tPER THE HILL] By TM BiT. RALPH HOYT. • One morning as be wended • • Through a path bedight with towersil Where raldsitghis were blenderr to begone the tickling flours. ,f . • Sifeet Youth, pray turn, thee hither, Tre s adl la vo s e r a s o engihh ew,ay, • • And these fair fruits decay • ; Bat me youth paused not to Ponder %it the voice were good or hr. To-, said he, my home Is yonder, - . O'er the hill thsre; o'er the 11111 ! pin: high noon Was slowing yvide and weary plain, nd there, right onward going, Was the traveler again; Be Seemed smother twine , Than the tnor,,lng's rosy Tooth, Hat I quickly knew him string _His unaltered brow of truth; `Nest, stranger.' rest till even', hang alluring voices still: Bathe cried—my rest is heaven I " O'er the hill there, o'er the kil! : • The shadelisrnight were creeping sequestereo valley o'er, Where a dark, deep stream was swe: ping By a dim and st.ent thore; . And there the pilgrim bending With the:burden of tho day, • Was seep st , ll onward wesuing, ' Through a ''straight sr d narrow way ;" He passed the gloomy' river As it were a genVe rill, • 'And resteldtrometorever ! _ • O'er _ d p en' Mem' o'er the 61il ! ;i`• ;EPHEMERIS. ---Otilckfonsins may not marry. —F41,1103144 is en route for California. —Russia is trying to get Upper Tartary. City has a female notary . -A-Tostee him gone back to the land from - whence she zame. --The Mi.yor of Sitka is in New Eng , - landlecttiring on Alaska —Gutikow, the German poet has re covered from his ittse.mty. ;179,000 • have been raised for the American college at. Rome. ,—Mr. Seward and his family are more than half way to the Pacific. .-,Small-pox, after sojourning a yearin San Francisco, has departed. —lt hai been calculated that sixty per sons per minute diein this world. —Ann Hathaway's cottage and garden at Stratford on ATM]. are advertised for Bale. —New York Connei:a have appropri ated $30,000 for fire works on the 4th of July. —Nevada is to have public schools in White Pine county, by about the middle of July. , r ,-T4e New York Sun scenes Mrs, E D. , E. N. Sonthworth of writing's novel Pe*w.elik- .-eaiirkainas has a town in which every Iffy has !►d measles. Itis a veritable comintinitP —Fairs for the benefit of Cabe are to be held at the fashionable watering 'Places diring the summer. —Baron Brisse derives an income of seventy thousand francs a year from the sale of his culinary receipts. —The New. Jersey railroad is trans- porting at present,two hundred and forty tons of strawberries per day. —There never seemed to be many peo ple In Norway, but quantities have come from there to America this year. —The Boston Councilmen entertained General Grant at what they called a "quiet dinner" for two hundred. —Empty Dttmpty was performed on Saturday afternoon before the inmates of the South Boston Lunatic Asylom: —Two boys fell into an old well in the cellar of a new building in, Philadelphia, on Monday, and one was drowned. . -A fatal disease has been raging among the turkeys in Kentucky, and the crop for next Thanksgiving is very small. —ln Philadelphia a dog, supposed to be mad, on Monday evening, bit a little three years old girl named Lizzie Wilson. —Kn.,Livermore, when she became a mother, turned her face to the wall and wept because her &it daughter was a —A firm of English coach-makers ad iertises that it has imported wheels from America, and is now prepared to build light carriages on our models. —Tennessee has - a new gubneniatorial candidate, in the person of Mr. David son M. Lutherman, who announces that he will run independent of party organi zation. —Napoleon adopted the Haroun Al Reschid dodge, and 'visited the recent electomi meetings in disguise. He was not as thorougly pleased as Hamm was with his experience. . —The Ingrain carpet weavers Cf Phil adelphia have resolved not to snbmit to any reduction of wages, and have:l-organ ized a strike in case the employers insist on reducing the wages., .. French agricultural journal says that by mixing hops with the ordinaly food of cows, the yield of milk can be greatly increased. We should fear that enrol* might be a little liecicy• —Bishops who are delegates to th e Jilt OeCtunerdcal Council in Rome, are already beginning to 'arrive in the Eternal City, although the Council will not;hateld until December next. —Artianda Craig recently won $lOO.OOO from Etats% Sprague in a breach of prom, lie ,case, and a Chicago papeiiadvises Mishit, If he wants to get a rich;wife, to pay the money and marry Amanda. The official dinner given on Monday e4remtig, by the Union League of Phila. delPibia4 to ei.ocivernor Curtin, was . the first. entertainment of the kind ever given by that organization to' a citizen of Penn sylvania, —A Brussels inventor has prepared a SubstanCe Which, when applied to tissues, wciod, (undue, scenery, &a, _renders them= inciimhustible. An experiment at Theatre de la Monnale proved the ot the inventor to be well founded. The Viceoy . ofEgypt is about to t 'Y~!~ found a University at Cairo, which will be under the charge of a German profes sor, who will conduct it on the plan gen ertdly adopted by the_ great European Universities - . —ln an lowa saw mill, recently, a vis itor touched a swiftly revolving circular saw with the forefinger of his right hand, and it was cut off. .In describing how the accident happened, the visitor reached out the left fore finger to the saw, when it too was cut off. —A white baby was picked up a few days ago on the Dan - river, near South Boston, Virginia. It was in a metallic coffin, with a bottle of milk at its mouth, and a roil of greenbacks under its head, while newly plucked roses decorated its strange cradle. —A white man in Brooklyn, on dun day, called at the house of a negro, an made an ' unprovoked assault on him knocking him down and beating him ae verely. The negro seized a, pistol and fired at his, assailant, but the shot struck si i third person, who died almost • instantly A. letter from Delaware says: ' "Th fnut prospect is magnificent. The whol State is MI of strawberries now, at cents per quart. Blackberries will be more plenty than Inuaquitoes everywhere.; Peaches will be a full crop• and unusually large and luscious, if the weather be dry." —The German "Lese Verein"lhas had its library and reading room painted, pa pered and carpeted, a lady librarian has been secured and a number of new books purchased, so that the dingy' old rooms have - becolue a very pleasant resort. = The "Verein" is to have a picnic next week. — .Pennsylvania has a criminal and pauper population of 24 , 004 —nine-tenths froth intemperance—maintained at a coat of $2,259,910.66,, or $6.80 for each voter in the State. The State revenue for li censes is $317,742.75, while the cost to tile people of supporting intemperate crim inals and paupers is $2,259,910.66. —Many persons think that Napoleon must get up a war to distract and occupy the attention of his people. In conjunc tion with this we have the report that 200,000 French soldiers are to be moved to Strasbourg this month—merely to see how quickly the railroacis can concen trate large numbers of troops at , a given point. —A man named . Nesmith offended by an aiticle which a ppeared in the Clnctn• mid Gasette, attacked the editor of that paper on the street, on Monday, and'after severely hcirsewhippinir him, knocked him down and severely maltreated him. After thishe went to the Commercial office in search of Mr. Halstead, but that gen. tleman's absence saved him from the lash. The Enquirer says there was a universal feeling of insecurity pervading the va rioua newspaper offices of the city through out the remainder of the day. Editors and reporters might-have been seen Mon day night going through the streets weighed down with arsenals of 1 lethal weapons; and castifig I furtive glances around the corners lest every turn should bring them face to faee with the avenging spirit. Tan New York Times says the English papers complain that some of the great Manufacturing establishments of America keep agents in the manufacturing towns of England to foment strikes and stir up difficulties among, the work-people, in Oder to secure the principal and most experienced hands for shipment. Thus, we are, old, were stirred up. the recent troubles in Preston, which resulted in the transfer - of a large number of hands to Lowell; and it is now reported that agents are operating in the "Black Country," and picking out a large number of good workmen for the Piftsbumh iron works in Pennsylvania. We judge there is some mis-statement about the matter. We sup pose the truth simply to be that large American manufacturers cx c u3ionally send agents to Great Britain to engage expe rienced workmen; and it is the wages these agents are able to offer which causes the difficulties the English papers sup. pose to be systematically planned. • A FRENCH paper has discovered that a strong prejudice exists in England against thirteen sitting: down at table. It re ports the death'of Mr. Ilalketh, who for thirty-fivo years had followed' the profes sion of "fotuteenth at table." It appears that the deceased has left a fortune of £20,000, gained by • the labor Of , his mouth; that irreproachably dressSd, it was his wont to present himself in due time at the houses where there was a good table, and to inquire whether, having thirteen assembled, his presence. wais 'de sired. If the'reponse was affirmative, he entered the dining-room, and after eating hlidinner, received, one or „two pounds sterling, according to the,• length and im portance of the feast. London, it is add ed, "still possesses-two or three gentle men Who exercise this trying occupation,' i and live with much comfort." ' -31 , . Nair, Yolut • letter says: "For--.a couple of months past, rumors that A:T. Stewart had joined the Catholic Church have been in circulation, ibut as nmicits aboutrich men are , always fiyint about this particular cote did not attract mach ' tention; i bait: just been informed t how ever, that it Is perfectly true. Thegreat millioludre, my Informant says, w as re ceived Into the Catholic Church by Arch bishop McCloskey, with , whom" he bad been in consultation several times before the event took place. The . same person informs me that lir. Stewart lately gave a donation of " 2 0,000 to the Moue of the Good Shepherd, a Catholic institution for reclaiming fallen women." Tan street - lights of New York city, it is reported, are so miserable, that it is positively dangerous both to life • ' and limb tp walk in the lower part of the town: g ..The remedy for this inconveni• ence is now attracting the attention of the authorities, and it is proposed to erect works fortbe , manufacture of oxygen gas according to the new French method. Several gentlemeit _have alretulY had wdike put " ' supply .:.their private hetises with the Prenclt'oxygen gas. tfi • .•'' " - 4. 4 .Wa1a-kteaUkte-451.--r .'• . • - • • • • • • f f'ITTRBUPAII GAZETTE: IttURSDAY. JUN .E 1869: , ..I.V.line,llolll.lgh We at Paris. \ . Since the, Murder of the Duchess de Pnudin, towards the close of Louis Phil ippe - Is reign, no more flagrant example of crime in high life at Paris has been discloaed than the recent mysterious gni . swim- murder of. Commandant Thevet. The persons who rushed into the bedroom of the dying commandant as soon as they heard the iatal _pistol shots found with him a lady of rank, duchess or marchion ess, en dishabille. Both the lady and the coaimandant, it is said, were married, althongh not to each other. This terrible incident is the latest illustration of a state of 'society in Paris so strongly-and -vivid ly depicted by Le Diable a Quatre, a weekly publication, that several editions of it were gold in a gni 1; day. It ap pears that the idolatry of material inter ests, the greed for . gold, the passion for dress and every other, form of costly dis play, the insatiable luxury, the via and crime which characterized the reign of the- Citizen King now characterizes even more strikingly the reign of the Emperor. For` the first time in the history of Pari sian society, the women of its foremost ranks are charged with selling th eir' fa vors. Not only . has Beranger's grisette ut ly . digappeared, transformed, into the m ern lorette, who is not a woman, but a infession, tine boutique; not only has m ddening absinthe expelled generous w e, and poisonous tobacco killed the I f ki but universal insane extravagance h involved families of every class in et itched circumstances—the main, di rect'cause of prostitution, an 'evil which prevails in Paris more widely than ever before. Every family is in straitened circumstances, from that of a bureaucrat's pretty wife, who pledges her little daugh ters earings to figure with a head-dress of flowers at an official ball, to that of a duchess; _whose husband tries to 'raise hundreds'of thousands on her_bridal dia monds, "Straitened circumstances,"says the publication to , which we allude, "have penetrated every household, open ing every .door to vice; the devouring ulcer has -absorbed everything--everp thing to this extent, that when we see a princess playing with her dolls, we may affirm that one of these days (if nothing counteracts the plague now general) she will prostitute herself for a few yards of lace. Nobody will deny that in all the higher classes of society adultry has be come a social principle." According to the .same authority titled procuressess, usurping an infamous trade, facilitate the progressive libertineage Of wives and en courage the immeasurable resignation of husbands. Partisan prejudices may have somewhat too highly colored this frightful picture of crime in imperial Paris. But, ' r making allowances for exaggeration. here is reason to fear that fashionable arisian• society is gangrene!. To cure d save it will speedily require -a social, f not .a political, revolution.—. Pram the X. Y. Herald. THE ANNEXATION OF Nova SCOTIA.— Suppose that a majority should decide for a repeal of the union with Canada and for the independence of the Province, with a view 'to. applying tor admission into the United States—what would hap pen ? Simply, that they would be re ceived here with open arms; and the United States would gain a territory nn suipasised in natural resources by any of 'equal extent on this continent, and in habited by three hundred and fifty thou sand freemen of the same blood and language as ourselves. England, though the would properly resent the forcible an - nexation other colonies, would probably interpose no objection to their voluntary incorporation into the United States. The question is emphatically one to be settled by the people of Nova Scotia i themselves; and should they settle it in the affirmative, the world may make up its mind that the marriage will takeplace. • It is the young folks on this side of the Atlantic, and not the old ones, who decide these ,questions. In the present case, though the lassie feels a natural reluctance to quit her father's house, Nova Scotia is apparently framing her lips to sing a cer tain ballad taught her by old Scotia; — Tramiel father and =Ober and a' should sang mad, 0 whistle, and 111 come to you, ma tad In-plain words, there is reason to 'think that only a little encourgement from this side is needful to induce that Province to take the momentous step: Shall the' United States .give her that encourage. ment ? Yes ! a :thousand times, yes !, Let the people of . Nova, Scotia and New Brunswick understand that if they ask ad mishion into the Union they will be hear tily welcomed.—From Our Monthly Gos sip, in the July number of Lippineitt's Magazine. A "Ku Klux" STORY.-A , reliable gentleman from Southwestern Georgia reports the following: An eminent Epis copal clergyman made an appointment to preach at Albany not long since. Every. body was invited to be present; and there being no Episcopal church in Albany, the largest church was secured for the occasion. This church had a very large gallery, which was appropriated for the use of the colored people. The appointed Sabbath came, and the building was crowded up stairs with bkeks; down stairs with whites. There being, no re tiring room, the minister had to enter the church clothed in his clerical robes. While all were impatiently awaiting his arrival, there suddenly appeared a ghostly figure clothed in a long white robe, walk ing, up the aisle. This, of course, was the expected divine, but Cattle in the gal-: lery had never seen the like before. All of a sudden a shout of "Bu-klux" burst from the gallery, and Africa broke in in discriminate pell-mell for the open air. 'Heels' over head they fell, rolled and tumbled; and rolled out of doors. The whites, viewing the uproar, also became alarmed, and some one shouted "Fire." Panic seized the white audience, and out they, imbed, but the doorways being crowded, they speedily made doorsof Op windows. Glass and splinters::flew ' every direction. The church was soo emptied, and presented the appearance of having been riddled with grapeshot Quiet was finally, restored; the cause of the ' disturbance discovered—tl4 white audience returned, butno earthlyinduce ment could ever indnee the negroes to go back.—Augusta Oironiele. . . E 3 nenkrlon.—During the week' end ing May, 20th, there Were 6,443 emigrants who lett Liverpool for New York. Of this number 4,443 embarked on steamers, and 2,000: on sailing vessels. Of - the steamers, the Erin took 1,242 passengers, the largest number ever carried across the ocean on one Vessel, The streets of Liv erpool are crowded with persons from the coottheat of Europe, seeking conveyanCe to die trafte&Stat4o 2 F,foAcit, hob o ever,'4ll king 1 4e , v4e•i;i4 .1p P WELDON & KELLY, .1 Manalsetwers and . Wholesale Dealeri la Lamps, Lanteins, Chandeliers, AND LAMP COODSi Alto, CARBON AND tams:mm:7;e ou.s, 'BENZINE.. Sze. No. 147 Wood Street anar 'Between Bth and 6th Axel:lnes 11. 4 ally arnipio;i4 SELF LABELING. FR :TIT -CAN - .TOP: I a r sßuiti;ll . 1 , _ 4 We are no prepared to supply Tinnera -and Potters. : It' is perfect, simple, and as cheap aa 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. . . 1 It 6 Clearly; Distin c t ly and Penianently , • 1 ... 41 33E1X.E111.. by merely piscine the name of the fruit the can covtalns opposite tbe_pointer and sealing In the customary manner. No preserver of traitor good housekeeper will use any other after;once seeing It. nah2s WATER PIPES, ORISINET TOPS A large assortment, sti34:h77 Ad Ayennemear Siottbfield St TRIMMING, NOTION:, &C ..JUST RECEIVED JOSEPH HORNE (1 . ,1 CO Latest Shapes Neapolitan and Cactus Bats and Turbans. _ 1 1-la l r Bonnets, Leghorn Bun Bats, Se. Brijeze ii2lt& 1 Choice French Flowers. 'Ribbons, In all colors and widths. Colored Crapes.lnalons, Laces. Bonne: and list Frames. Black and Colored Satins. Fans, Silk, Palm, Linen'and Pe , 'fumed Flit/. Hid Gloves; In all the new abide; Ne. 1W to & Domestic and lice Cotton Hose, new lines. I BaMburg Embroideries. limta l oklared Linen Setts. 1 LILCO ' A ( foods. Parasols Lace I Parasols and Sun Ustibrellaa, a fun. assonance l t. Miss Trimmings. 1 Black and Colored Bno4ed Princes. I Buttons, of every description. - Hoop Skirts. Fine French Corsets At the Very Lowest Prices, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL. 77 ARID 79 MARKET STREET. 1 Jel2 NEW AND DESIRABLE GOODS. Silk Fans, Linen and Palm L eaf Fans, New Japanese P,ns. SILK PARASOLS, all • the Neti St Mg . WRITE GOODS; ' fA Beautt ul Line. --- SUMNER BOULEVARD SKIRTS At Seduced Prlies New Puffed CoMira and Of's; In Paper and Linen. CORSETS, a Complete . Stock. GENTS' SUMMER• UNDERWEAR,I • • 'ln Merino, Gauze and Cotton. WRITES AND STRIPED MUSLIN DIRT Our Stock of COTTON HOSIERY Defies Competition. - • EMBROIDERI ES. . 'f ' - ' LACES, ' ; ! ' II ANDRE - BCE 'EMS MACRUM. GLIDE & CO, 78 & 80 Market Street. Npvi SPBIN6 GOODS- MACRUN CARLISLE'S No. 27 Fifth Avenue, Dress Trimmings and Buttons. Embroideries and Laces. Ribbons and Flowers. Hata and Bonnets.. Glove Sitting and French Corsets. Hew Styles urea ley' s Skirts. • .Parasole—sel the new 'Myles. • Sun and . Bain Umbrellas. . • Hosiery—the best Znalllh Makes. Agents tbr "Harris , Seamlsus Hada. Spring and Bummer underwear. Bole Agents. for she. Bends Patent Shave Col lars.' ••Loekwoodos •I..rettigo* - "Wen End," "Elite," Ito; .•:'Dlokeue , " ”Derby," and other styles.? . • : Dealers 'applied with the above ai MANUFACTURERS' PRICES. MAORTIM & OARLIsTA No. 27 FIFTH AVENUE. WELLING . HOUSES ..FOR Blg. 4Y,Bertba street, 91 0 1 00; Wood's 121.8t101 Milo° Avenue, $9, 80 0- ,O• Virginia street, 101.8011,• crate street, 1 19 1 ,b09_.• Second Avenue, 46,000; Sandusky strett,, gki,ooo; See on.* Avenue, 98.000; South . Avenue, 119 0001 Rebecca street,o9,ooo; NortlfAvenue, .10,000; South Avenue,ll9.oool Penn etreet. $l5 000; Edjeatreet, $.90.000: Stockton Avenue, &30.- mutt: Fifth Avenue. $40, 0 00.• others In 'ration icreation..' ply 10 IS: OUTERititT & IRMO, 39 Sin! Ap , - - .Jen M NDIERS ONJ.*BROTIfFiItfi g 1166 vtabettrt atreeti ; Dealers "In DuNs• 101trietwatAteNami, f 01:0 • HENRY H. COLLINS ! , BY WALL PAPER, WINDOW SHADES, OF New and Handsome Designs, now OPENING AT No. 107 - Market Street • (NEVI FIFTH AVENUE,) Embracing t large and carefully selected stock of the newest designs tom 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. HUGHES & BRO. zahm: s di • - ...... WALL PAPER. THE OLD PIPER STORE IN A NEW PLACE, MARSHALL'S NEW WALL PAPER STORE, 191 Liberty Street, (NEAR HABIL/MO SPRING GOODS ARRIVINO DAILY. mh6 GLASS, CHINA. CUTLERY. . NEW GOODS. " FINE VASES, BOHEMIAN AND CHINA. a% MA; br a NEW ST /Tllllt SETS MA SETS,. GIFT CUPS, A large stock of SILVER 'PLATED GOODS of all descriptions. • feZ a git e glern a if i ge need Part b:Vitewde. R. E. BREED -Sr. .00. . .. TREAT ;,cg 1) tdrate diseases . 3ptills In all is Itnns, all n diseases, and tue effects or mercury are I ;completely eradicated; Spermatorrhest or demi. ;nal Weakness and Impotency, resnltiartreM self-abuse or other causes, and which produces Item of the following effects. as blotches, hodilY Weakness. Indigestion, consumption, aversion to IsocitT. numanfiness, l dread •at haul* °Vents, loss of memory. Indolence. no emission., and finally lin prostrating the sexual system as So tender marriage 'tinsathilactory, and therefore Imprudent, art permacenily cured. Persona at. Meted with these or any other delicat intricate or long standingeowstitullonal Completed should give the Doctor a trial; be never tails. i A particular attention given to all Female eons. Plaints, Leueorrhes or Whites, Falling, Innate illatiOn , Or: Ulceration.oLthe- WOmbr Uvfilitlit pnititis. Amenorrhoea. Menorrhagla, Dysmen• norrhoea, and bterdity or Barrenness, ate treat ed with thagrestest success. i It is self.evident th the hysiOan who . °opines IdmielfexclusiVely tWady of a certain clus of diseases end treats thousands of tams every year must acquire greater skill in that specialty than one in general practice. 1 The Doctor publishes a medical pamPhlet of fifty pagesthat gives A tall exposition of venereal an ~private diseases, that can be bad free 'lofts or by mall f o r two stamps, in sealed' nvelopes. Every sentence -contains instruction to the ar.. Meted, and enabling:them In determine the pre. • else nature Of their c m n p f l ain ts. ,The, comprisingestablishment to; , t wails ' v mms the A ty r A al he U& o e ctor t ; op o nio onV a n n b n ob o taine.l l i l by giving a written statement or the Case, and medicine. can be forwarded by mail or ex- Frellit. .In fume lastsineeS. however, a personal' examination is absolutely ntmt.sary, while In others daily personal attention Is 'reqt bed, anti for theaccommodatiOn witch nch patients thetware, apartments connected the oMce that ive pro- ' vided with every - requisite that Is, calculated bo promote rcoover7. Including , medinaW.rfapOr baths. All prescriptions are prepared in tbe Doctor's own laboratory. under his personal en- ' perdition, Medical pamphlet/I at °Mee - Iree., , or . oy mail for two stamp.. No, matter who have Ailed, read what be says: , Henri it A...16,t0_e ,x . Sunders its It, to *P. X. -Wide, Itio.ll wYlld r b_____ .... _ MitlClGTinsuu" Court; Eiti nteir - Plttaintrah Pa. _ 45- aidDererr.r.; BAIRD -m .i.--- ,'Whdlesale•iliottes, Conuidon litrobinti alera In Produce, ions. Ratton,'Onoate. ;---"t Flay -Carbon and Latd GU. iron, ! NatIVII tem. fls Cotton Yarns and al? t,tatiurgh Minn tires genetaltil, HA and 111. osCOND 8 ICTs ,1 rfttaburgh. §IBIIJOHN' tintrrds...4.; " _..titt IPTON&WAL.LA.CE_,.WhoIIe. fr,2..kt, SALE 0 ROOERS - *NW PROD CLIC DEAL, ,r,r,-,-,yr J.:No. 41 &Ent STREET. Pitt anargh. - ,",,,-',l 3112 f L notru..2 atierst ' '- " ' T:51,...:, :1 0 .1/N:l4' ROUSE 141111,019.,' Sties b1.,,x.76-'0" u cessors to SOHN I. ROUSE 1- -O Nirtiole- ,-,=-":,..'''' sato Grocers , and emtntleaton Memanta. Cor. f.:-..;,- ne t 0 4 aukith4etd,llll,4l.Wit,;l4,reet4„ I 'lttaburith. ' rcE: BIENIT-4400bbkitaltieVillet ",-,,---.....,_,.........._. . .—.----------.-----------; vi sydirattwounent, tor fflue_ig;t• . - ; ;),,,..-; 1011 EARL Alillii,;,•23caaktfor sale x, ; J. B. 1 Ai. vaaleiVlJJ. I - Va M - 1:ZAllP" DRY GOODS. O 0 - I ■ 41 pci 0 P 21441 ei ra ,z P• 4 CZ "" ~; ci p i 4-4 4 its ' ll 4 1;f pm, I z o f .3 144 IN E- te La 4l o 1 13 L -1 0 114 tr i=i 4 0 E - 1 ;11 t I=l 6 I=l z ad p ot 41 6" 93 64 111 NEW SPRING GOODS JUST OPENED; AT! THEODORE F. PHILLIPS', 7 Market Street. PrinU, Muslim, Dress Goo 6, SILKS, SHAWLS. FIILI ! LINE OF S I 1., SACQUES, Very Mectp. 87. AO RRET STREET. ST DicCANIILESS & CO., Late Wilson, Carr & Ve..) OLEJAZZ MALI= U &Domestic Dry Goods, lo• 94 WOOD STREET,. o'ye Diamond alley, Foreign PITTSBUBOR. PA. WALL PAPERS: 100 WOOD STREET. 100 WOOD STREET. DR. wEccm:mx 4.,re • 17.,„*. - .".P.A‘t Lp,'- . --- 10aVAN'VVA li - I,l*Z"'" 4,4 NEW CARPETS! Jump, 113439: We are now openinw an assortment unparateled In this elty of FINEST VELVETS BRUSSELS TBREE-PLYS, The Very Newest Desigas, Of onr oari recent;importatlon and selectedthink eastern manufacturers. MEDIUM AND LOW PRICED r-NG-R _ALTA'S, VERY BIIPRICIOU QUALITY AND COLORS. An Extra Quality of Rag Carpet. We are now selling many of the above at GREATLY REDIICEI) PRICES. I II'CILLIIIII . BROS .ro. 51 FIF74H arEavE, Jel2 NEV CARPETS. ' FINE CARPETS. CHEAP' CARPETS. ?IL CLOTHS, WI DOW SHADES dwM.rt as. BOV\ARD, ROSE /c CO., 2 1 1 FIFTH AVENET. za24.o:l&mrT MALY 18,1669. BARGAINS .EL .1: 2 • 1 6 3. WINDOW SHADES, AND LADE AND NoTnNGRAIE New StoCk Just Received- LOWEST PRICES EVER OFFERED. McFARLARD & COL LIM. No. 71 and:73 FIFTH IVER I.IE, myl9 0; I 41": ts) • Nat J. L. DILLIAGEB..... • s. smirmisom. DILLINGER &. STEVENSON; DISTILLERS AND DEALERS IN Pure Rye Whiskies.. IMPORTERS OF BRANDIES, WINES, GINS, &C., No. 87 Second Avenue, •p2O VSTABLISBED BY A. & T _mad Bi BILLY, 1814. I W. M. GORMLY, WHOLESALE GROCER, No. 271 Liberty Street, WOIX . pII , LI7 OPP: EAGLY . •isirrrErstrutaxi. se :yl6 Y e WIMELD :,.. A. WZ/XLI. R Air STEEL . _& SON, 4 . .A.M.• COMMLSBiOti Merchants, il AND DX/LLD/18 /N A VIN:FR, ( .11,Anol. Vk.Ex). c&o. e No." 01110 STREW]. near East Comnicm t,.. ALLEGHENY CITY. PA.. W. C. ARBISTRUNG, Successor to Fetter & Annet-on, !..‘q PRODUCE' COMRIESSION- /ERMAN? Co-r 1 PITIIIIIII ........... JAB. .I'. SICBAUTe & ............ - "aOMMISSION ILICIV.C.RANTS, _AND biAtins ix 1 eAtutnk bREDI:6 MU, PZIED. ri4 it4W Llbent,Nt.. Pittsburg*, Lf_ l % Wholesale R sad etail Grocers, so. aaa razor annum C;lama No.. 25 rciasurr !mum. inva • 7 • • 1• IRAN calm). '<~~'~; Bond Floor) PITTSBURGH, PA
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