El Eitintrgi Gairtts. TWO. Two budsigneked from the tree: Two birdies flown from the nest; Two little babe& snatched- From a fond mother's breast; • Two little snow-white lambs Gone from the sheltering fold; Two little narrow graves Down In the churchyard cold. Two Uttle.droopinz.nowers___ —tirowing.hs a purer air.. - Blooming fragrant aad.bright , In the Great Gard; IWO' ' . Two little tender biros . ; Two little snow-white-111M' •. - In the 4crod Sheptkerd'is arm. - Two little angels more. • • Singing with voices sweet, • . ; Flinging their crows:s of goi , Down .t . their Saviour's feet.- - Fs•re Porn a I earth'y care. - Pure from all earthly stain— Oh, who con,d wish them hack In this drearirorld again ? EPREILERB. Logtin is st Lon ;,Brandt. -George Alfred Townsend is in New York. • : • " Scott•Siddons 'will make Amet-' lea her home. -Jerusalem —Jerusalem and Pails are throne.ed —, with; Americans. " • , of , yrance, pTopopes to visit .A 3 nriC a n e?" YO r .. , -Sodium b now Abed for matches in= stead of phosphorus. —A Boston balloon carried its ptissen - forty idles I two h gets n Olars. —A. shower og snakes; occurred _areal taneonsly in sayeralmuthern localities. —The ladies are moving to introduce Chinese Servant girls - into`the eastern - : .. • . r .'-Henry Yard Beecher announces that he will 'not lecture during the coming —Mrs. B. will return to iurope. immediately. Mr. Raymi:adleft no will. . - =Four dollars a day with board is said to the pay of agricultural ; laborers in Illinois. ~ • • •, —Beecher thinks that the 14300 paid yearly for floweri for his pulpit is a good investment. —Stewart named Butterfield-for Mats. tent Treasurer at New York. The Pres; ident defend.% the grammar of hi s letter of acceptance, which, he says, "I think Was Very well wrote." — ' —Tennessee is rejoicing over the fact tbat.,.thacradk . Qf Sta te la a pecuniary point of view re not altogether gone. —Groom.7s, bride 15; one rich, tother pobr,'6lgts)}ip'_pf eleven hours; love, on sight, lath:elated . SavannaliZsensation, —Dana saps le,- still admirea Grant. The latter will feel pleased that the . great encyclopedian has not withdriwn his' love. _ . —Temnessee has employed 20,000 Chi . .nese plantation hands. How John and Bambo will work together remains to be seen , —Lonii NaPolean is credited with hav ing saki lately that, "at 'Present France only acknoteledges-Bonipartists and rev. elation - lats." • lishermaii of Savannah sold his wife for sixty bunches of fish, worth thirty dollars. :The' wife was \ a willing party to the fiCaly triussaction. t'. Blair lign worse odor than ever with loyal soldiers of the late stinks. His dernigueisni tit exhibited in his speech at Long . Branch was sickening; but Ilia friends,say he"was wine heavy. —The honorary degree of Master of Arts was conferred by Union college, at thc; late corunteneement, upon Col. ;3: Townsend Cohnoly. of Gov. Marian's Staff andluditor of finance of New York city. • —A number of tobacconists of Rich. . mond struck .because a blacknoan was taken into the factory as a cigar maker. 'The_ proprietors brought color to the faced' of the strikers,. by hiring colored workmen to:fill their'places. —A daughter of General Albert Pike , I• at Memplps, killedherself accidentally by falling asleep in bed with an uncorked bottle of aholorform in her hand. the ,'Contenti gpilled ontover her breast and shewasAtind dead in the Morning. —Mr. Probasco's private residence at 1- Cluelnuatilis one of thefinest in America, sad bkworlM" °fut. Painting, statuary and cabinets of rare curiosities, is unsurpass• ed. by Many. :the "owner is one of the. Most gelid cmirteocut'gentlempn of' —The Presertf year' barks :the -centenY ial midst:rutty of the invention of damn. In 1761/i It'petent for the new loondensiog , petit boa granted : to an obsCureperso4 one. Wait by nam.er hence the,eivilizatiOn , Lof thii entrant year of.gr.4e, Its vrottder. • ladnatrlea, ,odlly comforts, leisure' mad humanities, , • ' 3ffilwatikee. paper' remittds P. Fi; that When. he le ft that city some • yeassago to seek his fortune, he lino:mine• . ed that We - shou . ld come back again when ? -he had 'gains apochet full of, ocks, and: done ,4 •Fxbyttldos totmike the -World re-' :40ct "I - now • gills spoi-ht.lillbOre,tOcomathobe. Vil,,ctter-trkythetutelita Offend , tinsuu7 ~---.41i1J01.1007.4414,06 tare an d valpablg eitpteami.la t i All LW pit: nek , eps : -, lstenesid otiketavfl77B;betag the waft coitneßopd pe ofGea' & r bur St. Qf, r 011140;1417*101rAh, are a 740 be, eo ) hetiteen 444 - the ebtxMokiMitninib'Prllext itu i for the beriefitralbeiniit,ori^Or taniotAteldsomirateum: ( '`lklndetikle'::e.oafiie u at UM fx:*titittiontd A lr titithingtolivirt 40 7, is 17 4 teadled by;the unlyal hp New • York; front Europe, on Wednesd ay ' , 'orthati w ho been sAr ever;lnvalid since the period mentioned, lIMIII and is supposed to be the sole survivor of that ill-fated coralnzny. „ Who were the guilty parties in this, one of the dark- Sit deeds in our history, has, singularly never been discovered. \ —Talent is any profession \k3 about as much appreciated and as well paid for in this country aa, in any other. For in stance, in the musical line, choir singers who grumble at their salaries should lead the - London - Husioz/ Times. They will see there that a soprano is wanted at a _London, c 1 4c , 419“.P-Prq-$9,9A7" YeFi Eton College , WaritS for its choir a solo alto, with a powertul !Ace, familiar with Green's, Croft's and. Pnrcell's anthems, to sing twice every day of the week, , for £lOO a year; and chorister boys are Wanted at,,salaries ranging from £2 to ahnum, including schooling, but xe.}n„sive of board or lodging , . ; / +-A mother'slove only equale4 • by a mother's generosity. One thciusand btrthe Nolumes of \ the library st! I the Dayton (Ohio) ' National Mili tary Asylum is the donation of Mrs. Mary, Lowell Putman, of Boston, s bone- Actress who has never been semi at the 'asylum, but who has sent her library pre.. 'paid, to the door, every' voldnie stamped' I"Putnam Library,"' and `beiind in the best style. Accompanying, the books, were a number of fine 'foreign chromes, framed ready for hangingispon the walls. 'The‘gift is mother's tribute.to her only i song Charles Lowell Butnami who was killed at the battle of Bari Bluff, and whose photograph ornaments the case of the library. —The latest - ocean mystery, the loss of the steamship United Kingdom, is yet un raveled., Oa the 29th of April, six days after the'lanited Kingdom sailed, the City of Paris reported icebergs and heavy gales In neighborhood of Cape Race. Itis possible that the U nited Kingdom per ished jismid these: sides, and probably from'collision with an iceberg.; It is hard to give np hope, but we are not left any foundation on which _longer to lean - . Like the Hibernia,'"ortutinful memory; the - United Kingdom hits,* doubt; gone down; but unlike the Hibernia; has, in canied. with her her en tire living freight: !It is, In fact, another terrible sea tragedy all` the more terri ble, in trnth, i that no one has survived to tell the tale. • BEECHES ON EARLY MARRIAGES. At no after period,- perhaps, in their life; do young men need the inspiration of virtuous love, and the sympathy of a contpanion iii their acif-denYing toil, as when they first enter the battle for their own support. Early marriages are per manent Moralities, and deferred mar . riages are temptations to Wickedness. And yet every year It becomes more and more difficult, Concurrent with the reign ing ideas of society; for young 'men to enter "upon that matrimonial state which is the proper guard "of their virtue, as well as the source of their courage and enter prise.' The battle of life is almost always at the beginning. There it is that a man needs wedlock. But a wicked and ridic ulous public sentiment puts a man who is in society, or out of society; for that mat ter. largely on the ground of condition, and not of disposition and charac ter. The man that has means where with he can visibly live amply, is in good society, as a general rule. The man that has virtue and sterling manli ness, but hat nothing withal ,external to show, is not usually considered in good society. Arab/firms young men will not, therefore, Marry until they can meet their expneses; but that is deferring for years and years the indispensable virtue. So ciety lashed where two cannot live cheaper than one; and young men are under bad influences who, when in the very morn ing of life, and better fitted than at any .later period grow together with one who is their: : equal and mate, are debarred from marrying, through scores of years. from mere prudenital consideration; and the heart and life are sacrificed to the pocket. , They are; tempted to substitute ambition.for loye; when set last, over the ashes and expiring embers of their early. rorduice, theyselect their wife, It la said that men who wait till they are,forty or forty-five years of age, select pr udently. Alas! for the wife who was not; firm a, sweetheart! Prudence' is good; but .is Tradence servant or queen ? Prudence Is good"; but what is prn deuce? It is the dry calculation ot the head leagued with Ma- petiketl is there no prudence in taste, nor prudence in the inspiration ot generous love? Is there no prudence in the faith by which, banded, two young persons go down into the struggle of life, saying e ;Tome weal; come woe, come storm; come calm; love is a match for circumst!inces, and we will Le all-to leach other!! Woe be. to:the, society in which the customs and manners of the times extendbeyond the period of romance and affetzkut of:the wedding. You bayeadiourned;the:most important• secular act of a man'tllfe. You have adjourned it gut of Eden into the wilder- - ;lidst.'- l rlie,Rtrit nest`" infected : ( and even women. - fall) With the :Public, - spirit, too OftetrWilta to Vg•iriiPeji h'ithase Wild' can placeherjigain,ln tboYery beglipihkg of Att"fe4dll-4*gii:hett she. *6 broken off as branch f the pa ternal tree. Bit a graft align d always be' willing to be i'gratt, aid - wait till it Criti make Its ownidpby legitimate grow. I Int- And woe 16 jaieday 'Yi4en every ,girl - says; marq • until my husband " .ii the begigriing has at much as, `myhadaf the' - .end of hi `life.'! . For she—what is she? ' Who 'wan if' that aultiter,ftaitt a shower of:gold? r Who eterlit saw-math the Ligpwailhe Whose , heart:; la .:mon by i :abundance; she .who - t bought Lint° -,imatrimony by: r house, and •Mad ;1; she • who , marten' for genteel wealtit•-she it is ;that /bpi*: iseducant.tby •gold. 'Foe -au - wedlock ;it adulterous-. in which it is not:. thaitel4.. ..that inspires.. marriage. Noble •Is that, pning,spirlte w high, seeing, 'ant loving, 'and' chasing, aid silently. ,biding her; choice; is. won.and ::chosen,;: and giving' herself freely,. romantically, if you: Will' (God be thanked for .the rorianee,). down to the.leiel of her , husband's mot;' inguess and poverty,;. that she and he' may;'hands, from the bottain bnildAtp their esteto./ Blessed is the. won= who sees that in going dim' etil PITTSBURGH. GAZETTE: TUESDAY, JULY 13, 1869, is goffig ney and that it is the losing of life that sales it. Blessed is the woman who - carries with her into married life all that, she learned in the refinement other father's family; who proves'. that sheds a woman in this: thatgentleness apidinalse and abundance, and luiarjevett, minis- tered to the better parts of her nature, and prepared her to go forth and minister earnestly and permanently in the midst of difficulties. Thousands there ere who, when wide ' they are called, and know their master, Love, go cheerfully out with the young man and take part and lot with him. Oh, that young men would trust themanore, and prove them better ' and" seelf this' is not so. ' How noble a thing it is to see the cultured, the tail. ished, and the refined, go down to the very, beginning of things, led by love:, fed by love, and at last rewarded by level Live together alone, if you have to go into the desert for it, and feed on herbs! : bhor Sodom and Gomorroh—or board to* houses! Men sometimes speak of the , ea re.and pinched fare. These are un i wor yor notice. It is not these. It is that /men learn self-indulgence there. Me ' i learn there not to be house holders. And all - that various ' discipline, all that ministration of care, and all that drill of contrivance, all that social Independence, all that subtle atmosphere, indescribable and unatialyzable, which belongs to the solitary household, they miss. No man and wOman can make husband and wife, hr er and mother, and .householders on the attern of their fathers, who begin 1 and continue their married limit hot-bed styl of existence. And yet they are un-` will ng to take a house that they can affo ; and they cannot afford to take the house they fain would live in, because itirniture is so dear, and virtue Is cheap; because society requires a certain amount of appearance, you know; because it would not do to go to the outskirts of the town! A log cabin is better for young married people than the Fifth Avenue Hotel would be, if they had the whole of it for nothing 1 What you get for nothing is least valuable to you of any thing. What you earn is all value. Under these influences, thewhole life is written in the wrong key. Men having started on tke false principle, they do not get over it. They are perpetually tempted to overlive by their very affections. If there is anything that an honorable and sensible man's nature leels and cannot stand, it is the silent comparison, on the part of the wife, by a look, even, of the way in which she did live, and the way in which she does live. How does this drive men into dishonesties ? How does it drive them out of simplicity and out of bold willingness to live according to their circumstances ? How does it teach them to live for other people's eyes and not for their own itcbial needs ? How does it teach the m to be more subject to vanity than love ? Such life Is hollow. Osten tation takes the place of sincerity, and so, ere long, a man is educated to be a rogue, and steals. And woman takes on unvirtue, because that pays the bill of extravagance quicker than anything else. —Byrne:A Church Sermons. Luck and • Labor. Indolent people are : the only 'true disci ples of luck, and luck alone is their god. They are always suresomething is going 'to "turn up"_ for tteir benefit, and-there fore wait is idleness, with "folding of hands," while the industrious, with strong and sharp will, go manfully to work and "turn up" something from the most un promising materials. Luck slew pa on the hope of a legacy to morrow, breakfasts on disappointment, and sits out the day in cold and hunger, still waiting for the fortune that labor achieves by sturdy blows and ,well.di vetted efforts. Ttie ringing ham Mer, and the busy pen, are Paying the foundation of competence, while indolence fosters misery and crime. Luck is simply the bantling of the most precarious chance, while' labor is the all-powerful god of success, that over leaps every obstacle, and conquers the world in detail.. Luck whines.' Labor whistles. Luck relies on the turn of a card. Labor on sturdy blows and honesty of purpose. Luck slips downward to penury. Labor strides upward to independence. Luck makes the outcast and the criminal. Labor the man of substance and the christian gentleman. Labor is despised by none but fools. It is the true friend of rich and poor alike, and merits the humble duty ofemery son r, and daughter of God. • BEFORE these modern days of dictiona ries and spelling books, the best educated people wrote the English language In various odd fashions. The autograph lette7 of kings, queens, and school dre.u, and those of the most famous liter ary people are not much better. A. re. markable specimen of this sort of bad spelling, is a letter written a little more than a century ago by the mother of Washington, which has recently been sold atauction in Baltimore. It is as follows: "Dear Brother "this Coma •by Capt Nickelson you Seem blew me for not writing to you but I\ dog a shonr you it is Note for -Wante of a wiry great Regard far you and the family but. as I dont, ship tobacco the , Captins -Never , Calls one me, eon that I Never knew when the come or when the goe I beleve yon have got very good overseer at this quarter now Can New. ton hag taken a Large pease of , grbuna irbm you which I dear 'say' if you had `been. hear yottr self it had not beeri Don Mr: Daniel and bia wife \ and is well ;Cozen Hannah has been married and L.Jather husband She has one c hild boy may . give my love to . Sister -. B all and Mr. ..Dawnman & his Lady and am •Hcar Brother, 4 - • \ "Your Loving' Slater \ . "MART WABnIRO'roN." 4 Yet Mr s . 'Washington was esteemed one of the first ladies of :Virginia i Times change, and fashions change with them. :Th/A1:1 ' Mint. —"Have you ever"mad the "'..fill'elent Mariner'? vied Bev. ' Mr. SPurgeon, one day - of his' congregation. dare say you thought It one /of the strangest imaginationa:ever pot;together, especially, that part where the old mariner - Tepresen's the corpses of all dead • men rising' up to man the' ship—dead men pulling - the roam dead/men 'steering, menseal , r spreading sidle. I thought' hat_ a strange Idea / that was. - But do Irbil 'know hate lived to - tee that time ! have lived. to sealt doge I I have'gone , OtutrehOs, -and I have wpm a dead : man in the pulpit adeadecum as a deacon, and , a dead. man banding the plate, and ; dead men sitting to • hear. " „ • tt, eueitials—ntogr,toh lop e, andPPilleSi ‘ooothing 1 4 C 1 1 Seea imietiiing,to . f o r. WELD9ptli iiELLY; huanticiarersik,4lll96lesak De* Di Lamps, Lanterns,- Chandeßefs, AND LAMP _GOODS. Also, CARBON AND DUBBICATINO QUA DENZINE. &o• No. 147 Wood Street. ze2:1122. Between iftti aII4 tieb AveAtu.., --- --- -- -- - - ,- F--. 7 . ` 7 l .:- ii " -- 4 , ~~~a t 1:‘ ..17.*.titi: 4 1 , toV it ,I".. ~ t- i; Ii ffSll . ti - '" " . ia, '? 4 44 : 04( ' 7 4. 1 1 .; : ,,i , t t.L. .7-..,A,K,4t. ia,~a d I tit I. ' • It 1 TT4 , 1 4124 / 2 00.,0 11 ' x , .4 4 'i' , l: l * t., I * j !': ,4:...k0 .1.j...P ( 4i i I ' WtSY t i . 1a14L46 N"tiV.titNt .. 4 : t 1.51- Wu ire now l'utters lt, Is the plain top, Fruits starme tho canter, and thu top of the C It is Cleo:rip 'Distinctly and Permanently . , . al by merely pl \ Inc the name of the trait the can contains op oslte the pointer and sealing In the customary annex. No preserver of fruit or good housekee r will use any other after once seeing t. 1 \ • , mh2s PIPES, CHIMNEY TOPS, &c. WATER PIPES, OIRMINST TOPS .. I..4large assortment, \ \ I • • HANBY H. COLLIAS: , \ ; spit:hal 21 AOO2llO, n'e,ar Smithfield St CARPETS, a co. CARPETS, • We offerntß•tall, f , r 'THIRTY DAYS CiNLY a tine ot. New and choice Patterns English` Tapestry, Brussel9, 'lngrain, . and Other Carpets, • AT LESS TIIA.N COST OF IMPORTATION. and our entire stork st prices which make it All object 1 ,2 1, buy this month, as these goods have never peen offered so low. Oar Store will close rt. 3 P. E. until September first. • No. 71 in 73 115211 AVENUE, jy:i:S±T (St eond Floor) NEW. CAI PE CHEAP CARPETS WINDOW SHADES. BOVARD, ROSE do CO., 21 FIFTH AVENUE. Nin4.thk.er NEW CARPETS! 3tLxle, 1800. We Are now °perdue' an assortment unparalleled in this city of FINEST VELVETS BRUSSELS THREE-PL S, - The Very Newest Deers, Of oar ort recent IC:lncitation and selectedfroes eastern itiannfactarers. , , MEDIUM AND LOW PRICED VERY SUPERIOR : QUALITY AND COLORS. : An Extra ',Quality of lii, Cariet. o .ltay the 21720. '3Fe are now Wing m 19.7 of the abate at CIREATII REDUCED PRICES. 51' /Ors Jrnrinv., Jen OLIVER reIANTOCK CO. HAVE JUST REGEHRO A FINE SEIMCTION pF ICIAIDWIMS, • TAPEStIit BRUSSELS • Tilt prar INGRAIN- AOAR-PETs. maz lOW Atigeßtinit OF • , • , WHITE, dila a FANCY .. • MATiIIiGS, FOR BUMMER WEAR, VIM MT! , . • - STOCK FULL IN A 4, O,f.P,AOTMENTS orang lIIAMINTOOK a r qi_f I iLO ij: PRITIT'CADT TOPS. prepe.red to t7nppliTlnn'ersend perfect, simple, and us cheep as eying the whets of the renews Upon the cower, radiating from rt index or pointer (damped upon • I,A33m3LED, SPECIAL SALE OP\ DIcIMUAAND &' COLLINS. FIXE CARPETS. OIL :LOTHS, MGCattirtges. iNartAIINS, Irratiffil BROS., UMEti 63 I # 2 K *VPUZ' TRIM:MINOS, NOTIONS, &C. NRIV SPRING. 'GOODS . . v MACRUNt CARLI SLE'S - leo. 27 Fifth Avenue, • Dress Trimmings and Euttons. . Xptilace,4gneo and Laces. lista and Bonnets. Glove fitting and French Corsets. New Styles Brae ley's Slats. Parasol .• . -7i1:1 the new styles. bun and Rain Cmbrellas. llosiery—tbe best English snakes.' • Ag , ate for "Harris' Seamless EWE" Spring and Summer underwear, Sole Agents tor the Bemis Patent Shape Col. Lars. "Loekwood's "Iriihe," "West End," ••it I ' ,ke; "Dickens," "Derby," and other styles. - • • Dealers supplied with the above at MANUFACTURERS' PRI,CF.S. , • MAO UM dr= • CARLISLE, • wico. -27 • PrFTH AVENUE, mm ' PAPERS, • WALL PAPER AND WINDOW SHADES, , ow New and Handsome Designs, NOW OPENING AT No. 107 Market Street (1:4,LII FIFTH AVINIIII,7 Embracing a large and carefully selected stock of the newest deafens 1.1 om the FINEST STAMP- Ell GOLD to the CHEAPEST ARTICLE known to the trade. All of which we offer at pidoes ttuit will pay buyers to examine. • , \ JOS. R. HUGHES & BRO. mh=gril. - 4 - \ lArAz.i..P/WER. • •\ TIIE OLD PAPER STORE IN A NEW PLACE, \ WI P. MARSHALL'S NEW BALL" PAPER STORE, 191 Liberty. Streil, • \ (NEAR HAREET,) SPRING GOCD3 ARRIVING DAILY. mIIS, - SUMMER RESORTS. CRESboIki SPTRINGi; - 1%.1s Fayorite SIIMIIter Resort, Pitnated on the Summit' of the ALLEGHENY 1101 , NTAINS, 2,200 FRET AUUVI! THE LEVEL OF THE ,EA. will be open fertile re• ception of' guests on the 111th clay of JUNE. I he buildings connected with the v.tablisliment have beep evtirely renovated and newly famish ed.- Extursion Ti kets told by the Pennsylvania itairresd; at Pllll.4elphia. Haerleburg and Pitts burgh, good or the season. Alt trains atop at reason. Tr u FUNNIsH Gil COTTAGES FOR RENT. For further information, addrets GEO W. MULLIN, Proprie'or, • et eason Spdags, Cimbrla'county, Pa 155:1,57 STOCKTON HOTEL, CAPE MAY, N. J. Will open on the - 24th of JUNE, 1889. This hotel has been erected within the Past year; af fords ample accommodation for nearly one thou and guests and Is tarnished equal to any:of the leading hotels In the 'United atates. • Porfterms, ae., untll then. address. PETER GARDNER, Proprietor, No. 301 Walnut street' Philadelphia. lett:klS•nryst , UNITED STATES HOTEL, CAPE MAY CITY, N. J.,. Will be opened for the season SATURDAY. May SRlth. In all first class apeotarments, equal say and yerAdordlnyt to rambles all the comforts, of a ii.nne. President Uraut expects to visit; Cape May this season and will atop at the "United: . States.' Address,. • ,• my21:1104 AARON MILLIER. Proprietor. GLAIEM CIUNAL. CUTLERY 100 'WOOD STREET. •i ELI ;Mr - GOODS. 01 FINE - VASES, 41 .s soinutuust a u CWNA. • DLS2III2. 811111 ks 418MOISING BXTB, m ,T CUPS' surge stook of t*SIiTER PLATED GOODS 'ot damivut-4L Eli • 441444 osonOn goOds,;, fed mania no one e nee d t o r suited. Re Z. 11103313 . CCI.I leer - WOOD STREET.. FLOUR. tEMIL AIL- FAIRY' RAUL lvja.ll2.llElLt l'brep Mar Breud i , equal ta "RENON !AMILY SLOUR. a rpAeurviu =at, se* out :when eape MILIMIL MILL SLIM amiuni, • irgAzil Jazz, gibut u t u "ll4 s ttungs. yams Win litM es atiratZAlN I°l4 • - 1 2. SSA. Ausabany. eart..lll. IN& NW. mar U. exzwAirs u.tavizuson. ROST* H. iturrEssols &AO. _ . , I.l.niallt SALM &MCP CON STI4INM3 mlll, splnn 'AT NUR k PrrroWiac4al -` • stAltht ,1166.1` • - DRY GOODS. . . r 0 •41 . O• , 1 4 - A 'ft Ck/' 413 ' Fil 1 M E?: o 4 z , M rn 1 " 4 „ 2 -ei M •••4 E ' WI p 4 - ..; W 4 04 -sj Els . g 0 - V Al 44 sw, c:. rp•A -IZ E=2l 0 P . 4 TA Poi 1 i W s 'i4 0 - Lt ' ' 14 am A . ma 1.4. irl • I:4 E l i s M Si NO , t, tisi ° - ell -- \ a *Ffir SPRZIWG GO D 8 JUST OPENED, N THEODORE E PHILLIPS', \ o , 87 Market Street. Prints, Muslim, Dress Goods, SILKS, SHAWLS. FULL LINE. OP.' SACQUF,S, Very Cheap. S 7. STREET. S. spa CARR, NcCAkiiirDLESS & CO., (Late Wilson, Carr Co.,) ' . WHOLESALE, LINAIAREI IN Foreign and Domestic Dry Gods, No. 94 WOOD FiTRE.r.r. Third door above Diamond they. PIANOS. ORG,A.NS, C. B uy T. HE ol im ifia dir 2 CHEAP• EST Sehomacker's Gold Medal Piano, AND . ESTEYI . COTTAGE ORGAN. The .FICILOKA.CXZEt PIANO combines all the latest valuable Improvements known In the eon• , attraction of a first class Lustrument. and has al- ' ways been awarded the big hest premium ex hlblted. Its tone is fall. sonorous and sweet. The workmanship. for durabili O tyand beauty, surpass aU others. Prkes from a to' 415 O. ( accoing to style and finish.) cheaper than all other so e ailed flirt eases Plano. • ESTEY , ti COTTA.OE ORGAN • - Stands at the head of all reed InStroments. In producing the most perfect plrequallty of tone of any similar Instrument In the United States. It la simple and compact in construction. and not thou. to get out ot order. CA.P.PENTES , I3 , PATRbIT " VOX HITALANA: TIW..MOLO" Is mix- to be foend tine Orwiu Price from 11100 to gamitutee4 for Ave BARR Y HUTCH & METTLE% • • wo. ia sr. CLAM SfiftEET.` -ferl.rciers for tuning ;and renalrlnsc, will bb promptly attended to br C. F. Mathews. WINES. LIQUORS, &c. SCHMIDT & FRIDAY, z apouTEss OF Writit'S l . .. BIIANDIES,:..GIk:'::::4IC...t.: WHOLESALE DEALERS za PURE BY WHISUES, 409 PENN STREET: Rave Removed to NOS. 35&4 836 PENN, Cor ' .lr.levei4t4 St., (torixterly Canal.) JOSEPH S. FINCH Oti Nos.'lBs. 113;159, 191, 193 sad,M, IrDIBT STBZET. •P/TTSBUEBII; mAzrcriPacrtarrauli or - • Caper lOstißed Pere Rye Wblskey.•;: Also, dealers 111. FOREIGN WIPTIA sad Ll-1 QUOREL HOPS. /to. - . esets.ner STONE. WEST COMMON Mackin.' Stone Works ',Horthwest oOrnera-West COntroos AANbeny. ATVATHAS i CO. as,. on hand 'or im p lore on snort Subs Hearth and Step Stones, tbr Sidewalks, Mower? Varna, he. Head an Tomb Stones, ab 4. Ortilant TtreplUtt4ll/ OrWCOßrie. P 1461.11 Immennataii- • DR. IWITIMItEt - CITECIIIES TREAT 41AL private diseases. Syphilis in all its forms v isili n diseases mod toe effects of mercury Aire completely eradicated; Spermatorrhea or Semi- • nal Weakness and impotency, resulting Iremr. self-Mose or other =uses, and•which produces some atria following effects. as• bloteneh 4: wealtneSs, indigestion, consumption, avast= society, unmanliness, dread ot, feting ;erten :loss of =MOM Ludolence, nocUrnel and Smelly se prostrating the sentialaystern as be: . render marriage unsatisfactory, and therelOsel imprudent, are permanently cured Persons 0f..1 Mated with these or any other delicato lutricalm or long standing coestitirtional combiMnt shouttli• gW. the Doctor a trial; believer falls. =7 : A partbmlar attentiongive rs to all Female plaints, Leurerrhea or Whites, Falling, motion or Ulceration of the Womb; *melt's, Anienorrtitea.'• Iffenorrlusgts, Dysme&T, torrhoe4 andbterility rie Barrenness, are treat` • ed with the greatest success, ' It is seif.eVident that a physician who continikel himself exelesively tothe study et a Certain Clattj, Of diseases and treats thousands of cases every: l . chWUt liSquire greeter Attila that aperialtyi one in general practice. \ e Doctor' publishes a medical pamphle t elq Msaeathat gees St fell expsgsltlon of verserea;t mu private diseases, that can be bad free at olhea:.l enamel' for two stomps; in sealed envelopes, Bye sentence contain' tnetinetkm to the at • and enabilog them to determine the pro; else nature of tharnomplalp in The -• estatelebasent, gem g • tea ample Immo la (would. if i tezl i t not 0011Teldent \ Visit Me clew, the opinion can be ob came ; wo rst a written statement of the case and cos can be forwarded by mall or en press. sem. Lisstaisees„ however, : ; persona , sgarranetion ' absoletely nessisary while I ' , others daliypenonal attention %%p rod, ari. j. l tir the ageommodation clinch mitten there arT_t• imertmeets coaseeted with the Meet at art Dpartf.ri *Med with llRMl___requisite that Is cal ..ressieste ve, including - at baths. All . prescriptions are, prepared. in thr • Doctors Owe latwratosy, nutlet his personal su Derrislort. Medical pamphlets at °Moss free, by mall thr two etamps. No matter.who bev;' , . • galled, read what he says. • Hours 9 A.M. ' !Sand ill to Br. Y , OleeOlo. 9 WYL I , . NYM =. Went Court .10reeest =tlabolllh rat: fal O IP. 111 \ PITTSBURGH. PA.