w or ki ng into slavery was dead and that - the best , men in the South thank God that it Is dead • all of employment heretofore consid- fie believed universal suffrage to be the * , ered; the sole • property of the o th er sea, best law rot the Re,publicoind he would say ' A Miss Hattie Bean has been :smelted i n that niuch for the in of New liclk Porthind, Maine, for robbing the inane. and for the be,nefft ofState Leglalatures on ....an Dresden and ...3n, Vienna; tne la_w b un'versa' suffrage was the ehal f of the: Fifteenth Amendment, that against the imprisonment of native sing- tai law of the Republic for good and fundamen for ing birds is now enfried by.,the police, evil. Continuing, the reverend speaker , w h ada. i nto t ini Rtiark i t p l y * an d ad an saigtl the South was notbalt ao'poor it je supposed. He bei free iiiil which have been brought there Heves tha l t ( l ff i -t or l ad e . - . , , , • - ...„ ~_ ~. n _ th e future the most loYal -.-.. io the South - will be those- who —*,1343::: tchmen who joined , the Federal fought most bravely to break , : up the. lrlitir.they acknowledge it tdhaYo been • armrin l lB444 and was reported killed In filunr rit,e,i,t isi t .e ie d b w il a nder and a sniserable one of the last' battles of,the war, returned The most d angerOuliinen are those the 'other day to and hla . wife married measures of disfranchis t e l m ° en z t l , or E c al o t lf44, again. and quite unwtillug4o;glt;e up-her ti°zl• sow *Ttlhand.' • - , who * don't know ,yet that slav ery j a d e ad -. •. : : ,' 1. •,- ' ' and. who keep up a Ore in the - ' — Aa odvezilacewait in a Ch icago pa- army that Went forth to hatirieare, for: th th e e per recently for young girls to like part Tinton., Father Farrell then went on to in the Forty Thieves resulted in` the as- describe why this Is a providential country. founding discOvertiluit more than seven • SPort et a t t ir t ec h ' e ttlee Zellitt:d i n 111•Heis°11d hundred _Chicago era were enzious to scrutable providence led a Catholic gallon.' !simile thieves, to discover this Coritinent-=. a land of Ina! —Hundreds of sires ,of castor beans manse grandeur, 'where • the imam. hav4o4o4,ii planted this year t., hefty of - the Unity,' and _ brother,: "i Texas .; hood of mei ' " are to 'be .1 fully Thill bean anima a Profitable Crog, and, ' realised; 'where king iiitibegitaf ire' alike 11, :when the soil la as prolific as it usually is known to be subjects of God, all equal ins) in Texas, yields from y bush. els of beans to the sere. . gentleman Who has made a rock work planted with ferng in the front of his house, near Winchester, England, has put up the following notice, and found it effective: "Beggars beware I Scolopendri ums and Polypodiums are set here." —The number of railroad passengers • in Prussia in 1868 was 97,848,665. By railroad accidents 2 passengers, 59 rail road workmen and 82 other persons were killed; and 9 passengers, 144 railroad workmen and 41 others were wounded.. —AbJut six cents smile is what one has to pay to ride from New York to Sacra !mento, besides a share of that portion of the taxes which were made to raise the money with which the Government sup plied-the Union and Central Pacific Rail roads. —The "Court Circular" from Balmoral shows that on Sunday Victoria and her younger Children go very properly to church, having the clergyman to dine with them afterwards, While Wales rides off to see a friend, leafing his wile to take a drive with her brother. —Anna Dickinson asks triumphantly whether ladies belong to , any of the "rings" so much talked ab out. We don't know, indeed, Anna, !,we •we have seen many a pretty young creature hke you who couldn't look at a ring without wish. ing to have a finger in rit.--Louinille Courier- TournaL [ —M. ,De Lesseps, foreseeing the com pletion of his great canal, wishes to have anew job ready for him, and so is urging the Xing, 6f Greece to authorize him to cut a ship canal through • the Isth mus of Corinth. [ He is [ decidedly the champion isthmus cutter of the world, d should try his hand on the Siamese wins. —On Thursday, near Delphos, Ohio, a fanner named John W. King, was at work making a fence, when a neighbor, named Enos Bryan, with whom he was, on bad terms, drove along the roadin a wagon. As soon as he saw King he jumped down and assaulted,liim, when King, in defending himself, struck him across the left jaw_wit6 his axe, severing the jugular vein-and killing film almost instantly. Xing went immediately to town aryl - delivered himself up to the an- , thorities. -- -- -LThe fact that Americans care more for the useful than for the beautiful is il lustrated in the new Coliseum now being finished for the Peace Jubilee in Boston. Ifis`aipeat plain wooden building look ing like an enormous skating rink, with very little, if any, attempt at outside or- 1 naincrttation. It is in short a huge, ugly shed not - unlike: an old fashioned barn viewed throngli' a microscope. This is all the more striking when we reflect that ,although the occasion for which it was erected is one of popular rejoicing and pleasure, the architects seem to have be lieved that the popular taste does not de mand external beauty. In contrast to this may be placed the great Saenger /Ist at Dresden in 1865. The occasion was a somewhat similar one. Germans from all I parts of the world came to sing and re joice together. A building of the same size, more or less, was required, and an airy, fairy palace was the result, a thing of exquisite beauty, with graceful towers and tapering pinnaeles,from which waved and streamed the flags and pennons of all the world, the eye was as satiated with beauty as the ear with melody. The peo ple would not have been - satisfied with anything less. The contrast is a striking one, andWe cannot but believe that it is the Boston architects, and not the taste of the American people, who must bear the blame, that the compirison should resit: so unfavorably. • 4.lit It'r* ' ' k;: , 'lL•tg ' PITrSI34Tt-cGAZETTE: 3fONDAY; .TUNE 14, before I trim -- , and His ht..0,3d -------m." man treelike himself and He' cannot Un do His Own acts.- No - wonder :that he tiaras were perseeutedbythe kings of eld. Etna Tacitus speaks of the Chris tains as "enemies of mankind," and he was right,* his own connection, for the Christains.Were enemies of tyranny and of the wrongs of societnas the Christian charter was the divine - bill of human rights, leaning for protection on the rights of conscience. Was it not strange that after eighteen centuries of. persecution, commenced by the Jews and continued by the Pagans, Chrlitianity is in the as cendency? The lecturer referred to the edict of Constantine enjoining tolerance 'for Christains and intolerance thrall others to the. R' formation, which broke Chris tain unity, and then spoke of the mistake the Church made in seeking foreign re cognition and accepting foreign protec tion, meaning the temporal power of the State. The State had nothing to do with the rights of conseience. The divine right of kings to temporal power was a "divine humbug" and was not Catholic doctrine. The kings of the Christian era were as despotic as the Pagan kings of old. None were as sanguinary as Henry VIII. o England, and he hardly less so than Loui XIV. of 'France. In such a •state. o Europe God Innis own time' called fo the diecovery of this land to establi h freedom of religion and the delivery from the despotism of the. Old %rid. As Catholics they feel proud that the little colemy of Maryland first established the principle of liberty of conscience, and the sword of Washington and the pluck-and tenacity of the American people con firmed-the true Catholic doctrine of the freedom of conscience. He believed it t be a pity that the sword of Washingto did not find its way to Spain: He•would mention a few of the diffi culties of Catholics in this country. The first was the want of lay organized° ' Every other denomination has its orgy - zation, but the Catholics have not. Wh is the reason? Are the clergy afraid o the people? It was one of the first prin ciples of Catholic teaching that the peo ple can never be wrong, for not wish their own injury. The clergy meet 1 in soloniii council . (very solemn, indeed, I especially if there are many old fogies 1 among them.) but they accomplish noth ing. .At the request of the Holy Father they'met at Baltimore and passed resolu tions in favor of schools for the freedmen, but eepressed regret that they were so suddenly emancipated and torn from the bosom of their protectors, while, if we want to benefit those who need aid they must have our sympathy. Hunureds of the clergy growl, but - that is about all. The matter 'may just as well be spoken of publicly as in priv to conversation at the dinner table. Th resolution mentioned was passed to let t e Holy Father under stand that they wee doing great things, t while they did no ing at all. Another difficulty lay in co servatism, which puts the leaders in oppo ition to the people and to honest . progress and then the people march over them. Too much conserve, tism, which . make' people cling to per niclons institution ' may be productive of stagnation, disease and death. Another difficult is a" taiga prehension of th-doc trine of the y infallibility of the Church. e The 1 Church is based on. Govern ment elation of God, and there must be in as well as in the Church, a supreme. tribunalauthefi ticated to decide. The constitution of the Church is God's constitution and God's law, and was there ever such an absurdi-• ty as to let every o .e judge for himself of God's law ? But t' a is - often misunder stood, even by Ca holies. The Church is a constitutional government with an executive, which ca 'of change the fun- damental law, and 'either take from it or add to it.' But eve ytbing outside is left to reason and to th- judgment of man kind, and It hal bee' a great - mistake to turn into tinchang. , ble that which is changeable. Religi.n is unchangeable, but he was not 'mpelled to swallow what every pious 00l alight say. He would say that the inquisition was in iquitous and tyrant ... I; that ecclesiaitical courts ought never . have existed, and ' he was satisfied to .: tried by a jury of peers. He was op ..sed to aristocracy, ta primogeniture, o religions persecu- ton as he. bell •ed the teaching ' of Catholicism to be opposed to all visita tions of the rights 'o conscience. Many who come here fro.. the old country fear prosecution. Fear is an evidence of guilt, and they would not ear to be persecuted I had they not perse ted themselves be fore. The safest m • to follow in Church and State was the. adical. Why? Re form will come, and .e sooner it comes the better. If the Protestants are pre judiced, so much the worse for them, and it is no reason wh Catholics should be prejudiced against 'rotestants. He had heard Catholics, clergymen and lay, say that Protestants had o principle of mor ality. That was all and wicked, as they believed in God and e Ten Command.' meats. They were prejudiced against the abolitionists,who had .en the beet friends the free laboring pop lation ever had in this country. If the eople once know the truth they will pu, prejudice under their feet. The reverend speaker then referred to the prejudice prevailing against emancipation and granting the j suffrage to the freedmen, and spoke earn- estly against such prejudices, and he also paid a glowing eulogy on the character 'I of the American people for having adopted I a short, sharp and decialve policy in this respect, the success Of Which was won- , 1 derful. They had "rained" four hundred 1 teachere and five millions in money upon the Ehitith for the education of the freed- ' men, as • the only edu cation Anferida inflicts upon rebels: The reverend gen tleman closed with an eloquent peroration in favor of the unity of the Chrlitiare, family. 1 New Discovery Concerning' iron. Mr. Gore, of the Royal Society of I.on , " • • . don, has noticed a new , fact in the be. • . havlour of iron under the influence' of heat and strain. A strained iron- wire Was heated:to redness by a current of vol -talc electricity; and then the current being discontinued, was' allowo to cool. It was obser ed tbat there arrived .4, mo ment in the process of cooling at which the wire suddenly, elongated, and then gradually shortened, until it became per fectly cold; remaining, however, perma... nently 'elongated. ' •2440 otherpetal besides' iron eihiblted this peculiarity, which m r . Gore attributes to a momentary molecular change, and he points buy that this change would Problthly happen in large masses of wrbnght Iron, and. Nould come into op eration in various cases, where those masses are subjected to the conjoint influ ence of heat and strain, as In various' en- *glneering operations, 'the destruction of 1 buildings by fi re, and other cases, The 1 Rhenomenon deserves I/ farther inywitigt. ^ "oint.e every'flict relating tj freth hid 11[XINDMRSOBIL 4 BROTHinta i n a il/ p L atila iosete xi s ikaineh eroac, nosier& ix issainvoss, EZ2 nS~-y ~_xw .. 'WELDON 41IL 'LALLY, mannftopirers and Wholesale Dealers i pt Lamps, Lanterns, Chandeliers, 1 .• AND LAMP GOODS. Also, CARBON AND LUBRICATING OLL3, BENZINE, ao. N 0.147 Wood Stree4 seO:nD Between sth and 6th Aventies. ,F'RUI'T CAN TOPS. I SELF " - r.P.IT7§.I3ITRGH.I ? -4 1 . _ _ We are now prepared to supply Tinners and Potters. It Is i)erfect, simple. and aa cheap as the plain top, having the names of the various Fruits stamped upon the cover. radiating from the center, sedan Index or pointer stamped upon the top of Often. it is Clearl Dlstini L , y, and Peralanerrily LABE.I3. i . by merely placing the namo - of the fruit the can contains opposite the_Dolnter and sealtngau uncustomary manner.' No preserver of fruit, or Rood housekeeper will use any other after mice ' l- seeing it. - WATER PIPES, onimmiET TOPS A large assortment, HENRY counts, api4:hs7 • Ad iveline.near Smithfield St/ TRIMMINGS, NOTIONS, &C. JUST RECEIVED JOSEPH HORNE & CO Latest Shapes Neapolitan std Cactus Hats 241 Turbans. Halt Bonnets, Leaborn Bun Hata, Bea Breeze Hats. Choice French Flowers Ribbons, In all colora and widths Colored Crape,, Illusions, Laces. Bonnet and Hat Frames. Black and Colored Satins. , I I, I Fans, Silk, Palm, Linen and Perfumed Pans: Kid Gloves; In all the new shade; No 31t to S. Domestic and Fine Cotton Hose, new lines. Hamburg Embroideries. Embroldarell Linen Setts. . 1 1 Lace and Lace Goods'. _ , f Parasols and Sun Umbrellas, a fall asiortment.l Dress Wrimmings. Black and Colored Knotted Fringes. Buttons, of every description. 1 .-, I Hoop Skirts. ' 1 i. Pine French Corsets. At the Very Lowest Prices, WHOLRALE AND RETAIL JeL2 77 ARDIS RAREST STREET. NEW AND DESIRABLE GOODS 'ilk Fans, Linen and Pain: Leaf Fans, New Japanese. Fans. SILK PARASOLS, all the New Styles. WHITE GOODS, A Beautiful Lite. SUMNER BOULEVARD SHIRTS ♦t Reduced Prieta Neu, Puffed Collars and auffs, In Paper arid Linea. CORSETS, a Complete Stock. 3 GENTS' SUMMER UNDERWEAR In Merino, Gauze and Cotton. WHITE AND STRIPED MUSLIN SHIRT Our Stock of COTTON HOSIERY Defies CompetitiOn, MICBROILIERIEN. LACES, sexammaclin f a. MACITM. GLYDE & CO. yes 78 & 80 Market Street. Nllif SPRINGGOODS HRH 6, CARLISLE'S No. 27 Fifth Avenue, Dress Trimmings and Buttons. • Embroideries and Laces. Ribbons and Flowers. • I Nets and Bonnets. airy,. Stung end French Corset.. • New Styles Eradieriskirts. Parasols—ail the new styles. • Sun and Rain Umbrellas: Hosiery-the best ltngitsh mattes,' • - Agents for "Harris' &Millen Rids. 09 .Snring and Stunmer underwear. • ' • 801 e Agents tor the Bemis Patent Shan l irs ,•)P• Lockarood's "Irving; ter “bleat. jr a Cts.'‘ *at , '`Dicketust` 'DerbytilmiS Dealers supplkd with the airove at MANUFACTURICRSt PRICES IKAORUM ..&--.,0i, NO.- 21 FIFTH - AVENUE. inn IWELLIN6 - 0 110IIIIER ~FOB . . PAL'S.—Bertha street... q 0 0; Wood's ' ! un, 09,300; Union-Iran:le o . Virginia stmet, ha. sou : (nit street; ;0 : Second Avenue, 48,000;8an ashy. arretic 113,0001r40- ono Avenue, .3.1100. South Avenue, 0P.1 , 09t Unbends street,l9,oos; Nor th /Mune, elo,o00 : &nth Avenue Ijl 13 500* Fenn street, $15.000: ... w ile.stliret. it Milt Stockton Avenue, $30,- Yu t Dian Avenue , I 0.000. When: in Tartans ."Astons• Apply to'lli. 0172411311 ET '3 KM% 39 SLsth Avenue. r - • - jell , . SJ MY WALL PAPER • WINDOW SHADES, New and Handsome Designs, NOW OPENING AT • No. 307 Market Street (NEAR FIFTH AVENUE,) Embracing a large and carefully selected stock of the newest designs from the FINEST STAMP_ TED GOLD to the CHEAPEST ARTICLE known ( to the trade. All of which we offer at prices that [will pay buyers to egazuhre. lOS. R. HUGHES & BRO. inh.U:ge WALL PAPER. i i rgE OLD PAPER STORE IDA NEW PLACE, W. P. MARSHALL'S NEW WALL PAPER STORE, 191 Liberty Street, (ZiILAR 3LARKET,) ;span% GOODS AR/11M6 DAILY. =hit (LASS. CHINA, CUTLERY. [ 100 'WOOD STR EET. I Call and exescilee oargoo.% &ad We reel satisfied no one . need tall to be suited.., .. E. BREED & CO • , _.___,__________ . . 1 DR. WHITITER cIONTINVES- TO TREAT ALL private diseases. Syphilis in all its terms.. al/ Ur nary diseases, and the effects of mercury are cometely eradleated;.Spermatorrhea or nomi nal. ealrness and .Impotency, resulting from self- buss or other ousel', and which produces scree of the following effects, as blotches, bodily weakneu, indigestion, consumption aversion to society, unmanllnese, dread of hipiure .evente, loss of memory, Indolence. ;remora emissions, suff.dnally so proetrating the sexual system as to render marriage uusattatactnry, and therefore Imprddent s are permaeently cured. Perilous at. dlctod.-with 'these or any other delicate, fettles.. or long standing'ocarina tional oomidatrieshou't give the Doctor a trial; .all Fe be never Ms. alms, attention _given to male emu n Outs,. Leueorrhea or Whites, Falling, Intim. Is Bon or Ulceration of the Womb, uvalltle. multi', Amenorrhoea. fdenorrhagla. Dysmen. norrhoea, and bterlllty or Barrenness, are treat ed with the tradast sitcom. • , . ' .., It itself - evident that a physician who confines , Illus_sellexciuslvely to the study of asertain class of oullalles and treat. tholasalAil - _____ __ 7 ,4...___J. oflases every year must acqul greater; in that specially men One In gene i practice. - • • Tbe ;Doctor publishes Winedical pamphlet of aft/ Pages tbat (Mesa toll exposition of venereal ants private diseues, that tan te bad free at °ince Evey, Min tbr twd stamps; in sealed envelopes. yisentence Contains instmcgon to the at , dieted. and enabl Mg them to determine the pre eite nature of theft complaints. The 1 establishment,. comprising ten ample rooma, la central, When it Is not convenient to • visit the, city, the When opinion can be ob., reinea rby riving a written statement of the °ate, and medicines can be forwarded by Mali or =- Plum iin some lastanees , however, a nal examination is absolutely necessary,' while la others daily pommel attention is 'erred, and for she iscoommodatton t faueb Isatien a theril are apartmeets connected with the ogle° t at alp pro vided - with every reouisite "that Is calculend to iron:Leta reoevery , :l including riledhietWipor • tbs. ; all prescriptions are-prepared in , the octorrsfrwn laboratory; under his personal au. pervislem. Medical pamp h lets at once free Or Or Mails ibr two ' stamps .. lie , rmatter who have failed, retr hilt Atari. Hours 9 A.M. 10 s INNS. Oundayi_ I& Doti S. M. I )Mce,No. 9WY ii ET:taeart ;Rouse. t .Pittabarith. Pa. ___ bins LOI Guam, for we tly J. B. v/6 • , . , . zic,.1,,,,:g-I,f,::' 1 / 4 :l it -7,-, ...Vi?i , ,:A,i -r, 0: 7:-. ,,,,, ", t.4.4-14.' S'sr 4- 12, ' Y:,t44.,.',14,5, -,*..,.,,,,,.4,,,,,r,:1v6)-ia,, 1,,..5,%,,..,,,,i,,,,, .. 7,,,,,,,,,- ..t.i..-- ,•••••,,, 1 ~ .4 • ' 'V.; '- ' , ...'s , ',. ~,,- " '''' - ' ',1... , ...Z.V. , . 4 ,4,*,'Wii,,,,f.t.-...1.ta, ...:k4c.,-,1"71,,,,t'::A.5PK.kictj,,t4.-",.. • '''''',l:‘' 9 r , ttl7 V- 'Veg'it.l...'"A*4%. V, ' * ' 4 , lo4S,tl2:gMgrjAflbl'.siftgsSC.',2 w , -- , wt,,.. • •. • !..-. ~,..„ . -.44.-A , ...4.4g1 •ct 3 .'" ' - go. . 1 • 1889 DRY GOODS. emo .2 ei pal -„ a 0. c 3 o 1 r ig ) 1 4 ej 0 L IF : 1 ff , z E 4 r 8 ,P 3 c=, to E-1 E 4 1: 1 4 4 14 0 °4 l Le c.O 41 I g=l E ., 114 ' as NEW SPRING GOODS JTJST OPENED, AT THEODORE F. PHILLIPS', 87 Market Street. Prints, Iduslins, Dress Goods, SIM SHAWLS. FULL LINE OF SILK SACQUES, very Cheap. Sl'. MARKET STREET. ST. ap3 CU!.FLI DicCANDLEEIS & Cp mate Whigs, Carr 1 C WHOLZBALE DiCA,Llau::: IN Foreign and Domestic Dry Goods, No. 94 WOOD STREET. Third door above Diamond sale,. WALL PAPERS NEW GOODS. FINE VASES, BOXIEDLINT AND CHINA. 1 NEW aryLas Dai.l4lß srrth TALL tiETS, 8 510HINQ BETS, GIFT Cups, A large stock of • SIGTER PLATED GOODS of sal dosoriptioos. 100 WOOD STREET rse BOVARD, - ROSE do CO., 21 FIFT-H AVENUE. myr.4.d&wl, OUJO HIDER laII'ROOF .DIEI{TT. Pr opt4als for Two steamers for Re moving* Obstructions.. REALED PROPOSALS will be received at the office of the United States Engineers, in the Cus tom House lint ldllig . • Ittsburgh, Pa.. until 6 o'c.ock P. 3f. 0* WICDNI SDAY. JUNE lath, 1869_, for Grubbing Two Light Dralight Steam ere. Crane' Beats and 'Flats, to be employed by contract by day's work in removing . . Obstructions from the Ohio River, Consisting of snags, trees, sunken logs, boats, : barges. wrecks. ay. Bidders must specify the . price per day for each dav's work, for which they whl wee to furnish everything necessary, and do the work under the superinteo &nee or a, per son lobe appointed by the said Engineer. Said price tr. cover the furnishing of a light draught Bats. one necessary- t, two at ongly.decked Bats. and the ecrews, chain , . rope levers. saws. axes. B.:tures,. iic., suitable for such work, and Illeltltifllff the pay and eEpenseS of vartala, Pilot, Engineer and crew. besides one manager or working boss in addition and one gang of eight men each for doing tile work, and haying suitable accommodaßons for, the Govern meta inspector. All expense.. to be naid,-and an risks borne by the party proposing, it being nnderstoodlhat the tiovernmt an y thin g t be reefouslble for the pay ment -of 'more than the sum. per day tnat may be agreed upon iu tip contract. The righ deemedryeu to intere s t ny the Govern It shMl be for the of went se to do. epecltlestions and a blank form of proposals •will be fUrribhed on application, from this °nice, e toer in person or by 1, riting. The proposals must be accompanied by the guaranty of two responsibig sureties,' signed on the printed form. By order of Brig-General A. A. HUMPHREYS, chief of Angineeze of the Army of the U.S. W. Maxon ROBERTS, U.S. Civil Engineer, harge obi° River Improvement. .PITTSBURGH, PA.. June 7. 1869., le8:125 PITTEIBITROM PA. T O SEWER CONTRACTORS. he Sewer Commission oe PR O POSALSIeghe • fly are prepared td rerelye or the construction of the following sewers with their appurtenances, inlets, manholee. c.: Comprising about - 1,5100 feet of 18 inch circular pipe sewer, on Whits Oak alley, between libritt .venne anu :Spring alley. • Compriaing about ROfil feet of DI inch el:cilia? pipe sewer. on North avenue, between Sandusky street and White Oak alley. • • Drawings and specifications can must en at the Engtneer'soilice, City Dail. Dlis state the kind of pipe' proposed 'to be furnished, (eelnebt or titrfied clay pipe,) and must to ' endorsed “Sewer Proposa.s. Contract No. 11," for No. H. as the eatemaybe.) and be delivered on or before 3 P. M. JDNE, AIM, 1509. Forms of proposal. on which forms alone bids will be received, will be furnished at the Engi• neer's office. The Commission do not bind themselves tO act.. cept the lowest ur any bid. Ily order of the Commission. • : je.s:kil3 t CHARLES DAVIS. City Engineer. • ac , s - orrkr..t . " • CITY or ALLEGH Cowrnora ENY,r. Sane 7, 181139.' NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS. 58:ALEC PIROPO3ALS will be received at this Mee until 3 o'clock P. xt. on TUEsDAF. .roue 13th. 1861), for grading and paving the following ntreets and alleys, viz: ,_. _ Monsiromery alley, from tkorth alley south ward. Ha ward. is Market street from Washington nve%n eyo Wal nut street., resort log central space or forty feet. where width is ninety feet anti over, sth and 6th wards. Fayette street from Fulton street, to Beaver avenue, sth ward. Carpenters all cy from Pine serest to Unlon - al- ' ley, Bth WHJ d. ' A Iso, for grading only,; Evans alley, north of Nixon Erect, 6 01 ward., - .- Aiso, for paving only: Blossom alley, between 0' Harastreet caneach alley, 3d ward. • Ppeciticatlons be seen In the onc e of Chas Davis, Esq., City Engineer W. M. PORTE:Ft, • Controller.. ieS.k&S SEALED PROPOSALS.: SEALED .PII6POSALS will be received at the • office of the Water Cou , mittee until F - o'clock, TUESDAY EVENING, JUNE 18th; 1889, tot' l a yi ng 80, 10, 19, 10, 8 andel inch pipes. Bids will be received for digging, ailing and ramming the trenches for the pipe, by the cubic yard or by the lineal foot of pipe laid for the digging. of trenches, laying pipe and making all connections at cress streets. ' - For setting and connecting dre plugs, aeparate bids will , be received. • For Inviter information apply OSISEPEI PRENCII. - Bapeqintendeat. Je9:k39 ORIPISA . SIP COURT SAL .--849. - - order of Orphans, Court, ;here. will' be ex. posed to sale, on the premises, on. .. . . T.I7I3BDAY, 3111.113 29,1869, All that certain lot in the oth ward, Allegheny OitY, (late Manchester ' ) at the corner of Market and Locust streets, having a front of 30 teat on 'each of said streets, and being ao feet square. 211111513—One.half cash and the balance In one year, with interest, secured br bond and most- (see on the premises. sale te commence at 10 o'clock a. at, • ,}e7:431)-X . PIIIIrbyTIER BLOOD, SALZ BT Dittracenns itinrancum; del;blClicw, sine IRLD CARPETS 4riti OIL CI4TH JELLY 113, BARGAINS IN r rt mg sic, WINDOW SHADES, " AND LAox AND'NOTTIN G HAk 6tTFtr_rA_rivs, New Soeli-Justßec,.eivecl. LOWRRT PRICES EVER OFFERED. NeFARLIND & COLLINS, ICo. 71 and 73 FiFTII AVENUE, MYID Mcond Floor). NEW CARPETS. FINE. CARPETS. HEAP CARPETS. OIL CLOTHS, INDOW SHADES. Matt PROPOELUaS. CONTRACT NO. L OONTZtACT NO. 2, 1..E411 za:, IBaBLLLA vexrsozr, narahul IMO