j? ' m T t ; r E s p-- . . .. PEACE AND PLENTY Predicted for the Kew Year by Euro i pean ilonarchs in Addresses, fj THE TOUKG KAISER'S GENEROSITY. jf Dcb Sympathy for the Toting Belgian ?0 King' Personal Loss hy Fire. GTHEB FOREIGN KEWS OF IXTEBEST , rBT OUT, TO THE DISPATCH. J IoiUoic, January 4. Copyright. J The Speeches at the New Year receptions at the k parlous European courts have not been of much Interest or importance. All, of bourse, professed confidence in a continu ance of peace, and President Carnot added that "France has the power as well as will to ,JreTent war; bnt the Ciar, upon whom the peace of Europe really depends, has not 'yet spoken. His Bussian Majesty cannot ho particularly happy just now. He has teen Buffering again from tbe effects of an influenza attack, but the foreign newspapers Unanimously refused to accept that simple explanation, and his illness was variously attributed to poison, morphine, electric shock, gunshots and dagger wounds; while one enterprising Paris paper placed His Majesty in bed and issued bulletins. But if tbe imperial body be fairly well, the Mind is ill at ease, for it is beyond doubt that fresh and dangerous Nihilist plots hare oeen recently discovered, and there is no Teason to discredit the rumor that several notably officers of the Russian army have reoently hanged within the precincts of the great fortress prison of St. Peter and St Paul. THE GEACIOUS YOUNG KAISER. The young Kaiser made no public speech, Iut wrote a very gracious letter to Prince Bismarck, congratulating that great m&p. "upon the maintenance ot peace, and inci dentally claiming credit for the same, equally with the Chancellor. The Kaiser, however, if somewhat prigcish, is a kindly young man. He spent several thousand marks upon New Year presents for his five little sons, and sent the Sultan's small daughter, Princess Haile. a superb collec tion ol dolls, with complete sets of dresses and furniture. On Kew Year's l)ay His Imperial Majestv looked very grand, as, with his wife, Le sat upon a corgeous throne, with a purple canopy, holding a sort of review of royalties and high civil and military officers. No one under the Wpk of Counsellor of the first class was allowed to be present at this august cere mony. Congratulations marched two by two past their majesties, the ladies in high dresses and hats and tbe gentlemen in lull uniforms, with their orders or decorations. To-day, byway of emphasizing the pros pects of peace,' the Kaiser gave formal con Tent to the formation ot two additional'Ger inan army corps, and the construction of .new vessels of war. To-day His Majesty is shooting hares and pheasants, near Berlin. His brother of Austria is similarly engaged Sn Styria. EUINED HIS KEPUTATIOIT. 'Yesterday King Humbert brought dis credit upon his horsemanship and ruffled Lis dignity by tumbling off his horse and rolling in tbe mud. His bruises will reqnire Attention for day or two, but otherwise he as au rigct. The King of the Belgians has received and deserves a good deal of sympathy for the destruction of his palace by fire. Un iike the average monarch, it was not his custom to apply to Parliament every time a ceiling wanted" mending or a picture had to be bought, and the result is that he is a personal "loser by the fire" to the amount of at least 51,000,000. There is a ministerial crisis in Spain, hut the baby King remains in his nurserv, his (mother, the Queen Begent, undertaking to (put things straight England is awaiting without excitement 'the arrival of Prince Kawananakoa, nephew of the King or Hawaii, who has entered as a student at the Boyal Agricultural College at "Cirencester, and will go into residence there in a week or two. The Prince is said to be rood, far above the British standard, goes to (church every day, and takes a class at the Sunday school. The Cirencester youths Cill certainly endeavor to civilize His High ess. GLADSTONE AND CAKXEGIE. trie Grand Old Man Taking a Great Inter est Id the Plltsbnrger. IBT CABLE TO THE DISIMTCII. ! London, January 4. Gladstone has be come deeply interested in Andrew Carnegie's ideas concerning the dnties of wealth, as set Jbrth in a recent artice in the ATorth Ameri can Review. Gladstone, in a letter to the J'all Hall Gazette, says he agrees with Car negie in nearly everything that he affirms, jsad recommends that his (Gladstone's) main reservation is prompted by Carneine's language respecting the endowment of the Stanford University. Gladstone says he has some doubts as to whether large endowments of places of Seaming do notraise the market price of ihigher education, which they aim at lower ling. "I must add," he says, "that the (growing tendency to the dissolution of uni Tersities as such from religion does not (abate but enhances the force of all such considerations as have suggested my lan Ignage of reserve." Gladstone concludes: I now come to an important addition which I ;snouia like to attach to the gospel wealth. I ee no reason why In the list of admissible and desirable objects for the dedication of funds, fwe are not to Include their direct dedication to the service and honor of God. Money spent in the erection of our cathedrals and our creat churches hardly inferior to cathedrals. nai been large, and has, in my Judgment been very well la'd out What I have said as to toe endownment of offices and places has some application to tbe great province of re ligion, but apart from this, and apart from marvelous and noble works, such as cathedrals. The institutions of religion and works of de- tuuou, learning, mercy ana utility connected nrith it, are numerous and diversified. Be Jlgionls a giant with a hundred hands, whoso strength, however, is not lor rapine, but for lose. I should wish to brine Its claim propor tionate, and therefore large, under the consld Jratlonof the open-handed and open minded (philanthropist DICKENS' CniNESEHEnO DEAD. yin Sine Expires, bnt Ills Business Is Tct Flonriihlnc IBT CABLE TO THE DISrATCn. , Xondon, January 4. Ah Bing, the most famous Chinaman out of the Flowery King worn, was call to his fathers this week. He Vas the original of the Chinese opium joint keeper in "The Mystery of Edwin Drood," Sickens' uncompleted novel. Ah Sing died in poverty, and, although he Iws been a bad man in his day, Jie passed away in grace. He leaves as ridow, an English woman of 63 years, who says that his last days were exemplary, ss lie passed hit time on Christmas reading tbe Bible and singing hymmr, and the Snnday before his death was with difficulty re strained from going to church. It should not be imagined that because Ah Sing gave up the business opium smok ing Is dying out in London. On the rnn- -ixaxj, there are more people now using the drug than ever, and a few houses have been established in the "West End for fashionable ' society that is addicted to the practice. CHAEITI PE0M AN U5KN0WJJ HAND. JAb Anonynona Donor of 100,000 far Convalescent Hospital. nrr CABLE TO THE DISrATCn. J London, January 4. An anonymous donor has this week given 100,000 to estab lish a convalescent home for the benefit of the London poor. He rightly holds that it-Trhen inpatient has gone through a severe tjfllness In'the hospital, it is only inviting a efious'tam of the disease to send him or i m her back to a squalid home before haying gained a fall measure of strength. It is reported that the princely donor is the Duke of Westminster, bnt those fcho know him best donbt it CHEERS AND JEERS. Both Paid for by the JlarquU de Lenvllle Hl Way ot Gelling Even lor Ridi cule and Earning a Ucputn- tlon tor nimiclf. IBT CiXLE TO Till DISrATCH.1 London, January 4. The Marquis de Leuville, who, since his rejection by Mrs. Prank Leslie in New York, has been cre ating a spectacular impression, has just managed to get himself into the Police Court under the auspices of Manager Kelly, of the Princesses' Theater. On the last Saturday of November a melodrama called "The Gold Craze," by Brandon Thomas, author of several suc cessful comedies, was brought out at the Princesses'. The play was bad, it must be admitted, but the audience at the time was much pnzzled to account for the apparent virulence of tbe men who hissed it, since Thomas is very popular. Pandemonium reigned during a great part of the per-. lorniance, insomuch that it wasoiten im possible to hear the voices of the attors. The villain ot "The Gold Craze," who commits two or three criries in each act, was named Marquis de Pleurville and was gotten up in imitation o de Xienrme. It now transpires that de Leuville got wind of tuts impersonation and hired a gang oi men for two nights to go in and attempt to break up the performance. At least, so a man named Kelly, who alleges that de Leuville hired him to organize the gang, has sworn in the police court He says de Leuville paid for tickets for about 20 men and gave him money to buy them drinks atterward. Kelly has charged de Leuville with in stigating, inciting and procuring a riot, and if he is convicted he may be imprisoned. It came out in the course of the examination thatde Leuville had hired the same body of men to applaud some doggerel of his that was produced at the Empire. De Leuville, by the way, has outgrown the suspicion he lived under in New York, that "he wore stays." He is now much larger about tbe abdomen than the chest, and he affects a lock of white hair, alter tne romantic manner of "Whistler, only that de Leuville's is composed of white silk, woven into his capillary growth. SOT MUCH OF AN IDLEB. Consul Johnston Provea to bo More of a HnatlcrThnn Wait Expected. rBT CABLE TO TlfZ DISPATCH.! London, January 4. British Consul Johnston has justified to the letter the esti mate of his character and forecast of his in tentions set forth in this column several weeks ago. The news just received in Lon don, and made public much more quickly than the Government would have desired, shows that the enercetic Johnston, far from idling at Mozambique, as had been reported, has been in the interior, making treaties, annexing territory, raising levies and gen erally asserting British imprests in the old time" imperial fashion. By this time he is almost certainly fighting the Portuguese and their native allies. The King oi Portugal made a .brave speech Thursday about upholding Portu guese claims, and the question of immediate interest is how far be is prepared to back up his royal word by deeds. If he goes only a little way further, there will be an Anglo Portuguese war within a week or two. THE GAS STOKERS' LAST CARD. They Fliid the Police Willi Tbclr Sleeves Foil of Trumps. rBT C1BLS TO THE DIbPJLTCII.l LONDON, January 4. The gas stokers are making their final effort They have failed to interest the Northern miners in their canse, and they are .now seeking to bring out the sailors and firemen working aboard the coal ships. To a slight extent they have succeeded, but the police have again stepped in to prevent undue intimida tion, and the strikers arc bound to be beaten again. The company makes as much gas now as they used to do with the old hands. The union has been beaten, point alter point, and public opinion continues against it OIL CITI CHICKEN FIGHTERS. Agent O'Brien Will Go to OH City to Tncklo l Lawbreakers. General Agent O'Brien, of the Humane Society, will make a trip to Oil City in a few days to institute prosecutions against a crowd of sports who conducted a cocking main at that place on New Year's night. The society's agent in Oil City did not appear to be able to grapple with the situa tion. According to the publication of the affair in one ol the Oil City papers,the main was attended by several hundred men.many of them sports from this city and Alle gheny, and broke ud iu a riot. Agent O'Brien is also in receipt of a letter from an Oil City lady about the case. On Monday afternoon 15 more perrons will be tried before Alderman Foley, of Woods' Bun,'for being concerned in a dog fight which occurred a few weeks since in that locality. Alderman Foley stated yes terday that" before he is through with the Eersons who brought about the fight, he will ave fined 100 of them. JDST WHAT YOU ABE LOOKING FOj BarcnlDH at the New Ydrlc Grocery. 14f pounds granulated sugar SI 00 1C pounds clear white sugar 1 00 18 pounds yellow sugar , 1 00 4 cans tomatoes .? 25 4 cans sugar corn 25 4 cans choice peas 25 4 cans string beans 25 3 cans California apricots 50 9 pounds Bntler county buckwheat. 25 1 gallon new crop Orleans molasses. 40 1 gallon golden drip syrup 35 7 pounds rolled oats 25 8 pounds large lump starch 05 12 boxes bag blue 25 Sugar cured hams per pound 10 Sugar cured shoulders per pound.... 6 Gquartsdried peas 25 7 quarts hand-picked beans CO 1 sack choice Amber flour 1 15 1 sack Thompson's Amber flour 1 23 1 sac Thompson's "White Swan". 1 30 1 sack Thompson's fancy patent.... 1 45 California peaches per pound 10 California apricots per pound 10 30-pound pails apple butter 1 35 6 pounds 20-cent tea 1 00 5 pounds 25-cent tea. 1 00 4 pounds 30-cent tea 1 00 3 pounds 40-cent tea 1 00 Goods delivered free to all parts of both cities. To those living out of the city will prepay freight on all orders of ?10 and up ward. Send for catalogue. M. B, Thompson, 301 Market st., corner Third ave. "Wholesale and retail. Hendbicks & Co., 68 Federal st, Alle gheny, lead in good work and low prices. They also furnish original ideas for all the other photographers. "Watch our imitators fall in line Good cabinets $1 CO a dozen. Fob a finely cut, neat-fitting suit leave your order with Walter Anderson, 700 Smithfield street, whose stock of English suitings and Scotch tweeds is the finest in the market; imported exclusively for his trade. su Patkonize Hendricks & Co., photogra phers. No. 68 Federal st, Allegheny. They are a reliable and painstaking firm. Go there ror eood treatment and good work, Cabinets SI 00 a dozen. BBlNQlhe little folks next week to .Hen dricks & Co.'s, No. 68 Federal st, Alle gheny, for photographs. Special induce- jtaen, ..' uiLuta. ijiiic earn. itiiiiii (niiinnva is mi THE NEW PUBLICATIONS. Henry Stanley. SiANLxrr, the world's greatest explorer, has just returned to civilization. No achievement of modern times can compare rfti this latest expedition. The whole itoiH Is throwing up Its half and shouting: "Hurrah for Henry M. Stanleyl" "What dees that mean to you? It topjb an op portunity to quickly make thousands of dol lars In carrying to the people tho complete history of tho wonderful achievement and remarkable discoveries as contained In our great work, " Heroes of tho Bark Continent ; or. How Stanley Sound Emln Pasha." It Is tie grandest and best Hundreds and hun dreds of beautiful and original Illustrations. Tho book may bo truly called "Pictorial Africa." Complete outfit only JLOO, and we refund this when you have Bold only ten copies. If you can give a part or all of your time to this enterprise, you will find a new El Dorado a real, live bonanza s-right at your door. Now is tho timo; do not wait a moment Our terms are liberal; send on your $1.00 for outfit If you don't like it send It back and get your money. Distance Is no hindrance. Books are deliv ered to all parts of the country promptly, and at ouexpense. No capital needed ex cept cost of outfit "Wo can and will satisfy you in every way. Apply to B. P. JOHNSON & CO, No.i009MalnSt, Richmond, Va. jaS-81 "r-rn3"En-D a r-m3- Theosophical Monthly MagazlneDevoted to Tbe Brotherhood of Humanity, Tbeosophy in America, and the Study of Occnlt Science, Philosophy and Aryan Literature. Subscription, 2 Per Annum. Single Copies, 20 cts. Each. THE JANUARY NUMBER NOW READY. All Theosophical works and publications. Address "THE PATH" OFFICE, jaWB 21 Park Row. New York. The Boy's Holiday The Best Youth's Paper Ever Published, WILL BE OUT JANUARY 7, Examine the First Number. For sale by all newsdealers. Price 5 cents. J33-23 ELECTIONS. Office of the Columbia Oil Co., XV O. 014 MARKET ST.. PrrrSBUno. December 27. 18S9. rE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE stockholders of the Columbia Oil Co. will be held on THURSDAY, January 9, 18S9, at 11 o cioce A. ii.. tor in? election oi directors ana for the transaction of such business as may be presented. A. P. McGREW, Secretary. de27-9 German Savings and Deposit Bank of Birmingham, Pittsburg. January 2, 1S90. ELECTION THE ELECTION FOR THIR TEEN (13) directors of this hank for the ensuing year will be held at tbe banking bouse, corner Carson and Fourteenth streetTuesdax, January 11 1SS, from 1 to 3 o'clock P. M. ja3-28 J. F. ERNY, Cashier. TOCKHOLDERS' MEETING THE AN I NUAL meeting of tbe stockholders of tbe onongahelaNavigatlon Company will be held on THURSDAY, January 9, 1890, at the offlc of the company. No. 104 Grant street, Pitts burg, at 2 o'clock p. h., for the election of offi cers and managers of the company for the en suing year, and other business. W. BAKEWELL. Secretary. del S-19.20.2L2i28,23.31. ja2.4.S,7,9 MR. A. K. N0RRIS, A well-known gentleman of Sharpsburg, re siding on Eleventh street, and employed at the extensive steel works of Messrs. Spang, Cbal lant & Co., of Sharpsburg, has passed through an eventful experience. His catarrh caused a stuffed-up feeling about his nose and eyes. The catarrhal secretion that dropped from bts head Into his throat was so tenacious and hard to raise that in the morning it would often gag bim and canse him to feel sick at his stomach. His hearing became dull, he took cold very easily, had no appetite in the morning, and as his food did not digest properly, gas formed in his stomach, causing pain. He often felt dizzy and lost flesh. He tried various treatments, but without success. He also used local treat ments, but his disease gradually grew worse. In this condition he began treatment with the physicians ot the Catarrh and Dyspepsia Insti tute, 323 f enn avenue, and became cured by their constitutional medicines, which are always curative and permanent in their action. He can. be seen at either his residence or place of business, and will gladly tell anyone further about his condition and cure. Mr. Job-n. V. Hartman. "I was afraid of consumption. I had a con stant hawking and splttlufc. I coughed and felt a soreness and pain in my lungs. My throat became sore and ulcerated, breath short. I lost flesh, and had night sweats aud many other symptons. It gives mo pleasure to add my testimony to the hundreds already published, to my completo euro by these physi cians. ( "Inowweighmorethan ever before and feel well and strong. "JOHN V. HABTMAN, 1214 Main street. Bharnsburg." Remember the place. The Catarrh and Dyspepsia institute. S23 Penn ave. Consultation free to all. Patients treated suc cessfully at home by correspondence. Offlco hours, 10 A. M. to i P. M., and 6 to 8 P. H. Sun days. 12 to 1 P. M. jaa-5-Mwrsu Hi CclI"S obtained the only gold medal awarded solely for toilet SOAP in competi tion with all the world. Highest pssibk distinction? s- PITTSBURG- DISPATCH, NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. ANOTHER NEW FEATURE. -THE Pittsburg Dispatch "Will commence on next Sunday, January 12, 1890, the publication ot A Novel of the Time of Christ, ENTITLED (( Ci OME FOBTHl" -BY Elizabeth Stuart Phelps, Author or "Tho Gates Ajar," "Beyond the Gates," "The Gates" Between," "The Struggle for Immortality," "Men, Women and Ghosts," eta, AND Rev. Herbert D. Ward. The novel will deal with matters of history and arcbseology, thoroughly in accord with the results of the most recent criticism and re search. Tne story will rehearse the events now being studied by the Snnday School chil dren all over the world, culminating with the raising of Lazarus. Of this authoress it has been said' "Miss Phelps' writings help to build up that more exigent and healthier taste In literary matters which our American public Is slowly but cer tainly acquiring; and at the same time they are full of a wholesome morality, a tender yet sinewy religiousness, of which no public can have too much." READ THE OPENING CHAPTERS. The points we made last week were good. Folks buying "presentation" pieces, as well as for their own use, profited by them. It will interest you to know that because of the very low prices we have placed on our full stock, we have captured the trade in our line. This week we are naming matchless prices on Piano Extension (floor) Lamps, Banquet Lamps, Table LampB, Hanging Lamps, Hall Lights and Chandeliers. Tea, Dinner and Chamber Sets, China, Glass and Queensware, Gas Fixtures, Bronzes and Clocks, Bric-a-Brac, Placques, Sconces, Pedestals, Easels, Mexican Onyx Tables, etc. If you seek nice goods in any of the above named at extremely low prices, "We are the people" to see. THE J. P. SMITH Lampi Glass & China Co 935 Penn Avenue. , Bet. Ninth and Tenth Streets. P. S. Exceptionally low prices on rich Cut Glass and French Marble Clocks, ja5-W7su Latest imnroved Snectacles and Eve-Glara.. Will fit any nose with ease and comfort. The largest and best stock of Optical Instruments and Artltlcial Eyes. KORNBLTJM, Theoretical and Practical Optician. No 60 Fifth avenue, near Wood street Telephone No. 16881 de285 SBt HERBERT WALKER ARTIFICIAL EYE MAKER, 65 NINTH ST. "ViiiK Office hours for inserting eyes. 1 to 3 p. v Saturdays, 1 to 6 r. j. de3-23-su D ,B. C LAMBERT'S GUARANTEED REMEDY FOR JJKUJNKKNW.ESS. Only certain (German) remedy for cure, self or friends, of the vice ot drunkenness. Write to-day for circular (English or German). II. iHSCHKBT. ja&S3-SU Box 119, Whitehall, N.Y. 'Park Exposition, 1889. . k -. SL -i. I SUNDAY, 'JANUARY 5, NEW ADVBRTTSEMEIfrS. A loop of corset lace is so much more natural and pleas ant than a metal eyelet, it's odd that the loop wasn't 'thought of first. But that'sthe way with in ventions; the awkward ones come first. s It was so with corset bones, and with corsets themselves. The best "bone" is Kabo that never breaks or kinks. Nobody uses "bones" any more. And the corset for ease is the Ball, with its coil of fine wire spring. A You can get the Ball corset at almost any store in the country, wear it two or three weeks,, and return it if not satisfactory. Chicago CORSE7 Co., Chicago and Now York. SEEING IS BELIEVING And -we have got them, 64 Tape Worms taken in 52 -weeks. Influenza or "La Grippe" cured without fail. I permanently lo cated In Al.egheny City one year ago for the purpose of convincing the peo ple that I hare a cnreforall the cur able ailments of tbe human family. Since here I hare cured 61 .wormj the last fire I treated and cured J were: Fred Gebnardt, of polio. Pa.. who bad been treated hv flvA doctors that failed to xelleveblin. He came o me on tbe 8tn of December last, and in two hours I re lieved him of a tape worm that, wifen stretched, measured 181 feet. On the same day came a lady who had taken U doses lor tapeworm, Dut an ianea. x cured ner In a few hours. On December 15 I treated Cbas. Lampns and a small child of Mrs. Gross, of Spring Garder ave , Allegheny, for tape worm, being successful In both cases; and on December 29 1 removed a large tapeworm from Charles Maeder, of Bennett station. Pa. They wjll all testify to the mildness of my treatment. In reference to the bead of a tapeworm I will state that it is nd cure unless tbe head Is removed. Come to my office and I will show yon hundreds that I have removed, bead and all. Since I am here I have cured hundreds of cases of catarrh, stomach, kidney and liver troubles, and many of rheumatism, falling fits, paralysis, eczema, hemorrhoids and secret dis eases. 1 also ouro caucer without the aid of knife. My remedies are 10 in number, and will be come standard family medicines whenever they are given a trial. One especially I call your at tention to. That Is my SYSTEM RENOVA TOR, a combination of 19 different roots and herb3 that work in harmony on the human sys tem and lay a foundation for the care of all chronic diseases, and will cure seven cases out of ten of them. Call for Dr. Burgoou's System Renovator at all drug stores. If tbey have not got it send to 47 Ohio st, Allegheny, Pa., for it, and you will save money, suffering and your lives. I will refund yonr money If you ever had Its equal in yonr family. Send stamp for circular to DR. BURGOON, 47 Ohio street, jal-14--w8u Allegheny City, Pa. ii WELL : JV9 MKK HMFlLPHi sssskw rv 'srs MflVKA "sasss8jXsi- If this saying is as true as it is old, then, judging- from the lively manner the high piles have been melting down since the inauguration of" our Great January Mark Down Sale, we shall succeed in the tremendous task of Closing Out our entire winter stock, regardless of the weather. Talk as you please; argue till doomsday, but the fact remains that such big", genuine reductions as we have made all over our establishment during the past few days will cause a buying fever among the people every time. And there is nothing more contagious than the buying fever. Even the glorious Influenza must take a back seat in this respect The buying fever, once aroused, catches on everywhere. It spreads from house to house, from and the dull, dreary hours in the establishments whose goods. (There will be no abatement, but a decided increase OUR GREAT JANUARY MARK-DOWN SALE . , ' WILL BE SUPPLEMENTED BY OUR ANNUAL INVENTORY COUNTER CLEARING. This 'double attraction patron will save a snug sum With an unusually large winter stock still on our counters, and stock taking being son that we will this week It's dollars, not garments, SELL AT FROM ONE-HALF TO Any Suit, Any Cap, in our establishment We didn't take an undesirable lot here and there and mark it down have slashed prices in every department. Nothing excepted! Nothing reserved!. Now, then, if you have closing out sale. Every dollar invested earns an immediate need the goods just at present, it will pay you to buy them at these prices. ,t Do not, if you have your own interest at heart, buy a cent's worth, of goods elsewhere before having visited c establishment Compare our goods and prices with those offered by other houses, and, if we' don't undersell them by a heap, we shall not consider ourselves worthy of 'your patronage. U3P- TIEEOSIEj who, GRAND DEPOT. FIFTH THEiONLY HOUSE THAT-AOTUAIiY CARRIES OUT THE REDUCTIONS IT ADVERTISES, -"- NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. IN OUR POPULAR BRAND Old Honesty W1B be found a combination not always to be had. A Fine Quality of PLUG- TOBAC CO at a Reasonable Price. Look for the red JS tin tag on each plug. If you are looking for a FIRST-CLASS ARTICLE -1W- GLiewins: Tobacco DON'T FAIL TO GIVE OLD HONESTY A FAIR TRIAL. Ask yonr dealer for It. Don't take any other. JNO. FINZER & BROS., LOUISVILLE, KY. mh235ssu TO THE PUBLIC. TRY Hunter's Ketchup IT IS PUBE. I desire to draw at tention of to the of Hunter's Ketchup. It is made from se lected to rn a toes, and is pure asperfol- ?mz lowmgan alysis: Mr. Thos. 0 Jenk ins: DEAlt Bnt The sample or J. W. Hunter's To mato Ketchup recelTod from yon on Oct. 8, '89, has been analysed, and 1 find It free from all min eral acids, salicylic add or artificial coloring matter. Signed HUGO BLAMCK, Chemist. Pittsburg. FOR SALE BY THOS. nol6-CS-S3u O. JENKINS. J. DIAMOND, PRACTICAL OPTICIAN, 22 SIXTH STREET. The Eye examined free of charge. Spectacles perfectly fitted. Arti ficial eyes inserted and warranted to suit. JaS-rrau BEGUN : street to street, from town to will undoubtedly draw big houses every day this week, and, of money according tp the make greater exertions (i. e. bigger reductions) than ever to turn merchandise into money we want to coimt at our inventory, hence you needn't be surprised at dur offer to " Any Overcoat, Any Any Shirt, Any any spare change (and who would gain an idea of pur reductions should take a look at the marked $4 98 and now displayed in KAUFMANNS' NEW ADVERTISEMENTS. WE . WOULD . RATHER . MOyE MONEYand ACCOUNTS? MERCHANDISE PBEPABATDRT TO QDR REMOVAL 723 and 725 HEAD OF WOOD STREET. WE OFFER OUR ENTIRE STOCK -or- FURNITTJBE -A2TB- : CARPETS : BELOW : COST -OS- ElSY PA .S TJSTJXj HOUSEHOLD CREDIT CO, 405 WOOD STREET. Acknowledged Champions of low Prices: IS : HALF town. And this accounts for proprietors are waiting for the cold weather to sell their winters i of purchases this week, for, commencing to-morrow morning, i amount of his purchase. TWO-THIRDS REGULAR PRI Cloak, Any Wrap, Any Hat,, Scarf, Any Pair hasn't) bring it forth "and invest dividend of from 33 to 50 our large corner window. AVE. - AND SMITHFIELD Sli rKt At- -? w. jEk. -THAU- -60- Liberty street, - YMEISITS' ja540 : DONE." the busy times at Kaufmanns', it is safe to predict that everyj but a week off, it stands to reaj of. Shoes for advertising purposes, but it in this great combination 'J per cent. Even if you don tfj Men's Suits and Overcoats 'fv c ' 'ux,nxi " ST-. " - Va if, ? r- St1" Ml . .-..JV7 t. tt f Z dL., - AiWJJ J.V SUL- a-. 'j ... ' t . -ff-i.ffl.