. . . . , ~_.. . . • , , . . . . . , . . . . . . . .. . — 7 — :' C:==:b _ . . ' * , 'i - • '====, al.' ' '.. ' - it 1 . r ~ . .. . • ... . . .- .. . .• . . • . , ,‘ . ~ • . ,-:- • •-•-..- ...•• .. . . ~ ~... .•• . . • .. • . . . ..•, . . ... .. • . .. . . ....„ , ~ •t.>. .. ; . . . .. , . .. =EMI THE DAILY GAZETTE OFFICIAL pAres Pittabaniti,,*May ,Ctly. and, 111egitedi Jifa UAZ TTE 11•411.04 street. Conker of faith A.m r AFRE 29. 1870 WED,'" DS It Fy 4 ki"" 961 at Antwerp' s:lf P ir Uoi ‘ o closedlaZiowlork on yratarday at 111R1111. MANS of the coPleties of the Schuylkill region are standing idle, and the miners are out of employment, owing to a re tau] of the owners,to lire tip to the basis of 1809 in the matter of wages.. .Pllll.Alig.l.l9ltA, the prowl eastern city of this' Commonwealth, has the largest public' ',park In'..ktnerica Pittsburgh, irosaillY owl prosperous. brings tip the roar of the State, but has not an acre o a breathlng'spot for the people. %?.'ti.t. not some of onr enterprising pub nu citizens move to establish• public bath ing place? 'Such an - Institution would proicia sanitary blessing of The highest oilier to thousands of people who would avail themselves of its aavautaget. IdtlD advice. from Minister - Curtin re. port his hudth-much improved. :lie lots received from our lloccmment wants. sloe to spend two months away from the Court of St: Petersburg, iu company with the Emperor, whose guest he is to be, at the Warm Springs of Germany. . Mx. Insit.tEm, some thirty years or more ago, wrote a novel called Venetia: Venetia has been republished since the recent success of Lothair, and from an ar ' title in a recent number of the Costner cica we should judge that a specimen copy has been sent by the Messrs. Apple - ton to the editor of -that paper, on whom it has made an hnpression;deep and last ing. lr to with unfeigned pleasure that ae are able to announce the conversion of our good friends of -the Post to the doc trine of protection. In a late issue of their paper they give the following pledge: .4 We nledge tho Republican party to send a Democrat to Congress who is in favor of protection sad will be able to as sett It on the floors of Congress...! There is hope for Pittsburgh msuuhe tures laid the country yet. • Tux Pot and Commercitd have joined hinds in trying to break up the Republi can pony, and are playing the game "you tickle me and I'll tickle you." The fol lowing is from yesterday's Pool: "The Commercial reports the true Re publican movement as making "gratify ing progresa"—etYles the address of the Executive Committee "a whining aPPeOtl:' and tells a great deal of truth about the Radical party, which we hare put in pickle readu for the fall campaign. Our readers will bear us witness that we depicted the nail results of Radical rule, just as our neighbor now sees them." • 'fix Cos:Medial yesterday published this special dispatch train Titusville "Titusville and 011 Creek townships gime nine hundred and deventeen majority for.47.AerrlV:7 917 majority for Andenon! That sounds high for the great reform candi. date of the oil regions, but how. much re; prating and doubling up and ballot boa . stuffing; -cob:nib:lug and emwfordizing generally mast have bean done to have secured such a majority is two townsl4mt vote .coca only 1#33 last year. and reltose total.poll of aU veto, only reached 1,0 T?. The Re publican element of Titusville and tido itf must have increased wonderfully of lite, or perhaps, third party lioneity and reform controlled the boards and demon grated how fraud is to be abolished and - the usuctliy of the ballot boa and the pa - City of pitinery riteetings maintained by leineist but oft outraged people. We like the first chow of reform the third party has given in Anderson's handsome major- but we think the peOple won't be able to appreciate how, in the newly Irian', rated, honest way of conducting a prima ry meeting, any liartirma candidate can secure a majority over his rival as large as the entire yotiug population of the Ii ' tovrnehips aarri . cd. They can't, they won' see it. •• ; THUS FAR this 'year we have not been treated with the learned saran's note of warning to be prepared for a delayed visit of the cholera-epidemic. As regular 'as' the summer months came in several peat years the people were cautioned and urged to get ready their households for the retention of the grim Flow aver, much perhaps tothediratip4ntatent Of tint prophetic. alarmists, the epidemic put In no aPpearanee, and the continued ab sence has encouraged the people to feel perfectly safe. and to dispense with an din on the recurrence of sultry weather. The slarmistarwittle planting dream:id fear among the peopleidatrvetf iipuod purpose, inducing the exercise and practice of min 4tary and preventive measures, and thus helping . to ward off pestilence of every description. cOuld wish that they would again " come forth and promise us the cholera, for the people, in their full sense of security, seem to have forgotten all about sanitary prudence, measures and regulations. Our city is to day In better condition to . furnish wet. came and a fruitful visiting place to the *cholera, or any other epidemical. visitor, 'than it has been for years, and yet not one word of alarm is expressed. We are living wholly indifferent to sanitary pro visions, and careless of cholera or any other disease. Our back streets and alleys are frightfully filthy, there are skeletons about the premises of all our houses, and the markets are filled With death-coaxing ..aeon-forced fruits and decayed vegeta bles, which heedless people buy and eat as if they , never heard tell of the cholera. Indeed, we are ripe for any epidemic u a city and a people, and if one does come fearfully heavy will be its ravages. i . 1 - 1. 1 QIIIXOTIC JOURNAJZSZ. Since the day when the immaculate Don. pink of chlialry,redouhtitde Knight, puissant passer StrILMI4..SULTted out with Rosenulde and Rancho to avenge the wrongs of the world, a munterpart of the 'same moral assinirdty has been 1 send in every'Widk of life wherein there is any margin fOr speculotiou; your pulpit Qutr• otos. altivring his limes against imaginary evils; your politico-economical Quixote, striking for Millennium to-morrow; your woman's tight Quixote, getting out of the fryinglen into the fire; • and so on down to the every day journalistic Quixote. *al v., aye sp;iling -for a fight, of which the best example at hand Is our- chivalric neighbor, the Commercial. • grern • the date . : of :ta majority, this Quiet:do ; sheet luni been principally en• gaged in , fighting' windmills of wrong whieh It alone could see. It IA never without its. nightmare of alarm, when those all *round it, in the, same ordinnt7 siteintion,l, lire enjoying their repose in, I • ez=zb • perfect sesurity, 'T. sees nothing but ring, wrong ...rruptions, everywhere ; end, aroglawsy putting lance to foot and p „,,, s i ng spurs, it tilts against thu irevitablo windmill, only to find itself, like its illustrious predecessor, an egre- gious ass "gone to grass. Its latest wind :mill is the "nioustee in tile Republican party of thlairounty. No entreaties of a- friendly Sancho could sustain it. It actually saw the 'hydra- monster "of such hideous mein lute.) glaring nt it—reaching out its great nrnes—froM the very heart of its own political household: and what is ye man of chivalric to do but to fight, fight,fightl l'op goes the lance. in goes the spurs, away goes !Certitude, and down goes our Don; the "monster" was only the creature, of a disteMpered mind—or of a perverted . principle, and the old wind mill of the original Repnblican party moves on no though the pink of chivalry had never , p o i n t e d inns• or eclipsed itself is prosper to, in coming bellicose before it. [ o r p e rhaps we are too Mild in calling thin movement of the Commercial merely Quixotism i While the true man of the lance was the very soul of sincerity, we -can hardly nay no mneh for this modern eltivalrist. Don was simply mad: the Commercial is methodically so. One t)ting,hewever, is certain: its own ir re„ularity is its own condemnation. THE AUGUST CONVENTIONS Republiennu—the true Repub ns, not those who have drawn their ore-honest neighbors into a puny rebel- um to break' down the party orktaiti tiall—Lace not acared worth a cent at t work of :•reform' now going forward, but they are cementing their ranks closer ; together to move against alk.opposition td secure triumph at all lovit'ids. Thou• who are so conspicuous in engineering tlin movement.—and the number has come down beautifully, au eight by ten °nice accommodating all immediately interest ed, with - plenty of standing room to fix up the programme—make considerable noise. but thrmannes of nober thinking pore will not be tickled with their buncombe resolutions and hypocritical protestations of honesty, into lending support to the pet scheme of destroying a powerful - po litical organization in order to afford a few dissatisfied parties opportunity to ride into places which would forever be with held from them if they were rewarded ac centing to the measure of their merit and capacities. It remains of course, for all the Republicans to tak; especial interest in politics now. The August Conventions must well, fairly and &It'll ally represent the best element of th party, not Its rich and gilt edged. adherents any more than its good, true, trust4erthy and honest members who have !an principle alone. closely clung to the organization in cloud and sunshine, and wilt; so often hart - con 7 tributed by their'votei to its glorious trii mulls over toes, no matter whence they came. It is the duty lof all good RePub- licans to interest themselves at the Au gust primary meetings, for the enema of the party depends largely on the delegate elections. I Put only good and true men in the conventions 'and they cannot fill to put men of equal integrity and Standing with them selves forward for the offices within the gift of the peopt. With a ticket having thereon the name. of citizens against whose reputations naught can be said, against whose fealty, to party and princi ples nothing can be urged, the regular Republican, organization need not have the least fear ~of defeat, even should the apparent probabillty of a coalition with the Democracy be consummated by the ring-leaders in the third party movement- It would be unwise and Insane for the August Conventione to ignore the demand of the people, and It is a universal one, not of recent birth either, for good candi dates. • liet the nominations be made with inmate...A fin min be well.. It is none too early for good citizen. to lank about for tit delegates to represent them in the August Conventions, find none tod soon to shape the _character and quality of the ticket to be 'nominated by the Re publitran party for Republican support. VERY COOL. tPhilc serfonely contemplatine yeeter der whether we were going to melt righ down beneath the oppreselve beet of the • • —. burning rays-of a summer's sun, our eyes lit upon a cool and refreshing shade, un der which We regaled ourselves for a time, and almost forgot that the ther mometer stood at eighty-five. This cool and pleasant retreat .we found in a coot munication front that staunch old Demo nratic county of Berke, on. the that page of the Comnicrefia. "Berke" 'shouts, Most lustily, MI bail to the new .partY in old Allegheny! In it shi sees that the day of her redemption from Democratic • bondage draweth near. How the eman cipation is to be effected we are not in formed, but it will be, nevertheless. If the insurgents shall succeed here, and of this there to now. uo doubt whatever,. as less, perhaps, than two dozen of loiters decreed in an upper. mom on Smithfield street on Monday afternoon, that victory is certainand boldly declared that they car. ried tiventy-five thousand Republican votes in their vest pockets! Berko will feel the efficacy of their purifying touch and 'her Democratic =foxily of thousands - will never be . heard of again. The political eminuiers of Pittsburgh are all mighty men. Although they numbered only about two dozen at their first meeting,. there is nothing within the limits of these United States that can resist their :Sway. They will disenthrall Berke and every other Democratic stronghold in the - na tion! We bicathe more freely. This is decidedly refreshing. We hope to keep', cool for a week to come after receiving this blessed assurance. Let all rejoice heartily. Berke is to be redeemed ! and the bolters of "Allegheny State" are to, redeem her. Berke !a bright and happy' future awaits you. Cherish nothing Mill feelings of profoundest gratitude for the "office-hunting ring" of Allegheny which has manifested so much coniPatisionat regard for you in your lost, and all buy hopeless condition. . .1 "Berke" would have been regenerated king since, she avers, if Senator CameroO had only been sent back, when an infan4 to the home of his ancestors, in the la of the mountain and flood. He hair la alyzed.the right arm of the Republican strength in the . Keystone State by hill unaltered, and, as we believe, his unaltml. able devotion, to its doctrines and usages. Well, if these will not bear to be em. c i toed in the open light of day, let Alle gheny be purified LEA Berks disenthral • ed by the organization of a new part , and let the Senator have all ths bon r but is due Whim for consistency in sten • . . ... ... • _ -Mg by the true doctrines of Republica - inn. It is decidedly cool, to charge man with bringing ruin upon a pe beanie : he has ever .Ihowed fidelity to its landi:des. . °fateful u the shade is, in thernidst of this melting heat, we are not prepared t 0 recline beneath etcher the Curtin or Cam eron "wing." We abhor useless and un necessary divisions, and Own i n iserme; most profoundly, those who create them. The success and prosperity of the R4rib- Bran party does not depend os. the smile or the frown of Simon Cameron or ff. Curtin, although both are recognlsod as Influential and leading members 'in it. But we have wwrched diligently, anti! lasTe been unable to discover a single in: IRE PITTSBURGH DAILY GAZE stance in which Senator Cameron Las ever betrayed the princip!es of hie party. It is but a week or two since a commu nication appeared in the Cummercial which was written by a correspondent in Philadelphia, in' which it was charged that Senator Cameron was demoralizing and destroyingllie . Republican party by refusing to lend his aid to elevate Demo crats to official position ! In the name way, we suppose, he to deMoralizing the Ile publlein party In Berks. and in every other county in the State. Do our readers . . in this regard the Senator is pulling down, or are they not rather con vineed that - ho is building up, the Repnbli- STEM It requires no very penetrating vision to see what the object of the -reform" party is. :onto of its originators tore have never been in healthful accord with Republican doctrines, others have got soured from some cause or other, which ten need not mention, mad, witlra coolness .ruly refreshing, invite the co. of good men infthelr wicked at. destroy a party, which cannot it is under any °filtration to maintain them constantly at the odicial crib. And Denemi Cameron Is riddled and traduced every day because he trill not assist them in the nefarious work of disruption mid disintegration by securing laces for the Democracy. 11=1111 If enhteron if , such a heinous sinner,and yet yields such a potent influence that he can corrupt not only the State. but the Nation, is he not a fit subject for the Itc• publican party to try their hands ott'! If they would only reform hint, then, ac cording to their logic, llte nation would iecome reformed, 'minima as he is the prolific source of all the political evils be. math which the countr y is groaning. het them not respond "11e' is • beyond reformation," for' if they ainnot reform rained rtforto many thong. lepublienns Kenp" very aKd. - Two "Zell of men—mom or less—however orniseworthy the.desil,in of oonte of thens. may be, will nut be able7to destroy your organization, which luta again .and again demonstrated ito invincibility. KAASAs Pleasant Words tromlan Old Friends. The Crops.. The Grasshoppers and their Past Depredations .. The Groi , rth of Hansas,!&e., &c. (From our neecialCorresnoudent.l • JEFFERSON County, Kansas, June 9;1,'10. It is now about ten weeks since 1, with my family, first occupied this house where I tun writing as our home, and thin is my first epistle to the dear old On ztrre. Upon entering a new place., however well we may suppose we have everything fixed, one finds very many things. still to do. end this la my apology for .my - long silence. I have indeed had a very busy Ink of it since I have been here, and every day sees sonic , improveinent, some. thing done which is permanently useful or ornamental. The.location is so beauti ful naturally that it is neither difficult nor expensive to make this as pithy a home as any reasonable man 'could desire. The house stands on a natural swell and on a well defined line dividing the .prairie from a belt of thriving young' oak timber. Meetly black oak, intermixed with hick-. ory, walnut, etc. The oaks are cert. sym. metrical in form, the dark dense, shining foliage of which makes groves for both north and south of the house very pretty. and' delightfully shady. Some of the members of our family have ou . place "Oakwood," which is certainly ap., propriate enough. I Our post office in - Perry. - • . I But I have sad .more than enough , about our own.ltome7 All I shall add is that there are plenty more localitiesjust as prettg as ours in th is neighborhood. I This has been a fine "meson in thin State. We have had rain. enough, but ' not too much.. A Wartn, quiet shower is falling at this mornent. The wheat is generally ripe and Much of it cut. The crop, EN a general thing, is not a heavy one, but the quail y is lett-rate. Corn and potatoes are very luxuriant. Early potato's, are already se large as I would care to have - osi the table Cucumbers and henna raised in the open ter , are new. abundant, and in slew tiny. we trill have I m'..siv of ripe tomatoes. Limn beano. 1;ot-0climbed to the tops of the poles and are full of blossoms I mention these lit tle things is they gives better idea of the climate than any more abstract de acription maid do. The fart (s, thin Kan. liend and th is warm and brilliant sun s nn push vegetation with astonishing iffitv. For example, I planted a 10t...0f tarty 'Rose potatoes on the 10th of My; o 4 the 10th of June they were in blossom and bad good nixed tutors. Fer a series of years grasshoppers were -tie matt serious peat of this country. I have seen them so numerous that it was difficult to take a step without crushing ] them.sit ich em. ' the. sometimes come to in swarms rant that nly thing why their advent can be compared is a snow shower. his is generally in the late summer and . 1 . rly autumn months. When such a' hower falls upon a field of young wheat ' not a blade can be found in an hour or two afterwards. The corn Is generally so Strong and far matured .that, although ihey devour the blades in part, it sustains but little damage. When they come ear ly some farmers defer sowing their wheat until they take their departure, or the Maly fall frosts kill them. , When they see proper to 'remain, they deposit their eggs in the veil, and then in the following spring a new swarm of na, tires 'is sure to...appear stud-give some trouble to the farmers In their, fields of corn and oats; but the greatest damage in to the gardens. IBut I ant speaking of a thing of the past. In the fall of 1868 they were some. what numerous in places, but none In nth , er places. In the npring of 1800 the ' young brood came up where the seed had been planted, but they soott..took wing and left, and since then I have 'not seen one nor heard of any. They may visit us again ox they may not. 'file immense migrating *warms of which I have spoken come - from the southwest, but nobody knows the place of their origin: • Probe. I bly It is on the vast plains of New Mcxl. co and northwestern Texas. The stream of. Immigration to this I Slate ii unabated. epper ufficen, are taking,the census, The and p It is though t I that Kansas will count up Its half million. Mr. Brett, Who in numbering . 1 the people in this Representative district, told me that thin township, which four I years ago wan forbidden ground, lit being I until that time withheld from gale, be cause it was the Delaware reservation,) will show a population of 2,500. Every avenue leading be the State is crowded with. people. Few railroads In any part of the 'Luton carry more passengers than the Kansan Pacific. That road, of which 11 have had a good deal to say through the t i olumsusof the Oexerry., has been a great ce ucss, more so than 1 myself andel. , patod, although 1 was-always very sure 1 that it could not be a failure. A leading (trunk road through such a country as this I ; is surely pay.. The company is puthing erapidly forward, and will reach' Denver arly in September. It will then be an unbroken line to the Pacific; for the road from Denver to Cheyenne City Is com pleted or very nearly W. Then pansen - , gyre to California call pass through Kul I sea and Colorado with as much facility, I and with no increased length of travel, as they now do through Nebraska and Wy.. outing a route affording far more varied, beautiful. picturesque and grand scenery than the other. It is exceedingly ibteresting -and im pronsive to stand here and witness this mightiest tide of progress the world ever saw. This don't seem like the west, but more like the centre, as It really is. We feel the mighty rush pant us, not of int petuoun hordes, such as overrim Europe inthe middle ages- and dissolved the Bo man empire. but of an advanced eiVillill- LIM of the ' truest type--thonsands upon thousands of our own people pressing on ward to fill up our own more glorious em pire. essaying with them everything that marks the most advanced stage yet reach ed by human beings. The dull..the plod ding, the unambitious and non-progressive are left behind in the older Ehates, while those passessing courage. and enteritis', are going forward. I can only expect to ne e ft very few years at morn; but at such a time as thin, and in such A place an this. a decade is more than equal to a century where all is fixed and stationary. In my nett I intend to 'peek of what 1 finally' ought to have before coming here. 1:11= TO MAIMED SOLDIEIM Here is the full text of the act iiltralu rid by Gen. J.. S. Negley. inembet front this district in Congress, and approved as a law June'l7th, 1970. Be it - enacted by ; the Senate and _flown . of Representatire. of Gin feed 'Stake uFI America in Congress naminbiani, That ev T cry soldier who was disabled during tits late war for the s'uppresslon of the rebel lion, and who was furnished by the War Depart . ..mut with an artificial linab,or ap paratra for resection, shell be entitled to receive a new limb or .apparatus as soon. after the passage of this act as the same can be prartimilty [Practicably J furnished. and at the expiration of every five rare thereafter. under !melt regulations ns may be prescribed by the Surgeon Gene ml of the army:: Prodded. That the soldier may, if- ly to elect, receive, instead of said alb or apparatus. the money value theretif, at the following rates, viz: For artificial legs, sOventy•live dollars: for moth. fifty dollars; for feet, tifty. dollars; • for apparatus tort resection, fifty dollars. 51:C.2.1110t tin: Surgeon General shall certify to the Commissioner of Pensions a lint of soldiers upo have elected to•receive any mom, commutation instead of limbs or apparatus, whit the amount due to each, and the Cesmniasinner cif Pensions shall cause the same to be paid to such soldiers in the same manner an pensions are now or hereafter may Ire paid. SEA:. 3. That every soldier who. lest a limb during fire-late war, but train the nature of his Injury was not able •to use an artificial limb, and .consequently re mired none from the government, shall - be entitled to the benefits of this act and shall receive money - commthation as her, inbefore provided. Approved,June 17, 1670. • not Summer. Ftvm the rerordn heat nt .:`:ureniburg Bavarin, wt. get tine followingifiter testing fact, In .1132 the earth cracked by reason of the heat, the wells and streams in Alsaca all dried up. and the bed of the river nine was dry. In 1132 the heat was so great that the sand expbscd to the man rays was hot enough to cook eggs. In 1160 great numbers of the soldiers In the cautpa4,m against Bela died (non the heat. In 12711 and 1277 crops of. IniV 'and nuts failed completely. In 1303 , and 1304 a man could have crntousi dry shod over the rivers Seine, Lair, Rhine and Itanube. •In 1393 and 1301 u multitude of animals , perished by the heat. which was so great Ithat the .Ijarvest dried up. In 1 . 440 the heat was extraordinary.. In 1550. Is3ll, 1510 and mu the rivers were nearly all dried up. In 1550 there war a great drought; which eitended over neatly the 1 whole of Europe In 1015suil 1010 there was in Italy,Frame,- and the Netherlands an overpowering heat. In 1048 there were 'fifty-eight consecutive dare of ex treme beat. 1078 was were htrt: and as were the first three years of the eigh teenth century. In 1718 it did not.min a single time from April until October!. The growing grain was burnt, the rivers dried up, the theaters ibut wherefore ie not statedl were ,:clused by command of the police. The thermometer showed thirtyAbree degrees Reaumer, equivalent to one hundred and thirteen degrees FahreuheixV In irrigated gardens the fruit trees bloomed twice. In 0723 and 1724 there wan great beat. The summer of 1746 was hot and dry, the growing grain being calcined. It did not rain for mouths. 1748.1754, 1700, 1767, 1778, and 1788 were years in which the summers were extremely hot. In the famous con ,et year-1811—the summer -was warm, and the wine produced that season was very precious. In 1818 the theaters had to be closed en account of the beat, the highest temperature being thirty-five Resumer, or one. hundred anti twelve Fahrenheit. Miring the e years of the revolution of Jul, ,n threlB3o, the ther mometer stood at th s irty , slx degrees cen tigrade, about uluety.aeven Fahrenheit. 18t2, during the uprising of the sth and and 6th of July. the temperature was about the same. A `fete Trick. .k gentleman stepped Into a jewelers .hop tri.Berl in the other dav, and, pointing to his ring: said he wiribjd to choose a stone for It. lie was faildosmbly deemed, had an air of dintinction,and while speak.' ing Herman fluently, yet gave the impres sion that he was a foreigner. The Ber lin Mr. Buhr, therefore, feeling sure that hr bad found a customer who was -Worth attending to, at once frelly displayed his treasures. After king consideration the gentleman at last selected a stone, and leaving his uanse—ts very high - sounding one—and address. went away. He had ...reel, felt ilmet. voitusable mem. In the jeweler's collection wasnasssai ?met ...is); es sime rent tin. disfing,oislied looking foreiguer's purchase to hotel. Alas no such per: son wan there known. Ton late the jeweler remembered that his customer, pretend ing to ho very short sighted. had kept bin face in close proximity to the goods dis played to him, and had at one moment been seized with a fit of coughing,' when his handkerchief had,been brought Into great requisition. It eras evident, there fore, that the nose must have been pre viously rubbed with some sticky substance, and that the missing jewel had been - thus abstracted! Had the jeweler been s stu dent of the annals of Attribute:dice courts, he would have become suspicious In pro. portion as has viisitot_berame short sight 'muchAs it Ls he must Le content with KO Much of consolation as he CAD fins) in the knowledge that his misfortune was scone tuba occurrence to Isis fellow townsmen some years ago, and that their tormen tors went by the name of "Sappers." London Globe. . Suppressing Obscene Publications. Among the Moral societies of England is one for the "Suppression of Vice • wilt exists in the form of vile and corrupting printi—a kind of sdivression ,which it is not easy 40 accomplish in this country, At ' a recent meeting of the society in London, Lord Teignmouth presiding, his lordship complimented the public press, by saying that it was never so. respectably conduct ed as at present. The object of the so ciety is to see that the laws against the pernicious tratflein vile prints are ex c. anted, which thee would not be likely to be without some!such effort. During the -past year the society effected twenty con victions for issuing obscene prints and books, anti twenty persons are now suffer ini . imprisonment for the offense. Since 1944, the society his seized 134560 ob scene prints and pliotogra'plis, 16,012 books, five tons of letter press in sheets, besides large qunntities of infidel and blasphemous publications, 47,060 sheets of obscene songs, 5,6011 cards, snuff boxes and other, articles, 840 copper and steel hates, 430 lithographic stones, 90 Wood, blocks, 11 printing presses, 29 cwt. of type, etc., showing a state of thingli and i anrouonnt of- impurity in society which ,/ is almost incredible. Curious Things to Know:- - Besides the fact that ice is fighterlthan water, there is another curious thing about it which persons do not know, perhaps— namely, its purity. A lump of ice melted will siwaysbecoMe purely distilled water. %Chen the early navigators of the Arctic seas got out of Water they melted freq• meats of those vast mountains of ice called icebergs, and were astonished to find that they yi hied , only fresh water. They thought that they. were' frozen salt I water, not knowing they were formed on t the land, and in ome way launched into the sea. - - Bat if they had been tight the result would ha ..3 been all the same. The fact Is, the water In freezing turns out of it all that is not water, salt. air, coloring Matter, and alb impurities. Frozen sea water makes fresh water. ice. if you freeze a butts ,Of indigo water, it will make it as pure as that made of pure rain water. When the cold .is very sudden these foreign matters have no time to escape, either.l4 rising or sinking, and are tilde entangled with the Ice, but do -not form any part of it. . Cwrrzn, In his "Life of Coleridge," re latee as essay at grooming on the part of that poet and 3rdsworth. The servants being absent, t poets had' attempted to stable their ho , and were almost suc cessful. With the collar, however, a diffi. culty arose. Afi r et Wordsworlh had re. ii linqulehed as impracticable the effort to get It over the taIIUIVI head, Coleridge tried .his han d . but showed_ no more grooming skill than his predecessor ; for 1 after twisting the poor horse's neck , al most to stnuigubttion, and to' the great danger of his eyes; he gave up the use less task, announcing that the hdrse's head must have grown (gout or dropsy), since the collar was put on, for he said it was a downright impossibility for such a huge oi . fres ti! to pass through so narrow a collar! Just at - this moment a servant girl came up, and turning the Collar up aide down,wlipped it Mr without trouble, to the greet humility and wonderment of the poets, who were each satisfied afresh that there were heights of knowledge to which they bad not attained. E : WEDNESDAY- MORNING, JUNE 29, 1870 Tkto: Boston Post gives these incidents l i of t e explosion at Worcester : In one of the louses, a balm in its cradle would have\ been antlimated; had it not been for a large map that fell over it and kept off the falling rubbiSh: and in a tenement house the baby of one of the household was lying on the. floor protected by pi'. lows on either side. 'rile room was thee. Mighty shattered and the plastering lilt other heavy debris, fell within two inehts of the bead of the little six weeks' 01l Infant. In another house a body sat it, her sewing machine. and the side of tße house came off. taking the machine away, leaving her in the open, sir. The shock fts felt and the sound heard distinctly in it the towns within twenty-five miles. A entleman wile was en a pond in South , pencer, fishing at the time, says that the hes were seen to jump from the watir x the time of explosion. It was also no. t eeable that the windows in closed apart , t Tents distant from the explosiort were urst outward, by • the explosion Of the l'r within,When relieved front thelordin. ry . externiL, pressure by the vacuum Yitich the 'explosion created. In apart. nents where tie , windows were open, the 'll'auded air fonnd. tin outlet without ?reeking the glass. Too King of the Belgians has ounnuon id the Baron d'Anethan to Brussels to tarn a nen-Cabinet, and the Baron has commuted to undertake the task. COLD ANDVPARKLING &ODA IV ATHR. Drawn from Genuine Marble Founts, with the Genuine Y MILLOW MALTA isTßL7P.freeh. Alto. the now American ammo MONTANA. curod•ntir On dmught. These ityrups tire the finest :Maims ever Fuld In Atnerlm. luu can end them always Moo •nd fresh at JAMES E. BURNS & CO.'S I= When. 'on will nnti KISSENGEN. CONIiNKSS and BLUE LICE WATERS alwwn , on (*Alai end try t horn MEE= M== THE LIVINU MACHINE Inhere the main spring of a watch and every por ton of the works become disordered. The human ••• eh la to the human system what that elastic Piece of metal Isto the chronometer. It Influences the action of the tither miens, and controls to a certain extent. the whole living machine. 'rue comp.+ s may be carried farther. for a. the 1 weediness or Other imperfections of the main spring tilndic - ate4 on the lithe of the thne-Plocw. In also is the weakness or other disorder ,the stomach' betrayed by the lace of the Inland. The complexion In tallow or faded. The eyesaru defi cient in lustre and luteUigenoe. and there is• worn. anxious expression In the whole countenance which tell as plainly as smitten words could do, that the deed to - mobbing organ, whose niece It is to minister ite'of Ibe body.md to sustain mud, parte. to not performing ledger. Itrequires vating sad reinitating, and to accomplish this rd II oetetters Plomach Hitter* may be truly laid Ar be the one thing eroVol. The broken mats t/t"tteloaft:tu'ar LTliy.trgilfga cued. Rad this Is one of me objects of the femme erge.ble restorative übich for eighteen ye., has Ikea aaging a successful contest wish drapepsta in all eilMatea. As a apeclOn for rind It nlem do alme. When the resources Of the iManna. cog hare been eabeneted, without. St beat, do mom than zulthrating the isle. 41f t whOlemme and palatable. yet howerful. et ems elects a perfect and permanent core. In all rases of ilyspepela. the liver irmore or less dlsordeced. end upon the Important gland, se well as upon the etnniach and bowels, the Bitter* act with etutrular dnctnes eolattag and milieu. oratimit every losautee and aostrallatlng Onnia on , which and mental health S.P.A. NEW. ADVER'I7I3iDTENTS FABER ST, VAN DOREN 367 Liberty Stree PrITSSIMEIH. PA. S I T ILA „AI ENGINES, IRON AND WOOD WORIINO MACHINERY, . Reath Pumps, Engineers' and Machinists' Tools, STEAM FIRE ENGINES BELTING, Woolen Machinery, Machine Cards. 'I/rm....me...en re . I .d . :lg nd s i lpi 4115:i.btA• rt not cf:. -- ortro - E.ru!sim , r.icrrEtt LETTER Copying Presses WIIZEL PRESSES.. • • BAR PRESSES. • LETTER SIZE PRIMES, CAP SIRE PRESSES. CARMINE AND GILT PRISSSIML WALNUT PRESS STAND. MANN'S COPYING BOOKS. TRENCH COPYING BOWLS. NOTE SIZE COPYING 110038. LETTER SIZE COPYING 30015. CJI.P SIZE COPYING BOOKS, AILSOLD'S COPYING FLUID. SMITH'S COPYING FLUID. TBENCII COPYING FLUID, VIOLET COPYING FLUID. RUBBER COPYING !MEETS. CAMEL'S LIAM COPTLRG BRUME& WATER BOWLECIUNA AND IRON. L. READ Si SON N 0.102 Fourth Avenue. IMPROVED CHERRY SEEDER IL ha ban ltl vm'for the 'eat stayears. and never failed In an single Wineries to wive entire under,- Uonio the w h p urchaser. ofch en r u e n l o s n o a e 17.1i will see • The Machine Is Cheap. Rhode, Durable and Handsome. The Hopper is adjustable, thorebY adaPtina It to all slud Coe.. IL I. the bea rtl t Cherry Seeder In the Market. No deletion. All orders addressed to • JAMES .BOWN, No.l36WoodStreet, = Will be Filled at 14ANUFACTURER6'PRICES GEORGE BEATEN 111A2PUFALTURIIM 0) Cream Candies. and T: ea, And Dealer in Foreign and Domestic Fruits, notice, Jellies, Dances, eaten" Nuts, itc. NO-112 FEDERAL:STREET Jos:yrs ALLY.I.3IIENY, PA: WINE OF • LIFE.--Tho Knot Blood Partner and Delicious Drina. WARNER% VITA, Olt WINE OF LINZ, Ls fret from any poe:moue I t or Impurities. helot ProPlue4 tformltlioeezwr.hlo Itht ant and delidoes article ever offered t the Paihiln f oter "r 9l . o. W " to . " re Wk jeerh; bitten 00007 .ItoUi rude and fell: young or old.= tehe the Wine of Life. It ts ' in fact, • Preoireon wish to solo" good health and • free of lively neut. will do wall to Yea the Wino Of Ufalt Is Warn& trom anything fzer Won ?bleTiii . o4%. l' pt a ce 10.01Ziart ' Otttlerif ""ci" myoalriner JAMES RENO HEWER CONTRACTOR AND BUILDER. ..I . gluing of Stone Pipe Room Dralne promptly It ?Ma 66 es til.'24ll l a. 'TAW' JOSEPH R. HUNTER Merchandise Broker, 250 LIBERTY ISTILEVir, Lltoaeloto7 of Mask Ba C E2Ar STOP= AND TINWARN, • ' FICIDNII2I. AL B WIESLONS. . ' P. C. DIITTTIL. CUM NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. - Monday, .June 27, SENIPLE'S, j and 182 Fedidia newt, I= MANY GOOD BARGAINS =EU At 75 Cent,: Full Size Lama Shawls A GREAT 'BARGAIN AT •1 .00. , OLORED SILK PARASOLS, WOUTU 81.73 AL 23e., Double Width Chen. Mohair,. • dent did bargain. tot liSic.. Printed A1M.... At 'Wife.. Fait Colored and Dark Lawrie. At 194 e.. 4-4 Bleached Banana, a great bargain c.. Fast Colored Pitileo , AtSse., Light and Dart PrinlA. an extra good baron. Attu, all the Bent Yates of Callon. 9U)(1 for 9 f arditMerrintao Chintzes. Paitiltnerea.Cottonaties and Linen Drill. CALES AM) CIIINTZE VERY CIIEAP. nue Una° Black Sills. 1 . 1.10 and Plaid and Plaid Japan,. Poplin, Lawns. Urenadlnen and llermnlee Lt Very Low Prices M:SEMPLES, 180 and 18E Federal Street, Allegheny KM Morganstern&Co's IMO MACROS. GLYDE & CO SPECI AI, BARGAINS P./IRISOLS Regardless of Cost Pon. ee and Silk Parasols for =MEM fitietlartO*trteel Shawl for IL land lron gs ..kerthlat Hors at a, at Ilannetltelled Handken-Moto. at Linen Towels, at. • Mena' Jean Driver,. at Green Kld Glove.. at P. K. for Sul. at /1.9 Wets. at all end oods court:tee yourself that otber how.* gas low se we 00. Nos. 78 and 80 Market Street HORNE & CO'S. Clearance Sale of HATS, FLOWERS, -gi11416.13:..Er00d5, - PAIIASOLS: SUN SHADES. Large. Additions to Stock in EMBROIDERIES. LACES AND LACE GOODS. 'GAUZE UNDERWEAR, GEN'7'S' FURNISHING GOODS. HOSIERY. GLOVES. GUIPURE LACES. .SASH AND BOW RIBBONS BILE AND LUSEN FANS. At Low .PriOes. NEW GOODS Arriving Daily: 77 AND 79 MARKET STREET. JOHN Q. WOIVAN 11. lIICIDUID DAVI/3 WORKMAN & DAVIS, Ilawnwors to WOILIMAN. 11001 AZ L CO.. sum !ammo and Donlan In Carriages, Buggies, SPRING & BUCK WAGONS. • 4 1 / 4 41, 46 and 48 Beaver St., Allegheny,. a...hi m neatly and promptlr intanated. Or dere tor now Work Indian op in . I=n: to Oro meinfaction m .oa7 Orlares4.B " gringlAMitiVik h nage. pants, .t4..41 B.A.V.VIrrn PA .4=4 Tr= Bat - . R. WISLI A CO DAVID bLVII3C ' web wet Ms la -911VORKILAiint. Exv.,, tf., Tri no...otter b....timed at Om ad 4and,_ander the 0710 of WORYWAN DAVIS.,. Orton solleitod. PRICERITINIt "HILL & ADAM'S SEWER PIPE CO," 65 and 67 Sandusky St,Allegheny ril=f= Manotactim DISSIT VITIMPLED WALT= AND SILWZR PIPS Onion! to CUDOZT TOPS. FLUES nod HYDRAULIC CTISZMT. r, Agent. • e - IV~ORROW, IN hate oc EILIMMIIIOtI . II Morrow.) (SUCCESSOR TO EMI ILRLLER,) Sianigfactater of .11144 3 ,PL1CR and SHIM gerbrk . A . I,Totrretavari IRON STEAM' rtniSi jobbing attended to No. 112 First ATenue, • fNear Staring mtreetl ingSlaT4 Prrranußou . WATER PIPES Chimney Tops, HOT Alit Sr. CHIMNEY FLUES, BLe. A lugs and ton eunnment oonstanlly on Wind. nola a. COLLINS, 13$ !*Coln AVIDITY& nm:.o Bakery, ,Coseetionery ICE CREAM The undsrsksed heribigi tie WEard al?. AY rth . 4ukif ' from the Path. Pd.“ 1:41 orders to hie line. We dee Is n _ en . ii „,„ ‘ „ n ms km assse Ind ft iionv o, th e Mut Elattsfactthe Lerl 4 in noo n.. nimethalthe and orlon. The Idsh. lid defrauds Ls 'Oohed. WhiL . ?MODEL _ . WM. KREBS, ICE DEALER, 851 River Ave, Allegheny. Jew* === NEW ADVERTISEMENTS AT WIT SEMPLE'S, 80 and 188 Federal Street, ALLac;nENY A LAME !MOCK TO tO,LF IN Hats, Bonnets, • SUNDOWNS, • . At PricesasLow asCanbeFound Anywhere BIEEMSI LADIES' AND MISSES' HATS. Ribbons and Flowers. Lace Capes and Shetland Shawls. AT VIMY TOW PPLCrA. LIGHT Summer' Shawls, AT POPULAR PRICES Parasols and Sun Umbrellas • LAMES' AND CHILDHENer HITE AND BROWN SDIT Ladles' White Tucked Mirts. Lace Collars mdllaMkerchlefs. Laces and Embroidered Edgings. Hosiery. Gloves sod Underwear. &t Attractive Prices WM. SEMPLE'S, 180 and 182 Federal Street, Allegheny On . a Par with Gold WE NOW OFFER Our New Stoo-k DRY GOODS NOTIONS 4 AT EASTE4N'PRICES Examine our Goods & Prices ARBUTHIiOT, SHANNON& CO., 9: .115 Wood Street -- -- PLANING MILL MEN e And Others, • TAKE NOTICE! . The undersigned bas letter patent of the Uni ted States for the Improved construcUon of weethesbeare log. initlde lining and of wainscoting for hisser. -The weather -boarding. by this patent improvement. being more perticciarly intended for verUcsi ors and combinea great durability -and bbeauty of appearance: end it is so oonsUl.cted as to *lithely avoid the use ot joint strips, and to prevent water from entering U lota of h gap ingn or the showing of the lolots m by the isetiCs of the weather on the Umber. Melds Milne and Mato by this new method are eo ounstroctee • form {effect panels es cheaply es by th e ordinary flooring boards alone: thereby preventing the showing of t nt Jae b from sroad47:l 111,•• • , 21 . ....L.Mi ... . .... Art,a..ag: li ormator, ..,;.;.. .. IA I • ~v .i., ,4 ... : ^ = VvAh 9. i 9°" All " 0.th."..,; • 111. _..(. A. Mundt - ow. the right of the territOrl south of the river In said county. To &InQuevran & Douglass, the right for the Yiret e.td. Pittabengh. To MIL Patterson & Co.. chop rights for their wall. Sixth ward. Pittsbureh. To Ales. McClure. for the borough of McKee*. BE "7 1 tSii.o.=.l..glutoAtii Etre. &mond. Third end To Deed Broilers. shorat ' ia th lr mtu In Se,' withmud. city of Allegheny. To Donhem. Mint Co.. for the bothoglim of Et Thiamin:4 Etna: also the townships Of Shako . .titanrady:.,wv.re" • thfielpleme es/1,. or addrem the as as:s r a S m id street. rutomrsh. re. • 1. C. ANDERSON. BUY THE GENUINE. "0 N SPOOL I SOLE. AGENT . ORN STEVENSON'S :SONS & CO • • •1 JEWELERS, 93 market stzfeet, Pittsburgh. (Tf3IRD~DOOt~FROM YIITIIII Have on hand a/1 the lit.eet novelties Lu Toe Jew elry; alto BUTer Plates end dint Pleted Were of l'l r etat Tillthbeb=dl=Artit yol d and silver pees. Both Key leed Pendant Blooms ex. steatly on Itend,“ well se full nrtety If the deer wades of the Btes Watch. bacludMX Jar. rid pehAT:tr.O.VarWtuilltl•• for lepalrtog mud reirulatl One Watabee. To 0900 branch of our butlhres .p 4.1 40 'Orders b y ytly 61100. Bellew of 11.1 Itrlade .act i n drzYnnici by nun at YVlbont. mylkaW • • L. 0. AILKSTIL.CL. ''ARNST AL & SON, Virginia a d Louisville Tobacco f luency, • . S7EG-2..RS Fine Cot Chewing and iSmointeg tobaccos, m WritSZT Plttttnuith. STONE NEW ADVERTISEMENTS) (31\ 4 1 'of the " Cu eSdPealt :and Oltio - The Chesapeake and ohl9 Is completed and running Irmo diICIIIIOND, VA.. to the celebrated WlllTE Stli.1 . 141:11 .Zl'llo 6 1 8. In West Virglnn, 247 tulle.. ,It In Mtn, Ceptdi7 extended to the Ohlo dent . , 200 alder. farther maklng to all 417 miles. In Its prose• Westward. It wetratea end operts up to market the WONDEIWEL - COAL DEPOSITS OF TUE KANAWTIA REGION IN WEST TIR. Effflr=;l • - Coats of thsf. section Into commooloaDon sOtb life IRON ORES OF VIRGINIA AND OHIO. and WESTERN, SOUTH WESTERN AND EASTERN OMNI ....-ddsted. It will connect the F. UPEIIIOR lAEBOR FACILITIES OF THE CHESAPEAKE ads navigation on the Ohlo dyer; and MEM with the ENTIRE SYSTER OF RAILROAD ANp WATER TRANSPORTATION OF THE GREAT WEST AND SOUTHWEST. will melee SHORT. EAST. CHEAP and FA VORABLE ROUTE from the WEST to the SEA nd 1111 command I LARGE SHARE OF TUE ENORMOUS FREIGHTS seeking tracePorlatlonth the mut. It will Om become one of the moat IMPORTANT AND . PROFITABLE EAST AND WES'± TRUNK LINES OF RAILROAD m tho country:eodVo 92 . Mend s tree° of Immense value. ,• The completed portion of the Road Is dole• • PROFITABLE AND INCREASING BUELNESS. And le f 'equal le value to the whole •momL of the alortioage upon the coUre Llne-4515.0110, MEE= . The' 1011131 of the Chesapeake and Ohla Itatilmad Company, being a PI RAT MORTGAGE Imo* TILE ENTIRE UN E, PRO PERTE AND EDE IPSOINTi. WORTII 'MIEN COMPLETED AT LEAST 930; 000.000.11 tnerettlre ,ne of the most substantial, • conservative and reliable Railroad Leans ever of fered In the marbet, and la peculiarly adapted to lIIIYEK,9 ARE INVITED TO CLARK'S T." OTTON LARK GEO. A. Sold Everywhere DRY YELLOW PINE AND OAK. em,-d . lot, thorovbV 0.4.0*.; 1 I. the rough, or itt.uut, at the Tern. JAMES M'BRIER, 191 Sandusky Street, lilegheny City. J.&79 WHEELER'S Patent Stamp Canceler& EDWIN STEVENS, N0..41 S. Third, Street, racuistrm.a. • .... . General Agent for Side of Pennsylvania. An anten win be mei throvgla this oak. for nu' Stl .01.1•0 NO BOOMS) .13:0 FULTON% DI. TOR LAMM No. 97 1191717711 A ' ~' 011171 ON TEM irkin Railroad nvestors and Capitalists —.is to make their isiscatniects with the set satisfactory assurance of DOBITITE AND . UNDOUBTED SECURITY- 1201= MM=I $l,OOO, $5OO and $lOO and may be had COUPON or REGISTERED. Intarest lilr per cent: per annum. payable MAY 9ot and NOVEMBER lat. PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST PAYABLE IN GOLD IN TUE CITy OF NEW YORK. Pore 90 AND ACCRUED INTEREST In Cur rency. at which prtco they ley.neady SEVEN PER CENT. IN GOLD on!thetr cod. All Government Bonds and other Securitlesdralt n' at the Stuck EXChallge recelved In sachem. at hoar lutt market mdue. and pond. rout to all parts o . .. a , . f the y, free Express eharaee. There obtained by ordering direct from us or through say reeponelble Bank or Booker 10 anr pert of the country. . . . . . - Fi.sk & Hatch, , _ BANKERS No. 5 Nassau Street, New Yor Maps, • PaMphlets and fall information furnished upon application in person or by mail. S. NEGLEAN & CO., BA.NICERS, 65 'Fourth Ave., Pittsburgh, -nts for the sale of there Bond BAII;EYZ 0 0 U ; l3 12 7 2: 4.CHESINUTST, PIinADELPII II '• peqecGtort trmeßy. The reputation and experi. once of 40 years, warrant us in saying that our stock of Fine . Timekeepers of the best Euro pean and. American Makers is now the largest in the coun try; and we guarantee that each Watch e sell, is finished with great m e chani c a l precision, has all the late improvements, and will run regularly, well, and give satisfaction. Impiries ro.pur “Plied Worokes lombi DT Wrest tor moll. • 143 H E 6 vs,, G o s h o e , C T e e n s e; F y wt • COAL AND CONE MORGAN & ILLNUFACTUREIIS C N Nri.ILLSVILLE COKE, their Mines, Broad Ford, P. &C. B. B Mee, 142 WATER STREET,. 5111 P TO ALL POINTS BY RAILROAD, And Deliver in the City. 227151 . :16 - • OscarT,Lamm&Co. IIANUFACTURZES OF CONNELLSVILLE COKE rT/TI4TrITI linuttilngheni and pl Anthr a a u e a i , l: . Cod OFFICE : 1001 Ao. $, Gazelle Building. Vir Orders reapacthilly solicited. ' ap111,14 COAL! CO A - 1 - 41 YOUGHIOGHENY GAS' COAL CO. Thle ComMtor me now prepared to tarotsh the beet Coel of any Mae or quantity. AT YALU RATE& Moe mud Teri attiotrtles the Ommellnille Ran road Depot. loot of Try Street. Plttahmlh• Orders addrmeed to either Mmes. West Nest." Pa.. or to Teed, vltl be promptly attattOstl to. 21. P. OREM, Beesetney. eharles IL Armstrong DICALEIL IN YllighlOghellY and. Connellsville Coa .Mtd lanctfacturer of COASL. SLAM AND IDZSCLPIRTIMRD COIL OFTICIS AND YARD. comer Butler and IgoMOSI stresas.l4lserty and Mimes streets,' Ninth ward; also. Seeped street, Eighth mark mid at toot og *O. . Oedampat C. A . phepota moos dressed to me throns7llPlttstita. 4 o ° ..A 4 selvil etttoUosi. Us k Msi:SP, Urlti & Co Idl e Stevenson & C.o. Bissell & Co.. of .Lyon =l• ,. j r ar k igg li tra m tle taNgit:is .! ca."(D7,. tm`lre_ a aun."'' r e. IL Poinnylmala /Weems, Yana, COAL! COAL !! COAl!! DICKSON, STEWART Us•trol removed WO Moo to No. 567 Liberty qtreet, ' iLstais aty now DWI)) SZOOND IFLOOB. • iiileffignutr ° COAL Agartt liasar."l4"mittlaMarolial.minummdt. Wm tie trill otioao,2 to pro.Ptit. CARPETS, OIL CILOTRS, BARGAIN CARPETS CAN NOW BS lIAD Ar M'Fatland &Collins 71 AND 73 FIFTH AVE. • • They an' taking stook. and will close out VIM' of tba twat Brusaels• and Ingrains, At lesn then nut colt. etrn and get the chute., CARPETS SHIM STOCK, Fine, Medium and Common C3RPETS. Oar Stock I the largest we have ever offered to the trade. 80 - yard, Rose & Co., mh V a FIFTH AVENUE CARPETS. New lOoms! New Goods! NEW PRICES! BooVr. 1. the •I aimrsted °vent. nur Nue m ta • YINEBT DWPLAT OF CARPETS Ever Offered in this Market. LOWEST PRICES SINCE 1861 OLIVER McCLINTOCK & CO,, 23 Fifth Avenue. NEW CARPETS. Reductionin Prices TO CORRKSPOND WITH ¶HOLESALE RATES McCalliim Bros., No.SIFIFTH AVENUE VE WOOD wrursr. PrOWN' :S. • lisauracturers of SPRING. BAIR sad MATTRESSES. klat.b.t Bolsteis and Mors. tledes. Butt (liven end Wltlte /Soliana. Cords. Testeld. 8u Perttoulur tAteutton to t OW.. lug up. eleauLog nod brushinit; short,' CI NW tog eweerte. Our mode of cleaning comet L. the Mar which TOY ow feel wolfed that the More an Es.• larred and the good. thorOhlthli freed 2,000 011 lust and vermin. The Twice for el eehthil he. he.h. ; frrednoed. on ezoress . Ell call for .0440. ROBERTS, NICEOLSON & TOOMPSON, ophoistarers sad Froprierton ut cam Carpet • Beating Ettablithmeat, NO. 127 WOOD STREET, nth7MN Near Vft ArenoL Pittsbarth. CARPET CHAIN Of all Colors, ONAAND AND FOR SALE Al' ANCHOR COTTON MILLS, wrzir wit I Allegheny City. ::8, OtrEENswARE Joe iviou STREET.___ 61 1 QUEENSWARE , ci , YINs rnExcit. `4 l China and C 4 lass.l A. iiiimut FLATirDoams,trossn Wj AND TEA EMU', TZA TRAYS , ; WiIArIVIONIYIO.B "ort°lll,li E BREED & 00,,i p4l •c:4 REYNOLDS STEEN •Ic co., 124 Wood ....treet Importers nod Dealers In . FRENCH, Clllll, FLU CUT GLASS AND Queensware. C=l ESTABLISHED 1828 3.10111T....0 1 r. M. MIT' HIGBY Clan &•• No. - 189 Liberty rfrotvap!:_t_l4Ulll DealtriALed pitZi n t p T GLANS hhw Inat=01:1104 ALL' th frt. the best Enropeco sZne s, arta we receiwthg• immix sad degrable Wt. the pbowe 'D - 11. - WHITTIER g'L'N' ille n g u i: owlttiawgz.... lethe effects of room= are completely •ne4e... tedrepernyttorrhes or Scales" Weakest. nod Im• pOWOCI. ridantist frOla ealf.b.• Of other wore lead ir prod b,,,m r uce some ol a.the fah...leg ellecte se blotch tdch .. .r . tg..=,r d ra eutesitott. armlike to f• of future even% Wee of n, to4lutfe pre-" tweet estsetorle. nod euehr eo eel eyrie% se to reader ro roo stetele r.l=rott imprudent. ere "--- a egertad with three or say other totateate vetoes elated 's.' oce.ellell...Peellsla i Shoold rye the 'Doctor e truth tht Wet MA : A WPM'' , atteutlon lea to so r ocre.• WI t:NrerV'oo trtler:ogLSll"%fr =WA. eteno~t. -.„ . sod or Barrennete, ere tlee wltle - tlie — freel , we V. It ell-e - Meot that ePr Wet melee, chosen exchodrely to- the ody or • outdo clue of dreams nod urea Outmode of . cue* e•f veer omit by toreurr stal In ttut, Werawty , y{ .a pamphlet of l i f4. IfOlf giro.. full Selloeltton of venni.' , E•er . dleeuee thtf3nrar t. et oft. , Memos Luetructlon to o the ecabltrie tTe.r.t'V4.4.',:'" the Mote. oaten pilaf. Vireteletht fitieleit , e Um emote " ttle'tloW6t AliortelmaVnt=..r.= . • twp spent of the arcane ..........cria let YMD or etyma. Inform Were = een r oATITVers dolly penso at le ropelsol,ead for ape the rtmerds m aenoimoOdatloa Of fo. • pelirete there are ewled trtth office that ire pecrrlded with 010 5 7 to offesdfolo s f==Needlell retal• rated ewe bat .All are to thelheltoes ogre Who •teeter.....M . •=1:Alro stat p, roeuei:teh N.lt rid toril .e. fete • A I ME=