El THE DAILY GAZETTE OFFICIAL PAPER of Pittsburgh. Allegheny City and Allegheny Connty. GNZEITTE BUILDING: I , . Censer a Wadi Avenue and Ikulthir RATUROAV MORNING, MAY 7, 11070. ika)fint in Frankfort, 93. PrEnni.r.nr in Ai.tn-nrr, 53! (low cint.ll in :Cf.. fork yl•ntrrdny at .-114 i- Tio: Altman .ctrre in to t.hine every day Lorea(ti.r. • TUE Pennxylvania AntiSjmery Socie formally disbanded itself at Philadelphia 01 the 4th. The war ia over I , • Cosortzsii will paws tliO Northern Pacifir e k k ,; Railroad bill on Monday. W ' may al . *, look, next week, for a report n favor of ~ a along , d grant to the Southern I ne. along ' the. 3241 parallel. TitE. New York Timex has I.,\s t ita load. . • lig editor, 4 Mr. SaIErTAII.D. who ie 'sae . .„Ceeded LT Mr. JENsts•ns, late the man ' aging editor. The change is attributed to the 111 health of the retiring journalist ; . but it Is undersrnod that he la really . a victim of the late collision - with ;. the t . Tram it,. • TAIAINII of the unanimity with which tile 'smileless people of San Dominge, bun gal for Republican liberty, arc said to have voted for annexation to thin Govern ment, we hear that several thousand of them have Mimed a piotert walnut the Fausammation of that' plan, which deeu intent han been laid before our Se 11116,: IT IS the, general impresnion that con gress trill really adjourn on the 4th of July. The only measures of public con4r: quenee, which will be tilltenni in thesnean. time, will be the funding-bill, the needed amendments to the natnralczation lawn. and the approprintion bills. This in about all that 14 expected, in the quarters bent informed. IT la satistaciatili known that a malori ty of the" Ways and Means Committee, o the .lionse, favors the retentii)h; with slight modifications, of the seventh sec tion in the Senate funding-bill. This is the section which will require the banks to exchange their bonds for the new four and a half per cents or take the cash for their property in gold ai par. AN English - Under Secretary stated in Parliament, on the 5111, that the Red River difficulty was settled. No basis, for the statement has yet transpired on. Oda sidOof the Atlantic. Our latest *skim' from Winnipeg report the colonists as en tirely confident in their independent posi tion:and even talking of annexatipn . to . the Republic. It will be curious to ewer. taln justly bow murk more the Seiretary knew. • • WE print au interesting communication relative to the charges•against Gen. 0. 0. Howard._A'cardfrom the correspondent referredto has recently appeared, deny . Ing any concert or action with Fernando Wood. .•Juatice" makes an home on.that point, and le confident of hie facto We lava no doubt that Oen. Howard will be ely 'exoneratedand then eye°. phantically eulogizod, by a print which is now giving countenance to the base an ..eiSudts of hie enemies TUE ineettn,g of the Equal Eights League, an association of, colored men, at _2lartialtzg, on the 3rd, ices largely at -tended, and its proceedings were interest ing. The resolutions were especially ' pointed and forcible, recognizing the tole, the School and Republican politics as the redeeming and saving elements In our Nodal order. To protect the 'interest of the nice In-our common school system, the League will continue its operations, adjourning now until August 13th. Tau Lake Shore and Southern Michi • ' Railroad earned. Last year, 512.9.15598A0 gross. Their operating expenses were $7,419,165.131; taxes '492.36134, and net earnings $5,03 , 01'0.71. .Out of this were paid two dividends of four'per cent. each ? and a surplus of $716;172.69 carried over. The operating expenses were fifty• Seven per cent of the receipts. This great trunk-line has now_ passed under the control of the Vanderbilt's party; which thus controls the unbroken route via - Albany. Buffalo and Chicago to Oma . • ha. ' ANL here is more of it 1 The Commer: dal, with . a aanctimonious sniff of its virtuous nostrils. soleinnly puts this query to the editor of a Republican journal in Ike interior be pretend to sly that he irlll rote for, and counsel others to do the lame, men known to he openly and undlsguleedly corrupt Poli- Mises? Doe. he believe the Republican party Cal long retain the respect end support of the honest mane. by - being' "stlckJers for the sanctity of Domination.: and Toting tot bad 'and Incompetent men? —The Commercial talking about "the honest masses" again!! The report MI/Pt be true, that its late Democratic editor; graduathig into Wredhot opposition neb-s -pefiet.Ctut West, has 'been succeeded. In the charge of Our honesty and reform neighbor, by Aminadab Sleek ! TUE SENATE Finance Committee have been conferring freely With Mr. Sou trict, with a view to agreement upon an abatement of the internal taxes. It was very positively stated, a day or two since, that the amount of reduction in the re ceipts - would not, he indrered to r eiceed twenty millions of . dollars. Yet these specrdations were all wrong. The Com mittee, through its chairman, Mr. Sher mut, has recommended a schedule which will remit over forty-three millions 'from the present revenue. If the final adjust ment shall be on this basis, it will 'make any rediction of the geocral revenue from other sources quite out of the question. 'But while the House might concede the point as to some of-the special taxes pro posed to be thrown off. it ittsafe to predict that, as a whole, the programme of Mr. Sherman will not become law at this ses sion. INTELLJGENCIL Quite recently Rev. Dr. hfcCosh, the distinguished President of Princeton Col lege, delivered a course of four philoaoph; . lad lectures before the Methodist Thee logical Seminary, in - Dalton, in which he discussed "The. Relation of the Sciences to Religion." The ministry and member ' ship of other denominations were largely represented at these lectures. One of the Boatonpapers thinks that the appearance of a man like. Dr. McComb among the Mimics who would fain set up theleown bald and bloodless place of the Divine Creator, I. like a stir north'-cast wind blowing through .the mists and murky fogs, to let the people ere that the eternaLsitn. still shines clear and steady in the heavens. Such a meas . of mum. suety, 'it argues, needed the silencing • which so;positive a.preeencu guarantees. The learned doctor showed that Dr. Chan. .: 7 •1 iditg.was a Patio' nudist, Theodore Parker stantulUonalist, and Ralph Waldo Emer - NO a Dreamer. At the same time he paid • - , - , kg,e(A?aa , Lin respect. to Sywarer. Mill. and COM... and all that el.a., of ulroates of rive Thought, and •hatred thoieialterativoidta apraad in the Mini, A rorrespoodoilt of tho Chrioia” Intelligrwve; titterring In coniplimeotne2. - termeto thedolor COl/1102,..Myl dolorcvlasitly` dneA Aot tuideirtind New &igloo& ohe eeems to regartY 80, ton a diminutive Germany, where rhilo.. ~pliiesyntenut prevail, and can lg. eloniti fled. If the doctor, I thinks, bad treauki t 1 teb-calle4l phikWiarly 7 130i,4341.1‘,1 Air MtuL or boh.tall of Home English or Conti niutal .yeteng, hn would.have Lein 'more effective- It "erns to JAI -getieJally:yon. recledthat the lectures will Ao good, and help triinti;igthert the bac& of the oppo nerde . of free thought. The position of Hon. Stanley Alio thewn, a Preabyterbut Elder, who appeared on the Anti-Bible aide of the late celebrated case of 'irtalrig the Bible In the Sehoot4 • Cincinnati, in severely eriticine4 and rondirned,)notwitlodanding his plea of being profe.i.nally rruploied. I rant ing MA • right to act in- a legal capacity. the, Prab roman; of Philaifelphia, gays it -can n t see how, an a Christian and an Elder. can UP excused for enme of his loital Baptist repotta the went. bernhiti to 1;i121.340. • This Arian; that he Baptists Lace full 100,000 more mem. ass than the Methodists. But it should borne in mind that the Southern 13ap- tints em now united - with their Northern Itrie.hern, while there nretwo distinct I Tell•SlaStiCal nyeterror of the Metlemlists The membendrip, in other words, of tie North and South. ts as stated shore. whi the Atothodbit Epineopnl Church '(in the North), ix about 1.100,000. The North end South ruaktun nggregate of over two in limas of meiiilieno. Rev. W. B. Mcllvaine, senior luistor of 1 ' Prenbyterian cLurch,has Joao& lap. the pasusrate re - luta been one of the Jog st and most atiercsadul in this regivn. aigt is a Presbyter he his been held' in the higl eat sites'. __ BI hop Bedell, during a late „Episcopal ViPi tint' to Columbus. Ohio, called "at tent on to the feet that betwetut2olturilius and Marietta them in not:oB69prd church, eve pt at Lancaster.; and between Marietta and; Ironton. small there are but two sma - chnrchea ne at, Pomeroy and the othbr at (Billipolin. This is surprising in view of th t d devoted lagors of Bishops Mellvaine and ell in that diocese. i TI birth-day; seventy-sixth. in( the vene ble Bishop 'Morris. senior member of th Board of Bishops of the .MethOdist Ephnuipal Chirch. was Observed at 'his residence, " Salubria," Springfield. Ohio. seve - ril days ago, with iome ecrof. Repre sennitivcs were present, ministerial and lay'. from different denominations, the pros, and other interests. After the rionl logo( the venerable Bishop Morris, " Birth-, day-Refiections," Bon. E. O. Dial, in le- Nor of the assembled guests, presented the Bishop with a beautiful hunting case gold watch. accompanying the same with an approprialn.speech, to which the Bishop replied. Other 'speeches were made. and a' poem' written for the occasion, corn- Mencing," All hail, all hail our natal day. "- was handed to the Bishop. It is gratifying to note that the late Mr. I leorgePeabody was a true Christian. and not the kind eta man some of- the semi infidel sheets have been claiming him to he. "Not long before Mr. Peabody died he mild to the . ',tutor of the Oecirgettioni. Massachusetts, . Congregational church, " I do love Christ ; I place my dependence on him for . salvation, and on him alone." Ilia day bibire hisdeatk,---partakingritthe holy-communion, ho said, ' But my trust is not in the sacrament. but'Christ alone." Few ministers have the enviable record of the venerable and distinguished Rev. Dr. S. H. Tyng, rector of St. George Epis copal Church, New York. In d' recent discourse, ho gave the result lof pits twenty-five iVeara ministry in that perish. Tit which, among many interesting statis thuf, he stated there had been .1.074 con. firmations. and nine hundred had renewed their baptismal pledges. lie had made over 2.5,000 pastoral virile, and 1 Preached to more than 400,000 people. Oker *750.- 000 had passed through his hands . in the shape of contributions,an avetsge of $B,OOO per annum for the first ten years of his ' tinistry, and *48,000 for the last fifteen years—" a sum not paralleled in the his tory of churches." He also stated that he had been detained from his work by ill ness-only two Sundays. The general Synod of the Reformed Presbyterian Church will meet this year at Cincinnati, Ohio, May 18th. - The annual Convention cif the Pennsyl vania Sunday School Society, for the year 1870, will be bod . at Harrisburg, Tuesday, Wednesday slid Thum*, June 14th, 11th and 10th. tieorge H. Stuart, Esq., is expeF:ted to preside. Each Sunday School in the State is invited to send two or more delegates. Pastors of churches, Superin tendents of Sunday Schools and promi nent Sunday School workers are invited to participate. Persons'desiring homes will address Rev. Thomas H. Robinson or John H. Sayford, Secretary, Harrisburg, Pa. The Pittebargh M. E. Conference, at its late dession in Johnstown, Pennsylvania, took action on one of the Ike questions of the day that admitscf no misunderstanding of, the temper of -dist body and the 'mind of the people they minister if, as follows: "That any man who will grain, or fruit, to a distiller, sign a 09tintk for a Priam:. or rent property to i r used in making or vending intoxicating drinks. compromises his Christian character, vio• lates the - spirit of the discipline. and should be admonished by his pastor. and if ho persists in it, be expelled from the Church." , • The Baptist auniverrarlea are to he held in Phijrie4phia from 'May 24th to 26th A Cincinnati paper repreeente that in Berea, Kentucky, ther&ie no dietinction of nice or inior in ttteChureh or schools. They meet and woruhip together in the utmost harmony. . . Reports front the • Congregational churches, connected-with the Miami Con. rence, show that the Vine street Congre 'giilol3lll4llllTh, CiDelDl/14.1G3V. Henry D. Moore, pastor, formerly of this city, have had recently ninety additions. - The Prtebyterian understands that the friends of the Western Theological Sem inary, Allegheny, City, are very anxious that Rev. Dr. William Paxtem'of Now York, formirly of this city, shall be per. manently and constantly occupied with the dirties of his Proferuswahip in that in stitution, instead of the partial service which he now renders, in connection with hie pastoral &IPA,* in New York. it sate "there are few men in the Church whom we would more gladly see wholly engaged in the training of the future ministry of the Church than Dr. - Pastmt.t; , • The friends of the Board of Presbyter, lan Foreign Allasionf will regret to learn that the financial year, April 30th, qloBex with a debt of nearly fifty thousand ,dot hire. The friends of thisbeett of causes should see that this debtllx removed at once. Tnr. Philadelphia Ledger Says: . Mr. Mackey. the late State Treasurer, sun , tendered his keys on Monday, and turned over to his successor {MC4IOO in auk. The whole Interact was to tune, in hank,to the credit of of the State. and net a dollar of due bins or checks. or any other clan of paper, heretofore covered - up at such times under the convenient title of "malt nersount." When Mr. Mackey took possession of the Ttessury .he received of this . acoounnotistion paper.''-_ He now returns a "clean Treasury, - and we hope It will be kept so. PITTSBURGH DAILY GAZETTE = By the requeat of many friends of the M'lnt, the subjoined report of thq address Pauline Dan,, de‘ inenkljrfore - t.hgladiel4 of the Siorrage Associntion Wednesday last : previous , . ar rangements Ittd prevented no. f Mtn ibeing present at' your first meeting. I rejoice to day to he able to greet you. With the 114.11. of you have been lierinitted to or ganize an Association -for the lienelit •if our per, as well AS the male sex. It is sixteen . vears since I conceived the first real idea of the necessity of wo , mates vote. It was in England. It was there,l got acquainted for the first time with a victim, ndlltof man's wiles and cal culations sione,--no, souls ,melt I had seen l,efore,=hut a victim also of laws, made only by man.--a victim, not only deprived of her children by • necessary separation from her husband, but deprived also of her vice means of living, inasmuch as this min, though a man• of 'imminent position -in the city of London,was entitled Fri law to collect - the sums she had earned by- faith-. f ul, earneat labor. lie was mean enough, as unfortunately to thin very hour many arc, to take from his wife her bard earned. luvad. Since that, I have seen hundred 4 of ouch examples. and tamle to the naturally logical conclusion that woman has not vet all the rights she ought to have, and that by her vote only she can really succeed to bring oh reforms favorable tuber adx. Yet it is a long while- since this question of woman autrrage has been atirred up . , and while tunny say that there is no founda- . . . . , tion for the Want of it, thousands hove Buffered by the want of representation - at the ballot box. They waited in patience. 'Baying in their hearts with the Psalmist, "This in my infirmity; but I remember the rears of the right hind of the Moot High: - I will remember the works of the Lord; surely I will rentembev Thy wonders of old," and bowing down - in submission, kneeling down on knees bruised by work and misery, they filtered not, but believed that the right hand nf the One who ruleth all things, would help them to overcome armies of hosts. • Our Lord Jesum Christ, when ho came 'to teach no. to bring His Doctrine full of love, lip canto to all. - Ho did not leech twolold law. but intended to benefit us all. lie freed woman alike with man, but man kept her In bondage. St. Paul, in Speaking of , women. was right,no doubt ,according to the civilization and morel culture of the century he lived in; a time of horror and barbarism, as is shown Lest be his own death, though he trod lived the life of a Ballet. I But Christ, _whose di_ -vine precepts men did, not, nor do always live up to; Be brought the privileges of Christianity to all of us. Ills sacrifice was made to benefit all of Ilia followers, and meta :made laws, which secure these benefitsimle to their own Ise:. The One who crushed the serpent's head, Ho rams for all: therefore be not afraid of storms nor waves, ye women. lie is walking on the waters as of old. He stretches out Ills right hand to yon forever, as many of us can joyfully testify.' Do not be afraid thattnen might crucify you, for speaking truth-, in doing So they would have to cut down the fruit trees of their own Edenti. Be not afraid if they call vou strong minded women; let us all be ritherstrong minded women than weak-minded num. I Yes, with a strong, firm mind let us help I to build up anew that foundation which has been sorely shaken by law-makers, differing widely from the one and eternal lawgiver. Be - of" good courage; believe that the Lord is with you, and. you shall see Him. Be not afraid of Being called old Maids; it would lie far belter if two thirds of the women were old` maids br fore entering Hymen's temple; we would 'then see fewer complaining husbands, or wives. fretful, la-cause they cannot have the same net of jewelry so Mrs. Brown or Mrs. Jones has, who drive their husbands away from their homes by these fretting freaks into places where they tind com fort; but alms'. also Femme and trape. devils to make them drink first and then gamble till -their homes and their healths are wrecks. Respect yourselves; 'be • devoted wives, good mothers; bring up your chil dren in the fear of Ood; be wise house , ken era, faithful laborers in flod'a_vine yard; untiring teachers without spread ing yowled( under a husband'', feet like a velvet carpet. only to be cinched, a per formance burullialing -to the whole sex. Let truth be our motto; do away with falsehood, lies. dissimulation and deceit, which are so often the main features of modern society, follow truly and not ap parently the footsteps of Him who said. -I am truth and life.^ Until thin is done, happiness wilt be a mockery and a hollow sound, society a mere masquerade. lea us live up to truth: many are with ue in thought and Heart. all have not yet the courage to come forward, but it may cheer you when I tell you that I had the satis faction to hear from tlfotte who yet dare not come forward, 'wortds of thankfulness for what we had the courage to do. It tells us again that the lord rulcth the marts and all things. 1=210312 ors erfultV4 MEIO4, The Volkablatt advises its Democratic friends to stop 'kicking against the pricks" because thereby they gain no ad vantage. Whether for good or ill, they will in the future have to count on the negro vote, and are not wise If they PO conduct themselves as for all time to prejudice the colored vote against them. For the pre. eat, at least, the Republican party is sure of this vote North and South. but per. haps the Democrats may still gradually find it profitable to mate peace with the XVth Amendment. Resides this the VoLlablott has a few • words to any about the female !tridents in the Philadelphia hospitals; an extract on the Bible question front the London Spectator, and, as steal, a abort attack upon what it calls "the Puritans, the Pietist! and the fatuities." The Freihcits Freund speaks of "Con gressional sleepiness," accusing Congest of do-less-neat; and' many representatives of neglecting - their linty. The people have looked, but only in vain, for some act of importance from this United States Congress which seems to be in a fair was of becoming about as reverend arid antique institution as the t'ongress of the old (lemma Confederacy, under which the electrum people slept so soundly and se curely for fifty years.. In regard to the Female Suffrage ques tion, the ladies are congratulated upon the brightness of their'proepects, especially in England, and then the article says. .We have always thought that if the wo men really have the idea of suffrage in their heads, they milli finally get what they ask. It matters riot Wow the melt may object, for it seems to have been de cided in the council of the gods; that we must drain the cup of vioman's suffmgo to the bottom. A third editorial treats upon the subject ot (Jarman unity and the grad. nal gmwth of a party in South Oermany which favors the union of all the Southern States with the great North Herman. Con. federacv. The ikpliblikaner has an editorial open' the doings of Congreas which it regards with far from friendly eyes, calls the I'ongressmen "greedy Radical politicians, humbugs and traitors," and sees no reme dy but that of next year sending - quite different men (Democrats?) to eupercede them. A {Vlfe'• 1314 e of the Mori One Brice published his wife in the Athens (Tenn.) Post, and the' injured lady repike as follows in the tame paper: , ' In reply tOtlainotioi) in tite.Post in re ' gard to my leaving hit bed and board, be had none; he Is mistaken, he had neither bed nor board.' Be left my bed and my father's board. As for running you in debt, it is something you could not do yourself; for you can't get credit for any thing. ~- f understand you have made an application for a divorce, and now tasave tome lat4yer from hard pleadinglor noth ing, I will raise a public collection, for I think the community will help to pay tome good blacksmith .to make you one not .of good iron that will last you your lifetime; no when you gm your divorce in your pocket you will weigh betoirr than you ever did before, for you are a very light article anyhow. Now I have one re. quest to make of the community—that in for everybody' to giro :him a shake of the paw; then he will Imigh himself to death and I will get abut of him. Respectfully, MARY BRICE. Sexavon Gustiest,. of Allegheny, was In town to-day, This gentleman has been urged by his trioruls—and they axe nu. niemmt---to tun for 'Congress In bin dis trict. Them lit no man in western Penn. liylvanla whom i we would sooner KC in our Natione Council.' Everybody in Har risburg who hak made bin acquaintance during the many year. that he has spent been, will endorse what we any.—Harris. burg Topic. COariuntiou of Jurlge Bond, - of 3farylind, as Judge of the Lofted State. District Court,ts now assured, and It will heal the troubles in the Republican party in that State, - . SIAJ.: TWAIN.] C URIO S E:1 Containing a Moral. , s:oll.ii before last 1 had a singular dream. I seenosi to 1.4. sitting in a deorstep, (in no particular city, perhaps,. ruminating, and the time of MOT. j le ealout twelve or one - •'. The weather.was Latent - and delicious. There was no hu man sound in the air, nut even a footstep, There was to sound of any kiwi to ..mph:, size the dead stillness, except the oreu -sional hollow barking of a dog in the dis. tango and the fainter answer-of a further dog. Presontly Up the street I heard a bony ebtek.clack inm and guessed it was the carannets of a serenading party. In a minute more a tall skeleton. hooded and half-clad in a tattered 11941 mouldy shroud whose slim& Were flapping Matte the ribbylattice-work of its person, swung loy me with a stately pride, and disappeared in the grar gloom of the starlight. It had a broken and wOrm.eaten, coffin on its shoulder and a bundle of something in its Land. I knew what the clack-clacking was, lien—it was this pony's joints work ing together. and his ellmws knocking against his shies as he walked. I linty any I was surprised. !Wort. I could col lect-,sty thdughts and ep?cr upon any specidations as to tvh tt this apparition might piwtend, I hear. another one corn; ing—for I recognized pis slunk-clock. Ile had t wothinis of a radio On his thoulder, and 1411111. foot and head-bards tinder his sAM. I mightily wanted TO peer tinder his Lund and speak to 'din,: but when he turned and 1011lielLp1. 0 inc with his eat - . ennous sockets anirhi 4 projecting grin as he went by, I though I would not detain him. He was hardly gone when I beard the clacking again, and. another OPP IR t sued fieM the Nita& : half-light. Thh. - one was betiding in er II heavy gnme. stoue, and dragging shabby coffin after hint by a string. When he'got to Me he gnuy non n steady look- fit a moment or two, and then . rounded to and backed Ilp to me. saying: ".Ease this down for a fellow, will your' I eased the - 1: - rinve stone drawn till it rest ed on the ground. and in drffng on noticed that it bore the nose of "John Baxter Copmanhurst," with -"May, Min,' as the. date of his - death. Deceased sat wearily onset, by our and wiped his os frontis with his - major maxillary—chiefly front former habit, I judged, for I could notsee that he brought away any perspiration. "It is too bad, too bad," said lie, draw ing the remnant of the shroud about him and leaning hie jaw pensively on his hand. Then -he putt his left foot up 011 his knee and fell to scratching his ankle bone id,. neatly with a rusty nail whirl, he • mu out of his clan. _ "What is bo bad, friend'! - '_. "Oh, tit, everything, rverything. I almo.t wixli I never had died." • "You surprise one. Why do vo w sa y this? lias anything gone wronta Whet is the matter?" "Matter! Look at thia• shroud—rigs. Look at this gravestnne, all - battered ult. Lark at that disgraceful 4.141 cotton. All, a• man's - property going to ruin and diStrue thin heron. his ryes end ask him if anything is wrong? Fire-and brimstone'" "Calm yinirself, calm yourself." I :aid. -his tos2 . .bad—it is certainly too bud, but then I bad not supped that you would - orb mind such matters, situated as you "Well, toy} dear air, 1 do mind them. My pride is {oat and niy comfort in int. pnired—dentioved, I might may. I will Maie me case-LI will put it to von in finch a war that you tan comprehend if, if you will let Me." said the per skeleton, tilt ing the heal of his stinted back. as if he in-re clearing for acthin, and thus unfelt s.cionsly giving himself a jaunty and fes tive air. very notch at variance with the grave character Of his INAltioll in life—so L. speak—and in prominent contrast with his that ressfttl 'mast I resole in the shame fel old grave van). a Work or two above you lien-. in this street— Mete maw s I just expecusl that cartilage would let go!—Third rib frau the bottom, friend, hitch the end of it to Inv spine with a string, If you have got such a thing about you, though a bit of silver wire is a 'deal pleasanter, and more datable and becoming, If one keep« it polished—to think of shredding out nod going to pieces in this way, just on account of the indifference and neglect of posterity r"--and the Icor ghost grated hi« teeth in a way that gate not a wrench and a shiver—for the effect is mightily increased by the abaence o 1 mut. fling flesh and cuticle. " I reside in that old graveyard, and have for these: . thirty I years ; and I tell you things Sr., changed since"' first laid this old tired ft-ante there. and turned over and stretch.' 4Mt for a long sleep, with a delicious sense upon me of being thme with Nutter'. and grief. and anxiety, and doubt and fear, forever and ever. and listening with coinfortabla nd increasing satisfaction to the wanes work, from the startling, clatter of his first spadeful' on toy coffin till it dulled away to the faint patting that shaptd the roof of mynew hOnle,—,lelleinUll My! I wish you could try it to-night !" and out of my reverie dectastal fetched me with a rattling slap with a bony hand. "Yes. air, thirty years ago I Ist d me down there. and WAN happy. For it wait out in the country, then—out in the breezy, flow ery, grand old woods, and the lazy winds gossiped with the leaves,and the squirrels capered over us and *around us, and the creeping things visited its, and the birds filled the tranquil solitude with miner.. Alt, it was worth ten years of a man's life to be dead then! Everything ware pleas ant. I was In a good neighborhood, for all the dead people that lived near the b longed to the-best families in the cite. Our posterity appeared to think the 'wOrld of us., They kept our graverlin the very best condition; the fences werealways in faultless repair, headboards were kept painted or whitewashed, and were re placed with new ones as seen as they be gan to look rustyor decayed; monuments were kept upright. railings intact and bright. the rosebushes and shrubbery trimmed, trained and free frorn_blemish the walks clean and smooth and graveled. But that day Is gone by; ' Onr descendants have forgotten so. Mr grandson lives In a stately - house built with money made by mt., and I sleep in a neglected grave with Int - ailing vermine that gnaw my shroud to build their nests withal! I and friends that lie with me founded and secured the prosperity of this fiur city; sad the stately house bantling of our loves leaves us to rot In a dilapidated cemetery which neighbors corm and strangers scoff at. Seethe differeneff be tween the old time and this—for instance: Our graven are all cared in, now; our head boards have rotted and tumbled down our railings reel this way mid that way, with one foot in the air, after a fashion of unseemly levity; our monuments lean, and our gravestones bow their heads disCour. [wed; there he no tnnamehts any mitre, no [MOO nor shrubs, nor gaveled walks, nor anything that Is a comfort to the eye, and even the paintless old board fences that did make a- show of holding no sacred from companionship with beitata and the defilenieutiff heedless feet, has tottered till it overhangs the street, and only ad vertiaea the presence of our dismal resting place, and Invitee yet more derision to it. -And now we cannot hide our poverty and tatters in the friendly woods, for the city has streched its withering arms abroad and taken us in, and all flat remains of the cheer of our old homes is the meter Of lugubrious forests : trees that stand, bored and weary of city' life; with their feet in our coffins,- lqpking into the hazy distance and not wishing they were there. I tell you it is disgrkeful! You begin to comprehend—you begin to see how it is. While our deaerndants are )lying sumptuously on our money right around us in the city, we have to fight hard to keep skull and bones together. Bless you there Isn't a grace in our ceme tery.that doesn't leak—not one. Every time It rains iu the night we . have to climb out and roost in the trees—and sometimes we-are wakened. soddenly by tho chilly water trickling down the backs of our necks. Then I tell you there is a' general hearingup .of old graves anti kicking over of ; did 'monuments, and scampering of old skeletons for the trees! Bless me, if you had 'gene along there some Ruch nighta after twelve you might have Peen as ninny as fifteen :of no roost ing on one Binh, with our joints rattling drearily and the wind wheezing thmugh our ribs I 'Shiny a time we have perched there for three or four dreary hours, and then COlllO down, stiff and chilled through and drowsy; and borrowed each other's akulle to bailout our graves with—if you will glance up in my month, now ea I tilt my }lead back, you can see that my head. piece is half full of old dry sediment--lutiv top heavy and stupid it makes me some times' Yes, sir, many a time if you had happened to citron along judo before the dawn you'd Itavffeaught us baling out the graves and hanging our ehrende on the !race to dry, Why, I had an elegant SATURDAY .MORNING. MAY 7, 1870. shnold stolen from there one morning think a party Itv the name of Smith took it, that resides i n a plehiun graveyard Over yonder—i think no beC3llll4O the tirst time I t:ver salt' him he hadn't. anything on but a check shirt, and the latd-time I saw him, which was silt gathering iu the tiew'remetery,he was the beat dressed corpse in the eimmany--and it Is a nigniticant fact that lie left it lien he saw me; and presently an of l woman from hero missed her cottin.=elte generally took it with her when she went anywhere, be cense she Wilt liable to_take cjld and bring on the apaantialie rheumatism that killed her if sheexposed herself to the night air -much. . She was named Hotchkiss—Anna Matilda Hotchkiss—you might know here' She has two upper front teeth, in tull,.but grand deal inclined to stoop. oiw rib on the left.nide grow, has one shred of rusty hair hanging front the left silo of her bead, . and -onir - little tuft jutealnwe and a little forward of her right ear, has her under jaw wired oil ouu eddy where it had worked loose, stuall bone of left forearm gone—lost in ti fight—lut a kind of a swagger in her gait and a 'gal ins' way of going with her arms akimbo and her nostril. in the air—bas been pret• ..ty free and sway, and it all damaged anti battered up till she looks liken queens. ware crate in ritinsz-maybe you burr met her'. ' God forbid'" t involuntarily ejacu lated, for somehow I was,not lonizing ,for that form.Of question, and It caught 10 a little otl my guard .. . But I. hastened to make amends for my rudeness and day: "I 'limply meant I had not lad the honor —for I would not delilierdtely speak dis voiwteuuslr of 'a friend of yours. You were saying that you wore robbed—and it was a shame, tooldit it appears by what is left of the shroud .you have on that if was a costly 1111 e iu its day. now did—" A most ghastly expression began to de• velope among the decayed features and shriveled integuments of my guest's fact, and I was liegiming to grow nuenay and distressed, when he told me he was only working up a deep, sly smile, with a wink in it, to suggest that about the time he acquired' his present garment a ghost in a neighboring cemetery missed one. This reassured me, batl begged him to confine himself to speech, thenceforth, becitume his facial expresaion was uncertain. Even with the nued elaborate care it was liable to mien fire. Smiling should especially be, avoided. What he might honestly consider a shining Success seas likely to strike me in a very different light. 1 said I liked to see it skeleton cheerful, even decorously playful, but I did not think smiling was a skeleton's best hold. . • 31AuK TWAIN. ICOliCillSlol3, with the rest of the MORAL, next week.]Fram the Ruffian Erpreo.. FOUND DROWNED. = • with Kidder's Raven Indelible Ink, to I ' ofauporior quality for - marking EN LIN PILL tairrivr, sc.. de.. with • common quill or Meal pen. Timm freely. neker blot. or *plead. on any materinl. living • Perm•linnt mL taut black. Hold mill - • JAMES E, BURNS it, CO.'S Dont ttiore atltt Totulty Medico] Depot. copper loono sal Math (old Fit. Clair( lits AN OLD FALLACV EXPLODED. Thirty or forty years ago. It was the fashion to min:ante., powerful purthtives as -spying modl thnes." Tenitle domes of salts and germs, oththel. and Alas; or climber mils were Oven to all the members of a fthallyrwbether MM or well, by way of preparing them for the warm weather In pros pect. mlot pernicious modern is neatly obsolete. but there are some old Sondms of private life, Incapable ilike of forgetting anything. or learning anything. who obrthwitelycling to It still. Nothing could be more pernicious. more utterly unghlhe entitles). than such en onslaught an the vigor and elasticity oil the system. to order to enable the ph plod etrtwaures to resist the mien - atlas edema of sprint damps sad summer beat, It shoal( be toned and reinforced, not relived and weakened. The twit medicine agent for this Ptt Mow. Is Howel -1 tars Stomach Bitten. Its efteet Is to tone the stmt. nob and liver. gently relieve the bowels from ob strucUons, brace the nerves, improve the quality of the blomd, stimulate the appetite end cheer the *MOM. In thls Improved mnditlon the errant.- nom is eatable of resietlng unhealthy Inguences which would prostrate an enfeebled system. -A vigorous digestion aboolutely esecntial to health. and there Is no danger of the *wreath faltertug or NM. In Its Important office If this gement reg.. table elixir is taken regularly as a ortemaehle. None of tb tonic tincture. or eitnicts will supply the place I the Bittern, for thernmple mouton that they operate a astringents only. In Yarn. in ordinary portico, gee or ail prescriptions would be required to produce wegandely, the boneacial rem its. which the nested shaultantovutly. and harmoniously by this single epectfle. p,o3l7MADivm;4o(:))3.• , .>Rioli:l FABERI ._____-,-.VAN DOREN 3ss7 Libert•Stree PITTSPCIIOII, PA. STEAM ENGINES, IRON AND WOOD WORKING Steam Ply mps, Engineers' and Machinists' Tools, STEAM FIRE ENGINES BELTING, Woolen Machinery, Machine Cards UrManufacturers' and XIII Sup plies. A constant supply on hand and furnished on short notice. 01!.1:YERI o,wnAct,r,.r.p PEARL COAL Schnabel Walker MINEltd, liIIIPPRItS AND WITOI.VNALF. AND RETAIL DEALER* IN "OAL, NUT COAL kr',SLACE I= PEARL ('UAL WORKS... PlU,haryh,nn Pa /smile Ra Oftlee and Yard: Corner Sandnsky S and West Penn R. R., ALLt:unEsy CITY. PA CS=3 OPENING. (to VRIDA or , the (kb Inst. we will have inientnis o SUMMER Bonnets and Hats. ALSO, ALL Mi. :YOVELTIFS IY THE. NOTION AND TRIMMING LINE KITCHEN & BEGGS, 12 FEDERAL STREET. Allegheny My. A‘751.47 KING WASHER. This machine has taken the-entlre notrket in NO York, New Jersey ann Ens.tetn.rennsfl,khin..md 11 , 1!tanteed A Perfect and Easily IVorkitir Machine W. W. KNOX, sole Agent, =MIE=2M GARDEN PI ,:1 NT Flow.pr Trellises ! The hamberne ' st. realest, Cheapen IrPrd meet. Over Q 0 designs. W. W. KNOX, I= 137 Liberty steel, Pituiburgt, P GAR i EN VASES GsNen . enuments. Lawn Rake, ==fM W. W. KiOX, 137 Llbert7 meet, P4taburgb, Pa. . . . „ . . . . . . ........... 0..--<=---=- , -- , :-... ,,,, ..,....,,,,,,.... ~.., ~ :::.: ~: '', '; -;.-,, . -,_. -, •_-..,,,,,-,-.•;'.', .5 .,1 2,t;:* '-'s.t'itklg..:4%tUAV,WASzariMe -".,- '* , cailk . f. 4 l.: AN , -. , li.Pea .- .!. - ' , : ,,, 4 - .1. , 7..T ,, . ,, ..:1 ,17 ii,' , . ~7 - -' ~,,.!'"..-,''..,,-, ~.T01,•,e4.4Q-C-,,..-'''''' '•'•- • '''• • ';,4',,..4'1,7*444C-4-Y4-Z,;e,ga‹A.l7,F-Arq,',5\c,,1,V...W.,t-,',-4,',';`,a,,--'. ' _...4:: • ' 1,ge.,,,,,,,,••:, a\rgq. , ..7, -, . , 4 • 5 , ... • •4 ,- .W."A` , 7; , " - '4 , a'V g..4• “ •' • - . . .. , „_,..;‘,..,,,,,... , -A , , , ..-44-4 , --- , -- - - . . NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ATTE ACTIV WILLIAM Nos. 180 and 182 Feder LATEST NOVELTIES IN - HATS AND BONNETS, Stindowns, BibbOM alld Flowers AT • SENIPLE'S: INFANTS' .t I°l 6 lrt.. E EI/OISOS w 11NSERTINUN. INFAN WANTS, LAC COLLARS AND HANDI , CERCHIICI , S, COI ETI4. L CE tIDGIWIA and INSERTINOSI. At opular .Prices, AT SE NIPLE'S. • IBASOU, SUN UMBRELLAS, RAIN UMBRELLAS. •t-very low prices SIMPLE'S CRIGNONS, A R T. KID ANDIILTIIII W I N AD GLOVES, ATAISAIDI*I3. BODICHY. NOTIONeI, de., Complete Stock WM. SEMPLES, ISO and 182 Federal Street, Allegheny NOTICE! Third Arrival of Spring DRY GOODS. Bell & 'Moorhouse 21 FIFTH AVENUE, Are Offering Great Bargains in Dress Goods, Silks, Shawls, Linens, Piques and Chintzes lEA 1 1) IRE PRICES James Hoag, Jr's 74 Federal St., Allegheny At 10 ront, 30 pattern. Wnll Papers, Wish "lore, gOO4 at the price. • At 12 1.2 e., Ileary Bright Dalr Wall ripe • At 13 coots. Fino.Viblto NW!, At 23 oenta. yard-wide White and Buff liollAOd for Vrtodow Made.. g W at the price. nod OU Cloth Window Rhodes at low prima. Yard Whit, Floor Cloth. htliht 001ar , 43 cont. , Wide Oil Cloth. cot to dt UM; votes, se. MiliMiNM KNEES HO AO', .1' No. 174 FE DER AI, STREET, ECEIM:111 THE BEST BARGAINS OFFERED This Season AT 110 41114T41. !Wive Healy Briflab Cotton Slbiting% ME= !Witte Heavy British Collor Stotkings AT EXTRA BAIAGAIN. AT 3 PALE /OR 1100, edits' Super British Cotton Stockings. MM= Men's Arm British Collor Socks. AT 23 MATTA. Melee Heavy French Cotton So I.ADIYe• AND MICNN fERINO GAUZE UNDERWEAR = MIMES. DOTS AND cm.tuuswii COTTON .STOCKINGS AT Oft6AT(.l Rouvown rstolB AT Morganstern&Co's __, SUCCESSOR TO MACRUM, (CLYDE ' . & CO Nos. 73 aid 80 Market Stree mb22 M HORNS & CO'S. Hosiery ! Gloves ! = Prices Unknown Since 1861 ALEXANDRE'S .111 D GLOVES--a toll mart- Meat at 111.7.3. . . COUBSIOMIER'S KIDS at LONG TOP KIDS. choice shades, at Irl.llt, MADEIGIITING IWtrift. lisava, cants. cq ' NI • AND 1111111 ED COTTON - 1109 E, —lO .nla anclvp. • ' DOMES= COTTON 110811171'.iy casa or doz. GENTS' SUPER STOUT HALF nosz. 2S mole. Is the most pie/vault. cheapest and best Dentiffte '' Yfi t rianted free from Injurious togredlent. It prowerves and whitens tits Twil I Invigorates and toottimi the Gums . Perinea and perfumes the breath! . Mvents accumulation of Tartar! . . aas and Donde!! Artificial Teeth! Is a superioeartleie for Children! Solo by all Dreads. and Dentist. Dzoprtertor, A. Y. WILSON. Phllsdelphi. Dm sale by all ItiAiLJa.Z . Truit . jest ,mioae; to which we Write the attention of . eiLULUS P. STRIGHT, - Wholesale mtd Retail Cash Billet.. I,_) . . _ GENTS' SUPER FINE. HALF 11W1E.143 cont. Also Splendid mkowitmentA SASH6y, sAgn 3 .11 BOW IIIBPONS. ;ADM' !ANSI . - BOWL Large Additions to 'atook 77 AND 79 / MARKET STREET. Mat ir AND PLASTER, GUANO,. AND poreelebratpa AMMONIATE 9ITER-P7IGEPFIATIE (*LIME. I=l W. W. KNOX, da w 11$7 Liberty Witt. PUtiblillits, PL NEW ADVERTISEMENTS E PRICES, LFit l llllE'S al Street, Allegheny City, IiAItILVINS IN {ES (',(►Ol)S SENI At 12 1-2 e.. NEW MTYL►tll'ill IstLAINS.r, At 25e..Dt W Alit. 1.01.1.1:04, v./ r ritrmtp At 37 1-•Jc., BLACK A I.l•Ari•A Itra good. At 6 1-4 c., DOW , I'Atl , OS. At 10c.,L1011T AND DARK V*l.ll,l* At 31c., SMALL ("RIB (Snarl. At 30o,11ONK1 • CriAnt emu At 12 1-2.. altAl" ItIiNTIXKY JZANS AgSIMERES AN I) .11 , ',A SS, . Cotionlides and I;iiieii Drills, • VERY eIIEAY AT SEMPI.,E'S LIMIT SPRING AND SUMMER SHAWLS. BALMORAL AND GORED SPRING SKIRTS. MARSEILLES QIIILTS, TABLE DAMASKS. TABLE NAPKINS. VAIII.F. MATS. TOWELS. &c.. /W. THE STOCK uutplete in Ever) : Department I'M. SEMPLE'S, Maud IS Federal Street, Allegheny On a Par with Gold- WE NOW OFFER Our New Stock GOODS DRY NOTIONS AT ' EASTERN PRICES =I Ex amineour Goods & Prices. ARBUTHNOT, SHANNON & CO N 0.115 Wood Sfreet BUY THE GENUINE, CLARK'S "O. N. T." SPOOL COTTON GEO. A. (I,ARK. SOLE AGENT Sold Everywhere. 111:1Mi JOHN Q. WORKMAN 11. HMV ARD DAVI WORKMAN & DAVIS Succesann to WORKMAN. MOORE m tact - niers and Dealers In Carriages, Buggies, SPRING Sr BUCK WAGONS - • 11, 1 1,16 and IS Beaver St., Allegheny. Etepalting maul , and promptly exam:dal. Or ders for New Work gotten up In good atyle apd warranted to Ova PAM( action In every perneldaL ritivlFit'V•h°4 7.:cf!,:ce=g-R9hheMn pany's .P at ent ARN IN'S PATENT' 1 WHEEL, and IllaWs quiet Snifter and Antl-Battler for MUM. -H. RICIDIARD DAVIS hitting Putbisibei , the In Wip. Muurp, the late n 11.1.1.4FEI:AtTA.M'.111411tROit-b.k b"' ttir .4. 01 111 . • oblisitto4. * • k I IWCWAVENS: Lte trtlb Marra' Santa's! Bast. Pittsburgh. • SPECTL kCI ES. • THE Mr, FRANKS, the celebrated Lecturer on the Eye, and Manufacturer of Patent and Improved Spectachm. hmitniumed hi tattaburah, and Of now at the IT, Clotail HOTEL. where he adjust. his far•ramed Spectecles to defective vision from an examination or the eye alone,. AP to suit equally well by 'day as by artificial light without wise, from IS m 43 year.. lir. F. may hp touienionally corniulted On all disease' , ot tho Murrain leye..d lama Was Mot:hot ht. Spectacles and Ere Glasses for en a About 4.0e0 Min of them Spectacles were , qelil on Br. Prenha boa eisit In the apace of three month.. glytng the most entire aatlatactioa to a.m the medical Mattlenten mud °Steen. of Ptustnyitb have by Cortillmits testified. Be partlialler and enqulro at the tattier' entrance on Penn street for Or. Franke office, ROOM 92 Pt. dole Motel. STONE WATER PIPES EMI ROT AIR & CIIIAINEY FLUES, tki. A Wye end' full sWirtmegl pousloattlr o 4 hind, HENRY H. COLLINS, 133 SECOND ACES UK. e~m WHEELER'S Patent Stamp Cancelers - EDWIN . STEVENS, No: 41 S. Third Stree PHILADELPHIA. - General Agent for Mate of Pennaylvania Slaw All olden; EIJI be filled through OD °Ere fpi:vor thi 01.2 FM El Trego's Teaberry Toothwao Carpenter and Builder, Well promptly Wood to MI kinds of JO . Wm work. °U F t .M n t ter e m: . 47, a .aonf ," :.;. 7 p: ' ! '"° - "za • CHEESE, ' • • . . iso Dues Gomben Ctie•Se; . • leg bases Futon . ; fur •Ale by J. O. CANFIELD. • 141 First Ammo NEW ADITERTISEDIENTS aPeale and Ohio Railroad Co. The _Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad la conipleted and running from RICIIMONO. PA. 1 , . the reiebratee WHITE SITI.PIII7R SPRINGS, ,„ W.. 1 Vl,ents, 227. Tile,. • It is being niptclly ..tended L. the (11.10 river, 200 mile, furl/ill b 1•1(1 In all 427 mile+. In 111 procremo NYeetwarddl pemlratx• and 090-63 ny lao o.ruet.We WWII/Ent:1:1. COAL. NEENISITH TUN KANAWHA REGION IN WNEIT VIR A, And thug ben:lathe sopettoramlabt.ulsat !1...1...Minn onto enmtnuntoßthmt .Ith lb. =I = CIE= It will connect We SUrEttIOR = = 11=1 WATRIt TRANBPORTATION OF THE I= = FORAM.): EGIITE from the IVIS3T to the REA and will command a LARGE SHARE OF TOE ENOILSIOES i'llY.lillhTß 1.6., king traluportallan Ia 111 thus bocon;n :nu; uf the m'ost IMPORTANT I= LINES OE RAILROAD In the country, •nC onm 11110.1 X traglP of lumen,. 'fettle. The romplOtOtt p.rtlon of the Howl le &kw a PIIOF.ITAiILF: AND 131.1SINISfl. and Is: equal yi value In tho avuoual the luovv4voio ulolU uw. oath. LIE 4-113,900: 000.) =I Com pan T. being a FIRST MORTGAGE UPON THE ENTIRE LINE, PROPERTY AND EQUIPME.NTS, WORTH WHEN COMPLETED AT LEAST M.- 000.000, le therefore om of the moat aabataittlat, mmervative and reliable Railroad Loam over of fered In the market. and la homiletic adasld to the vents of Invesiffs and Capitalists = mtisfect.rilysaunne; of POSITIVX Al =I The End, are In dennnilnalhm• of $l,OOO, $5OO and $lOO, um, be tee] COUPON nr RNGIATEILICD Interest Mr, per Cent. per Jammu, payable MAY Ist and MOVII3IIIIIIt Ist. = =I Pie 90 A - ND ACCRUED INTEREST In Car ney, at .filch price they pay nearly SEVEN PER =I All Gonarnment Bonds and otharSeeuritleadealt In al the Stock Exchange received to exchange, at their full market ',due. and Bonds sent to all parts of the coontry, free of ram.. d.rin. They can ho obtained by ordering direct from us or through any re:Too:WE* Bank or Banker in any part of the country: . Fisk & Hatch, BANKERS. Maps, Pamphlets and full information furnished upon application in person or by maiL S. M ' CLEA N & CO. BANKERS, • 65 Fourth Ave., Pittsburgh Agents tor the tale of these Bonds. Genuine Preparations From the Celebrated house of PETER SQUIRE, LONDON Granniar Effervescent Bi•Carb. Potassa, Bromide Potastut ' lodide Potasia, Citrate Iron and Quinine, Bromide Ammonium, Carb. Lithia, Vichy Salt. Kissingen Salt, Cit. Nag. nesia, Seidlitz Powders, &u.—To pro tect Physicians and the Public from spurious articles of this character, purporting to be "direct imporia tions"—all bottles of the genuine will in future bear a strap label over the cork, with the address and fae simile signature of the' manufacturer, P. SQUIRE: and on the side his trade mark, and also address of the Im porter and Sole Agent, • SIMON JQHNSTON, Cor. Smithfield St. and Fourth Ave. •P. s.—We hare received our anal Spring supply. of . . Mineral Waters, Saratoga, Star,_ Congress, Klssingen, kr., Ac. Also, another supply of tringent Red Gum Lozenges, and lodate of Ammoniate Lozenges, which hare prored mirk a great sac. cess in England mid this country In cases of Relaked Sore Throat, Bron chitis, etc. feLlannit R. M. IteCCMAN J H. MeKOWN R.M.M'Cowan&Co. BOULEVARD PAVERS, Pave Sidewalka,Cellars,laalde Yards, Drives, &e. .. . . • • • WARRANTED Aumss'r cFtAziun OE DRAT AND COLD. . • a frlatkatflamTEClaloaheal.3lllFßDLllAlL Fritherirn.7.FP.ll7 "Undtd Hit. Li:a, barb a CO., ...Wan/. Dun . mraall; DREKA, IMPORTER AN) RETAIL DEALRR IN FINE ' STATIONERY, VISITING, PARTY muIIIIMINRSS PART/ ENGRAVING, MONOGRAMS, AREA, 11.- LUMINATING, OlOnters bl uwlt Meet.) prompt attadloo. flood for samples. „ 1033 Chet4tnut St, Philn TEAS AS! TEAS Teas,roaJust received,. large and atm aostuttueat of N ststaut at YOUNG HY . SON. 001.0Sti Buyer* are Invited call and eaaltilue the Mock is quality and price will be tot the lotemit Of the purchaser Also. hand..'bane and expellent aseuetalaut of clink* iliroeliOa. PM' *ale by 0 .M=MI C. BARNES, M ornac: No 8 FOURTH ATE., Pittsbn C• ANE POLES. I bave a One sasortment of One Poles left Over from lan fesr. witlek I offer ate very Idle price. Pubes venting should orkr Wirt to uto lesure tbelr tenors tonna Mica.: FLUTING MACHINE& • • The heat mA cheapen{ llatWg Machines In the market. Pelee 80.30 each machine. Cali tad sea them at • JANIK9 fildWN'Et. • .41 336 Wne.4 INCII ING IRONS. . • • • - i havo jug retniroil en neitortment of pinch ing iron, an article need rery' moth in the esetjhr the Indies for miring their heir. For NM hi • 'JAMES DOWN. gin I • 1311 Wood Street. BUTCHER Sy TAKE NOTICE! I have the finest *movement of Ctrealar Spring Italamme, with $U nub and enameled fronts, mottlete In every part and W....U.4' • 'JAMES DOWN. ST. LAWRENCE HOTEL ED. BARKER,.FroP Peed St. Balla, formerly old Camel CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, &o CARPETS. SPRING STOCK. Fine, Medium and Common CdIiPETS. Oar •Staek is the largeot IFP have ever offered to the trade. • . Bovard, Rose & MZ;11=1 April Ist, 1870. SPECIE . PAYMENT. :... Resumed ! Fro. thlx dN Wnwer Cho will be Oren to ell h oustoomm, at FFarland &Collins CARPET STORE, 71 and 73 Fifth Ave. thir prices one the lowest In this 'maim. CARPETS. New Rooms! New Goods! NEW PRICES! We here Aneugurated the opening of Our New Munro with the ' FININTI)IBFLAY OF • CaRPETS Ever Offered in this Market. LOWEST PRICES SINCE IS6I • OLIVER MeCLINTOCK & CO, 22 Fifth Avenue NEW CARPETS. Reduction in Prices WHOLESALE RATES. ,McCallum Bros., No. 51FIFTH AVENUE. UPHOLSTERERS. MsnaJacenrars of. 141PRING 11Allt and HUSK MATTItg..9BII2, Feather Mater* and Mon. Church Cushions, Cornice Youldtoga and 114 grade of Upholstery work. /rt. dealers Ist Window Shades, Burr. Greco ann . wane floilands, Cords, Tauels, ne. eartleular attention le oven to talt. tag op, cleaning 01 nntelting. altertng and ntial nts maw.. Our you of cleaning anwt Is the mai .71 , 1 , 1 which you ean feel mewed that th e colors are uread anti tbe {awls thoroughly toned fro L dust and reirogn. Tha twine for elaaglog firlroduoed. Our aitiowes will *all for and I itr all goods flew of charge. s ROBERTS, NICHOLSON k THOMPSON, team Carpi Beatipg Etta Ultimo!, NO. N 7 WOOD STREET, tater:mar. Near tlritt Avenue. REMOVAL. S. P. SHRIVER' & CO. "" 2i9 and 2a Liberty M., Above the head of WOOD STRYKT, where tiff will be pleased to see all their old Meta, sad cee. 14.11:00[1. S. P. - SHIVER & CO., IrS5 REMCYV_A__L. Allegheny Insurance Company =9 Na 07 FOITETII AVENUE, I=2 Earl p ENOVAL—FREIPK 14011110EDER, h . Marclant Tailor end Peeled In fluntleantuli Furnishing tinodou ..In Uleutlntdan and Non' Clothing on hand and undo to order at the abort nut notion. has reutuuttitrom hlslatestund. No. NI. Fourth moue. to No. .11 WOOD STREW. aunty nf Third avenue. addrkalll-1," REXOYAL. • . HAIEN JAMES LINDSAY Hu itassoceal M °Scar. from corner a Wetenar estrous and Wublsorton street. to No. IS? 11:ITH AVE:CM - asloll EIOV AL — bie Pittsburgh Haat for %arisgli Earm =E! removed, from No. GI to •1 FOURTH Avg— NUE,In tLo Mambas:4e eml Kamiteetenert Bank I=2 Rratovht. The hloagagehela Imam Compaq SO I)4oulad NQ Woo rotooved from N 0.98 Water striot to ti swam of Wood afoot and Fourth Imes. )mono door.) oat:snot on !worth avarom_. • norvitt- JOHN H. C1.J.14 Stroreray.. MI easures, DR \\TITITTIER CONTD. trim TO TiIIirATALL tlyadAle la Mk Its fan.. 5.,11 somiry .12 tba - Wbet. a! amneaeyr.• comPletelr tedrunia. or ...mil Weather rd ma. nelea ,111.111118 WM.... armee eases, m I/Mtharli of the rEiZrect., ainitier n.esdriamn. off V• societ, . ler.. dread of future Ir a .m.,. Wide t .. rion w tontal =re llit.topc ... ..ad d er testil eap.... Petemheetlintheill. NIMES ...smith them or any other delicate, lettennie era insaihrer ..titait.lromptaint ao.dd Into the an t ! • Utah be never fella, A putrAllar anent!. Oven to all YenteJe emus tenmannies or Whites, Inlismann tiala or Illeendloa of the ob. Deanne, Ibmitis. Amenorrhoea; Ysnorrhaela Dnimenotrlmea, and A or Darrennese me treated with Um ere.- enterial. It is vetf-irrdent that. physician who =Anew himardfareltudnely to the study id • pertain elan DI Qleeee. end teems thonsanda of notec nett mit mint mallard forst.. skill In that spentallii Wu one In general prectlre. , Theta.. publish. matimil pamphlet of OH MU ghee • full expoaltion cd venoms/ ane private dleesaes that tan be had free. Oleo Oe bY mall far two mem.. in sealed envelopes. DWI mutes. contains Instruction to the ntilleted. cod etattn. them to determine the greet. eaters of their romphdatte. • . • Thw estahltatiment, comprising ten ample... Whoa It Is not perrenknt to visit the eity. the Doefor'e omninn ban be nottime.tri•••• written statement of the OM, mend tae e forwarded by mail or mimes. In amissh oes. however, • wrens. eiouldnatldn Is . =arg a l z iaow fur ae o n daily atteuttkin of melt o•Denta them are spartment=AL4,,,_," oboe that provided with army' Miden... I. ad cmauxl nvoym. M.. men. baths. Ail pnocrlptiom are prepared. in the Doctor's own isboratoryorader bordskei. Medina pamphlets. White , by MD for two Mande. No matterwho have Me d; read what he mem Hour. 9 a.. toe e.O: Bap dame 131 Hill r. Mee. No. • 1M.I• Dew Conn House) rittahurth• ? a laq Wt.' Stmt. 111 I = ABOVE WOOD STREET. Upholsterers sod Proprietors of REMOVALs I = r. J. Doi:Nat., th....u.n. 1 IN