11 El 'IIIE,DAILY GAZETTE. Of Pfttabu QM Corner of Sin THURSDAY. JULY 28. DotO (40T.0l inZ•foot York ,14,.i0,hh,,y Tout LOW WKEWSll.lltOblOgrlipll 7 prOnk illeto to wore the baariest bank nat. a, 1.,,, - w e . t%l hard oo it for twvernlycar, width° \ ow York 15.dorne announce% that he ha% o ly carried hinutelf do en as far At 1828. • I Tut 'v2 kspirit of the Fr,TUoll . nts,oo, ,ewrritlx , nusouao,h, :Tho want of oe tlinEianut the pirt of tlo, roople been atilk ngly °beet - en:de, and is a di.' hoortenin oaten for the I I:o4toror'el' eon ottlierstio 1. - :..• , ,n , t fi.itmldi it is toted are w telling' the .progrese of the 41) , e nil patiently liting oP to sweep upon Bente Eld ell. Jr el tf nil: thug einu lete the ed or unity of Italy. . r• : 1 i , T carefully lir war In L portUult tura thq long witill prlvateering on ;corn• lier' *ranee, or PFassia, as rove 4tlcided their intentions \xYL pc= by \ ll bath nationi 'to abide by the tre ty of 16.16. AltitSigh Spifu tilro Lint ell Stites refused to agroti tliSt treat, ,still thoyi are to b included \ iiittekal . rt Its ',provisions utrord: Tux: Con Mercial t ivaunteth auchly over what, the eformi te have accomplished. We adcui , a jourtd that. aux laugh and =Wry ) Cr. .1 Ch circumstances. and tat caa ijo ful over' a wreck •of - tight anti 'patio s and cheat itself into `t e belipf t xat itccompli.lial 'good in a ! il war; .. I 1 , Ttimitidis ' llO mystery in 'the day of b ttlu on the lihin . O. The firsttuggle is l lll in all limitability bo derisive. It It will arobably Involve tIM loos of frourififty • to sixty thousand men and no linmano"l4rson iiimrrlsh to• acceletuto the moreinent of {be troops.tipon 4 - other: • )" - • . . .. • ' A iroilif.nsi of tilt. fifth articlo l of the ''. . Treaty izir Pragoo (A gust 23. 11146) loo ;rides lliat, -if th inhabitants iof tho .., Nlorthern districts o Schleswig 'declare.. s.fres vote . ; their eeiro to be united to ilq.ilr - tasey shall Ix, restored \ accord . ir.l.r." . Itic i ,thi"iso liuclileii dpa't do ' - to one , of l'..lwi'4.hornii I in . tke .'icich ' 4 feral epidenuis. i . "'"-• . . • 1 . t ~ 17c !OULU b(1 Only eharacteriatieuf the • .crafty and intriining , Finch Emperor if ihe ru or that \he ha ri c.,. tsntered into a 1 ta•rtil.' tapui, with Prank proves true. Prfral to •celee the euppart of France for ..'the ritlarabip of Spain B.ldrisi , retuto to ; • . furidiih 7 t7apoleon with a pretext for war, f , . ' ,with.ervaela seems to hove Seen the pro.' gramme long since adopted. Tug IC'hronirk announces that moire gentlemen In Pitteduggli contemplate Iformingla Ristoricol • Awe:relation. with a view of•Vuollecilig together and preserving( . matter bearing upon the early history of our fitate,,and' eaßecialii this perrtion of the State.) Stich an• organization should lulu 'had existence tu , -this eon:gain 'silty many years ago, and now es tho.hiea half been taken up we hope thlst It tll NVUILE France and Prussia are steadily preparing tor the first shock of battle tit. other European powers are being grad ual- ly end 'dryly drawn into the oomphcation. _fidnek„thi development of the secret treat; proposed by Napoleon to Blamer:rat, t 1 probabllitiee Of a general war on Om Old Continent are wore certaiu-i Engirded is getting bp her war spirit. and ehi cannot biderterta without dragging other govern ments-into the quarrel fit • Tat orNeof brimstone. corner plaint ,i- vely zings out, "Will. there be two Re . irqblitan tlekTete In the field?" We al. omit lose patience. Have we. not state'd twice and thrice - before that there will be but one enclr . ticket in the field, and that Will be, nominated in August: in the • Maki:while we kindly. advise our contem porary to sell out the spare occupied •In • ,theway of a standing joke at the top of " its s adltprlal columns, with certain ,good Ilelmbold might purchase it to advertise his baehti. There is no use In " . qiniatfrig so much space on the heavy page ) Tau Commereol, which has reiterated ,the dechtuttion that the new party would Withdraw their whole 'ticket ssyS, •./111: tie stories about the Itepnblicon () can "-' Oaten declining are sheer trentionsi l-trolned faleshoode Does It wish to have \ Ithe ;tames of the anthers of those'. load fal12!)hoe.01 L e t ant a“ , llist it.". *- In tts culumns ever).- morning, attdSit will ace them. We Lseert that thw who have made • the 'shezinventlar and • given utterance fled falsehoods" are on its men tided, .;. we 'now they speak the troth. When "; . these gentlemen have commenced to give oi l & other the lie, it is time to,dissolve partnership. = "' Tun registration orthe houses of 111 ~:., 'Sarno of Bt. Louis under the new law del .. t i e• -. velopes some Interesting fame Thus f .:.. • am hundred honseihave been put -do ...... in the books. These contain about sigh 101 hundred pros tams. - In - the majority o ='i' eases the k rs are women, although ' ,;;" in many Los men are silent 'part. ;;i-t 'Mira. The average age of tite frail ones ~,,,,.. As twenty.tro, Sean..- . A . majority are, ~...;, ; :',l.inerritans by birth, but almost every nit .',.• ~ tion has contributed its gnats. 'the oc. l cuPations are serious—a mijekty wing 1,...-... been •ervants, and many never having ..., , e , -had any occupation. - mho-average ;time ......., that the women have-been In . the life of .o ;..3t vier and ignite will Mot eictied . five 'yearn. • ..• , •The youngest oaths lists are; If 3. and the --," Oldeat 49: ' The reasons' for l'biXopalag '"'""' Vtiititutei are not many: - :Cot *few were ited; some :rent driven to it bilietv ,ery,and some bad assoelatimua• A :,kr o at majority are registered as °Satiety ~wg,theboainets from choke l t3esue sa;- ,a2•7•aon't want to work, and some ; they .Ithey.uts find nothing-else to do. ... . ^ IC, it , MN . WA l :, 'WM' stated' on' - Wednesday that!, the 1 .. "Members of the new party were Inform. I ;..3,0P,1f 0. 4 f Ir,Mends , ptirktfor, 004 Olaf had. / ~,, ~,, acecenpllehed the object Atr,,whieh I they ...:t :tkid orstiiiiita. aid would therefore retire from the contest. The matter; however, 1 . "!seeedlidpinbiletty front a eou*. yister i ' ' day. yllicia, ~bl4.Nic corrOoff,tedr , , i1 44 . t b " irocetrixt is tree. ' it was announ that 1 l• aetiv t he,- g o*:o4 . tt;' hartne - sMishe l 4.t to 4 ''"" '"it 4 iiel'aii. "iiiitllit Mt 4 t•Porfact: . it co - Alltitet ~ ibr a time from itat4,,,i t . N . .l,ite, . k;- must admit thit, Atj lidter/t e toi t ~ , 1 , arduous, very artfu,r6; aid exh:itai ,p. - 1 ""Vike,lke""P.M"ritft:iY6:),43',..)ik, 1 nit. ), —"d' *.:,44e,';064... i. ./.....,4.4.,the i fleet i ....witri Metal mememters who, haver.'n - Z . - ""'ol*`4. '64 - who 1 e county , In ' i fruld isearch la loi ll 4itek2... ! iiittYfil4i o L_ ,r- r ...wasatiod air t'ress Irom their labor, ." T h ey .. .- - titicyd,'l4(.4ouili4C,o4ll:74::to ;44rgY.. 6 I 1" .."14, ..,. " ..:4 • •,',, 1 IBM , • , . will, and determinatiott could do, but all their efforts have only proved to be love's labor lust. They have returned from their labors, related their sad tale, and V owed" most obeequiouslito they moo. t•r•, who hare been graitiifiesly filseeied to City and grant theol'..Yeet. for a time," and for all time. ; The moiriatty of 'these umattre. in elairulng a victbryarithotat • etrlking a blow is refeeithing.'''flueh men 'will never he able to accomplish anything. They will 41 few willing to +erre them. • =2= A RIVER„PtiLICF ' The cities of Pittsburgh and Allegheny knvo become no large that it ikbeginning to Le a littiz. T.l.:sera even for themost old 0, 07 3 . 0 f otter as to ep'eak of them 'as the shale of.rura& innocence and virtue; n'hd evident an thin foot is everywhere we go, it a no plafr iport, apparent than along the st4ores and b,.tween the banks of tlt7tlAlie ghCny river. More than vine;; gentlemen have told us that when they i have taken ladies When out in barget*snr- the Allegheny they have been accoMed with the ,vileSt butgitage and the moat opprobrious', etii theta by boy., little ind big, all attired In the content° faithioneble with 'Adantin the ante.fig.leaf time;, who were swirti ming and wading -and dabbling in th`e stream or dancing ; - unchaste cart-cari's on the !there. And kenides this, numer ens' adult men, blg and . brawny', but nitOgether wanting In modem!, she nor respect for „ the lawk„amuse themltel es in the evenings by gutting into wherri , or skiffs and pulling upend titian.tite ri r in a Mate of Mark nudity which amou is to gross indecency, when his remembe that It is done in broad day light, with rt the limit* of the two cities and betwee the poricilbanits of A great rive . Mere reMonsZnincett are useless, for 'who rn b* pant no law an to I,?r , capable well conduct severe action is necessary,to recall them to a sense of legal proprii•ty rind we cannot see how such severity inn be used unless the two cities should unite, as they have done in the case of the bridge Pollee, and create ti river polite. whese sole duty shall be to'nttend to the co fre quently recurring breaches of the law in that section, and eippowered to plicate and make arrests ins both ities r ot upon the water. Special river 'police have roved extremely tuteful in - - ew Xnrk and .1111adelphia, and • ..ve think we tetve I' right to aait it hem in the na to of eve 1 • • lorer of decency. law and rdor in tl I.4;nruianity. THE BALA y-CE OF POWER. Be the confeefin of the French them selves, the presint war against the-liorth Herman States in the hitereit'of the "balance of 'powir. - liy this expression is meant that state of affairs in which - no one of the Euripeari potversi is permitted to have such a Areponderance of power es to endanger the independence of the others. While This idea is as old even as the Oreek States . ; still, nofuntil the days of Charles V: was it distinctly avowed, the iieergrown power and ambitious de nim of this moilatch awakening the other European powers to the danger of such prepOnderacce in any other State. Theiiriotive of preserving-the balarice of power, first came defmiteliinto the-po :Atka] - foreground in those unions which England, Holland and Austria repeatedly formed against the encroachmeots of Louis IV. on the dominion of Europe. The same cause disrupted the moot dan gerous (to Louis) of these coalitions; for, in the war of the Spanish Succession, when the Hapsburg pretender to -the throne of Spain became, by the death of Joseph 1., sovereign of Austria and Ent .peror of Uermany., end the power which, in the handsof Charles V., had. threaten- likely to be again' ,wielded by ooe . man, England withdrew front the coalition, and thus saved Louis from a aignaroverthrow , I Thouggrewiensof Napoleon called all. the powers °I.-Europe to arms siainst hint sln the name of the balance of power rand to rearranging the map of Europe; this convenient shield - Was frequentty invoked to cover the jealoury which resisted coll.\ one claims to restitution. It, For some time, the balance of Powerin Eumue hue, it might en be put, 7 been em bodied in a pentarehy, or permanent Con.. grew of the great powers, who mutually. and jealously watch each other's move. ..ments. This mutual jealousy on the part. of the great powers is considered the safe lty of , the petty States, being the only in fluence that prevents their absorption by these great contiguous political sponges. In the present instance, France imagin ed that she felt herself sinking in the great political * whirlpool of Prussian ab sorption, and hence she strikes In the In terest of the "balance of power," which, of course, la to the Interest of France. Ile therefore follows as • natural sequence that France and Prunes will not be slum In this conflict. All the great powers of , - Europe, must, in some wry, become in: valved, otherwise the balance of power "ceases to be the mairt,apirtinrof en action:: not possible for Ame —, who mason from the broader ...oiarioint of universal right, to havelany sympathy with the rums bell i pat forth bf France. ' . EFFECiIIjF THE'WAR. c ,, Enarybodisee to be discuss lug - net now the effect the I . zanco-Prundan war ill have upon the arMetary and common:lid interests of the United States: SOIL en tertain the, most 'brilliant . hopes that it will redound to ournational aggrandize. meat, and be a -mural of great &unmet , chi and agriculinral prosperity. At this 1 early day. before it hart been ascertained the proportion. the war will asentim—tho number of mittens that may be drawn into it and its probable .- duration—very little. as experience goes to show, earl be said sai to the effect it will 'produce here: The moves oO the military chess-board are 'sometimes slow and the consequences un certain. we .are occasionally informed that. a high "military eflichil," or a die llnitislimincleir, :has predicted certain se q uences and results, but our gape in the Jaat um yam, to go no farther heck, has taught , us that military oftdale and financiers can see no farther into a mill 'time -than thcdr less preten_ tiros end hose oeitlisted. neighbors. to one can predict -what rainy -movements Will taknplaee in the Rhine region the n t 'twonty-foir honrioirwitat premium go a wili oiosmai reL Von street., ono Vince. * :re tio, are mi so is me 4 thi ,* n:a mta ho i w in e ty ve . r Ai, whi w el 4tos. are Peraiil Sinit ;44 ti relation .ts •ki thisteitolumns same time fees; th preseneWar will seriously affect hn mi titet'. sea the funDetrelt; ..T t the . eattitiiyi: tedgration from i Ger. I ,mans' heO reetived an effectual check for the present, 4nd so long ex the war eon: thmi.weic vvi i l be, deprived of . the beb4te vihich . n In* and continuous sof, of hardy and ii ouA,cured to qa ddlii the -effects To ttorap hue ) lett. to, bonds have offered a heavy depreeli44 tcal : . .SF /I f i r , xiir,,flptn, 10 `lsiur , ; '' on 81Yt~•tinie Alt advanoeln gold has kept Our ' ji I,lttorYeiiithnis JenitinaOinag_kiiinlifeitt sad eonsequantly 'trteveatid 'theft sil*a,. , , And ..0_1341.t t 44. tl. l (.1 marl In any large amounteyet in the event of the war continuing it may be expected that thek will come back to us in large quantitie4or some time. In the nature of things not be expected to f:oritinue rung.. Our public securities are Infinitely inaperier to any thing offered. or that to likely to be offered, In European _markets. Our bonds are amply seen red, and rimer a touch higher rate of interest than European nations are selling to give. If the •COUII.O. which I nor bonds toil, iltiring thin war between Prussia and Austria in itoki Is any criterion, we need not expect that their yeinru will Ife of long continiu tusr. Immediately after the outbreak of afar in that year, about 410,000X10U found their way hero .from Europe. lint the tide was moo turned: Aboont as soon an the bonda began to arrive, a.refiux move ment set in," and In the shOrt space of two or three weeks some $15,000,000 Were sent back to Europe, which showed' the great confidence tnauSAtlantic capitalists had in our securities, and the -preference they gave them over thoto of their own countries. For the time being. .hewn, r, there will, In till probablilty, be consider \ ahle tluctuntion and derangement. and in e uncertainty which surrounds th .caurse which will likely: be pursued by European I ) powers, no one so predict, oven approximat ell, at what figure! \prices - of public 4murities may range. As we (have already i ted in' the 1 .1 ., Present crunplications abread-the p tweet 'of funding' one thousand five hu ' red Iranians of our national debt, is a cord :lnce'iiltli the provisions of a rem t Act 'of Cengterl, is not very brilliant. I 'will not be accrplialted for some .tim ~ and it is not ll ely nod the fr the Treasury will attempt it until peafe Shall have been established betweetlAlte.... tiara now at 1 , 114. Our bonds nt presrn k are about 4„welieper cent..below par in told, and (n - iild tint be nog hinted at. I piir .t four, four and a half, and five per cent: , interest. For' the preseni 'then 11 hope of funding the national nebt hits mashed. If our capitalists have publ c spirit enough, the warfa y secure to the re. rival of our tenorcial marine, dlf it should stimulate to regain nut aurae. macy in the carrying trade of tl e ocean. whiclCrara ' enjoyed' before 'the ... ['drill'"? .. remain; preyed upon onr sltips• on the high seas, it will be to us agreat rational' . blessing, whatever may ie the disastrotra consequences to those. who anti waging The present condition- of onr coi mercial marine, not to speak of the adequary of our nary . , is a national grace, and 1,,;11 if it should be at the pellet: of the calamities .of nth, ie, for which we arc in no 'Way 're. \ 'oust ble, 'Ate tentontti?n to) ' Va . !etruier state of efficiency will be ~ latiled y with delight. Theie ano reason why we shouldsurrender th 4 . ingtmde'df rite ocean into the.handl of Eng \ and,. and- be dependent upon lierfc;r bottellle in which toiiow away and tramwt 1 the products of our great agrieultitrai. domain, and the means of conveying' td'ether lands every letter we wish to transmit. People may rave as much 4 they 'please aliens free trade and nagiettation laws, but the truth Is the present elate of our couimer el del marin e is the' re tof a lick of pub lic spirit and outerpr . . We are paying millions to England very'. year In - . the shape of freights. whi h i. 4 might with greater advantage an . more . honor retain ii.ri. in our own pockets. 1 othe , .. nations than dui:, now eng-aged in it should become. involved, a long war Vill',.create an in creased demand for bre: -etffs. But lilt should terminate AS ok•dil. a! the Pratt so-Austrian War of Ilittl . sat'] Remain and other nations should main \iteutral, and the indications are the '. wilh - th ' will y not stn our opinion be - --- rfry, tnit l f, ed hi „...„.....r......te dCMILTICI thir - Itgli !tn./ Products. Every thin looks fi l usible for an average harvest In the Bride Mee. The \ failure of the groaclng crops LA 'ranee 1 , to not no great as at first reported 'and all the resources of the craps. group g cone tries in-Europe mulit become •ex ü beforebafo the belligerents will img turn ' . 1 tention to the t'nitect 1 'tatss for for their armies. At d i ll events, •• not advise our fartulh friends fi ci away their *heat wipr.the eal of getting much higher tireat aPpresent offered. i' - 1 -----; . ' One great adeante4e II elyso re this country f rm . th e Iwa is , theta ports will be }treat]}; 4i Minh balance of trade is too attlingly a already, and the soonek the tide the better will it.be for,itlie pros the nation. 'We can If a nil eel these expensive article which • poverishing ourselves b krtipor year. A W o man's Idea /or hat . . . _r :.. [From thi its • talon,' riii, tl) T. begin with. Ilwoqj Viva kitchen Well lighted; some, yl,, ) ;1.04 deal of 1 the broad, cupensi. . stMl e ht ling iti boldly, as if It bad # tlct ri ht to he there.. That would gamier, n sitate large windows. And tb4 I woul glee as much attention to 'the mallet n ofi,a 1 ", kitchen as I would tea sl *Ming m. I would bays a large et re tar dee ce sus pended over the, catkin stove • with a hole in the center, and a eta, 14uling to the top of the house, tota rry tiff the sa. very smells which the p wean at cooking generates, and prevent thrm from perme ating the house.., •, • •• • For these smells, howerla sa'eory and 1 agreeable, are apt to to - 'e away some thing from the keenness f our appetite or, at least, cause us to' a ticipate Some thing better than the reklity.. Then I Would have 11. large sink. with a perms eat soapstone or marble wash bowl, for washing the dishes. anti } another for drain bag. .I would also have en ltdjuatable pipe , ,„ leading from the hot wardward tank to either of th ose basins. Besideii thfue-I- would* have sundry cupboard ' d Closets Sr. ranged on th e wall, so t o be tasteful and decorative, as welt ovenient. Then] would have ads CAI deV . A.Pd to tiny drawers, such as one mica in a dreg store, and labeled in this *tanner; . Bde, allspice, nutmegs, cream 'of tartar, etc, to i (o that at a single , glance I ' uld discover just what I wanted, witbo t rooms:zinc . to find these thltigi in som o ut - of-the-way, corner, placed there by some untidy Bridget. This,would say one a world of, care now devoted to In meting every new servant as to all pl cos of things. Cooking is becoming so a pllested now 1 a-days that one needs all A t arrangements, and as many utensils as ul chemical labo , story; arid the - good hiteet should I give the mater familial "a .lam for every. I thing.' s • . Tue. most diedinguished guest =hf,„„the Rockland Mime, Neatest Beech, Maas., Is thus described In tlie'eihr,V4 York; Tri, bone : Ralph Waldo Emerion, a tall, ' rather slim and shainblingloolting figure, with bis^ hat sloping backward and his 'cravat awry; limy be • seen every day along - the plasma Ills thin hum is, in 'the Imagination , ef• the writer, , marked with farrows of thought, the grayish hale tell. t.. 4 *nue 00 years' erpeHedee ; the 'lined lint nose seems pwdeeted into the fiftare; wisdom lurks in the shrewd - • ittedle, that playa Mend the firm lips, and a r ilitiVe sagnety•aparkles in Lis keen , ; byel hi a born seer. • If any ade what thdnoddllgflowers whisper Olt taming breeze, or. what the wild- wave ee are *lag, it Is hi: ::Unlike the ancient philosopherecthe Concord Inge door not go hereto!, but *ears large 'shoes; eats • Lie food with a•silber fedi. agd enjoys the ispeeti - '1; hay#l keen tedildr. ". • '4 • •••4 I• dustrivis Teator4 or Amr nap, InaikAittar. IQ '4. Tele European war b 1 . , rk "INYCNO . 'LAVA , .01108154 d :Sr thirty it' thou-Wild &filar, * l id , a: pretty 'he/Odom' 1 ~ trottitsethtiwWerr-bei- bthabt- 1,1 4"1 °°, , '4 , 4 w fai th ige y * . irma p : - # 4,,,m in ebiagb ,to*e lyet .rv go b t I a par* me& h ,i 9 tel.d poor ehd ditrootitabie by ibechic. , h , 'oo6kort , nte Alilppftrand. wi t I mp , i Z. : 0 7 0.4wh edaler se :A o ll:se . : 4 511: 4 1: 1 t hwi. to . helfeihh%Vefdrmhed wbeh , ett , S mie)l it they4keitediltelertzi Inkwell* her t ~f• i,. , . ,-; .. ,A;, t. _s,. g ._ l . a..,.,g._a+ PITTSBURGH DAILY GAZETTE : THURSDAY MORNING, JULY 2S, 1870. DOWN IN MAINE. [Correspondence to the Pittsburgh Gazette.) iStAINT., July 2:i-1d;"0._ MEstins. EDITUIIS: We prondosed you an oeimplonal letter from the deitshorii thin stniner. ~.Of course tlieressere imyjfed conditions. And one of theise, thut' sre should h e free • from hot 'mining • not boon complied Last 'saintlier w'o 'did nut eiperi• ence n sitig,leOM, uncomfortable Aar.• Already in July we have bad very many scorching days. It bun been ono of the wannest months here surer.. ord, and there is tl9-'suspension yet. Bat we have almost constantly a lireeZt, from the ocean mitigating the Lela NOlial nth orelse would be intolerable. There is no great . milt for Watering Jerenow. To the mountains, the dere'. Jere of HIS sea,- flee. To the ocean come the Canadians and mountaineers: There is an exchange of Places: - Change of air and scene Is. the. object. Places once popular resorts have ceased to become so; others hare taken their places. Formerly, hete, it was Cape Cottage or Cape Elizabeth; now it is the Ottawa House on Castleitig's Island, at the en. trance to Portland Harbor, mud Mt. Desert on the Eastern 'coast of Maine, to which more and morn resort to enjoy the scud mountain scene, and the -clews of AM, foiling . ocean, the ;ails, the fisiTtifgs and the hathinga. ' Now Yorkers and Bostonian, leave miected bottle on this spot, hut a few yeais ago one- of the quietest On the globe: and regarded as wholly! Undeeiroble itX. a place for resid ence. ' ! • ! The polities of !nine are a little tile. Imbed. Even he • tlicre are ambitious men, restless men Mid ' men desirous of a. change, hoping to derive benefit from it. Perham will'ix, tlovernor, although there it some talk of bringing out chamber lain, the present popular tiovernor,!na a citizena', that ia, a-Democratic candidate. This wan diametral in the recent Demo cmtic Convention in Portland, anti it Is still spoken of.l .Wohave been told that he masa Democrat before the war, and that thereis hope that he 'will return to the home from which he has Wandered. The belied' entertained for no a long time by so many ie discreditablo to the (inventor, and we nhould. think would damage hie chances for I,7,pited Staten Senate in place of Senator this ilovernor Chamberlain, Senator.Mor rill and lion. J. Washburne are the dates. The latter line but • littlestrength. Tire contest will be between the two form er; the result doubtful. • I A few weeks ago. the return of Mr. Lynch from Cumberland county to Con gres seemed very doubtful, as York county, a. pail of his district. claimed the candidate this time, and seemed disprieed to bolt the ticket and thus give the elec. Lion 'to the Demoerats. They are, how 'ever, gradually becoming reconciled to . - otiiinatlon: - hero, asclneK6ere,thi or three whomc only hopes are in a change f men; they are ready to• do anything for n share of the spoil's. What hi' oar, minion now, would be honesty and pirrity were they in the stall. The anniversaries of our colleges and seminaries of learning have again been celebrated. Boston hat. given her 1.0.511 bouquets to her diploma and honor stet dents, amid speeches and rejoicings and feasting, and has decided. to adorn some of her school IVOIIII.I with ttatuary and paintings; The graduates ornur north east 'colleges have spoken the pieces which aro to Immortalize them, and have . gone to their homes to prepare for waverer struggles with less certain results. Harvard ,has had new life lufused into her 'and is In creasing In students and wealth. The propriety' of congregating a large number of students In the name building in by some doubted. Certain it is that many go from home to fit themselves for the duties of life, and come back to lead a life of sharne and wretchedness.. The statistics of the number in the graduating class of Yale the present year who drink or smoke, or chew tobacco or are profane, have bean severely commented on in ties New York papers. A gentleman attended. corn• ruelicement at Bowdoin for the purpose of deciding whether it was !the place to educate three sons, and - .lien he heard the chronicles of class day. read,. filled —with a . ofanitr:and language unbecominA to a iberally educated young man, he soar • saving. I will not te4al InTraonoiiltero. •The scholarships high moral tone. gentlemanly bearing 'of the stwients your own university will ron.rars• vs fnOorably with that , of our best eolleg. It does not gradnate'drunkartis or Vleie young men. Its emumencement ezerci are equal to any to which nu thaw. There are no hazings, no rebellion, riotous, assembTingu there. Let hit sens cherish it. - - IFor the Pittebutils 011Zett4 TUE WOXIAN QUERTION. heir at. upOliers would to /tore M eNill/1. EDITOR/4: Vi - nt4,01 am begin ngto talk IQ moth of their rights. a. ME an agitating the question so etrenue that it may be said now to be fairly- and squarely before the public. Shall women have their rights, or not i is the query so often heard that a fah' minded, hottest and easy goi`sig man.-begins to think that theie must be something: in it after all, and to believe that the mother. and,wi ere ankeistere inc-daughters whom lie hie looked. upon as the sweetest of win pinions and peers of the hearthstonr, hive in reality been-elaves and draftee • eullbruig, writhing under the lash of his domestic tyranny'. Having thus, we may suppose, become convinced that he and all men are tyrante, he nat urally decides, that, being tyrants, they will merely refuse whatever these fomenters of a servile uprising shall de mand. Hr, however, examines the laws, awl finds that woman' legal condition beipm improving in thin country before Limy Stone or Mee. Bloomer began to agitate the question; but that there le still In this as in many other paragraphs of the book of life, eternal,Tortm for progreu and improvement. Ite will probably determine that marriage elsonld be re garded as an Neal . partnership. Leech party- there performing those necessary duties for which by nature and education ho or she may be most fit, each putting Into the firm all of the capital at his or her disposal and each having a • right, ' upon-. retiring—by death or divorce—frtmi the firm, to dispose also !study of one-half of the stock and enacts of the eonc ' re, and no more. 'thin," says lira , " is Justic e . and even. though Ibe a tyrant. I s all be' just." Thereupon, perhaps, he p mewls to use hie utmost ef fort. to bring oabout ouch a Mats of affairs, but he is stomas mulled by Moon whis believe that Woman's property should be and remain her 0.111, 'and - altogether out of the reach of her husband, sad any wages that ehp may earn shall belong to ler absolutely, as well as • a 'portion of those other husband, and the would-be just man finds a portion of these belliger ent Amason., not eitiefied with female equality deinanding of him to acknowledge in his statute books thet wouien have a right to a - physical and legal superiority to men, equal to that spiritual superiority which lie has always—perhaps uncon sciously—sdailtted. 'Mile brings him to a halt, and while examining , the the two suggestions, •he ii assailed by an army with bannere, ,uponcwhlch. le inecribed, IVoniaiii Sir (rage, and he is told that men being:all tyrants women cannot hope to gain'their rights until they have wok the privilege and the p6wer of 'ttie ballot. Having wrung.-this morn their despOtie rulers they, will put down all wrong And see that hereafter their ."governowr ire, not miserable, 'degraded offkcourings . . of Europe and aides," 'as now: These words sound wolf 'from the trained lips of, the strong minded, educated handful of Insiders;' but s upon,: examination; She army • c behind there is not • found balm altogether wadrmg In the 'element of degraded' offseburitme • !Mau foreign lands,' :• wives', ' - alstelii. and daughters of those who are now supposed 'to rulh the ' country, And - So this suggestion; not being . 'en clear and inkiest as to tarry immediate' wheletloh , with It, le'placedikisitk. the' °there .- and'ilie'fatr-minded, 'holiest and. ,eilarising'inin afoteiald,' Strof 'learning, them closely and'roasulting the *fee of hls household and their friendi, end WA:* ing thettrint *alidgether agreeing, with' either of , elmis . ".fietititt of the woolen*i r movement elidfelpably contented 'with their 'present ' coti lion, while,„re .the iianaf*ilf6dtre 'affair 'vie& kin' .teleflesini iledeynriktbieterritc Rim, 'eel imprelreeterdoeblch.,-181 eeneteseti' te. .Wit 14.c9,4i , ,#.1,f1P0dee that . olPiltht , o women agree Smong:themetirven !upon 'ilia thkr really tint iaand . thad'ifinilieW littithet dl.lBl' mfallr.bes a pie , td Mr-- , reietty areta , reritabliqrefuftnp , hoi will' !tenttituto..lit - the •eld.' and timeJhosored attiorse:!ounteot 'to be tailed a tyrant by all , other , women if those: et. hie - -freely elefr, L Islifientiratesseastled*ltl , !dim MS heritel ~ 1,,,,i.'i I: 4 ; k•lt/1,-4i , :gitorse, fill:: , .4 .1 , A.0 ir.1.1 . .tr.0 •,11. -.10;; ~:, r. ..i , :l ,tt. , ,,." .. . t z.i.+: .iii 1. .1.u.,1 !. Ca 1..:', Alziti 41'1 .', , 1..;:i .i.,,,i, Uf im turned tity of itbout re iM OVCIT EETI Etl ' Fps 'I • t ISM ' •- ' • • ' Growl Superetiti . zn or i y o Ramda—Strange A very singular story comes front Rus sia. A peasant woman' of the interior named Eugenia Chubakova, having a still-born child, put it away in a large bon; which the experienced women of the vil-. - Inge:had told het was the proper filing, Mader the circumstances, do. TwO days 'after she raised theFild of ' the boa to see what hadlecome of the d, foundthst it. had diiiippeared,and, oiled thit the •'Doniorol,.' or spirit of the house,,had car ried it away. Chubakoia, the husband, and the wise women who had assisted at the delivery, were of •opinion that the Domovoi had taken poeseasion of the body,- and it was resolved to keep the whole at loins profound secret. A ~ montlt aftei , 'ward, -however, 'the local' authorities heardAe.stery_and budituted a search, the result of srlireft gran thai a village thief named. Vasidli *no proved to have stolen the missing: body', and acting under! th e advic e of a wizard; to have fried it,, in, order that ',out of the fat' _ which ' . -fell from . it, he mi ht nutke ' a i talismanic candle. to stet him in ' the pursuit of his profs btu. .By the ' light of the candleslmade • rom. the fat of a fried baby, a thief may steal as•;much as ho likes without fear of tscovery; but' it is necessary that the bah should have been baptized. The light from it candle made out of the fat of a still•born child is. ithout yirtue; sambas soon as t e Rae explained to the thief he. desist from the magical process which he had already commenced. Once in possession of a candle made from the fat of a baptized infant, the thief lima, course Qf unbroken prosperity before him :.--- i ' - -- .4 • AMEPIiCA7i SAFFRIM • • • • A fresh soSPIT of • AMERICAN SAFFRON. ' . • AMERICA!! SAFFRON. ASSRIIICAN SAFFRON. . .AMERIoIN SAFFRON. AMERICAN SAFFRON. . AMERICAN SAFFRON. .AHItIUCAN SAFFRON. A fresh simply AS: JAMES B. BURNS & CO.'S DRUO STORE...mu:fa Penh sall Sixth street, 1,44 M. . . TIM BLOOD Li RUMMER flit Moat detenotwtee In hot weather. Proud porepinition deprives It of portion of It. no tablet and nroiltuntive proYertimi• /a Summer. the' desk Ilium. In sold dorms. Its firmness, the muscles lack 'their usual elmalcity atm vlanr, and the weight of the body diraln!shes.. Three are cletei ndkuthins that the , ordinary sim ply of the Ilfe-suetatnins Prineffile Fot.dedbe the boot we eat:ls not sufficient to meet the empire• ments of the system under a high temperature- There V another mums for dile, beeldoit the direct Influence. Of the bent. els : ttre iO!.. of aPrett• aa the weakening of the dt,istive powers which It demselons. I;mYer . these circumstance's a whole some invigorant ta evidently Ileinled. and the hest and sefeet to Ilostetter's dloniach Bitten. This admirable veirseible tonic and alterative, acts fa vorably two the system to iieWrat - ways• it in- renames the appetite onJ faillitates dlaeStlon thereby IneJltdent the Moonset to reoelve und ann. blind It to asslnstlote a doe lunimnt of nourishment. It ohm toner the rolusea secretive organs and the bowels. Under Its operotionthe process Of mood latdh.o.C.3 l oned.hl the deellt through limper.. la arrested, the whole front. refreshed and Inala ointted. snd the ittilrits oshllanded. The dlueelo tic. the tdlieusthancreenisthedebliltated.simme ly need to ha .10 :Le P Is precisely the stimulant Tnd corrective thee rtlnnt to take at this season. housands cif them un or the tact by experience Sethi. In the pima rimontosia for out nf It) Will eupply place—lmst of all the true. local aro trunu Which onus uriscrupolon• desieteataild he plait for the bevedt of their torn peeketale peddle oat Lo Its stead. NEW ADVER FABER VAN DOREN 367 Liberty Street PITT PC ROD. PA. STEAM ENGINES, IRON AND WOOD WORKINO MACHINERY, Steam PailipS, Engineers' and MarkinLsts' Tools, STEAM FIRE ENGINES, BELTING, Woolen Machinery, Machli Cards Urlanntactitrers' and Mill Sup. plies. A constant supply on hand and tarnished on short notion. 01113E.ILEO 11110aLICITEID GRAFF, lIEGES blanufaotur re of Cooking ,anj Loafing, STOVES, RANGES, , FURNACES Eine Grate' 'Profits EMMIEMMEJ COLUMBIA COOK STOVE, Confidence Cook Stove, The :F3Os.to DOUBLE-OYEN \ IMIT.OYED Cooking I gor, Nile's Improved • tar Range, AND Ft ;FURNACE, LPTICE ANL WAR,I9IOIIBN, 206 and 208 Street. Libea SUN;ARNSTIIAL_&. • Virginia alialioniavilia Tobtiebo &MY 'SEIZ / AR " r' :..I Fine Cui Okada and dm big Tollama, ' v 2 eviiirticti erraiiiertust.4. , • =MG= :~1 ~iL~E~WAA.., RAVCO,IOMBCCA ''tblliiPTlttkrAViltS . Atimii4ol4*44oo: -: ' i , c° ... • ei.olialiffeitto tafw . .. A....ra v , JOSEPIt . Iia'IIUNTEIti _ ',.;'!:1006474040; 33 44 1 **4 .x-tuntox'z iom tm -I,l4**l,l.mitesiatiers.) ,irtiiiiio63l. , i MIIIM=III NEW_ ADVERTI GOOD S BARGAINS AT f WNL SFNPLE'S, 80 and 182 Feder — la Street, 250 for 3= White Huek Towels, A GREAT fIARtiAIN. At 1. Se Soft Finished iguana. extra good. ' At 8 e, Feat Colors& Calicos. • At 8 e Fist Colored Callow's. a great beTalo At I . the BeetUeLee of Citing At 25c rat BLE MOHAIRS A DECIDED DAROAncs At .414.. ran Colored Llama. At 11110..Mm1l Al limo , At 60a Ladles Balmoral Skirt, ! Ar CIAO ladlea all WOOl Bummer 'Shawls. Hats,Bonnets, *taboos and Mowers. Parasols and iittti Venbranam. Let. 64alans and lemonlnns, • Kld Lloda Thread. Oloveo. te. Very - Low Pricem WM. sEMPLE'S, ISO and 182 Fedcral Street, Alleghen7 'ILL BE ISSUED SOON. PITTSBURGH; ITS ndustries & Commerce, MI A 111001( POUTRAYING IN FACTS AND FIGURES Grorh and Present yrospe Eli! Representative laitafeetering Intends OF PITTSBURGH. corms or Tuis Tours°, ma, cc ?Irma) • IN THIC ; Leading Hotels', - • • Ot THOPS romoNsoi TLI dlttiN WAVE! R IN TEW P OUTWIT OZOR Z T U- . 1 ART TO T R ' • • TRADE OF PITTSBURGH Tbe Volume wilt be printed end boned In a et,le •nt bitberto attempted to We City. A limited peon nee been , Assigned to Advertisers. CANVARANDA WILL CALL UMW ILINUPACTUBBILE AND„ Br MI S' NE N For their F yore. DAVIDI4 t E. A. ITER W A, RY Publ übers. • ]AXES 3111X89 Special Bargaim PARASOL Spring &Summer 4EGARDLESS OF C I ST, AT k Morgan stern 8616'5, EOM MACRUM, GLYDE & CO., Nos. 78 aid 80 Market Street. STATIONERY. W. Wet for th. 1.8 trade,. =deg may oth tt L. amorous to inooLlio, m t ...",, 160,000 NitYNLOPEN , 1.900 Mulls smarm r Pin. 170 ILIUM PLAT PAP 6,000 QUIRK. BLANK MI, 1 03 CANILI SLATZ6, - - au*, cum rural'. APIRVICS. 11.1e0 EATS' Flamm . SW GROW , rim= .1.11), 060 D 02313 MIX 12 A, 7101.07 AND COPYING. , ~, . 0011 GROSS pr,4o) iiri PAL 000110 imam. • - IA allosa eaXllo&i ,_ • . 000 001117 INISMOILAND oils, via recicierriooins. " ' ' fte011001161.11.110 YON. - . . READ.WE SON, FOUR 'AVERT, • • •,,i ,11;:x.... • dl 1, 11011611. PA PITTSBUIIGH White" Lea IOCCOIot Wirke, & son) ion:d •M"' 2141-1 TI• firt iikiriklati i itteklAi l t rye; efiIqI4I4IPPEINT. 0:1: • 4,1 4 , ; • • I, Zi . . Dia" l44 t. v ii.• .a • um. CSF4VOCOPieII prime OWN* EARTIZZA4I4/ rot BIEM =I NEW' PA Pk! ai Z 414 MhZil 110 POPULAR PRICES BEI WM. SEMPLE'S, 180 and 182 Federal Street, I=ll9 Summer ,Shawls VERY CHEAP. Plaid and Cline Mixe JAPANESE POPLINS Wiwi; Linen Sults, u rlaterVhilinfllghlte. • At Very Low Prices Holley' Comb Quilts E;assinaeres. and Jean rdw i r tel L Tie . tient. Iladkpretilefa, COW" 'and Cuffs. Ladleo Lam Whirs, as. At Attractive Prices AVM. SEMPLE'S, 180 and 182 Federal Street. Allilabeny En BORNE &- CO'S lieceitred this Day: Trayellng Satchels, Cord and Black Satins, Black tiro Grain Sash Ribbons Colored Sash Ribbons, Henze Merino Undershirt* Large Palm Fans, Silk aud Linen Fans. HATS, FLOWERS Millinery Good,s =I NEW GOODS 'Received Every Day. 77 AND 79 MARKET STREET BELL & MOORHOUSE 21 1 Fifth. Avenue, Laos Curtains, Sum'ther Silks, Thin Dress Goods, Summer Shawls Shetland REDUCED PRICES iOtt aPar with Gold! WE NOW OFFER Our New Stock DRY GOODS NOTIONS EASTERN PRICES Eninine our Goods &Prices ARBUTHNOT, SHANNON & C(). No. 115 wooa stree BUY THE GENUINE CLARK'S " 0 SPOOL COTTOI ,GEO. A. OLAR POI4E ,A'GENT " Sold. POlrtwhere. PIPE ,-••-, C O, " $ .:E' , g L 14. 6 6iatiskiiiikysi4Ateki 4. 4, . ~,,,n 1,,,.0.gi al 1 4 11.1 a1 , 11 , ,1S . ~ i. - , grigEMIND 'W S M O 4. I .7fRVPMFIRFICRetw??,,IMPPL, The lastly of 111hpne Pipe nous. DMus • wm34411.)-s , i ,orrip*,ea albs isitanimArriuntr zawrMat 9 i 7 ltio o4 ,-ARV"'qt , 7 ol 7" , ;A. NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. I ch adf o . 'se?* and Oh' Railm The Chesapeake and Ohio Railroad Dieted ens tiuzu EICLIMONI),*A. to the celebrated WHITE BULPIII.III In Vest ytnasts. *27 nine. It Is belne nDINJ extended to tb ' e Ohlo river. 200 miles turas , makton In all 447 miles. • • - I. Its Pr.Ven S% estword. It Poootmtoo tad opelO op to market the l ONDERFUL COAL DEPOSITS OF THE NANA, 'EA REGION IN WEST V/IL. EMU. And Um rings au. superior sod abundant Coen. of that section into outtununlostion nab the IRON o=l OV AND OHIO. And the tArRATERN, BOUM WESTERN AND EASTERN lIARKETS. When completed lt connect the dUFERIOR I.IA.RBOR FACILITIES OF THE CUESAPEAKE RAT latch tellable naelcatlen co the Otdo rim, and thus lOW the ENTIRE SYSTEM OP RAILROAD AND WATER TRANSPORTATION OF THE OREAT , NEST AND SODTLIWEBT. It will waken 511011 T. EASY, CHEAP anQ CA• VORABLIC RoUTE I row tho,;t9 EST to am SEA sod wW commiiiid . LARGeSICAAII: Or TUE irSOILMOUS YILEIOHTS teusWctatlO:lto L 66 001111 t • IL VIII tbtt. beeoleto moot We most IMPORTANT AND PROFITAIW,E EAST AND WEST TRUNK LINES OF PLAI ROAR Ln INi/ COUIILI7. and COM- =wad a trade of immense value; The tot oted portion of the Road is dojo* . PROFITABLE.' 4... ND INCRSABINO eueususs and la furl,- equal In twine to the whole ndionlat e the noirtwasre noon the entire Tiliae—(9lB.ooo 0003 The loan of the Cheeepenee and Ohio IlsOnlee Oornonny.bellldeliTtST SIORTGAGE UPON THE .ENTIRE LINE. PROPERTY AND.F.QIIIPMFLNTS WORTH WHEN COMP LETV:O AT LEA r $3O. ,000.000. therefore one o f the most an tantial neon - olive and rellobloitoOrond Loana er.r of - rod tb. mutat, mulls pecullorlY .liptoO to ES= Investors and Capitalists, Who desire to make their Itmestahetth hrltti the most shtlefattor, asittrance of POSITIVE AND (tDOtDTED SECURITY: I. The Bonds lad In denosoltudfons of $1,000, 1 $,,500 and $lOO, • d may be bad COOPON or lIEOISTF.RICD. Interest Six per cent. per annum. payable *AY let had NOVEKBER!Iet. - PRLNCIPAL AND LNTENENT PAYABLE IN GOLD IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK. Pete 90 AND ACCRUED INTEREST to Cur rencsoa which; price they our nearly SEVE:I4!EIi CENI 4 .LN GOLD ust their hues. AL Qo•emmunt Bonds dad other Baccalllos deal In at the Stook Exonerate received In exchatga,at theta full mirrkei value:acid Bond. net to all 'torte Of the ornater. Irene( Erma. charges. They am be obtained by ordering direot trem n. or through any reeponalble Bank or Banker In any part of the eomtq• Fisk & Hatch, BANKERS. No. 5 Nassau Street, New York •Maps, Paint&lets and full information furnished upon application in person or by mail. S. NUCLEAN Sz CO. B.A.N kERS. 65 Fourth Ave., Pittsburgh =I COAL AND COKE MORGAN 4 CO., C ONNELLSVILLE COKE, It thetr,Minet, Broad Ford, P. k C. R. R Office, 142 -WATER STREET, SUIp2TO ALL POINTS BY RAILROAD, And Deliver in the City. OscarF.Larnin&Co. • MANUFACTURERS OF CONNELLSVILLE COKE, Er= Youghloitheny and Anthracite Coal PITT:381111AL PA, OFFICE : ROOM No. 5, Gazette Building. Ifr - Order• respectfully eolleted. naked COAL! COAL! YOUGIIIOGILENY GAS COAL CO. Thts Company , now hawed to furnish the beet Coal of MY Mrs or quantity. AT IbeplltAtTES. Omoe end Yard illololog the .Copiellietlle Rea. road Depot. toot of Try. Street. Pltteborgh. Orders addreesed-45 either Mines. ITest Newton, Pa. or to Tart will be promptly attended to. H. P: 01113tN, Seeree.Y. = Charles H, Armstrong DEAIXftIN " Yonghiogheny and ConnellsvMe Coal - - I —And Manufacturer of COAL. SLACIS.AND DINULPIIIIHIZED ODES. OFFICE AND YARD, omen Butler mid Morton Wears, Liberty and Clymer street., Ninth ward; also, Remind Inman, tbribth ward, and at fdot of Roes street, P. C. It IL Depot. Second amt. Orders left at either of the above Whom or. ad. &seised to me Molts h Pittaborgh NM Male, f P e t 'strenh s lyin ' r. Hassey, wail. a m r l'vr.o. Beath, llatcat u bL lOU, El. 8, Pinner A Stavenson Co.. Bissell b Co.. Gran Ragas, Ale:. Bradley Part, Rm. & Co., Ptah. °cam y 4 7001 Ob, Co., Rees*, Graff A Dull. Wm. DI. Faber Da m 1 0 0 0. el, sills R. R. Pennsylvania U. Allegimy Falley COAL ! COAL f! COAL ! DICKSON, STEWART & C 0.,, tunas Atioved Moir Moe to NO. 667 Liberty Street, ( Taw, City 'tour mW) Eatcompvi.ooß, SM7Lir M a criltAnas m a Ic r t =ft attheir otecoarsidammod ks Mom enran as uttOodod 0 ,1 1...PUY - T. T. Tregq's TpaberryTootim Ulimoit)pl•ureq.ekstswi •adtiospi.64bleit t reinu"iuni al4•l.4l=tinecias Ftwar..6.B grettetutthe Tootb I . • • .to R2=l l of=tir= l' tresmit..aloottlostri ofll Tartu!. itetal =',F:FprOr= Smyth 7ol.catianint Tor .010 b) a Din . num • .W ! ;uO.: PII;E' . 113;11E1: ;)Tirc pm . - ••- •0.• • • • Fiat lila ' ali) io 'cure iiiiivejtorZ; 4o 7 1141T.M1111102= - Ti%l=s, WWI rt tc ., l3 4ll , ...auutEuzi Eva: , e ahaigno== * 0 1.171=r6,4. 0 ,, i,iEVlTlllll. , ,tParoltbretrojt •Yaii7 8 :mud t.' ' trIRGIIMATI:,III.II./INe4O, Illeiiiiit -..i4V42,11 for terPrwMitt Itllr \ 1" , , j, " . :: ....:..'. ',' . 1 ' r . ' .iio;:i;iiiir.rigri.AW, 41 . . „. ,t_ lal 2 . : ' .1114. TAbilli,VlAt Ninth sit,. 116TOUCE,-itty .littonitialini of JO -0,:=1.4941,%1=0:4,1 ritatmi CARPETS, OIL CLOTHS, &c UMI -, , fifErFS. S. ER STOCK.' Fine, Medium and Common ,„ C./IRPE TS. Oar Stock is the largest we have ever °Prof to the trade.• • Co.,Bovard, Rose & C 21 FIFTH AVENUE --.-. BARGAINS CARPETS .; CAN NOW BE HAD AT ' X'Farland &Collins 1 71 AND 73,T1FT11 •AVE. Ul' They t art taking slocis , anti will clot. cul Yuan, 04 s bou Brussels and Ingrains, • , . At leas than ant wet. Call Footll gat tbd <6OlO J1 , 14_ - --- -- --•.-- - -------- CARPETS. New Rgonis! NEW PRICES! • ' We have tosoularuterl the opening or our New Rooms ' , Mb Mu = Cilkt'ETS Ever Offekid in this Market, JLOWEST PRICES SINCE 1861. ___ • OLIVER McdANTOCK 3r CO, I 23 Filth Avenue. CHEAP CARPETS. Superior Ingrains, $l.OO PIA TAM). COMMON CARPETS, =x-00 T 093 claiTs PEI!' TAAL. M'CALLITINI BROS., 51 :Fifth :Avoilue mas - - _ i ITPHOLSTERERS, Yu stadia:mos at SPRING. FLUB and 'Huse ILATIItEBB/11. /feather Bolsters cod. Mown. 'Church Cushions. Cocaina 3ltroldlaththd all Maas 'ca Upholstery work. Atao. dealers In Window Shade*. Buff. Or and Width Rolland.. Cord.. Taaaelcia PecticulattattenUon U given to tak. tug up, cleaning and Drushlag, another god thlar. Ins carpel. mods of ohmage.. canna Is theo only way la hlth yen °MIMI wnree that the twos, are in. served and the good. thoroughly freed from all rinse and vormta. The faith for cleaning has been greatly reduced. Our exams .111 call for and die. Item Ell coo& has of charm ROBERTS, NICHOLSON & THOMPSON, =I team Carpet Beating Establishment, N 0,127 WOOD STREET, I=l eARPET -GRAIN Of all Colors, ON NAND AND TOIL BALE AT, ANCHOR COTTON MILLS, Allegheny City. GLASS, GIIEENSV7A.ItE Sic 100 WOOD STREET. 64TEENSWARE, I= China and 43-laFq= suvra PLATED 000pei.Dueiza ATM TEA elms, Tss TRAYS Ip! R2R b ira'Mk t aos iv lEgs Ira prim. L E. BREED & CO., - IoTWO6b-AtltirET7-' REYNOLDS STEEN &I CO., 124 Wood Street Importer. awl I.o.lers In PEENED, CELIA, FINE COT 'GUM AND Queens7rare. - I Urns lamest emecetazeet. st New York prime. . • alterar warr....assix; 6 . 7 - 1 . • Ilt. Met . . canc iwi al l f. a A N . l z: ot ,:wt ST zimnr ßlYAl3B lietsll 9'lj Aß :C:laS x. DNl 7be o .B L sri 'jr A 'r ;: .. d: BC J . o e t : ; b ° m b 3 o vrat rs In I PLATED AMIE , The ottealll.m of al rsquirlue rxwdo ip 0, .1.,,i, floe lo rilroft.Ol to our Stook. 'mooned